er Suspended Term Given For Arson plea of guilty to a charge of ar-| . @on, was given a two year sus and witli ‘eature bands, the Silhouettes and the Riverbeats. DEATHS JARDINE — At Summerside, Oct. 7, 1965, George D. Jard'ne, Freetown, in his 87th year. Re mains resting at Davison Fun- eral Home until funeral arrange- ments are completed. Please omit flowers. lace C_ Pursey, in his 83rd year, Resting at the Cutcliffe Funeral Home from where funeral will be held on ’ Calling for ‘The Guardian, Charlottetown, Fri., Oct. 8, 1965. *! Betty Grable ‘Gets Divorce granted a divorce . Thursday from ‘bandleader Harry James. mer actress Betty Grable = The divorce was granted—in | Integrity Could Ruin Health Centre Ils Accredited The Stewart Memorial Health Centre, Tyne Valley, has been sionally accredited by the Cou Hospi ‘ Prior to 1963, the Council -| would not survey hospitals smal- ler than twenty-five beds. This Tuling was later changed so that Punch Imlach To Stress Youth PETERBOROUGH, Ont. (CP) Punch Imlach, coach and gen- eral manager of Toronto Maple said that his team may forced to lean more toward ; hospitals smaller than this could voluntarily apply for a series of visits leading to full accredita- .,|tion provided certain basic stan- dards were met. The Health Centre was one of the first to take advantage of this alteration in policy. It is believed that it is the un- official program of the Council to grant recognition in stages. The first visit, termed a —cour- tesy visit; is followed by an ini- tial survey 12 months later when provisional accreditation status may be grafted if the hospital fulfills the standards. If these standards are maintained fro a further 12 months, then a subse- quent visit may increase this rating to that of full accredita- 5 A forms the Health Centre that it is the smallest institution in Can ada to have attained this status. “letter from the Council if- |said: “I and Australian Davis Cup star Roy Emerson said Thursday he has rejected a- new professional Jack Kramer: Emerson said he intends to| retire from tennis in two , ti years Kramer was reported to have said Emerson could make up to $100,000 in a year if he ac. cepted his offer, but he would mot guarantee that figure. Emerson, on holiday here, have not replied yet, ee can he it as 100-per- at certain answer will be ao.” vid “T am 29 and’ I'm thinking WESTERN » FUNERALS | : of retiring. I won't be playing as Much tennis next year, but I an defend my Wi Emerson, married children, is Australia’s hope in the defence of the with two major Davis Cup against the winners of the India, inter - zone final. Stolle, Australia’s No. 2 been badly off form Player, has lately. tennis offer from U.S. promoter he movement this National h, quite perturbed. over team's 5-4 loss to New York an exhibition game said. John Surtees Set For Home TORONTO (CP) — John Sur tees, the ace British racing driver . two injured weeks ago in a trial run, will able to return home next ¥ sday. all tubes are out (of who passed away Oct. 9, 1964. Wife and family of Mrs. John R. McLean, Souris. Maclean, Maeduartie Long Civil War In Indonesia Struggling State _ 12 TOP NOTCH REASONS... Why you should buy a 1966 Pontiac at- SIDE MOTORS LTD. “Where Customer Service and Satisfaction Come First’ ~* — Po ll y 7 mh a Mr. Bill Long Service Manager eH tae! Gain Pas “REASON NUMBER TWELVE" — The dealer service policy carried by Hillside Motors. What does G.M. 24,000 mite warranty mear? At Hill- side Motors exactly what it says. Your new car or truck is guaranteed for 24.000 miles or 24 months and will be repaired and serviced by nothing buf the best in parts and servicemen. HILLSIDE MOTORS LTD. St. Peters Rd., Charlottetown Ph. 892-1243 @ sealed settlement—by Clark) ay AP News sls Communist led demonstrations ;|movement’s activities # the Seles | Sanrio (ates here ie ne Absolute inte: a of the share of ev- | : ¢ , of public allairs’” was ‘the lery one of his employees.” Hic |,,Miss Grable, 48, & striking) Press’ Southeast Asian serv- Indonesid, sing 1955's 100 a6 &| Since Sukarno told the United as J. Angus MacLean |noted that farmers and fisher- nde singer ee © ~ ices. He has worked fre- | base, went to 1,500 in mid 1965. | States last year to “go to hel” Nand Heath Macquarrie hit the |men who do not normally jn Vorite pinup girl Second! quently im Indonesia since | Rice, the staple food; has gone |with its aid and took many cases have to file income | World War. She and James were 1957 and was there just up 600 per cent since January|ou of the United Nations, he tax retures will in the future be ™M#rtied in 1943 and theirs was) before the current crisis (end now is virtually out of/ has had to turn to his new alli- requiredto do so so that their |*nown as the ideal Hollywood broke out. le ee Meee eee ee Be eee — yg aeolian Aaah A court spokesman said terms y DON HUTH Poits while the cami tines ss . a overnm } OT er discronttns \¢! the sealed settlement); KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia! iorated, more late model cars a Se Se facts of the pension plan,” Mr. | wouldn't be made publie. It was| (AP)—A prolonged civil War | appeared on Jakarta streets | Chinese Communists us oe MacLeas said, “‘is that the citi- | worked out in the judge's cham-|imvolving the Communists | in \than ever before. Luxury goods| war is in the maki zens over 70 have been complete- | bers. for that Southeast | 7are,_2Y in the Chinese |g. Communists, Sukarno caa- ly ignored. A Conservative gov- Both Miss Grable and James| {0s ‘al Reunderme in, |Gominated markets. Wives flay be expected to get the &. ernment i Ottawa would imme- |have been living in Las Vegas| psu foun Eten? om prominent military and govern-| nancial help from Peking that diately remedy this unfortunate |for the last few years . vg, | Ment officials appeared in costly |). the oversight, he said by instituting nthe, country, filitviorgest 0 /elothes and flashed expensive ee mets. ee eo "| Indonesian meet such a strain and ‘still Te ae The army, bitter over the Pe TO LITTLE, TOO sLow maintain the political and finan- Sukarno was fully aware ot |2°*™ % six of its generals. at ; ” Mr, Macquarrie turned his at} Deadlock cial stability & sorely needs 10) wnat was happening. He be- |e pans of Indonesian Com- | that tention to the treatment of the Perens See eee. | qame ietiaind with propaganda |ments, ic gorected Cones ne ly from Atlantic Provinces by. the outgo| |g [J brok , an daily demonstrations di- ss to we ment.” cat cd “Fiey came s Un en to hold his one man rule, has aesiaat tie sympathy if Sukarno presses for cman with too little too slowly,” Mr publicly admitted he cannot con- a eae government |continued strong relations with Head M i. anid... “The former By ARTHUR GAVSHON trol the rampant inflatioa The leader of this campaign a “clean” he stat-|government failed to push|, CONDON :AP) — Prime Minis-|@weeping the country. was Communist party boss, D.|_ The S-year-old “president for “led, “we consider |ARDA as far and as fast as it|‘*"*,, Harold Wilson and Ian) He recently “ordered” that it|n aidit, whose part in the |life” presumably is well aware this moral que Mr. Mac: | should have been,” he stated. “It | trait" (ailed, Thursday to break be eliminated in one year, s8Y| present ‘upheaval still is not | this. ‘|quarrie added his team-|is not reasonable that city peo |. hed British- ing Indonesia is rich enough to| Clear Aidit. employed youth| IH Indonesia does not get ec’ [mate's statements, saying that |ple take for granted what the aed eee aes Fe tracy | Stand on its own feet That was | Crvanisations to parade the |nemic relief from somewhere /“when morality becomes a ques- rural folk have not been able to | to seize before tive current crisis began. | streets of Jakarta with banners |@fd a civil war cannot be pre- | [tion of public morality it is|attain. There is no reason for| The ewo men agreed merely to |2d0nesian currency was im bad | condemning price manipulators, |¥-mted from breaking out, Sa- then the business of the the rural population to be faced |talk again today after a two-hour » ‘The rupiah had (0 |corrupt officials and militerists | karno's “‘ guided democracy” It is. up to the electorate to clean |with a lower standard of living |conference in the cabinet room 16,000 to $i—an alltime high. declared to be’ growing fat on |may have reached the end of -/Up a mess of this sort and not |than the city dwellers and we |of 10 Downing Street had produc- officia) rate is 6 to: 6 graft the road. the government”. therefore must get more money |ed not an inch of LIQUIDATE HOLDINGS Aidit, whose 3,000,000 - ee Turning to the Canada Pen-|into rural pockets,’ he said. ‘A| “If tomorrow’s meeting is analysis attributed ber Communist "party Pag . |sion Plan, Mr. point jpian like ARDA, properly and |truitless too,” one member, of| met tttkan wnerchents ge oracr [largest outside the Communist | ADVERTISING a a Se ens eee te eee ek en a ae We! date their holdings, countries, criticized Sukarno for May not be co knowledge | In closing, both men told the to the average man in the rural |gathering not to be intimidated areas. ' by parties tha? threaten repris- and The EXPECT DEDUCTIONS al against non supporters, but to Patriot He told the gathering, com-|vote.as they saw fit. > acl aoe prised primarily of farmers and| The next meeting ‘slated by ness rural businessmen, that the | Mr. Macquarrie and. Mr. Mac- pate| most important point and the | Lean is in Vernon River on Wed- advertising. oes greatest flaw in the pension plan |nesday. sanhesten the was the fact the plan was com-| ° Last night’s meeting was con- akan, pulsory and not optional. He | ducted by Wilfred Bradiey. En- eS aries: os pasted ext. that uvesy: Wereins |efenneter | gee, Movited by = anh henaatly man could expect payroll deduc’|Earl Todd, ank MacGregor oe a, me ye swede St TEr tanak Gah enrted leleinn the walid a declgned 40 emp! could expect |Luunch was served following “not only to pay their own share |meeting. mislead the readergé, in accepted for must not con- exaggerated * : prices and , ‘Western and Central Districts ake. : . described in e e any “atvertonmem,. we: , would appreciate know- GM Suggested Retail Price ol gp 4p z The Guardian - The Said Down From Last Year's oe eric which this OSHAWA, Ont. (CP) — The| outside left hand rear view mir-|Cootinue: to import a relatively) HAVANT, England (CP)— : § newspaper ts an active guggested retail prices of ail|ror, dual windshield wiper and| Small volume of cars from the| police car rushed to an sddcoe REPAIR Member. 1966 General Motors North) washer and padded eun visors.| U.S. consisting . principally of|in this Hampshire town when a|- : passenger cars| Furthermore, he eaid, im-|Caditiac and the higher price|™an telephoned . saying there Advertisers who delib- will be lower than those of sim-| proved penetration resistance) models in the Buick and Olds-| Were cries of help coming from % erately violate these Hilary - equipped 1965 models,| windshield glass will be stend-|mopaie lines the house. 80 there were: a| ee ; |General Motors: of Canada an-|erd on all 1966 GM North ® . . party of : re permitted to use our ad- coe Sek, eS AIMg-|. Reductions averdging $260 are people listening _to THOTLL ERE vatbiie pense. " On * «© \@leo being made in the prices/ Help, the’ Beatles’ latest hit THE CAMERA EXPERTS ‘o" 7“ A 1965 model Pontiac sixLan-|\ot these imported models. record. ; r - Pictured at the left & below are eleven of these reasons. These men have all completed the General Motors service course and are ready to give your new Pontiac, G.M.C. truck the prompt, courteous service required. Yes, in to-day’s driving condit- fons you need the best factory trained servicemen to look after. your car. “And we have them!” Buick, Acadian, Vauxhall, or i stint