THE Charlottetown “Liftle| above are five members of the |ning, corresponding secretary; held its annualjnew executive. Seated: Mary lit Theatre Guild Holds Annual Meeting, ee ee nat tot. manager, Elmer Pow- er: ex-officio, niicierie” Rana- han. The chairmen of the various, committees and organization of Oe Gora Palen 2 eee Teck Mackin. maieey Bely. Balls historian, Allie Machecd; membership, Agere: costumes, We ih ‘lh B i 3 Driveté F ine Fined In Police Court e had | been cancelled for a year. aan ea es dle ; Z iis 4 i q Hoe i iH F E : f F Rag 8° 4 ft 3 LOCAL BRIEFS oS n pol agg arriage of her daughter Cath- ezine to Alfred J. Hennessey, on Saiurday at St. Patrick’s Chureh. The n cod was cele- brated Rev. W. J. Enright, C.Ss.R. Mrs. Smith was accompanied to Charlottetown by her daughi Betty of Cal; . who was a@ bridesmaid for her sister. _ stated last evening that the morning fire yesterday at and Stavert Foundry. Elm Avenue may have been caused either from defective ih f E i f THE : f R E i tae i i: | al ! ft i laden Dead Sea, one world’s toughest waters for swimmers. Jack Griffin, from the United States Embassy in Amman, and Bill Johnson, from coast to the east. The Jordanian mavy supervised the crossing. Margaret -|P.E.I. Historical Collings, The Prince Edward Island His- torical Society yesterday opened its exhibition and display of items which are links with the early days of the province and the lives of its pioneers. More than a thousand items are 'Brehaut, vision of Mrs. William | hee teen eee ee sum. Opens Display In YMCA president; and Eric MacGregor, Society mer and its expected will prove of interest to both residents and visitors to the province Mrs. Brehaut said the exhibit pointed up the need for a per- a home for the historical items. She also said that the so- i would welcome further tribute them to the society's col- lection. : persons professional field. From such even pointed questions usually evoked “vague, neutral and evasive generalizations.” BUILT FROM WITHIN “A genuine and lasting pres- what we are doing, it must also embrace the values for which we stand.” “We have sotto operate on our as to recapture lost values, revitalize the inactive ones, and try to change or mod- of the practical pur- immediate values held society’’. Bowers declared also Ml E effort was used up influence a ‘‘power not enough thought grass-roots interpre- he.termed “‘a per- pemmaiig devolving on member of the 2 g B ! ze E é fr BEE individual : , | lush verdant farms, our 0 but the primary effort should be — towards quality of ser- rooted in service, and on the interpretation of service, are a fraud perpetrated on the com- munity,”’ he said. At the conference opening ses- sion held yesterday morning, Father Bowers spoke on what -| constitutes social work. “We know all too well some of the consequences of it, in child welfare, in public assistance and in delinquency control. Every day we deal with problems that re- sult from it, but the nature of the. individual.” The speaker said that while the problem of the individual cannot be ignored, it cannot be taken out of context of the social si- tuation in which the individual lives and of which he‘is a part. NO FOOL’S PARADISE “He is part of society end s0- elety begins with the family,” Fa- ther Bowers said. “The life of society is as good and as healthy as the family life that exists with- in it. We can go around in a fool's paradise; we.can look at all our material prosperity, our ing mines, our never atilied fac- tories, our seaways and our higa- ways and close our eyes and our ears to all the evidence that, in many ways, our society is a sick society, and i seems to be get- ting sicker, because so many of the factors in it, economic, soc- jal, psychological, are undermin- ing and weakening the founda- tion—the family.” A good healthy change in social work of the future was by Father Bowers. He said this change involved a going back to social work’s original emphasis on the family and the crucial roles that exist within it. “We have to stand and make clear that we so stand, for so- cial values and not fiddle on in- dividual strings while the home burns,” he said. “We can use alf that we have learned, ‘we must use all that ye have learned from the years when we were engrossed with the individual, but we must put it into social context and primarily that is the family context,” said | Father Bowers, LARGE ATTENDANCE Some 175 have registered for the conference. While a large proportion of these are those directly engaged in social work a large number of the delegates are those interested in social work, as members of agency boards, and other organizations such as retarded children’s asso- group leaders are among the most rominent to be found in | the of social work across Can- ada. They are David Weiss, tive director, Baron, de Hirsch Institute, Montreal; Fred Mac- Kinnon, Deputy Minister of Pub- lie Welfare, Halifax; Miss Jean Dorgan, Consultant in Social Work, Mental Health Division, De- partment of National Health and Welfare, Ottawa; Outhbert Gil- ford, McGill School of Social Work, Montreal; Miss Lillian Henderson, information. officer, Ontario Welfare Council, To- Tonto; Miss Florence Schill, di- rector of public relations, Chil- dren's Aid Society, Metropolitan Toronto. e SWEDISH POWER | Sweden's first industrial atomic energy unit, to produce both heat and electricity, will be es FOR RENT CITY NEWS PAGE * wt TELEPHONE 8506 — ASK FOR NEWS DESK A special meeting of The Prince Edward Island Temper- ance Federation was held in the National Film Board screening room, Dominion Building, Char- lottetown yesterday afternoon to }discuss methods of providing more alcohol educational mater- ial for the youth of the province, The president, Arnold Hender- son of Bedeque was in the chair. The results of a survey of the material presently available in the classroom was presented by the program co-ordinator follow- ing which it was decided to pre- pare a booklet for each of the grades seven to twelve. It is planned to have these ssiibmitted to the department of: education in September for approval. Hon. F.A. Large, Q.C., chair- man of the education commit- P.E.I. Temperance Federation Plans Educational Projects lothers would apply, through the Guardian, Charlotictown, Wed, June 24, 1980 5 ‘Employee Groups Are Registering _ ioe onl tt tor i oe shoei te An information booklet will b essay interest that his committee had decided to conduct a combined oratorical-essay contest this year in each of the three counties. Winners in each county will be brought into Charlottetown for the finals. mer School of Alcohol and Nar- Hill College, Halifax from Aug. cotics Studies to be held in Pine 10th to 15th inclusive. This school is sponsored by the tem- perance division of the Nova Scotia teachers, clergymen and federation, for a place on this course. A film, “Liquid Lore” was viewed by the representatives present. TO STUDY With a doctorate in education- al as his immediate objective, Rev. Owen Sharkey, of St. Dunstan's University, will register for a three-year course at New York’s Columbia Univer- sity next week. Father Sharkey who taught at SDU for a period of six years spent the past five years as a member of the Catho- lic regional marriage tribunal lécated in Halifax where he also served as a part-time naval chaplain. On completion of his studies at the big American uni- versity, Father Sharkey will join SDU’s faculty of education. Dentist Honored At Convention A Charlottetown dentist, ducted as Fellows of the Inter- national College of Dentistry at Halifax, N.S., on Saturday. The ceremony followed the annual meeting of the Canadian Dental Association’s board of governors. were honored were: Dr. Dewis, Halifax, past president of of the Canadian branch of the International College of Dentistry, Dr. J. P. Whyte, conducted the ceremony. YORK NOTES Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Vessy. and little son were visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. EI- mer Brown in York, recently. Miss Olga ‘Proud an employee of Simpson Sear’s in Charlotte- town, is spending her holidays with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Proud, York. Mr. and Mrs. Keith Brown and daughter Aletha, were visitors to Charlottetown last week. Mrs. Harry Muttart of Marsh- field and her two grandchildren, Donnie and Wendy Gillespie of Seven Islands, Quebec, were vis- itors to York last week. Mrs. Irving MacDonald has re- turned to her home in York,. af- ter being a patient in the Prince Edward Jsland Hospital. floor sanders and edgers also “FABULON” the famous eres ALLEY” finish completed in 1962, ~ G. M. | Holland Cove Again Chosen For the second time in as many years Holland Cove has been selected as the site of a Mari- time YMCA leadership develop- ment course. B is one of three such courses which is sponsored by the YMCA across Canada and begun about six years ago in Ontario. tral location and ideal surround- ings was chosen last year and again this summer for the east- ern centre. Camp dates are from Aug. 16-22. Attending the course are young adults above the age of 18. After this period of a week's instruc- tion and fellowship, they return to their local communitics to give leadership in Y.M.C.A.'s there. Three local Y's men wiil again be among the camp menéors. They are John Evans, _ gencral secretary of the Charfottetown YMCA, George Anderson and Al- ton Doliver. HISTORIC CHURCH Four pillars in Edinburgh's St. Giles Cathedral are said to be meeting of the Nova Scotia sum-| To Iwo Girl Guides So popular were these courses the Ontario site could not accom- modate the large number seek-/| ing admission apd.westein and eastern centres were established. Holland Cove because of its cen- Gold Cords The Gold Cord the highest | award a Girl Guide can earn, was presented last weit to ewe) Charlottetown Guides at the clos | Skipper, Mrs. Donald Macmillan. Also attending ‘the ceremony | were Mrs. Harry Cudmore, pro. | Reid, and Mrs. G. Avard, deputy | vincial commissioner ; Mrs. W. W.| provinci K Arsenault, division commissioner; Mrs. L. Prowse, chairman of the! presentation, by her Sea vailian,| sen‘atives of the Sea Rangers, | Guides, and Brownies. The presentations last evening | were mate Oe ree eee and Mrs. W. Reid. The two girls were presented ty" Ghar | Captain Mrs, Jack Rawek. Attending the ee were Canon and Mrs. J. R. Davies, Mrs. T. H. B. Somers, | Mrs. L. Prowse, Mrs. H. B. Arm-| strong, Miss I. Arsenault and | Mrs. John Harris, district com- missioner. To these three girls who re- ceived their Gold Cords, it has) part of the original Norman building erected in 1120. Dr. B. J. O'Meara, was one of three ) Maritime destists who were in-! | The other two dentists who} the C.D.A.; and Dr. Leonard G. || Israel of Sydney. The president |; NEWSON listed below. hall of each — WEDNESDAY JUNE 24 Gaspereaux School Sturgeon School Cambridge Hall Little Pond School St. Eleanors Hall MONDAY, JUNE 29th 8:00 P.M. / Kensington High School Electrical Contractors @ Wiring © Fixtures . @ Appliances | Sales and Service fe c Free Estimates |} 161 Queen St. . Dial 8325 HOSPITAL INSURANCE DISCUSSIONS =—sf Munhors ond lult 6 the Montini’ Sedan i Commission of P.E.I. will attend the meetings | The forthcoming Province Insurance Plan will be discussed and questions regarding operation of |; the plan will be answered. All adults are urged to attend these meetings, which will be held in the |) EAST THURSDAY, JUNE 25— Lower Montague Hall Georgetown Town Hall ; WEST THURSDAY, JUNE 25th 8:00 P.M. meant months of planning and working. A great number of ELECTRIC | ee provincial * commissioner. Look-!Prince Edward Island at Presented badges have been earned, ser- vice challenges have been met, and the Girl Guide motto, “Be Prepared” has been well and SIGN PAINTING Gold Cord committee, and repre-| truly tested. Plastic Signs A farewell presentation was Trucks Lettered — Lettering made to Lieutenant Virginia Mc- BENOIT SIGNS See ee ee oe 204 Richmond St. Dial 3817 Miss McKenna will be leaving Vor See ae AT ELDON HALL, From 7 to 9 p.m. kkk kk KK 4 THE MOST EXCITING CAST BOLDEST STORY EVER FILMED! * *F +P For First, Second and Third inoculations z* Dae in ‘ . Avo BURT LANCASTER’ “a +) SEPARATE THBLES. * 42 thas Prone bn 108 Ore as as Pata a * wth WENDY HILLER SHOWS $:30-7-9 +e - * ¥ ha ee CEE STOMMY He TODAY and THUR. <i hi i i, Se, a ADULTS * xx xx«t © KM * | BOX OFFICE x OPENS AT 7:30 P.M. SHOW AT DUSK ad tndtmedémeacntan ae co eee + i | FINAL TONIGHT— + AVA . . .SHIPWRECKED WITH TWO MEN ON ta TROPICAL ISLE! + NORTH RIVER * AVA GARDNER — STEWART GRANGER . ee * * ¥ ee * DAVID NIVEN in * “THE LITTLE HUT” 4 COMING THURSDAY and FRIDAY .