VVed_, Jan. 22, 1958 '-:.-E-.-:I Wan Dies Sucideniy In Hamilton The death occurred suddenly at H.:‘.mili:on, Ontario, on Sun .f‘ “‘-‘—‘i"i"T""-' mu nmuv ‘cl (3. day, January 19, of Frederick Troy, formerly of Greenfield. The deceased, age 47 years. was the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Troy of Green- field, Following his father's death four years ago, the deceas- ed operated the farm at Green- field. In June 1956 he went to Hamilton where he resided with his sister. He was unmarried. He leaves to mourn two sis- ters, Emma (Mrs. Daniel O‘Donnell) Avondale; Florence tM'rs. Frank Hynes‘) Hamilton, Ontario, and one brother, Frank, of Boston, Mass. The funeral will be held on Friday morning at St. Mary’s Church, Montague, at 9:30 a.m. The Girirdiau Page 5 I THE ELMER SAFETY Plaque, , held by chairman John H. Morris held by co-chairman (left) and the Elmer Pennant, Scantlebury, were presented to schools yesterday by the Char- George-both Spring Park and Parkdale lottetown Junior Board of Trade. Ischool flagpoles. Elmer Safety lrules in pamphlet form were is- sued to all pupils from Grade one to six with instruction given by chairman John H. Morris and . _ _ . co-chairman George Scantlebury. maIl_0!‘ t0WI1ShIDS 3d.l01I11I1g. I The chairman announced that a 308110113 Soughl by the 10031 Jay- strict and thorough watch will be where it is noticed parents are Mr. Evans of Charlottetown. lpfesehted E11119!‘ Safety P18Cl1leS 6665- _ . made for infractions of the five leading children across the street Another brother resides in thegto both Parkdale and Spring Park’ Along with the plaque. thelE1mer safety rules, especially to against a red traffic light without west_ To an the so,-I-owing, kindschools, thereby uniting the sixifamiliar Elmer Pennant was pre-,children between the ages of 5 regard for traffic or the child's sympathy is extehded_ :city schools with those in the twolsented and will fly from theito 14. Statistics show that the ac- mention of the infraction. Plan To Recruit Hungarian Interment will be in the Church 3 c........y. Safely Plaques Presented To Parkdale, Sp. Park Schools cident rate in this age group rat- es higher than from the nine ma- jor diseases. Mr. ‘Vlorris alslo stressed _ that the p a r e n t 5 give more thought to safety rules, especial- ly at busy business intersections passing in Western Canada of Mr. Welsh Stewart “ of Belle River. He has a brother Mr. Sim- on Stewart of Belle River. He Yesterday m°1‘n111E 9119 Char‘ aiso has a sister married to Rev_ lottetown Junior Board of Trade also extended to Rev. W. A. Pat- terson of Georgetown and Stur- geon United Church in the recent passing of Mrs. Patterson. Relatives here of Mr. William Gillis regret to hear of his death. in British Columbia, caused byl months in Toronto, Ont., has re- turned to his home in Georgetown. Mr. John P. Herman of Char- lottetown representing Morse: Tea, called on his firms custom- ers in Georgetown on Tuesday. Personal Possessions OI Sir James Dunn Donated ‘While public attention from mast to coast has been caught by the magnificent gift of $1,750,- 000 to Dalhousie by the Sir James Dunn Fundation, set up by Lady Dunn, of the new Science build- ingisoon to rise on the Studley campus, Dalliousians will deeply appreciate a further second gift Dunn a gift of such na- ‘ that it will, perhaps, even more intimately associate Sir James with his alma mater. tetown, there, in the cradel Confede-ration, he will be shown the chair in which Sii PRESIDENT or DALOUSIE, DR._ Sands friends. summei-, ' 5 _Mr. Hugh MacNein visited his .we regret to hearof the pass- . _ si ter Mrs. R.C. MacLeod -in Kin- ing of Mrs, J_H_ Mabon of Mon- d I 17 SS 011 JaI1_UaI‘Y 3- We are 318d tague, recently, Sympathy is also D E A L E R in ~ _ to hear Mrs. MacLeod is improv- extended to the family. CO, ‘I 5 -. ‘ ing. . . 3 THE WINNING PRINT Mgglefinrfgigairéi o{W3§tr:éu:<gn£:;1; DUKE TO OPEN GAMES ‘('1 "3 . - it o 1' 1 Don Gass who discussed them ‘laid to rest in the Little ‘Sands LONDON <Reuters)—The Duke ' In A from the artist’s viewpoint Cemetery on January 4. Many of Edinburgh will opehthe sixth / . ' I I i whichiis something very helpful of her friends remember her as B .t. h E ire and C m h_ _ ‘ - . to a photographer. First an‘ Ms. Dan Munroe of High Bank. “ls mp C d_fi°m 1° ‘. I third place‘ winner was Gordon lsincere sympathy goes out to all wealth Games‘ at 31‘ 1 i W3 95-‘ - V E . White and second Margaret Mal- ithe bereaved. July 18, Buckingham Palace an- ' ' ' - ’ . » I hear of the.nounced Monday. ; i A , Ch b . th Pm_ lett. , . We were sorry to Masnoiiixlilaéiid iiéirgtiie rzrlitdztiiilizngi Buaiidiitiigr ldind eproduce ' - _ the Cha 1 tt t c Cl b th .ults for the Feb. 17th ' has Zviifng :i“?£2 L0 and Ms, EFFECTIVE MONDAY, JANUARY 20, 1958 ,. . , ' - - ' we i ' lirogram v:gi(!;Iei',lhisar;EC()SItlIIn1Iilal.?’ftln()gf _V<a1‘i‘I:isSBecl(:m(1:(c))llaborated on the ' h::::::’s ‘° a rs: zfgissesizitf VS ’ R ESLEY *- MR- JQHN W- SKINNER Stan Mclnnis, Director of grapiher”. We are looking 501" ' , ' s§i“3‘..’"§?.‘§§?.2‘?“e..¥.if.¥..f§.‘;a”§§ AT HIS G REAT EST I HAS BEEN APPOWTED "5? shit? i:..i;“2.:i.£:’:.':f.;*:§“ ‘;.“:.:;;i::: ,.,,s ,.,,s,1B,g Drama“ I E‘ IMPERIAL Esso AGENT . 8 Light”, H 1 d h - _ d G #3 L ' for electronic ‘ . 4 sin the ioiiidiirigceorcieiz viii. iiash.e§ii§i Bfiivliiiii and Gordon ‘- - ' . *5‘ IN THE CHARLOTTETOWN EAST AREA / Margaret ll/lallett: 2nd and 3rd. White for bulbs. 1 SINQINQ \ ‘if . - (1 Taylor. A show of many beautiful co or ; ' Special project was announc- slides in the c o m p e t i t i0 11 by President Roland Taylor “Autumn” was judged by MYS- .°l“b members are to photograph 1“ bi-.8¢'k and white the Confed- HA L D $§v<&j.’m.___.__ Wm MONTAGUE RINK , ALL ORDERS WILL BE ND E SAGAN T0 WED ‘ ' TE TONIGHT PARIS (Ret ) —— F ' SKA ..,...:.:i: .....r:::‘::: gxfeqgnt 3 BY MR. sI<INNER and playwright, said Monday: . . 0 p'm' ' Will marry 40-year-old Guyl Adm 15510“ 20-35‘? §°.‘:.2:“,:;-guieiisher and his; EFFECTIVE MONDAY, JAN. 20 did not $31‘. in two weeks. She _ ied TIII1 where she. would be i _ Efmé tclwn °o?aE‘Z?j§§’°§§lé“ 5-iii ’ . eek.:° Vfguld not officiate at her ———————————— — - B Worksfiie ibI$l(I:I£:::::11,yC0nSlder her 3 b SINGING! EASTERN """"" " FIGHTING! . » . _ : I ‘ DANCING! 1] S C E GUARDIAN s , ALL ORDER WILL RE EIV AN ‘ ‘ ' . YEWSUAL SCOTTISH (“Queen ' ulafecl for babies! I 1- - us ATTENTION WITH the th- Auspices St. Andrew’s Breaks up PI'1°9'"’easeswhee1mg IVI ._ o o Shyterian Ch011'- l'G'I msms . G ’ _ _ , , -——--'—'’‘“ '1‘ - §::§§i§3‘SZ‘;“i.:i.“;£"£.»§i2.:‘.:‘., ' NO INTERRUPTION IN SERVICE’’ whmfe . J. Mcllwaine Alli ' ATTEND F U V E R A L ‘ in Cinernascope ‘°‘”"'”‘ mm ‘ ‘- ‘ . 53.1.... attending met CARa'i{‘XtL TQDAY IUIIY lylfll-Mickey Shaughnessy-Dean lines-Jennifer Holden A ‘K-ewof the late LAC Arlic PARIS- M — _ A ,___h_ . R | P 5 t§3';~ 1:reVl1\r1i._ aiéi_lG'Ii.,:.F._{I. ?)lil— TONIGHT j egu fir “C95 ‘N I we‘ 3- .aii i rs. eu en _ .. i,i.“.'ii§i.;.:::;“a..€.ii:?i dz: Sm week “*1 5"°WS 3=3°-7-9 - ’ _ . Mr. Owen Kelly and Z 05 83”“ Mrs, John Johiisoii, all J mmersidh ‘ A. E. KERR, given to his alma mater the spec- ADMIRES DESK his hat and coat. Lady Dunn has high; two small glass and man- a car accident. His funeral was from Mr.. Ernest Shaw's, Uigg last week. His parents reside in Kinross. To all the bereaved sincere sympathy is extended. A large flock of wild geese were seen flying over; the shore ogany bookcases, each five feet; cially made suite of furniture five inches wide, twelve inches mad here and wehding their way which originally stood in Sir :deep, and‘ seven feet five inches. towards the North-West on Jan- James’ London office, and later ; high; two desks in mahogany and V. “ary 14- \ in his office in the Sun Life Should a visitor go to Charlot- Building, Montreal. of proudly , sive mahogany pieces which now zany double-door wardrobe, thro; The suite consists of seven mas- ladorn the offices of Dalhousie’: John A. MacDonald sat .at the president. These seven pieces are seven inches deep, and six fec momentous time; and in future jmade up of two breakfront book- |five and one half years the visitor to will be proud cases with cupboards beneath in ‘ While their intrinsic ly shown the desk at which Sir Imahogany, each eight feet three very considerable , their James used to sit, the bookcases I inches wide, two feet in which he kept his records, and 1 the wardrobe in which he hung two l . i Once again sympathy is ex- lblue morocco’ each 5”‘ feet _by‘tended to the relatives of Mrs. |four feet, and two feet seven in- Ernest penny of Beach point 01195 high; and One Small mah0-A whose death occurred recently. Master Ronnie Saunders of Murray River was taken to the _ _ Kings County Memorial Hospital, 11101165 '1.11gh. lMontague on Saturday, where an V3111‘? _1SIappendicitis' operation was per- Chlef lformed on Ronnie Sunday morn- feet seven inches wide, one foo in-,value in_the eyes of Dalhousians ',ing_ we are glad to hear that he clies wide, two feet two inches will be because of their associa-lis making good recovery. He has ldeep, and seven feet nine inches tion with the man who used. them. * ‘an aunt, Mrs. Chas. Stewart in [Little Sands and his Mother was formerly Kathleen Maclean. for- merly of Little Sands. Best‘wish- LITTLE ‘SANDS , H U Miss Glenda and Miss Saundraicomplete recovery soon. Stewart, daughters of Mr. and} 011 January. 15, 1-1 steamer Mrs. Alex Stewart, Charlottetown,i_‘Wa5 599“ Passing 1“ the Strait- were guests of their grandmother,‘P§1cet1;fu ifsflfimicgnfingttléirliiggtlsat: — Mrs. A.D, MacNeil1. Little Sénds,snii seen flashing their nightly during part of -the New Year hol-isignais across the Strait. We still ida§{- . _Ihave very little snow-jiist a sprin- M155 Bertha M391-ea“: W110 hadikling. The snow storms which been 8mP10Yed at the 3i1‘P01"i'atlhave been forecasted for here so Summefside. Spent the 1101i(13Y'many times, have so far this year with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.,pa5sed us hy_ John Willie MacLean, High Bankl Truck loads of gravel are be. AiI'D01'Il'70n Friday after New town these days from the shore Year’s. Miss MacLean is in the of Mr. Peter Richards, ,Little Civil Service and does stenogra- Sands. This is rather unusual at PhYW0I'1< fol‘ the R-C.A-F- this time of year. Usually we Ml‘. Edwin MacKan7.ie has beelrhave lots of snow».by January 15, visiting his home in ‘Little Sandsl We were sorry to hear of the for a week or more Edwin is em- 3 passing in New York of Mrs,‘ P10yed all Gaget0Wfl-.N-B- , Snellen who was formerly Anna Residents‘ here send C0hg1‘aI.u1-_Stewart of Caledonia. Her nephew 8ti011S t0 M11 and MT5« 13111Y',resides in Little Sands. To those Bears, Belle River, who were Ye-,who mourn her passing kind cently married. Best wishes gofsympathy is extended. Mrs. Sne- out to you both for many years of happiness from many Little latives in Little Sands in the 1 $100.00 in prizes. By KEN METHERAL Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON (CP)- — Quietly, al- most apologetically, Britain’s na- tional coal board is winding up its stalemated program to recruit Hungarian refugees for the coun- try's collieries. It is just a year since the board set up training schools in the coal- fields of Durham, Yorkshire, Lan- arkshire and Wales for 3,000 Hun- garian miners recruited in late 1956 from refugee camps in A'us- tria following the ill-fated upris- ing against Hungary‘s Commu- nist rulers. With some 9,000 vacancies in the country’s 850 nationalized pits, the board envisaged the plan not only as a humanitarian gesture but a a means of overcoming a long- anding manpower shortage. The board hoped eventually to re- cruit 5,000 Hungarians. OPPOSED BY MINERS But the program failed to take into account the opposition of British miners to employment of She returned to her duties at the ling hauled Westward to Charlotte-I llen often visited friends and re-' foreign labor. Miners, who only a few weeks before had made generous donations to funds in ; aid of the refugees, unexpectedly voted to keep the Hungarians out of the pits. And they‘ have remained ada- mant in their decisions to main- tain the boycott despite pleas from government officials and their own leaders. Of the 3,000 Hungarians who completed English-language and mining-technique courses at the coal board schools, ‘fewer than 600 have been accepted in the pits. The board hopes that the 700,000 British miners will be per- suaded to accept another 300. The remainder have been advised to look for jobs in other industries. OBJECTED ONCE BEFORE Among the pits -which rejected the -Hungarians was the Bullcroft Colliery, which employs 1,600 miners. The Bullcroft miners brought abthut the downfall of a similar plan to recruit 1,100 Ital- ian miners in 1952. - They went on strike in protest against working with‘31 Italians and other pits joined in support. The board finally dropped the plan and«the Italians, recruited at a cost of £200,000, were either Refugees For Mines Fails repatriated or sent to Belgian mines. The Hungarian been more costly. The coal board is estimated to have spent about £1,500,000 in recruiting and train- ing the Hungarians. GEORGETOWN Mr. and Mrs. Gerald MacDon- ald of Cardigan were visitors to Georgetown on Tuesday, Janu- ary 14th. Mn. Pieter Van Shuppeii and sons Jockem and Willem of Sum- merville, were business visitors to Georgetown on January 14th. Sgt. and Mrs. John King and family of Summerside, where Sgt. King is stationed as a mem- ber of the R.C.A.F., motored to Georgetown, where they were mother, Mrs. Edna King. . Rev. Father Lawrence Landri- gan and Rev. Father Francis Bolger of Charlottetown were visitors to Georgetown on Tuesday 14th. Mr. Lionel King, who has been employed for the past several boycott has ‘- weekend guests of Sgt. King’s- Mr. and Mrs. Norman Thomp- son had as their recent guests, !Mrs. Thompson‘s mother, Mrs. William S. Stevenson and Mrs. ;Stevenson’s father, Mr. John Mac- ‘ Dowell of Fredericton, P.E.l. Miss Jean Jay of Charlottetown was the recent guest of her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. John Batchilder. _ Mrs. W.J. Fitzgerald was a visitor to Charlottetown early in the week. L.A.C. Billy Murphy and L.A. C. Al Pearson were recent gue- sts of Mr. Murphy's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Williz.::i Murphy Sr. Both Aircraftsmen, .who are sta- tioned at Chatham, N.B., are in this Province attending the nu- al Physical Fitness H$(€y School. Mr. and Ms. James Caldwell and son Jimmy of Chatham, N.B., where Mr. Caldwell is stationed with the R.C.A.F., are guests of Mrs. Caldwell’s parens, Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Landry. Friends of Mr. John L. Mac- Donald are sorry to hear that illness has necessitated his enter- ing the Prince Edward Island Hospital and all wish him an ear- ly return to normal health. Mrs. Albert Lavers of Charlotte- town was a recent guest of her MacDonald. £5 IMPERIAL‘ 50 parents, Mr. and Mrs. John L. - _ _ -_H--m _-_......