...'...a- ' The Blucnosc. famous rac- ing schooner built at Lumen- bur N.S., in 1.021 won follr North Atlantic fi:<llCl‘lil(‘n'S . Bosox Halt lwins Edge By THE (‘..=\.N.\I)l_\‘.\' PRESS . Gene Collloy. lillll ninth inn- lloser Smith's two-run double in the. ing help from Dick Rarlatzl gained his til:-:i \‘.l!l over New lfourth. After the Senators tied. 3. as ,'it on Don Lock’s 11th home run he silenced the booming bats of land doubles by Ken Hamlin and l .Chuck Hinton, the White Sox with Just one cxti'a—l)ase hit. lscored four in the sixth off Os-I York YZllll\'("£‘S Sllll<la_\'. 4 the American l_.(‘£l’.§llO leaders Whitey l"ord suffered »his eighth loss rtompzlled with 16 wins. Ford tired ill the middle inn- ings and uns liflvrl ill the sev- enth for a lllll"ll~ll|lt.“l‘. cut the dccldins: run ' Lilltl zldziili it was Conley who ‘t\'.'l‘;l the hero. Tile 6-R rigzllt ll(lll(l(‘l‘ l‘.:'l(‘(l to lo to open the '1‘ iiloverl up on a suci'll'icr- lay ‘t.‘.n.i'i~rlil Hardy BLUENOSE REPLICA TO BE BUILT ISLAND NEWS PAGE 'Alberton and West Prince County Directors of the West Point Ferry Company have postponed their trip by water over the proposed course of the ferry service linking W e s t Point, P.E.I., with either Shediac or Buctouche, N.B_ P.M. MacCaull, Ellerslie, said last night because of difficul in getting the whole group away at the same time and also be- cause of uncertain weather con- ditions, the trip which had been planred for Saturday was post- ponod as ‘< The trip was to have been made by cabin cruiser. When the trip might be in Maccaull wasn't sure, but point- ed out that the season was gett- g ‘ate. The trip was planned to give promoters of the proposed ferry service a first-hand look at the 2 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Mon. Sept. 17, 1962. est Pt. Ferry Group Postpones Water lrip Mr. there is a two-way struggle go- route it would use and also give them a chance to talk to some of the New Brunswick promoters of the scheme. A meeting of government min- isters from this province and the first or second week in Oc- tober, though word is awaited from.the New Brunswick cabin- et before a firm date is set. One item of business will be a discussion of sharing the cost of a survey of the route and bar- bors for the proposed service. The survey on the New Bruns- wic side complicated as ing or between Buctouche and Shedlac for the terminal. r. Maccaull said some time ago that he hoped the New Bruns- wick people could reach a deci- sion on their terminal. Sun. School Holds Annual Promotion ALBERTON — Sunday was promotion day at Alberton Uni- ted Church Sunday School. It a coral reef off Haiti. A re- plica of the schooner is to be built this year. championships in the 1920s. She was sold to the West In- dies Trading Company in 1942 and in 1946 sank afte hitting YEtlll(S; (CP Photo) DIEF (Continued from page 1) an anti-Common Market paper, says in a front-page story: “Though Mr. John Diefen- ' bat-3r is likely to remain rug- gedly hostile, Mr. Macmillan regular morning worship. The service was conducted by ‘mg Minnesota to a 4-3 v ‘over Cleveland Closer The White Sox scored two off J-ori y Claude Osteen on A1 ' i special ‘tremes. ’teen and Daniels. glI'_’i;tl;ei‘:' lwnvs OWN GAME Europe At Minneapolis, Camilo Pas-; tory New York Yan- ‘ Speaks and scorvrl ml l,lI lflirllolfs sin-. 9 5 _ ‘teams n3Ve 10'“y(': le_ tgames remaining. 3113 It was the ::(t‘nllt‘l RBI for; The Cuban right hander. who Clinton wllo.-c lusty triple to 3150 nan 3 bunt Single and d0“ dead centre llisliligzlited Bos- ton‘s t\\'o~i'uil f""h. The Red Sox tot their first run in thc illll'(l on a triple by Hardy. : The Yf‘llll\i""~ :-t:li‘t(‘d off as though they r-rc urlilig to dis- pose of Ct‘.lllt\ qilir-l;l_v. Tony Kubek 'I‘_‘t’llllltlt‘{l out. but four harsh .\lll‘lt-‘ "ave .\'cw York? two ilins. lticllarrison. Tom Trcsll .r:\' _\I?11‘tll€ and .1 Roger i\lzil‘i.< 'o‘.\'r~rl Conley for believes prime minister will not be able to stand alone against the ma- t !l “Mr. _ shortsighted and unimaginative The triumph, their fourth l€n°ngn l0 ignore this danger- ‘straight, lifted the Twins within ‘Says ut 11 _three games of F‘ Worsthorne. that the Canadian Peregrine Worsthorne, in a article in The Sunday : egraph, warns “white" Com- 9 monwealth leaders against .pushing their opposition to ex- The Commonwealth. he could not long survive if remained aloof in deference to Com- monwealth pressure, only to re- cual drove in the winning runignet the dECi5i0n late!‘ 35 the with an eight-inning single and missed opportunity became rpitchod his 19th victory in1lead- clearer C Diefenbaker may be “B e the minister, Rev. David Mac- Donald, assisted by Faye Gor- don who read the Old Testament lesson and Linda Rayner who read the New Testament les- U! 0 5 Junior boys led in the Lord's Prayer, Karen Hastings read a poem. and primary children sang. “‘This Is My Father's World." Pauline Hardy was sol- In oist. The ushers were Clair Ray- ner and Gordon Barnett. The sermon was directed par- ticularly to the oung people. Certificates of promotion were presented by Henry Wallace, su- perintendent of the Sunday School, assisted by the teachers. NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) — Bad luck continued to dog Gretel, the challenger from Australia, in the opening America's Cup race against Weatherly Satur- a . was held in conjunctioon with '3 Y She suffered a couple of frac- tures — in addition to her dam- aged pride -— in losing by half a mile to the American de- fender. A spokesman disclosed in the press interview after the race that at the second mark Gretel broke her backstay sheet. forc- ing an immediate ju rig the third mark she broke permanent backstay. Despite this continuation of the saga of Gretel's injuries, the Aussies refused to give any excuse for their performance. Australian helmsman Jock Sturrock commented after the race: “We were beaten by the better boat on the day." . A her Bad Luck Dogs. Australian Yacht Both crews were extremely unhappy about e waves caused by the large spectator fleet, many of whom consist- ently refused to obey the ' structions of the coast guard cutters and launches patrollin the course. - At one point directly after the start Gretel had to sail right in among the spectator fleet ‘ prder to get where she wanted 0 5 go. ~ The American team spokes- man, George 0'Day, expressed regrets after the race that this occurred, saying: “I hope that in the remaining races we will show a little more courtesy towards our guests." h Americans still o xlr) e rconfident, according to ’ a y. “We think Gretel is the best outside .competition we have faced She's a hot boat. We ex- ='' M Q pect plenty of competition the rest of the way." with very little author- either at home or abroad." a has rarely had a more unfavorable press in Brit- ain. The Common Market issue ble, grounded a single over sec- ‘mils lnng been 3 5°ln'°°°7 C00‘ 0nd base with two out in the flict between the two countries, ilast. of the eighth to score pinch . but Critical Comment n55 110': irunncr Kaat. with the run that§°ften 30119 *0 Sn‘-‘n lengths- Halifax Grabs Softball Title HALIFAX tCPl Halifax Comets won the Maritime lad- broke a 3-3 tie. Kaat had run« for Earl a t t e y who had had to At Kansas City, the Athletics ing as l iscoreu six runs in the fifth inn- : gels 4 2. ‘ ‘ The loss was the fifth straight . ‘singles-—and whipped Baltimore 1 for the n them 31/2 games behind second- n:'. on four hits—three of them At Los Angeles. right hander ,v.'alked. Kaat went to second as ; Phil Regan hit a decisive twa- fpinch hitter Tony Oliva also‘run double but Ron Nischwitz walked with two gone. help him with his pitch- Detroit edged the An- ies softball championship here Sunday with a 12-6 victory over ummerside Thunderbirds. Halifax had won the first game in the best-of-three set before gels and dropped gels trail first-place New York the ccllisrwlltl 1-lll'_‘lL‘S. torlole‘ 125-, , _ At VV(l>‘l‘.ll‘.':ti‘nll. lim‘ IIGl‘b8rt‘ The Athletics held a 3-0 lead placc Minnesota Twins. The An- gave up ll hit» nlirl walked inner 50“? innings but the 01‘i foilr but still \‘.'U‘.l l“i>' gm gammoles tied the score in the of the Seiko“ 3.; Chim;-0 whim Brooks Robinson hit a two-run ,Yankee fifth. lby 6%, and any combination of victories and Angel Sox dm~m,(.d NW Smators 7_4_ fhomer and Charley Lau scored Ilosses totalling five will elimin- lwhcn he tripled and John Pow- ‘» ate Los Angeles from the Amer- ’ ell followed with a sacrifice fly. lican League race. R , their half of the fifth when Gino i lcimoli singled and scored on a jdouble by Jerry Lumpe. Their lsecond run crossed on an error aftei The final four runs scored on K!‘ an infield out, a sacrifice fly Flying materials fol‘ the United and singles by Jose Tartabull Arab RCPUWC and Cimoli. BRIEFS IS I’/\'I'IEN'I' Leo l\I£l(.'D(illf.{élll. Alberton, is a patient in the Western Hospi- tal. WEEKI£.\lD (,'-[EST Miss Margaret Cliipman. Char- lottetown, was a weekend guest of Miss Faye Gordon. Alber- ton. IN IIOSPITAL Mrs. Fred Clark. Alberton. is a patient in the Western Hospi- tal. HOME FROM TRIP Mr. and Mrs. Reginald Tra- vers and David returned Satur- - trip to Que- of Captain and Mrs. Macintosh at Petawawa, Out. :5‘ SPENT WEEKEND -T Miss Marion Starr and Miss Holmes, St. Andrews. N.B. " t the weekend in Alberton. ' ' y were house guests of Miss flux-ley MacArthur. Alberton. t RETURNS HOME Gary Morrell has returned to - his home in .Alberton after be- ing employed in Ontario for a \ time. obinson's homer was his ‘ r . 3 The Athletics broke the tie inv Krug, they loaded the bases. “ ,,..... Too Late To. Classify _____________.._..._.._.. _. __ FOR SALE — TWO COWS with cnlva by side, one Short- horn and one Hereford. Stew- wart Drake. Cornwall. ---—-——-—--—---—-—--*--*1- FOR IMMEDIATE SALE ’O ‘W a large model ' wfittnw-all tires, perfect con- '-‘Tdfllan throughout. vimv II?- Phone 4-5581. '1"-'$t'A~Partsb” Council c.w.‘i.'.‘i mc g was said to near Cairo. PHYSICIST VANISI-IE8 UNICH, West Germany tReuters)—A 49 - year - old jet propulsion physicist, Dr, Hal 5 N vanished last Tuesday, ' said Saturday. have beens up- rocket centre baud 'i.neao‘r,1olnnu of ancouvmllldbnd bborucuedh!flqcI.Vol- losing 7-4 Saturday to Thunder- birds ere. lmana Hell Is Winner SAINT JOHN, N.B. Mart al. won the $400 invi- tational pace at Exhibition Park Raceway Saturday night, pac- ing the mile in 2:09 1-5. King O'Day placed second in the invitational while Michael Mite came home t ir Eddie Grapes was the lone double-dash winner. Single wins went to Congressional Boy, Be- ware, Brother Baldwin, Jollity Path and Hy Lee Harmony. (CPI _. NEW YORK (AP)-—A lean, tough and talented quarterback named George Mira provided the major fireworks Saturday as the U.S. college football sea- son started with a smattering of action from coast to coast. Mira, a 175-pound six-footer, sparked Miami of Florida to a 23-14 victory over Pittsburgh. completing 3 of his 25 quick. low-trajectory passes for 162 yards and punching out 86 yards running. His prime hack- field support came from Nick Pinelli, a fellow junior who scored twice and was a top flight runner - receiver - de- In other games: William and Mary nipped Virginia Tech 3- on Steve Bishop's field goal in the Southern Conference; Iowa State sputtered along with its new T-formation but beat Drake 14 7; Florida State smothered the Citadel 49 - 0; Louisville cow FROM wsu. IN s.c. noun-firsmsaputbtclutber NIP! around Perky‘: body aadotcyw-truciibotstodhcr-up toufe ' (or run) ' \ College Griclders Open ‘62 Season shaded Wichita 21 - 20; Tulsal handed Hardin - Simmons its 23rd straight loss. 39-0; Villa- nova overcame West ‘Chester 316; Wyoming beat Montana State 13-0; Utah State downed San Jose state 29-18; New Mex- ico upended New Mexico State 23-17; and University of the Pa- aiific racked up Brigham Young a State, switching from the single wing to the T, dis- played an ineffectual attack most of the way against Drake 0 five - yard touchdown pass to but managed scoring drives in the first and final quarters. Louisville beat out Wichita ,with less than three minutes to play when Johnny Giles fired a 0 Montgomery and ar Compton bulled across for two-point conversion. sa swept touchdowns me” first three times FY _ a it had the a one - std game marked by several fights. P VISITS CAMBRIDGE CAMBRIDGE, England (Reu- ters) — Prime Minister Diefen- Cambridse. Saturday. T h e y were accompanied b the Cans. dian high commissioner in Lon- don, George Drew, and shown New Brunswick is planned for '~ East German refugees Karl- Heinz Warmus. 22, left, and Willy Geidel, 25, raise beer glasses in West Berlin after smashing through Communist One Type arcine WASHINGTON (AP)——A tem- porary halt in the use of type III oral polio vaccine for adults. III has been recommended by the United States public health ser- vice. .. , . The vaccine involved is one of three types being used in mass immunization programs. The type III was recom- mended for continued use for pre-school and school - age chil- dren. The decision, announced b Surgeon - General Luther Terry Saturday night, came after a daylong meeting of an advisory committee of polio experts. _ The committee had not planned to meet until Sept. 27, but moved up its session after Canadian authorities recom- mended against further mass use of the mouth - administered Sabin oral vaccine. - REPORT FOUR CASES The Canadian health depart- ment acted after reports of four cases of paralytic polio among 5 4, 00,000 persons who had ceivcd the Sabin live - v vaccine. The U.S. committee's decision is advisory in nature, and local re. irus TOAST IN 5 i border fortifications to me- doin. They drove a truck 100 miles through East Germany, smashed through barbed wire fences and swim a canal un- to the vaccine . . . But no vac- cine can prevent polio in those already infected with the dis- “Such stories as we are now hearing from Canada have pre vlously checked out false." The U.S. advisory committee met twice in August to study re- ports on 12 cases of paralytic polio lnswhich the disease was diagnosed within 30 days after the patient took the type III oral vaccie Re-diagnosis later established that one case was not polio It announced it was unable to establish any connec- tion between taking of the vac- EDOM case of polio behig attributable" Yanks Halt. der fir-2 of East German nora- er guards. The two had been truck drivers on a refinery project near Leipzig. ‘ (AP Wlrepboto) cloudiness may develop in the late afternoon. Regional forecasts: Hal ax n vicinity, south Shore, Annapolis Valley: Sunny with little change in tempera- ture: light winds, Low-high at Halifax and Yarmouth 46 and 85, Kentville 43 and 65. Northern Nova Scotia, East. ern Shore: Mostly sunny and continuing cool; light winds be- coming west 15 the _ after- noii. Low-high at New Glasgow, Cape Breton: Mostly sunny with little change in tempera- ture; west w ds 15, with gusts o 25 in the afternoon. Low-high clue and development of the 3 Sydney 45 and 63 d WEATHER TORONTO (CP) — Tempera- tures issued by the weather ce: with a few cloudy periods and a little change in temperature; west winds 15, with gusts to 25 In the afernoon. Low-high Charlottetown 46 and 63. Eastern N.B. Counties, Lower St. John River Valley: Sunny mm, M“, with a few cloudy periods and Dawso ,,_,,,,,,_ 59 continuing cool; west winds 15, 35 with gusts to 25 in the alter- s3 noon. Low-high at Moncton 42 and 63, Fredericton M and 63,‘ Saint John 40 and 63 Bay of Chaleur: Sunny with a few cloudy periods and. continu- ing cool; light winds becoming westerly 15 in the afternoon. Low-high at Edmundston 40 and 60, Campbellton 42 and 60. ' Bay of Fundy: Light _winds; mostly le ar; visibility 10 miles; temperatures in the 505. High tide today at Charlotte- town at 12:48 a.m. in 1:10 p.m. At Rustlco at 8:22 a.m. and 8:19 p.m. Summerside tide eighteen minutes later than Office says there should be Charlottetown. Sun rises today plenty of sunshine but some at 5:42 and sets at 6:07.: $$$'2"iS8%8‘-:’a'88S2i":2 53 HALIFAX (CP)—The weather health officials will make their own decisions on immunization programs. Reached by ship to-shore tele- phone from New York to the liner Queen Mary. aboard which he is returning from a business trip, Dr. Albert B. Sabin, the vaccine‘s developer, said: “I think all community-wide immunization programs should go on as schedule . “I have had at least 15-ship- to-shore calls since the (US) decision was handed down and in each case the callers assured me there would be no discon- tinuance of their programs." Asked specifically whether he meant that the vaccine should continue to be given to adults, Sabin replied: "I see no reason why the vaccine should not be given to adults." _ SCORES CANADIAN MOVE Earlier Sain called the Cans dian action ill - advised and said: “What should be done is to intensify its use" because de- lays in immunization “leave ul wide open to outbreaks of polio which could assume epidemic proportions." He added. “The oral polio vaccine has around by the dean of Kings College, Rev. Dr. A. R. Vidlar. been given safely to over 200.- 000.000 people without a single -':)t:nc-9:1“; - ' i I HIGH SCHOOL I I are Invited to write for FREE booklet. Tells how you can. earn your High school Diploma AT HOME IN SPARE TIME . AMERICAN SCHO0L—P-1 U Amherst. N.S. Send 0:110 your mm-: 55-page High School Booklet aha Samplel 98 Victoria St. E.. .0. Box 54. NAME ADDRESS L'jj——“j //we 70:5 Cifilltl lP3[éll@E@ rocrui NATIONAL SURVIVAL JUNIOR NCO’! SENIOR NCO’! . OUNNIR RCAC DRIVER MICE (Wheeled) O0-0 The Prince Edward Island Ragimept (RCAG) will be , ting recruits for initial training in army _ skills from 10 Sept. 62. To be followed by special- ised training in: In order that the program of trainin be ‘:3’ rdinoted from the “lay an"; tionsanddoteswlllboutollows: onA1u.orr1r.'rowN.—ni1 bton Compound. nr dI¥IIIl'.l'lIIII'IdIynsté:td_at moilm. T3 ginning Monday 10 . . MONTAGUE—l|lontogn Arm roan nl ' beginning 14 Sop. 6;. 0"’ I . ‘M SUMMER8IDE—-Summerside Arinoury Tuesday and Thursday nights at 1930 hours beginning Tim-ado: 1: lap. 82. - .. .. — - (D. J. u.-col. ' DRIVER MECII (Tracked) CLERK ADMINISTRATIVE STOREMAN RANDSMAN o CHIPMAN iioualirax " Your house is one of your prised pouudonst Don't be misled by the first price you're quoted. Stop and_ think carefully how much it will eventually cost. How much will you pay for insurance? How much will you pay for painting and ropairinq In the years ahead? How much is the resale value as compared to the Initial price? When you huvo ' thought our and found the answers to those questions you wfllrealixo why we duh you to ooinpan. Th- fllultsatod Cbipmoa Roughtox SHAW . has brick is just ‘one of our-fort? different texture and colour combin-_ utlou tbct will note you won! brick. IHAW loco brick cftox'lI°'3 have compared. 4 5 Prince Edward Island: Sunny- Upper St. John River Valley.‘