“> Officers Named | By School Body | sident of the feciag tock fiame 4-H Delegate and School Association presided Council Approves Poo! As Centennial Project icatma er ™ From Lot 16 SUMMERSIDE — A resolu-;winter works, government | imtroduced to the parents by the Forbes, Lot -16, will re- Mrs. Webber were tion that a swimming pool be|grants and other approved| Principal, Mrs. M. Dover. —| a aoe Edward Island at dinner. Dr Weote eaie = the 1967 Centennial project in!forms of financing such centen-|_ A. report on the provincial | present F ; Newfoundland and showed slides the town of Summerside was gi-| nial projects; that the club agree |Bome and school meeting was this year’s national +H congress | wortraying the life and land pt ven unanimous approval at ajto provide an administrative | #ve0 by Mrs. Grace MacKin-|in Chicago, Nov. 2 to Dec. 2. | Newfoundland. special Town Council meeting | body for this project and that it | 09 She commented on the im-| 4 total of 140 senior members| _ here last evening. agree to take care of the main-|POrtance of communication be- from the 10 provinces, eight 4-H Both the federal and provin- tenance of the pool for one year | Simning at-an early age and its| members from the United cial governments are most de-| after completion. | Fole in the development and pro-| states, and for the first time, a girous that all cities, towns and| Coun. Perry told the council om of a child. delegation of two girls and one in Canada enter into the|that she had met with the Kins-| Correspondence was read by/woman leader from the North-| youu) WARTS snc te = of 1967 Centennial celebra-|men earlier this week and that | the secretary, Mrs. Nelson Hen-| west Territories, will travel to| growth on hands. face. fcc. uneue by instituting permanent |the club was very interested TY, including a letter of thanks Ottawa Nov. 11 for the opening a balatroers a ane ae projects within respective areas. | and “anxious to get going’. She |from Mrs. H.W. Pletch for dona: | of the 34 Canadian 4-H Club con- Net em said. An herbi! one A centennial committee under /added that the club has already tion to the library. \ference which concludes Nov, 17 | lew to healthy skim gy ay grus,icts, the chairmanship of Coun. Fran- | selected committees to deal with The following officers were in-|in Toronto. 4 ces Perry was named some time |the various aspects of the pro- ago to select a project and the |ject and they wer just waiting | Wee npsident Mrs, Netw fen COVENdish Men ry, etary; a . Willam Attend Banquet treasurer. On Tuesday evening the Unit- ed Church Men’s Club of the Ca- |vendish Pastoral Charge held jtbeir opening banquet. About 63 members and thetr wives attended the banquet. Rev. Dr. CR. Webber Nearing, and choice was made following the for its approval. ee — mena TT ee tion of a brief to the | CIVIIC MINDED | e ~ i Ea committee by the local Kinsmen | Coun. Morrison who is also a | 7 Club recommending a swimming | member of the centennial com- : pool in the vocational high school. Approval of the project was made on the provision that the mittee, termed the Kinsmen a “very civic minded group of |. people who make a very good job of whatever they under- PROGRESSIVE CONSERVATIVE POLICIES Kinsmen Club can meet the fol- | take”. lowing conditions — that it can| Coun. Hubert Schurman call make all necessary legal ar-| ed this ‘a wonderful project” and noted that in the past two or three years town children who ; wanted to swim during the win- Charlotte rangements required with re spect. to the location; that it agrees to raise the balance of money required after applying | ter had to travel to . town to do so. 2 SIGN NOMINATION PAPERS Mayor George Key Jr. said “I FOR ~ : a very ee ° sive community”, adding t Hon. Angus MacLean and a ie Sak Oa end tee a : = ere ee S an CWS a e there hasbeen a need in the Heath Macquarrie were nomi- = in Q C Ragroicates reaten (Macquarrie left) town a civic-minded group has nated to represent the Progres- the new redistribution act is are shown here with A. Wal come forward to fill this need- ce Conmvetire rae BGs seep eeeen ceemr Ss Sacre oon. | . Woeaterer We cmmmeme prstticts | tue Hemme re om * ot : —? — % aaien, *Thi respective candidates and in their ee yesterday — The Guardian, Charlottetown, at. Oct. 23, 1965. 3 jsut ere inem a smseh wa the MacLean-Macquarrie case noon ur Innis, . hn as we can on this project’, Coun. +) final’ Conservative nomination there were @@ Melia al rs ocing WILL BRING A NEW CANADA of irrigation. will it in (Cumioned, tren name .2 Beth me ‘eared: Gat ae tet : look for prices as really pro- mising. Mr. Irving said he will have a sizable part of his investment back on this year's operation —he had not eompleted that part | eral others who used of his accounting and will, of | this future use. Mr. Willis observed that this type of equipment lasts @ long time. | Both men are sold on the value at re ‘i ipl 38 os E g5 The Rt. Hon. John G. Diefenbaker r f in ut [vit ilgili : is all bebe puete production. , By last night harvesting in the Willis potato acreage was 90 per cent complete. It is 70 to 80 per cent completed in the pro- Canadian Water Study Seen As Important Job CAPITAL BUREAU |of rivers which now empty into ’ OF THE GUARDIAN | James’ na fpeng — meant oy _ H. Clark|water into . ungry Great) akg ogo eno Lakes’ system and produce elec. jobs in Canada. As chief -|trical power .at the same time. In the west, prairie resource Northern Affairs and National) )inisters have proposed a three- “an year, $5,000,000 investigation of the nation’s|water available to the Saskat- chewan and Nelson rivers, includ- ing ible diversions of the) Peck und Athabaska rivers. The Bay of Fundy tidal power project would be the second of its kind in the world. Mr. Clark | the has made two nyse to France| to study the first such project of water potential of Northern ~ iés kind om the Rance river. of : - if si 8 Bae is i #3 z Film Preview | |the finance committee recom- mended that Town -Manager J. A. Brophy attend the Municipal Finance Officers Association school which will bee held in Ha- lifax from Oct. 27 to 30. ; Mr. Brophy has been. attend- ing these schools.every year for the past 20 years and was the initial president of the Maritime branch of “the association in 1946. Coun. Perry pointed out that it was through Mr. Brophy’s par- ticipation in these annual schools that the town got on the Ameri- can bond market. This benefited the town financially, she said. FEWER WORK LAND About: 10 per cent of Canada’s labor force is in agriculture to- day, compared with 46 per cent in 1900: BUY CARS “S..° Also I trade up or down or sell it for you. Foreign or American.' | Pay Thru the Nose | I SELL CARS ALSO @ MEDICARE The FOR YOU AND YOUR CHILDREN ive Conservative Party is committed to Medicare. It was a PC Government that brought hospital insurance to Canadians. We will enlarge the same plan to cover .all illnesses, including mental illness on exactly the same basis. It was a PC Government that took the first steps to a nation-wide Medicare program ii 1961 when it set up the Hall Commission to study health services. If you want a national health plan, including universal Medicare with proper priorities and efficiently managed, vote Progressive Conservative on November 8. i EDUCATION FOR ALL Your children will get a full educational opportunity under the Progressive Con- servative's “National Policy for Education” — Canada’s first. University grants will be more than doubled, meaning LOWER TUITION FEES. Federal- provincial programs for vocational schools—begun ‘by the PC’s but allowed to lag—will be stepped up to train our youth for the new age of high skills and automation. DEDUCTION OF MUNICIPAL TAXES f KIMBALL C. ACORN 4-8641) 3 vince in general, he estimates, |to the Clark briefcase is a study | As a homeowner, your taxes will be less under a Pr ive Conservati i of the 300,000 square mile drain- Coarse co ee » yo under a sive Con tive oo os ee ee = cee reaur a the Gack sietoement Set For YCMA Government. Municipal taxes up to $500 will be deductible from taxable a cient up 40 aca on |Nelson river system on the! income for federal income tax purposes. Rising school costs have put an Thursday, though their pro- — ng need of a long, Th Restless Ones", consid- | House of unfair share of the tax burden on the homeowners, almost to the breaking duction is roughly 3 acres a| 36 i ta (aeaian water is; ered the most successful mation | point. This deduction means a federal sharing of education costs with the day on the average. # emphasized by the ara picture yet produced by evange- | Bra emore provinces and municipalities. ~ . Cometine © dist Billy Graham will be show . ter usage. The North America: j George Ramsay Wate ‘ia: Power Allance has| 2 Charloticiown on Nov. 8 and / OLD AGE PENSIONS $100 Di j i | been getting increasing attention|/® at Queen Charlotte High | Furniture es in Hosp fal in - — — rs oe School Auditorium. Our senior citizens will not be left to suffer under the spiralling cost of Fiving, SUMMERSIDE — ~The death Peonives a multi-billion dollar With the accent on youth this | Available The Canada Pension Pian forgets them. A Progressive Conservative Govern- occurred at the Prince County |water diversion which would af-| feature length film reports say, : : 3 ment will provide $100 per month old age pension—WITHOUT A MEANS Hospital Oct. 16 of George M. fect a network of Canadian riv-| deals ‘imaginatively and drama: | at ' TEST. We owe this to those who have built our country, a: ae ’ Annan, “ = jers. . tically with the teen-age crises.”’ | ! year. Was a son NO BARTERING i : ie Thomas L. Ramsay and oa aces oe Dai hee en oan! (r ockett & Storey " Ramsay, ur Laing mai ¢ Hemiiien, PEL Canada wil not barter away its oe a — nde Limited OTHER SOLID POLICIES FOR J f his marriage he moved |water until its future Ss are, Ae é “ i j - ’s branc! . ” ; conor ae ce —_— determine these future needs, | @PPproach to social problems. improvement” _ VOTE e Bete Mortgages on Older Homes to aid labor mo-_ He is survived by his widow | The study of Ontario water| A preview showing by invita-] Kent St. Charlottetown | } ; the former Harriet Phillips , and |diversions was sparked by Sud-| tion will be held on Oet. 27 at | @ End of the Sales Tax on Drugs and stop the penalty | two" daughters, Evelyn ‘Mrs. bury- engineer--Thomas -Kierans}the-YMCA-at-12.15-p.m..—-—--~-fig SIREN —— a Ce ~-for being sick: --- Stereos eee £ oi: Lorne Waite, Kensington, and |W" spoke to both Federal re Sareea . FOR @ Recreational Parks Aid near our cities. ey rary Myrtle at onti- ten brothers, provincial governments about. the g : : : James, Hamilton, and Archie, \feasibility of reversing the flow See The Fabulous : e ne Loan Act to cut the high cost of insta : via sat Kensington, me a sister, wars. , RESPONSIBLE, o Fiétera Waits Policy with a feed grain agency. : Presbyterian Chunreh, Ke iry farmers. WEDNESDAY CTC , aaa To Think About... @ National Power Grid to tie Canada together. ’ OCTOBER 27th | Furniture Fashions @ “Roads to Resources”’ to open our frontiers. j DEATHS | if your furnace ts over 10 years ARRIVE SUMMERSIDE AIRPORT (en ee (ck. a. ; it a - Close look! ; Confederation Conference to strengthen our unique APPROX. MID - NIGHT CARVER — At Churchill, Thurs- |, Stve @ Con \ q day; Oct. 21, 1965, Alton carver, |HERE'S WHY: Displayed Now At AT OTTAWA union of provinces and cultures. oa od an in Be 79th a = “‘life ag ¢ fe @ New Life for ARDA to help farm communities. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 28th Funeral Home from. che ta yore ee : J p id @ Urban planning sesearch assistance to all communities. 9:30 A.M. Depart Summerside 3B with service ey eay, Ot | «= «BUT EVEN MORE rener ac ond - ae eae 10:45 A.M. Arrive Alberton |2 p.m. Interment in Birch Hill | IMPORTANT 9 pores pert expansion to move Canadian wheat and (Jacques Cartier Memorial Arena) cemetery. eee ee oe Oe es eee 11:00 A.M. Depart Alberton 12:00 Noon Arrive Summerside for Private Luncheon | MOUNTAIN — At the Western | Hospital, Alberton, on Thursday, | derful improvements in the last 10 years you have a right to be discontented if you don’t have a Limited @ End of the 11% Sales Tax on building materials and production machinery which have added to your cost ‘aaa 2:30. P.M. Arrive Capitol Theatre, Summerside for | Oct. 21, 1965, William D. Moun-|™oedern LENNOX heating sys- > Meeti tain of Alma in his 90th year, |fem! If you do mot have a ng Forwarded tren Jelleys Foams LENNOX heating system call us Open Evenings Until 9 3:30 P.M. Depart Summerside TODAY. . . 4:30 P.M.—Arrive S.D.U. al Home to his late residence . (talk informally with students) will be held this Saturday after-| Beal lectri St. Peters Road Parkdale , VOTE NOV. 8 -5:00 P.M. Depart S.D.U. noon with service commencing Paimer E ectric PI 4-6345 — 2-1755 PROGRESSIVE (Motor cavalcade to City via Sherwood, |4t 2.30. Interment in- Montrose | Dial 894-8543 - Parkdale) : United Church cemetery. an 5.20 P.M. Arrive at Charlottetown Hotel ; 8:40 P.M. Depart for Rally 9:00—10:30 P.M. Rally at Charlottetown Coliseum 10:45 P.M. Return to Hotel FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29th | Ch’town CONSERVATIVE for a Government with Policies for Helping People. - Wesushest ty the Progressive Conuerveitvn Partyc Chiade 9:15 AM. City Hall ease M . H th 9:30 A.M. Depart For Souris County acqualrie, Ca - 10:45 A.M. Arrive Souris . 11:30 A.M. aie cron ter tensk 12:10 P.M. ve Montague for lune 1:30 P.M. Depart for Charlottetown Queens M L An 2:15 P.M. Arrive Hotel ac ean, gus 2:45 P.M. Depart Hotel for Airport 3:15 P.M. Flight Departure : fe . ae Prince ESSIVE | Just mail this coupon to- House of Braemore, ; M. Do ald D d bs da Sa Hellen S., Dowesview, Ontario, County acvon » VaVl CONSERVATIVE i | ON NOV. 8th Kings id, Melvi ‘ | &= McQuaid, Melvin 1 . (Inserted by the P.E.1. Progressive Conservative Association)