\__l V? it his Good For the island II’ he Guardian is For it V0 . LXXV. N0. W ‘ ISLA Presenting ii new form. of" island entertainment in the City of Toronto. 10 highland dancers will rm at the famous ONE. Monday which draws thousands of spectators , Afllulrlflu to its shows. Left to right are Tom Bur Charlottetown. Eli:abeth Haywood. Char- lottetown, Evelyn Fraser. Cardigan, and Marsha Weil- ner, Southport. The group lowed Otfawpudllcgnymnddvlntlnl Gealnlli all leave Friday afternoon and will perform Monday. return- ing Tuesday. Mrs. Douglas McGowan. Montague will ac- company t.he dancers. (See picture and story on page .'!)._ More Religioniln Schools, Urged By Synod Speakers By CARL MOLLINS KINGSTON, Ont. CPl-—Speak- ers at the general synod of the Anglican Church called Monday for more religion in publ schools mo instruetlon.in worldly affairs in church education. day-long discussion of a report by the church's general board of religious education ranged through projects and proposals covering both the sec- ular and religious fields. “At the very least the church has the ' to insist th public education should present the Christian view of God, man in up and the world the same hasis as other views," the board report said. Religious education in the church must include study of '‘the basic and specific ques- tions about life that people are asking today, the kind of ques- tions that are raised in news- papers, in a g a z i n e s. serious literature. movies and TV pro- grams. said the board's gen» cral secretary. anon K. R. Michael Creel of Toronto. TAKES ISS UE The board report took issue with the popular argument_that public schools should maintain "a strictly secular and neutral Dolley" because there state religion and Canadians follow a variety of faiths. The principles of liberal edu- cation in a democracy and fact that “the overwhelming majdrity of Canadian taxpayers’ are at least nominally Chris- tian“ give the church a right to have a voice in public edu- cation. the report said. "Moreover. there is no neutral course in education. The educa- tional system . . . not inclined towards Christian principles is mevitably slanted away from em. ii” 5 9 Specifically. the schools should present "a careful and accurate" treatment of history; Rvmpathetlc treatment of Chris- tian faith expressed n l ra- ture: an attitude of "reverent «'tRnosticism." if not of positive faith in non-scientific sub an an acknowledgment that factor other than material con- ccrns should govern_ a pupil‘: of Canada ' re as much time The report noted that main- taining “Christian attitudes" in education depends ultimately on the individual teacbe _ to the ‘enlistment of teachers as she does to that of priests and other professional workers." School curriculums often con- tain materials which "to say the least do not do justice to the Christian vlew." the report said. The church should "main- tain communication” with edu- riculum revision. On possible future policy, the NEW YORK (AP) »- Amer- lica. Roman Catholic Jesuit imagazine. says some Jewish [groups may produce an out- break of anti-Semitism in the United States if they continue to push‘ for elimination of al religious practices in the pub- lic schools. The weekly magazine. in an editorial in its Sept. 1 issue. says there’ have been "disturb- ing hints of heightened anti- semitlc feeling" since the U.S. Supreme Court's decision ban- ning a New York state official school prayer. The editorial referred to the ‘support given the decision by some Jewish groups and to the act that Jews were among those petitioning the court in the New York state case. The magazine said it would be "most unfortunate if the en- tire Jewish community were to be blamed for the unrelenting pressure tactics of a small but overly vocal segment within it." The editorial was described of the American Jewish Con- choice of vocation. green. as containing “thinly local Officer to Join Group0nNortherniour Capt. Walter L. Conrad of. Charlottetown will be one of 10 Canadian‘ Army officer: fr o in i the Maritime: to make day 6.600 mile tour north c Ieven- on of the for are suppiementfnrprevious loo Now in the first half of a two year course leadingto staff of- ficer qualifications. the officers this into the for north . the department of notIon- turn and studies. In I practical «in Fi-obinhe Thule. Inuvlton Acctlcooocn Yoilowhfh. Ind Ti-entonon way they will becomefninilfnr group of I entl. in- cluding 13 from other countries. 18 Inembonof the college’: ‘di- recting unit. and about six other officer: is scheduled to return to lllllton on Sunday. cational authorities during cur-l board suggested that establish. .Jesui’rs'Magazine RapsJewish Aim by Dr. Joachim Prinz. president ' ; ment of Anglican parochial tschoois would provide an oppor- ', tunity out fully .Christian-based educational cur- “The church will need to give F riculum. Newfoundland now is t . ‘only province with Anglican parochial schools. ~ On religious education in the church. Canon Creal ‘said cur- ,rent plans call for a fresh lapproach that would ‘ ciude ,adults as well as Sunday school .Clllldl‘Cll in the program and ibring issues from the everyday world into the study schedule. The church must a ;“drasiic reappraisal" of the ;traditional Sunday school, he said. tism. . He said it was "a sorry day for religious liberty" when "so .respectable a journal of opin- lion as America" should resort ‘to such alleged threats. 1 !cause Jews have supported ef- [forts to protect guarantees in ‘the U.S. constitution. TIME FOR QUESTIONING ; America. which has scored tthe Supreme Court's decision as Ea step towards the seculariza- ‘tion o U.S.. continued in the editorial: § "Conceivably. with help from ‘some important Jewish groups. .the recitation of the Lord's iPrayer as well as the reading ;of messages from the Bible in the public schools. can and ‘may. in the near future. be de- clared unconstitutional. er. ‘ e fo r e. whether it is not time for lead- their more militant colleague! .whether what is gained through fthe courts by such victories is ‘worth the breakdown of com- munity relations which .will ln- _ ,evltably follow them. ‘ “What will have been accom- plished if our Jewish friends~ win all the legal immunities the seek. but thereby paint themselves into a corner of so- cial and cultural alienation? T time has come for these fellow citizens of ours to decide a m o n it themselves precisely what they conceive to be the fi- nal objective of the Jewish community in the United States —in a word. what bargain they are willing to strike as one of tthe minorities in a pluralistic society." Iblhdfllleonqurlnfi. “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, TUESDAY, AUGUST 28_, 1962. @1112 @itm:crliott WEATHER I Mostly cloudy. coastal .02; disipating during morning; southwest winds 15. Low-high 58 and 78. «mo- OTTAWA DISCUSSION I ARDA Projects t Await Signing l CAPITAL BUREAU ; sent out to all the provinces in OTTAWAOJF '12-IE GUARDI:NiltVll1ay along with a request thlat -- s soon as a 0-: e provinces comment on te‘ minion-provincial agreement is lplan. The comments have alll signed the federal governmentlbeen received by Ottawa a ndl will be in a position to co-oper- ;ARDA is now in the position of ate with Prince Edward Island ire - submitting th e proposed} on several projects under ARDA. {agreement to the federal cabi-l Director of the Agricultural ne- tnet. When it is approved, it will 3 lialtiilitation [then be sent back.to the prov-i a n d Development ; . Davidson. met with =inces for formal signing. §‘}.°f§‘.‘.Ei°‘i°‘g£l”.‘L'iif.‘.Z”M’:§§’si§°iiI ._...;'i‘.V‘i...°."‘2..‘...‘.’.’i‘i"‘.i‘.“’ J? ii’.’."i..‘?.'.i’.-Z . drew MacRac in Ottawa Mon- luntil the agreement is signcd.".~ day morniitg. ‘Mr. Davidson said. “But as soon E Following the meeting, M r. :as this is done, and it could be Davidson said that P.E.I. has ‘ completed in about three weeks. 2 presented a number of propos- = we will be in a position then to- ’ als for ARDA projects, somelgo ahead.with some of the pro- half dozen of them of a major i posed PEI plans’ natisire. I h Mr. Davirllson said he did not‘ _ ‘ “ ome o t e proposed pro- ,‘ anticipate tiat ARDA would be‘ Troplcal S1-on“ gelctsvialre ‘oenes that can be start- 3 hit by the government s econo- l ry little delay. b ut my drive. A sum of $50 million ‘ th r ‘ ' h r ‘- Develops At Sea ,Stuiyiv-w€i}e’ii‘i‘éi§ftS3li‘§cf.§‘§'ei. i.".ili..‘.°‘i."".if‘f ;':‘...‘§i’§f.i“..°.".“."‘. _ iplained. He said that his depart- t three year basis. MIAMI. Fl3- ‘AP’-—The first ;ment has held discussions with: Little of that money is likely to A tropical storm in the At1amicjP.E..I_. representatives on tlir_ee:be spent this year. A formula. up l?§§§f;l"‘...‘3..i%l§i .*::‘..-'.“.'=..*°.::‘.‘ tr: 3.12:. ‘il'g‘;..'é§5°.“. ti and gale warnin s were raised ' -- - -l ~ - E from Morehead gciw to cave t"°ii.5“°iJ§3i3isf.$.““L’i’$i§iL‘L'éPIES; f;§‘i°‘1.i‘.’i’."i."".‘."i'i"i"i.i“‘}.f.‘.I’..i".‘iliiiil .-« . ti“ lMOTH:E~R OFFERS i EBABY FOR HOUSE! DERBY. England ersl-—Mrs. Jean R mother of six. Monday of- fered to give away her month - old baby in ex- change for a house. Mrs. Rook. baby Jacque- line and her five other chil- dren. have been staying at a city welfare home here ‘and her unemployed lius- band. Jim. 35. at a Salva- tion Army men's hostel. since they were evicted from their low-rent council (Reut- ook. “The family should stick together an ave tramped the streets to get a home." said Mrs. Rook. “Now in desperation have made this decision. We love the baby very much. but we have no alter- native." Morell Rear Boy"! Fatally Injured Prince Edward Island's third traffic fatality within two days veiled threats of anti - semi-I ters of American Judaism to ask . Hatteras, N.C. The storm. named Alma by forecasters. was about 100 miles least-southeast of Charleston. S. 3 . a p.m . E Packing winds up to 45 miles tan hour near the centre. the {storm was moving north-north- ,£mst at about 14 miles an hour. j Winds of 30 to 40 miles an }hour extend outward 200 miles ‘from the centre, mostly in the eastern semi-circle. ‘ I Suspect ls Held In Bank Robbery i MONTREAL tCP> —-— A man rwas arrested Monday after a j,bank holdup in which the bank's taccountant chased a suspect for a couple of blocks in a com- ‘mandeered car. i Police said a lone gunman (walked into a branch of the |Bank of Montreal in northeast Montreal and forced a teller to ‘hand over $1.200. As he fled ifrom the bank, accountant Ad- gdre Favrcau ran after him ‘ Spotting the suspect running ldown the street. Mr. Favreau [flagged down a passing station jwagon, driven by Jacques ,=Champai1nc, and started after the man. . He caught him minutes later land held him until police ar- irived. wigicnc-to-nun-n Announcements. ndlcec . 13 Births. am. etc.. .. Ms Ital! Comic features .. 11 ‘Women’: page ti city. Queens 5 Kings County 4 S .. ......... 3 . . . . . . . . . 10 Earle Terry. London. 0nt.. who is conducting a workshop in school music at Prince of Wales C o l l e g e Auditorium. ‘ a general ARDA agreement was e. l By JAMES NELSON OTTAWA (CP) — A general meeting of the Progressive Con- .servative party will be held in .Conservatives Plan Mid-January Meeting and university branches-metl in the sweltering heat of a ho-, tel hall, and broke up their’ (Continued on Page 3 Col. 6) January — barring a winter election in the meantime-—and new impetus will be given to party organization, ' was cided Monday at a meeting of‘ party executives. 3 Senator G. S. Thorvaldson of Winnipeg, who will retire in January after three years. as party president. said it would be a meeting at which both party organization and platform ' iscussed in open session. . The meeting, drawing 1,500 delegates to Ottawa and per- haps as many more observers, is scheduled for Jan. 18 and 19. . he Conservative party's na- itional executive officers — rep- 5 resenting the s e n i o 1' party Wind Cuts Path Across Scisk. EARL GREY, sask. tCP)~-A violent tornado early Monday tore through an area three miles wide and 30 miles long in south-central Saskatchewan. scattering granaries, trees and crops. Damage was estimated at be- tween $500,000 and $1,000,000. With winds reported at more than 100 miles an hour, the fun- nel of wind hit ' at the farm of Ernest Foster. about seven miles north of this farm-. ing community and about 50! l group as well as women's youth takes time out during a coffee break to go over one of the long: featured in the work- shop for three of the delegates. miles north of Regina. l SCHOOI. MUSIC WORSHIP OPENS HERE Left to right are Mrs. Georle shew. Buckley: Sister st. Pa- trick. Siimmerside; Mr. Terry. and Mrs. Bert Patterson. of l occurred last night with the 1 death of two-year-old Francis 0’- Neil. Morel! Rear. who was struck by a truck yesterday af- ternoon. The little boy was rushed to the Charlottetown hospital short- ly after 1.30 after he was struck by a three-ton truck. driven by Alexander Angus MacKinnon, Forest Hill. while crossing the road near his home. He was tak- en to hospital in a private car occupied by Mr. and rs. Ches- ter McCarthy, Moreli Rear. The vehicle was escorted to Charlotte‘ toivn by an RCMP police car. The road, where the accident 16 PAGES Experts Expect Spaceship T To Be Put Back On Course \/enus Probe t May Succeed CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. .’(AP) The U.S. Mariner II spaceship sped toward an in- intended December rendezvous with the planet Venus Monday night after several anxious ‘hours when project scientists feared the craft was too far ,course instead of the 600,000 ‘miles indicated by early fig- ;ures. ‘ , If the United States, newest land brightest planetary ex- .plorer completes its assignment {after a journey of 80.000, 1 miles. it will provide the world’s 10“ 900759 10 Carry out its mis-lfirst closeup look at mysteries sion. But officials announced late ;Monday after exhaustive study Iof tracking data at “the .spacecraft ' on a trajectory ltliat can be corrected to make; .it fly by Venus within a dis-l 1tance of 10,000 miles planned." They reported that the 447- pound space voyager had been lpropelled only 250.000 miles off until today if an inquest will be eld. In addition to his parents he :1‘ three half-brothers. The Souris Detachment of the R.C.M.P. investigated the acci- ent. Early Sunday morning Martin Ross, 55, of Flat River was kill- ed when he was struck by a car while walking on the highway near his home. The other fatal- ning when Mrs. Percy D. Wil- liams, Charlottetown. died in the Prince Edward Island Hospital as a result of a collision in'Char- lottetown Sunday afternoon. An inquest has been ordered in both fatalities. occurred runs through the O’- Neill property, with the ho me being situated on one side and a barn on the other. Reports indicated that the boys father. John O’Neill. was standing near his home and call- ed to the boy. who was on the other side of the road. to come across to the house. Just as by started across the road the truck came around a turn. The driver reportedly saw the boy and swerved his vehicle but he was struck by the rear wheel. The vehicle was loaded with pulpwood. A cousin of Mr. Mac- Kinnon. Louis MacKinnon. was a passenger in the vehicle. An autopsy was performed last night but it will not be known 9 5‘ 0 Charlottetown. The workshop. which concludes Wednesday. is sponsored the department of education and the _P.E.I. Music I-‘ggtivnl Association. ‘Found In Nflci. 74 Bogus $10 ST. J01-l'.N’S. Nfld. (GP) More counterfeit Canadian ten- dollar bills were uncovered here Monday as banks toted up their weekend receipts. Sev- enty-four of the worthless bills have now come to light since the first was discovered in a city bank last Thursday. Syd ney Man of the puzzling planet. Among other things. Mariner It could determine whether life exists on Venus —- something doubted by most scientists. correcting a trajectory error of up to 50,000 miles. if applied to the 600,000-mile figure, firing the motor would have brought Mariner II only Within 100.000 miles of Venus-— far beyond the maximum 25,000- mile range officials set for ob- mysterious. cloud shrouded taining useful data about the planet. , Scientists pored over radio data throughout the day. When computers produced the lower figure, the scientists set to work preparing precise formulas needed for the critical firing of ity occurred early Monday mor- tr the motor in eight days. on p. 4. is survived by one brother and Se t They tempered their optimisin- with statements s a yin g that- many things still must; occur in the eight days before a signal is sent to fire the motor. They noted that all commun- ications, data - gathering and other systems were working perfectly Monday but that e1ec- t onic bugs or space dangers—- » such as radiation, varying tem- perature and -meteorites—could ruin parts of the experiment. Tlm0WN OFF COURSE Mariner II was thrown off course by a slight roll motion executed by the first stage of the Atlas-Agena booster rocket shortly after it blasted into the early morning darkness from Cape Canaveral a 2:53 EDT The National Aeronautics and Space Administration labelled the rolls normal dispersions in the Atlas which “put the 447- pound spacecraft 250,000 miles off its course to intercept the planet." This deviation, however. is well within the correction capa- bility of the mid - course motor on Mariner. , NASA's jet propulsion labora- tory at Pasadena. Calif.. the V main computer 0 e. said 5 that if all went right the craft » 1 Is Drowned SYDNEY (CP) -— Walter Au-, gustus. 40. of Sydney. drowned: Monday when his row-boat over-- turned at nearby Gilhomes Lake. The body was recovered a shorti time after the accident. ‘ Becomes B HALIFAX (GP) --- Flt. Sgt.; Robert Chad Tournour was at,‘ work as an RCAF inspector at. an aircraft maintenance plantl neighboring Dartmouth Monday when he heard that he had be- come Earl Winterton. A telephone call from a New‘. York newspaper the 46-' year-old native of Windthorst. Sask., he joined the British of 70-year-old Lord Wintcrton. a fourth cousin once removed. A 22-year veteran of the air force, Sgt. Turnover left. work and told his wife and the RCA? public relations office . e spent the afternoon talking to men from London, -1 -'3: n . New York. Toronto tend I-falifax—mostly by tele- iphone. _ gt. urnour. who likes ‘fish- ing. golfing and playing bridge. suggested he could think of bet- . . a. talking to report- expected the force office ers. u t queries. The same thing happened in 1% '1! rd with the death_ of Lo Winterton's former heir. Major Gernrd Archut Tumour. D Flt. Sgt. Tournour was then serving at 3 base in Sardinia when he was told he was next in line. 801'}! DELIGBTED "‘We‘re both delighted." said the Ind wife in an interview des- . He cribed himself as the son of I Saskatchewan bank manager. peerage with the death Sunday, V ——I rot mi The new us. call for discus- would pass by Venus within the it first two weeks in December. t The vehicle had been slated to make its fly-by exploration in . a 30-minute pass on Dec. 4 and | then whirl into orbit about the sun. . — .-;-i—.;_. Inspector Oi Aircraft , "t" h P A Flt. Sgt. Tournour lived in various parts of Saskatchewan before joining the RCA in 1940. He married the former Kath- i leen Whyte of Saskatoon in 1941. g The Tumours have no chil- ren and live in an apartment in Dartmouth. They moved here a year ago from the Montreal -*— iarea where Sgt. Turnour had a I 1 similar post. Sgt. Turnour never met Lord vwintcrton. but said he corres- Iponded with him by telephone ‘and letter. lie says he has not heard of- flcial notice yet and does not know what will be involved be- sides the title. Whether or not his wife will move to England possibly depended on the details of what the appoint- ment involved. ._ However. "I'm in the air force three more year: at iealt ire at 50." Yanks Prod Reds 7. iOn Berlin issue 3 WASHINGTON (AP) .. The ?United States prodded Rustin again Monday to discuss ways .of reducing danger-level ten- 3slons resulting to run‘: Communist wall and the "sense- less cruelty of the police of the ‘ viet sector" sions was contained in I not: delivered to the Soviet forelui office in Moscow.