hundreds of vital points along ISLAND NEWS PAGE Alberton and West Prince County| 2 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Mon., March 19, 1962. GUARD AGAINST TERROR 600-mile power transmission network around the company’s industrial complex. Increase of COMINCO security forces is ane of many new protective | measures since Serucat Oe ver up giant power BY NEIL, A. MATHESON Provincial and Farm Editor Any decision on a Northum- berland Strait causeway would have no bearing on our effort to get the West Point to N.B. ferry service established, Peter Me Caull, president of the West Point Ferry Company told The Guardian-Patriot Saturd: The Ellerslie inno had fust arrived home fr where he and Robert ‘rindlay, MLA, chairman of the com- | pany’s ferry committee, pre- | sented their proposal Thursday afternoon to the Canadian Mari time Commission. TO MEET DIRECTOR: They will meet their fellow directors of the company and bring them completely up to} | date on the Ottawa discussions, before any decision is reached on the type of effort fost mst be made to get the detailed in- formation the Can has | souoeeta Paper Company | Expects Trade Canadian Smuggling Role Is Seen Dating From 1956 |= By DAVE McINTOSH OTTAWA (CP) Reliable ‘sources said here that in Canada on the same charge. They said the Canadian army officer involved in the case was and had been brought home. He also said there had been “similar difficulties” in aes smuggling in Indochina by Can- discovered smuggling gold and | when a Liberal government wi Sdians serving with the tnter-| had been summarily convicted | im otflee—the first public Indica- ald as! veported ia’ an date national Truce Commissions there dates back some seven years. ‘They said the smuggling of| gold by Canadian servicemen | began not ‘long after Canada, along with India and Poland, became a member of the truce commissions in Viet Nam, Laos and Cambodia in the late sum- mer of 1954. Most of this smug- ing was between non-Commu- nist South Viet Nam and Com- munist North Viet Nam, Smug-| Bing of oplum, between Laos South Viet Nam began | Other informed sources said Canadian soldiers ling in Indochina late last year and already dealt with on the spot by their commanding of- ficers cannot be court-martialed by his commanding officer. The sentence was believed to, be a Involved in smuggling before / paige fine together with a reprimand which would hold up any pro- motion. RETAIN COMMISSION This officer, according to mil- | Souney action, itary law. cannot be tried by| court martial on the same of-| fence and will retain his com- mission in the army, the sources id. However, if this officer had also smuggled opium and |eould be proved he could be tried by court martial for a dif- ferent offence, Prime Minister Diefenbaker disclosed in the Commons Mon- day that nine Canadians—seven military and two civilian per- sonnel—were caught smuggling opium or gold within Indochina Answers To Questions Given By Government In House Answers to ieaeiions tabled in the legislatur HIGHWA' Y DEPT. J. George MacKay asked the| being of ere to table a} br wn of travelling ex- ee Page 34, department of highways annual report for the year ending March 31, 1961. ister of highways to table a breakdown of the item of ma- chinery rental for the 4th Dis- trict of Queens as listed in the annual report of the department ha the year ended March. 31, ‘The tater iid Departmen-| rey, tal machines were used for Hon, J. Philip Matheson, car| Maintenance on roads in the expenses, $913.29. 4th District of Queens during the RG. White, gov't car expens fiscal year ending March 31, es $791 thse “Philip Matheson, con- MOTOR GRADER, 81-1977, ference, $85.21. $7,216.14. R. G. White, travelling expen- MOTOR GRADER, 81-2710, ses $1,066.6: $9,139.62. tt (OR GRADER, 77-2220, A. Wi nie, travelling expen- ses, $1,183.72. Louis travelling ex- John Thompson, travelling ex-| Penses $2,269.50. Brian Scott, travelling expen- Ses $1,923.07. William Ward, travelling ex- Penses $2,371. Lea Windsor travelling ex- Penses $252.44. Paul Balcom, travelling ex- Penses, $338.95. Blake Wood, travelling expen- ses, $61.25. Registration fees ECAHO., Charlottetown Hotel, $150.97. Registration of motor vehie- les, $474.50. — $13,874.92, Less: Credit in the amount of $152.20 (Payment for private miles - Malcolm Reeves, which should have been credited to Garage Acct). Total $13,722.72 HIGHWAY Stew: paste 509.90 *TOTOR $504.50. qgMOTOR GRADER, 1040, #887. *uoron GRADER, D-7 TRACTOR, 31-9723, $354. 86. D-7 TRACTOR, 2003, $,- 834.81. LeTOURNEAU DOZER, 70670, $799.00, LeTOURNEAU DOZER, 70660, GRADALL, 160000, #819. on TRUCK, 200156, $422.88 ten TRUCK 1570-C, %Ton TRUCK, 79. 1901, $39,404.31. HIGHWAY EXPENSES M. L. Bonnell asked the min- bod of highways to table a trict of Kings as listed in the an- nual department for the year ended March 31, ANSWERS Labour, $3,731.91; Gare $s ling Dairy division: (2) Travel-| owned cars ex owned Women’s Institute: (2) expenses; (3) Gov- cars GRADER 8T-1636, | «, $1,438.95 88 $115. tion that Canadians had been te) said sougriing ry | anadians | predates f Aan etree piace if any, had been taken. his | typewriters, H. |, $922.49; Earle Adams, $1, 204; ae Vessey, $1,343.- 27; L. T. Sabine, $1,308.55; Char- les Carr, $1,075.62; Joseph Me- Rackets, § $10.73 P. J. Bogaerts, br Sia ive employees eo "Freericton, NB. $67.89; To- (3) Oil’ and gas, reg. insur- ance, general repairs, te, on one car, te) Traveliog expenses local: — Allan Palmer, $355.35; Mrs. Audrey Velnot, $1,227.02; David Peacock David Ward, $050.9; John” Chandler, $1,205.04; D. P. MacLean, $169.- 66; L. W. Roper, $870.40; W. Sterns, $110.10; aes, oo Graemi for i ‘mt David Rogers, $101.- Gerald John- Out of Province Travel W. Roper, $755.75; David cock, 1.08; D. P. MacLean, | in $36.22 . E. Sterns, $85.45 David Ward, $95.05; Audrey Veinot, $51.90; David Rogers 26; Air tickets, $126.75; Tot- al — $8,867.65. (3) Automobile insurance six Registration six cars, $114. ‘30; Gas, oil and main- tenance of cars (6) $2505.39; To- 77. L. Pea. $20.70; ‘Irene Mountain . Total — $1,983.48. ba = Registration of cars, ; Automobile insurance Gas, oil and maintenance (3 cars), $912.67; Total — $1,250.71. : (e) Farm (3) ‘Travelling Melville Bell, $301, Establishment Expenses: $1,187.40; R. A, ts, 70; tuaeiee e MacKin- ‘Char! Phi $94.68; Total — $1,729.48. say SNOW PLOW H. P. Smith asked the minis- fart Ross asked the min wee and highways Public (2) What were the numbers and types of such pieces of equipment? 3 va ae new and hand? of —| with grades 11 and 12 wi McCaull sald Hees isa possiblte a meeting may be held in Charlottetown this week. MONTREAL (CP) — Consoll-. The Charlottetown meeting dated Paper Corporation Lim. possibility is tied in with the Friday in its annual fact that Mr, Grindlay will re- paper consumption is | ttn today to his duties in the Ticreasing at a slower pace than | legislature as a member for 2nd pial wide capacity, the com- | Prince, and Mr. McCaul! who is y expects operations in 1962| on the Electoral Reform Com- een Seem LORETO Len continue at about the same MacNeill’s Mills rate as in Farmer Passes The company had lower eres ings than in 1960 and a MOUNT PLEASANT — The | fh of Austin Phillips, lecrease in sales, the ae leat! Net, “earings in 1961 fell to|58, of MacNeill’s Milly $15, r $2.58 a share, |red {i ' | from $16,099,683, or $2.72 a share Hoo anne eee At High Level paneiat statement to share- in 1960. Sales were $119,009,198, | Marc! off from $19,599,817 the year| The lat c jee Sins Mr. Phillips is sur. vived by his wife, the former Vera Moore, of Victoria West and by two daughters, Mary, Mrs. Milligan, of Mac Neill’s Mills and I da, Mrs, a vin mas of Gagetown, al one son Stanley, Hamilton, Ont. i ‘a Also surviving are two it ters and four brothers, rat nce, Mrs. George MacMillan, Rumford, Me. John Bishop, of tne Pleas: jant; Hugh, of Old oceners, - ur, Pung | (3) Service and repairs to ministers car, $258.14; oil andj ai ; Total — $631.05. (7) Mercury car, 2,043.79; two The report said the tonnage of pulp and paper products sold decreased slightly to 814,024 from 815,450 in 1 Capital expenditures in 1961 amounted to in 1961, the report said, prea with $6,679,000 in 1 Working: capital at the year- end stood at $70,834,680, pared with $66,596,618 a year pay loader 966, new; 1 LeTour- Beau, used. ) Bee (2), i 1 road stabilization mixer, $75,512.50 Abegweit Equip; 1 motor grader rental purchase- Ba. In 1961, $15,028.00 Abegweit Equip; 1 motor grader rental purchase-pd. in 1961, $9.360,00 at Vietoria West United Church. A. Pickard; 1 motor grader re1 tal purchase-pd. 1961, $13, 520.00 A, Pickard; 2 motor £;\Truckers’ Brief er rental purchasepd. in ‘6! Being Considered oa $10,040.00 A. Pickard, 1 ‘raxcavator D-9 DUMASAT T LoToerieee cooper | Seating Giat 'n\ request ‘oro- ae vincial truckmen for higher h encanta rates is “under consideratio Premier Walter R. Shaw Satur- EXAM FAILURES day added “I am not in any posi- et a ae asked the Sar berg on the request inister lucation; al le present itme. c (1) How many students in the| The truckers presented a briet rovince wrote grade 10 exams| to the premier ‘riday morn- jt | ing asking ton-mile increases on all provincial government con- | tracts and extension of the hour- percentage | ly rate scale. Premier Shaw said the truck- ers feel that the present haul | 14 ow sang? weudent wrote] F8 ae Rot high enough in grade 11 exams in 1 = of high operating costs. ow Sauer ongas Seeetren et y Mama pas! Islander Honored lure? the paecite : On Retirement ALBER’ umford, The late ee “Phillips through- out his life had been employed in’ farming at MacNeill's Mills. The ae Bi be held Tuesday the ila ly students pass- , ieee a talurer (3) What was the pel those passing ‘witoat a fail- umber of students grade 11 passing without a tan ver (7) How ne students 2 the province wrote aoe How many students In | grace 12 passed without a tail | with which he has ure? for the past (9) What was the percentage| "As a young of the number of students 1n| Boston ra a srade 12 passing without a fa At the ti | company, “0) What are the eee a | tirement he recei canon of high sel board of Print oe eee I and “tering Pany’s oe servi grades 11 ani | ji apree i) Aa to. questions, ieaing| toh ce wice. these ‘high schools have the best record of percentage of students passing without » fail- ure and which school had the| Poorest record? ANSWERS (1) 972; (2) 271; Mr. and Mrs. MacNevin (the former Olive Buchanan of Bel- fast) will continue to ‘Summerside Stella Maris "Dapeen Hi ha North Rustico lottetown; St. | 's High, Charlottetown. rage i best = Kin: | Queens s Grade Id bet = North Rustico: i E THE Bi «++ AT BENEFICIAL math $3000 and non ans ove $1800 be life-insured mane oat GEORGE ST. Phone: 6518 CHARLOTTETOWN BENEFICIAL PINANCE CO. OF CANADA West Point Ferry Efforts Said Not Tied To Causeway mission, also has to come to the | elty the first of th “But there is no particular hurry for the meeting to be held although we want to inform the directors fully on what nas transpired, he explained. It Is likely, Mr, McCaul! said, that professional engineers will have to be employed to get the information required by the commission. |. Mr. McCaul and Mr; Grind- lay also met Works Minister | Walker, but his iprarkniee will uot have any official connection with the project, until and unless | it is accepted for subsidy purpos- es by the Commission and ap- proved by the proper federal People. 4 “pnt ye at Nerdo fubsilary of Marit Airways, made its Test 3 ieee vit Woman Jailed lin Rackets Probe | &, repent: rind | ATO, (AP- — The | is riding a new boom, a moon v. Appeals| upheld the ie ccviction of Sally Hucks on charges of trying to obstruct Senate rackets committee in its investigation of Teamsters president James ofa ym. ‘The state’s economy is sky- rocketing, propelled by prepa- rations for this decade's zoom to the moon from Cape Canav- ral. People from throughout the United States are streai into the country’s fastest-grow- ing state. Many are connected with rocketry or associated en- deavors. Others ‘come to seek a fortune in the general expan. Mrs. Hucks was chief switch- board operator at the Woodner Hote, where Hoffa lived in | Washington during the commit- tee’s investigation. The court ruled on only one of the nine counts under which Mrs, Hucks was convicted, hold- | ing that “‘conviction and sen- tence on this count are clearly val me charge in that count was that Mrs. Hucks, 44, tried to influence Josephine Freed, a fellow telephone operator who testified before the grand jury | that indicted Mrs, Hucki | The sentence was .0 months to 5 years on each of the nine counts, the terms to be served concurrently, (Australian ion. With the missile industry 0 tourism and citrus, traditionally the principal dol- r producers, a three - stretch economy now’ girdles the state. Rocketry may eclipse the oth- ers, Florida’s governor Farris Bryant predicts “the greatest economic boom the world has known.” The moon boom, in contrast with Florida's land bubble of | the ‘20s which was blown open | by a hurricane in 1926, is on solid footing, An estimated $20,- 000,000,000 will be spent in the 1 WwW | ores government ne ed lead to a common approach to iS e com: iconimnen Market problems. ‘In Commons OTTAWA (CP) — Ci House of Common shas given ‘a warm welcome to Rt Hon. John McEwan, Australia’s deputy prime minister and min- | ister of trade. ime Minister Diefenbaker enthusiastie | round of desk - thumping ap- | Plause when he drew attention 10 presence in the galleries of Mr ‘McEwan, who is on a two- | day visit to Otta | Mr. Diefenbaker Ewan is discussin “internal interest” to Ci and Australia, and the eftects Commonwealth coun: files shoud’ the United King- dom enter the Common Market. Lionel Chevrier (L—Montreal Laurier) on behalf of the Ube eral Opposition wished Mr. Me- Ewan well in his aco | with the government CCF-New Democratic | Leader H. W., Herridge said was sure thé discussions be tween Mr. McEwan and the Canadia GASOLINES puta sparkle in your youngster's eyes... Kinsmen “Easter Buckets” @ colorful plastic sand bucket @ each bucket contains approximately % Pound of good quality Easter candies @ attractively packaged in cellophane Entire Proceeds Will Be Florida’s Economy Sbuged | [As Moon Boom Gathers Force 2,110 $28 ssi Linked with and progress WHITE ROSE Charlottetown Kinsmen Club ‘Easter Bucket” Blitz MONDAY, MARCH 19th from 7.00 P. M. to 9.00 P. M. For Kinsmen Service Projects NEW PLANE ON VISIT HERE t of Ruane | plane is shown above as it was | See re rts vas wee whea = given xy tah r Lester Pear- crew at the Charlottetown air- ee The new port. | vember, the company sold 10- 000 lots, said vice - president Neil Bahr. The price went up Dormant villages in the ai carne te ion” me are svaleee. Oak Hill, where The focal point is the missile | $0me 700 people live, is look. base at Cape Canaveral, which |i through dusty shelves for 7" harter. A municipal gov. juts into the Atlantic off mid- is © ida. ian ernment is ed for Florida Near the famed tadlan ent, a River citrus region, was little known until a cap- tured V-2 erman_ rocket hurtled into the sky there in 1950. CONTACT YOUR MERIT MAN The United Sistes National Aeronautics and Sj dmin- istration is. acquiring S000 ad. oes acres to enlarge , the ent 15,000-acre bai will be the Iaunc! the Nova, Super, booster. the rocket that eventually will take man to the m¢ About 300 families living in the way of expansion must move. Real estate activity is brisk, | particularly in six counties in the missile zone. Orders for | lots at down and $15 monthly or lower terms are) coming from many parts of the | = 3 The largest on, city spring: ing up ts at Port Malabar, Paracel Developroent Corporation took acres | immediately after announce- ment last August that Cape Canaveral would be the moon- | port, From September to De-| FOR SOE TTY AND Salita 3 ol PUN ea 3 INSURANCE n growth 134 Richmond St. P.O. Box 308 Charlottetown PEL MERIT INSURANCE com nany MOTOR OILS $4 70 Offices Across Conada A member of the Kinsmen Club will be calling you on the phone Monday evening for your order. Your support will be most ap- preciated . . . and your order will be delivered to your home, Used