~~ LAS ORO 9 ABA AARINEL LT WORE AEAD MET Yee evar giee ce CTRL ATMO Re ate Fat RRC ROMRRET PZ : ed as winners of two of the 10 27 \slanders * College for the 1966-1967 study jare: Donald Cudmore, North - Larkin And Power. ~ Get Scholarships Irene Helen Larkin and Mary| Miss Power is: ae daughter of Virginia Power have ar nam-| Mr. and Mrs.’ Richard J. Power, MARY POWER | Souris. She is-@ graduate of Sou- ris Regional High School and is also enrolled. in the arts pro- available $1,600 scholarships which have been sere oe ar by St. Dunstan’s Universi! iy incoming Freshman students |éram at SDU. from Prince-Edward Island. Under the terms of the schol- Miss Larkin is the daughter of |arships the students will. have Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Larkin, |their full tuition paid during the Morell. She graduated from:Mo-|four years they are in atten- fell Regional.High School and is|dance at SDU providing they tinuing her studies at SDU in|maintain a ‘satisfactory standard the arts program. 6f ‘work each year: Attending: NSAC ing facilities which will continue to be located in Trueman House. By DAVID ROGERS i Dir: of extension - P.E.I. Dept. of Agriculture : On Wednesday, September 14, ‘studénts in all classes xs ‘at the Nova Scotia Agricultural e “ gpa: syear. Enrollment this year is 170 ‘students with 27 of these .coming ‘from Prince Edward Island. “TECHNICIAN COURSE This is the first year that the :Nova Scotia Agricultural Col- ‘lege is offering its new two-year ‘technical and vocational course, :specializing in farm business. ion of the 20 students taking this six are from P.E.I. They ‘lit 2 2 » 33 ‘Winsloe; R.H. Farquharson, ‘Kensington; Richard-- * Grant, ;Kinross; Ian Smith, Pownall; |. Robert Thompson, North Mil ‘ton; Fulton Underhay, Charilot- ; tetown. _|of sheeding: | guilty and received a fine of $20 ; Summerside; Rodney - well, Morell; Paul Gallant, Sou- _ tis West; Strothard Rodd, North . loma course. - DEGREE COUNSE ~s-Junior, Matriculation.“ The first | : P.E.I. They are: JE. Adams, | Sea View: J.C. Colwell, North- | > A.B. Morrison, Coleman, - three are from P.E.I. They are: | J.E. Mills, rdiploma course is being phased i out and is being offered this fall “for the last.time. In the first Ding- tional courses, varying in length will take the place of the old dip- The course leading to a degree | tm agricultural is. now a_five- | year proposition. In ‘order to | qualify for a degree in agricul- | ture,.students now must com- plete five years’ study d | three years of this course will | be offered at the Nova Scotia icultural College and the re- maining two years completed at | the university of their choice— | usually Macdonald College Que- | - bec, or the Ontario Agricultural | : College at Guelph, Ontario. In the first year degree course 1 out of 48 students, six are from | am: C. Garrill, O'Leary, RR2; | J.W. Harris, Summerside, RR2; | RRI; | L.G. Murphy, Sea View. f In the second year degree | course out of 52 students only | Vv. W. Lleyd Annandale; MacLeod, Northam; MacPhail, Argyle Shore. Since last spring five new pro- | fessors have been added to the | teaching staff of the college: fan M. Fraser, who has‘ return- | ed from post- graduate work at the University of Maine (Mathe- | matics); W.J. Hawkins,. (Eng- | lish); Paul Gervason, (Econom- i€8);“Douglas Jose, (Farm Man- agement) and Dale Ellis, Voca- tional and Technical Training. NEW RESIDENCE Underway at the College at , the present time is the building 9 of a new. residence to be called | Chapman Hall. This residence is designed to, house 196 students | and is planned to be ready for occupancy well in advance of Fegistration day, 1967. Chapman House will be residence for stu- | dents in the new technician cour- ses being started this fall. It is courses. Tuition will be based on the cost of the teaching and up- keep of the college and‘ divided among the provinces in in_propor- a four storey steel and brick structure. containing resilence | jue fs Student Common | Student Council | non Student Acitivty Rooms and storage facilities. The new residence will be connected to Trueman House (the present men’s residence) by means of a tunnel in order to provide stu- dents with cacmad access to din- Island News Page 2 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Sat., Oct. I, 1966. -— $20 Penalty Is Imposed: Magistrate A.J. Haslam, QC, fined John MacLean of Cornwall $20 and costs or 30 days when he appeared in City Police Court yesterday morning ona charge Carl Francis Pineau of North Rustico, who appéared on a similar charge was also fined $20 and costs. . Boyd S; Pyke: of Charlottetown appeared in court on two charg- es. On a charge of operating a motor vehicle breaks, the accused pleaded tion to the number of students in attendance. Any young person in P.E.I. who is considering farming or other phases of agriculture for a career would be well advised to think seriously: of taking cours- es_at.the Nova Scotia Agricul- tural College. For further information e¢ 0 n- tact the Registrar, Nova Scotia Agricultural College, Truro; or with defective | and costs or 10 days; on the second charge of driving without a valid driver's. license he plead- guilty and received a fine of $10 and costs or five days. George Donovan of Charioltte- town charged with having a dog running at large had his case adjourned until October 5. Giv- ing testimony for the crown in the case was’ Augustus Wilson, city dog catcher and Mr. Dono- van. Magistrate Haslam in adjourn- ing the case asked Mr. Dono- van to see about having a pen built for the dog that would keep him off the street. Three cases involving persons charged with being drunk .and in- capable were heard. Two of the accused _pleaded not guilty to the charges and had their cases remanded until October 1 and the third man, pleading guilty, received a 20-day suspended sentence on the condition that he leave the province, as he was intending to do. WATCH. IT MOVE - Steele Glacier, in the Yukon, ' moves at up to 50 feet a day, more than 10 times the speed _|visited the wildlife park this sea- | Female Cougar Is.On Display At Rustler Park A new addition has been made to, the Prince Edward Island Wildlife Park at North Rustico in the form of a rare 70-pound female cougar obtained from a zoo in San, Antonio, Texas. *The Cougar, although not na- tive to the Island is known to and signs of the same animal have been \discovered in parts of Nova’ Scotia. - Charles 0. Bartlett, manager of the park, explained that the animal was delayed in her arriv- al approximately four months due to the air strike in the Unit- ed States and the Canadian Air- ways embargo which further delayed shipments. & Approximately ne persons son’ including ‘school and church groups, stated Mr. Barlett. The park will remain open un- til the end of October. and pos- sibly longer provided pleasant weather continues. SEIZE LOTTERY TICKETS have existed in New Brunswick} | a Comat Joins Hunt, ‘Helps Odds For Birds Today is the day. The shot guns have been inspected and oiled, the permit bought, tne gear brought down from the closet, the locations scouted, and the blind built-or repaired. Unless."some horrible and un- foreseen disaster has befallen me between the time of writing and’ the time you read these words I'll have been in a duck blind for a couple of hours or more by now.’ And I'll probably have had my usual share of suc- cess, which is to gay very little. As a matter of fact I'm the sort of hunter who evens up the odds on the side of the birds. If I ever stopped to figure out the amount of money. expended per pound of meat brought home I would come up with a set of fi- gures that would make any rise MONTREAL (CP)—The> mo- rality squad of Montreal police raided _an_east-end flat Friday and seized about '14,500 hockey lottery tickets end arrested one suspect. “All 12. series of 1,200 tickets ‘each were for. games the P.E.I. Department of Agri- cutture, Charlottetown. of most glaciers. scheduled for the Montreal Qanadiens’ 1966-67 season. — The Rural Beautification So- ciety of Prince Edward Island Wednesday presented. a_nine- page brief to th e Executive Council of the provincial govern- ment stating the Society’s eco- nomic position, and offering sug- gestions by which rural areas in the province could be made more attractive. The Society, now in its 2ist year of operation in P.E.I., is an organization dedicated te the preservation of the natural beauty of the province to foster an appreciation teh me a and rewards of living ae sant and delightful sanlualtigh: In__ reassessing its work and the methods by which it is car- ried out, the Rural Beautifica- tion in the brief pointed out that there is evidence already of a lessening of interest in. rural beautification in this province; the various competitions: each year is not growing. GREATLY CONCERNED The Society is greatly concern- “led by this trend and feéls that -|immediate remedial’ measures must be-taken if interest in ru- ral beautification is to be main- tained. The most urgent requirement, it is felt, is that of more funds with which te improve and en- large dts competitions. ANNOUNCING | the number of participants in|. - J sident-Keith Brehaut operating budget is slightly- in P.E.I.. Department of Agricul- ture and the balance from pub- |. lic and business donations and participants’ entry fees. The brief states that the So- ciety is doing a}i that can. be dene with the funds available, but does not hold much hope for an expanded program unless fi- mances are substantially increas- ed. An additional $10,000 must be found if the Society is to make satisfactory progress. INCREASED COSTS General administration costs have increased enormously dur- ing the past few years and more of the Society’s funds are utiliz- ed for this purpose, it was indi. cated. It was suggested in the brief, presented..by the Society’s 3 un- of bury, that the department of highways should insist that con- tractors finish the job by raking and steding the shoulders that final payments on the con-. tract should be withheld until this Was been done. The imposition of a “nuisance tax” has been suggested as one method of compelling owners of the excess of $7,000 annually, 50 per juse of the cent of which comes from the /fundable bottles’ now Hillsboro bridge on which ; sun. erect a. cottage, similiar in style Beautification Society — Presents Briefs To Cabinet present time the Society’s total see some regulatory controls im- sed upon the manufacture and so-called - re- in wide- spread use. It also asks that increased support and greater interest be given to woodland care and management and reforestation in the’ province. The Society re- commends that the government ere to the esta- t of a department of eonservation which would ex- compass such branches of gov- ernment as forestry, dlife, water resources, pollution con- trol and protection of beaches. The Rural Beautification So- ciety of P.E.I. further proposes that the government give the So- elety free title to a small tract of Crown land te the south of and immédiately adjoining ig 0 to those common 100 years ago. It was specified that the con- struction of such a cottage could and |be considered as a centennial project and thus qualify for both provincial and federal grants. It is anticipated that South- | port Bunbury or somé other de- signated municipality would . {sponsor the project on the So- ciety’s behalf. - _. Outstanding Concert Series = § | P.E.1. COMMUNITY CONCERT ~—_—iy. CONFEDERATION CENTRE | Oct. 13, Thursday et 8:30 P.M. Ronald and Jeffry Marlowe Exciting Twin Duo-Pianists. Jan. 31, Tuesday, 8:30 P.M. Father Kelly, April 5, Wednesday, 8:30 P.M. goke Ore outstanding young Tenor, New York Light Opera Company Post bide Memberships available Oct. 11, 12, 13 from St. Dunstan’s University Prof. T. Lothian, Prince of Wales College Mr. C. J. Flynn, Phone 2-1215 oes Mrs. J. 8. Vai tour, Phone 4-9420 Dr. K. A. Parker, Phone 2-8469 Confederation oe Oct. 18 from 10 A.M. to 8 PM. Internationally Renowned Robert DeCormier, Folk Singers in Classical Setting. 14 singers and 8 instrumentalists Ist Bonus Program té all Community Concert Members ‘ Neptune Theatre, Oct. 91 -aw tion of membership card ai Box Office, Confederation Centre. £ cn 50 cont samen Seas OE wl Hp on peeeen'a . As a public service this space contributed by the following firms: Cudmore Business Eq Queen Street — Moore and siclazs Ltd. _/ Confederation Plaza Henderson and Cudmore Confederation Plaza . Crockett & Kent Street — Charlo Rogers Hardware Co. Ltd, ~ Confederation Plaza H. M. Simpsen Great = — Charlottetown Ltd. town Ltd. \ in thecost of living look like a decrease by comparison. The old badger has delicatély pointed. this out on more than one occasion as I stumble half asleep around the house at. four: in the morning and’ then drive off, to spend the next six hours or so in a duck blind only to re- turn empty handed or nearly so. It’s the kind of madness that most womén don’t understand, and I must confess I sometimes self. SPECIAL FASCINATION But there’s-a special fascina- tion in duck hunting that goes boven the killing of the birds. You are there in that blind with the sun not -yet up but already spreading a rosy glow to the eastward. There’s that expec- tant feeling that this could be the day, the uncertainty that it might, not be. Shapes, firs in black “silhouete, begin to appear as the sun inches its way up over the horizon, and as fin- gers of light reach into the dark they begin to take on sike and definition. You hear the crump ... erump as someone lets go a salvo down river and you mutter a few un- complimentary remarks about his pacentage and mental state. JBut all the while you're mostly \jealous_that_it_wasn't your. gun that first split the dawning still- ness. 3 . _jam at a loss te understand it my; ~ PHARMACY SERVICE - SAVINGS We Dispense any Prescription | J. EH. Worth en tos ee ca ee ) 142 Prinee St. Phone 48424 SPECIAL i Shoulder ROAST BEEF, Ib. 480) Free Delivery | QUEEN ST. | MAR KE MEAT | @ Selling completely washing machines Just Dial 892-3837 Kent St., Charlottetown And then you hear that ghost- ly whistle of wings or the gabble of a feeding flock in the west- ward darkness and you get con- cerned only over you're own af- fairs. That's: when the tension géts almost unbearable, and you re- member that it's been months since you let go at a targét mov- hour. * You can, make out the decoys now, bobbing gently in the water in front of you, and you wonder if the pattern is right, whether they_look real enough to fool the flight that may come by any minute. Your eyes are strained even now from trying too early to pick out shapes from the darkness ... and ‘then suddenly they are there zooming out of the dawn and swinging in over your decoys./~ As they flare you are up and firing... and the hunting season has really begun. It’s a scene wthat will be re- peated with variations on marshes, ponds, rivers and bays all over Prince Edward Island today, and with varying results. Among the fraternity _ has been little -but talk of, the numbers of birds available- all this week; and the sighting re- ports seem to vary about as widely as You could imagine. CLOSED ON BLACKS Of course not only ducks (ex- ing at thirty or forty miles an} ridge, Ruffed Grouse, snipe and. wood cock aré also légal shoot- ing aé of sunrise this. morning. Most of thé duck shooting: will be concentrated on. green and blue wing teal, but a good many will be out after geese éven though I'm told by some that they. aren't in prime shape this tion Grounds. gets an equally good response’ past couple of years. H was ré-organized in 1963, and in 1964 began obedience training classés under the direction of Mrs. Lee Ward. | In July. of this year the club held its first sanction dog show and the response encouraged the club to stage a second such breed show today at the Exhibi- If today’s show the club plans its first champ- ionship. points show in almost 20 years in early June. The difference between che two types of shows is basically that no points towards a champ- jonship ‘are awarded at a sanc- tion show. It is primarily de- Canadian Kennel Club, the governing hody, that a local club must stage two sanction shows before they can hold a points show, * They alsd serve as a general get together for dog fanciers, ie good fellowship rather than keén competition is generally i cept black ducks that is) — today. Geese, Montreal | Saint John —QUuaLiTy.orvos |} rebuilt Moncton fi i “rat eta ~ tricians. ie ac Sines) . eo eieaced re. lief, Ask your e aor er ora-jel’ Charlottetown to: P-6-14008 Halifax. 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