5 id ra td Miss Jeannette MacDonald of § Westville, N.S. pipe band t teacher of Gaelic music Prince Edward Is- ng ee - PIPER PROMOTES “ALLIED YOUTH” land in the interests of “Allied Youth.” Last year, when she was international president of the movement she toured the United States. The picture shows LLINGTON s of Lacordaire Study, Db at the home of Al © Gallant with a good attesld- & After business portiof a of whist were play- ‘Mrs. Alphonse Gallant won ies prize and Philinou Arsen- & for the men. fembers of Cape Egmont W. tute gathered at the 00 house for their regular eting. Roll call was answered members. Several school Bs were paid and mission was opened and found to ain a neat sum which in tirn be sent to a priest in Mon- Next meeting will be held 'the home of Mrs. Joseph Rich- | There will be an auction mes (whist party sponsored by B- Egmont W.I. was held at ‘home of Mr. and Mrs. Gus lant. Prizes went to Syl- | Gallant, Cyr Gallant, Mrs. Gallant, Miss Roseline rd and consolations to Ovil- | Arsenault and Mrs. Gus J. ant. Lunches were also sold. avin Gallant, student at Sum- fide, spent a weekend at the le of his parents. is mafty friends regret to hear ard F. Arsenault is confined home through illness. i Barlow has returned to = home from Prince County i where he underwent) sur- Lye. R sidents of Cape Egmont dis- *t were saddened to learn of} death of Mrs. Melanie Poirier ly in Shedia, N.B. She had mmerly lived in this district F some time after living | in fine, US.A. for many years. ® was 91 years of age. a Wednesday evening, a very Hoyable evening was spent in Carme] Hall when the new- organized orchestra, composed ‘ boys gave a demonstra- ‘of their abilities. Music sel- gs and songs were much en- d by the audience. . Willard MacCausiand of left on a motor trip to to visit with members family for a month. funeral of the late Mrs. D. MacNeill was held from late residence to Immaculate Meption Church, Wellington re. Pallbearers were Mark wrove, Bert Ayers, William erstead. Raymond Gillis, Gor- m Goodwin and Lloyd Lewis. St. Gilbert Altar Society met nila: with 10 members and one - present. Various réPorts pre-heard. Ladies were to bring |} 1 for a quilt at the next which is te be held at of Mrs. William Arsen- pl) call to be answered in ‘of an auction sale. A few s of bingo were played and was held bringing a neat Phil Gallant: for the home of Mrs. Phil. B. |} P°A vote of thanks was tend-|] Steele and have already taken up idence there. thy is being extended to . Emile Perry of Miscouche formerly of Wellington in the\ tragic passing -of her bro- Mr. Moore of Charlottetown. - Eva Day and Mrs. Hazel were recent visitors of Mrs. Horace Bryanton ington. ; Miss Beatrice Ferguson has ac- cepted a position as cashier with the firm of R.T. Holman’s Lid. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer MacCaus- land and young daughter of Charlottetown were weekend vis- itors of grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Fred MacCausland. They also visited Mr. and Mrs. Roy MacCausland and family. Master Gordon Day celebrated his 13th birthday: on Thursday, March 26th at his home. Mr. and Mrs. Roland Millar and son Roger, were visitors at the home of Mr. Clayton Bar- low and family on Sunday. Sympathy goes out to Mrs. Edmond L. Arsenault and other members of the family in the re- cent passing of Mrs. Marin Gai- fant at her home in Urbanville in her 76th years. Funeral was held Saturday morning to St. ‘James Church,Egmont Bay.__| An enjoyable afternoon and eve- ning was spent recently when neighbors and friends gathered at the home of Mrs. Ivan Poirier for a knitting frolic. Lunch was served by Mrs. Poirier. Elmer Arsenault spent the hol- idays with hid parents. Mr. and Mrs. Edmund C. Arsenault. A whist party in aid of St. Thomas Aquinas Society «was held recentl? at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Sylvere Wedge. Prize winners ‘were Gents, Louis Wedge Ladies, Mrs. Victorin Arsenault, Consolations, Victorin Arsenault and Mrs. Toussaint Gallant. Messrs Ed and Jerome Mac- Neill were in Toronto on a bus- fness trip recently. Mr. and Mrs. Charles. Allan and family, Mr. and Mrs. Ern- est Case and family, visited Mr. and Mrs. Howard Barlow on Eas- ter Sunday. Mr.. Eldon Barlow, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Barlow visited Mr. Clayton Barlow and family, also her with Vice-President Richard Nixon. ‘ Miss MacDonald will address P.W.C. students this morning ‘on the positive approach to the | een eet en problem of alcohol. of the movement is form of activity can be ¢ on better without the use alcohol. i The that RE Mr. and Mrs. Fidele Gallant and family on Sunday. \ Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Gallant and family of Moncton, spent the Easter holidays with Mr. and Mrs. Cyrill Gallant. Mr. Harold DesRoches, Gage- town, spent the holidays with his father, Mr. John DesRoches and sister Ardena. cently left for Labrador, where he will be employed for several months. George Veno of Miscouche left for Montreal by plane on Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Aubrey Arsen- ault of; Moncton, recently vis- ited in Miscouche at the home of Mrs. Arsenault’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles DeCoste. Mr. and-Mrs. Fidele Perry were| visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Henry! Arsenault on Sunday. B.M. | BURTON Mr. and Mrs. Emanuel Cle- ments, Brocton are now residing with their son-in-law and dau- ghter Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Per- ry, Burton. Mr. Bennett Howard who re- cently purchased a house former- Ay owned by Mr. Roy MacWil- liams, Springfield West, ad it moved to his property in Glen- garry, Lot 7. This major task Was completec Thursday eve- ning, with the assistance of many willing hands this lovely two story house was landed at its new location. : Friends of Mr. Emanuel Cle- ments are sorry to learn he had Lyk 'Gertesgeaaeal anh abehe tom a speedy recovery. Sincere sympathy of the com- munity is: extended to the be- reaved wife, family and relativ- es of the late Mr. Edward -Rich- ards of Lancaster, N.B. and for- | merly of Tignish, P. E. I. Messrs. | Patrick and Raymond O’Connor, Cape Wolfe are uncles of the de- | ceased. MISCOUCHE Justin McNeill, student of St. Dunstan’s University, Charlotte- town, spent the ster holidays in Miscouche, at the home of his Anne DesRoches who is taking a course in Home Economics, in New Brunswick, spent the Eas- ter holidays in Miscouche at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Phil H. DesRoches. Rosalie DesRoches, Iris Gal- lant, Jean Arsenault, Patricia Cronin and Delima Poirier. stu- dent nurses of the Charlottetown Hospital, were visitors to Mis- couche during the past week. The Holy week services which were held at St. John The Bap- tist Church, Miscouche, wer.e largely attended by the parish- oners and people of surround- ing parishes. The school closed for the Eas- ter holidays on Friday and all the students returned to their respective homes. Mr. and Mrs. Ewald Heer and Mr. and Mrs. Emmanuel Rich- ard of Summerside, were recent Patricia Poirier who is attend- ing St. Dunstan’s University, spent Easter with her’ parents, Ete * OTTAWA (cP) — In-May, 1958, Parliament amended the National Housing Act increasing to $750,000,000 tfrom $400,000,000 the amount : can issue in direct hous- joans. This amount was in- creased at the current session to $1,000,000,000. The corporation previously an- nounced that housing completions in 1958 rose to a record 146,686 from 117,283 in 1967. Also, 164,632 dwellings were started, up from 122,340 the previous year. The report said this record would have been impressive in any year. -“In 1958, it was the more so by contrast with reduced activity in other sectors of the economy. Expenditures on house — building g "}ownecs, $55;00,000 going to. indi-' ‘ wg Housing Industry Reached New Stature During Year. were %5 per cent above those of the previous year expenditures on other types of capital invest- ment were down by nine per cent.” }»WHOPPING LOAN FIGURE Government housing “fending in 1958 totalled an unprecedented $373,000,000. Of this, $309,000,000 was used to finance homes for viduals building their own homes and $254,000,000 being acquired by builders erecting homes for sale. The remaining $64,000,000 financed multiple units for rent. Private lenders last year ap- proved mortgage ioans of $810,- 000,000, up from $517,000,000 the previous year. About two-thirds of this volume was under the National. Housing Act compared with a little more than one-third in 1957. Main impact last year of the special measures taken by the government was on the construc- tion of houses for home owners, the report said. The total started in the year rose by 25-per cent to 115,221 from 92,227 in 1957. The report said the year’s rec- ord house-building activity was achieved with the smallest in- crease in building costs in recent years. The cost per square foot of single-family houses financed under NHA averaged $10.51 in 1958, compared with $10.35 tlie previous year. AVERAGE COST Average’ cost of these houses was $14,708 in 1958, as against $14,493 in 1957. The agency said a number of factors accounted for this rela-!duce costs. their insured lending, financing 45,716 homes, corhpared with 23,- 984 in 1957. 2. OMHC guaranteed 37,132 home improvement loans made by banks for a fotal of $39,600,- 000, up. from 29,947 loans and $30,600,000 the previous year. 3. The corporation in 1958 su- pervised the construction of 1,618 family dwellings and 14 schools or extensions for the defence de- partment. 4. CMHC is co-operating with the National House Builders As- sociation and the National Re- search Council in plans for a “budget research house.” The plans include a simplified heat- ing system and other structural features which may help to re- TIMELY NOTES ON FUR FARMING More than 900,000 ranched mink were imported by the United States during December, 1958, ac- cording to Department of Com- merce figures. This was a clear increase over the previous De- cember. o The actual figures are: Decem- ber, 1956—931,632; December,— 1957—786,156. The rise could. be accounted for by exports of skins from Scandanavian countries. Sweden shipped 219,800 skins this past December, compared with 886,115 a year earlier. Fin- land’s percentage advance vaas even greater, with 137,757 skins exported, compared to 33,827 in December, 1957. Danish ship - ments rose slightly, from 116,820 to 121,115. Norway’s shipments climbed from 75,388 to 108,154. Canada ise stili the most im- portant mink shipper to the Uni- ted States, but actually shipped fewer skins. Quantities declin- ed from 454,386 to 424,740, for the year 1956. The above figures will give our mink farming friends reason to think very carefully about what would happen if the economy of the United States started to de- cline from its present prosper- ous condition. In the month of December, 1957, there was ser- ious consideration being given to the possibility of a setback in the manufacture and disposal of many products that were con- tributing verv largely ‘to the pros- perity of the United States. One of these was steel, which is a real trade barometer, and in the month of December, 1957, U.S. steel (common) went below $50 a share. President Eisenhan- er and others rallied the confid- ence of the nation, and a real Mr. and Mrs. John €. Poirier, Miscouche. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Arsen- ault of Summerside, were re- cem visitors te Miscouche. Sympathy is extended to Mrs. the death of her brother Joa- chin Gaudet who passed away wave of prosperity started in, which carried the stock market to unheard of heights. U.S. steel actually sold for $100 a share, and because of the profits from the stock market and the con- fidence of the nation, sales of luxuries increased . tremendously. One of the principal juxuries was furs. Our ranchers will real- ize from the above that the pros- perity of the nation is the only real guarantee we have for the success of any of our fur indus- tires. IN DENMARK From faraway Copenhagen, Denmark, a despatch from Fair- child News Services, dated March 15, states that American buying interest was the high spot of the weekend auction of Danish Fur Sales which mark the end of Dan- ish winter fur production. Ranch mink (males) sold 9 percent, and females sold 99 per- cent. Both went at prices five percent “higher than January. White mink sold % percent at prices 20 percent lower than De- cember. Glancing \ over the reports of fur’ sales throughout the United States, we find that everywhere All of the sales feature mink. ducing quality goods. many years in the fur industry, and he knows the quality and Catherine McKenna are visiting there is a report of increase in| lottetown, regret to learn of her sales, with some of them twenty| accident and wish her a speedy percem higher than last year. recovery. they are top mink ranchers, pro-. Joe Dupler is a veteran of the color it takes to receive the highest prices. Approximately $100,000 has been appropriated to handle ad- vertising and promotion of SAGA mink in the United States this year. About $60,000 will be used for consumer advertising, pri- marily in national fashion maga- zines. “‘Saga’’ is the name ap- plied to the top twenty percent of mink produced in Denmark, Fin- land and Norway. ELMSDALE Mrs. Hazel Cameron was a recemt visitor to Summerside, guest of her son and daughter- intJaw, Mr. and Mrs. Maxwell Cameron. Mrs. Thomas Wall, Bedeque, spem su.eral days recently with bem terrible,” he “I was talking to her, but got her two. minutes a [ = EF afk EGS he Pletsch home wiich Hi *~ and her son nad moved “into. the Pletsch home because of fear that a slide would hit their own home. CAUSED BY RAIN The slide is believed to have i Highway worker Michael Bru- netti, 32, was helping a group of workmen drain tie hillside when the earth started rolling. “It came so quickly; there was nothing I could do,’’ he said. “‘It picked me up. and carried me with it.” escaped uninjured as he the crest down a 600 - foot slope. Wreckage caused by the slide cut off the escape routes of the four people in the Pletsch house when it started to burn with the upset. The Scheutze home was untouched. Mr. Scheutze and fellow work- ers ran to the wreckage of the ruined house but flames stopped them from going inside. Volunteer firemen and citizens arrived too late to help. BEDEQUE Mrs. Mae~ MacFarlane, this village, left on Monday 23rd »1n)} a visit with friends in Toronto. Mr. and Mrs. Stanley MacKin- non, ang .Mr:: and Mrs. Fred MacLaughlin, returned to their homes in Haverhill, Mass., after spending several days in this community. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph B: Mac- Caull, Carleton Siding, were re- cent visitors to Halifax, N.S. Mr. Clare Muttart, second year student at Mt. Allison, spent the Easter holidays at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ken- neth Muttart, Searletown. The graduation exercises -of the Atlantic Christian Training Centre, Tatamagouche, N.S. were held on Thursday, March 26th. Among those in attendance from the Bedeque congregation, were Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bell, Albany, whose son Donald, completed the 18 weeks course, and Mr. Ir- Cottie, completed eat Yom the, the were Mr. and Mrs. Carleton, Mr. ‘hur Mr. Arthur Craig and Mr. Ctaig. Miss Carolyn .Lowther, Carleton also attended the grad- uation exercises. Mn, and Mrs. and daughter Ann, were in tis village on Friday 27th, calling on Mrs. Gillespie’s sister, Mrs. 5 two children, Dartmouth, N.S., and Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Mur- phy, Halifax. Friday held in the Bedeque United Churen at 11 a.m. There was a good gathering. The choir rend- ered fine music. The Pastor, Rev. G.A. Cowper-Smith delivered a Mr. Alden Leard ofthe Mt. Allison faculty, Sackville, is spending the Easter holidays with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Leard of this village. ‘ B.Q. FAMILY IN WINNIPEG’ OTTAWA (CP) A former Ger- man paratrooper who deserted from the Canadian Army in Ger- nipeg when he was posted many with the Princess Patri- cia’s Canadian Light Infantry May, 1954. : Burke Electric Authorized 2 Dealer Electrical Wiring Repairing and Supplies Oil Hi Household A 112 Kent St. DIAL 4021 liances ving Toombs, whose daughter, her dauzhter, Mrs. Fraser Rix and family. Mr. and’ Mrs. Dale McKenna, and Mr. and Mrs. Louis Dunn were recent visitors to Chariot- tetown Mrs. R. A. McKenna and Miss relatives in Chai’ ottetown. . The . any friends of Mrs. Allan Matthews of Sunset Lodge, Char- BIGGEST SALE Otto Grosse, well known to our mink ranchers in this province, claims to have made shipment and delivery of the largest num- ber of mink ever sold from one buyer. In February of this year, 1,250 breeding animain from his ranch were shipped to the Dup- Fire - Auto - Casualty Marine G. G. K. PEAKE LTD. Havelock, N.B. FOR THE LAND’S SAKE - LIME Soll acidity slows down the decomposition of organie matter and reduces the yields and quality of hay\ and pasture. LIME is the cheapest all-round soil conditioner on the mar ket and should be applied to acid soil, it makes all major plant foods more available. Always remember, “HAVELOCK LIME WORKS”. Shipped in carload lots of 30 tons or more, bagged or bulk. Order now from— HAVELOCK LIME WORKS Phone 488 ler Mink Ranch at Salt Lake City, Utah. Mr. Grosse said: ‘‘It is quite a thrill to see one of the leading furfarmers in the world, who is producing fine mink, come again, again and again, to Northwood. _for_producing quality | pelts. The prices he has consis- tently received in the New York in U.S.A. D.M. auctions. bear out the fact that cy wr LINDER ON yoy is MacLEOD LTD. 1T WAS LIKE THIS, JUDGE: 1} HAO JUST GOTTEN MY CAR FROM ALLISON MacLEOD parents, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard McNeill. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cotton and daughter of Halifax, NS., recently spent several days in Miscouche, visiting relatives and friends« Leo DesRoches. who is employ- ‘ed in Charlottetown, was a vis- itor to Miscouche on Friday. Peter Steele of Miscouche, re- id \ j C\W/aR on a new C.C.M. A complete BICYCLES REPAI THE BIKE SHOP now in. Trade your old bike in placement parts always on hand. C.C.M. bikes from 39.95 up. Little Bikes Middle Bikes the grown up. We carry the’ well known, well built stock of genuine C.C.M. re- RED and REBUILT & SPORT LODGE Dial 6241 $750 $1350 EUR | 126 ST. } m — ° * ayyNe ret te ° 1958 AUSTIN 4 DOOR SEDAN $1595 1953 CHEVROLET 2 DOOR SEDAN 1955 DODGE 2 DOOR SEDAN —" GONE THREE BLOCKS WHEN THIS CoP GRABS ME ANDO SAYS DOING SIXTYaa« | ALMOST AT \ “19 | Ving s) iste ee ©, Now, ! WASN'T [/HoLO Fm ev, HOLD ITS } OOING SIATY-~ NOT THIRTY-~ | NOT TEN, EVEN, IN FACT, | WAS STANOSTILL «~ 1956 VOLKSWAGON 1957 PLYMOUTH: MacLEO \'M GONNA STOP THtd BEFORE You BACK INTO SOMETHING == 10 DOLeARs Jf A . 2 DOOR SEDAN $1025 4 DOOR SEDAN $1750 91 CHRYSLER 4 DOOR SEDAN $350 i a patti depots located across Eastern Canada! model 440 sedan illustrated below, Gives 43 miles te the galion. COMPLETE PRICE = FRED HICKOX, Charlottetown For information about Franchise, write: Omnitrade Limited, 1247 Guy St., Montreal ‘ it’s se wise te Go skoda smartest in the small ear field _ In all models . the racy 450 sports convertible . . . Skoda lacks nothing but ungainly size and unnecessary expense . . . it is economical in everything but comfort and styling! continued and satisfactory performance assured by more than 50 parts and service . . from the Me in all principal centres $1720