JUST KIDS boardin bus? Well, not quite ‘ kids. These young people are members of the National Youth Orchestra, shown here leaving the Charlottetown ‘Delightiul, Amazing’ Says ONR station on route to sleep- ing quarters Saturday even- ing. The orchestra consists of 100 musicians, 53 boys, girls, 20 per cent of whom are French-speaking. They can NY 850 to study and play with the orchestra for the summer. but one member said yester- day the trainirlig they get is u ! CIIIIC; National Youth Orchiestra—‘Brav-o' (The following was writ- ten especially for The Guanflan by the director of music for P.E.i.) ' By CHRISTOPHER GLEDHILL Last night’s concert by the National Youth Orchestra of Canada was without a doubt? the biggest musical event ever to hit P.E.I. Extra seats hadI DEATH NOTICES Received too late for Classified death notice column HILL—At Montague on August ' 8, Mrs. Dorothy M. Hill. widow of the late Charles V. Hill, formerly of Charlotte- town and Halifax in her 7lst year. Private service the Montague Funeral Home on Monday, Aug. 10 at 2 p.m. Interment in Lower, Montague cemetery. ; WADMAN—At Augustine Cove,; Saturday. Aug. 8. 1964, Mrs. Joseph Wadman in her 85th year. Transferred from the. Chisholm Funeral Home her late residence where the funeral service will be held today. Monday. Aug. 10, at 2:30 p.m. Interment in Free Church of Scotland cemetery. Cape Traverse. JAY—At the Prince Edward Island Hospital Aug. 9. 1964. Hollis Jay of 152 St. Peter’s . Sherw . n 15 year. Resting at the Cutcliffe Funeral Home from where the funeral will be held on Tues- day. service commencing at 2 o'clock. Interment in Floral Hills Memorial Gar- tens. DYER—At the Prince Edward Island Hospital, Aug. 8. 1964, Mrs. Dorothy Nickerson Dyer of Framingham. Mass. in her 56th year. Her re- mains were transferred from the Cutcliffe Funeral Home to Framingham. Mass, for interment. O'BRIEN — At Prince County Hospital. 'Aug. 7. 1964. Ma garet. O'Brien, wife of Anslem O'Brien, 637 South Drive. St. Eleenu's, in her 67th year. Resting at the Compton Fu- neral Horne umil Tuesday. Aug. 11, then to St. Paul‘s '1 a Church. Summerslde. for Re- Na quiem High Mass at 9 cm. Interment in the church mastery. MacLEOD ' - At the Kings County Memorial Hospital, Friday. Aug. 7, Norman Mec’Leod of Murray River in his sou: year. Resting at the my River Funeral Home till noon today. Then to the cormnencing at 2.30. inter- ment in the Little ‘Sa cemetery. BELL—Sud aim-ode- Thomaa Allan Bell. Harbor. in his 1 Resting at the Murray River Funeral Horne till 9.30 this morning. Then to the United (31mph, Murray Harbor. for funeral service commencing It 11 o'clock. interment in the Murray‘Harbor cemetery. FORD—At the home of his daughter, Mrs. Douglas Mac- ew Do ' corded for broad to be brought into the side aisles accommodate the overflow audience. ' rdhestra of N young players comprises the cream of the crop from all over the country, and it is inspiring to see that so many young people have already reached so high a standard of pnoficiency. It augurs well for the future of orchestral music in Canada. This concert was not only a treat; it was also a challenge. Nearly half the players come from Ontario, just over a quarfi ter of them from the West (a proud record, this, for a region that is too often regarded as "uncultured" by ignorant East- erners), just under a quarter from Quebec, and from the en- tire Maritirnes only two, one of them a Haligonian and the other from Wolfvjlle, N.S. WHY FEW MARITIMERS? There are, of course, reasons for this. Money, lack of com- petent teachers of orchestras! instruments, and comparative scarcity of large urban centres. Added to this we might pos- slbly add complacence, apathy and a vew other unpleasant words. Let us face it, this is North Viet Nam Reiecis Invitation To UN Session By THE CANADIAN PRESS North Viet Nam rejected Sum day an invitation to present its side of the Southeast Asian crisis before the United Nations Security Council. And it charged that United States aircraft had again violated North Vietnam- ese airspace. The foreign ministry in Hanoi broadcast a stateme saying Security Council "has no right" to examine the clash be- gvgen North Viet Nam and the "Only the two co-chairmen (Britain and the Soviet Union) and the countries who took part in the 1954 Geneva conference have full competence to ex- amine the extremeiy dangerous war acts committed by the 11.8. government against the Demo- cratic Republic of (North) Viet m." t The council also invited South Vet Nam. The North Vietnamese new not good enough. Educators. both general and musical, are aware of niece things. The general public must also be alerted to the fact that Cano ada is entering a period of great expansion in the arts. and the Maritimes must join in this with the rest of the coun- try or else be left behind hope- lessly. Our beautiful new Confeder‘ ation Theatre is at last pre- senting us with some of the musical facts of life. I might add that plans are at present afoot to see what we can, with our limited resources of popu- lation. do right here in Char- iottetown. TRUE COMPLIMENT This orchestra made such lovely sounds for us that I will do them the compliment of criticizing them from the highest plane. The first strains of the National Anthem hit me like a thunderbolt. The silky (muleuce of the strings, the precision of the Woodwind. and the smooth power of the brass, not to speak of the very com- petent percussion section, were a continual delight to the ear. Mr. Avison took the Mozart test demonstrations were held in Peking and Communist Chl- nese leaders warned that they were determined to stand by ISLAND NEWS PAGE Western And Control Districts no Guardian, Charlottetown. Mon, Aug. in, 1934. 3' overture to the Marriage Figaro a little slower than At least 18 accidents were re- ported on the s of Prince Edward Island over the week- . or as can be determin- ed. only one fatality resulted. On Friday night the first ac- cident and ,the fatality were recorded. Thomas Allan Bell, 16, son of Mr. and Roy Bell. Murray River, was killed when the truck he was driving left the highway and turned over several times. The cident happened about 11.45 p.m. near the top of Bell’s Hill. two miles from Montague. Two passengers in the vehi- cle were injured and taken to N n a usual, and, yea hospital. Lester Atwell, 18, it all the more. The We of Guernsey Cove is in the quality of the music, which 5 P.E.I. Hospital. and Carleton so often lost in the somewhat scrambled hurry of most per. n . was touchineg youthful and appealing. The Night on the Bare Mouth tain can be interpreted in the literal sense of the W Sabbath which comes to an end with the dawning light or figuratively the darkness. of agan Russia merging into the morning light of the Gospel. “in any case the music came through magnificently except for a little out-ofstune playing just at the close. AMAZING '6 off pretty well, especially in the tutti passagm. Some of the variations were, entre nous, just a little too tough for some of our young players at their present stage of development. But it was a very creditable ef- fort in . ’ilhe Berlioz Symphony is the work of an eccentric "off-beat" genius. Space forbids me to, give it the full treatment that it requires. but the orchestra. scored a real triumph in main ing this strange amalgam con- vincing to the audience. Law- rence merney’s handling of the cor anglaib solo in the Scene aux Champs was just righ. Illhe musicians merited the thunderous applause and shouts of "Bravo", which I re-echo. Truly a memorable night. It was amazing to me that ] MacDonald, 11. of Murray Har- bour, is in Montague Hospital. Late Friday night or early Saturday morning two cars crashed in Crapaud. Mr. and Mrs iten. Sydney, . Jo v dies N.S.. were last night reported resting comfortably in the P.E.I. Hospital as a result of the accident, in which their car was severely damaged. The other car was driven by Thomas Gordon Summerside. He was reported not injured. HEAVY DAMAGE e vy damage to two cars resulted when they collided at 2.40 Saturday, shortly after noon They were driven by Duane Hodson of Charlotte- 9 town and Parnell Kelly. South- port RR. The accident oc- curred at the corner of Wey- mouth and Fitzroy Streets in the city. At about 2.45 that afternoon William MacInnis, Morrow Drive, was struck by a car driven by Francis Audet of Quebec City. on Water Street. MacInnis' condition was re- ported last night as improving after he suffer a fractured right thigh, fractured left ee, bruises, contusions, and abras- ions. The next accident occurred in Souris about 6 o’clock Sat- At Least 13 Accidents Reported OnWeekend urday evening. when two cars driven to Harold Kenneth Black, Riverview. New Bruns- wick, and William Edward Wil- son of Halifax. collided at the corner of Union and Longworth Streets. Extensive damage to the cars resulted, but no one was injured. Oyster Bed Bridge was the scene at 9.10 Saturday evening of another accident in which no one was injured. Property da- mage resulted but the RCMP of names or ve- Shortly after midnight, at about 12.55, an Ontario car was hit near South Rustico by an- other oar which left the scene of the accident. RCMP are investi- gating, but as of last night no report of the hit and run driver was available. Again only prop- erty damage to the car resulted and no one was injur . Six people were injured as the result of a two-car collision in Glasgow 10.35 Sunday morning. Both cars bore Nova Scotia lt- cense plates. One of the cars was driven by 5.13. Tremere of Hunter River, and two other Hunter River men 'were in the car with him: Wayne MacMil- lan and Sheldon Ford. All were in the P.E.I. Hospital last night. MacMillan, apparently the most seriously injured, was reported the Hope River area near New ' The 201 Wing RCAF Asso- ciation. Charlottetown, last evening presented two wheel- resting comfortably, and the oth- er two wero in “fairly good' condition. Names of the Nova Scotlans. a woman and two children, were witheld pending notification of next of ' York Corner, on the St. Pe- ters Highway was the scene of another accident at 3.30 Sunday afternoon. The driver of the car involved, W.D. Laybolt. his passenger, 8.1.. Kennedy, were not injured. R MP in Summerside over b :1 CI- the weekend were report have investigated a total of four more accidents in that area. chairs to the Helping Hand . “.4. WHEELCHAI‘RS RCAF Association, WITH Oyster Bed Bridge. Shown here with one of them are, from i . camp chairman Wendell Cudmore. camp dir- ector Earle Nicholson, Pope and Jo- ph P. Gill, who was drain- se man of the project. The band of the P.E.II. Regiment gave \‘J to of MAOHQ. But then in p.m. Summerside wasted littu time in gaining the first win They scored seven runs in the first two Innings and appeared to have no trouble in disposmg th seventh inning with Summer— side. ahead 9-4. MACHQ came Viet Nam had started building up its strength near the 11th parallel—the border of the two countries. North Viet Nam Soviet Premier Khrushchev sou ed the same a Saturday speech in which he promised that if "the imperial- ists unleash war." the Union "will be able to stand up for their country and for other socialist states." EREPARE FOR ATTACK in Saigon. capital of South Viet Nam. an air raid alert was held for the first time in 19 years after Premier Nguyen Iaianh dec a state of emer- gency and warned the country to for attack 5. in a. prepare . The alert also followed state- ments by minds, repo by the Viet Nam press agency. that Communist China moved je aircraft to North Viet Nam Fri- day and that Communist North agency said two US. recon- naissance planes had flown over provinces southeast, south and northwest of Hanoi before head- ing back towards the south-Sim- ilar charges were made Friday and Saturday. WILL END PATROL The latest complaint came a day after the 11.8. deputy secre- tary of defence, Cyrus ance, an id the American destroyer trol in the Tonkin Gulf off North of Viet Nam "will end in the next few days" but will resume again ode the announce- information agency ro- cast by the Voice of America. President Johnson uttered air raids against North Viet Nam Tuesday night atta- charging that Communist torpedo boats mde a second attack on Amer- ican warships in the gulf. weekend passed without any sign of retaliation for the 11.8. attack. but massive pro- wlth the sayin . and the sins of Turkey will not , Mm, a Aug. 8. 1964. H. W. o . tonneriy of Emerald. in his 75th year. Remains are rest- “! at the Davtson Funeral service will be held at one O'clock p.m. interment in the church cemetery. Please omit flowers. MURPHY -- At Halifax. Aug. WESIERN R | E FS o’clock p.m. 1n‘er- m II “a m amstery. STEWART FUNERAL The funeral for the infant son - Mr. Mrs. Obor Stewart was held sum afternoon from the Funeral Com Home with services conducted by R". 0; what is necessary for what has been reques ." He said Britain had said she was unable to he ded: "So seek help from elsewhere to support thenintegrityand unity He said the Turks had “quite definitely" dropped a a p a l m bombs on the island. remarks, "The military ability force us to make concessions which are against our own prin- ciples. . WON‘T RECONSIDER - "Cyprus will not reconsider her position over} to avoid the third world war. Giving the death toll figure on the island as 500, Soteriades said many villages have dis- Second Urgent Meeting Asked OI UN Council omen moons ' (cm .— Turkey was ad weapons on government spokesman in Ankara. Turkey. denied the landings Ignoring Turhy'd denial. a Cypriot delegation spokesman dad-rem "reappears to be pa a limited invasion." l“animal President Sivsrt A. ctl Weber. In wee Wilmot Vail-s senators. ofNorwayaathrccca museum“... PIUSVILLE Vincent and Alyce Gallant are mending their holidays at the home of their parents. Mr. and Mrs. Peter F. Gallant. Recent guests of Mrs. Wil- The funeral for 16-year-old accident victim Thomas Allan t Bell of Murray Harbor will be held at 11 o’clock this morning fro mthe Murray Harbor Unit- Church. Bell, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Bell. died Friday night when the truck in which he was riding rolled off the highway tw miles north of Montague about 11.45 p.m. . A grade 10 student at Monta- gue Regional High School, he is survived besides his parents by two brothers. Roger and Leigh; Coroner Dr. G S. A. Inman 8. ordered an inquest into the fatality, but the date has not yet been announced. Accident Victim Buried Today The following were appointed 0 the jury: Ralph Burtram Lea, Vernon River (foreman); Philip A. O'Donnell, Vernon River; Malcolm Claude Mac- Phee, Montague: Wayne Jos- ep Sturgeon; Tyler Vere Beck. Montague; John Arthur Power. Greenfield: Ken- neth Allan Fraser, Montague. The two passengers in the truck who. along with Bell, were thrown om the vehicle when it rolled. were injured and taken to hospital. Lester Atwell, Guernsey Cove, is a patient in the Prince Ed- ward Island Hospitai, and Carleton MacDonald, Murray Harbor. was taken to the Non- tague Hospital. to life. Two errors, two singles and a walk produced three runs off pitcher Lou White and the makings of a game winning rally were imminent. The breaks were suddenly going theis way. But an outfield throw beat runner Crowell to the plate end the rally and the inning. The second game, of course. was the ider. Summers with Pete Devana pitching won the clincher 10-4. Frank Jarvu. lost. although only going three innings. Doug Alien, Dave 140- Blanc, and ‘ ' Martin were the main offensive for Sum merside. Each had two hits. R. MacLean was the most trouble- some for Devana‘. MacLean whacked three doubles in four ‘ es. With the score only 3-2 in fa- vor of Sununerside in the last game, the 'Islanders' scored four times in the fourth inning on three singles, two walks and a sacrifice fly to bust the game wide open It broke the backs of the Halifax club. They couldn't catch up. In the sixth frame Summer-side added three more runs to complete the rout E E Recoptured SOURIS — Two men seeking freedom found it for a short time Saturday afternoon, but the RCMP found that they shouldn’t be seeing it and sent her to attempt to climb the 000 Teasing Norkay, Sir mastered Mt. Everest MEMORIAL UNFINISHED NEW DELHI! (APl—JLack Chaisson. Rollo Bay, escaped from Scum town jail. located in the town “.50. firehail, for only a short time. d1“ Almost immediately after es- caping they were sent back. Prime the project. funds has stopped construction. on the Gandhi memorial build.- ing after a seven-year outlay of A recent appeal by In Minister Shastri. and others brought $5,000 of the Camp for retarded children at: McMahon, president of ening. : mused Sunday. The Halifax J o B HIG AG I? c a a 1-0 record while I k ‘ . Nepal (AP) -d Summerside was 1-1. If MACHQ New Zealand Sir Hillary arrives here In Septemo. 21,-- - foot Masarkha Thamsekh, peak. Together with the Sherpa, ‘ Edm ud- ln 1963; $130,000 still needed to complete: liam Gallant and Jacqueline Brown were'Mr. and 5. Mel- vin Jones and family. mm. Ont. Recent visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Peter F. Gal- lant were Ernest and Gary Steeves. Salt Springs, Nova Scotia. Frances and Paul Gallant. me osebank. spent some ti visiting their uncle and aunt Mr. and Mrs. Justin Oorcoran, East Royalty. Mrs. Blair McLellau and son Blaine, Toronto, Ont.. returned by plane on Saturday after hav. ing spent their holiday; at the in the zone five finals home of Mr Mrs. John Corcoran. Wendal Gallant, Ont.. is vacationing at tirehome of his parents. Mr. Mrs Fred Gall at a . Mrs. Mary Peters. daughter Zeta, Summerside, are visiting at the home Mrs. Angeline for the _ Toronto. ball bat championships in the RCAF, BaII Team Set For Alberta RCAF Summerside softball team now goes to Namaio. - berta 'tIlIS month. After knock- ing off MACHQ, Halifax 104 in the - genie here yesterday . Sum- merside advanced to the final Dominion RCAF soft» western province. The three team finals. with MACHQ, NF Gander. New- foundland and Summerside nu competing. started Saturday morning at 10 am. with Sum- merslde IIII Gander openim up against each other. Summer- side was half eliminated in that tit-st game. They lost 4-3. MACHQ next at 1.00 p.m. and a few hour; later MACHQ came out on top 5-2. After losing the opening game to Gander. Sumnerside humil- iated them 35-3 that evening. Gander was now eliminated, in the oddly scheduled set up, with a win and two losses. The stay was set for the two game set- tes between MACHQ and Sun. pita]. Alberton. ppeared from the map. All hospitals were filled with ‘ wounded men, women and chil- dren, he s . Since Thursday avoiding. there had been Turkish destroyers off island's northwest coast, well within Cypriot territorial te wa rs. "If this ll police ac- tion, how would one descer a bigger operation?" he asked. be held as soon as possible. Nielsen said it seemed un- likely a meeting would be held Sunday night because the United Nations is trying to get continuation of the landing re- port in be UN peace force on Cyprus. The council earlier Sunday unanimously approved a 0.8.- 00.000.000.0- l‘rcel lobster ment II 0010 slaw. I... I“. Britis't resolution ask! all concerned to observe an me- diate cease - fire in the explo- siva situation. The vote was 940-0 with two abstention- - e Soviet Union and Creche; slovekia. crispy french fries and tangy CHILDREN’S SPECIAL Coco-Cola Ice Cream Hon effective Monday only PETER PAN SPECIAL ‘ [OBSTER BURGER lroll. t . . . . . . .. The Roman historian Pliny said mistletoe was a cure for sterility and a remedy for poi- sonm . INTERRUPTION NOTICE There will be an interruption of electric power along the Trans-Canada Highway between North River and Tryon on Wednesday, Augusr 12, weather permitting. This interruption is necessary to permit us to to relocate and rebqu power lines as required by highway construction work along Trans-Canada Highway. The area; affected will be: 1:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. (Day ' ht Saving Time)‘ Bonshaw to Tryon inc uding Kelly’s Cross, Argyle Shore and adjacent areas. 9:00 am. to 5:00 p.m. (Daylight Saving Time) CFCY Radio Station at North River to Bon- shaw including Nine Mile Creek. Kingston, Emyvaie and adjacent areas. MARITIME ELECTRIC a. .a ‘ travel bargains Charlottetown to: Montreal Moncton Saint John Halifax Sydney Corner Brook $18.00 Toronto Winnijgg Vancouver Mifllfl-M 1‘4".“‘v"; H 1.11.3 it I)! 55 Additififiai-Lifil iufiifira‘ $1 6.00 $ 3.70 $ 5.79 $ 6.30 $1 1.50 $25.30 $42.00 $63.00