Although l-lalloew'en doesn't arrive until tomorrow. stud- ents at Prince of Wales Col- lege have been busy during the last week conducting a “Hal- lcwe'en for UNICEF" cam- paign. This included classroom collection boxes for voluntary donations. Posters were drawn by art students, under the dir- ection of Miss Eleanor Lowe, ~ and displayed in the corridors to publicize the campaign. A Hnllowefen dance last night ISLAND NEWS PAGE Alberton and West Prince County‘ HALlOWE'EN FOR UNICEF : culminated the week of cam- paigning. Looking at the dona- tion boxes are. left. Diana Thompson. president of the United Nations Club and Sus- an Martin. in charge of the campaign. Handicraft Slated For By DON IIIACLEOD Guardian - Patriot Staff Writer Courses in the teaching of handicraft making are being lined up. and it is anticipated that before Christmas, the gov- ernment will provide courses in weaving, one In woodturning. leather crafts. one in jewellcry, and several courses in textile paint- In E. Deputy minister of tourist de- velopment, Wendall MacKay. who spent two days last week interviewing instructors who will come to this province from New Brunswick. said yester- day “it is too early to tell in what centres the courses will start, but those interested will be notified through the local ess." STARTS NOV. 1 Mrs. Percy Lister. provincial handicrafts director. will take over her duties on Nov. 1, and will line up the courses. Mr. MacKay said that Mrs. Lister hopes to set up a handicrafts standards committee. similar to that in New Brunswick. The committee would judge quality handicrafts and approve them for marketing. Questionnaires filled out by three 80 Courses Fall Start looms have been ordered a n d are expec arrive next week. “The looms,” he said, “will be rented to those who want to take the four -week weaving course for a fee o per week. The agreement will be on a rental- purchase basis and a person who pays the cost of the loom in rent will own it. PROVIDED BY GOV'T Materi a n d instructors will be provided by the govern- ment for the courses. Once th course is completed, loom own- ers will buy their own materials cost through government channels. “The same applies for all courses. There is a basic fee for the courses. but after th e course. the person continuing in N 90' handicraft making must buy his own in e als." Mr. MacKay added that pot- tery courses will not get started “until early in the New Year. as there is a problem in getting qualified instructors." The deputy minister pointed out that the government will not ' e a marketing agent for the sale of handicrafts. There are plenty of outlets that want good handicrafts. but the quality those who attended the handi- crafts exhibit in Charlottetown have been evaluated and show that 165 persons are interested in the weaving course, 183 in textile paintinrz, 116 in leather- craft, 138 in jewellery. and 144 in wooriturnin . It 8 MacKay said that 15 must be high." Prince Edward Island and the WESIERN BRIEFS IS PATIENT Ivan Adams, Alberton, is a patient in the Western Hospital. RECEIVING TREATMENT Miss Linda Rayner, Alberton, is receiving treatment in the Western Hospital. IN HOSPITAL Addison Rayner. Alberton. isl a patient in the Western Hos- (T765595 vital‘ . double T0 NEWARK '"‘"' - Mr. and Mrs. William O'Brien I ."""° l°"°V left Alberton Sunday to spend' .sllks . ~‘ the winter months in Newark. .crepes -I N-‘L .slzos 7-20 i seem SUMMER ‘fig; “"“ E Mrs. Roger Lakin. who spent sum r in Al on. left _ this morning for Braintree. ‘Mass. . - LUKE FUNERAL — The fu- neral for Mrs. James Luloe of 3st. Ch-rlrsostome wasstheljt yes- THE terday morning to . ames' Gturch, Egmont Bay. where Re- 'qm H Ma as cele- '99 89-T .1 brated by . :13 155 Gt. George St. who also officiated at the Inter- Cltnrlottetown “Too Late To Classify (WANTED —LADY wants 1 homeworkbvdlY0l'h81fdI!- tPhooe 4-6620 evenlllcs. provincial exhibition associa- tion's facilities will be nsid- en-d for the first Maritime Championship Agricultural show which will be held late next September, it was learned yes- terday from Livestock Director L.W. Roper. The idea of the show which will replace the Maritime ' 1 Fair, was approved se- veral weeks ago by Agriculture Minister Andrew MacRae .E.I. and the ministers No vs Scotia and New Bruns- wic . "We'll do anything possible to help out. and make this idea possible” President Cecil Ste- wart of e P.E.I. Exhibition Association said at the time. Committees were named at § 00 -n-vs a Moncton meeting last week- end to interview the exhibition € **~‘:-x ( 1 Palmer Rood Resident Dies ALBERTON — The death Mrs. Albert McDonald, Palmer Road. occurred Sunday at the Prince County Hospital in her 58th year. Besides her husband she is survived by ree brother and one sister, Ernest, Palmer Road; Edgar, Harper Road; Cyril in Norwood, Mass.; Mrs. Emmett Gaudet (Winnifred) Christopher's Cross. The funeral will be held Thursday from the Immaculate Conception Church where Re- quiem High Mass will be con ducted at 9.30. Interment in the church cemetery. 9.. 2 The Guardian, Charlottetown, '.l‘ues., Oct. 30, 1962. C Three carloads of Aberdeen fingus breeding stock arrived in Charlottetown yesterday after- “stop" signs on the “yield" signs was made case we want to go back to “yield" signs." Mr. MacRae said. He went on to say that “an amend- ment to the Highway Traffic Act may come at the next ses- sion of the legislature, and if i does. we may use the “yleld" signs again. “There will be very little cost in superimposing the "s o p" signs and there will be a later use for them if we have the Highway Traffic Act amend- ed." e ‘Yield’ Signs Are Changed eld" signs on provincial highways will be superimposed with “stop" signs, Acting Min- ister of Highways Andrew Mac- Rae said yesterday. He sa' that department per- sonnel have begun to change the signs. NOT DEFINED The move follows Attorney- General Melvin McQuaid's sug- gestion that the “yield" signs be removed as “yicld" is not property defined in the High- ways Traffic Act. “The decision to superimpose Province To Be Considered In Agriculture Show Pl-ans |aSS('-Claliolls in Fredericton, N. .13. and the NS. provincial exhi- bition. as well as the exhibition people re. The Maritime Winter Fair was usually held the first week in November before it was dis- continued when fire destroyed the plant at Amherst, but the new date has been set to late September so that heating fa- ciirties will not be needed in the cattle and other livestock barns. CHILDREN’S WEAR It snow suits . cops, bennots. etc. . car coats Belvedere Store Sherwood — Open Sunday and LAAAAAA--- D AAAAAAAAA vvvvvvvvv " every day until I0 p.m. lgrgrnss 1 TAIITIIII TIRE 1 I R E s CLARK TIRE 1' I R E S GOODYEAR TIRE s noon,‘-“nan TANTN‘ ms 152 Kent St. Dial 44574 llllll Certified Pi Welding . General eldhtg ‘ ' Stacks Smoke Iianltsot consult HYNDMAN hsuranoo’ your ‘FOR YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS Insurance since 1872 our experience of so years Aunts Throughout the PI-‘evince 8: CO. LTD. as underwriters. to 1 al vv Aberdeen Angus Sale Here Friday noon and the 60 animals. mostly young heifers, will be sold by auction Friday at a sale com- mencing at 11 a.m. The 60 head of Ontario cattle will be sold along with 16 head from a num- ber of P.E.I. breeders. The Ontario cattle are stabl- ed at the Exhibition Grounds where they may be seen by any- one who is interested. Tom Jackson, Cooksvllle, On- tario. has 23 animals; Wendell G. Barbour, Charlottetown. has 10; Harvey MacDowell, Rose- mout, Ontario, with nine and Malcolm Bailey, Uxbridge. On- tario. with six. are among the largest consiguers. A two-ycar-old heifer and a Whilewall tires optional at extra cost WEATHER TORONTO (CP) — Tempera- tures issued by the weather office: Min. Max. Dawson 28 29 Vancouver 46 58 Edmonton 41 61 gory . 45 73 gtna 30 83 innipeg 37 45 Ottawa 25 32 Montreal 25 34 Moncton . . so 52 Halifax . . . . . . . . . . SO 56 Charlottetown . . . 41 53 Sydney 11 U‘ Ysrmouth 52 office says today will cool with sunshine in regions late th oon. Regional forecasts: . Halifax and vicinity. northern Nova Scotia. Eastern Shore: Mostly clear. with late morning and early afternoon cloudiness; very cool: west win gust- 30 becoming light ing to this evening. Low-high at Halifax 32 six-year-old cow are from the E. P. Taylor Winfield ranch at Willowdale, Ontario. other P.E.I. breeders selling cattle include Dr. J.P. Lantz, Kcppoch. with three heifers; Ir- ving MacDonald. York, with four: Boyd Dixon, Clyde River, wi wo; Frank . M c Earnscliffe. with one animal: Andrew Wells. Alberton. with one and A.!,{. Roper. Charlotte- town with one a mat. Ten males and 76 females are being offered in all. The sale gets underway Friday morning at the Exhibition Grounds at 11 o'clock. Claude Craswell will be the auctioneer. The sale is sponsored by the P.E.l Aberdeen Angus breed- ers assoclation and a number of Ontario breeders. . John’: . . . . . .. 34 . 58 HALIFAX (CP)-—-The Walther most regions until cloud spreads into western‘ M-rs. utertsoon. :2‘ w-high at Moocton St. John River Valley: Mostly clear this afternoon; very cool; west winds wl gu s becoming light near noon. Low- loeculooa, * in overall ooolt north AMI: ”L3"5f°n.t VII I - Ito: xtsndao. becoming overcast late lie: 1 saowfiurries, becom. I this evening: very welt winds 28“ mm. min: west 164 by It Campbel- Bay of Fundy: Northwest winds 20; cloudy with snowflur. rte: elm-tog in afternoon. vsg. lblllty 15 miles except two miles in snowfiurrles: r 40 High tide today at Charl te- town at 12:18 am. and 1l:50 p.m. At Rustico at 8:25 a.m. temperatures hhtFaedito28 dfl. dO:OO and 40, New Glasgow 30 and 33- so tF.Iohn flerlgdnw, 1!:Ti.inuud- :I'ghtoen was later tit“: Goshen 30 and 40- stop as and . ‘Charlottetown. sun rises today South shore, Annapolis Val- Boy of Cholera‘: Cloudy with at 6:30 and sets at §:01. ley: ostlyi cloudy“ I-emminlg overcast .ths eve ng: coo; w.~.. winds 15 win. gt... to as Pcrkdalo I-Ions Sponsors becomirng lgt; this auf1ter- v pl noon. OW- S 8 armou . and 42. Kentvllle 32 and 40. FTQO. HGIIOWC an Party Cape Breton. Prince I-tlfilwlard Il d M tly clear wi a rrsioadlilng grsid early afternoon bf ‘”'*.n ‘T ~ 1 dl : very c ; es V 5vfi.'3."§§sgu.tiugfico 35t°b;§oI:1- PARKDALE .INS'|l|TI.I‘|‘l HALL in west 15 gus ng in ’ ' October 31 Starting 1:30 p.m. FAMOUS FOR .. nnsunan mspacmp ; FOR PRE-TEENS Entertn.inmentandtreatI.prIzos1orvsrioos ,- , . I GOOD 032: °'' ‘ mum:-1., 9 P.M.--TEENAGERS—-Recreation and dancing, sscxg Also prizes for costumes. THERE 3 N0 EQUAL T0 0LDSlVl0BlLEl Super 88 Holiday Sedan Year after year, O1dsmobile’s special brand of quality is taken for granted- by everybody except Olds. And here for ’63, Oldsmobile has again‘ allowed no compromise. The wheelbase is a full size 123" (l26' in the Ninety-Eight)—the interiors are, as always, truly luxurious in room andappointments —the ride and response even more dramatic. Experience the result—you’ll agree no car offering loss can truly be called a “luxurious”, “big” or even a‘ “generous” automobile. NEW "TILT-AWAY" WHEEL AOIIISTS NEW SELF-AOJIISTIII IRAKES IAOIIE ROOIA WITH NEW TO 7 POSITIONS‘ . GIVE SIAOOTII, SAFE STOPS FLATTER FLOOR The flick of e lever-—and Oldsn Oldsmobile’: efllcient brakes Oldsmobile‘: new flatter floor mobi1e's new "1‘ilt-Away" steeru make eir own adiusnnents makes more room for tbeman ing wheel swings up for easier in 1963.Beckup—stop—4md in the middle (thanks to a_44 entry and exit. Even while driv- there yop an! Extra °onvo- per cent r in, you select the wheel position nionoe, safety . . . tunnel ) Olds demonstrates that suits you best—oould any-. that's the '63 Olds. what "legroom" really means. thing be more comfortable? ' \ NEW OELOOTIIOII OEIIERATOR KEEPS IATTEIIY FIILII OIIARGEII Even at idling speeds, the new Delootron Generator diaries the battery. Keeps it fu ly charged for those must-start ' mornin&s—snd prolongs battery ' e, toot ‘Options! at extra cod More than ever, thcre’s “something extra” about owning an Olds. O-I“-l GOODSPEEDS I IIEW EXTEIIIJEO-LIFE EXHAUST STSTEIA RESIST S CORROSION Excess heat and corrosive acids can cut down your mother life. Olds does something about it with special sluminizing of mums: parts plus a heavier gauge steel in the ‘V. OIIIET, SIOOTII RIOE t onasohdf by llflllllfllt ’63 Oldsmobile . I SEE YOUR QUALITY OLDSMOBILE DEALER SOON! A ovum. tuotouvuus P. E. I.) LIMITED Dlalb-O57]. BIIARD-IEAI FRAIE SIIRES 0ldsmoblle's famous ride ° pen. ‘I built tlonprovided _ -Beam fronts- witb the help of Vibra-Timed Body Mo ova so location.