.., .-..:....-. . ' Canadian Navy. Page 6 The Guardian ThUrsday,Nov.6,1958 Tanks May Take Shot At The Moon Early Tomorrow By VERN HA"‘HLAND WASHINGTON (APl—The US. Air Force may take its third pot- sth at the moon early Friday. Like its two predecessors, the new lunar probe is designed to: 1. Measure variations in radia- tion along a Zita-day journey to- ward the moon. _ 2. Provide data on the intensity and exteL‘ of magnetic fields of the earth and the moon. 3. Report the number of im- pacts with meteorites. 4. Scan the far side of the moon with a television type device and relay to earth impressions that would be converted into crude photographs. The 25 pounds of instruments GEORGETOWN Miss Sally Johnson, recently of the Nursing Staff of the Kings County Memorial Hospital in Montague, left several days ago for Halifax, NS. and from there she will go to Saskatoon. Sask., where she will be employed In her profession. . Barbara MacCon-nezll. baby dIau- ghter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles MacConInell, is a patient in the Montague Hospital, where she is receiving treatment for burns suffered on Saturday, Nov. 1st. Mr. John K. Smith of the RC. A.F.. who is stationed at Green- wood. N.S., is visiting Mrs. Smith. who has been spending some time with her pmms.‘Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Stewart. Miss Joan Batc‘hilder. student at Notre Dame Academy. spent the past weekend as the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Law- rence S. Batchilder. With Mi s I Ba‘tchildcr, as her guest was Miss Betty Sparrow of Newfotmd- land, who is attending Notrc Dame Academy. Mr. and Mrs. William MacDon- ald, Mr. Allan MacPhee, Mrs. William MacLeod, Mrs. L e s l i e Dougherty and family. and Mas- ter Carl MacLeod, motored to Halifax, N.S.,'durlng the past weekend. , Mr. and Mrs. Harry MacCon- neIl and family. of Charlottetown, motored to Georgetown on Sun- day, where they visited relativ- es and frienck. Mr. Joseph “Sonny,” Johnson, accompanied by Miss Barbara McQuillan and Mrs. Wilfred McQuillan motored to Cornwallis, N.s.. recently where they visited Mr. Wilfred McQullla-n Jr., who is stationed at Cornwallis in the Mr. and Mrs. William White and Miss Phyllis White and Bor- den, motored to Georgetown and were weekend guests of Mrs. White's brother, Mr. J. F. Joini- son. Mr. Roger Solomon home recently from a trip to 0t? tawa and Hull. Mr. Clair Currie, Canadian National Railway Trainman, re- cently spent seva days at his home in . Mr. and Mrs. Claude Henry d Vernon River, were recent vis~ tors to Georgetown. Lieut. Bernard Walsh of the Royal Canadian Navy, was a re- cent guest of his parents, Mr. and Mm. Earl Walsh. Mr. H. R. Carruthers, Provin- cial Auditor, was a business vis- itor to Georgetown on Monday, Nov. 3rd. Hallowe'en night passed quiet- ly in Georgean and very little damage we, reported. The children and pre-school age chil- dren were treated to a party, which was held in the Town Hall, where treats were given to all, and the children played games and held contests. The costumes were of a high order and repre- sented about every known char- acter; past and present, real and fictional and supervised by the School Teachers and Trustees. The Georgetown District Boy Scout Apple Day, held on Satur- day, Nov. lst., was as usual very successful. The proceeds are administered by the Provincial Council of the Boy Scouts Assoc- iation. Local officials are grate- ful for the generosity of the sup- porters of scouting and for the efforts of leaders, committeemen, Scout Master. Scouts and C u b 5 whose hard work made the day so successful. On Thuesday. Nov. 4th.. Mrs. J. W. Layers, Mrs. R. S.' Glidden, Miss Sheila DcLory. Mr. and Mrs. Chester Walker and ’Mr. N. W. Hansen motored to the City. Miss Kay Publicover of Bos- ton, Mass, paid a short visit to her parents. Mr. and Mrs. James Publicover early in the week. Mrs. Alec MacKinnon was a recent visitor to Pictou, N. S. where she was the guest of her bI‘Ci'lh'el‘. Mr. John Donovan and Mrs. Donovan. Mr. Arthur Yorston of Pisquid, spent several days in George- town last week, at the home of Mr. and Mr. James Publioover. Mr. and Mrs. John Donovan motored from Piotou, N.S. on Saturday and were weekend vie itors of Mr. Donovan’s mother, Mrs. Maurice Donovan and his sister, Mrs. Alec MacKinnon and Mr. MacKinnon. Mr. Raymond DesRoche lett on Friday on return to Halifax, N.S. after spending several days in Georgetown. at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Temple Gotell. Friends of Mr. Russell White are sorry to hear that he is a patient in the Veteran‘s Wing of the Prince Edward Island Hos- pital. All wish him an early re- turn to good health. Mr. and Mrs. Chester Walker, motored to Charlottetown on‘Fri- day. October 315i. where they vis- ited Mr. and Mrs. Howard Wal- her. Mr. Clifford Chappell and dau- ghter Ann of York, were recent guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Norman B. Thompson. M i s 5 Carol Walker. student nurse of the Prince Edward II- aboard the “w space traveller will be thoroughly sterilized 24 hours before blasto-i’f against the remote prospect that it might hit the moon. Scientists have agreed to make every effort t4 avoid lu- nar contamination until after earthmcp have had a chance to explore the moon’s surface. The launching site once more is Cape Canaveral, Fla. The early morning hours of Fri- day would be the first period in this month suitable for a moon rocket launch. If there is no fir- ing than, similar favorable per- iods occur in the early morning hours of Saturday and Sunday. After Nov. 9 it would be futile to fire at the moon until Dec. 4. land Hospital, in Charlottetown. was a recent guest of her par- ents. Mr. and Mrs. Spungean Walker. A.C. IN MEMORIAM HENRY RICHARD WOOD 'I‘he comm-unity of Vernon River was saddened to hear of the death‘of one of its oldest and most highly respected citi- zens, Henry Richard Wood. at his home on Tuesday, October 14, 1958. ' Although in failing health for the past year, he was able to be around until a few days previous to his death. The late Mr. Wood was a life-long resident of Ver- non River and was in his eighty- eig‘lrth year. A lover of animals and a good horseman Mir. Wood in his earlier life displayed a fine stable of prize winning horses. Despite his years he enjoyed the numerous visits of his farm ily and hosts of friends who were frequent visitors to chat with one who always made them welcome. He leaves to mourn his pass- ing his wife. the tormer Deborah Lee, who will sadly miss the companionship of her life part- ner. Also eight children: Clar- ence, Charlottetown; Willard, Rockland. ,Mass; Everett, Bor- den; Harold. Charlottetown; Milton, Alexandra; Jennie (Mrs. Arthur Richards), Vernon River; Pansy (Mrs. Parker Wood), Charlottetown; Doris (Mrs. Gil- bert Jenkins) Mt. Albion. Also 23 grandchildren and 5 great-grand children. His funeral service which was held at the home of his daughter Mrs. Arthur Richards, on Fri- day afternoon October 17th was largely attended. The service was conducted by his pastor Rev. T. R. Goudge, assisted by Rev. A. S. Weir and Rev. N. Green. The hymns sung were: “In The Sweet Bye and Bye”, and-“When The Roll Is Called Up Yonder". "The Last Mile Of The Way". was beautifully ren- dered by Walter Burdett, cousin of the deceased. 'Ilhe pail bearers were Ernest MacMrlllan. Arthur Wright, Frank Lea, Gavin Reid, Irving Tweedy and Francis Drake. Flower bearers were grandsons of the deceased: Preston Rich- ards, Hamid Richards, Collins Wood, Kimble Wood. Milton Jen- kins and Chrys Jenkins. Burial took place in Pownal cemetery. The floral tributes were many and beautiful. Gone to heaven swaet repose How we miss him no one knows. Gone to meet loved ones gone be- fore Waiting on that other shore. Pillow -—Wife and family. Wreath — Grandchildren Horse-shoe Wreath —- Great- grandson Glen Robbins. Spray — Mary and Doris. Spnay — Collins and Margaret Pillow — Wendell and Annie. Spray — Frank and Maude. Spray — Rita. Spray Sadie and Percy Wood. Spray -— Staff Carvell Bros. Spray — Myra. Willard, Pres ton, Lona. Spray — Doris and Bill Terrio. Spray — Nettie and family. Spray Lily, Claude. Chris, Gladys, Tom. Spray — Doris and Fred. Spray — Hazelbrook Church, Womens ltllssionary. Spray — Millview United Church. Wreath — Mr. and Mrs. John A. —MacDonald and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Scale. Wreath —- Borden station yard and pier crew of the C.N.R. Wreath —- Management and staff of Goodspeeds of P.E.I. Basket of flowers — Elizabeth and Milton. Basket of flowers — Mrs. Lin- coln Wood and Ruth. Cut flowers —— Mrs. Wood. CARD 0F THANKS The family of the late Henry Richard Wood wish to take this opportunity to thank their re- latives, friends and neighbours for their many acts of kindness during the loss of husband and father: also those who sent flow- ers. cards and letters of sympa- thy. A special thank you to all. Calvin SOLDIER DEMOTED NICOSIA, Cyprus (Reutersl—A 22-year-old British army corporal was sentenced Wednesday to nine months” detention and reduced to private by a court martial here for distributing leaflets urging violence against Greek Cypriots. Cpl. Ford said he wrote the leaf- lets in reply to those issued periodically by EOKA terrorists. In his leaflet he said “bringing offenders to court is no good any more.” adding that British troops I or 5, when once again the .noon and earth are in the preferred position with regard other. The forthcoming shot is the last of three assigned to the air force in connection with the interna- tional Ceophysical Year pro-gram The first lunar probe failed Aug. 17, the rocket exploding 77 seconds after launching. The second attempt at 3:42 a.m. EST Oct. ll—Igivven the code name Pioneer—was a success in its own fashion, but the flight travelled only about a third of the Pioneer justified itself by send- ing back, over its radio voice. valuable data still being analyzed. Vancouver Boot Makers Plan Protest VANCOUVER (CP) -The Van- couver Labor Council learned Tuesday that 100 bootworkers here will be laid off in the next two weeks, while a firm in St. The, Que, makes boots for city police and firemen. A letter from Donald MacDon- ald, secretary-treasurer of the Canadian Labor Congress who in- vestigated the Quebec firm, said women workers at the plant— which is non-union—unake be- tween 25 and 46 cents an hour 67 cents an hour. The J. Leckie Company here announced it will lay off workers because there is not enough work to keep them employed. The firm made the boots for 20 years unti‘ last May, when city counc' awarded a $20,769 contract fc: 1,701 pairs of boots to the firm of A G. euB.o. t It tTiJfoSe of G. A. Bottled; of St. Tite. The labor council voted to send a copy of Mr. MacDonald’s letter to city council to protest award- ing of the contract to a Quebec- finm. Canadian Milk Goes To Hungry Kiddies Overseas OTTAWA (OP) Canadian milk, donated by the federal gov- ermnent and shipped by the pui- tarian Service Committee has gone to help hungry youngsters in Hong Kong, Korea. Greece and India. The non - denominational USC said Wednesday it has shipped 200,000 pounds of powdered milk to the needy areas, USC officials said one pound of the milk pow- der will provide one child with a glass of each day for 30- days. ' , In Korea, the milk powder is mixed with Canadian barley and distributed as hot, nourishing gruelfifor children during the hun- gry Winter months. In India, the children‘ in isolated villages often eat it dry. TEN MILE HOUSE Following is the report for Oc- tober: ‘ Grade VIII. 1. Danny O’Connell, 2. John McQuaid, 3. Rita O’Con- nell. ‘ Grade VI. 1. John McInnis, 2. Blanche Walsh, 3. Vivian Walsh. Grade V. 1. Gary Court, 2. Pan-i line Dougan, 3. Elmer Walsh and Maurice McQuaid, (equal). Grade 1M. 1. Freddie Mullen, 2. Bobby McInnis, 3. Shirley And- rew, and Gerald M-cInnis (equal). Grade II. 1. Louis Dougan, 2. Gerard Fitzpatrick, 3. Walter Mullen. Grade I. 1. Brian Mullen, 2. Barbara McInnis, 3. Gerard C’- Connell. Teacher. Thelma Fitzpatrick._ Have a Wall Problem? Solve It With lovely m TIIE ORIGINAL STYIOII WALL TILE This beautiful kitchen cnnbe yours. Miraplas cemes in 27 fas- cinating colors, all the way thru to the back. Easily installed. Cleans like chino. 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