.‘ A w. »oh 1 - Y ' 32.35313 LE‘VTS BROTHERS' FOREST .311»... LEE Kl As‘AlI-Canadian-Bull' Forest Lee Kismet Jr. a Hol- ‘ein bull. owned by Ira a n d flaude Lewis. \‘oi'k. has been ominated for “All - Canadian -ull of 1962." provincial live- tock director Lou esterday. The animal. which was senior nd grand champion at the pro- incia! exhibition last year, is ie only Holstein from the Mari- mes to be nominated. “Kismet.” said Mr. R 0 per. was classified excellent in Dew ember. This is the h i g h e st rading tiiat can bc iefore winnin: these honors. he efeated hzs stableniate. Lewis- ale Robert Hope. who had been he grand champion Holstein iale for the previous fh r e e ears." Discussing the experience of ra and Claude Lewis in t reeding of cattle. Mr. Roper aid. “about 13 years ago. th e .ewis brothers. then of Free- )wn. were partners with lIlPll't ather. Colby Lewis who operat- d a large farm there and who Roper said ‘ received. . was considered one of the most successful Holstein breeders in the {\laritimes. “Later. Ira and Claude came to York and purchased the Well" known Ayrshire farm owned by‘ ‘the late B.R. Brown. recognizedt throughout Canada as one of the, : outstanding Ayrshire breedersi of that time. MORE THAN 100 HEAD “Ira. shortly after. purchased. another farm near the Brown. farm and equipped it with a new i cattle barn of the latest type. He now has over 100 head of Holstein cattle. The herd con- sists of approximately 35 milk- ers with the rest coming along in calves. yearlings. and t 0- year olds for replacements and to supply the trade with founda- tion stock." Referring to Kismet. Mr. Rop- er said “there have been re- quests from as far away as Bri- tish Columbia for semen trim this hull and a limited amount will be available for export for Winter Works Has 32 Proiects Thirty-two winter works pro- approximately currently costin: are ects. 542,000. nunl'cipal prosram. Sixteen communities are. a king part in the program.; eral government pays one half budget vhich involves such projects as. of the payroll costs. the provin-‘lishment in this country. ‘3 onstruction of open-air rinks. nstallation of sewage systems being. ‘arrled out in the province. un-l er the, joint federal-provincial l gether. the Cuba crisis and the. Anglo-American Polaris pact of- land repairs to municipal build- ings. ‘ The estimated total payroll of the projects is $131780; appro- ximately 410 men are hired and they will work an estimated l3.-f ‘ Eman-days. } . Under the program. hte fed- cial government pays one quar- ter. and the municipality involv- ind sidewalks. and construction ed pays the balance. l 300d Business Year Likely, nsura nce Survey Predicts By GREG Mat-DONALD Canadian Press Staff Writer This year will be neither a oom nor a recession year in Zanada. says the Prudential ln- urance Company of America. The company. in its annual conomic forecast. says Can- da‘s Gross National rill increase about. 4.3 per cent 3 341.200.000.000 compared with ast year‘s rise of seven per “By almost any measure. ’anada's e c n n o m l c perfor- 1ance in 1902 was the best ince the boom of 1956.“ The GNP. says the company. rill increase by more. than iree per cent this year. exclud- ig price changes Some of the highlights fore-‘ ast include. 1. An increase of 3900000000 i consumer spending over last 2. An increase of “50.000000 i government spending;. 3. An increase of 3200000000 1 inventories. all .in farm in- estments. and . d eficit of about 25 per cent to fONSUMER STABLE it says the population growth. uilt - in economic stabilizers EASTERN BRIEFS BA! SURGERY Mrs. Alvin s. MacKen si 9., furray Harbour South. is a pn- ient in [has County Memorial lospital. where she has under- ono outcry. COX I'UNERAL -- The fun- f t d f u. . m for pa. Cox an hog 3.48.3.1?“ "mm?" ’ m ‘riday. an. 1. tom of! “Imports would normally be timed Church wher service mud at bat when m - 3- domestic activity is improving ac service but ch- Product : l i such as unemployment insur< ‘ ‘ance. and a steady relative shift away from consumption of goods and towards consumption iof services has made consumer spending the strongest and most stable elemen in the post-war {Canadian economy. ; "This demand for . has grown from about one-third t ‘or less of consumer spending in jimmediate post-war years to; yabout 40 per cent today. It .flects. in part. the satisfaction tof pent-up demands for con-; ‘sumer goods but also reflectsi basic changes in attitudes to-‘ ‘ward education. recrea-‘ ltion. medical care and other so- .cial services arising from an in- I creaslany affluent society." .3 e company says the con-‘1 :tinuing population growth and; he resulting demands for civic{ lexpenditures account in large part for the. expected $400,000,- 000 In provincial and municipal; spending. . It says it sees difficulty for" ithe federal government in main- ;taining its austerity program as I re- 1 ecrease in the tradolthe economy slows its growth iminlster! Will he in Ottawa Md irate and therefore expects at lmodest increase of .00. ‘ ‘in Ottawa spending. 1 'caeacrrv nxcnss l The continued decline in busi-[ ‘ness capital expenditures still; reflects the excess productive lcapacitv created during the 1956-1957 boom and the recent levelling In corporate latter the rapid rise i The suming an average crop thisj year cmmled with the possibll-i ity of lighter grain exports. itt ls expected farm lnven-g tories will increase to about; $200,000.00!) with no accumulaq ition of non-farm inventories for- seen. . The rise In exports in 1903 will reflect the foreign exchange impact of federal government laction in the latter half of 1962. ‘government promotion of the tourist industry and aponsorshi Holstein Is Nominated Hos Ann Sea Power Restoration ‘ artificial insemination work." {Seal-19:2? \x‘ggzis's 1N item-e I restnr. i formerly ;matn |defence will be naval or. stipound. bined maritime operations. Island Group ' To Attend PC lFirm Moves rofl s ' . company says" nitizii‘ 3:. PHlead To Cb’town ..- .41 / 4......“ .. . AND NEWS PAGE. Montague, Souris, Kings County .. WASHINGTON it t. Washington w 'Stroniium levels Double In Some Cities In U.S.A. IAPl—Levels uported last March for samples radioactive strontium-90 in‘collected in May. August and . _food. resulting from fallout from ‘November. 1961 I4 The Guardian. Charlottetown, Sat. Jan. 12. 1963...,0198, bomb tests. have mm! ‘ .i than doubled in the last year in [of the five sampling cities where t least one American city but jcomparative figures for as the only one both PM lntervenes To Aid Refugee OTTAWA iCP) — Prime Min- ister Diefenbaker has person- ally intervened in the case of the 15-year-old boy who from Czechoslovakia last month aboard a Cuban airliner. The boy. Milos Navarntil. now ed adopted [mu—W III! m III gave his name as Sta-toy. Au- thorities have been unable to lo- cate . It has been government pol- icy to deport no one from Can- ada to countries behind the Iron Curtain. The youtlr may be or sponsored nadlan resident by an individ- ual or an organization. ' .t - i - is in protective custody'of im- BABY STRANGLES . ‘ . d H I b are still well Within acceptable 1961 and 1962 were available. . _ 1' D 0‘" Du Ce e rates health t|cvels.ia_r‘i1eth.S. gov-; The August. 1962. figures for “firm” “mm” 1" m" GANDER, mud, (cp) __ Ten. " ” 0 ' “mm” mm ‘“ ‘ca 95' . . ESL LOUiS 3h°wed that “he “"9 ’ month-old Catherine Peters did . ‘ I. Manta ue The Food and Drug Adminis-'dietary intake of the radioactive M" melenb'k" “a” "m r” of Mn non hm w e. . 0 "at. r. the f. . ports th youth might be de- Sula ednes . y jg, ion repo says igurcs .isotope was 16.5 per cent of the ported w e unfounded and ma. day when her head became MONTAGUE ~- David Duff of Lower Montague celebrated his ‘ 90th birthday. Jan. 8. when Mrs. ' William Thompson was hostess " I and held open house at Edge- ‘ wood in his honor. lthcir best wishes. Mr. Dqu was ;'the recipient of many cards. ' tgifts and telephone calls. » 1 Mrs. I gdaughter Mrs. Athol Robertson "and Mrs. Vernon Nicholson. Mr. Duff was born at Brack- i ley Point Road. When two years i . 1 old he moved with his parents “on 3 to Dundas where he lived hap- ‘ pin with a family of nine, until he was 20. when he moved to Boston where he became a very successful contractor. Retiring in 1930. he bought the Stewart farm in Roseneath. For the past 15 years he has been a welcome guest at Edtgewoozl. Lower Montague. ' , His hobbies are stumping —t Th7 annual 910%": or “‘9 working in the woods and play? Hm‘hmn “ism.” LOL w {l 5 in: the violin. He enjoys life to held in Coronation Lodge. Mill- the fun and is an avid reader view. with District Master or- “in “mm.” glasses. I ml 3 Thompson was assisted ‘at this delightful party by her . Many friends called to offer .. Mr. Jessie. Roseneath: Susan. Mrs. y Boston. and Lillian Mrs. Den— ton. Florida. resuitcd from sampling of the .council’s danger level. Figures strontium Content 0‘ the 8W?- ‘for the other thre cities were: age die! of 19-year-Old boys ~lMinneapoljs. 15.8 per cent: At- rated by fond experts as lhellanta. 9.8 per cent; San Fran- the government would give “sympathetic consideration to his right to stay here." e prime minister received heaviest eaters of ‘all age letsco, 6,4 per cent. groups. . ‘ The report covers "markct' EDITOR DIES basket" samplings taken everyl . three months from May. 1961, LONDON ‘Apl " S“ Bruce through August. 1962, in wash. Ingram. editor of the Illustrated ington. D.C.. and similar sam- LOI‘Idon News. dlEd It '11! homfl plings in May and August, 1962, at Chesham. Bucldnghamshiro in Atlanta. Minneapolis. St. TUCSdaY- He was 35- Sir "19° Louis and San Francisco. became editor of the maganlne. one of the world’s first illus- D.C. LEVEL DOUBLES The study shows that as of representations last week from a Czechoslovakian group Canada on behalf of the boy. Young Milos sneaked aboard the Havana-bound Cubans air- liner Dec. 18. and when discov- ered by the crew after the plane left Shannnon. Ireland. he was put off at Gander. Mid. and turned over to immigration au- at the ,August. 1962. the average daily intake of strontium-90 from the Washington sample would have trated news magazines. in 1900 as a age of 23. He w grandson of Herbert, lngram, founder of the magazine. thoritles. They took him to Hal- ax. The youth said he had an “uncle"—a brother of his grand- caught in the rungs of her crib. RCMP said.. E BELLES SHOPPE January STARTS TODAY been 25.9 micromicrocuries—orl about 13 per cent of the daily( levcl established as acceptable‘. for lifetime consumption by that federal radiation council. ' ‘. This compares with six per. .cent of the danger level as re-. DAVID DUFF Duff has three sisters. Mrs. Neil MacDonald. OPS. Storey Electric Ltd. AUTOMATIC WASHER en Drake presiding. A record attendance of mem- bers frcm the district was pre- sent and heard a very favour- able report from the District Master and his officers. l The following officers were; elected: District Master. Wins- ton Drake; Deputy Master. Earl OTTAWA (CPl m Federal Carter: Chaplain. Arnold Bruce: "Speed “mils” are keePlnf-l the Rec. gem-Gian“ KB. Young; . danger to humans from poison- Fm. Spprgfaryv Arum,- Bmwn;l‘ous pesticides well below haz- Troaqurpr‘ Donald Drake; ardous levels. the Canadian So- hlarsliall. l-loward Murray; Lec- 1 Ciel-V 0f ZOOIOEIS” W35 tOICI ttircr. James Coles: Dcpiity Lec-‘ he” ‘ ' tum; ,inim Mat-Land; Tyler, Hit. A symposium which centred son Hughes; Sentinel. ML. Jnru"s attoniinn on Rachael Car- dine; Auditors are Allison Carr 3. 50".“ (’"n'rnverSlal bofik Silent and spurgmn 1“..an iSpring heard papers from two Lunch was sowed hv mem federal scientists who described bers of Coronation Lodge. "‘9 resend] dm‘e ‘0 assure that the chemicals do not harm jman or his food supplies. Miss Carson's book. on tUnited States best-seller lists ‘for months. deals with the threat to wildlife from the use of chemical poisons against in- at Tues- ‘day‘s meeting echoed this con- ‘ cern with relation to birds and; fish in Canada. But they ap-‘ Take" ’0'. peared to agree. that the situa-l By DAVE McINTOSH OTTAWA iCPi ~- controlling pcsts have been enormous. Chemical control of insects assaii arc sccn by many dc~ authorities here as the shop of sea power to its; prominent role andi 0f Canadian 8 . gricultural mevgeath knell of strategic air; pmducfion_..> repotted Dr. Officials say that if emphasisl Henry Humg‘ assocmte dlrec' on spa power by the Unnpd tor of federal research into pen. Stains and NATO mminues‘tticides. Without them. certain Canada presumably would fol~l may" cm” could not be pro‘ low suit. Such a move wouldl ""9 ' wide ramifications for: DANGER To SAE‘MON defence strategy. the defence Dr- R' R- Log'e 0‘ the fed‘ and the military estab eral fisheries department. Hali- x. noted the great concern In .1... last 12 years. thaover the destruction of young RCAF has received as much ofl salmon by DDT spraying of New the defence budget as the ncni Brunswick forests to kill spruce and army combined. Some. offi-t‘ budworms. rials foresee the possibility of He said the problem has been a radical change in this picture partly overcome by cutting the the point where Canada'st DDT strength in the spray to a contribution to western quarter-pound an acre from one least. integration of the ice. three traditional into one of conventional SEW-i "some TOIPfltmise.” such as spraying the com'j same, area twice in 10 days. . Dr. Logle reported one iso- flated situation last summer in which spray planes went over one section of a salmon river times. The budworm kill was 68 per cent and the salmon kill 100 per cent. In this instance. “DDT turned out to be a better poison for fish than for budworms.“ But he agreed that “from a Prince Edward Island will be well represented at the annual meeting of the national Conser- vative Party in Ottawa on Jan. WOMAN DRIVER "fillimamaiigears that between 50 and 80 delegates will leave1 1 SYDNEY A u ' t r .1 I I the province next week for the: Reuters) __ A woman drm meeting. ‘ . The provincial Conservative gibmp from fiydney to association will be represented. half on“? came 0 an abrupt . when her car hit a pit as well as the women's associa- . . tton. county organizations and arm“: ha" a mile ms’d‘ ‘ N the young PC's. Practically all provincial ca- The woman “d ‘1'“ EV“ binet ministers will attend por- “in! e mfeig ed mm th‘ or its: intonation? ' I Premier Water R. Shaw. Many asmunded mine employee‘- The woman. who did not give her name. said she missed a turn on the main road. got on to a mountain road and drove into the mine when she mistook its entrance for a tunnel. ' Mine employees went into the mine and pushed the car out. Toronto on business at the time‘ of the meeting. About the only minister to re- main in the province will be. Hon. Alban Farmer who will be acting - prcmier next week. ‘-».A... an..- no... May We Accommodate When vou are in Halifax the ottem comfort-bio. centrallv located STERLING H0111 ‘ In the olden to uni CAPITAL BUREAU OF THE GUARDIAN OTTAWA —- Head office of Casius Corporation Limited has been changed from Montreal to Charlottetown. Notice of the passing of a special by-law to effect the change is contained in the cur- rent edition of the Canada Gazette. ' R. List. secretary of the cor- ocrtifiec that I on out n In I the rum"- iGov’t Restrictions Keep Pesticide Danger Down fisheries view. we are going to have to live with some kind of spraying for a number of years, and repair the fish damage as est we ca " l F—l—l— ——_ 1'0 THE CIRCULATION CONTEST OPEN TO ANY BOY OR GIRL IN P.E.I. You do not have to be an Evening enter this contest, Your cus- tomer will be turned over In a regular carrier but you will get credit for the sale. & DRYER REPAIRS We have a full stqu of factory lrninedescrvii'cincn. facilities and parts for all makes. Phone. us today- Storey Electric ltd. "side ‘2322 iaI y. Ch‘lown 4-7311 —- Patriot carrier to MANAGELTHE rumor CHARLOTTETOWN, P. n. I. . I agree to subscribe to The Evonln Patrl And bill me $2.50 by return ‘ gulf; .._-uuou . . . . . . ~-.-..-..........-..nu”... . .n . m m CIRCULATION MANAGER, THE PAIR! marrow. P. 13.1. or consult HYNDMAN a. co. l.TD. SATURDAY, JAN. 12th FOR .YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS 1/3 OFF All Winter Stock your disposal. . Charlottetown Q Montague balance of Special MP0“! HATS Insurance since 1872 Prices Our experience of 00 years n on' racks insurance underwriters. is at of t In th nnnssns W '° 93’ OFFICES: 1”“ S id 2 units“ BIELLES SHOPPE Agents Throughout the Province '_I Period of 1: weeks Inca-00010:...- Ingres toan to The Evening Patrith for n 00 of 'Aldblllmtuiiyretnrn' m us Sign «11:33:: I Brunt“ ) lye-mart ) lhsnlotboennrenhrmblerlborlorthputfldm. “A. ...:u...-......... ...... ‘ WOW ' - 5 ' . NOWOWWIN . (Bl HOCKEY I STICK Personally Autographed by the Famous N.H.L. Star FRANK MAHOVLICH Hey Kids . . . here’s in chan top quality profession! hack 3! the great stars of the o . . . Soil Two Now—l3 Wonk Spbscriptions to .Hefi'cmhgpaltial (DAILY PLUS WEEKEND MAGAZINE) S'l'llli'i" TODAY! Open to Anyloyor in game today. Here’s what to L MONTAGUE 1* GM’ 0 of-a-life-time to own a y stick signed by one a boyto collect ' 3, m“ ( ) ' 3’ C m" ( ) m“! Either by Carrier or Mail Delivery 1 have not been a regular inbscrlbor for the put to days. m“ _ mummnmmmmoou uoymrein‘v ..m . . . . . . . .. Moods uli tbmthTbelvenlng minim": mm. , .. em M” then their”. «I when... '3; m I.“ Tm ma ' . . . . . . . . . . . . .. fl nl Of. nu... ant. gnome- “- ' ~ ' i-""°~""'i.......'si°°*c llbsorlbor’s lilo-tor. "W- . u S i I'm“ I.“ hm“ . Jew.“ -