penal) a ' the Driving Park ee ae Lea F ; : = ta Sete T E mf z 3 MIDWAY 1s ATTRACTION FOR THOUSANDS RANKS WITH BEST ~Old- Home..W eek. climax to big tourist season | The elimas of one of the great: | the est summer seasons, tourist and entertainment- wise, that the province has ever experienced takes place the week of Aug. 15 to 98. It is the annual Provin- eial Exhthition and “Aid - Home Week. many : Toronto~ boaste tte Canadian National, Calgary its stampede, and Montreal its Expo, bet for sheer. genuine enjoyment that “breeds good neighborliness none ean surpass this premier_sum- sophisticated. mer event-on the Island. Here} The Women’s Institute build- rural and. urban- folk rub shoul- jing reflects the cultural. side ‘of ders with tourists, the great and |the fair and the province.. Here There is the vaudeville, midway. the races, the live- istock, poultry, handcraft and cooking exhibits and. displays that; year after year, produce the excited ‘oh's and ah’s of an appreciative public. The midway is the=mececa of children, and the Bill Lynch shows,-down through the° years: ihave given tops in this. type of entertainment while also provid- ing. plenty to: exctte the more wot ao great, from all parts of jthere are exhibits ranging from | the country to produce a ‘pet- flowers” te photegraphy;-an out- pourrt’ that fe: an- antidote t» jetanding display of the home many of the world's fils. | arta and handcrafts that’ are Tt is a far ery from 18908 when [practised by the amateur joined. with |professional alike. Here too the the exhibition ta produce today's [art of cooking anmes into its great show, but it ia a compll-.jown withofferings that_ would ment te-the founders that the ‘tempt the- most_fastidious. format for the competitions and | The livestock and the poultry the tmage of the entertainment jbarns always attract their hae changed litle. > quota, of. visitors, and ‘the ama- ~and feur can freely’ match his judg- ment against those of the pro- fessional in the ring at the: main pavilion. Here is produced to the public ‘a. cross-section of the best the Island -breeds The good neighhorliness that permeates the. exhibition and “Old Home Week spills over into the business. booths in the pav- ilion .and surrounding grounds, Here rural and urban folk can receive the/ latest information on mechanized farmirg’ to the most recent in government plans concerning ‘conservation and |reforestration. : But while all these attractions | have their followers, and they are many, It is the harness | horse racing program-that pro- | vittes-the-foeal point of the big | week. It is difficult ta describe the tenseness and the excife mem that grips the crowd when the announcer . roars “They're aff’ and ‘Here They Come.’ Suf- \five it to say. -vou have to. be there, You can't just imagine it. Mayor extends welcome _% je alwaye a pleasure te the 3 Oe extend a welcome to- visitors to our city and our province, but perhaps there ts added warmth te the greetings on the occasion of our annual Old Home Week. j We know fthat ‘then there are manv former eitizens returning to take part in the celebrations. and to renew their former de- licht in the Provinelal Exhibl- tion show and the great harness racing which {s always sa much @ part of eur way of life An The Maritimes To. all of vau.—_old friends —and Rew of Charlottetown, T. offer a sincere welcome on behalf of all fur citizens May vour stay he ao pleasant It’ will live long ‘in your memories and may we al- wave remember with delight that vou came to see ur. : Sincerely yours, WALTER J. COX, “MAYOR City of Charlottetown : Mission reports TOKYO (AP) Seven North Americans just hack fram Cam- hodia said tnday they are con- vinced Prince’ Norodom = Sthan- | ouk, Cambodia's ruler, is neut- tal toward the Viet Nam war and is trying to keep Communist troops from using his country as a@ sanctuary Syhanoayk Hed" munist hodia's border, Jan ‘wilfully them. Russell American Friends said movement of a new Com Vietnamese along Cam- but’ no Cambod- co-operates’’ with Johnson of the Service Com there ta (‘lim Pepin and AMHERST, NS CP) Mines mittee told a press conference Minister Pepin today makes an- Part of: Cambodia's 32.000 other tour of the Ray of Fundy man army patrols the horder, and .thét” heads for talks with and village militiamen are on _— the Inokout for strangers. sald : e Canadian-horn Donald Duncan, Legation a former US Armv special forces: sergeant in Viet Nam mho now is an the wtaff af Ram guarded parts .macarine Jahnson’ Punean’ and thelr five companions fkarmed an THE HAGUE (Renters). Po "Americans| want ta know’ cit’ hice today reinforced their guard foens’ mittionh which visited of the Chinese. legation§ here, él feel amboda fi to Aug. where eight Chinese technicians i ® ta cheek on 1 § ‘allegations: have [ound sanctuacy. for more that the Viet one and: North than three weeks in defiance of Vietnamese. <nidiere were using Dutch authorities the countrs s+ -a sanetiary As -a diplnmatie deadiock - arising fram the mysteriqns FOUND. NO EVIDENCE death of a Chinese engineer jast The masion: membert said month continued. state police thet during their horder inspec- strengthened the guard on the tions by plane. truck and on jegation: building and garden to ~fnot-they-found- no evidence that ahogtc3icmen--A-potice-<pokes- Cambodia's: frontiers area was man efised: ta explain the auch & Ssanetiars reinforcement Duncan admitted under ques The technicians, who origin Honing that tie possible for ally came tov. The Hague as @mal! srouns of soldiers ta hide delegates to a welding vconier- or ftrave ndise vered through ence. havé not budged from the anme of the he fnliaged hor-* lefation since July 17, the day der ntrs » one of their colleagues died Three men bers of. the. there af being spirited from grep indicated that thew did ja hospi! hot eonsifer a nited. more Patice ant fe “question them ment af Camr saldere: in. phot death af the’ encei the wWearder aren eufficient ta ws: neer He Toy teal ino an. en e: plle¢ that Cam tempt iscaver haw “he re. hase? et herne vced he the Viet- ceived the niyuries ohe’ hore Mamece. Communists as @ sane: when found ne in a@ street of quar} and auppl) route. The Hague July 1A we erertoe : “Rav - ie kt \" x, i r al Li fe il i Phd Bete - A ae = @ it 4 YOUNG AND OLD ENJOY THE RIDES — sibilities for developing the! Fundy's potential. One—would be ‘in the Minas Basin, on the Nova: Scotia side‘ of the hay, and the other in the’ Cumber- land_Rasin - Shepody Bay area, nearer New Brunswick. The Atlantic Development \Roard announced last year that | development of the Shepody | Cumberland Basin oro ject was technically possible but eonstruction was. estimated to cost $400,000,000 The Minas Basin project, by ™ far‘the greater of the two, has been estimated “to «cost 000,000.- It would be similar to a. development on the River Rance in France that is ex- pected to produce 240,000 kilo- watts. annually beginning in 1967. Mr. Pepin indicated Wednes- day that development in these | upper reaches of the Fundy} could come before the tides of_| Passamaquoddy Bay are har- nessed. | $1,000," has" gigantic task Ry COLIN FROST | LONDON (AP) Michael Stewart, .the unknown = states- man took over Wednesday. night the giant task of rescuing Britain from financial disaster. | ‘The — self effacing former schoolteacher Was. heen foreign secretary for the last two years. Rut’ many Britons scarcely | know What he looks like Stewart's move to the home front was the main switch. of ‘Prime Minister Wilson's gov- He tried to win another Com- mons seat in Leyton, northeast London but was again defeated. Inevitably he had to resign as foreign secretary.. The resignation brought the unknown Stewart to the foreign office,-one of Britan’s great of- fices of state In_ that post he has consistent. supporter of the United. States position in Viet Nam, brushing aside the persis- | tent complaints of. Labor's left heen a) ernment reshuffle Wednesday jwing, — _ es haa He has travelled the five con- tewa makes a setraig Games of toha with. Chases tinents. Yet he yemains so little \Brown, economics minister whe known to the man in the street Betas has ‘set’ problems — | HOLLYWOOD -(AP) the ornate fireplace of Gotham | City's - atock exchange board- room trying te find a way to Brown's . brainchild, and to re ave the. building from destrue- «Sat man and Robin stood In front et. | ADMINISTERS FREEZE now becomes foreign secretary. that the political Brown remains. deputy’ prime minister, Rut it-was clear to ness jeveryone “in the Commens. Stewart ig %. smokerooms that Stewart_.has pisek——browed. quiet emerged as the strongman of’: the Labor government, second ionly te Wilson. » spoken | His task’ is te-administer the lwage. and price freeze, which is |store confidence in the_ British eo ' will mark new venture Old Home Week. this year will mark the inception of a new venture bythe P.E I Crafts men's Council,-as they put-the Island's choicest handcrafts ‘on | show in a three-way exhibition | a the Women's Institute Build- in Along with the. traditional home ‘craft’ classes arranged as always by the WI. the Crafts imen's Council. will. administer competitive: classes in a number | of handcrafts. which are.-new here.” ing, and the manufacture of cop-. per and silver jewelry; and oth- ers which are being revived. aft- this class will include various grey-haired,, types’ of metal work, wood disappear.” - : work such as turning and carv- ADMIRE PRIZE-WINNING NEEDLEWORK Michael Stewart ie such as silk screen print- | | jing, leather-work, textile-paint- launched after the body. of Mra jing, block printing and fly tving. Jean-Guy Eeustere was found in Ta addition te the competition, a. lime-filled graye 75 mules the Council. is having -a sales north of Montreal. She had bees section, where articles made by reported missing tm January _jlits own. members will -be-on-aale ,1965, land under the heading “Crafts 4 man provincial police” said lmen at Work,” it {s arranging led them toe the grave ts being \anteresting | demonstrations of held as a material witness for the-ahove crafts a coroner's inquest, expected Police seek- WEFENESSED. SLAYING a : jcommient onthe. affair. . . Montreal pelice said Mrs. ire 1 ers. l.auziere Was a witness to the Jan 27, 1965, slaying of Roland real. police said today an inves here tigation into the existence of a The victim was cut down by gang of hired killers in Quebec a high-powered rifle. has been launched in Monireat=<Police also said they are look- linces as well as Quebec centres. of waiter Laurier Labelle, tax! one a pe py ha exists - driver Raymond Bellehumeur, the _east o warfeatT* sal ae _Det. -Lieut. Jacques Parizeau of and the_ 1000 double - slaying “a QPP officials declined further | MONTREAL (CP)... Mont Chretien at the All Nations Cafe and may spread to othe> prov- '& for links among the slayings “the “Montreal police. “A féw two east-end men, Rejean “Ray. cartooniss jer many years, such as weaving |guys belong te a big gang and mond and Arsene Malot. ‘have to put a label on his like- ‘and pottery. Other. sections in if they're not satisfied with a Det-Lieut. Parizeau said the jperson they arrange for him to gang is based in Quebec but it may have leaders in other The fovestigation was provinces” 4 Pee Genuine SURGE with | premiers to hold conference two provincial premiers that could bring closer the develop- ment of the. hay's mammoth flower resources. :Mr. Pepin made an 11-hour boat tour of the bay Wednesday with engineers, iy public utilities executives, The group will go over the same larea “hy air. and surrounding roads today. The hay, Incated hetween Nova Scotia and New . Rruns- wick, ts ahout 50° miles wide. at its mouth and ends 160 miles in land where tides reach a- height of more than 50 feet, highest. in the world Various Hiijdies” hate indi cated the tides could wield’ more than N00 000 kilinwatts if har nessed Mr. Pepin said in an. inter view after making the first tour that-s-he— wold meek Premier Robichaud. of New inswick today and .Premier aera of Nova Seotia’ Friday to ediscune two groups which would. st idy: the development possibilities The Atlantic Tidal Power ie gramming: Board would made up of federal _represe tas tives. and delegates from. the Nova Scotia and New Briutiswick governments, and piiblic utili ties There wauld alsa he an At Jantie tidal. oower engineering and: management rammittee The group's resnponesihil ties would Re spelled ont after meet. ince with the premiers | Past studies indiréte two pos “nary with each ltion: jeconomy and the pound sterling E A new villain, Minstrel | He ean expert a quick and ne Ver es imi a ion $0 ar ul (played . by former hoy - next> shuddering eollision with maior idoer Van Johnson), wanted |labor unions, aghast “at seeing money or threatened a. big thetr bargaining power: whipped : ' . blast. But the problem at the away hv -the new freeze law | —— : ‘An ancient trick of selling a make a few moment war Ratman’s diffi: which the gorernment inched = Sa culty. in navigating smoothly through the Commons Wednes. _ changes here and there so that your pre- through -one of those elaborate dav night : 'Bat- sentences. If he succeeds. he can hope duct looks a little different ...then... he | “Gentlemen,” said, “are you prepared to live tm the shadow of this truthless ‘|5No, let's try i again. Gentle- imen, are you prepared to live in the shadow of ° this rascally, ruthless tyrant... .” | The twice-a-week program ts in production in a sound stage at Desilu's. Culver City. studio. And at the moment, a ‘pass to the set in undoubtedly the hot- jtest: ticket jn towri. Demand, from. presidents of sponsoring corporations to ordi: tourists. was ao great that on two days a week visitors were permited to visit the set stay strictly . hmited to one hour. | Those days still’ present prob lems hecause children are often so young and Ghee reece that the sound track is likelve pick up-+a Tittle ie anine | what's Ratman doing — now, {\daddyv"' Then {t must he’ re! i shot ; : KIDS SNEAK IN On the dav Batman was. fig uring out how to save the stock exchange. the set was closed to visitors But somehow three jyoungsters, aged six to 10, had ‘managed to slip in. When the scene finally was shot, Adam West removed his jhelmet, mopped his: perspiring | forehead, dropped his cape and idonned a light dressing gown Rurt Ward pulled off his mask jand the ‘two. stars. strolled he- hind the cameras to talk about the show West. who as Batman has read so many fulsome lines. with meaningful pauses that it has hecame his off-camera mariner of speech, confessed to heing a hit fatigued but said he was de federal officials: termined to continue public ap- loans are being channelled into Ppearances, even to play host to a Hollywood Palace program and guest in other variety shows ; “Few actors,’ he said: “have had such a quick and extraordi nary thing happen to them. So if is important ta me, as an actor, to make the, most of A “Success in. itself is ; roh lem hecause of the natfre of the role. So the important shi ng for me ta do. regardless af pres sures, is ta take every chance I get to establish mv awn identity Adam. West, that isto’ offset the other one.” : ‘To transfer to Montreal WEEDON, Que. (CP)—Three men taken into custody In con- nection with -a holdup of. twa mail trucks. Wednesday were scheduled to he transferred to Montreal today for further pa lice questioning Si Fifth mail sackea taken in the holdup were recovered There was nosimmediate estimate of their contents value . tn. crown. his eareer ge acces- sion to prime minister jf party faction or political “accident should force-Wilson out. Political. accident already has heen decisive in bringing Stew- art. th his present ascendancy In 1984, when the Labor party returned tna power after 13 years, he was named _education mini Ster The foreign’ secretary's job’ wer te Patrick Gordon Walker Gordon Waker however was ousted from the Commons by the electors ¢ | Smethwick, —a suburb of Birmin gham —— a India Joe world aid NEW DELHI Twenty-four countres have of- fered aid worth ‘some 2.753.000.- 000 rupees (about $575 000,000) to save. India irom famine in one of the biggest international rescue. operaiions vet known The aid represen‘; nearly ‘5'2 rupees for every man, woman and child in the a and is equivalent to nearly i2 per cent of the central = go, vernment’s budget for this year. The total may grow still fur ther: with contributions from | WB other countries which have . promised to. consicer India’s appeal for emergency assist- ance, launched when the depths of the food crisis became appar- ent last December Meantime, ships are already ‘uninading at = Indi3'a harbors with commodities to feed the people and fertilizecs to boost future production. Grants and Reuters agricultural develooment. The government is confident it can beat the famine threat. Se NEED OTHER AID e the SURGE Rut, India's forcizcn ad te quirements do not erd with fond and agricultural . assistance Ioans for economic develop ment ‘and imports of “much- Harold Palmer & Sons needed raw materials will have Kensington, P.E.T, ‘to be added if Indian industry ‘ is to keep on ite foet’ Roy Younker A prominent. Rretisn indus eee PEN. trialist, | Sir: Norman Kipp ne. Erie Veard & Son who visited India recentle, con : Milton, PFI cluded that no amouot of in} eae e - genuity can prevent large-scaie Cyril Jonee unemployment: -from developing Pownal, PEL as stocks of raw materials give out. A. MacRae &€ Son India’s chronie shortage of Sherwood, P. EF. 1. foreign exchange. which limits Stirling MacRae its imports to all hut the bharest essentials, can largely he traced Brookfield, P.E.1. back to the _ unprecedented ; i drought which caused the crops Waldron MacPhee & to fail. Son Cotton and jute: suffered Fimupod, P.F.1. alongside rice and wheat crops and this hit India's textile in John R. Thompson dustry, &@ major source of ex Frenchfort, PET port earnings a) The drying-ip of rivera cut hydroelectric power resources. which in turn affected produc- 7. tion. ' J : ° Turner Givdon & Son Kensington ‘exhibition barns: Almon Wood & Son Marshfield, P.F.1. . Elmer Myers Hazelbrank, P.E.T. Keith Rarrett Lt 184, P.E.T, Dan Jewell ‘North ‘River, P-E.1 Keith Roswell & Son Victoria, PFT, Roy Dickieson New Glasgow, P.E 1 * Oswald Newsome &. Son Kingston, PFT. Albert Boswell Marshfield) PET Judson MacPhee New Haren e - \tabel is “NEW” and start making fantastic claims for this NEW product. being tm- . ! changes are made only Surge equipment Ie but . constantly proved ... when It can.he shown that they actually Improve milking operations, not just to pro- vide new advertising copr. . The Surge milked its way to the very top of the Milking Machine Business... and... “¢areful, honest fests convince us that Surge is still much better than the next. best. For a-great many years, numerous highly skilled engineers have struggled to build a the SURGE ‘kind of cow, milking. We urge -you to com- machine that would match pare that best imitation that these engineers have been able to build with the milk-getting, udder-protecting performance of a genuine SURGE milker. Even if you have already invested is one of these IMITATIONS of the Surge .. . it will still pay you In increased and improve ndder health—to see your SURGE DEALER about switching to a SURGE. 6 action “OLD HOME WEEK" at any of the following Cormier Bros. Richmond, P.F.1. ‘ Hooper Bros. : Milton, PUPS Neil Hooper Rustica. PET.’ Alyre Pineau Rustica, PET BR. B. Jones -Runbeury. PET Elmer Smith Freetown ‘Rasil Haslam Sprincfield, FFI Stan. Hurty eae Milton” ~ en O OUGIAS BROS ONES INC (MY 3h (iT TE