the evening. Daytime tempere- tures warmer than on Thursday. | Winds southerly 15. Low-high at Sydney 38 and 6, Charlottetowa_ « The NATO integrated com- mand, first established by Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, is an i- ternational defence headquar- DEGAULLE | 4 and %. Outlook for Satur- y sland News Page | ‘ Eastern and Central Districts change in temperatures except The Guardian, Charlottetown, Fri., Sept. 10, 1965. 5 not so cool at night. High tide today at Charlotte- “town 11.08 a.m. At Rustico at 6.24 a.m. and 8.14 p.m. Summer- side tide eighteen minutes later than Charlottetown. Sun rises to- |day at 6.48 a.m. and sets at 7.31 | p.m. All times ADT. ls Underway loday | Playground e MONTAGUE — Som 75 Leg- by a reception given by the Field Day jion members their wives Montague branch and followed x This Saturday | from province ‘hy a dance and special enter- lare here for a’ two-day conven-: tainment. \tion of the Prince Edward Island) Chairman of the convention |Command. committee and master of cere- | The convention opens today monies is E. Foch MacDonald , with registration at 6.30 p.m., of Montague. followed by a parade from the Out of-province guests include | yj branch home to Montague Reg- J. W. Tatterie, Truro, Nova) 4 ful! slate of races, judging of | or city playgrounds start at be 9.30 a.m. Saturday at Memorial d. o> | | Treats will be distributed to all. It is expected attendance this Official opening —— Brunswick Command president. nigeie San Canna 647 te © |party will be Stan Ward. f Mullin, host branch president ; j 7 tures ar will qual that of last year ional High School. Parade mar-.Scotia Command president, and | |; , | { n | playground crafts and awarding shal,is Mack MacKenzie. Wendall Firlott, Bathurst, New | or crests to members of cham- ars oe a color WEATHER League and Babe Ruth teams Delegates will be weleomed-by | F provincial president Mercier yoRONTO (CP) — Tempera- 4 | Hurmon Martin and Montague | ,., aoe [98 ang | Mayor B. H. Yeo. Lew Overnight High P ina 6! . when 500 were on hand. lie Ld | “certainly” |months whether he. intends to | will-be-included-in-the~program-| those taking part. | nual press. conference in the luxurious Grand Ballroom of the Elysee Palace. The event, re- sembling a court occasion for the former French ~-monarchy more than a press conference, attracted an estimated 1,000 newspaper men and diplomatic representatives for the tradi- tional de Gaulle dessertation on the state of France and the world. MAY REMAIN PRESIDENT | He told reporters they would’ know within two run for re-election Dec. 5, but, his remarks on other subjects such as exi ters in which officers from vari- ous nations serve in mixed fa h- ion without reference to nation ality. Sinee its inceotion, it has always been headed by af American=now Gen. Lyman L. Lemnitzer. De Gaulle “dislikes having French officers taking orders from foreignefs, and is reported to feel the integrated system makes an officer lom his sense of nationality. ‘ Abolishing the integrated sys tem would mean the end of any allied type headquarters ‘and leave Western defence to a clas- sie system of national alliances sted at the time of seemed to hint he intends to be, the First World War. De Gaulle on _the scene as president for did not advance any alternative another seven-year term. TODAY - SAT. $e A FAMILY YO -“Fogether...the for a dre |to integration. Events in the annual field day * ic ir * te H ~ ye ~~ SHOWS 3:30-7-9 , SAT. 1-3-7-9 Tobacco farms at Grandview, Upper: Montague and Greenfield were visited yesterday afternoon where the owners estimate ano ther’ eight to 10 days of harvest- | ing will complete the job. | IMPROVING Katherine Docherty of King- ston, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. | the former barn had been des- troyed by fire. Interested spectators on a part CBC headquarters should be in Montreal. not “remote” Ot- tawa. by persons interested in promo- . ting..expansion of the crop- in this province. Harvesting is perhaps -more of the field day tour included than one-half-completed -on the |Hon. Andrew MacRae; minister Lloyd Docherty, is improving af- iter her appendix operation in the P.E.I. Hospital. | Priming or harvesting is well |per Montague, and John Power, on the way to completion _at_the |Greenfield, farm of Leonard Vaerewyck and Mark Vanneste, Grandview, Keen interest was shown mn | farms of Marcel Moyaert, Up- |of agriculture, and deputy ‘min- ister S.C. Wright, also R. C. Parent, director of the Expert- EGG PRICES Egg dealers were reported quoting producers prices as fol- | lows yesterday, grade A large 4 the mechanical tieing equipment | mental Farm here. 31 cents, grade A medium 2 cents, and grade A small 20 cents. Seas 50,000 VISITORS Approximately 50,000 Island- residents and tourists visited the Prince Edward Island Wildlife Park at North Rustico so far this season as well as thousands of school children and youth groups who used the park facilities free of charge. The announce ment was made by C. O. Bart- lett, director of Fish and Wild- life Division. Department of In- dustry and Natural Resources for P-E.I. —— RN JOINS RCAF. ~hThe™ swearing” in-of~the first \female. commissioned officer took place at the Armed‘ Forc- es Recruiting Centre, Queen Charlotte Armories yesterday when Donna Baker, RN, was sworn in as a Flying Officer (Nursing Sister). Miss Baker left by train later in the day for. contact training at Cold Lake, Alberta. She is the daugh- ter of Lieut. Cmdr. Don Baker ,|RCNR (Rtd.) and Mrs. Baker of Kensington. Lieut. Cmdr. Ba- ker is a former commanding of- ficer of HMCS Queen Charlotte. ~-=- CARD PARTY.-HELD- ~~ ‘| The results of the card party held Thursday, evening at the Community Centre were: door prize, Fred Gallant, special prize, A. R. Ellis: ladies’ first, Mrs. P. Smith, ladies’ second, Mrs. Ray Garnham; = gents’ first, Joe MacEntee, gents second, Joe Shelphoon: con- solation, J. Cavanaugh and Mrs. J. R. Gallant, and freeze- out, Mrs. N. Gallant and P.} McQuaid. : | | SPEAKS -AT TRINITY Lt.-Col. Gordon Darrach will speak at Trinity United Church “The -“unsavory-- feud”. -be- Recent CBC reorganization inappropriate and inadequate. CBC lacks cohesion, unity, esprit de corps and easy and | confident internal communica- tions. It is overburdened with administration. : CBC's! five-vear forecast of | expenditures in 1966-70 should be chopped__by-_$33,500,000__to $769 500,000. © CBC should retain present share of TV and radio adver- tising markets—25 per cent | and four per cent, tively. _CBC should be given bor- rowing authority — maximum $200,000,000—for capital out- lays ing authority. Tespec- Spending on CBC's interna- tional. service should be _in-- creased Board of Broadcast Gover- nors has not asserted its full powers under Broadcasting Act. au CBC should not receive for next five years additional li- cences to establish alternative Ms services throughout Can- ada. The . private CTV network. apam from news and Telepoll. carries few programs-of any real value or substance. tween CTV. and _ its ~affiliated- vrivate stations should be ended, by compulsion if neces- sary. ‘ Private TV ‘stations are al- most exclusively congerned with their own and local inter- ests, the principal one being making a profit. Private TV_ stations have been “woefully deficient’ in development and use of Cana- dian talent. : a The ‘necessary’ private TV approved by broadcast- | “north -shore~beaches-during, “the: _WENDALL MacLeod, "Yor. Dudes thskhy ts mck. ést Hill, won the —Perfection—is—_plowed_‘ at field speed slower pace of regular com- Special plowing meteh at rather than at the much . petitive matches. Edwin Mills, Fortune Bay Takes Kings Plowing Title Sunday at the morning service. | , He is a native of Fast Royalty, > tetwork—shouldn't—be—allowed the son of Mr. and Mrs. Neil; to fall into the hands of the Darrach. Educated at Prince private stations which have a of Wales College, he is a grad-| ‘sorry record" of perform- uate. of Dalhousie University | ance. and Pine ‘Hill Divinity Hall, | Halifax. Serving in the Cana-| In 196? the 229 private radio dian Army 1942-46 Lt. Col. Dar-| stations spent a ‘‘disgraceful’’ rach served in Italy and North-| average of only $22.29 a day west Europe. He rejoined the) each on Canadian talent: seams ae al. Oetote re, The broadcasting authority Protestant Chaplain with the should establish annual 4th Canadian” Infantry Brigade! awards for TV and radio pro- Group in Germany, served in| ductions similar to the Gover- By NEIL MATHESON " Leslie Hunter suggested the at- Edwin — Mills, Bay . Fortune, |tendance might be an all-time yesterday won the Kings €oun- record for the match, though ty Plowing championship for Thursday attendances normally what must be the fifth time are lighter than on Wednesday. The runner up position was tak Bad weather curtailed the Wed- en -by William MacInnis, St (nesday attendance slightly this Peters, who won the provincial year, but Secretary Albert Acorn was the’job turned in by veter- | ‘old gang always did turn in an |furrow, Strathcona; ‘attractive piece of plowing when |Compton, title four, years ago. Mr. Mills, who has represent ed the Island four times in Ca- nadian competition and is eligi- ble again next year, had bes crown and best*finish. Mr. Mc- Innis had the straightest fur- row. Third place in the championship competition went to Ray Burke, Strathcona. Itwas on September 15, 1960, that Mr.. MacInnis first won the provincial crown for which he will compete next week at‘West Cape in_Prince County. Edwin Mills was second on that occa- sion and Stanley: Willis. Corn- wall, was third. The St. Peters farmer repre- sented the province in Canadian competition at Belleville, Ont., and also on the farm of Mac- donald -College, Ste. Anne de Bellevue, Que. rd ATTENDANCE. HIGH . : Match officials were smiling happily last night and President ° county | ‘said the Wednesday crowd was | about a ak, The entertainment this year | was really good and large num- | hbers of people stuck close to the ‘central stand where dancers and | | vocalists entertained. the crowd | throughout the afternoon. Plowing Judge Archie Mac- | |Millan, Truro, N:S., turned in | his usually effective job, and his placings were received in| the manner accorded a real craftsman. | | Mr. Mills got into a spot of | trouble in the early part of his | plowing task but the experience ihe has picked up in competition | through the last few years car- ried him through to eventual victory. Gloria Hunter, Strathcona who topped the class on Wednesday for “Queen of the Furrow” con- testants, yesterday won the class for Ladies end had the bestt crown, furrow and finish. | One of the most attractive bits ‘handled by a master plowman, “ plowing seen for some years Korea and Indo-China. | MacLeod, best furrow, Dundas; an plowman, Truelove Taylor, | 3. Robert Jackson, Fortune. Dundas, who topped the class; Class 9 Ladies — 1. Gloria for horse-drawn gang plows, The Hunter, best crown, me ry 5 a igor. Class _8)= White Rose Special and that’s what “happened at : Dundas Thursday forenoon with | To sg he ers : Mr. Taylor directing the ra-. , unching; 3. | tion. : re "eee aan Upton. : ‘ erfection Special — 1. Wen- a dour ak wie 3 an | dall MacLeod, St. Peters; 2. Ray saa nates ’ aotad with Burke, Dundas; 3. Vernon Yor- MacLeod, : ston, Launching. | = best Ta. aa won County Plowing Cham. | cicson, ’ ? pionship — 1. Edwin Mills, | a we dag had the best crown jSouris, best crown and finish; | and Mnisa. ,. |2.William MacInnis, St. Peters, | Wendall MacLeod, St. Peter's jbest furrow; 3. Ray Burke, Dun- turned in the best job in the |das. Perfection Special, a match in | which the general idea is to plow | APPEAL FOR CALM at normal field speed. | 50 ® Carolyn Campbell, Whim Road,|, LONDON (Reuters)—A crowned “Queen of the Furrow” fighting here pact has been: the previous day, presented the |Worked out by unions represent. | top award to Mr. Mills at the ing Indian and Pakistani work- | conclusion of the county title ae England’s industrial Mid- | . | . The unions are the power- | match Thursday. evening. , ful Indian” Workers Association PLOWING RESULTS jand Pakistani Workers Associa- Class 7. Single Fufrow Open— tion. They .arranged to print. 1. Truelove Taylor, best crown leaflets appealing to members’ and best finish, Upton; 2. John jfor calm | | | Tractor Novice 2 6r3'Furrow-.:. ; Nor-General’s awards for liter- ature. The: authority should stipu- late a minimum .number of hours per week between 6 and 11 p.m. for public service (in- formation and educatioh) - pro- ‘grams. The. 5§-per-cent - Canadian content regulation should be regarded as only a bare mini- ; mum. The broadcasting authority. should assess whtehes private broadcasters spend a fair pro- portion of income on “‘artistic ereation.” Parliament ‘should set - ex- plicit goals for broadcasting | and hold the broadcasting: au- thority. to annualaccount for achievement of these goals. Licences for broadcastirig | Should be granted to educa- tional institutions” or corpora- tions, even if wholly or partly own by provincial . govern- ments. The CBC. should receive -an annual statutory grant of $23 per TV household: such ee now number 4,582.- T | HALIFAX (CP) — The wea- | ther office says warmer air | from the southwest was ap- | proaching New Brunswick late Thursday night and this” will spread across the Maritimes to- day. The arrival of the warmer air | will be accompanied by in- | ereasing cloud. By nightfall, | skies are expected to be over- |cast in al three provinces. | Showers or intermittent rain will | Move across the district during | | the afternoon and evening, and a | few thundershowers are predic- | ted. Because of the cloudy skies, | | afternoon temperatures will be | much the same as on Thursday | “except in Oape Breton and Prince Edward. ‘Island, which | will be a little warmer. Regional- forecasts: Cape Breton, Prince Edward Island: Clear, clouding over in | the afternoon with showers—and a chance of thundershowers in p - { st 5 & H io - _ Other speakers will include |DANson Soe 49 65 City Recreation Director Jim - THE FARM of Mark Van- LeLacheur, research officer at | oe el MacDonale 29 | Vicloria eae 51 65 Fox stated that children plann-| neste, left and his father-in- the Experimental Farm. Doug (at the Power and Moyaert | ee eee ae eA ata a ee ene ee law, Leonard Vaerewyck, sec- Kilpatrick, left is the fieldmap ae Onn ED ’ * | Winnine@— 5 0s. fxs 54 ss | “es ‘s ie Crate Booth by +10 ond from left, at Grandview working with the tobacco gro | fargest attendance was at Heath Macquarrie will be|Toronto . ....+++.- 58 «67 o clock, forty ea "De base- was the first visited yesterday wers from the provincial de- |tne Powers farm where approx- ‘guest speaker at the annual ban- Ottawa . .....++++- 4 «72 , le League when a tobacco field day was partment of agriculture. Th@ | imately two dozen people show- | \quet Saturday at 7 p.m. Other|Montreal . —..+0+++. 4a- 3280 Babe Ruth shoals “be teve- held with the idea of promot- men are standing in a tobacco (4 yp to watch the harvesting ‘guests at the hanauet will in-|Quebec ... .....+- a-8 a - corona at Memo- ing interest among new grow- field where harvesting’ is near- and tieing operations, and. see clude John Mullally, Attorney-| Fredericton cae 67 al Field during the morning. ers. Second from left is Keith ly completed. the cured leaf jo the pack 'General M. A. etege Sema iSaint—John——s+re++--47 67 barns. ve aoa | cote This group included several | position lander i. eeded |Moncton . ~.-++- saa * WARNING . 5 The banquet wi prec | Halifax i 68 bankers from the Montague and [Sema + ott eeeeee 50 58 (Continued from page one) F Charlottetown areas, people who —* 5 Charlottetown fe ge are interested in the crop pro- | REPORT Sydney ©. «+++. ones: gg Audrey killed 500 persons in duction of which their banks are St. - John's . 6 Cameron, La., in 1957, they (Continued fr one) 59 helping to finance. ENTERS HOSPITAL ontinu ‘om page | Boston es x ‘know where to go and what to ’ , : The large pack batn at Mr.| Arthur A. A. McQuaid, City, power to suspend licences for New aa PCORAENSS 78 3 do with precision. 3 Moyaert's farm drew particular |has entered the Charlottetown| serious breaches of such un-: Miam ae Dag soi 73 85 Exposed areas ‘of St. Mary, interest. This structure was er- | Hospital for treatment. dertakings. New oe go | Vermilion and Cameron par ected several years ago after ee tiaiie 50 30 ishes in Louisiana and Sabine ngeles .....-- Pass on the upper Texas coast were being evacuated> Last October, an. estimated 100,000 refugees were forced to ‘take shelter from Hurricane | Hilda, Which took 37 -lives in | = Shlati— VeRA——BRANOON ‘WASTER ED KEITH: MILES: deWILDE-BRENNAN -WYNN TECHNICOLOR® Real | Louisiana~ and left property j;damage in the hundreds of mil- | ilions. of dollars.. \Louisiana’s; vast offshore off | jand’ gas operations stood ci \serted Thursday. All operations | | were stopped and 3,000 workmen sent ashore for safety. | The Louisiana National Guard | was placed on a standby alert. | The U.S. agriculture depart: | ment ‘announced it has stock- piled enough food in strategic | areas to feed 100,000 persons. | Medical dispensaries were being | set up in refugee centres. Extra supplies of anti-venom and = typhoid vaccine were Tushed to the threatened par- | jishes. In some areas, the threat ‘from snakebite is nearly as ‘great as from wind and water. Park Lifeguards ~ Make 5— George McGuigan, supervisor of lifeguards reporting on the work of the P-.E.I. Naational Park Lifeguard Service which closed its 1965 season on Tues- day, Sept. 8, announced that the’ service had been responsible for five major rescues at Warious summer. In addition a number of small- er mishaps had. been. handled and prevented some of which- might well have developed into more serious proportions. The service provided a staff -of 16 fully trained lifeguards di-, ‘vided among nine lifeguard sta- tions located at various ‘points along the National Park beach- es extending from Dalvay to Ca- | vendish. | Mr. McGuigan said in addi- tion to carrying out their normal duties in connection with the | | safety _of swimmers, members=! Suspended Sentence Handed Out SOURIS — Willard Kennedy \of Parkdale was given a two year suspended sentence when he was found guilty of an at- tempted theft of a sum of money exceeding $50 when appeared before Magistrate Jamés B. Johnston, QC, in the King’s County Court at Souris on Wed- nesday. Appearing for the crown were Constable D. R. MacLeod of the RCMP #n Souris, Mrs.-Heten MacAdam, Donald J. MacAd- am, and Deborah MacAdam all of Morell. The accused testified on his own behalf, and was-re- presented by Lester O'Donnell. Two people appeared on char- ges of illegal possession of li- quor, one was fined $20 and costs and the other was fined $25 and costs. ; ea ROLLAWAY LANES NOW OPEN FOR FALL BOWLING | | For Reservation Phone 4-7142 or 4-8634 Rescues of the service had been called ‘upon to administer first aid to some 360 persons. i They- also instructed close to 300 adults and children in swim- | ming and water safety. | The P-E.I. lifeguard service | started 16 years ago with only two: ‘members and: has shown: a} steady growth since its origina- tion. al | | “Mr. M¢Guigan pointed out that +there is ample- proof of the’ ef- +fectiveness of the service in that since its inauguration their has never been a drowning incident within the areas supervised by the service. : PATTERSONS for watch repairing fast service 113. Kent St. Ch'town HORROR PLUS DRAMA MIDNIGHT SHOW TONIGHT _ 20 cis puus & viowent worvers! Entertainment re | At Our Big Weekend — _ DOUBLE BILL TONIGHT - SAT. ONLY AT 8:00 SHOW “THEY TREATED BEAUTIFUL WOMEN AS IF THEY WERE FAST CARS, . DANCING Tonight Commodore Room THE ‘MARINERS - QUARTET Members and Guests Tourist Membership Available { MAIN BRACE CL ROOMS. LOW BACK PAIN Is it hard for you to sit down, even harder to gét-up from a-chair because of low -back pain? Does this pain make work difficult, keep you from turning over in \ bed? This nagging, wearisome pain keeps thousands in misery. But here is good news for ail such sufferers. Templeton's | TRC's give the desired relief, from such | suffering quickly, pleasantly. Equally good | | for jumbago, back-ache, sciatica, leg pains, arthritic, rheumatie and neuritic pain. Get T-R-C's for fast relief. 85c, $1.65 at drug counters eve Fer extre fest relief, use Templeton | | Cream while toking 1-8-C's internalty. $1.25 at drug counters - $ "s ° Liniment in the roll-on bottle externally e THE YOUNG R CEES MARK DAMON - WILLIAM CAMPBELL-LUANA ANDERS waves THE INTERNARONAL PLaVcines mee ROGER CORMAN - mew R. WRIGHT CAMPBELL: ane LES BAXTER ' Plus — a blood-curdling doozer SEE THE UNCONQUERABLES'! _ AMERICAN: INTERNATIONAL’S ry e