U.S. AND Named in honor of the five "Fighting Sullivan Brothers" who lost the lives in an enemy action in thre Pacific during World War Two. and wearing their campaign rin- bons, the USS The Sulliva, one of the oldest and proud- est ships in the US. Navy is shown tied up at ‘the West side of the DOT wharf in Char - . The SulliNans is skippered by Cmdr. Lee 15. Waring, USN. Towering over her stern can seen the Royal Canadian Navy's sup- ply and maintenance ship HMCS Cape Scott, command- ed by Cmdr. Anthony Law, DSC. CD. RON. The Cape CANADIAN amps oocx TOGETHER Scott beside providing accom- modatlon for the HMCS Corn- wallis t and band is also acting as depot ship for the four destroyer ISLAND NEWS PAGE Eastern And Central Districts The Guardian, Charlottetown, Mon. Aug. 31, 1964. 5 escort, HMCS Yukon, Ores- cent, Algonquin and Athabas- kan which are anchored off Victoria Park at Three Tides. AR'DA Rehabi John Mullally, Kings MP, has announced that Kings County has been declared a rural dev- eral government’s agricultural rehabilitation and development program. Projects which include the dc. EASTERN BRIEFS FORMER RESIDENT Walter MacNutt, formerly of Charlottetown and now of Tor- onto, arrived in the city Friday wening on a short visit. IN HOSPITAL Linda Anstie, Cardigan, is a tient in the Charlottetown ospital. INMEMORIAL HOSPITAL Mrs. Helen MacGillvary of Montague is a patient in the Kings County Memorial Ros- tital. CONVALESCING Mrs. Frank LeClair (nee Edna Acom). Queen Elizabeth Drive, is convalesclng at the P.E.f. Hospital following surgery last week. LAB AT MONTAGUE The department of health mobile lab from Ottawa is visit- ing Montague where it will be testing the Montague River and area for the protection of shell fish. It is thought it will be here from four weeks. in change of the operation is Jack Reid of Ottawa, assisted by Ricks Toxopeus and Marco De Beilefeville. both of Ottawa. RICHARDS FUNERAL — Fil- neral for Roger Clarence Rich- ards was held Sunday, Aug. 30 from the Murray River Funeral Home to the Presbyterian Church, Peter‘s Road, where services were conducted by Rev. M. Carl Currie. Hymns ware When He Cometh and Underneath Are The Everlast- lng Arms. interment was in cemetery. Peter's Road vniupmeut of co ty past- i ures, establishment of parks, campgrounds and tourist estab- lishments, development of com- munity recreational ‘areas, re- forestation and water control through dams and ponds quallb for financial. assistance. Federal and provincial gov- ernments will share coats of the projects equally, except in Six Speeders Draw Fines , Speeding charges brought fines to six persons in traffic court Saturday. They were: 'Ihad Hucz, Cove- head. $25 and costs; Gordon Sterling Cameron. Charlotte- town, no and costs; Paul Dennis, Charlottetown, $15 and costs: Paul Lewis Bolckner, Ottawa. $15 and costs; Rhodes MacMillan Warren, Stanhope, $10 and costs; and Dallas 11. Bowman, Pennsylvania, $10 and O osts. Fines of $10 and costs were handed down to the following: John Beverly Nicholson, Or well Cove, more than three ad- ults in the front seat R aid Arthur Sherwood, parking and leaving a vehicle on the travelled por- tion of a highway; Mary Alice Parker, Wich- ford. Rhode Island. failure to yield the right of way; Llo John Osborne, Char- lottetown, passing on a solid white line; Howard Nelson Vessey. York, squealing tires; Victor Arsenault, Lot 16, dri- ving on the wrong side of the road; Arthur John Gaudet. Sum. merside, equipment on a motor vehicle not in proper condition. Two motorists were fined and costs for failing to halt at a stop sign, and was given a similar fine on a charge of proceeding through an inter- section when unsafe to do so. after stopping. Kings County ls Designated elopment area under the fed- c . J. R. MacDonald Rabineau, . Iitation Area the case of pasture developmenti in which the federal govern- ment pays two-thirds of the Aloysius at home; one do ter, Mary, Mrs. Lawrence Daley of St. Mary's Road East. Ono daughter, Clemmie, predeceas- ed hiun. 'lhree brothers prede< ceased him. They were Dr. Jack. Bernard and Willie. Also three sisters predeceased him; Eliza, and Sister Mary Clemen- tinn of Notre Dame, and Eliza RN. He learves nine grandchil- ren. Requiem High Mass will be held from St. Paul‘s Churc . Sturgeon, Tuesday, Sept. 1 at 10 in the church cemetery. dren and two great grandchll- , a.m_ Interment will take place t ost. Mr. Mullally said he had been pressing for the prompt desig- nation of Kings as a develop- ment area for the past several months. He credited the prompt action of provincial research direct- or Reid Sangster, who provid- ed the federal government with the necessary information, with assistin the government in reaching its decision. Mr. Mullally concluded “I look forward to much concrete work being done under this pro- gram in the future." FLAG DEBATE (Continued from page 1) say, is for a part of the Union Jack to find its way into any new Canadian flag. Most men- tion the Red Cross. A historical French symbol, or part of It. would also be used. 0n the other hand, many Lib eral backbenchers indicate a willingness to depart from the ‘ d position leader Diefenna'ker art at loggerheads over how long that committee should sit. Three times in one week, Aug. 18, 20 and 21, the leaders of as; five parties met in the prime minister’s office in an effort to establish acceptable grou n a rules for a committee. NUL' Leader T. C. Douglas assumed the role of mediator. but in. limit on the committee’s work, with a limited Commons debau- to follow. Mr. Diefenbaker sug- gested three months, and sources say he would have ac- cepted two months However, hewouldnotagreetoalimitea Commons debate unless the recommendation of the commu- tee was “substantially unanim- ous.” , He later explained to the House that if the committee were established on the hosts of seven Liberals, five Conserva- and one member from each of the three smaller par- ties, it would mean a simple majority could be reached by the Liberals and one of the lat- er. “If only one of those mem- bers, p e r h a! p s the Creditiste on whose party is entirely united, were to decide in favor of removing the Union Jack and having no vestige of the Union Jack in the flag. then the com— mittee would simply end then and there." But if the decision were based on an 80 - or per-cent major- ity, he would agree to limit the ebate. . government’s proposed design- T-hree red maple leaves on s Two City Sudents Win Awards In Music Classes Two Charlottetown students have received a Conservatory Silver Medal for their high marks in the 1964 practical en aminations of the Royal Con- ervatory of Music. Toronto Receiving highest marks for P. E. I. in grade we plan 0 was Donald George Camp- bell of 119 Nasau Street, and in Notre Dame Academy. Dies At Age 94 MONTAGUE The death occurred at his home on Pan- grade one singing, Frances Lea ‘ “mm 0f .ssspsrstoan white background with 1! ve. tic-al blue bar at each side—if such a compromise flag would receive parliamentary biessmg. Prime Minister Pearson him- self has said he would be willing to let a committee hammer out a compromise, but he and 0p- Msuuni'érusens lusuuun conun- NOTIC SPEflAL GENERAL MEETING A Special General Meeting of The Manu- nlu nncs r: 3' anus and in connection ere distinct fund. mure Island, Saturday. Aug. 29. of Joseph R. McDonald, a well is n o w n and much respected resident. He was 94. Toronto, Ontarig August 28, 1964 SU NTER’S After the third meeting, ilk. Pearson told the Commons that while it failed to produce an agreement, “no doors have been closed for any subsequent meetings." And he announced that he was declaring a free Note on the flag resolution so there would be no threat of an election hanging over the heads of MPs. The fact that the governmen‘. had previously announced the flag resolution as s question of confidence in the government, and that it would resign if de. feated in the vote, was one of contentious issues in the debate. There were repeated Causewa- tive changes that the govern- mnt was using the threat of an election to ram the new flag down Parliament's throat. The announcement of a free vote did little to change that. Mr_ Diefenbaker said attitudes had frozen in emotional de- bate and "the decision . . day appears to be too late to permit the carrying into the full effect of the meaning of that term." One of the chief difficulties in reaching a compro se involves the political manoeuvring neces- sary to achieve it. ‘ STANDING PAT The government wants to avoid any impression that it is retreating from its determina- tion to give Canadians in dis- tinctive flag. The Conservatives don’t want to appear to be giv- ing up their fight to retain his- toric symbols. F0 the most part, the three smaller parties, a majority of whose members support a new flag, are sit-ting on the side- ,Deed Says Plans Made Before Fathers Met Here By JAMES NELSON QUEBEC (CP) — A century- old document indicating the plan for Confederation was langer conceived here before the Fathers of Confederation held their first conference in Charlottetown has been made public by the federal centen- nial commission. e document is a cabinet minute of the pro-Confederation united province of Lower an Upper Canada instructing John A. Macdonald and the other Fathers from Quebec is tario to go to the Charlottetown conference. It is dated Aug. 29, 1884. Cen- tennial planners say the docu- ment has been among the pre- Confederation state papers at Canada in the Public Archives but so far as they can learn has never been publish . Photocopies of the hand-writ.- ten cabinet record are to be presented the mayors of to. Charlottetown, Halifax, Saint John, N.B., Fredericton and St. John’s, Nfld., as well as to Mayor Wilfrid Hamel of Que- | markin the centennial the ,of amendments that can lines tossing in suggestions. So far, most of the debate has centred around a sub- amendment proposed by Mr. Diefenbaker that called simply for a national plebiscite. Each member can speak on each amendment. The number he proposed is limitless, unless the government invokes rules to prevent them voyage of the Fathers of Con guage of the executive council of the Canada under the old act of union, the document notes that despaltches had been ex- changed between Governor Gen- eral Monk of Canada and toe lieutenant - governors of New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and rince Edward Island “on the subject of the conference pro posed to be held at Charlotte- town with reference to the fu- ture union of these prov1nces with Canada." The document says the Cans- dian cabinet "entirely concur with the opinion expressed by the lieutenant - governors that the proposed meeting (at Char- lottetown) must necessarily be of an informal character." "But they (the cabinet) con- sider that very great advantage will flow from the rtuni that will be thus afforded. of con- sidering the practicability of ’6 unng under one government respective provinces and, should it be found that reason- able prospects exist of such a union being practicable, the committee (the cabinet) con sider that it will then be possi- ble to proceed to s more for-- mal conference . . . BRITAIN WAS BOSS The document acknowledges that in any union of the Bu:- ish North America colonies the British government must be consulted. It speaks of placing “before the imperial government such a general outline of the pol- icy proposed as may enable her majesty's minister to deter mine whether the interests of the Empire will be thereby and of giving the unc- tion of the queen to the intro. negotiations on the nibject." ocument concludes: “The committee, therefore, respectfully recommend to Your Excellency that such of You! Excellency’s advisers as can conveniently be spared from their official duties at Quebec should be authorized to proceed to Charlottetown for the purpose of conferring informally with the representatives from the Maritime provinces. “Certified, Wm. H. Lee, Snow rotary." Macdonald and seven othnl ministers sailed Aug. 29. 1864, from Quebec City and met with 15 delegates representing the three Maritime provinces in Charlotteth Sept, 1. Af eral days setting out their ideas for Confederation, the Maritime delegates decided to shelve their plans for Maritime union and later at Halifax the confer- ence decided to hold a formal conference at Queue Oct. 10, 1864. The Rogers Hardware Co. Ltd.‘ There are about 6,000 known species in the ant family For- micidae. AUGUST SALE ; MON-DAY ONLY SPECIAL! DRESSES Reg. 9.98 - 29.95 s5-37 ammonium-ca 0 Terms cash .Allsalesfinal The late Mr. MacDonald was born on Panmure Island where he spent his entire life. He at- tended public school at Gaspar- ea-ux and was a graduate of St. Dunstan's University where, un- til the timo of his death, he was the oldest living member of the alumni. He was known A: a good farmer and fisherman and for a time sold life and fire insurance. He was also a staunch supporter of the gressive Conservative party, He was a member of the St. Paul Roman Catholic Church. Stur- econ All other Merchandise including new fall stock. l L Jill/fr. "SENTEB’S 162 Gt. 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