SUSPECT NABBED Police corner a suspect fol- lowing a rock-throwing inci- dent in Grand Bend, Ont., Sunday night. The action was on the side streets. with hel- meted police keeping the main = street—the scene of Satur- “day’s riots —clear. - (CP Wirephoto) SECOND ANNUAL TOURNEY ‘Championships Decided At Local Tennis Courts Chanattetewii tenis ehastintes: ships, with the exception of the men's singles were decided at the Charlottetown tennis courts last week as the Charlottetown Recreation’ Department staged DEATHS MUNN = At the Kings County Memorial Hospital, Monday, September 5, 1966, Archibald Neil Munn, of Little Sands, in his 98th year: Resting at the Murray River ~ Funeral .Home until noon Wednesday, then to way, % ~~the” United Church, Little Sands for funeral, service at 2 o'clock. Interment in Lit‘le Sands ceme- tery. SHEPHERD — At the Charlot- tetown Hospital, Mrs. Benjamin Shepherd Sr., 18 Stewart Street, in her 66th year. —=The=tuneral-will-take—place-this=- —morning~at 9.15 to the Church of the Most Holy Redeemer for Re- quiem High Mass at 9.30. Inter- “ment in the Catholic cémetery. CLOW — At the P.E.I. Hospital, Monday, September 5, 1966, Mrs. Elizabeth Clow of. 131° Hillsboro Street,_age—77: Resting at the ~MacLean--Funeral__Home—from “where the funeral will “beheld Thursday, September 8, with service commencing at 2 p.m.- _ Interment in the People’s ceme- i tery. ‘ARSENAULT — The death oe- cured Sunday, Sept. 4, 1966, at the Annex Hospital. Summer- side, of Emanuel Arsenault of Mont Carmel, in his 83rd year. Remains are resting at the Rooney Funeral Home, Sum- merside;. until Tuesday noon, then to his late residence at Mont Carmel from, where the funeral will be held Wednesday morning, Sept. 7, leaving the home at 9.45 to Our Lady of Mont Carmel Church for Re- -quiem High Mass at 10 a.m. In- ~terment in the Church ceme- tery. sseacilinghiaainipen MacWILLIAMS — Suddenly. at ‘Fortune Cove on Monday, Sept. 5. 1966, Mrs. Wilbur MacWil- liams of Sackville, N.B.,: form- erly. of O'Leary, in her 48th year. Forwarded this Tuesday afternoon from Jelleys Funeral Home to. the home of her. sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Harris, Knutsford where they will rest until Thurs- day morning at 11 o'clock then to: O'Leary United — Baptist Church for service at 2 o'clock. eceaes in the Soringfield est Baptist cemetery. MAHAR — At Vernon River Sunday, Sept. 4, 1966, John T. Mahar of Summerville in his 84th year. Resting at the Jenkins Funeral Home from where the funeral will be held on Tuesday morning to © St. Church, Vernon River for Re- quiem High Mass at 9:30. Inter- ment in the church cemetery. We Trade Home and Auto | 7 Furniture * Televisions * i ANptanees FIRESTONE, Ltd. Dial 4-5547 September ~ 2 its second annual tennis tourna- ment. The men's singles event will see a new champion emerge when Rev. William Comerford meets Doug George in the finals. Jim Cullen the defending champ- ion didn’t take part in the singles event. Comerford and George were slated to play their match yesterday. morning _ but due to weather conditions it was postponed: In the senior douttes the team of Reg. ‘Bud’ McAleer and Jim Cullen” emerged victorious as they defeated Doug George and Jim Crew in a hard fought bat- tle at the local courts Sunday advanced to the finals after coming ‘behind from. match point_in their semi-final round with Walter Cullen and. Bill Blanchard to down Cullen and Blanchard 2-6, 9-7;-6-3: ° ~ In the other semi-final veter- ans George_and__Crew_toppled- Huggan, last year’s finalists, 6-3, 3-6; 6-3. The father-and-son team of Walter and Jim Cullen were ‘| Tast season’s doubles champions. In the final the winners lost the first set 6-1 and were down 20 in the second set before coming back to win the second set6-4 and the match set 6-3. -JUNIOR EVENTS ~In the junior-events Joe. ote and Dana Hood won both ir respective” singles and doubles championships,‘ - Drane who ‘compella in the 18 and under division displayed too much power as he came from behind in ue finals a al feat defending champion Mi Duffy es a 6-3. Joachim’s | -‘|actually shrinks hemorrhoids. MacLEOD — As the result of a tractor accident, Saturday, Sept- ‘tember 3, 1966, Harry A. Mac- Leod of West Royalty in his 40th year. Resting at the MacLean Funeral Home until noon today, September 6, then to Zion Pres- byterian Church for funeral service commencing at 1:30. In- terment in the People’s ceme- tery~ HILL-—-~-At-—-Vancouver,—-B.Cy- Sept. Ist, R. Walter Hill in his \75th year. Surviving are his wife jthe former Jean Lewis of ,Cardi- gan, son Ernest and daughter, Mary. Burial in Vancouver. JACKMAN — At the P.E.I. Hos- pital, September 4, 1966, Abra- ham Jackman, Middletown, in his 74th year. Resting at the Cutcliffe Funeral Home from where funeral will be held to- day, Tuesday, with service com- mencing at 3 p.m. Interment in St. John’s Church cemetery, Crapaud. Contains a Unique One of the most common afilic- tions is a condition. known as “Itching Piles’’. It is most em- barrassing for the sufferer dur- ing the day and especially aggravating atnight. : If you want satisfactory relief ~—here’s good news. A renowned research laboratory has found a unique healing substance with the ability to promptly relieve the burning itch and pain. ‘It This‘substance has been shown to produce a most effective rate of healing. Its germ-killing pro- perties also help prevent infection. afternoon. Cullen and —McAleer- "Father Comerford a n d —Lyall-— Joe teamed up with Mike Duffy to shade a determined Cullen 6-4, 3-6, 7-5 in the doubles final. Dana Hood who won the 14 and under championship drop- ped Grant KXillorn 6-0, 6-2. topped Phillip Connolly 6-4 and 6-2 ‘and in the finals_-met Art-McQuaid. 15-13 count. before losing. the | first set and than captured the second set 6-3-to nail down the jover-manning at championship. igs eS R. Hood and | L- (2 aaa City Recreation ~ Department. ful close the summer tennis pro- gram. team of Mike McAleer and Tom/}*,° - The tourney brings to a success- ~ In Collision There was a two car collis- sion Sunday afternoon at ap- porximately 2:30 on the corner of Reserve and Valley: Streets. The cars ‘involved were a 1965 Ford Falcon driven by Drive and an Anglia driven by Mrs: Diana Adams of 225 Brack- ley Point Rodd. There were no injuries and no estimate of damage. Another two car Collision oc- curred on the corner of Garfton day morning at approximately 11:45. One of ‘the drivers in- volved was Francis McKenna of Tracadie Cross who was driving a Volkswagen. There was no futher information available ‘last night. : City police investigated both accidents. = sal ccbdan and ‘restraint’ for | a further | half year. WILL BE CLOSE Pre-voting assessments cated the 9,000,000-member Con- | gress will Support Wilson by a Narrow majority. His speech | Monday was interrupted a half-_| dozen times by mild heckling and polite applause. In any case, Wilson told the unions; - the serious economic problems will be ‘settled ‘‘not by a card vote’ at the Con- gress, but by government deci- sion. “There will be no letting up in the severity of our economie Measures until we are paying our: way and are seen -to be paying our way,” Wilson. said. “That. means the” government | must govern.” He emphasized the govern- ment’s determination to- relate pay to work accomplished even after the temporary wagee reeze: “We. do not -seek as a long- term policy to destroy the. ma- chinery of collective bargaining _but after the six-months standstill and the six months of severe restraint in the long term it will still be necessary to en- sure that,the planned expansion of incomes is related to the in- creases in national productivity and does not attempt to go. be- = McQuaid battled Hood_ to. ajyond it. YT The_ prime minister attacked restrictive practices. such as union— insist- ence, outmoded systems of re- In the 14~and under doubles |cruitment and apprenticeship in Hood_ teamed up with Phillip skilled crafts Connolly -to. win. the final Kil disputes over job demarcation; and. _inter-union The -whions, shed he said, must “ingrained traditions in- The trophies and balls for the |herited from a defensive past—. tournament were supplied by the’ we’ cannot fight the problems of tomorrow with the rusty wea- pons of the past.” Continued from page 1 comes, _ could be mass unemployment in “ta depression such as we have never seen,”’ he said. Demanding an end to dalous” “scan- less ‘than ~a-full-day’s work,” Wilson said: © “We are in danger of turning inwards on ourselves in pursuit of a jeisure we have not earned, of being debased by the phil- osophy of the never-had-it-so- good society, which withholds dividends and_ prices—:|° restrictive practices among-_unions-..and_ entrenched. systems_that-amount_to “laying claim .to a. full day’s pay for FUNERALS ° Thomas Hunter of 126 Walthen | Shoots ‘Charlie’ “Charlie”, the cake who. jmade his. escape from his own- | er, Warren ‘Duchemih last July 19, was shot at noon Sunday on | :the property-of Harold E..Hynd- jman in Stanhope. Mr. Duchemin was residing at \his ‘summer home in Stanhope jed. when his five foot. one and a half inch chicken snake escap- For a number of days the au- ‘thorities aided by the RCMP ‘searched the area for Charlie ‘put to no avail. and Weymouth Streets yester- -| roy reports of sightings of Char- There were a lie but none lead to his capture. It had been thought. that the snake may have died from the cool evening “temperatures op the Island; however, Charlie survived. The snake-was- found--by the. son of Mr..Hyndman at their cot- jtege, in Stanhope just a few hun- | dred feet away from the cottage | lof Mr. Duchemin. It was sunning | litself on the top of a_ spruce. |hedge when spotted. After get- | ting permission from Mr. Duch- | indl- jemin, the snake was shot by ‘Mr. Hyndman rather than taking | the risk of trying to capiure it. . WESTERN BRIEFS "Island News Page Mishap Western and Central Districts The Guardian, Charlottetown, Tues., Sept. 6, 1966. 3 Two Vehicles | | Summer Resident Causes. Fatality Harry A. MacLeod, 39, West | Royalty, was killed Saturday | afternoon when he lost control |of the tractor he was driving in |a field on the Hurry Road. Dr. AHan MacMillan, pro- nounced the victim dead. The Charlottetown RCMP De- tachment investigated the mis- hap which happened around 2 o'clock. According to RCMP re- ports no inquest or autopsy will be held. Funeral services wil be held today from Zion Presbyterian Church, Charlottetown, with ser- vice commencing at 1.30. He is survived by his wife, ithe former Alma MacDonald, itwo sisters, Kay, Mrs- Scott MacArthur, Union Road; Mary Lou, Mrs. John Bradley, Char- lottetown; three brothers, Fred |Murray River; Maynard, Lon- }don, Ont., and Laurie. New Brunswick. Minister _ Addreesses Banquet Dr. D. A. Campbell, minister of. Zion Presbyterian Church in | Charlottetown was the guest} Speaker at the evening banquet of the P.E.I. Funeral Directors and Embalmers Association held at the Charlottetown Hotel Sat- urday. Dr. Campbell spoke on the re- lationship betwen funeral drat | ors and the clergy. The speaker was introduced | by Neil MacDonald and thanked | by Vernon MacIntyre. During the dinner a toast was proposed to. the ladies by dames | Allen and responded to by. Mrs. | Carl Moase. The -afternoon meeting was) presided over by the past presi- | . dent, R. E. Bradley. The new.. officers elected for | the year are as follows: Heath | Chisolm, president: Douglas V. Ferguson, vice-president: Neil A. MacDonald,, secretary-treas- urer.and Vernon Macintyre, reg- istrar. The new directors ‘are Sterling Dingwell, Robert Daw- son and Brendon Seneeenny 4 CANADIANS Continued from page 1 $383,000 in gold ~ bullion from | Winnipeg airport. Laforte was awaiting trial for Melvin Duffy Passes Away Relatives im Charlottetown |have received the news of the jaccidental. death - on Friday jnight in Quebec of Melvin Duffy, 23, of .St. John, N.B. The late Mr: Duffy is the son of Mr.. and Mrs.’ Ernest ‘Duffy, of Halifax, formerly of Char- lottetown, P.E.I- He was _employed with the LEGION BREAK A break into the Miscouche | ‘Legion is being investigated by the Summerside detachment R.C.M.P: The break occurred Sunday night or early’ Monday morning and a quantity of liquor was stolen. : IN HOSPITAL Heath M. Chisholm of North | Tryon is.a patient in the Prince Edward Island Hospital. 1S PATIENT Arthur L. Rennie, Kioadate, is a patient in the Western Hos- pital.* : MINOR MISHAP A-minor- mishap -with- no: dam- age resulting was the only accl- dent reported” 6vér “the “holiday weekend by Summerside detach- ment of the R°C.M.P. : TO BERMUDA Brian Gazzard, who has been student assistant to the minister of Alberton and Montrose Pas- toral Charges of the United Church of Canada during the summer, has .left to spend a brief holiday at his home in Hamilton, Bermuda, before en- “9 —— WESTERN ini tican aed et rere studies. | EDWARDS FUNERAL & the funeral for Leslie Edwards was |held Saturday afternoon: at: the Compton Funeral Home where service was. conducted by Rev. Leslie Files. Hymns were: Unto The Hills, and The Lord’s My Shepherd. Organist was Hamil- ton—Irving---Pallbearers were Earl Sudsbury, Donald Gillis, Marshall Thomas, Lioyd, Fred and Nelson Molyneaux.- Flower- bearers. were Gordon Haton, Har- ‘old. Foy, Eric, Albert and Wiil- liam -Trowsdale,—Interment was in the Peoples cemetery, Sum- Burning Rectal Itch i Relieved In Minutes This Special Hemorrhoid Remedy That Relieves Pain Ac It Shrinks Hemorrhoids the resources needed to care for merside. CANADA'S LARGEST Passes In Barn Allied Van Lines of N-B. The funeral. service will be held- from Walkers Funeral Home Wednesday morning ‘at 9 a.m. to St. Patricks Church, Springfield, N.S. for _ funeral mass- Western Man ALBERTON — The body of. Albert MacDonald, 66, was |found shortly before- Noon yes- terday in a barn at Alberton owned by Alton O’Brien. A long time resident of Elms- dale he is survived by a daugh- ter; Joyce in Summerside and the. following brothers and_sis- ters: _Arthur, Norman, Alice and: Mrs.John-Gwynn (Ruby) all-re- siding in Mass.~-U.S:A.: Mrs. Bruce Logan (Mary) Halifax, merside, Ira, Summerside,—Wil- Gordon, Sackville, N.B. The to formed this morning. Following the results of the autopsy a de- cision on an ‘by—eoroner— _|four had taken rooms in a hotel ~jrendered when he was found Mrs. Ralph Cain.4Blanche) Sum- liam in Haliburton, P.E.I. -and yesterday where an autopsy will be per- inquest will be made _ rape; Duke was being held after acquittal on a non-capital murder charge for reason of in- sanity and. Leclerc. was being held on a false pretences charge. Mrs. Ross Shook, 70, de-| scribed the four as “nice men” | who:chatted with her and | watched her husband do his | chores after their plane ran out | of fuel and sputtered down on | the Shook farm. The farmer gave them a lift to a bus station where they changed Canadian currency for American and then came here. Tavern owner Chris- Stath spotted them bent over glasses of beer, reading newspaper clippings. and skies about | stealing~an airplane. He called FLED TO HOTEL By the time police arrived the | next door to the bar. Duke sur- alone in a room and facing tne shotguns. of two policemen. Police then kicked in the door of another room and _ found Leishman, who _— surrendered. Leclere appeared with gun in hand and a_ policeman _firea, wounding the -fugitive in the Leclere was finally. ene: on a roof as he tried to his belt as a tourniquet og his wrist. Laforte had’ fled across a root | and down a ventilating shaft | into a jewelry store where he touched off the -burglar .alarm. “Wat \He fled again to the roof where | wounded slightly in the was e fl es ea me tat en N.B. Brbiniey thumb: and forearm and wer | | suffering effects of fear see ‘Island Native | Passes Away: O'LEARY The death of tors} Mrs. Wilbur MacWilliams of Sackville, N.B. occurred sudden- ly Monday morning at Mill Ri- ver where she had been vaca- tioning. The former Helen Adams of Forest View, near O’Leary she is su¥vived by her husband. a daughter Valerie, RN, Moncton City Hospital, a son Clare, Sack- ville, N.B., also'a brother Ralph }in O'Leary and a sister, Mrs. | Lewis Harris (Iva) Knutsford. Announces New Hospitai STE. ANNE DE KENT, NB. (CP)—Premier Louis U. Robi chaud says a 3(-bed hospital will. be constructed in Moncton to replace Hotel Dieu Hospital which he termed ‘too old” to serve the province. Speaking Sunday at the of- ficial opening of the Stella Maris Hospital here, the Premier said the new Moncton hospital will be named the Dr. Georges Du- mont Hospital in memory of health minister Dumont whe died July 4. Construction was ~ to begin next» spring. Spider Causes $300 Damage BORDEN R.C.M.P. here reported one accident-during the holiday weekend. The only accident could be blamed on a spider as a man from Augustine Cove, Edward Webster MacFadyen: apparently went to brush a spider off his leg and went off the road. strik- ing a power pole. The spider had no friend in MacFadyen as the accident in the Tryon area cost him $300 in damage to his half-ton Chevro- let truck. ‘Two Mishaps Are Reported SUMMERSIDE Separate | accidents over the holiday week- |end resulted in two people being sent to Prince County Hospital |— here. Two-year-old-—Lorette Arm. | strong, daughter’ of Mrs. Gerald.) Armstrong -and ‘the’ late Mr. Armstrong, 440 Notre Dame | Street, was struck by a_half-ton ‘truck Monday evening at 6.30 ‘and she was taken to. Prince ._|County Hospital, with a bump. on Tthe head and is under observa- CITY AREA FUNERALS BEARS FUNERAL — The fue « neral of Walter M.. Bears of | 163'2 Great George Street was held Saturday, September 3 from the Cutcliffe Funeral Home to. Trinity United Church. Service” was conducted ‘by Rev: J. G. E. Ball. The hymns sung were The Lord’s My Shepherd and Nearer My God To Thee. A solo No Night There was sung by John F. Bears. Flower bearers were Hugh MacKinnon, Ivan: Doherty, Harrison James, Basil McQuaid. The pall bearers were - Hon. Keir Clark, Daniel Comp- - ton, Frank Lacy, Russell Leard, Merrill Craswell, Sterling Beate on. Members of the Royal Can- | adian Legion held their service |at the grave side. Service at the grave side was conducted by Harry Mortimer. The last post. and reveille was sounded by - buguler Bill Blanchard The interment was in Floral Hille.< Memorial’ Gadrens. for clean bright teeth use oe Cow Brand tion for 24 hours. The truck reportedly was op- | erated by Charles Crossman of Summerside. : Saturday, Orrin -- Livingstone. | clean 17, was admitted to hospital af- ter his motor bike collided with a 1961 Dodge at Notre Dame Street. The car was operated_ by pg M. Williams of Summer- ie. | Livingstone suffered a frac- Ny jtured leg and other minor tnjur: | Raa ies_in the 5.30 p.m. accident... | hs Summerside Town Police 1n- vestigated- both accidents and | they also reported that “a minor accident occurred also on Notre Dame Street resulting in. $150 ‘damage to_one_oftwo..cars n- volved in the front ton fear end \coltision. Cow Brand Baking Soda on a moist toothbrush helps remove stains — cleans and brightens teeth and oon. Leaves a fresh, feeling that “lasts all day. And to relieve sore - ay aia Baking Soda Funeral arrangements are not completed. KEEPS CANADA CLEAN MANUFACTURER OF INDUSTRIAL CLEANING SUPPLIES AND EQUIPMENT others in our midst who have never had it good at all.’ Wilson's 45-minute speech to the main base of the Labor gov- ernment’s political support was a prelude’ ta TUC. voting: Wed- nesday' on the wage-restraint policy. 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