Western and Central Districts share of the spotlight at the At- lantic Winter Fair this week, Rev. Clare McGill a mission- Presbyterian due to arrive in the province the latter part of this week for a number of speaking engagements on the Island. will speak during the At 11 a.m. Sunday, Nov. 7, he morning To Speak On Island the accused and apprehended him, he said. A search of Ber- nard's person was made but no weapon found. -| Bernard was then taken to his home while awaiting the arrival of the RCMP. While there, the constable said, he had gone into \racing bike. The bike was pulled iby a husky young Scot by the jname of MacLeod. Revealed on Thursday after- noon was the fact that Gary top honors im the exhibit of geese. Thursday was Prince Edward Island day at the fair and Agri- Andrew Mac. ‘guests. Harold Smith, MLA, Three Issues, City Native Gets Posting \newly constructed Toronto Do- minion Bank on Provost St., New Glasgow, N.S. Mr. Ramsay began his career with the bank four years ago in Charlottetown and has served with branches in Sydney and Dartmouth. George Ramsay, a native of 'Pownal, and Mrs. Smith ‘were |Charlottetown, has recently been | lappointed accountant .at the Superintendent A. 8. McNeil, officer commanding L Division . } Island News Page inthe‘tnning emcmeed (Rear charge of identification branch Then Go For Four Political Parties ary with the Bos wae Frenchfort, nas won - ae Church in Canada who for some grand championship of the wat- : ov ,er fowl exhibit with a Toulouse time has been engaged in trans- oo font sxiieit © eae MR. RAMSAY Vote as you please but please vote ! Still UNDECIDED ? The Guardian, Charlottetown, Fri. Nov. 5, 1965. 3 wen ale te cae ae ee RCMP, last night announced the : | jfollowing promotions effective most of the other livestock judg- | Nov. Ist ; . 8 . A ing had been completed. a: Y, Eng | Fulton Sanderson, York Point, | | Sgt. W. L. Bigelow, NCI im land (CP)—Mice can catch the lwho had been acclaimed earlier | 3 | charge of the Charlottetown common ¢old as well as hu- ; : in the week as the kind of the |tachment, promoted to staff ser-|mans, so 400 members of the . jsteer world with his grand }geant; Cpl. W. J. R. MacDonald, |National Mouse League here ° champion steer of the show, |NCO in charge of the Summer- | are te consider whether to spona,: jwas pulled around the forum jside detachment, to|sor further research into their during the big night show on a | sergeant; Cst. W. H. Smith, in|pets’ sneezes when they meet? A &:W DRIVE-INS We're Progressive .. . Over 100 A & W Drive-ins In Canada We're Liberal . ... a bedroom and given his baby a hug. The constable's wife said that shortly after her, husband had left to go to the: Bernard home she had heard someone coming into the house from her upstairs | | Speaker Says BES i \Carol MacDonald of Sydney. | Dr. J.A. McMillan, Ruest | Mr. Ramsay is the son of Mr. | speaker at. a recent gathering |and Mrs. G. A. Ramsay, 32 Ger- | at’ Morell said there are three |ald St. Charlottetown. |main issues in any election. | | ““First, the local candidate; sec- | He is married to the former REV. CLARE McGILL | s : ‘ into the house from her ipetaine \service at Summerside Presby-! ond, the party; third, the leader. | * | We Give You Your Money's Worth ‘ it was, and the accused had an- orig iy od Pree prening be tip of the party in that order 0 ice a a 4 : swered. She said he had told’ tetown to par-| of importance,” he said. ; : R . her there was a “fight at the ficipate in = rally at Zion) Dr. McMillan described the : || We're Social “No* Credit “ point’ and that a badly beaten Church at 7 p.m. Conservative party as a party NO NOW HEAR THIS ~ \fraa. was laying ta ron of hs | O" Monday evening. Mr Me. wtich sie the pat and to . sked | fies what : : _to yell loudly to cope with # and dozens of hecklers during sons this week in Montreal. he wasn't home had asked that ate uae cen change for the sake of change he be told to come up to Ber-| | because this usually results in ‘ r ® ° e nard’s home as soon as he re- oe . ee on logisistion,” be said. The annual Policemen’s Ball} We're Proud Of Our N.D.P. : re iminar earin eae BY SHOULDERS , He !8 also scheduled to con. ot tres Se een | was held last night by the Char- ; : Mr. Malo nd M duct a rally for all congrega-| major pai + not only | lottetown Police Department at Y < Both Mr. Maloney a TS. tions in Prince in the Summer-| 25 80 assessment of both Mr: the Canadian Legion Clover es, we re d_of our Nourishing, Sark stated that they had seen side Presbyterian Church on) Diefembaker and Mr. Pearson, |Ciyb. Master of Ceremonies for Delicious the accused dragging a person | Wednesday evening. | but. also in regard to the men |the evening was Staff Sgt. A. J. Burger ‘ - by the shoulders toward his/ Mr. McGill was born in Glen-| associated with both leaders house. coe, Ontario, and is a graduate! Hon. Leo Rossiter, Dr. Reid told-the court he had of the University of Western On-| of fisheries, forsaw greater eco- received a call from the island |tario and We Theologi-| nomic expansion in Kings County at approximately 10.15 p.m. and jcal Seminary. “Later he did ex- if Federal government partici- | Dowling. Prize winners for spot dances were Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Mac- Callum, Mrs. John Butler and Mayor W. R. Cox, Mr. and Mrs. -In Lennox Island Murder SUMMERSIDE — LOOK FOR THE BRIGHT ORANGE BUILDING Prelimin- ger Labobe’s place where he Corner Trans- |the cellar. The accused had then ary hearing for a 28-year-old picked up some beer. They had arrived on the reservation at ap-|tensive studies at the Institute| pation could be obtained. Alan Gregory and Mr. and Mrs. | Canada Lennox Island man, Sterling Jo-| then gone to the accused's home. ee oS ie ig a ae proximately 11 o'clock. He said jof Linguistics, University of| Melvin McQuaid, Liberal can- Edgett. seph Bernard, charged with ca-| Mrs. Peters said she had been | cejiar. that upon arrival he bad exam-|North Dakota, and at the Ken-| didate for Kings County, out-| The door prizes were won by Highway pital murder, opened here yes-|drinking since one o'clock in the} She stated that she had gone |ined the deceased but that there jnedy School of Mission, Hart- | lined the conservative policies |Mrs. George McDermith and Aud Malpeaae terday before Magistrate W.| afternoon but that she had ' not |to the cellar hatch and called to|Was no sign of life. He estimat- |ford, Conn. | and said he would stand firmly |Steven MacDonald. Drawings ped Chester S. MacDonald. _| seen the deceased drinking! un-| wr Bernard not to kill the dog ed that life had left the bod y|NO WRITERS | behind this platform in the in- | Were made by Mayor Cox. Prizes Road e The charge was laid following | til he had picked up the beer at|but he then came up and said |from between one and two hours| He was appointed to Formosa | terests of all the electors of |were donated by city business the death of Roger Labobe, 28, | his home that evening. “I'm afraid you're too late”. She |before. jin 1958 and when he. arrived! Kings. firms. the night of Sept. 26 on the reser- ARGUMENT DEVELOPED added that he had a knife in his| Constable oe presented at! oe the ae tribe he | Open Daily at 11:30 a.m. Car Hostess Service vation. i i ink. | hand when he came up from jnumber of tograp’ poses aT PICKS WRONG CAR j ie | She said that while the drink tha katior. } lscene and general area, bot h|Uage 80 he immediately started Terry were both born in er ‘PORTSMOUTH, England} (CP)\—A youth escaped from | prison at Portsmouth, Hamp.- | ' Thirteen witnesses were call- jing was going on in the accus- ed by the Crown during the day- ed's home an argument had de- long hearing and shortly after 5 veloped and he had knocked to mosa. Currently, Mr. McGill is home| ‘on a year’s furlough and is to reduce their language Mrs. Mary Catherine Bernard from the ground and from the) vriting. Through his efforts jtold of being at the accused's jair. He also testified that he had | This Week’s Best Buys p.m. It was adjourned to Tues- day, Nov. 9 when 1! additional witnesses are expected to - be heard to complete the Crown's case. The wife of the accused, Mrs. Evelyn Bernard, refused to.give evidence against hér husband in accordance with the Canada Evidence Act. Witnesses called were Mrs. Ruth Bell, a lab technologist with the RCMP crime detection laboratory in Sackville, N.B.; Dr. Raymond Reid, Wellington, who examined the deceased at the scene; RCMP Constable. W. | rlottetown | H. Smith of the Cha Detachment; Mrs. Hazel Peters, sister of: the accused; Mr:. Mary Catherine Bernard; Joan Malon ey: Constable Joseph Labobe, | the police constable on the is- land: Mrs. Genevieve Labobe, | wife of the constable; Lawrence tion, said she was watching TV. | when she heard a thump in an- ~Maloney. Mrs. Moses Sark, Mrs. John Labobe and Thomas Brod- | erick, caretaker on the reserva-|and saw “Hazel on the floor’. tion, all of Lennox Island. : | Mrs. Peters, 1 years of age | and a widow with two children, | told the court she and ‘the de-| ceased had planned'to get mar- | ried. } She related events leading up to the death of Mr. Labobe on that evening and said she arriv- ed at her home at. approximate- ly 8 o’clock and that both the ac- cused and deceased were there. She began talking with them and later accompanied them to Ro- DEATHS BIRT — At the Prince Edward Island Hospital Wednesday, Nov. 3, 1965, Chester Malcolm Birt of Pisquid, age 56 years. Resting at the MacLean Funeral Home until 10: a.m. today then to Mt.: Stewart United Church for funeral service com- mencing at 2 p.m. ae in People’s cernetery, Mt. Stew- art. HUMPHREY — At ag oad County Hospital, Nov. 4, . Andrew W. Humphrey of Ken- sington, age 90 years. Remains will be forwarded fram the Dav- ison’ Funeral Home to the home of her son, Robert S. Humphrey, |- this afternoon. Funeral service will be held from the Kensington resbyterian Church, Saturday +f 2 p.m. Interment in Peoples cemetery. Flease omit flowers. See aah kinesin nana COMFORT SOMETHING To Think About... if your furnace ts cree 1 years old, you may mo! to give it a good. close look! HERE'S WHY: imeey wenesee. abou' years. BUT EVEN MORE IMPORT Sa Palmer Electric Dia) 894-8548 - Ch’tows a, | shortly. her down. Later she said the de- | ceased had taken the ber,-which |™Ment develoving. was in a bucket, and hidden it in some bushes a short di jaway from Bernard's house. | |. She ee dae minutes lat-' Thay. were eretty wed’? er seeing the deceased lying, | : at the doorstep in front of the ac- | RAISED VOICES ne home. She said she saw tirlin, i i land that ‘she had aot dose any. and of hearing raised — lthing when she saw him hitting | from the general direction ithe deceased wih the knife. | allegedly used. in the incident, jhe stated she had seen similar; knives before but on the night in question had only seen the blade when the accused was us- jing it. . She said al \peared to be hitting the deceas- jed in the stomach. | Joan Maloney, a 14-year-old | \girl who was baby-sitting for the | Bernards on the night in ques- | that hitting the deceased. : ine of the deceased. Latbobe’s other room. She went in the room where in sight. Mrs: Peters had then attempted | : to kick the deceased in the|he arrived stomach, she said. An argument was in progress | iat the time and both Mrs. Peters life but thére had been no signs | and the deceased left the house of any. He immediately proceed-''to-London before —an evening | Stavert. Afterwards, she said,| ed to the Indian agent’s house |rally in St. Thomas. the -accused -had-taken~Labobe’sané-—told -him to -contact the’ . -Isit polo or one’s wearing Stanfield’s Knit Polo _never to) stretch pyjamas. The fashion-right styling of these comfortable sets makes them as *Exclusive with Stanfield’s im Canada, She told of going to Mrs. John | Labobe’s to pick up some oil voices | of |the Bernard home while there. lis the knife | She ran back towards the ac- cused's home and could see him! The first blows she heard, a PM POINTS stated, sounded like fists hitting a bodv but she added that she p- | had then seen the accused’s n jhand coming down but of hear- |in Ridgetown to speak to be- |ing no sound except the moan-|tween 500 and 600 people— She told the court she had | school. then proceeded to Constable| This was a tion - home_and__ returned | speech. Constable Labobe said when at the accused’s |pl house he had seen a body lying |becoming a clergyman: before Rock of Ages. Organist was Mrs. outside and had checked it for |the First World War. dog, which was in the house at|RCMP. While returning to Ber- | the time, and thrown it down in|nard’s home he had come upon never to bind or pull while you sleep. Style «7o—a fine-knitted Balbriggan- weight cotton—is available in s.M.1, with a wide choice of attractive colours, for about $5.95. Style 7e0—an home and of seeing an argu-ichecked the knife for finger- She said the prints but had found none. jaccused had told her to take; Miss Bell gave technical testi Stance Mrs. Peters home. She added imony on clothing and other ar- she had seen! ‘“‘Stirling | 4; i the throwing Hasel on. the ground ticles she had received from -|local RCMP detachment. linvestigation was under the rection of Cpl. W.J.R. Macdon- ald, NCO in charge of the de tachment. George R. McMahon acted for ithe Crown and defence counsel J. Melville Campbell. — (Continued from page 1) reception and then stopped off 'mostly children—in the political |Sunday schools, his ambitions to jbe a professional baseball ayer and how he considered Mr: Pearson later drove back paign, he said, but ‘I never felt better in my life." pillow time? neckbands* and cuffs are guaranteed out of shape, and high | the first portion of the script- ures, St. Mary’s Gospel was pub- | \lished in the Tayal language in/ |1964. Prior to that he had made | it possible for the publication of | a language primer, a hymn book, a catechism and a Tayal edition \of Laubach’s story of Jesus. | assisted by his wife, Grace, who |holds a- degree in Bachelor of |Science in Nursing from Wheaton \College. She has also has Bible \School training and had — done iconsiderable study in _linguis- | WESTERN FUNERALS \time travelling across In all his labors he was greatly | tics. Their sons, Timothy and! spending a large portion of his|Shire, and tried to hitch a ride Canada |to London. Instead he landed describing his work and the/back in jail. The first driver needs of the Formosan aboriginal who stopped was a guard from % |the prison. Liberal — Poppies for veterans and the United Appeal Fund. Alianerias silliest | TUCKER FUNERAL — The ifuneral for Mr. Sterling Tucker 0 1c The _ prime minister was held Wednesday—from-—the- with him to the scene. Uponichatted comfortably about his {Central Bedeque Baptist Church | her return the accused was no- ‘early days in parsonages and |where service was conducted by |Rev. H. Estabrooks assisted by |Rev. R.M. Shaw. Hymns were |\Safe In The Arms of Jesus and Estabrooks. Pallbearers were Walter Bernard and Walter P: Jesse Bradshaw, . Er-: \skine Forbes, Arnold. Barrett, It has been a strenuous cam- Clare Bradshaw. Interment was | ‘in the peoples’ cemetery, Free- ‘town, interloek weight—ts about $6.95. Boys’ style ovo, are $4.50 in s.M.l- Size xi is available in all styles at a slightly higher price. as : | STANFIELDS { STANFIELD'S LIMITED, TRURO, NOVA SCOTIA “OPEN LINE” =| | -TV SHOW - CFCY-TV Friday, Nov. 5th — 6.05 to 6.20 and 8.00 to 8.30 YOUR Four Liberal Candidates invite . telephone questions from the electors of Prince Edward Island. Special Open Lines Phone No. 894-8559 Direct your questions to: _ HON. J. WATSON MacNAUGHT — | B. B. JONES MARK MacGUIGAN JOHN MULLALLY a Moderator - J. Elmer Blanchard 3 "MAKE YOUR VOTE COUNT FOR MORE” VOTE LIBERAL ) eee ____ Gnserted by-The PEI, Liberal Association). CHEMO ETMMiMOTOMMMEEee eae eae, Cine eapeanbeses x s |