SAINT JOHN AMBULANCE TROPHY Results of this year's Saint John Ambulance — Association Provincial Military First-Aid competition have been an- nounced. Four teams entered the competition and a team from RCAF Station Summer- side have been declared the winners of the” provincial first. said military trophy. Mem- eerie bers of the winning team on behalf of the national head- were LAC F. Dillon (team captain), LAC A. Shatzko, members Sgt. D. Hill and LAC T. Lynch, LAC P. Gou- LAC P. Goulet look on. Indi- let, and Sgt. D. Hill. Superin- dendent A.S. MeNeil, officer vidual mementos were also commanding “L" Division, eer oe of the ae MV. the competition was the team from No. $ Medical Co: (M) of Charlottetown. sents the trophy to alternate team captain, LAC T. Lynch, Official Gives Reasons For Anger Of Taxpayers BATHURST, N. B. (CP) _ County Administrator A.R. Bar- ton said Friday two factors have contributed to the disgruntle- ment of Shippegan and Miscou dsland taxpayers. over their 1965 tax bills. One reason, he said, is that Gloucester County applied a $307,000 surplus last year to off- eet what would have been a 10 ger cent increase in tax hills 6ince bills this year reflect both the normal -1964 and 1965 bud- @et increases, tax bills are up ebout 2 per cen* + The. second reason. said Mr Barton, is that a revaluation @rogram has shifted the taxat ton burden from personal pro oerty to buildings Buildings in Shippegan Parish fhad borne 48.4 per cent of the ¢ax load and personal property 39- per cent. After revaluation —puiiings now-bear-65-3 percent of the load and personal perty 26.5 per cent “The problem of revaluation és being faced in many com- munities in New Brunswick.”’ eaid Mr. Barton ‘The situation here has just been made worse pro- because of the surplus situation | éast year." ' Mr Barton also said he doesn't intend to return tax bills rejected by a large part of the Shippegan Parisi popula- ton which were presented to fim Thursday by a protest de- EXPECTED TO PAY He said the hplls will be an DEATHS - WOOD — At the Prince Edward Island Hospital Aucust 27. 1965. G. Lawson Wood, Hazelbrook, in his 67th year. Resting at the Cutcliffe Funeral Home from where funeral will be held Mon- day with service commencing at 1.30 p.m. Interment Cross Roads cemetery. HILLIER -- At Moncton Hos- pital, Wednesday. Aug. 25, 1965, William John Hillier,, formerly of Charfottetown, in his 76th year. Resting at the MacLean Funeral Home. - Funeral = this morning from St. Paul's Anzli- ean Church, with service com- mencing at 10 4m. Interment {will take place in People’s ceme-__ tery FENNHAN The__death _oc- + curred at Millbridge, Maine on Aug. 23, 1965, of John Degil Fennhan, formerly o& Scotch- fort, in his’40th vear. His re- mains wifl rest at the Hennes- -sey..Funeral._Home..on Sunday. Afiernoon at two o'clock from where the funeral will be. held | on Monday morning, the funeral home at 830 for Requiem High Mass at St. Bona- venture Church, Tracadi¢, at | nine: o'clock. Interment in the eburch cemetery. MacNEILL — At” the Prince County Hospital on Friday. Aug. 27, 1965. of Stewart MacNeill, 13-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Urban MacNeill of Miscouche Resting at the Bowness Funeral Horm from where funeral will be held on Monday, Aug. 30. to St. John the ~ Baptist Church, Miscouché, ‘for Réquiem_ High Mass at 9 a.m. Interment in the ebhurch cemetery. Visiting hours 2-5 and .7-10. DENNIS—At the Prince County Hospital, Aug. 27, .1965, Mrs. Wilbur Dennis of Margate, aged 70 years. Remains ing at the Davison Funeral Home. Fu- neral arrangements will be an- nounced |ater. WATSON — At-the Prince Ed- ward Istand Hospital, Friday, August 27, 1965, Miss Annie G. Watson of 181 Kent Street. Rest- ing at the MacLean Funeral Home from where the funeral will be held Sunday, August 29 2.0 p.m. Interment im People's eemetery, Summerside, “be considered to be eliminated leaving | i mlyzed but the people who re-| credit forced the’ sale of dehen- turned the bills _knéw____what--tures to wipe out-the — county their taxes are and are expect- debt. This had led to he in- ed to pay them. "__ erease in axes. Mem ers of the delegation “There is no immediate solu- which marched on the Glouces- tion to this problem,”’ said Mr. ter County court house were Barton. He told the delegation were protesting tax increases that only the New Brunswick which in some cases were dou- | Legislature can impilement re- ble and more what they paid last’ commendations of the Byrne year Repart aimed at lowering the At the court house Thursday, level of property taxation Mr. Barton told the demonstra- After meeting with Mr Bar- tors: that Gloucester Couny is in. ton, the approximately 150 Mis- financial difficulty and ,the = «ou Island’ and Shippegan ax- bank's refiisal to extend further payers said that unless a satis- eet eee factory solution , is - proposed. to their tax problem in six days hey wou'’ march on Frederic- Medical Pa per Is Published _Bacton said ne wou A medical paper dealing with Dayers. before the tuberculin testing “which was government, prepared by Dr. Erie M. Found, About 90 per cent of the tax tax provincial culosis control.of the provincial protesting communities were re- department of health, was used turned to Mr. Barton in a box. Mr in full in the most recent issue of the important Canadian Jour- nal of Public Health. Delivered earlier this year at ed to Mr the Dalhousie School of Nursing’ Chiasson of Lameque. A petition objecting ton ie ' Mr. Barton said-he would put | the ctirector—of—the—division—tuber-_bilts sent" to residents of the; ‘nstitute for nurses in tubercu- Iosis and respiratory diseases, EASTERN_- FUNERALS the paper discusses fully the) various means of _ tuberculin) testing_as a dianostic and once finding ‘tool’. : | Dr. Found stated the objec- | tive was to find the maximum number of casés before they de- | veloped symptoms and before they infect others. ‘ He concludes with the quoted rel: Deen Sas ate siatemem ‘Tuberculosis: cannot | Son: Services at the’ grave as.4 public health prohlem uml Geen Sear a ee WE. less the number of children who “Tant...assist fe become infected before the age Goudge. Rev. Lewis Murray as- of 14 falls. blow-one’_ per ent’! sisted. in. the -chorr. - He adds, no country today satis) Sanz were Sands of Time Are fies this condition. eee , Sinking and Unto the Hills. A ‘ . duet Never Grow Old, was ren- | dered by Malcolm MacLean and Lioyd Martin. Flower bearers He were Wayne Haden. Allison 0 Fine Drake, -John MacLeod, Ernest MacDonald, Wilbur MacDon- Roger Reginald Fall, of Park- ala, John MacRae. Donald dale was fined $50 and cools | Te aan gree Martin and when he pleaded guilty before | Roy ogg allbearers were Magistrate James B. Johnston = s, _—Gerry— Morrissey, in Queen's County Magistrate’s | Court. yesterday afternoon to a- ter MacLeod. WJ. Mutch. In- : terment™ took place in Che charge of reporting. an offense | ,, : try to the police when in fact no Valley United Church cemetery. offence had been committed. | John Charles Hyde of Corn- | for Mrs. Ewen Gillis of Kinross was held from the Jenkins Fu- False Report Draws $5 ‘PAMPHLET CAUSES IRE GILLIS. FUNERAL — Funeral | John Shaw, Ernest Martin, Wal- | Ex HALIFAX (CP) — Eight unl- jversities and colleges in Nova |Scotia have received more than | 10°000 applications for qureinsat |this term and the eventual total | |is expected to be greater still. | Dalhousie University’ here is expected to enrol at least 4,000 students, an increase of 600 | lover last yeas. The enrolment | lof 3,400 in the 1964-65 year was | jan 18 per cent increase over the | previous university year. | St. Francis Xavier University | lof Antigonish and its branch at | \Sydney — Xavier College — ex- |pect to keep total enrolment be- low 2,000 again this year, al- |though a few more students may attend Xavier College. Last year, the combinéd enrol- ment was over. 1,900. ‘‘and we're | trying to. keep it about | same,” a spokesman said. Acadia University at Wolf- ville, N.S., expects 1,450 — 1,500 Acadia and St. FX are in the midst of expansion schemes. An increase of 300 students is expected at St. Mary's Univer- sity here which last year was, attended by 1,000 students. It ts a Roman Catholic University run by Jesuit priests. | “Very little change’ is ex- pected in the student population at Nova Scotia Technical Col- lege, which last year had 375 undergraduates and 70-80: gra- duate students. / N.S., is expected to remain stea- dy at about 240 to 250 students. Mount St. Vincent University in -suburban—Rockingham _ex- pects about 200 more students this year, with a projected total of about 600 for the 1965-64 year U.S. APPEARS (Continued from page 1) they chased and caught a theoretical satellite This opened the way for the Gem- ini 6 spacecraft to try dock- ing with another satellite. Russia, without a manoeuvr- able craft to date, has dove nothing in this area. U.8. CAUTIOUS Nationa! aeronautics and administration officials are cautious in predicting who now is ahead in the moon race. Asked whether he thinks quarters” Saint’ John ‘Ambu- | students this year, compared to, Gemini 5 would close-the gap lance Association, as team 1,311 enrolled a year ago. Both Dr. George FE. Mueller, assocl- ate administrator, said: “We're persuing a course that we hope will provide the United States with leadership in manned space flight. This is a step. I don't think any one flight or achievement is going to de- termine leadership in space.” The Soviet Union's top scien- tifie administrator indicated this week that Russia could be hedging in he race. Dr. Mstislav plored ‘‘the exaggerated inter- est in the world’’ in putting a (sland News Page (General Investmen Western and Central Districts | |The Guardian, Charlottetown, Sat., Aug. 28, 1965. 3 | University Enrolment In N.S. pected To Show Increase Buying 60 MONTREAL ‘CP) —The Gen- eral Investment Corp. is buy- ing a 60-per-cent share in Ma- rine Industries Lid, of Sorel, Que., and will sell two of its present concerns to the Sorel firm The General Investment con- cerns involved are Forano Lid, a@ manufacturer of wood - hand- ling equipment in Plessisville, 5S) miles southwest of Quebec City, and Volcano Lid, a maker of heating equipment, located in St. Hyacinthe, 30 miles east of Montreal | The new three - company lorganization represents an an- nual sales volume of $50,000,000 The share transfers become ef- fective Oct. 1 General Investment is fi- nanced both by the Quebec gov- ernment and private investors. Its spurpose is to stimulate in- dustrial —devélopment’ of Que- bec. -It announced the new 4ransaction Thursday No purchase. figure for the Marine Industries shares was Escapees Draw Prison Terms FREDERICTON (CP) Four inmates of the New Brunswick Central Reformatory who es- caped Aug. 16 have been sen- tenced to terms in penitentiary. Maurice Dube, 21, of Blue Ri- ver, Que., who was captured by RCMP Thursday night in a barn near here was sentenced to two years on two charges of break- ing, entering and theft, two Keldysh de- counts of car theft and one of theft. He & received an additional The university of Kings Col- man on-the moon. He said it is three months for escaping cus- \lege here, with 250 students and |some financial worries last year, expects to enrol over 30. this term. Enrolment at Saint Ann's College, Church Point, WESTERN 4 BRIEFS | RECEIVING -TREATMENT | Vernon England, Afberton, is receiving medical treatment in Halifax. IN SANATORIUM Vance McNeill, Alberton, has entered. the Provincial Sanator- ium for treatment. i RETURNS HOME Blair Waugh, young son“ of and Mrs. Wilfred Waugh, to the | Wilmot Valley, has returned to tockets level of taxation and signed by his home following a tonsillec- launching pad in orbit about the about 800 persons was puresent- |.tomy in the Prince County Hos- earth. Barton by Calixte pital, | $90 FINE A fine of $90 and costs was imposed upen Charles Hansen of RCAF Station Summerside on an impaired driving charge. He was the only accused to ap. | | | ! pear before Magistrate R. S. 4 Hinton, QC, in town police court yesterday: nvLon @ Rad QuiLTeD “® SKI JACKETS Y NYLON LINED. — ROLL-IN HOOD DRY CLEANABLE Red, Black, Blue, Ladies’ or Men's 3) WA) Ova. $6.59 Ena: large. o uc ese $7.00 Girl's or Boy’s 8-16 $5.00 | Child's 3-6x _ $3.50 | Ladies’ “man-tailored” Capri fine flannel slims, side |___sipper, 12-20, charcoal or wall pleaded not guilty to @! LONDON (Reuters)—A gov-| grey. cece OHS charge of unlawfully causing a ernment pamphlet telling peo- '3” Dell, gift boxed, fully cisturbance—and—not—guity topple how to lodge a complaint dzassed, rooted seran Waly $1.00 | turning off the highway in a un-/ against the police sparked a Woel- melton blezers~: { safe manner. Both cases were dispute here Thursday night.| 2° ** $2.40 | adjourned until Sept. 10 to set The police federation said it 7° 4 2 °0:csterserees- $3.20 a date for trial, 7-3 Jac shirt pullovers agreed to the leaflet only if. it : Ernest William Arsenault of | included a ‘‘vital clause’ re-| at a on ae ;105-Upper-Queen-Street-pleaded"minding the public the police yiyos har ‘ohh $.te-5- guilty to untawfully causing aihad a difficult and dangerous "‘socg ‘we esersl sanm disturbance and was fined $20 joh “and to think twice before | S$ ML Xt sauisee set $3.50 and costs. complaining. But the phrase) ‘sariseacTION GUARANTEED | There were seven. cases of | was omitted and now the police- | FREE CATALOGUE and GIFTS ne oe ene ce tik on | mén are demanding talks with | DISCOUNT MAIL ORDER a ’ ive j a ; Pe { aa a cad Go a: bony secretary, Sir Frank Sos- -1383 Queen EAST ~~ TORONTO a) - was, fined $25 and costs and an- | = ———— othe? was fined $10 and costs. Smooths Away Summer Wrinkles Direct sun rays are ultra- violet . .-. and ultra drying to skin as well. Tiny mouth lines, crows feet around the eyes and even aging ink- les grow more and ~ more pronounced, unless you take immediate steps te count- eract the skin drying effects of the summer sun. To do this best, ask at your drug or department store for “2nd Debut". It contains a’ most-— urizing skin discovery known as CEF 600 and CEF 1200 in double strength. ‘2nd Debut”’ revitalizes the skin's water carriers and, in spite of the hot sun rays, the complexion should take on a glorious youthlike bloom. Help make the skin clear, wrinkle-free and levely. . + Lila Hamilton. $1.00 per e DANCING - BAY VISTA LOUNGE (Just West of Cavendish) ’ WEDNESDAY NIGHTS Music by the Velvets “THURSDAY NIGHTS Music by the Rainbow Five - r Featuring Vocalist Paul Gallant SATURDAY NIGHTS Gordon Heustis Orchestra Fully Licensed Lounge rson cover admission to da on ednesday and Saturday. * PHONE NEW LONDON 32 Reservations held te 10:15 p.m. ] A to early for Russia to set a realistic date. The U.S. has set a 1969 target for its first Apollo” manned” lunar landing. BIGGER ROCKETS The Soviet lead has been based. primarily on rocket power, a field in which the US. is rapidly gaining ground. The U.S., has fired more powerful rockets than _ the 1,400,000- pound-thrust - Russian booster, but they have not been tested horoughly enough to trust man's life aboard: them The recent Russian launch of a 26,800 - pound satellite indi- cates the Russians are working on a new booster in the 3,000,- 000 - pound - thrust clas s. However, -Amer.ican experts feel ‘the Russians do not have anything in the works as man moth as the Saturn 5 being groomed for Apollo moon voy- ages. It will produce 7,500,000 pounds of thrist™and ‘shoot men directly to the-moon-First tests” are scheduled for 1967 The Russians have indicated they will use several smaller to assemble a moon ae See Th HANDIC L.$. HU tody and also must serve the 10- weeks unexpired portion of his reformatory term. Three fellow escapees “were sentenced Thursday to similar. terms on a total of 21 charges of breaking, entering and theft, car theft and escaping custody. They also must serve the un- expired portions of their pre- vious sentences They are Stewart Breau, 21, of Neguac, N.B:, Arthur Mazer- olle, 21,-of St. Rose, N.B.. and 18-year-old Joseph Robichaud,’ also of St. Rose. aoe 7 ~\ »| Suggests Dief Per Cent yess wae OTTAWA (CP) — Opposition disclosed, but af unofficial esti- “S¢ UR against the Liberals’ oe Against Liberals Leader Diefenbaker predicted mate ssid it was $12,000,000. messy” record on morality in Marine Industries has heen S°vernment at the next election. | of , The Conservative leader, back owned by the Simard family Pi gay a swing throug Sorel, ity #0 miles ; oe oa. - Quebec's Eastern Townships, BUILDS SHIPS said his party will wage a Marine is active in dredging POSitive campaign” but ke made clear that the morality is- sue will loom large. “There's an over-riding, feel- ing among people from all the Way acr this country that never in a period of two and and shipbuilding, and in the construction of railway freight cars, turbines, alternators, fur- naces—and—other suchi.products. It has a shipyard and» factory | i 1 in: an tore, employ e half years has there been such) "A. Ludger Simard, president * S¢ries of messes that have to of Marine, said in a statement be cleaned up. that his family, retaining 4 per cent of the capital, will be rep- resented on the company’s board of directors. Rene Pare, president of Gen- eral Ifvestment, said the trans- action was part of the corpor- ation’s attempt “to enure he smooth transition of enterprises from family to public owner- ship.” He. said General Investment also has been urging the “necessity of grouping .into Jarger, more effective units.’’, —— decent N.S. Man Dies In Accident HALIFAX CP) — Pilot Dave Pickering of Don Mills, Ont., and mechanic Del Harnden of Cloverdale, B.C., remained — in good condition in a Goose Bay, Labrador hospital Friday ‘after a helicopter crash that killed one man. Dead is Ewart R. Penney, 41, president of Martech Electronic | Systems Ltd., of nearby Dart- mouth. Married and the father | of three children, Mr. Penney left here Thursday by aircraft and transferred to the helicopt- er at Goose Bay for the trip to a construction site where — he “These things transcend party feelings,"’ he told an impromptu press conference on his return from Knowlton, Que. Mr. Diefenbaker said Prime End of ® China Jewellery ® © Toys * was to do installation work, the air-sea rescue centres-here said Friday. The helicopter crashed in the | Churchill River, near Goose Bay, Thursday night. ; | FRUIT WAS AN ERROR The first loganberry was pro- duced by a mistake of nature in the blackberry garden of Judge J. H. Logan of California ‘in. 1881 | _ Murray His 25th ANNUAL LOWING MA AGRICULTURAL FAIR | SSOCIATION GROUNDS. Dundas on ~ = a its Aix e Terrifi 12 PLOWING CLASSES: RAFTS NTER, President Dundas, R.R. IN MEMORY OF F. W. LeLacheur Psalm 16-11 —In Thy presence - fullness of joy “Death is the perfection of Life” Ss ale, ra — —} Harbour Wife ores PRIZE LIST ON REQUEST ¢ ae 2 - SJ ° _CLEARENCE SALE Starting August 29th ®@ Island Tartans @ Handicrofts Other items Ranch House Gift $ Stanhope : Open 7 days weekly 10 a.m.—10 p.m. THE Misister Pearewe te “subject te the direction’ of Kelth Davey, national Liberal . director, several—cabinet..ministers who ° want an election in Novemb. rc |hefore, redistribution of constit- uencies can e completed He said Mr. Pearson's conten- tion that an election with the new electoral map will not be possible until 1968 is a ‘‘sheer political invention” Big Action = For Drivers MONTREAL (CP) Racine- car drivers from Ontario and Quebec will be featured in a battle for the provincial champ» pionship and $3,000 in pri when the Club Auto Sport Metro politan ‘CASM) presents its first | — program at Le Circuit Mont Tremblant-St. Jovite this week- end The two-day event will opén with time trials today and finish Sunday with a %lap race for sports cars Season hop P. E. 1. O) eSE. 2 ae CLOSING. BUFFET Sunday, August 29—5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Delicious Food in a Pleasant Atmosphere $3.50 Plus Tax For Reservations Phone Covehead $ WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8th c Handicraft Display... 290 HORSES and CATTLE ALBERT ACORN, Secretary” | ~ Cardigan, R.R. MRS. WARREN MacDONALD, Treasurer. Cardigan, R.R. 5 ‘PROVINCIAL PLOWING MATCH - and, AGRICULTURAL FAIR ~~ We Welcome the Transient Diner! CLASSES