| he Ty day evening concert series con- and percussion. ——fluctor—John- CATCHING 40 WINKS Robin Mo-re. a 19-year-old performer i» «water show-at the. Canadian National Exhib} tion, cafches 40 winks after her water-skiing. event.- Robin keeps the skis handy” through- e ° Island News Page Eastern and Central Districts The Guardian, Charlottetown, Mon., Aug. 29, 1966. 5 | Peking Paper To Discontinue By VERGIL BERGER PEKING on China's militant young Red Guards to stop using. force in Pushing the “great proletarian cultural revolution.” A newspaper editorial stress-_ ing the need for civility and | discipline was published Sun- day, just before the start of a lanned three-day — demonstra- | ‘tion at the Soviet. Embassy in} recently - renamed Struggle Against Revisionism Street: Observers here think | the demonstration might be — in- tended partly as an answer by | the Red Guards to a Russian| protest against what Moscow has described as their ‘‘hooligan pranks’ outside the Soviet em- assy last week. Thousands of leaflets were distributed-—-throughout~ Peking Sunday announcing the demon- strations. They included direc- tions to get to the embassy The map and the ~ fact that | workmen were building tempor: | ary lavatories near the building | indicated.a well-organized mass rally was in the offing. IGNORE PROTEST The Soviet protest note,pub- | lished in Moscow Saturday and | not mentioned in newspapers }' | ‘| here, complained of Red Guard | ‘activity atthe Russian _em- out.the snooze, all. set for the next performance. (Op. Wire- | ‘ Photo) Atlantic Orchest ra Plays | - Final Concert At Centre By MARCIA LOYND For the final -concért by. The Atlantic Orchestra on the ~Sun- Fenwick._chose_.a_ program -that was ‘oriented to-. ward.music of the classical per- tion built on a four-note harp entire Works: performed were by foc Gluck, Mozart and Beethoven, as well’ as by Srul Irv ing Glick of Toronto. The concert copened with the “Overture’ to Iphigenia im. Au!- 's bv Gluck Gluck. was. an - sichteenth century composer * wh irled. to rid She-costa or te t m fe atcmns ff ices and to meke the musie serve the drama. In this over- ure which wes revised by Rich- ard Warner the dramtie import ‘tha mue's fs apparent from ho very ecponine. Perhaps Wag- ner’s revision ceul? be consid- ered a bit’ romantic, but the reatment -of the work by the orchostra.was quite good..T!.e a@rnes hat a full vibrant--sound end the entire ensomble captur- ed. the. dramatic aspect of, the work : “Dan by —Sruf_lrving—Glick- last of the newly-commissioned works, was next on the pro gram Originally conesived dance sketch, ‘it.1s a short work ina harmonic idiom, net aton- al or experimental as have heen man®-of-the new works. As with the others, this.new work makes as a excellent use of the resrurces of The Atlantic Orchestra. not ici aa tra Seca ec oe solely on the. string - LOCAL BRIEFS IS PATIENT Vaughan Murphy has return- ed to Charlo.tetown after under- going surgery for a head injury “in hospital in Haliiac+y N-B-.Mr Murphy is now a patient in the Prince Edward island Hospital. BRIDGE DISMANTLED : The last span of the old Hil's- boro beidge was dismanticd on Saturday morning: The contrac- tors were MacEwen from Mt. Stewart and a Lutz firm from Halifax, N.S. As far as could be learned last night the steel {a still in the river. MEETING TODAY A meeting of the Labor Re- lations Board is scheduled for today, August 29 at 7.30, board rooms of the labor depart- | ment in the “new Provincial Building. The meeting is being | held to hear Local 1181 United Packinshouse Food and Allied Workers, em- plovees of Langley Food Packers a Linea, Viana gue Th was stat} alt borneVatlev-swwere-- Sunday + visitors at the home of Mr. and it this annlication has been ed th Mav 9. hoor the hoond since vac es in the | Jay. Miss Georgie Dover was a) | treal ;the home of Mrs. Wallace Birt: section, but making-imazir rative use of the other sections of the orchestra, woodwinds, brasses- The. work is interesting a nd The orchestra played the mu- Bel cha DER INE PISQUID EAST Mrs. George Jay and Mrs. ae ea tay ereld Jay were visitors in iLorne Valley Tuesday where ithey were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Earle MacDonald. Mrs. Atind Campbell, “Char- hot! was & visitor at the jhome of Mr and Mrs. Edward | Jay. Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Jay and boys were visitors in Charlotte- town Friday Miss. Elaine Hendricken, ns Dorchester, Mass._is “spendin her holidays with her .parents Mr. and Mrs. Dan Hendricken. Mr. Robin Curran Spent the weekend with his parents Mr and Mrs. Gerald Curran, Star- hese Road. : : Mr. and Mrs‘\Cecil Jay and sons returned to their home in Syracuse, N.Y., Friday after | holidaying in this vicinity. j Mr. and Mrs. Harold Jay have received word that their daugh- | ter Shirley Jay has arrived safe | in England. She plans to. visit Paris, ‘Zurich and other places | before returning home. She is ied by. Carol Lane. Mrs. ‘ Juanita MacDonald, Charlottetown, was a Sunday | visitor at the home of her parents, Mr, and Mrs. Edward recent visitor in Charlottetown. Mrs. Joanne. Lemieux at were recent visitors Mr, and Mrs. Earle MacDon- Mrs. Harold Jay. DANCE TONIGHT» ROLLAWAY CLUB Admission 60¢ 9:30 Te 12:30 Music by The Blue Crystals : “The Island’s Top Dance Band” & ene and | the application of | Miss Katherine MacDonald, Mon. bassy.. “For a week the Red Guarde- - spearhead of the Mao Tee: | Tung’s cultural revolution have been swarming all over the city, campaigning against |. people and ‘things they con- |} sider to represent old or West- ern ideas and culture. ue Red Guards appeared to be meeting resistance from _ | some, of’ thie targets of their campaign. ~ sic svmpathetically and spirit-. edly and even though a few notes were lost, the overall ef- fect was good. Particularly. en- _joyable ;was the final movement Mr’ and Mrs~He:G. Moore left Thursday’ for theif home in Wilmington, Mass., after spend- | ing their vacation at the home of | Mr Moore's parents, Mr. and} Mrs.-..W.....L....Moore, Cross Mrs Louis Campbell of Som- erville, Mass. and Mrs. Anna Creamer (of. Reading, Mass., re- cently vis.ted their parents, Mr and Mrs: W. L. Moore, Milltown Cross Mrs: soda Porter, Somer- | ville, Mass., has returned home, after visiting her sisters. Mrs. GeorgeeMoore..and..Mrs..: W.,_L. V Pore, Milltown “Cross HOOVES DID THE worKg | The first threshing machine| not worked by human muscles was the ox, whicl-trod—the# grain out .of ,the ears on a threshing floor. ‘northwest 15 by day, light ~ Chinese-speaking foreign dip- ae said that among the, undreds of, thousands of notices | Soatea all over Peking this | weekend they saw one an-| nouncing that eight Red Guards | __WEATHER clouds remained over the Mar!l- fimes late Sunday as a. large jhigh pressure area approached the district. Mostly clear skies are pre- dicted for today. Temperatures Milltown | will. reach the seasonable 70s, | during the afternoon. Regional forecasts: A few clouds today with sea- sonable temperatures and winds at night- Low-high at Halifax 53 and 70, Yarmouth, Kentville, New Glasgow and Goshen 50 |and~70* Sydney and Charlotie- |town 52° and 70, Moncton, Fred- ericton_and Saint John 50 ‘and -70,—E-dmundston—and- Campbell- ton. 48 and ‘70. High tide today at Charlotte- town 10.10 a.m. and 11.49 p.m. 'At. Rustico at 5.19 a.m. Sum- 'merside tide eighteen minutes later-—than—Charlottetown, Sun rises today at 6.37 a.m. and sets | at 7.51 p:m- All times ADT. Jar - ANNE WRC ey LeIGH AY VaN a ARSE “OIAPPTON- RYDAL (Reuters)—The Pe- | | king People’s daily has called | hind the campaign | into Asks Guards Using Force | |and a member of the Commu- nist young pioneers had been killed, No details of the nine deaths or confirmation from other sources were available here {In cases of homes © being | raided, ‘reporters observed that” the owners did not resist the scores of teen - agers who swarmed inside ELDERLY BEATEN Individuals, many of them old, have looked helpless while being beaten or humiliated by crowds of slogan-chanting Red Guards and children During the weekend. a num.- ber of men and women, some) with shaven heads, were seen being thrown roughly into | trucks full of teen-agers and driven away: Others have’ been made to wear or carry Placards | denouncing themselves, The editorial in the Peking People’s Daily told the Red, | Guards to emulate the disct- | | pline -of- the» army -and-be~ as: loyal to party chairman Mao as are army officers and men, in- Demonstrations stead of using force. Cominued from page | Spec to wh uaation as to what liee De floodlit with electrie bulbs. Girls | two main streams of US¢d umbrellas to keep his por- | opinion, One side maintains | Tait protected from a constant, that it either reflects a struggle | drenching rain. | ‘among various groups in’ the| In Tainan, Wushi and Soo- | Communist party leadership, or chow, marchers remained in a is being used. asa tactic by one | festive mood, even applauding | group. Eecelanere as our bus Hoppe | alongside | pilen eee —" figtisnine | Up to this point there had been | | discipline within the party and |20 sign of: violence. It was in among the population as ‘a | Hangchow -that I first saw evi- | prelude to the introduction a dence of destruction, when mid- new policies; presumably. in the | dle (high) school students dese- | eemasenas field. crated a Buddhist temple. They probably were members of the : ultra. - nationalistic Red Guard Luna Xi : organization. Seen In. ~ Moon Orbit. . JODRELL BANK, England | (AP)—Sir Bernard Lovell, head | of—Britain's—space—tracking-sta- Yin temple, a detachment of. teen - agers images of Buddha and pasted on the. two large. templeg,, crude | street {signs. ss ‘VERY GOOD THING’ Questioned through my tinter- | n ne ARTIS INR ee i contrasts an opening slow sec- with w ba pli Sd tion at Jodrell Bank, said Sun- fi th light soherze ena ee irelduaaimine TORONTO (CP) — Tempera-|day night ‘there is no doubt} As Lin Yin temple is a’ na- igure with a lighter Be aheateATiOn: ANA: The nisecotlale eee jthat Soviet Lunz “XI fs {n orbit /tional monument, the vandals | like theme. “After a lyrical sec- ratior nh Low arene High Sunday round the moon.”’ tion the scherzo: ‘and ae sece, lence. Beethoven realized t he ia |made only the symbolic gesture | ee Ie ce GERI Aoc GTBMOE Of wipdoe fol DaNien (outs 36 ae While the Russians were stillof breaking one - bench | ; SEE as lowing-a_very-loud’ passage_and Victoria ......+++. 52 " 63 officially silent about~their ap-|throwing a small. Buddha to ‘the'| COME T Sree Used i’ to good advantage Pamionton }/-.... : S4° 62 “tparent success, Lovell. said’ the| ‘ground, se the ° aes S03 a a ze a Se oace ine one ee Yellowknife’ ~- 44 63" | orbit appeared to be confirmed| We. passed the’ crowd on the igi by ve ‘ the fore 5 Ne dete thevevening Regina _~...... 53 72 |by new bursts of signals- from | lroad soon ‘after, strutting back trolled old .city - of . Jerusalem, the- orchestra came to -the fore, 0 SURNAg -t0 | ihe ning’ Winnipeg ..-....." 64 . 83 |the Soviet spacecraft. Sunday | ;to town to drum and cymbal, The -work is -for «double 1 the orchestra played the music ‘forontg —."...... 64 76 night. ban rs high, 4 h of bour- |UP a --quartet. two oboes,. two.clarim= from the “Obstacle Course” of ottawa-.7.....c-.: 5074 occa peat : At 10/805 , ets, two horns. and two. basscons, “Turvey’'. “The music for this Montreal .....4«3.. 47 73 The signals Sree pikes ie rn eavad ¢8 n, ae ke tel, Ensemble plavits was Rener was written by John Fenwick. Quebec ....... 44 71 Souratt wea iiac nthe a aehle ine lnsadaita ally good: although atone ion Many people consider this se Fredericton 54 69 ak ‘ t P- ius tha Vide ob ain anitiaht de | resolution said, was occasionally a problem: "The quence to be the most striking ‘gaint. John OB 66 [Panter shore. the: hasison, lov: nast ror. The: 8 lay | first. and second movements in the musical, and the perfor- Moncton ........:. 55 70 (ell. said. Another burst. of sig- | x omer oe: . rae na were . plaved straightforward!y mance of the music proves that palifax Sayer 58 70 nals lasting about 10 minutes sr “iitcae ati we tees 4 and well, but the minuet s¢em- jt ean stand by itself Carlottetown 57 66 was received, and Lovell said |the railway station Loney ed a bit heavy for Mozart Dyn- Jts appeadecan be traced to the (Sydney ......... 56 71 |he was convinced the satellite | eens ‘ iguaiey 4 amics seemed to be forced at strong pulsating rhythms and Yarmouth Se eek 68 |was in moon orbit. “iit e nid he t ais stag times, to the detriment of the chords interspersed with sudden St. John’s, Nfld.... -56 . F Luna uy rea \ Agreed PTE ihe: autos fon Aug. 24(3 music. silences. A middle section is ly-|Boston —......3. 65 ay, was—aimed at & Near-or The only work after the inter- pics| but soon gives way to the New: York ......... 70 88 of the moon, apparently to take land 25. eae Fushan IT saw ev | 3 mission. was Beethoven's “SVM: mortial quality ofthe opening. sAtlanta.....:.... 64 84 pictures for use in choosing a \tence 0 this. Commune mem- phony No.8 in _F- Major. TNS pho musie_can_be-conéidered a | Jacksonville 2... 66.88 ite for_a“manned_landing. _- ~jbers had broken a granite grave- | work—is-usually- passed -by—f0 T,)cins—and— illum natine—mus-+Tampa——- vrveve 67. 91" |. The Jodrell Bank observatory | some of. the. more well-knowN-i..) commentary on War or can Miami ........... 75 88 reported the spacecraft fire its | Becthovep ‘symphonies. It is '™ jo onjoyed just as abstract my- New Orleans- iteias7 TA 79 |retro rockets Saturday night. a lighter vein. than the works i, Tucson . ...... sees 72 94 |Lovell said “then that Luna XI surrounding it, a it i pleasant int [jLos Angeles ......, 67 76 a either gone into orbit, sand inventive. although not stri- HALIFAX (OP) — The wea- |crashed on the moon or gone kingly original. STURGEON ther office says only a few {behind it. He said it. had not made a soft landing. The Russians \ normally an- nounce space successes at once. With the successful orbiting of | the satellite _ still unreported {f° from the Soviets, there was speculation Luna XI had a more complicated mission, such as a | return to earth. The Soviets | could be waiting for completion | of the entire mission before | making an annouricement. SPECIAL Shoulder Roast Beef 49e Ib. Beef. Kidney 25¢ ea. - “QUEEN ST. ‘MEAT MARKET | PRIVATE TURVEY” Curtain: 8:30 p.m. Tomorrow Night: — ; CONGRATULATES WINNERS Lester McRae of the EI- don Legion (fourth left) is (shown) congratulating stud-. ents who won the Eldon Le- gion scholarships. To win they must have the highest marks in the provincial exams for the Eldon area. Left: Holly Ra- fuse of Mt. Buchanan, highest in~-grade~ eight; Merrill Gillis of Eldon, highest in grade ten; Glenda MacRae, Pinette, - sec- opd highest in grade ten; Fay Clow, Flat River, second high- est in grade. eight. Missing from the picture Morrison, Eldon, who received honorable. mention. Also not in the picture is Mrs. Hector is Glendon: Mrs. Hector Morrison who of ithe auxiliary of the Eldon presented the prizes on behalf Legion. > Just before I arrived at. Lin |stone of a former land lord and | weré using a, second, ’beariiig his had defiled the |mame, as a. bridge across ‘the = in thelr commune village preter, the head monk was re-| ganization for Economie Co-op- to—have—sald-that—‘this /eration—_and-- -Development EUROPE NEEDS POWER European member's of the Or- ergy used in the world. ported. Se-1- is probably a very good thing.”’ |count for 60 per cent of the en ltion, meeting in the Jordan-con- they | Scheme for the shrine city. The Are you aware that the nicest dancing in Charlottetown is being enjoyed Monday through Saturday 9 - Room. . @ ADULTS ONLY @ NO COVER CHARGE ® FULLY LICENSED Music by the Charlie Munroe Group. Che Charlottetown. Hotel Confederation Centre TODAY at the Charlottetown Summer Festival ONLY 4 MORE PERFORMANCES . “THE ADVENTURES OF “ANNE OF GREEN GABLES” Gositodvestion Centre Box Office Open 10 a.m.-9:30 p.m. Summerside Ticket Office: Linkletter Travel Agency MODERNIZE JERUSALEM -- ‘AMMAN, Jordan (AP)—The Arab Engineers Federa- disclosed Saturday it will draw modern— town planning’ ‘objective is to create a new and greater Jerusalem, a 5 Oooo FAMOUS FOR BRANDED INSPECTED STEAKS: GUS hs 12 in the Malpeque a cs 4 SN MM Be Ow ke ee C BIG * DAYS *, SMOOLNER BROS, a =B.n. ee "FERN HUSKY. ik MANSFIELD ae SONNY JAMES ROY DRUSKY = DEL REEVES Moe} 1a N00] YD a MUL Meee] UL Comm] am VLU "DON BOWMAN LOUIS QUINN: BILUE BRD ARTHUR C. PIERCE: LARRY ETREKSON BERNARD A.WOOLNER _ Admission—Adults 1.00; Children 50¢ vi SHOWS TODAY a orurs. 2.20-1-9 The story of Grace Caldwell Tate really beganin the back seat ofa car. F aenclhdatatntct ads vaie P+ wae ~ and went from man... to man...to man... it LN Ai mS 7ANNE PLESHETTE BRADEORO OI ee BEN GAZZARK —