\ 2114 in. FIST 12% in. 14 in. _ FOREARM 12 in. 14 in. 17 in. 17 in. orgy, 25 in. BICEPS 1444 in. CALF 15 ‘Ain. ee RAE a itn in ae ail ae tl ll tr a tt IVALO Te e | COMPARISONS FOR TONIGHT’S FIGHT Patterson is dpe 7-5 favorite This {s how. Floyd “Patter- son and George Chuvalo stack up before their = 12- Racial Understanding Plea children Carried ToWestBy Vanier REGINA (CP) — Governor Genera! Vanier carried a plea for understanding between French and English Canadians into the heart of the prairie provinces today He spoke here at an after- moon ceremony marking the be- binning of Saskatchewan's year- long celebration of its diamond jubilee — the 60th anniversary of the province's creation and entry into Confederation In a W%-minute address, the 76-year-old former soldier and diplomat who is Canada’s first French Canadian governor- general called upon Canad:ans to ‘‘cast- aside pettiness, selfish- mess and intolerance, and sub- stitute understanding, brother- hood and confidence in one an- other.” There is in Canada a French fact, he said This 1s nothing new.” “We are all strands of the Canadian fabric, and where by ourselves we might well be torn and broken, together we form whole cloth that can re- tain its strength despite the hardest wear “This, in sum, {s the great DEATH NOTICES Received too late for Classified death notice column SMITH — At Moncton Hospital Annex Friday, Jan. 29, 1965, Joseph P Smith brother of Edward. Charles and Fred erick Smith, Charlottetown Resting at the Charlottetown Funeral Home {rom where funeral will be held Tuesday morning, leaving the funeral home at 845 for Requiem Hizh Mass at the Church of the Most Holy Redeemer at 9 o'clock. Interment in the Catholic cemetery. FRANCIS Suddenly at her home. 76 Upper Queen Street, Saturday, Jan 39 1965, Mrs. Joseph Francis. aged ‘7 years. Remains were forwarded Sun day evening from the Charlottetown Funeral Home to her late residence where funeral will be held Tuesday morning, leaving the house at 1030 for Requiem High Mass at the Church of the Most Holy Redeemer at 19 45 In terment in the Little Flower cemetery Morell SHEEN At the home of Mr and Mrs. Alvin Ashley, Brookline. Satur day. Jan. 3, 1965. William Sheen, for merly of the Locke Road, in his 84th year. Remains forwarded from Jel ley’s Funeral Home to the home of his nephew, Harry Gorrill. Glenwood Funeral Tuesday from Glenwood Uni ted Church, with service at 2 o'clock Interment in Bloomfield United Church ry. BRAZEL -— At the Sacred Heart Home, Jan. 29, 1965, Miss Emma Brazel, formerly of Johnston's River, aged 62 years. Resting at the Hen nessey Funeral Home where the fu neral will take place this Monday morning at 9 O’clock to the Church of the Sacred Heart. Mount Requiem High Mass at 9.30. fm the church cemetery. Ryan, for Interment A tow truck removes the of the Duke of Gilou- of it road and over. round heavyweight match. to nicht in Madison Square Carden in New Y ork City lesson of your history as it ts aiso the lesson of Canada's his- tors For it must be obvious that the two are so entwined, na- tion and provinces, that the prosperity of one is almost by definition, the advantage of the other The ‘cancer of unrest’ or Malaise of |_ depression” infect- TORONTO CP Tempera- tures Min.. Max. Dawson -20 “11 Prince George 4 11 Vancouve a 33 45 Victoria wees 39 Oo Edmonton 5 -3 C algar 5 6 Regina vecee od! 1 Winniveg Sees 18 -2 Toronto ........... 10 z7 Ottawa ........... 5 13 Montreal ......... 10 19 Quebec... . . . 6 14 Fredericton ...... “15 20 Saint John ........ -15 20 Moncton .......... - 1 19 Halifax cecee 14 27 Charlottetown 6 — Sydney 8 6 Yarmouth . 8B 26 St. John's, Nfld 12 26 Boston 2... 0 28 New York ........ 18 29 Miami |. ........ 43 70 New Orleans ...... 33 47 THesen- 5 saves 44 72 Los Angeles . 5 62 HALIFAX (CP) — The wea- ther office says a snowfall of about two to four inches is ex- pected up to noon today in Cape Breton and Eastern Nova Scotia; elsewhere in Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island and Southeastern New Brunswick, little more than snowflurries is indicated. Conditions throughout the dis- trict will improve gradually to- day as a disturbance at sea moves farther away. Regional forecasts Northern N.S., Prince Edward Island, Eastern N.B. Counties: Overcast with snowflurries; little change in temperature; northeast winds 25 diminishing late in evening to northerly 15 Low-high at New Glasgow and Moncton 5 and 20, Charlottetown, 5 and 18 | High tide today at Charlotte- town 11.38 a.m. and 10.34 p.m. At Rustico at 5.41 p.m. Summer- side tide eighteen minutes later | than Charlottetown. Sun rises, today at 7.22 a.m. and sets at | 5.32 p.m. turned about 50 miles north of London Saturday night. The duke was driving to his coun- Henry See story on sports page. 4 CAP Wirephoto). ing either the provinces or the nation would surely lead to weakenesss and possible collapse in the part not infected © Geet Ae ISLAND NEWS PAG Western And Central eon The 4 » Guardian, Charlottetown, Mon., Feb. 1, 1965. . - 6 Accidents Reported: * Sside Child Injured SUMMERSIDE half-year-old Sherian - Four and a| 1956 -yehicle driven by Elliott, |Edward VYeno of St John Eleanors. |daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Regi-| The estimated damage was Inald Elliott, is in Prince County | $300 to the Muttart vehicle and Hospital arm along with lacerations body, after being struck by a car driven by Alan George Murphy of Summerside RR 1 yesterday afternoon The accident eccurrd at ap proximately 2.45 p.m. on John- sto’ Street here This was one of four acci- , dents investigated by town po- lice over the weekend Friday night at approximately 1130 pm a 1953 car driven by Gerald Stewart MacLeod of St Eleanors was in collision with a 1963 model driven by Roy Jean Louis Lionel of RCAF Summerside. Total damage was estirnated to be $350 At 5 o'clock last evening po lice investigated a two-car col- lision at the Central-Convent Street v intersection. Involved were a 1964 model driven by Douglas Lloyd Mut- tart Carleton Siding and a of Permitted TIGNISH — Children under 13 with a broken right | $500 to Veno's car of the face and contusions on fhe At 6.50 p.m. a 190 car own- ed by Paul Joseph Arsenault of Summerside was © struck while parked on a ser\icg, stat- jon lot on Notre Dame Street Three vehicles were invol\ ed in this accident. A three-ton truck driven by Elwin Russ Adams and a 1962 mode! car driven by Don Alfred Linkiet ter being the other two vehic les Damage to the = Arsenault vehicle was $150 the Adams truck, $10, and the Linkletter vehicle $100 The Borden RCMP investig ated two accidents er the weekend Saturday afternoon at ap proximately 2 o'clock they were called to an accident be- tween Breadalbane and Emcr- jald involving cars driven oy Joseph Trainor and Albert Rowe, both of Emerald Total damage was estimated” to oe $700 Sunday morning ‘we later- jmodel vehiéles driven by Peter \MeclIver of Newton Road and Linus Mulligan of Kinkora were involved in 2" accident at Kin- kora. Damage was reported not — a tha Sa years of age in the Tignish Com- | munity skating periods alloted them will have three regular | Saturday was a busy day for~free each week it was decided at |” the 76-year-old genera! gan it shortly after 8 am. in Ottawa, when he got up to have breakfast, read the morning pa- pers and looked at his mail He listened to the radio broad- cast of Sir Winston Churchill's funeral) and later attended .a memorial service for Sir Win ston on Parliament Hi)! The Governor-General le't Ot- tawa immediately after the me- morial service and arrived nere at 4:25'pm. on an RCAF Yukon aircraft WEATHER COLD The weather was cold—!3 de- gress below zero—as a biting wind stirred up the snow drifts around the airport, but a crowd of about 200 welcomed Gen. Vanier On hand to greet him offi- cially were Saskatchewan's Lieutenant-Governor, R. L. Han- bridge, Deputy Premier A. H. MacDonald and Regina mayor, Baker Minor Offences In City Court For being drunk and disorder- ly Joseph Cannon of Charlotte- , town was fined $20 and costs when he appeared before Ma- / gistrate A. J. Haslam. QC. inp City Police Court Saturday morning On the same charge. Albert Stordy, also of Charlottetown, was remanded until today, bail set at $30 John W. Pyke. Charlottetown, was fined $10 and costs [for having defective equipment on a motor vehicle Howard M. Jenkins, city, plea- ded guilty for failing to stop for a red traffic light and was also fined $10 and costs or five days in jail. Two persons were charged with being drunk and incapable | One was given a 20-day suspen- ded sentence and the other was sentenced to Queen's County jail for 20 days START ON REACTOR MOSCOW (Reuters) Con- struction of a nuclear reactor with the technical co-operation ‘of Russian specialists has started near Jakarta, the Indo jmesian capital, the Russian news agency Tass reported Sat- | urd ay. after Sir Winston Churchill's state funeral. Passengers in the car were the duchess and the duke’s chauffeur and valet He be- 4 Meeting of the board of direc- tors of the Tignish Sports Re- creation Association held in the fire hall This will give the children | every opportunity to enjoy skat-/ ing on the new enclosed rink, it was stated The recreation association, sponsoring a full minor hockey and skating program. will hold Its ice sports day and fancy dress carnival for youth on Sat- urday, Feb. ® Wiring the enclosed rink got underway during the past week. A congratulation message on the erection of a closed-in rink was acknowledged at the meéting from Sister Saint Catherine of Sienna of Larry's River, N.S The minutes of the previous meeting and correspondence was read by the secretary, Mrs. Reg Eldershaw. The meeting was chaired by the president Kenneth McRae. Other directors are: Rev. Clare MacDonald, Wilson J. Shea, Ro- Alcide Boudreau, | bert Keough, Gerald Keough, Russel! Perry. David Harper WESTERN BRIEFS IN WESTERN HOSP. Fred Fitzgefald, who is em- ployed with the CNR, is a pa- tient at Western Hospital, Alber- ton HOSPITAL PATIENT David Harper, physical educa- tor at the Tignish Regional High School, Hospita!, Alberton IN P.E.1. HOSPITAL ; is a patient at Western, Gordon Barbour of Alma is a! patient in the Prince Island Hospital. KIDNEY OPERATION Mr and Mrs. Harold Cormier, Tignish, received word that their three-year-old granddaugh- ter, Sherry Kim, of Chicago, successfully underwent a deli-| cate and rare kidney operation | ‘in that city recently. Edward | | Some families outgrow our beetle. Nature. And some people will ne Idea of being seen in our Station Bus. Human noture. So it was second nature the Volkswagen 1500. Births, Deaths. Marriages Here Decline In ‘64 CAPITAL BUREAU OF THE GUARDIAN OTTAWA — Birth, marriages and deaths all declined in 1964 in Prince Edward Island, com- pared to 1963 figures, .the Do- minion Bureau of Statistics has pear For the full year, births to- lin 18 2,732 compared to 2,939 lin 1963. a drop of seven per cent Marriages numbered 654 \rompared to 692, a drop of 5.5 cent and deaths totalled a decline of 1.1 per cent over 1963 figures The P EJ. figures eompare with a Canada-wide decline of 24 per cent in births, and eight el per cent rise im marriages and a5 per cent drop in deaths In December alone, P.E.I had 223 birth compared to 266 in December 1963; 51 marriages compared to 67 and 90 deaths compared to 84 for the cor- responding month the year before _ - a a Vincent McInnis Dies At Age 83 SUMMERSIDE The death of Vincent McInnis occurred at the Charlottetown Hospital, Jan 29 at the age of 83 He was bein at North Car leton where he was a farmer and moving contractor until! his retirement He is suryived by his wife, the former Ellen Boylan of Dromore, one son, Emmett 0f Kensington and five grand- children Brother William Mc- Innis of Borden predeceased him by exactly six weeks. One son Charles St. Clair prede- ceased him The funeral will be held at 9 am. today from the Davison -pEuperal.. Home... penal Chuvalo’ Rags To By AL COLLETTI NEW YORK (CP) — Heavy- weight George Chuvalo of Tor- onto, who earned less than $3.- - 000 knocking out Doug Jones, gets his rags-to-riches chance for fame tonight when he meets Floyd Patterson in a 12-round bout that could lead to an even- tual world title shot for the win- ner The glamor of the classic meeting between a rugged take- two - to - land - one puncher like Chuvalo and Patterson, a boxer- Puncher with fast hands but a brittle jaw, has lured a sellout crowd of more than 19,000 to Madison Square Garden Patterson, the only man to hold the heavyweight title twice, is favored at odds of 7 to 5 to defeat the Toronto scrapper who says he never has been knocked down in 39 fights. He won 23 of them by knockouts. Chuvalo and Patterson both are in magnificent shape after long training grinds and both spent the weekend in seclusion awailing the weigh-in at noon They meet in the ring shortly after 10 p.m. local time The outwardly etolid Cana- dian and hi genial manager, Ir- ving Ungerman, a Toronto bus!- Ressman, motored from Monti- cello, N.Y., Saturday afternoon after cofmpleting three weeks of training there and bedded down at a New York City hotel . LOOKS YCUNGER Chuvalo, who looks younger than his 27 years, was feeling the pressure as fight time ap- proached. “I'm a bit on edge and I sometimes get cranky, but that is expected,’’ George | said after he wound up his training. He has boxed 184 rounds by official count — his manager said rc ily 200 jdone up to four miles of road- s History Riches? work almost every day for the nine weeks of training at Bol ton, Ont., and Monticello and his legs, says, are in great shape Ingerman said he wants to | Sir Winston Condolence Book, At Summerside SUMMERSIDE An an- nouncement was made by May- or W. E. Jenkins yesterday that he has arranged with Pre- he mier W. R. Shaw to have the book entitled ‘In Remembr- ance" placed in the town clerk's office Thursday and Fri- day, Feb. 4 and 5, during of- fice hours each day from 9 am to 5 p.m The citizens of the town may register their sympathy over the death of Sir Winston Chur- chill before the book is for- warded to London, Engtand There, it will be placed along with similar books om other Canadian provinces, (Jn the Sir Winston Churchill library Is your pain RHEUMATIC er ARTHRITIC? Do long for relief from raat of theumatic and arthritic pain? | Thowsands get speedy relief from their suffering by using T-R-C’'s. Don't jet dull aches and stabbing ins handicap you any longer. Try | EMPLETON'’S T-R-C’'s. Only 85c and $1.65 at drug counters everywhere. Fer extre fest relief, use Templeten’s FLAME. | | Croom Liniment in the roll-on bottle externally, | while teking T-R-C's interneily. FLAME-Creem, | $1.25. 163-9 nip de Canadian champion has You've just given yourself the best reasons for looking into the Volkswagen 1500. ver get used to the for us to bring out mention. (Our TS engine zips from a standing start to SO mph in 12 seconds.) But we didn’t get carried away completely. We got 0, good grip on ourselves. And left any radiator, a 1500. You might ne ol the 1500's engine in the rear over the drive af i i! ae Communist Chinese artil- lery will not shell the Quemoy ficers and men ef the National- ist Chinese army on the. islands | agency reported from Peking | Saturday. % | of So don’t let @ beetle or @ bus owner say ne rah g d é Ungerman disclosed Chuvalo | got only $2,700 when he knocked | out Jones last Oct. 2 at the gar- den but the fight was “a step- ping stone for us.” WON’T SHELL ISLANDS ~ HONG KONG (Reuters) Islands Feb. 1 and 3 so that of- can enjoy the Chinese spring | festival, the New China news NOTICE OF CITATION In Re Estate of MARY JANE MacLEOD, Yrmerly of Uigg in Queens County and lately Charlottetown in Queens County, Widow, deceased, tes- NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a Citation has’ been ex- tracted for the passing of the final accounts in the above Es- tate and for an Order for dis- tribution and the hearing of same shall be before the pre- Justice in the Estates Di of the Supreme Court at the Court House in Char~ lottetown in Queens County, on Friday, the 12th day of March next coming, at the hour of eleven o'clock in the forenoon. DATED es 2ist day of Jan- wary A. D. 1965. G. GORDON TWEEDY PROCTOR. a a aa sees ¥ Lf ee Baca . ¥ kw. @ ttle more ee ee We made the 1500 to sect five people. Or wheels. on chnost ohne number of small, dirty faces. And we cool it with air instead of that well And to get everyone where they want to known wet stuff. And. you still don't have to Vol 4 ‘ 9° at a clip that's almost undignified for us to — buy anti-freeze becouse we still don’t have vy gids: yes . ae o 4 © * cs PARKDALE SUMMERSIDE isle hs ‘ache W. R. JENKINS LTD. POPE MOTORS!" = St. Peters Road, Box 1055, Charlottetown Box 937, 12S os ie 4 Tel: 4-6563 S at J as i sion re rt