/ , 120 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Fri., July 10 1959. ‘| targe circle of-relatives-and- Mrs. Hemphill was the former Mrs. James H—Birt—of—St—Pat— DEATH NOTICE MRS. JOHN HEMPHILL q friends were saddened to ‘earn of the death of Mrs. John Hemphill who passed away at the Prince 16, 1958. She was in her 82nd year. rick’s Road where she resided, until] she moved to Charlottetown about twelye years ago. Besides her husband, she leav- es to mourn her family; two daughters, Emma, Mrs. Winston MacKay, Union Road; Mary; Mrs. Otto Robbins, Bangor; six sons, Tra, Charlottetown; ae: Cal- fornia; Wilfred Toronto; Alex and Harold, Halifax; Alonzo; ? Mr. and ‘Mrs. George Richards, Magdalene Island Miss Bernie Boudreau, Montreal, Quebec . There were also 106 Sympathy ed her in infancy. | K short service Was held-at™ Cutcliffe Funeral Home conduct- ed by Rev. Donaid Campbell as- Edward Island Hospital on April| ne’ °Y Rev. Gerold 1. This was followed by | servic in Mt. Stewart United Church. The service at the church and grave was ie M. Sheen who spoke comforting words to the bereaved family. A solo, “Beyond The Sunset,”’ was beautifully rendered: by Harold Coffin. } dine, Ralph Coffin, Leith Stew- art, Edward Birt. Interment was in Mt. Stewart The beautiful floral and cards from relatives. and friends were silent testimonials of the esteem in which she was held: - Please God forgive a silent) tear, A fervent wish our mother was’ \ . here, _ CS oe . 7 Head of Mnspore. A som Cyrus we predeceased her im July, 1946. A| But she was our mother, aad sow and daughter also predeceas-| loved her so. allbearers . were: Rennie , John Garnhum, Melvin Jar- ‘ tributes the = AMSTERDAM (Reuters)—Ki a long-standing program of go neighborliness between the ty countries. uniform, he was greeted pt tl airport by Queen Juliana ar Prince Bernhard at the start | Wearing a general first Belgian royal visit he in 21 years. — fo Watch For The ROYAL TOUR COMING JULY 27th as A-GUIDE TO A-GREAT EVENT. Every detail of the program for Her Majesty and Prince Philip while on the Island will be presented clearly, along with maps showing the routes they will travel and points they will = Precious as a souvenir, the RoVul Tour Souvenir Edition alse. > town ‘ of Fisheries eg Rena and Gustave Gingras, Mon-|Mr.'W.R. Shaw, Charlottetown ‘ Rev. and Mrs. W.B.F. Corkum, Ralph, Ronnie and Gordon Sand-| Kemptville, Ont. . : erson, St. Peters Mr. R.R. Bell, Charlottetown CUT FLOWERS |Mr. Roy MacGillivray, Charlotte- Mrs. MacDonald, Mrs. Matthew; town and Miriam, Souris Miss Robina Clark, Toronto, Ont. Marjorie and Jack MacLean, Sou-|Mrs. Margaret Moreside, Tube- Catherine and Melvin McQuaid) Rev. W.E. Aitken, Dartmouth, N. 7 and family, Souris S. . The Leard Family, Souris Mr. and Mrs. George Campbell, Valerine and Elton Waite, Sum-| Rollo Bay West - , ceinae |Rev. Melville Aitken, Hamilton, ee Lester, Martha and Sam John-| Rev. Melville Aitken, Hamilton, . ; stone, own 4| Ontatio a Mr. and Mrs. Melvin MacPhee,’ Mr. ‘and Mrs. T. Kane, Plymouth and mother, Souris Mass ; CROSS : .|/Mr. and Mrs. Alex MacPhee, Howard and Harold Dixon and| Nashua, N.H. i . family, Fortune Bridge Mrs.: Addie Shook, Boston Mass. = Walter, Gladys and Linden Dick-|Mr. Ralph Trainoer, Hamilton, | son, Trenton, N:S. Ontario SYMPATHY LETTERS . TELEGRAMS Binaries * Sister Rose, Calgary, Alberta Mr. John A. MacDonald M. P., ; ; Hon. Lt. Gov. Walter F. Hynd-| Ottawa : ee man Dr. and Mrs. Edison Aitken, 1 ° : Hon. J. Angus MacLean, Minister! Grimbsy, Ont. ' - a : - x = . ™ . . ‘a 3 ¥ sy a hs i Sp y : i, ies wee . i ” — QUEEN IS SERENADED ~* Ne: : ¥ _ r Q% pe) A collegiate band playing from | at Gull, Lake Park, Gravenhurst,| range in age from. 13 to 19 and States, Great Bfitain and Europe. a barze constructed especially. for! Ont., Saturday.” The 75 members | have won 47 trophies in interna-| . (CP from AP) the occasion serenades the Queen of the Barrie Collegiate’ Bandi tional competition in the United| . a “4 : a \ SPRAYS". + ry, ‘ a Enid and Edison - : “el , |Maudé; Roy and family, Bothwell : Dispersal Of Defence Industries 22s - tune Bridge . > i Dellie, Bob and Jean, Souris ad oie ee | MacKenzie’s Service Station, Sou- <0 f ; ris § [ e F u OmmMonNs Everett Dickson and family, Tru- , 4 ro, N.S. * oa” . - Mr. and Mrs. Albert Griffin, Sou- 2 OTTAWA (CP) — Dispersal of|on his estimates, Mr. O'Hurley; Mr. Q’Hurley said progress has|_ ris rey fefence production industries; said the government expects to; been made in breaking down U.S.|Ada MacLaughlin, Truro, N.S. from the central part of Canada| spend more than $400,000,000 over} barriers such as the ‘‘Buy Ameri-! Doris. Jack and -family Fi ; . was urged Wednesday in the/four years for some 200 of the|can'’ policy and certain security, Annie Joyce and Claude MacKer = - Commois. controversial Lockheed F-104G/ regulations surrounding Ameri-| zie, Fortune Bridge 7 Speakers for the CCF and Pro-| Supersonic fighters planes to re-|can - developed equipment. Vera and Lulu, Souris gressive Conservative parties) equip the RCAF air division nl “We are determined,’ he said,! Joan, Ross, Lowell and Doreen, said defence contracts ‘should be | S€as. “that any Canadian role under| Summerside ys spread arcund to help secondary} The main contract for the air- ‘production sharing shouid involve Bruce, Lela’ and family, Monta- é. indssiry in other parts of the|frame—about 41 per cent of the|some of the more demanding| gue ee | country, cost—would be put up for com-/ (technical! work and not be lim- | Bernice: Isabel, and Eileen, Tru- 7 Defence Production Minister | Petition among Canada's three|ited to the pouring of sags, ro, N.S. ' 7 O'Hurley, whose annual spending| Major aircraft manufacturers. |crete ... ___| Annie Aitken, Sara and Jack, For.) 74 ~ extimztes were be-ore the House, |The engines, about 23 per cent} Mr. Pearson said the growing tune Bridge said everything possible is being! of the cost, would be built by | integration of Canadian and US. | Jack, Della, Edna and Brent. 7. de-e to make purchases in the|Orenda Engines Limited at Mal-|deiences a far cry from talk @| Stellarton, N.S... \ 7. ou lying areas. , ton, Ont. few years, ago by Progressive Olive, Stanley, Nora and Mar- 7. At a later point. J, W. Pickers- | PRODUCTION-SHARING ; Conservatives about ‘freeing our; vey, Halifax, N.S. 7 gill (L ~— Bonavista-Twillingate)| Dealing with the question| of | defence policy 4rom the overpow-| Mrs Simpson and family, Char- 8. as ced for totals. by provinces, of swroduction-skaring with the U.S.,'ering contro] of-the—U.S." lottetown. : 8. defence production contracts al- Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Dumont of lo-sted last fiseal ear and was settled in Souris where he lived) Charlottetown 8. to'd they were $218.4098.000 in DEATH NOTICE \the remainder of his life. For si\Opie. Larry, Nina and Mike Do g Quc rec and $264.040,000 in On-| years he was on the store staff ver, N.H. at, _—tario NORMAN H. RICHARDS | of Matthew and McLean Ltd.. and <Atlantic Wholesalers Ltd., Char- 93° FENEWS PROPOSAL Citizens throughout the Island jin 1925 started his barbering ca-|. lottetown: 7 " During the debate. Opposition and of Eastern Kings in particul-| reer, His grocery business, brav- | Sadie, Aubrey, Rita and Jackie. Leaier Pearson renewed a pro-| a were greatly shocked to arn ely commenced in 1931 in the | Fortune Bridge posal—taken up in the NATO | the death on Friday morting, |depits of the depression, was in Doc and Eunie Smallwood, Souris council a few years ago—that| May [5th, of Norman H. Rich-| @ building he erected at the same Jean and Rundall Seaman. Char- there should -be free trade in de: | ards in his 67th year. Active ©|¢ime. This building gradually loetown fence materials among the NATO | the last Mr. Riehards had work-| grew over years to comprise 3. Allison and Earle MacLeod Char- cr , 3 = ‘his usual long hours ou.the apartments, one office, a store, lottetown i At The least. the former ex-| Previous day with death coming and barber ship. Dietary Dept., Queen Mary Vet's ternal affairs minister said, Can-| SUddenly from a heart seizure as| With the same drive that he Hospital, Montreal ada and the United States should he arose the next morning. to his own work, he fait- Sister Nora and family, Kentville abolish tariffs on such articles if} A man. of many talents. N.H. | fully ser on the Town Council, wns their program for sharing of de-| Richards combined several oc- | of Souris for over twenty years. WREATHS fence production. were to be) cupations in a life that was never|He was a member of the Orient Sister Daisy and brother Gus. of _. really effective. But he admited| anything else but busy. Pre-emi- Lodge,~A.F. and A.M. at Souris:| Magdalene Islands ‘ . there are many. difficulties in the| ment ‘among barbers on the Is-| Married in 1916 to Laura’ Dix6n ‘Orient Lodge, A.F. and A.M. Sour- : cand land, he worked best under pres-|of Fortune Bridge, who survives,| ris ” Mr. Pgarson also proposed, as} sure always with perfection as a Mr. Richards also leaves one son. yr and Mrs. Frank Palin, Mon- : - had been done in NATO pre-| motto. To-his other activities,|Claude, manager of the Souris {trea} viously: | Sharing in the management -of a} Theatre-and four daughters, Pau- proy Progressive Conservative as 1. An assignment by the whole| grocery store and running a taxi,|line, Mrs. M.A. MacLean of Sou- party : NATO alliance of specific de-|he brought that same e‘ficiency | Tis. Muriel, dietician at the Queen: yyanager and staff, Bank of Com- fence production jobs. to each| and zest which marked his whole, Mary Veterans Hospitat-Mont-| jorce Souris a . country, with an agreement that life : |real, Joan, Mrs. Alan K. Mac- wiac and Elsie MacCausland Sum- ome would not enter into an-| Born at Grosse Isle-in the Mag- Lean of Souris, and Enid, Mrs.| jorcide other's field and so dislocate its dalen Islands, the son of John Edigon Baker of Summerside.!cyark Fruit Co, Charlottetown industry. | Richards and his wife Annie Ait-|Three children predeceased him, Management Rite-Way Cleaners. 2 An exchange of the best ken Clark, Mr. Richards was of |Arnold who died in 1926, Eliza- (yo riottetown evailable brains in each country| eambined Welsh and P.E.I. stock. |beth in 1929 and Ralph in 1935." pq Beulah and Roger Townshend for particular production jobs. His early career combined a|. The funeral service on Sunday ¢)i. te In response to expressed fears | minimum of formal eduction with afternoon, May 17th, was con- Giisqa packers Lid., Charlotte- by Mr. Pearson that Canada-U.S./a great variety of experience in| @ucted by Rev. W.A. MacQuarrie —__ wn defence production sharing might|Canada and the United States,/D.D. of St. James United Church ecome a’ one-way street in favor; which later with extensive read-| Souris, with a very large cor-| of the U.S., Mr. O*Hurley said he | ing gave him a background from tege following to the grave in| agrees the U.S. has to “come | which he could speafauthorativ- Souris West Cemetery. across” to Canada on this weap-|ely on many ‘subjects. -He mis-; -The pallbearers were Aubrey ons interdependence question | sed but few opportunities for this; Aitken, Roy Crockett, Walter Dou- STIFF OPPOSITION and always with the courage of | glas. Gerard MacDonald, Melvin 4 But he recognized that stiff con-| his convictions. Politically a con-| MacQuaid, and St. Clair Paquet. | ! gressional and industrial oppoSsi-|servative he represented the Is-| Surviving sisters include Nora, | a tion covld develop in the U.S. to| land on severat-occasions at Pro- Mrs. Pineo of Kentville, N.S. and | i Canadian firms manufacturing ‘gressive Conservative National)Daisy, Mrs. George Dickson of | 7] weapons or parts for joint defence; Conventions. rr 'Grosse Isle, Magdalen Islands. SERVICE ‘ A 4 which could be made in the U.S.| Norman Richards enlisted in, Also Rose, Mfs. MacLean, Cal- _ "| Paul Hellyer-<L—Toronto Trin-| 1916 and served with the 25th |gary, Alberta, anda half bro- ity), former associate defence} Scotian Highland Battalion during ther Douglas Clark, Grosse Isle, : minister, said Canadians. would|the First World War. An athlete |Magdaien Islands, | CUDMORE'S : be ‘just babes in the woods" if} of some distinction he represerited oo : y believed- that, if business 1S/ the Canadian Corps in cross-coun- | PTL 7 _— in the US., there would not|/try running at several athletic|The Family DRY CLEANERS ’ be very great pressure by the/ meets im France. CROSS 120 Kent St. Phone 4922 U.S defence industry against im-|~ Returning to Canada in 1919 he! Joan and Alan a ; s. Pattie Mr. O’Hurley's state- : See ment that Canadian firms got $32,000.990 in prime U.S ean , : 0 8 S TE R S a coniracts in the first half of this P. e r, he said that in the same aint-Up * J. period Canadian exports of air- The Year Round : craft and parts declined by more|] | : ; ‘visit. han that amount : ae ! Oaacuetts for diversification of Clean-Up I i . defence. contracts came from : Douglas Fisher ccF—Port Ar- thur) and Ernest Broome (PC— é t , } }——vancouver-South? —_____] — D ' Le aoe, Fisiier said it should be de- ecora e - i ~ ——- liberate government policy to di- : Phone & ‘Delivery ver con‘racts to those areas ~ . Orders -e not shared in the concentra- ’ $ os " & Soa of tadesity as in central Can- Let s All Make Our City Sparkle For | Orders Expressed - < RCHASES As ee eae Lait %; : tT tT , NG PURC The Oth. g Se iwe are striving es much as Royal Visit on July 30th... Phone Crapaud : Royal couple. possible to spread out pur- Ye : +111. : chases,” Mr. O'Hurley ne a x af r as practicable, materials fo ‘CITY f | 0 on tas given area were being = ° 1 pert @ Wee bought locally. . Hie As_an example, he said that . . wich tomers ee! CHARLOTTETOWN ae were down six per — oe. | Lobster Pound os in the last yeat they wer \ = : oc a ag nae During his opening statement | q- also will be invaluable to-all-loyal Islanders as a guide-to their participation in the giant celebration marking the visit of the ea ee EST ’ alii a ~The Guardian - The Evening Patriot ~ = HY