ISLAND NEWS PAGE Home,SchoolDiscusses Guidance Counsellors ALBERTON BUREAUllocal OF THE GUARDIAN ed. Paul Batchilder defined the Mr Boswell was introduced by functions of a guidance coun-. Perley McNeil] and thanked sellor as fourfold when he was 1 by Rev. Gerald Steele. opening a general discussion on REPORT CARDS "Guidance" at Alberton Home At the beginning of th and School meeting here. .meeting Principal McNeil] an- The four functions. he said. nounced that on Nov. 23 report are service to the individual cards would be given out for student. assistance to the class- grades 9 and 10 and on Nov. room teacher. assistance to the . 26 those for grades 11 and 12. supervisor and administratoriAt 8 pm. on these days par- and leadership in developinglents are invited come to a guidance program. lthe school to receive the report leadership." he conclud- question of how much autho- teachers any problems they rity a guidance counsellor . ma have. This. he felt. would should have. The general opin- f help to build up between par- ion seemed to be that theients and teachers a better ; counsellor should be able to:llnd€l‘$tanding and Closer 00- ‘1. ticular courses but that thel benefit to the stu ents. David Boswell spoke on A1. trade course may be started in 195. He sai it is one way of Mrs. Herman Corcoran pre. that it is a preventive meas- 2 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Fri. Nov. 13. 1964.: ‘in Discussion centred about the.cards and to discuss with the Insurance-Busi At the monthly luncheon meet- g of the Life Underwriters As- sociation of the province. held recently at the Tartan Restaur- ant. Summerside. R.T. thorne. vice-president Holmans Ltd. was the speaker and gave an address on the subject: “ h ' ance Industry and Management .Problems". . Mr. Henthorne outlined his {opinions of the needs of manage- lment for business protection and 1employee welfare benefits. He lwas mildly critical of many in- ;surance salesman in t'ieir fail- ure to adequately study the needs of business as it pertains "to insurance and suggested ways 3’ elof assisting business men ‘uncoverlng vital problems and Two $50 Fines Given Motorist Floyd Sheldon Tremere of Hunter River was fined and costs or 10 days in traffic court yesterday for driving while his licence was suspend- ed. and $50 and costs or 10 days for driving a vehicle in which the registration was sus- pended. George Everett Raynor Covchead was fined $10 and costs or five days for inef- ficient equipment. Two r- sons were fined 55 and costs for failure to stop at a stop sign. '3 (D $5 paramount importance to ness Relation Outlined To Underwriters l i l l l l l 1LT. HENTHORNE lpresenting logical solutions. The speaker felt that disability and retirement provisions were h t e 0 no employer and employee. Stewart Ives of Charlottetown introduced the speaker and Jack Walmsley of Summerside extended the thanks of the group for “one of the most enlighten- ing and thought provoking a - dresses ever heard by the Life nderwriters. President Ed McCabe of Char- lottetown was c'lairman of t e other Maritime Provinces. Sgt Cha . reed with speeding. Jog. Trenouth served in detach- eph Trainer. Charlottetown. meats all over the Island be- was fined and costs or 10 fore his retirement in 1960. days. and Wayne MacPherson. New Wiltshire. was fined 813 He has lived in Charlottetown for the past {our yum and costs or 10 days. I . , . 0f six persons charged with Suervmg are hls “'"e- Ethel' being drunk and incapable. two three son8. MODtY- Ala“ . were given ay suspended David. and 3 daughter' El‘za' sentences; two were each fin- beth. all of Charlottetown: and ed $20 and costs m. 20 days. two brothers- Murray' Que" and two were given 20 days in bee City. and Vance. North Bay, jaiL Ont. . 1 One person was fined $5 and The funeral will be held Frl-i‘ costs for failing to st0p at a day from the MacLean Funeral ‘1 stop Sign. Home at 12 o‘clock. With 00m" " " —‘ . . HOUSE CONSCIOUS m _ . mm“ “"1"” “mm” ce e I ROTORUA iCPl—An Amer- tery at 3 pm. [Mn nan visitor to New Zealand, harles Vernal Webb. 66. may C Nine Cases Heard gave troluble making his neigh- i ors beieve the story of the . time he was knocked over by In court a louse. The Salt Lake City. of char. Utah. man onto the loggtedjvsgdlvas fined $20 and hlghway ‘0 lake 3 thograph costs or days for being when a complete house on a drunk and disorderly when he "filer-"BMW" PBSSfll by. The. appeared before Magistrate A. Edge Of the house knocked him J. Haslam in city police court to the ground and he suffered yesterday. concussion and shock. Hearing Aid Wearers... Ilave E.V. Norton, Acousticon Service Expert CHECK AND CLEAN YOUR HEARING AID FREE! regardless of make! meeting. adVlse and recommend par- i operation which will result in . . d 3? final decision should rest withl He also announced that there p s the student and his parents. ls a DOSSlbilltY that 8 junior ‘t \ g lied Youth. a program which Alberton. If there are enough \ ‘1 is a component of alcohol stud- l young people interested. presenting the alcohol prob- sided over the meeting. Music y le youth and suggested l was provided by John O’Malley. - “*3 ‘~ ~ ure. SIGNIFICANT PART Mr. Boswell expressed opinion that the home plays 3 Here's Miss World 1964. picked last night from among tition in London, Her vital very significant part. insofar as: M Y R I o eShe is Ann Sidney. 20-vear- . ., a. 1.! . th statistics are: - - . the chllds perspective of the; a e .Md hair stylist former ‘Miss a list of five fina is s in 9 (AP wirephoto via cable from alCOhol problem is concerned. l ‘ _ I . Ann was annual world beauty compe- (London) -The ChurCh ’5 concerned with SEATTLE “Pl—An EngllSh- man who missed out on US. citizenship here “snooze you lose" United Kingdom. industrial First Aid Display To Highlight Safety Meeting. A. Summerside “A demonstration of industrial ' kinds of fires and effective pre-. ' flI‘St aid by the Si- JOlln'S Am- cautions. Members of the Cliar- Chairman for m? Re? CV05: bulance Corps and the local lonemwn detachment of meiblood‘ donor committee. or nex Red Cross will be a highlight RCMP will Show films and 180 . weeks two days of clinics in of the prorince's third annual mm, on sat-9w. SummerSide is George industrial safety conference at v 'G 3‘“! UET Smallman of the Junior Cham— the Charlottetown Hotel Nov. EVER“ “Q _ lbs of Commerce which is 23 I The conference Will conclude i again sponsoring this project for The conference is sponsored. with an evening banquel‘ Spec' l residents of the town and sur- ' the moral implications and the. community with law enforce“ ment. “but perhaps the schooll under a judicial edict l Blood Clinic can do the best job in present— 1 had the was! opened again . Is Planned in the facts. he said. igheninnrepem and we may "Allied Youth.” he continued. “is particularly interested ini alcohol "education and in rec-ibecome a sma _ “319 inter- refiégm-u tAdOICFCenlS : helnational incident before things no , ge out in the world}...ere finally smoothed out. early today and are faced With; Albert Smith 30 Boeing Com. the soc1al_ use of alcohol and‘ aerospaée 'ehgiheer and they are interested in learning lme central fi ure in the case the facts about it.” As he citedl , I t tgt t 1k B t that one in 10 who use alcohol l“asl are :1; and o ‘3,” Su dno become addicted to it he said. is"..vc.ls._ all: la" “Lid da" rah‘ “it is hardly fair to be hand- eve en ham 3 6 Mt ‘ calls from don understanding. The thing had threatened to : telephone ‘ V. , . on by the P.E.T. Workmen's Com- glggfakeszflmsgi“£18”:[rounding areas. Paging” Ame: $1213: :2 82:; ‘since the story hit the wires.» pensation Board. Board Sec- ' ger ' ,yU 9' l TUCSday ahd WMHESdBY- NW- outh t'o m t .t blt’ R". d ‘5'“. said. retary Br Campbe” Said “lent 0f 5" Bunyan" m‘er'll7 and 18 Will be “Blood Donor 3", m . lee 1' t." I? r “But “0 matter what. we the day‘s schedule will include. 5m" . . lDab'S" {01' WSldentS or summer‘ iwlwouldn'l sav anvthinc nastv talks by specialists in the field} Mr. 98mph?” said ihal ‘9“??? l side and vicinity with afternoonl about America‘ we “Bend {0 or industrial safety. p a n el . are some out to all “land bus" land evening clinics to be held at l Technical lmake our home here. wt1 are ' . . nesses. inviting them to send”.e Canadian Legmh f discussions. safety film demon-i ' representatives to the confer-building [mm 24 and from 7_9 stratinns and exhibits of safetyI "ET."- Vel‘y Pl'Olld arid happy to be here. America has been good to us." i Visit Gov’t l equipment. kb k f ence. d M each day. Professor Roy Broo an o i "We would urge." sai r. The objective set on the same. c - the public relations institutei Campbeh‘ “that all firms inter.‘ basis as an the clinics held m2 OffICIals Here IN US. SINCF 1959 i | Smith. who has been in the Representatives of organizations that offer tech-‘Boeint! employee nearly four nical assistance industry 5'881‘5. was among 91 Persons 0? Dali‘OllSi“ uniVE‘VSlt-V “'i” l ested in industrial safety send ’ the province is 120 at the after. the “wow address at l their key me" l" 011" miller": noon. and 110 at the evening ses- ' a'm' ; sions. or a total of 540 donors 'n t“ .' v ‘. Represents lVPS of Nova Sco-h the two (law to en . "The conferences have been tia Light and Power Company: hiflhlv successful in the pa“ and. A . . were the rovince vester. who came before US District . . I t- . - - Red Cross officials in Char-i . P. - ‘ . . ' “ d t Imanageum ‘0 g“ “@3th ‘0 that the provmce has achieved: Tim '\, . P] .1. B “k ‘ T] l .n: “3‘23 ‘9“_cerem9ny' us ry. solve acmdent hazard problemsi i y \cle ll ip . :1 en. le Ju ge was glvmg a little d d m .t d only 97 per cent of its overall ob- of an re uce e seven y 8 h . jective at the four series of clin- l - A we encv of accidents}. . . . V risearch and Productivuy Coun-i r the Nova Scotia department of L” 5:32:11??? (a: ll“; 3’3“ T‘“ icrl: E. P. Irwm. regional of- labor, headed by department 5 ._ next week: chili; igojsjcicagg tficer of the Economic Council of . ' . l . lCanada. and D. R. D ' safety director George Smyth ‘at least 103 per cent m order to “he regionaI nationafli“ son of Officials of the Charlottetowni 1 A rah-e Department will discuss! MONTREAL (CP,__AgricuLI(agfleyleagfiiesgitogidtégrgig] trig; study school lll Halifax. tutal department dilatation-lL l"Centennial Year". ? E8832 thflesale Pnces 'ol According to the Summchldel i country stations fibre cases. Chairman' George smahmaml lextra-lafge -37i lame ~331_me‘ ‘ keen interest is being displayed ‘ mm .28: small .21; B .23: C l by the many and van-ed groupsi I Wooden cases one Fem ; involved in competition. for tro- l l panelists on safety will ml the runswick reatalk on its importance and sig- clude three representatives ofi Step-Dancing, j A Carson, Bell Lead Bridge ' l l Fiddling Held ‘ l... r. Standings l licate bridge playat the Char- I waxed current receipts. whole- lottetown Hotel this week. 1701- f saie Quebec wth 33; colored lowing are the standings. . 38w ‘ TRAVEL PREDICTION ‘ LONDON iAPl~—Christopher North _ South - . . . Cockerell. inventor of the hover- Farmercreen Sk'm Mm‘ PPWdH- Syraywraft, predicts that such ve- roombs . Coffin 69‘ Process N0. 1 In bass 13'1‘5’ihicles may eventually connect wenner _ Dunbar 66 . roller process No. l in bags “mes at speeds up to 300 mph. 6,i 14-h: feed 13-1312: butter milk Inc has asked the Bride} Rail- g lsiretch of idle inew ty dling and step-dancing compe- tition at Kinkora Regional High School. sponsored by the Kinkora Alumni Association. Chairman for the event was Pope McMahon of Sherwood. rogram included four vocal selections by a Kinkora Conolly « Toombs . . GzlPOWdEl‘ feed 10‘2-11 we 5 to allow him to use a group. accompanied by Winni- Larabee - Bell a , East _ west H Potatoes: Wholesale sellln track to test a Carson _ Be“ 73 . prices, Que. new 505 1.15-1.25, p9 hOVercraft that fred McKenna and Richard John~ Cutcliffe . Cutcliffe so; 755 1.65-1.70; N.B. new 505 1.30 1Iwould travel about to to 15 feet “on: three songs by Winston Killorn - Hamny 62 3 1-35: NB. 105 new 33-34: P.E.I. “above a concrete pavement. “weds “I‘d RlChard JOhnsmn- Campbell - Stewart 60 | 755 2.20-2.25: P.E.I. 50s 1.45-1.60 1The hovercraft moves on a accompamed by J°Seph CNN“ f at the piano; tap dancing by Tndv Clow and Paul Smith: a vocal duet by Shirley Barry and Doreen Sherry and songs by Richard Johnston. Following were prize winners: boys and girls years and under first. Paul Smith: second. Cheryl Doyle; third. Charlene Peters. - sh 57 P.E.I. 10s .26-.39. “cushion of air. \ Walsh - Wal [ / Ladies 16 years and under— Kelly; second. 0 n a . ult; third. Carol Arsen-; ' Mary Arsena ault. Boys and girls 12 to IS years—' first. Judy MacKinnon; second. ‘ Clow; third. Anne Marie Long-wearing Ii. ‘. nau . Men's stepdancing—first. Peter Gaudet; second. en Perry. third. Frank Ross. Fiddlimz contest—first. Earl Hughes: second. Russel Warren; ; third. Toussaint Arsenaull. Judges were Ivan Day. Claude '. Barrett and Desmond Gaudet. ~ BIIRIIS CLEANER NO SMOKE, I0 00“. . Heavy duck work . Assorted lines for extra warmth i' ‘ O "HAHN. Gib Mow IT’S MUSICAL RIFLES The barrels of their standard been with Phone 4-73" 24th year of the British Fleet 37.88 PARKAS ( HEAVY DUTY) . Heavy duck ln olive chides, some heavy duty nylon and lined wlth heavy wool llnllg m. Judge lncensed By Snooze n Citizenship lnificance when he ldetected Smith dozl “Strike the name of that man jfrom the list." he ordered. and 1denied Smith his citizenship. Smith protested afterward he .hadn't been asleep at all but was listening with eye down- t'iought he ng. s . Mrs. Smith. present with hair ltwo little girls. Odette. 3. and Giselle. 2. stoutly affirmed her .husband had been sitting at the 3front almost under the judge's ibench “listeninc attentively in a relaxed position." STUDYING DESK “I su pose he was sort studying the ed ‘she said. The small United States flags the little girls had planned to wave for their daddy remained unfurl d. But a way was found to work things out. I Smith wrote the judge a ter of let- the immigration director. John P. Boyd. Boyd then drafted a motion for a re-hearing on Smith‘s petition for citizenship. and Smith said he'd sign it. It con- tained an apology “by the peti- h he i g ' I. I l' ‘ ” phies which have been provrd- ' '2' l Butter: C_urrent receipts non . ed during the past few years byl . . l lgilldeggwe 3:3 93 Sent” dlm‘lglr' ‘different Summerside husinessi ’ - I g f 9 Mi « 50W? 9" PM 8 con ce rn s and private indi-. - ca’m‘Beni “13”” East 3"“ ‘ "2" . “iduals- ‘Kilrlilgil dlacJemlAlIinnrlIear?‘ i West. were high scorers in dup- Cheese: Deliverd ilontrcal —-—~«——m-_~—~ i.“ stepdancing at 312 recent M“ I i . t. ' l‘l ' ii‘l ' :7 y is '3." l" t K / .‘ '1‘ ' My“ ‘ .. The word is PROGRESS at Hooley's Men’s ‘Wear the most spacious and finest men’s wear firm in P. E. Island. Along With our usually fine service Hooloy’s offer you a new credit to serve you during this sale and an expert tailor for on sns Fine Wool Blend Flannel - Crease Resistant "mum . Warm qullted 'ml, . Zipper front a m M m. h." " Dinah” They Air Arm at Lee On 3018!“- I Q. M ’1” m. ,ml‘mnu .t headmaster Albert Hall con- » .h v .5 mm mm 50 a“... m fl. Petroleum Products 3w. years of naval flying and cable from London). of. go of the desk." . Concealed hood . Assorted shades and sizes 'tioncr for his demeanor and conduct in the ceremony.’ The judge set Nov. 30 to hear the motion. Boyd said he was sure Smith would get his citi- zenship then. . Mrs. Smith who met and jmarried her husband in Toronto ‘in 1959 after he came to an- iada following his graduation lfrom the London Institute of » IMechanical Engineering. said lshe‘ll be next. ‘ "I want very much to become .a citizen. too." she sai . and Giselle are al- ready U.S. citizens because they :were born here. i Retired RCMP l l O I {Officer Dies l l A retired RCMP officer. Sgt. Truman Dudley Trenouth. 57. died Wednesday at the P.E.I. Hospital. A native of Northern Ontario. Sgt. Trenouth joined the RCMP in oron o in 1932. Following training in Regina. he was posted to Port Arthur. and then to the Maritimes. ii In addition to postings in the ‘n roe {United States since 1959 and a.judge conferred with the districtl ‘q KW ' Nil A 'iw't' ‘lfr ‘ff'ifl l l l l l . l 'T .It's a fact—an expert check-up and cleaning may improve the performance of your hearing aid as much as 25%! Mr. E. V. Norton, Service Manager of Acous- ticon Dictograph of Canada. Ltd.. will personally inspect your hearing aid renni- loss of make or model absolutely free of chum. He will check it carefully for full performance with the very latest scientific equipment. and clean it thoroughly. his servicing is done with a minimUm of delay— if necessary, repairs can often be made while you wait! Even if your hearing aid seems to be in good condition, bring it in to our Free ' Service Clinic — you may be surprised at the Improvement a skillful cleanlng can make in its performance! Our Free Clinic is an exclusive Acousticon service. designed to give you the best possible results from your hearing aid. Mr. Norton will be at our office for a limited time only. so act now. and visit the Free Service Clinic today. W FREE HEARING iiin smwc: CLINIC IOIE: Ibis offer good only during the dates shown below. ACT NW1 SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 14th I — 6 Pom. i CHARLOTTET OWN HOTEL Telephone 894-7371 a the spot man or yout 0 Only black and sizes S.M.L. llnlng ltd draw string 9ner . w Plan. use mall, layuvmy. charge or budget. Extra staff terations. 1 .99 - SKI. JACKETS . Taper and regular ston . Regular to 813.05 HOOlEY'S MEN'S WEAR Chem“ up. Regular to as high as $6.95 ' Assorted shades. patterns and 8 8 ‘~ x . Til-fizdchth. wash and wars. 3 ' and assorted materials 0 Some flannel for extra warmth ' oasss SHIRTS . Dress shirts. white only 9 8 K Sanforlletl cloth . Well mad; and styled z I 1" sizes from 14% to 17% Reg. price 3.!!- ‘ ‘ MEN’ .4”: DRESS PANTS s w E A T E R s "‘7 . Assorted shades, style and p Q Crease resistant 2:; I ' 4 1’ 0 Assorted shades and llaes . m n.” “a”... 1: 0 Regular prlee was up to I"! . Excellent value clearlu It i, . ..