i’ llStAND NEWS PAGEKTZESES ' ' t Average weekly wages and i Kings, queens and lsalaries paid in Prince Edward . ’Island i Oct ber rose sli htl ‘ The Guardian, Charlottetown, Mon. Jan. 7. 1963. n 0 g y 5.from the preceding month. ac- <cording to an advance report ' on employment and payrolls. I ‘ published by the Dominion Bur- I P.E.I. also rose slightly in the month to 159.6. compared Mrs. Percy Lister. provincial! About 80 people have signed! 108‘s handicrafts director, will attend ‘ for handicraft courses and Mrs. ' provincial secretary Wendall i members of the local resources} MacKay. He will try to deter-.development group and the pu- mine what interest there is in l blic is welcome to attend. setting up a mathematics course .- L ‘ m:9§*¢4-~M M: . .swas‘ as... .. The average weekly wage and l ing 100. Rustico resources development. strate handicraft making at the. .. . .. I Nephew Dies ’ ‘ ~ ‘ salary on the Island was $33.49 in cto . This compares with $54.73 in September and with group to set up handicraft cour- ‘ meeting. will line up courses for L ses in the area. , various groups. The meeting will be held atl A film on arts and crafts will I Onto rio Word was received this week ,by Thomas Brazcl. Johnston‘s * can of Statistics. $56.30 in October. 1961. tonight's meetiing of thelLister. who plans to demon—‘ on 1949 employment equau‘ " " 8 pm. in Stella Maris Hall.‘ l‘be shown iRiver. of the sudden death of The index of employment in Also attending will be deputy The meeting is not confined to 4 The recently elected execu- tive of No. 8 branch. Royal Canadian Legion. Montague. is pictured above. left to right. seated. Basil MacKin- uon. first vice-presidenp; Dan Munn. president: Athol Rob- ertson. past president; stand- ing: Albert Elsworth. second vice-president; Humon Mar- NEW MONTAGUE LEGION EXECUTIVE EECTEED tin. secretary; Leslie Stuart. assistant secretary. The Man- tague branch has a member- ship of more than 150 memp hers. and has always been an active supporter of youth of the area. especially in the field of s . year it has transported teams to field day-s. purchased uni- In no forms for the little leaguers. supported ' (1 present 5': 3% supply space The branch has an Brownies. active ladies auxiliary. Court Fines a former teacher. will instruct applicants one night a week at the regional high school in Rus- ' o. L? e iHave Trouble Driver $150 A fine of $150 and costs P.W. MacDonald, Provincial government offices a re more widely distributed around Charlottetown than at any time in histo . The situation will continue un- three separate buildings. The $8301 Iliuildihf is. beifng mentof agriculture are in the {23‘ gfltgfignzequent delay and Northern Rhodesia. reported 2%???an hours on Cape Breton Island dzedtcouples ittgngng. Twp or- CLASSES {timovec todcreir eMSite 2011' prnvmcla] Bulldm-g Annex_ “secondl e cy‘i uh . th UN Swedish jets flew over the Tshombek government ap_ have uncovereld the]; fouhidziftion c ras Isiuppieth ethII’IUSlC. th NEW SERIES BEGINS Bifd. one era ion emorla which also contains the tra- most im gin?“ ‘Sthls bre Northern Rhodesian border. aP- Dealed again to the Internal. Of a bu‘ldmg Ode” an t e on" S w wtfaf erth '5 m0“ t l“ "‘3- vol bureau. Other agriculture of- p elm e P.“ ‘0 parenuy on a reconnaissance “ma! R d C t h 1 . . SS. _‘ as een goo or e spo r TUESDAY, JANUARY 8, 1963 14 BUILDINGS {ices are in the old customs huih are put to great inconvenience ms!“ The dispatch sai 0f th V: 1355’" :plvlcglms The northern affans depart- crazed world and the big new At As it stands now, government ding on Great George St. Th” and suffer much frustration Katangan Interior Minister 8 cogmfgi‘que ‘i‘siiedecai’lgra‘z': ment. working on a $12.000.000 rink here is running full speed affairs appear to be conducted building also contains the de_ from the seeming runaroun ~ program to partially restore the ahead. much earlier than was Y from at least 14 buildings in the -citv. West Kent School now con- tains the ighways, public works and education depart- ments. Treasury moved recent- ly from the Cabot Building to tiie New-Wa Building on Great George Street. The former Queen LOCAL BRIEFS RECEIVES NEWS Alex J. Young. 82 Walthen received the sad news her. John D. of the passing of his rion. Jan. 4. at their home in Fort Lauderdale. Fla. IN O’LEARY Wendell Ferguson. Hampton. spent hi holidays with his bro- ther Douglas and Mrs. Ferguson in O‘Leary. AT SOUTH MELVILLE LAC Winston Provencher ar- rived on the Island Saturday from Chicboug-aniou. Que.. o spent two weeks holidays with his parents, Mr. and s. om- er Provencher. South Melville. ENTERING ORDER Gerald E. MacDonald, left here Saturday by air for Graymoor. . ., Where he is entering the Religous Order of the Franciscan Friars of the Atonement. Mr. MacDonald is the son of Mr. and Mrs. George J. MaCDonad. 93 lfillsboro Street. CROCKE‘I'T FUNEB L —-'l'he funeral for Samuel B. Crockett was held Sunday afternon from Trinity United C h u r c h. Where service was conducted by Rev. John Ball and Captain R. det and members Council. City Comptroller John Butler and employees of the City of Charlottetown. also rep- -~Gov’t Offices Widely dustry and natural resources, as well as the provincial motor ve- hicle branc . The department of health Main offices of the depart- partment of welfare and labor. The premier's office and those of provincial secretary. munici- pal affairs. tourist development and attorney-general are in the Provincial Building. Divisions of education. such as school supply and visual educa- tion, are located in the provin- cial vocational school on Graf- ton Street. The research division of the department of industry and natural resources has quarters in the S. A. MacDonald Build- ing on Queen Street. Industry also uses space for four persons at City Hall. The Workmen’s Compensation Board is located in the Heartz Building on Great George Street. Also having offices in the Do- minion Building is the Public Utilities Commssion. DISADVANTAGES SEEN The disadvantages of the scat- tering of offices were outlined at the last session of the Legisla- ture by a committee appointed by Premier Walter R. Shaw to study the need for a central of- fice building. Effects arising from the scat. tering. according to committee chairman on. J. David Stew- art. or were “departments. Kilmuir, Dies MONTAGUE — The death oc- curred at the Kings County Memorial Hospital, Saturday. . 5. of Peter W. MacDonald of Kilmuir. aged 93. The late Mr. MacDonald was L4 or = Valleyfield East: one niece. Mrs. Ruth Kerjac. Rhode Island; two nephews. Angus MacLeod a nd John MacLeod in BC. Four or 40 days was imposed on .Io n A. Lund, 26 Chestnut Street. by Magistrate A.J. Haslam in city police court Saturday. The accused pleaded not guil- ty to drunken driving but guilty to the lesser charge of driving while impaired. Three accused were fined $20 and costs or 10 days for being drunk and incapable. Pleading TSHOMBE (Continued from page I) Katangan f are e 5 Saturday tact with the policy making peo- they have to go through to visit more than one department while in the city. The public are en- titled to better service than they are getting in this matter. and it is time the necessary steps were taken to improve the situa- ion." CORPORATION SET UP The government went on to set up the Crown Building Cor- poration to handle construction details of the new building. Architects who designed the Confederation Memorial Build- ing were engaged to design the government office building. Construction of the new cent— ral office building. which will cost several million dollars. will begin in the spring. A dispatch from Kitwe, Godefroid Munongo was re- ported to be organizing a task force of armored vehicles and infantry in that area for march on Elisabethville. Actually. a newspaper man found Munongo in Mokambo. seated in his bar drinking beer. There were about 500 disorgan- ized Katanga troops there. also drinking beer. A UN source in New York denied a published variation which'said Munongo "is leading in bethville.’ This informant said the Ka- tangans were camped on a road between the border town 0 Sakania and Elisabethville to prevent refugees from returning to the capital. The UN has been urging the refugees to return. LIVE OVER WATER. Some old people living in Kampong Ayer—the "water vil- lage"—of Brunei. are believed never to have set foot on land. The village is on stilts over wa- Sakania is 25 miles southeast of Mokambo. Associated Press correspond- ent Adrian P orter reported from Kolwezi that a train loaded with arms and ammuni- tion and hauling four tank cars of gasoline had arrived in Kol- SI EASTERN, BRIEFS hilarious story 0N BUSINESS Nell Hooley has returned from a business trip to Mont- real. FROM MONCTON d * 'k * * ** * * 'A' * in the suburbs was never 'so shockingly funny as It is In this a love-expert who become a statistic in his own research! TODAY - TUESDAY - Are‘ you Ifis sing More NOW And Enjoying SHOWS 3:30 - 'I - I wezi from Angola on Africa’s West coast. Porter quoted a Katangan cabinet source as saying Portu- guese administrators in Angola are giving “every assistance" to Tshombe inued defence against the United Nat- ions. The minister said the Portu- guese had given Tshombe a supply route from Lobiti. supplies for Katanga have been unloaded there during the last few weeks. Porter reported. ' guese foreign ministry called the reports nonsense. A I t h o u g h the Portuguese press has supported Tshombe in say that these reports are pure zaville, capital of the formerly French Congo republic. that UN trooops were terrorizing ci- vilians. There have been more than 300 cow r assassinations" in the vicinity of Elisabethville, the communique charged. Secretary-General U Thant has made clear through a New York spokesman that he now— wants action. not words. from Tshombe toward making effec- a march of 1.000 men on Elisa- 1. live Thant‘s plan for reunifica- on. Time is running out. Thant on New Year‘s Day set a two-week deadline for realization of the unity plan. which involves Ka- I tanga’s political reunion with The Congo. merger of the Katangan and Congolese armed forces. revenues of the copper - rich province with Premier Cyrille Adoula's central government in Leopoldville. -TIP_ Made to and splitting of the‘ :E ‘ for local people under the adulti . grazcilf'l’élfrgleayflgilt“ le’ ' . education program. If there is 2 V v v ‘ - n 11f} ‘3'» sufficient interest. Mr. MacKay.| Th? late MR 3"3231 “’35 born in Charlottetown Royalty and moved to Ontario with his par- ents and family in early life. He mployed in the mainten- wa l FORT WILLIAM ‘Cl’i—The l ance shops division of the CPR isecond Trans-Canada Air Linesl since 1929. lVISCOUIlt to develop trouble with l He is survived by one bro- ‘its undercarriage In two days i ther and six sisters. A brother. -at the Lakehead International Airport Sunday The aircraft. landing gear failed to . . a“ .it circled for one hour—20 miles ; ANEOlan DOI‘lv and that Mllltal‘y lwest of the airport to reduce its Alice ‘fuel load before landing. i After making a safe landing .locked in a retracted position. ‘None of its 28 passengers or Icrew of four were injured. made a safe emergency landing l I Flight 50. des- ! itined for Sault Ste. Marie and” lToronto, took off at 10 am. with l 46 passengers and a crew oft four. When the aircraft's tmaitnt Christmas to spend a week with re rac . . ‘Vincent. of Mermaid. P.E.I.. l predeceased him in 1955. BRISTOL Clarence O‘Brien arriv- ed from Boston the day after Mrs. . her aged father James Whalen. Mrs. O’Brien. the former Whalen. left here half a ury ago to reside in Bos- “ ce t :ton. visiting her home at fre-i news of the sudden passing of Rev. Phalen McKenna. P.P. of 242-year-old fortress of Louis. historic fortress. said day the building could have been erected around 17 —— seven years before Drench engineers began work on the fortress. Workmen are digging further into the ancient foundation in the hope of finding out a i- tional information about its his- tory. . CHANGE IN CURLING Curling was played in Canada in the latter half of the 18th cen- tury by General Wolfe‘s soldiers who melted down cannonballs to make their stones. Alberton. a widely known par- ish priest. This scribe, who was success with about two hun- anticipated. The severe weather made it possible to get a sheet of ice early and it's a wonder- land for the younger folk. Mrs eorge Hume. a former ipost- mistress here. who 19 ft Bristol forty-five years ago to ‘reside in Muskegon. Mich.. has [kept in touch with her old ;friends by the Christmas greet- ing card. STONE CARVINGS T BE ' Provincial ficials have i wo stone carvings. which now adorn the Cabot Build- government of- ing on which demolition work indicated t h a t is expected to start within a few days. will be salvaged. At named three judges Sunday to investigate New York's paper blackout. They termed it an “intolerable situation." top is the coat-of-arms. and the lower photo shows th e '1 t ' ' 'th 0 than I lthe aircraft underwent repairs" t - t I. " I the son of Donald and Christina $32.3..3rtfgg'fig‘mags... n, In Lisbon. a Portuguese gov— land resumed its flight 31". hours i quflss‘fimjsmmh a school [Str'ke PrObe head of John Cabot. It is in- R°Ss Ma°D°mfld 0f valleylield the front seat of an automobile. eminent s O" we categorlcan'y Ebehlnd SChedUIe- |teacher in Western canada and I d dersmod that both 0f the 5° west The-‘7 HM in Heatherdale another accused was fine gamed. reports. that Portugal saturday “will” TCA V.i5' at present teaching in Saskat- 3 anne “Wings .Wi“ “de be incor‘ many years before movmg to $10 and costs or five days to ‘5 mmg m'l‘my “113 ‘0 “Imit- a‘SP Fl‘gll‘ 50 WW" chewan. arrived home for the NEW YORK (AP) —- Labor Wrated m the. S."“°‘"r° °‘ “ u - complete the docket. TShombe‘ ong'm‘tes m wmml’9g‘ made.a holiday season. SBCYElal'y W- Willard Wirtz the new provmc‘al govern' By DON MacLEOD Square School contains the de- He leaves to mourn his Wife CALLED NONSENSE 52,1“? emergency, 1“de at W‘“' This vicinity was shocked and Governor Nelson Rockefeller ment Wilding “ham”? for Guardian-Patriot Staff Writer partments of fisheries and of in- "19 former Minnie Campbell of A Spnkesman 0‘ the Porlu' “‘PC’E’ after "5 nose Wheel saddened last week with the and Mayor Robert 01"] we“ Kent SCh°°l Site- wagner (Photos by Craswell) r-----—--fi IIEWS- neadquarters is 133 prince brothers and three sisters pre- w r re orted to have blown u “'5 Struggle for the Secessmn 0‘ ' invited to s end the Festive sea- Conectlve bargaining a nd ' til construction of the new gov- Street. This department also deceased hm'_ tvfoebridlges leading to Kolwezi? Katanga from the “St 0‘ The son with Fapther McKenna at his medial-l0" have failed to halt. for o | ernment office building on the has space in the Dominion Buil- Funeral 95m“ 9“ mm“ at UN sources in New York said Congov the POFtusuese _g°Ve"“ residence. attended his funeral the fill/'5 costliest newspaper I west Kent School block. mg. a clinic on Fitzroy Street. 2 p,m_ from immun- Unnted Saturday the column intends to ment never has hinted it would D0 d instead as an honorary palh strike. now in its fifth week. lI | Most recent increase in the and the Hospital Services Com- Churc’h' “Imam in valleyfield garrison Kolwezi and will fight. gwe the Katanga“ preS‘dent bearer. Talks br°ke 0“ three days ago 113 Kelli 5‘- Dial “5732 dispersion of departments has mission is located on lower cemetery if necessary, to establish itself concrete hen" . n The first big ball In the new and have “0i been ’eSCthUIEd- '- ._ _ — — - — Lg! occurred with offices housed in Queen Street. there. .Th? spokesman Sam: A“ OTTAWA tCPi —-- Archaeoloi high SChOOl 0" New Year's EVE the Cabnt Building moving in", DEPT. OF AGRICULTURE parts of departments. lack con- REPORT TASK FORCE ""5 ‘5 absnlulely “"true' I can gists searching the ruins of the for Couples only; was a huge Christian Education Centre O’Lea Mothers Classes 2:00 PM. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 9. 1963 At PUBLIC HEALTH CENTRE, SUMMERSIDE Mothers Classes 2:00 P.M. Parents Classes 7:00 P.M. Department of Health AAA-“ f“ ' ' FAMOUS FOR' 0 BRANDED INSPECTED I D :STEAKS 1 E c 2 [‘1 -< AAAAAAA vv' BACK 1 TOP Mt ( . Measure SUITS ANNUAL SALE 20%0Rorr The ‘00 IT llflW’ Season is here again 0 The season for improvement jobs around your home. plant or business. 0 The season when skilled workers are more readily available and, being more productive, give you better value for your dollar. 0 The season when many firms offer discounts. mm o ' _ resentatlves of the Charlotte- 3": “we” 5 The season when many other things can be done to advantage such town police force and ChHflOlle' e S things as maintenance of lawn and garden equipment, electrical ap- town fire department were in - IN NEW HOME . . . _ _ attendance. Pallbearers “’9” Mr. and Mrs. Roy Gilli: have ' pliances. outboard motors and automobiles, as well as dry cleaning of Maurice Griffin. Ira Brown- taken up msidence in their new George Puncher. 0.S. Harper. Percy G. Acorn and Wilfred Livingstone. Interment took place in the Peoples' cemetery with lavlce be conducted by Rev. Mr. Ball. MACLEAN FUNERAL —- The home on Queens Road. Mon- targue. SUNDAY GUESTS guests. FR XTRA EE PANTS drapes and rugs and replacement of upholstery, to mention but a few. 0 The season when you can help your community to create employment during the traditional winter lull. When everybody works. everybody nerd Thomas M Inn ish, Mn. Mullah and ‘ benefits. tea Var-no}: Riv?! Un- of Glnrlottetown. Ch ' Regular Value 75.00 _ I _ m at the Church and grave LEAVES FOB SCHOOL was c by . T. Peg” Machod. Mono . 1‘ V I I I r W”, W. Dr A. tague. WV” today th- (s , 8.Weh-Aduet"’l'heOldR-sor.l;J.S.loressu:;dha'M , . . 9 Cross" raidered Mal- . 53a "‘ wt“ EM Bob HopevLana'liJRneRy In tom M-G-M tn ClnemeScope and MetroCOLOR TIP TOP TAILORS For advice and assistance get In touch with your local National Employment olllcc mm cur-ms " NexttollendersontCudmoro) ' dbAthi “1 M.“ 'st M” II ad Mn ' men- all”:th 3:33: and Grafton Street Charlottetown ssue y u ortyo on' 'c a. 1"" "st" M “mm'ca'lad‘. Wtookflmhthc Peggy Jo,wm8uuflvat-¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ 4 ¥ ¥ ¥ can my. on to W I I Pattersons -.