l rl T TUESDAY Charlottetown City Council will meet at 7.30 pm. Tuesday. Oct. 3, rather than Monday, holiday. TEACHER IN HOSPITAL Mrs. Ewen Todd, member of West Kent School teaching staff. is a patient in the P.E.I. Hos- pital. ENTERS CHILDREN’S HOSP. Bernadine Doyle of Pleasant Grove has entered the Children's Hospital in Halifax, where she will undergo surgery. She was accompa ed by her mother. Mrs. Leo M. Doyle and her un- cle Harry Cameron. of mouth. N.S. who was returning from a short visit to tie Island. rt. 'ro NAME DELEGATES A cabinet meeting today will determine who will accompany Premier Walter R. Shaw when he leaves for Ottawa Saturday to partic federal-provincial meetings and in ceremonies during Queen_El- ‘ lzabeth's visit to the capital. The premier said there is a meeting next week of the tax- structure committee and a con- secrtenfi of Canadian premiers MacISIINNON FUNERAL - The funeral for Mrs. Evelyn MacKinnon was held Thursday, Oct. 8. 1964. from the Mac- Lean Funeral Home where ser- vice wu conducted by Rev. John G.E. Ball and Rev. Henry Tye. Hymns sung were "The Lord’s My rd" and "Abide With Me", Pallbearers were: Ralph Carr. Jack Mar- tin, Frank Puncher, Walter Auld, Keith Boyce and Charles Ruestis. Interment took place in the People's cemetery. JAPAN'S NEW savor OTTAWA (CP) —- Hisanaga ssdor to Canada. will arrive here Friday. The 58-year-old Mr. Shimadzu. a member of his country’s diplomatic service for as years. succeeds Nobuhiko Ushiba. who here years. Before his Ottawa sp- pointment, Mr. Shimadzu was mbasssdor to Thailand and. tso New Zealsnd. P I 0 C A I l B R l EFS ‘News Stories On Queen Set CNI VolUme Record Shim-adorn. Japan's new ambas- M A three-day office-tooffice shift is taking place in Ottawa for the integration of national l l Approximately 180,000 words describing Queen Elizabeth’s vi- sit to the province were filed by national and international news- men through Canadan National Telecommunications in Char- lottetown from Sunday to yes- terday. norm BRIEFS IN HALIFAX Matthews. Alber- relatives in Hall- Mrs. H. . ton. is visiting fax. MOTORING 1N N.s. Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Hardy and . Mrs. Francis Crane, Alberton, are on a motor trip in Nova Scotia. SPENDING HOLIDAY Mr. and Mrs. Neil Matheson, Soutiiport. are spendin the thanksgiving weekend at the home of Gordon Barbour. Alma. RETURN FROM N5. Mr. and Mrs. Silas Rayner. Alberton. and Mr. and Mrs. George Dunbar. Montrose. have returned home after visiting in Nova Scotia duri g the past week. They were guests of Mr. Rayner's Sisters. Mrs. Emerson Phillips in Truro and Mrs. Carl Yonkey in Little Musquodoblt. and of friends in West Gore. STEELE FUNERAL e funeral of Mrs. Annie Steele of Montague was held from St. s Chm-ch, Wednesday. Oct. 7 at 9.30 am. quiem Mass was celebrated by Rev. J.W. McCerdle. Pallbear- ers ‘were: Steele. Rob- ert Steele, George Steele. Leo Lawrence Mshar and Steele, Emile Mahu'. Interment place in st. Paul's cemetery, Stungeon. Graveside as ea was conducted by Rev. Find- lay Mullally of St. Paul's Church. took 1 DEFENCE DEPARTMENT IS OVING defence's command struc- ture. Some 1,300 military per- sonnel and numerous chairs, CNT office manager J .12. Da- vies said the wordage was a re- cord for any Maritime Provinces news event. News stories on the Royal Vi- sit to Charlottetown were sent to “practiially all Canadian newspapers. papers in the Unit- ed S tes. the United Kingdom and Australia." "Wednesday, 66,000 words were sent through the telecommuni- cations office and Mr. Davies believes this is also a Maritime record for one day's wordage on a news event. Sunday. about 20,000 words were filed and yesterday. the day after Queen Elizabeth left the province. about 8,500 words were handled by the Charlotte- town CNT office on the R 0 ya] isit. Extra staff of five operators, two technicians and supervisory personnel. was needed to handle the news coverage transmission. Harry Life. superintendent of CN Telecommunications for the Maritimes area. praised work of the operators. who worked in shifts around the clock. He noted that the word- sge total of nearly 180,000 words was “tremendous” pared to the total of 15.000 trans- mitted out of P.E.I. du royal visit of 1951. desks and file cases are through the lty mov— while guards watch. I Two $125 I Fines Levied Fines if $125 and costs or 30 days wefe imposed on Hensley Frizzell, Sherwood, and Martin Josepl Kelly. Ontario, for im paired driving, when t ey ap- peared in city police court yes- terday before Magistrate AJ. Haslam, Q . ard vCasford, both of Charlotte- town. were eac fined $15 costs or five days for vagrancy. Reginald Trainor, town was fined $25 and costs on a drunk and disorderly charge and William McEwen, Charlotte- town, was remanded without bail to Oct. 15. Stewart Cecil Wakelin. Park- dale. was fined $10 and costs or five days for speeding. Three persons charged with illegal possession of liquor were each fined $20 and costs or so days. Of 11 - persons charged with being drunk and incapable, eight were each fined $20 and costs or 20 days: two were remanded until Oct. 9. and another was gi- ven a 20-day suspended sen- tence. John Russell Dunn and. Rich- Charlotte- man Eastern And C ISLAND NEWS PAGE entral Districts Celebrated Co-op week in Canada will be held next week, starting Oct 11 and running until Oct. 17. marking the development of Oanad 's (Jo-operative move- ment. This co-op week is sponsored jointly by e Co-operative Union of Canada and Le Conseil de la Cooperation, the English and French counterparts for promotion and education in the oo-op movement The wth of co-ops will be celebrated during this week in Canada by dinners. rallies. social and educational events. , to be organized by local corn- 'rmittees and aided by provm- cial organizations and t e CUC. BIGGEST YEAR The biggest increase in the co-op business movement was in 1963 when total business vol- ume rose to $1.650,000,000 from $5,000,000 in the previous year. The foundation of the ‘co—op- erative movement lies in its over 1% million members about 3,000 oo-operative m- Next Week lsociations across the land. ‘ ; o-operative unions deal In v consumer. insurance, credit and Imarketing of all types of goods, lretailing and wholesaleing in various fields and other bus- is. ‘ In a statement to the Co-op- erative Union of Canada, Prime l Minister Lester B. Pearson says i “Over the years I have watch- led with great interest the growth of the co-operative Imovement in Ca-nada. I have ‘been particularly impressed with the way your great move- ment has been able to adapt itself to changing requirements and needs and diversify into 0' a: m various other activities." He also commuted on cooperatives making able their knowledge and ex- perienoe gained in the field to other growing and developing coun res FRENCH-ENGLISH President of the Prince Ed- ward Island Cooperative Un- Kenneth M. MacLean of Lot 16, notes that the co-op Memorial Organ To Be Dedicated At Central UC On Thanksgiving Sunday, Oct. 11, at 7.30 pm. the Hall- Memrorial Organ, which has been placed in the Marsh- fie - Dunstaffnage United Church, will be dedicated. Other dedications at this special service will include an organ lamp and a Sunday School Attendance Board. A rememberance book been compiled in which memorials and donations. since the erection of the anctuany in 1927. will be recorded. Special music at this service will include selection-s by the has all ted Church, solos and the Jun- iror Choir of Central United Church. Male Eight of Park Royal Uni- ‘ week is significant in the fact that it will be celebrated joint- ly "between the Cooperative Union of Canada and the Le Counseil Canadien de la 00- orperative. the CUC counter- part in French Canada. he said. Credit Union Day will be Oct. 15, during Co-op week. Mr. MacLean added "we should renew our interat in people beyond our own fron- tiers people who are less tunarte than we are in all parts of the world”. The Guardian. Charlottetown, Fri. Oct. 8. 1964. Co—op Union Growth iness areas. on a cooperative sv- Evangelist Billy Graham. in Boston. Mass. for a series of rallies at Boston Garden. has a meeting with Richard Cardinal Cushing of the Cath- olic Diocese of Boston Wed- nesday. Mr. Graham Tuesday night challenged young Chris- so cover the Queen’s arrival. They Police Deny Taxi Driver Broke Security An RCMP spokesman said Wednesday his force and RCAF police were fully aware of the presence at Summerside RCAF base Monday of a taxi driver who entered the base without LIVESTOCK TORONTO (CP)—Prices were when com- lower on a moderate demand for a comparatively heavy sup- ring the ply of plain unfinished slaughter to b tario public Fire Inspection Continuing In Souris Area SOURIS — P.E.I. Eire Mar- shal E.T. MacLeod. accompani- ed by Swris Fire Chief Ben- jamin Carter and members of the RCMP and local fire de- partment inspected buildi in the town yesterday for cards. They also conducted a fire drill at Souris Regional High School. Previous drills have been held at Souris Elementary School and St. Mary"s Convent. and additional drills are ex- pected to be held in the future. The investigation of town fire 5' ll buildings is to continue. It is being held in conjunctio with Fire Prevention Week stockyards Thursday. Slaughter cattle 1.320: Choice steers 23-24 with some dry-fed s ers t 24.80; ood 22-23; choice heifers 21-22; good 20-21; choice fed yearlings 22-24; good 20-21; good cows 14.50-15; good .heavy bologna bulls 18-19 with odd tops to 19.50. Replacement cattle 2.200: Good light stockers 20-22. Calves 272: Choice vealers 28-30 with odd ops to 33; good 25-27; boners 13-17. Hogs 1.795: Grade A at Tor- onto 25.55-26.65 currently selling at 26.65. heavy sows 17 70 Sheep and lambs 24 lambs mostly 19 per hundred- weight. MONTREAL (or) stock p steady with em ll $2 lower on the Montreal live- stock markets this week Trad- Iing was moderate. I Receipts: 2.983 cattle, 2.11. Live- '1:. Good H 2.25. Good heifers 21.25. medium 17.50-18, common .50-‘1725. Good bulls 1725-19. common and medium 12-17. Good vealers 28-32. few to 33, medium 2227.50. common 12-22. Grade A hogs 25-27, with most plus 80 cents; sows 16.50 - 17. with most plus 80 cents. ood lambs 20-2050 mix quality 17-18, those to} ritual slaughtering 2225; good sheep 5-10. Icalves, 734 hogs. 213 sheep and a b m a. Choice steers 22-23, good 21- 22. medium 18-2035. common 11- 17 .85. Good cows 15-16. tops to 16.75. medium 14-1475. common 11.75- 1335. cannera and cutters 5.50- credentials for the Queen’s ar- ' al. Inspector .10. G o r m a n. RCMP royal-tour liaison officer. said “it is completely untrue” vs _. < that the driver. Conn Murphy of Charlottetown, eluded supposed- ly air-tight security precautions. With concern for Queen Eliza- beth’s safety uppermost, the in- cident arose when three British photographers hired a cab ini Charlottetown to drive them toI Summerside, 45 miles away. to procured an official press card for the taxi and were them- selves accredited. The London Evening Standard reported that Murphy, without accreditation, casually pass through the guards and stood a few feet from the Queen. Inspector Gorrnan said that Murphy was checked by police B-I|.|.Y GRAHAM MEETS WITH CARDINAL C‘USHEING and because he had no creden- tials was told to go to a certain spot on the air base with hisi taxi and remain there. This, he’ said. was done to assist the photographers and was not unu- sual. SCHEME APPROVED KATMANDU. Nepal (AP)— Sir Edmund Hillary. conqueror of Mt. Everest. has been given permission to attempt to climb Tamserkhu peak in Eastern Ne- pal. The government has also approved his plans to build a school for mountain guides. tians to shun the world of their “drunking dads and Wa- tusi-dancing mothers" and asked them to be noncormists fog Christ. (AP Wirephoto) *****¥¥r¥¥¥ LAUGHS AND MUSIC await you when you see our big DOUBLE BILL -- TODAY and SATU‘RDAY- 3,,OSH‘3‘Y‘,.,, THE tiliilf GREATEST 31“ mm mm COMEDIANS IIIIIII‘IIIIIIII , AT THEIR .FUNNIESTI ive. NOTICE DR. W. A. SHEA Will be absent from his office in Alberton October ll to 25 inclus- monitor-memnsz 1 (HA niorrrrown sronr Open Saturday ' AFTERNOON Tlll 5 p. m. Sackville Moncton Truro ' Saint John Halifax ~S dne Quebec Montreal Ottawa Winni Edmonton Charlottetown to: Anti onish CN travel bargains P4172" $2.20 $2.90 $3.70 $4.30 $4.80 ' $5.20 * $9.50 $1 2.1 5 $13.00 1 5.70 35.00 47.00 IIlII LARSIlII - IIIESHERWIIIII SINGERS carp/roe .2:;'.’.l‘i‘:.:.‘."i.. MIDNIGHT SHOW TONIGHT RESTLEss "Elm SANDRA or: LUANA PATTEN ' MARGARELIISBYSSERgRCwfl .rrrnrsnsdmonrlinesmlnons mum-scru- .. -"" A mun-mrmm must run. ennui STARTING MONDAY