FEDERATION NEWSLETTER Hog Meeting At Moncton Appoints Representative By J. LINCOLN DEWAR Last Friday in Moncton the Montreal. The main business before the ari representative to the provisional committee for the setting up it a National Swine group. Appointed to this position was Mr. Stevens from the Anna polls Valley. Action on an elite hog pr 0‘ (run was deferred until later in the fall when the Federal de- partment policy on this will be announced. Appointed to a special Marl- time Potato Committee was J.E. Mellish, Union Road. P.E.l Mr. Mellish is president of the Maritime Federation of Agri- culture. FLUID MILK PRODUCERS At a meeting of the Directors of the Fluid Milk Association held last week arrangement- were made for the holding of the annual meeting at Birch Court on Wednesday. Oct. 14th. To be carried out this meeting will be the routine business mat ters associated with an annual meeting including the election of three new directors to repre- sent Prince County. Making an appearance will be the Dairy Princess of the province who is also the Centennial the province. FARM FORUM On Friday afternoon Oct. Inc! the Provincial Farm Forum Committee will meet with Rod- ger Schwass. secretary of Na- tional Farm Forum. Initiated will be planning for the coming season with arrange- ments being made for a number sex-vi of programs designed for interest of special groups. am Forum is now in twentyufifth year and as adult education program displayed considerable tenacity. In a general way topics this year will deal with, “Farmers in Transition." For instance on November 9th the topic is “The Sunday Farmers." “In community. there are people tel who in farming is not a full-time Job. Who are these people? be they contribute to the rural the an 5 Queen of. community? Do diverse inter- ests and perhaps higher income give their contribution particu- lar significance?" Other topics will be "Two Roads to Market, the Farmer's image. Church and Community In' Conflict. The Claims of Age.” DAIRY FOODS Meeting in Toronto on Tues- day of this Wednesday week the Executive of the Can- adian Dairy Foods Service Bur- eau put the final touches on the draft of the 1965 program for the promotion of dairy foods. Added to the program of radio. newspaper, in-store and home car will be a modest flyer in television. The program was originally drafted last spring and suaomli- ted to each of the five regions for consideration, suggestions and approval. Based on this year’s acceptance by the indus- try and support by producers, there appears to be very good prospect for an expanded effort in 1965. Certainly there is a new spirit of optimism for the dairy business. interested should write grade level. tain courses. Department of Education Charlottetown, P. E. I. September 29. 1964. Night School Courses (Grades XI and XII) The Department of Education has recently received inquiries from persons in Charlottetown and vicinity wishing to enrol in night classes for gliifitruction in certain subjects of Grades XI and Those in the Charlottetown area. who are Education on or before October 7th stating their occupation and the coursm desired as well as the It' should be noted that a course in any par- ticular subject cannot be offered unless the en- rolment is adequate to justify the engagement of an instructor. Applicants will be notified as soon as possible after October 7th whether or not it wzll be possible to arrange for instruction in cer. M. MucKenzie. Deputy Minister of Education to the Department of HER MAJESTY Certainly in point of interest nothing will occur next week in compare with the visit of Her Majesty the Queen. So much will be written and said about this visit that anything more would certainly appear to be superfluous. However, one as- pect of the British Monarchy and the British Aristocracy is the abiding interest held over many years in agriculture. In the old land practically all titled peo- ple had an interest in the coun- try and in agriculture. While considerable time, may e spent in London nevertne. less "home" was in the country. The Queen in her own right ranks as a large farmer and is well v e r s e d in livestock and practically all phases of British agriculture. this with its agricultural background the Queen will find a very spe- cial bond of interest and a real agricultural welcome. POLICY COMMITTEE The Policy Committee of the CIA. is planning a special stu- dy on farm credit policy needs and on direct measures to im- prove farm income. Mr . rue Hurd in preparation for this con- sideration will be visiting every who finardimt _____._ ACROSS THE ISLAND SECOND SECTION Charlottetown, Thurs. Oct. 1, 1964. .. Service Goes Back part of Canada and interview , ing farm organizations, govern-: ment. professional and co-oper- i ative le. l POTATO MEETING ! Present planning indicates that on or about November 10 a special potato meeting Will be held in Summerside at which growers will be provided with information on markets. proba- bly a re p ort from the Potato Marketing Board and from the committee which was set up as a result of the meeting held on March 30th. It is likely if the meeting feels that there are mar- keting problems which need att- ention that an opportunity will be provided for discussion and the registering of opinions. Pros- pects at the present time are for markets throughout the season and it is to be hoped this optimism is justified. This year the province has bumper crops in every department and the most important cash crop can be turned into lots of case everyone will certainly be bel- r off. AUTUMN BEAUTY This season of the year brings its own particular brand of beauty and variety of coloring. The ripened grain fields are particularly attractive 'as a con.- trast to the dark green of pas- ture and potato field. For really special beauty the change in co lor of the leaves stands in its own class as do the asters by the roadside. Soon to be added _ to the contrat will be the dark . , red of the newly plowed fields. v o - «W ' m a servo should be ever return to All in all though winter is in the ONCE LARGEST c MINE offing autumn has much to offer as a very enjoyable season. , Officials of Anaconda Can- was once the largest of its ada) Limited said this week kind in the British Common- k ' their operations at Britannia _ Ban 5 Props Beach,British Columbia would wealxdnemnbhmyimim ’ was ‘ up wi r‘ ac ion All Offices close down. The copper mine MONTREAL (OP) - Hal C. Banks, the ex-shipping union our in Canada who has a five- year penitentiary sentence to this country, has resigned all his offices in the Seafarers' lu- ternationa'l Union, it was an- nounced Wedne y. Banks, ousted last March from the presidency of the 310 of Canada (Ind), has quit his - a - year post as vice‘ president and international rep- resentative of the STU of North A m e r i c a, the announcement said. Over President's WASHINGTON (AP) — The , not be objective in assessing Warren commission report has [his risks. and that be frequently reopened question ofimi t su ‘ate ‘ whether a president should be lpolitical or other considerations. allowed to make decisions about There were strong indications aides who planned Ihis own security. . , that There were some broad hints President Kennedy’s fateful trip New Question Is Opened 0 trol and demonstrations as t that a president probably would to Dallas had a strong influence ~‘ ‘1? Over IOO—Yr. Period i l By NEIL A. MATHESON = Provincial-Farm Editor I HAD the privilege of sharing in a most unusually moving experience when the people of South GranVIlle Presbyterian church observed their 100th annivorsaly last Sunday afternoon. There were many things to remind one of the services of : the long ago. The old church itself is unchanged in its basic structure and arrangement since I first worshipped in it me than 50 years ago. The interior has recently been painted and redecorated and presents an attractive appearance as a place of worship. But tears came to my eyes as I was whisked rapidly down [the long trail of memory. when William Bruce of Valleyfield “- sented" the lines for the rendition of the 103rd psalm in Gaelic for those of us who were singing will: him. It took me my ‘ days in Rose Valley and the nearby churches our family attended at Sacrament. tune. including Granville. THE FACT the psalms. and a paraphrase. were sung with- out organ music was another reminder. And Lloyd Leland'a reading of the lesson in his faultless Gaelic was still another link with the past that was forged on that unforgettable aftero I can recall the days when only the psalms were counten» ‘ in scone of the older Presbyterian churches I wonder 5how many readers can recall e statement: “The came dowu from heaven and they go back to heaven when they are sung, but the hymns which were man-made go only I to the ceiling of the church and bounce back from there." If i that sentiment seems unreal now, it was xcry real to those 3 who held that opinion in the long ago. Vase Of Flowers Was Resentecl DEVOTED CHURCH people held strong. views in those learner days. I recall attending a Sacrament service one Sun- day in this same South Granville church. with my mother my oy ys. One of the men sitting in the side seats. facing the pulpit. at the front of the church arose and walked from the building shortly before the service started. W n we went to a neighbor’s home for dinner, as was the custom. I learned that one of the devout members of the congregation had walked from the building because some one had broug t a vase of beautiful flowers and placed it on the table in front of the pulpit. were in a church seem IS CLOSING by employees. It in not known whether the operation would resume some time in the fu- ture. CP Wirephoto) commonplace now, it In . as some people termed it. brought into the House of God." I have long since forgotten the gentleman’s name but I thought of him Sunday as I sat in the old church and listened toRev.DonaldOampbellpayti-ibutetotihedayscrfhhelox' £20- The same siro organ. Many a congregation. including our many years before permission instrument into the chu' . and their forefathers, had we it was diffiuslt to break with the long established tradition. First Organ Came In 1961 they concentrated on crowd coir}: ch _ To quot. a paragraph ‘ the leaflet dj . a” two most problems. More Wk“, when t .tated flu than 200 whee “hears and fedf aim of the first organ to the church, the ministry of m era] “gen,” were °°ncenuamd was under the direction of a precentor. Only the psalms and at Dallas Trade Mam Where the paraphrases were in use, with some of their most beloved the large“ flow" were ex' ones being sung today. This is a taste of that stout Convenqu Pecled- ‘ spun 't that has marked out the devout path of a people of God.” The Problem of dwde The tor" would sing the line and all at the whether a president should be . t required to take the precautions outlined by his guards may be one of the toughest facing the new committee on presidential safety. Obviously the president cannot be made a prisoner his own police force. ng convictions were held concerning a chmch own. had to wait Safety clrcums books a sung or “promoted” so the rest of the congregation in the shining. Many memories came flooding back Brine acted as "precentor" on Sunday. could when from a sniper, but be repeatedly that he didn't want secret service agents riding on the presidential limousine dur- ing parades. MENTIONB DEFICIENCEG The report mentions secret service and FBI deficiences that permitted a man with to HEREAREtlhenameedthemenw-horanoathat lonship firemen's hose and reel team here in 1925—I screwed ha-iefl Phil MacDonald—«he on titre Olympic team in 1904— and - Stewart ran lead. still living are Monroe MacLeod. George Walker. Innis A. Stewart, Jack Connolly (recently retired as M master here); John Tumor Jr. Allen—be was with the myself. Time have died. They are. Wilbur Wmd. who came tmm 0031 to it. y last week. had been other! who are ‘ RoyalBankolCamdaandialivingsotarasIknow—and Alexandra; George Wood. and Wilfred ‘e Harvey Oswald’s “*de Readers wall note that 12 men are listed and that is car- gam '5 vantagel’m’“ 31?“ “1” met, but only 10 ran in the race. Those 12 were seeded parade route Mum“? “’93 de‘ the team candidates were cut to that number. It was neca- "med' 1‘ .3150 implies Mat an to have a couple of spa. cas of injury or illnem. agent “Ahmed 0105” “l K?” So the 12 men trained faithfully through the six-week period nedy “111d have saved 1‘15 Me- and nobody knew who was going to run on the team until we The fin“ ShOt was “0'5 fatal - were getting into our track -togs for the actual competition. . _ , .ack Connolly, was tWC. agents in the front seat of good enough to phone them in to me at my request. earlier the car were virtually sealed‘ this week. The old picture lists Angus Ma-cEachern as coach off from the rear compartment and Chief Thomas Ranahan is also pictured. by a steel hand rail 15 inchesi :53" the back "' m” “m Strength, Stamina Were Needed In contrast. agent Rufus W.i Youngblood is believed to have RACE of one-quarter mile was oln the Idixl‘fibitfi track THE ~ - here. The e‘ ht men in front of the rec pulle te “"9"”. mm” "°h“5°“~ “mg l reel—it tooklga lot of effort to get it. rolling—when the hydrant 1" 3’10?” can hem” e .ShOt ‘ was reached. 250 feet from the finish. hydrant man Jack Turner that klued Kennedy was mad' 7 had to take the end of the hose that, was rolled nn the reel. j and couple it to the hydrant. George Walker was nozzle main . . ; and he followed the reel to the finish line where he broke the the Vice'preS‘dentlal Cal" llast coupling and put the nozzle on to the line. of hose that Officials 0f the secret service. “had been laid from the hydrant. If the, coupling at the hydrant. FBI and the White HOUSE re- ‘m' the nozzle was not tight. the judzes added one second to the “159 10 discuss security pi‘ecau- itime. for every one-quarter turn they could. take up on the "0'15 bl“ it is apparent that Ecouplmgs. There were no turns possible on lne couplings that many changes have been ma e . day. The Turner-Walker pair saw to that in secret service procedure ' Tl . run was in one minute. five seconds. The coupling at The renovated presidential . the nozzle was in four and three-fifth seconds. it was all In limousine now its jump ‘ fun and though it was strenuous work. it was nothing more than seam. occupied last Nov. 22 by i competition against other firemen 5 teams. Governor J o h n nnally of Texas and his wife. facing the Ml'.‘ Names Of Man On Hose Reel Team at so agents can observe the president from an arm‘s length way. MATERIAL ADDED Presumably. bullet - proof or bullet - resistant material has been added :Fire Fighting Wcls Tough Job Then BUT I recall John Turner. father of the. man who was. in little 19% race telllng me of the time When firemen had to haul lthe hose and reel units to fires. and then fight the litre when they got there. A CBC-TV show recenlly showed-some of the :pictures of the old hose reels used in Halifax. With the lam {handles he firemen pulled on to pump the water. This is my do ddyo‘ {C765 (/o\$l<wage/l With the bigger windows (Drawn by Martin Hilliard, age five) bigger windows. It shows you what the bigger windows feel like. And you can be sure when we make changes in a Volkswagen it's not iust window dressing. It's the some with all I6 changes on the new VW. They're all there for good reasons. Improved brakes. Better gearbox. lubrication-free steering assembly. And improved wipers to clean the bigger windshield. Get in a new Volkswagen and see what Martin Hilliard had in mind. Even if you’re iust window shopping. Bigger‘winclows. Ono Volkswagen. Hard to picture? Well, it's like this. We started with the windshield and we made every single window iust a little bit bigger. All the better to see with. But the new Volkswagen still looks pretty much like the old Volkswagen. Unless you look real clasa. Martin Hilliard looked real close. Kids are like that. He didn't care that the windows are only 15 per cent larger. He knows bigger windows when he sees them. And he knows how to draw them. So that's why we show you Martin Hilliard's drawing of our new car. And the W. R. JENKINS LTD. St. Peter's loads Parkdala — lax loss—Tel: 4-6563 POPE MOTORS, BOX 937. SUMMERSIDE TEL. 6-3117 5 ’t know if there is one of those old firemen living—- I don ‘ assigned to watc‘il " " - I would like to talk to him—nut t e buildings "6 more In “meme ili'lallzhli‘iarllgs 8:: todav are a long rrv from the sort of this: now and they are scattered lJolhn Turner was telling me about throughout a motorcade. } I I.“ with firemenv’s teams at 7mm and Mouton lo we! Johnson frequently changes ;m here. and I have never had more intm.es1in;.nr Plans and routes and some' 1 Friends. I recall that there was a great deal of drinking Wind times does not reveal his travel (those tournaments when old timers got together. but I never Plans until the “St mlnme- ? did see anyone in bad humor. There seemed In W— In the past few months, the ‘mrten law mat nobodygdshtguld spoil the. 307d feliwship- no scope of presidential protection that was strict] adher . has been greatly increased with I heard of game rare squabbles over 91“?” “Endgrmlceh' the secret service frequently in later years. I'm speakinz,nl‘-°U' "‘9 “Imam”: calling on the FBI for help. The. 3 I had the privilege of cmnveimfi. service counts its agents in the ilnformafion would Be hundreds while there are sev- eral thousand FBI agents. km in The Warren group said thej . Thanks vjng holiday wee _ secret service men were “sub- 1 we I J35 ashfilsuall If gain}. reader has . stantially overworked" and 1m, ‘know: of an “em he 0.. ‘he. thinks mlth be interesting. their pay was below that of 1 please 2;” in touch with Frank weeks at the Guardian in FBI men. box-um or ' Idersl‘taw in Tigflish. and i call The service already has insti- J m”. m. wherever 3m suggest, for the story. tuied a 10-month reorganiza- m me man who told me about an_eariv attempt at do tion program that calls for the mm m this addition of 205 agents and the Wm he lease can me or expenditures of $8,000,000. the p k in which the item was recorded and I have fal- gosten . f the la in the home i was to Viol madmlikzaingIly intmlng item and i would From US. u down. POUR IHEO lbelp overcome the country's 4 food crisis. NEW (AP) —- The United States, pouring when The U5. signedan agreement Wind“ at the rate of to an In“. gm.” to.“ of mm) to” ' " m’ "no, wheat, soonoo tons ot-rice and 588.000.000 under its W ace program. “The program allows India b pay for the Us. interest and long terms Dal Wednesday to keep the . . coming‘tbrouch neat June to 75.000 tons of ma! 0" '0' 1m. K I‘