mm 15.0 3951' U TH! GUARDIAN. CH ARLO1TETOWN wraaartrrstw FEE WESTERN euaaoiah following otoroo . T,-rat: MEETING of the Ladies Aid of the Prince County Hospital ggvcrtlsed for Thursday evening. 5 been postponed to Thursday. yum 215i. ",4-um REGULAR monthly during at the Kensington manch of the Canadian Legion No. 9 will be held in the Town 1:, Kensington. Friday. .june 15th at 8.30 p.m. All members re- quested to attend and all veter- ms welcome. ..mar:wr.u. SERVICES --!Rev. )3. A. FitzPatrick will return from W. meeting of the Msiitime Unit- ed churcii Conference in Sackville m time to conduct Sunday services on his pastoral charge. These will be Rev. FltzPatrick”s farewell ser- vices to the congregation at. Cas- canlpeu, Tlgnish and Alberton. .,iI.N'GAGE)Il-1NT- Mrs. Mzijrir H, iiimiin, Borden, announces the eng.ig9THCn'. of her sister, Nin Johziitnii Mclnnis, R.N.. daughter of tho into Mr. and Mrs. John J. liiclniiis, siimmersidc, to Joseph najiiiond White. son of Mr. and Mrs. John J. VVhltc. Emerald. Marriage to take place 10.00 n.m. July 21. at Holy Redeemer Church, Toronto. -'(illll.D !NJUR.El)- The many littin friends of Master Norman SiillillOl1S, 5-year-old son of Mr. mu Mrs.- Harold Simmons. North st. Eleanors. will regret to learn that he is a patient in the Prince County Hospital after an accident in which his left hand hecame en- taii:lrd in the belt. of (ill electric watrr pump on Tuesday. On arTiVili at the hospital, one finger of the hand was found to be so badly lacerated that medical iiutliorities decided it would have to be amputated and the opper- llllnli was performed on Wednes- tia'-' morning. He is resting as comfortably as can be expected. -LEAVE FOB. BOSTON -Mrs. Hiizry Wedge, Sumimcrside. and i".i:' mother, Mrs. Mark Delaney In on Wed-ncsdziy for Monrston o iii-Fil' way to Boston where J Delaney will visit her sis- ter Mrs, J. J. Condrirk, who is q': -rs ill. They will be joined in .Xlvi.ton by Mrs. Wcrigcis daugh- , Carol Ann. who is attending S Josciphxz School there and they will proceed on from Bos- tc.. to Montreal where Mrs. llHuigc's son. Richard, will join i.iZ:'ll. They will then return by 1 of Bosutoii and with Mrs. .".llCy will all rcitirii home.-S. -IS TRANSFERREI) -- Mr. F. R Dunn, accoun-tirnt of the Roy- ai Bank of Canada. Summsrside, ho: horn transferred to Amherst. . where he will hold a sim- position. it was lcarncd yes. twznay. Mr. Dunn, who came here in March, 1950, is a native of Pwou, N. S., and has served in mi-icr of Maritime branches. zn Suminierside he was an r- nu-mber of the Y's Men's and the Curling Club. He i . or succeeded in Summerside by Mr K. G. Lcavitt who comes here from the New Glasgow, N.S., branch.--S. MEN'S MEETING - Rogcrs was chairman of tat regular meeting of the Sum- merside Y's Men's Club held last. owning at Robson's Restaurant. Guests were Dr. W. Moi-esidc. Be- flwif. and Mr. Vaughn Cook. S tulle, N. B. Final plans were no for the movie which is be- i:.; sponsored next Wednesday and Tniirsdny at the Capitol Theatre by the club. It was announced tlmiv. there would be a ticket sals in iX'tllSif1Lli0-n. A presentation of I urpnrtin-it gift. was made to i.'-'-KLIFLT Fred Dunn who has be-in transferred to the Amherst b.-azich of the Royal Bank. Mr. iiliirray Willet. was inducted into the cliiib by Y's Man Bill Currie. Km Walker and President Hil- 1a:ti Clark gave a report on the nwiit Munoton Convention which was attended by members of Maritime clubs.-S. Personals stir. oi-ei Gallant, o'Leai-y. left yesterday for Toronto, where he will undergo medical treatment. He is a veteran of the second World War. mMr. John C. Weeks, St. El- Penors. has returned home from i-'10 Queen Mary Veterans Hos- Diial, Montreal, whore he has been undergoing treatment for the Past three months.-S. llSEil citiis FOR SALE 1949 P1 ' 1949 Folysiiouth Sedan 1947 Oldsmobile, 5 passenger coupe 1941 Dad e Sedan 1939 Pont ac Sedan 1930 Chev. Sedan 1930 Model A Sedan 1939 Ford Half Ton Truck These cars all in good con- dition and can be financed. STAN BAKEII. 115 Summer St. Dial 2336 ' Summeroldo M if PRINCE COUNT! Orflcl 8 Summer Strut. Bumlnenldo. Pbono an glows. Subscriptions. Advertising lopnooniotivco J. sumo IIUBPIY and GIOBGI GLOW. liouoo Phones: 0088- and U88 Tho Guardian may no bought at any of tho in Bununonidox aookolou. Summer Street: Gourliso Drugstore. ll control ltooola my'l News-otond. Water Street: Mun Gondot. 6'1 Gnnvfllo lttoou Alyro Douootwo Gcooory. Iooontl Strut: blond Motor Tunoporo. "1 Water Street; Aloon'o Grocery. no Iunooll sum. : K. L. Waito In Konoington 3 WES! PBINCI: OFFICE ., Albortoni Frank Woolo, lepnunuun, t Phonon-ID-lolflooondts-llouoo. -INJUIIED IN FALL -Friends 01 Mrs. Mark Goudet. S.r.,wiilre- gret to learn that she is a patient in the Prince County Hospital as a result of a. fall sustained in her home on Wednesday when she fell and suffered I fractured hip.-6. -BAND C0N.CE.T PLANT!!!)- Summcrside will---be privileged to enjoy its first bmd concert of the year tonight when the Pipe Band Of R. C. A. F. No. 401 Reserve squadron of the city of West- mount will play at 730 in Memor- ial Square. This band concert is presented through the courtesy of the Summer-aide Wing of the R-. C. A. 1". Association.-6 Four In Hospital After Accident Four persons were taken to the Prince county Hospital yesterday following an accident at Beaton's Bridge, Carleton Lot 6 near the entrance to Coleman Comer, early" in the morning. A light truck struck a post of 3, new bridge, then cut off posts in an old bridge nearby before landing in four to five feet of water in the creek. Occupants of the vehicle were A.V1re Bernard and Oral Arsenault and two young ladies. They were cnroute to summersidc from Al. bcrton. , 'Mr. Bernard had his leg broken but crawled amt bobblcd to the nearby home of Fred Gallant from where Dr. L. G. Dewar of O'Leary was summoned. Mr. Arsenault may have internal injuries. The ladies are suffering from shock and minor cuts. All four were removed to hos- pital yesterday afternoon by acn- bulance. Fox Breeders To -Meet At Montreal The 3ilst annual meeting of the Canadian National Silver Fox Breeders Association, head office Summerside, P. E. 1., will be held this year at the Laurctntian Hotel, Montreal, and will open on Mon- day, Jttine 18th in the atfternoon. A directors meeting will be held in the morning. The president, Gordon MacMil- lan, Corniwall, accompanied by Mr. Ernest T. Mill, Kensington. director. will leave tomorrow morning by train for Mon-treal. Leaving this morning are the following: George Cablbeck, man- ager; Vernon Matthews, treas- urer; T. D. Carnithers. secre- tary, (all of Summersidei, and Mcssns. R. Humphrey, director. Kensington. and E. S. Burleigh. cl-ircctor, Eilerslic. Colonel D. A. MacKinn-on, director. Charlotte- town. and ponold 0. Stewart. di- rector. Summemide, will fly to Montreal for the meeting and will leave on Sunday morning. Mi-. L. W. Hancock, Summerside. another director. will be unable to attend this year as duties at. his ranch will not permit. Official: of the Association said yesterday that the Hudson Bay June sale was being held in Montreal on Tuesday in order to give the directors and officers ad the association an opportunity to attend.-S. OTTAWA, Juno 1! - (OP) - Joseph Desgagnier. 46. today was sentenced to two months in jail for assaulting Solon Low, Social Credit leader. when the latter re- fused him money on the street. He plooded guilty last. week to the os- ssult, which sent Mr. Low to hos- pital for tremment. for minor face injuries. Professional Bards i A E. E. Parkman. I Opt.D.. R.O. '3 OPIOMITIIBT lyoo lxotnlncd llloun ruteo Office Hours: 0 to 12 - I to I i and by oppolnttnenl Phono all REGENT THIATII ID130- Sulnlnsr 83-. SIIIIIIIIGIWMO t. Earls. lllcltoy chartered Accountant Cnnodloo lonlt of Conunoroo luildllll loounmltlo. I I I- I;”-T.i.:.".::..:-"- ll Colnpieto Visual Analyse! . : alouoo Intel 1 PIIONI mo oiIAu.olAN's BUILDING I ! Ioinnorolllo P-I-1 ......s..m- lnstilin Blamef In will ease SHERBROOKE. Qtie.. June 14- Hearing of lengthy Superior Court proceedings in which 10 relatives of John 0. Holland. former owner of the Sfunsteod Journal. are chol- lenging the will he mule on Fun. 18. 1949. will be continued all this week. on Saturday the hearing was adjourned until today by Mr. Justice William Mitchell. Mr. Holland died on March 15. 1949, less than a month after he made the will. His 10 cousins, nephew: and nieces have chal- lenged legality of the will on the mentally carpable at the time he dictated it. They are opposed by the Canadian Red Cross society and the Salvation Army to which organisations Mr. Holland be- queathed : residual amount be- lieved to be between 3100.000 and 5150.000. Left 31.000 llch In the will Mr. Holland anooinfn ed Wesley H. Bradley, K.c.. and Charles Jenkins. joint executives of his estate.- He gave 31.000 each to the to relatives and an equal amount to D:-.' A. H. Carson, a United Church minister. He also left 3500 each to his two nurses. And he stipulated that the residual amount be divided equally be- tween the Salvation Army and the Red Cross Society. Through their attorneys. John T. I-Iackett, l(.C., of Montreal. and Stewart Willis, the i0 relatives are attempting to prove that the late publisher was "mentally dr-terinr- atnd" when he signed the will. One of the principal witnesses heard here last week was Dr. I. M. Raibinocltch, well-known Mont- real expert on diabetes. He testi- ficti that many of Mr. Holland's actions. cited by rolritives in sup- port of their contention that ho was mentally deteriorated, were actually due to the effects of in- sulin injections. He said he had known Mr. Hol- land in a professional capacity and his patient. had reacted in such a manner to the drug that he was obliged to reduce the daily quota. He said that between 194-1 and 1946 when he was creating Mr. Holland he never saw any evid- ence of mental depreciation. He said his patient was weaker phy- sicaliy. but showed no signs of be- ing weaker mentally. "A patient suffering from in- sulin reaction has difficulty in forming words, suffers from dis- orientation. loss of memory and hallucinations,” he said. "Sleep- mess is the most common symp- tom. and an insulin reaction can even be accompanied by paralysis," when the doctor was asked if grounds that Mr. Holland was not; IIEATII I-EETERDAY (Continued from Page 1) that the original civic airport was Opened in summer-side. He was one of the foremost of those who agitated for the present dial sys- tem. the first of its kind in this province and on the night that it went into operation he was pres- ent and dialled the first message. This was about his last public ap- pearance. He was for several years I Pres- ident of the Canadian Weekly Newspaper Association. In his younger days he was I member of the 82nd Regiment of P.E.I. and in the First: World war enlisted for service and was "on command" taking drafts of men from Canada to England. It was largely due to his press representations that summer-side today enjoy: its fine public lib- rary. Always interested in the youth of the town the gave unsparingly of his time to the Boy Scout Movement and was for a time provincial chairman of the Air Cadet League of Canada. A post pl ident of tho Bum- merside Board of Trade. he also served with that body for several years as chairman of the air mail service committee. He was also a member of the Eummorsido Riot- ary Club. Prominent in the Masonic Lodge. he was o. Past. Master of Hiram and Lebanon Lodge Number 3. it thirty-second degree member of the Albert Edward Lodge of Pet- fection, member of the Klkbth Chapter Rose Oi-oix. and a mem- ber of the Nova Scotio consistory. His wife is the former Florence Alward of Summerslde and he is survived by one son. William R. of the Board of Public Utilities of Charlottetown. Two sons made the supreme sac- rifice in World War Two. Arthur and John Robert of the R.C.A.F. He is also survived by one broth- er, Victor, in the Canadian west and one sister, Mrs. Dorothy Sharpe. Summerside. The funeral will take place from his late residence on Sunday to St. Mary's Anglican Church for service at 3.00 P.M. - S BOMBAY, India. June 14 - (AP) - Manuel Garreton, former Chilean Ambassador to Turkey and once a member of the Un- ited Nations Korean Commission, was freed today of a charge of smuggling 5350.000 worth of gold into India. The court said the Indian Government wanted to drop the charge for "political and diplomatic reasons." .jM...--.---- he had any personal experiences with such cases, he replied: "Un- fortunately. hundreds." The hearing is expected to last almost another week. CAPITOL Tonight: 7:15-9:15; Saturday 2:30-7:15-9:15 NOTE: No Matinee Today (Friday). Summer.-side V THE BRIDE gets the FATHER gets the M-0-M presents '.Iic romantic comedy of tho yearl, SPENCER TRACY . JOAN BENNETT ' -ELlZABE'I'l:l TAYLOR oa'a6o.&a'-4:” is DON TAYLOR - IILLIE BURKE :' i so-out Ploy by Imam counts and sum Norton gm ylivl it .. fr Illlil toiicitit Rnaiiiisbtii Si with MINOR WATSON - RUBY DEE - RICHARD LANE aytloyoo Looiu rs-Iftl lmi ,, Dlroctod by Alf Ell E. omit who a you ' the lotion stay Produced by Mott loislln - Written for tho mm by Lomnco Taylor and Mthtu mm on info lion mm lolouo ALSO ON SAME PROGRAM "FIGHTING RED HEAD" . T with Red Rider and Little Beaver f Ll. C.N.R. Shipments During Past Month Increase in the export of pulp- wood and decrease in the export of potatoes from this Province dur- ing the month of May highlight the report of railway shipments as issued by the Charlottetown office of the Canadian National Railway Superintendent. Compared with the same month ti83);i last year potato shipments dropp- ed almost fifty per cent from the total of 1.374 carloads, to 748 car- loads in May, 1961. Puipwood on the other hand jumped from 2 car- in May. 1950. to 664 last month. Lumber also was shipped to ' the amount. of 16 caxloacls month as against corresponding month of 1960. In the import shipments railway coal showed one of the greatest drops with only one carload com- ing in last month year. This is due no doubt to the use of diesels. Fertilizer goods, 14 run; sand, gravel stone. at) (28); shingles and roof- ing. 20 (-). and vegetables, 5 (-). of import carioads wuv MOUNT KIBCO, N.Y., June 14 have also dropped drastically wlthi fish. 13 i5); blues, 3 (51; livestock,-, 231 carloads imported against :i88i1l2 L149): less carloads. 79 I'79i;; if oil meats. 24 424i; oats, 3 t-); starchy shipments climbed from 150 to 199.i2 :11; turnips. 31 IZGI; misc, 28 and shipments of autos rose from 159:; bottles, empty, 3 ('1): mach- 4l carloads in May 1960 to 68 last. lnery, 3 (-); railway material. 5 I8); hay and straw. 2 G99): moss, Other shipments for last month's (2); autos, 2 t.i; 5c,-ap mm, 14 Poreslmndimz month in' l-): canned goods, 4 '-r: recr- l950 in brackets, are as follows: itables, 2 (-), and strawberries. 1 From Cape Tomientine to Bor-, (-). , den: Trucks, 6 (6): bags, empty.l14 Exports total was VIM carloadsp co . showing I decrease of 91 carioads too (101); fruits, if 012); flour andifrom May of last year. feed, 1?! (140); H. H. goods. 1 t-);l ' hardware, 5 (3); lumber. 55 (4.1); livestock. 4 ttlizf gj less unloads. 261 LONDON, June 14 (5)3 m3Chmg5'i(1g.i3?1e1 gfgr-l;3l000,000 on development. education ' its (l52):l 3 tfteutcrsi :- Britain spent more than 5:13,- ! and welfare in her colonies during the last l2 months. A government. Hstatemerit released today showed 33 W2” mmned 3 that nearly ft-1,000,000 was spent. oii mdi education in the colonies. showing a decrease of 192 - (GP) - Actress Tallulah Bank- rarloads from last year. i From Borden to Cape Tormen- (1): barrels. empty. 4 (6); call. 8 (12); head, stricken with a gall bladder ailment, entered Northerii West- chester Hospital yesterday for ob- servation and possible surgery. ; MAKE too out KEEP too out Get relief from constipation-lndl. geotion. Ppoitivo results from FRUIT-A-TIVES provon by coal oi thouundo. FRUIT-A-TIVES contain utnclo of fruits and turbo. arm til :'an's Mobile rliovio This Week Presents BAD BASGOM istarring Margaret O'Brien, Wallace Be-ery, Marjorie Main Also: Fourth Chapter of serial, i "King of the Forest Rangers" N "You know I'm putty stubborn about odmlllng ono gooollno to better than nnolhor . . . hullhio B-A BB gooolino hos Inodo o rool difforonco to my car. I'm getting morn power and pickup than ovor boforoi And talk about economy! For my monoy B-A I8 givu mo moro por gallon--in ovory way-than anything I've mod." I "I'm on of those 'oIIow mo' bids myself . . . bull flguro Hm 0 winner whon I docidod on I-A 98 for this now car of mine. Up hill! 3 3; or on tho straight-ow..,, I-A 98 con onsworo tho domondo of in high compression onglno. And you'ro right about I-A oconomy. Thou woo o dlfforonco in my gasoline bill tho first month! usod I-A 901" PANY LTD. liolnpolloltonuony j Dwnodbyconodona