¥ —pete—again—this—year.— xcuie « As Soloist For-Nearly-50-Yrs. -—compete—in__the pr —Mmaich Wednestay THREE OF the contestants in ‘he ‘Queen of the Furrows”’ contest at the Prince County plowing “match n. 9’ Leary Tuesday are ieft to right) Doris MacDouze'!, dauchter of Mr and Mrs Allison MacDou- ga sponsoeren Sy O'Leary Farmers Co-op; Lorraine Mac- Williams, daughier of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon MacWilliams, sposasored by O'Leary liank am Nova Scoiia, and Joan Smallmafi, dauchter. of Mr and Mrs. Garfield Gorrill sponsored by Knutsford WI Three other contesiants are Lillian Locke, dauguter of Mr and Mrs. Lorna Yoo, sponsor- ed by Haliburton Womens In- stitute; Barbara Harris. dav ghter of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Harris, spjonsored by the O'Leary Lucky Dolar Store. and Gayle Gam»le, daugbter of Mr. and Mrs. Gerzl| Gamble O'Leary, sponsored by Union- vale WI. Provincial Plowing Title At Stake On Wednesday O'LEARY The eighth annu- al Prince County Plowing Match will be held Tuesday at West Cape followed on Wednesday by the provincial championship match Roth events are on the farm of Milford Ellis about eight miles west of O'Leary on the paved highway Winners of the three matches are eligible for provincial championship Wednesday The Prince County- match will | be at 2 ‘n'clock Tuesday and’ there are 11. other plowing class- es all sponsored. by firms .and individials’ in Prince County. Arthur Hudson of Cascumpec has won the Prince County title en four occasions and will com- county the on Other attractions tractor rodeo, a team pulling contest and, for the first time, a ‘‘queen of the furrows” will be selecied and crowned” Tues called the golden voice —of day evening during a variety program in the O'Leary Region- al High School auditorium. The provincia) match will-be officially opened Wednesday at 1.30 by the minister of agricul- ture, Hon. Andrew McRae. ANNUAL BANQUET The annual banquet and pres entation of prizes will take place Wednesday night The various plowing match committees are working hard te make this year's events bigger and better than ever. The top three plowmen from each county will be eligible to ovincial title Carl Wiltis, Sherwood, must be tional competition. He was third “ip the world match at Armoy; Northern Ireland, several years ago and was second in the Can- adian championship match at Brudenel) last year Other Queens County compet- itors qualified are Sterling Moore, Sherwood, and Art Jones Pownal, who finished behind Mr. Willis in that order in the Queens County match this year. Mr. Moore also has experience in Canadian competition. Edwin Mills, Bay Fortune, heads the Kings County repre- sentation. This experienced | four) plowman has competed f times in Canadian com,etition and could have gone this -year, but was obliged to turn down ‘the opportunity because of work at home? ; William MacInnis, St. Peters, was runner up in the Kings County match on Thursday and Ray Burke, Strathcona, was third; Mr. MacInnis also . has had experience in Canadian plo wing competition. These six plowmen will be tn the Island tithe match on Wed- nesday at West Cape, along with the three top men in the Prince County match on -Tuesday. Lucy Blanchard Was Noted Lucy Blanchard, a_ natural mezzo soprano who was. often ( St: Dunstan's Basilica, died Wed- nesday at the Charlottetown Hospital. She had-sung in the great church for nearly half a cen- tury. She had started public singing when only 10 years old and until her retirement had been guest soloist at almost 90 per cent of the weddings held from the days when it was known as the Cathedral. The late Miss Blanchard was widely heard in fields of enter- ‘tainment as well and was known in practically every hall in the province as she took singing parts in countless concerts from pne-end=nf=the—istand—te=-the: other. eee “fegarded as the strongest -com-=— A> member-w-a—noted-rmsical petitor because of his interna- family, she was a daughter of ATTENDED NOTRE the late Kings County Judge Stnilaus—Blanchard and Mrs. Blanchard. Judge. Blanchard Kirk Of St. James Calls A. McCuaig Rev. Malcolm _ The Kirk of St lottetown,. has called Malcolm Adams -McCuaig as a successor to the late Dr. T. H. B. Somers. Mr-—-MeCuaig—is—a—native—of Montreal, and a son of two Presbyterian Churches in that vicinity: MacVicar Memorial in Outremont, and St. Andrews in! bt. Lambert ’ Educated in the Montreal public schools, he later won a Bachelor's Degree in Arts from Sir George Williams University ('58) and a bachelor of Divinity Degree from Presbyterian Col- lege, Montreal (’61). ___During_ his. student years Mr. James, Char-, | | | + | i McCuaig served the church on| 283 student fields in Lake Ainslie, Cape Breton Island, (‘56 and '58) and in the city of Van- touver ('57). During his three} years in theology he was assist-| ant to he minister at Maisson- 4 neuve Presbyterian Church in the city of Montreal Upon graduation Mr McCuatg was appointed by the. general Board of Missions to begin a Presbyterian Congregation in the northern mining town of Thomp- son, Man. Three years later he war called to the _ pastoral charge of Knox Church Carberry, | child, a daughter Donna, aged ~~ and Zion Church Wellwood, both in Manitoba. In June of 1962 Mr. McCuaig REV. M. A. McCUATIG |Lang, a native of St. Lambert, and a graduate of McGill Univer- | sity elor of They have one Arts ‘two pvears . fhe Induction service will be held on Sept. 30th in the Kirk was married to Brenda Jane of St. James at 8 p.m. P.E.I. Liberal Convention Postponed Un ‘The Liberal party provifcial ion will probably not be held it collided on Howard Street!» til November convention scheduled this month until late in. November to choose a leader of the party here has been ably until late November. President of the P.E.I. Liber- al ‘Association, W. R. Jenkins, said it was felt the—impertant- Mr. Matheson, former premier by Clifford David Arsenault of | , prob- the provincial Legislature, resig- P the,car received an estimated $150 ned the latier post during 1965 Session and Dr. M. Bonne}], former minister L. to succeed A. W. Matheson Opposition t be allowed to come Lasser tin r= be held to determine the will of FUSES TODAY. ing involved in As a result, he The leadership convention will a with the serious campaign- the rank and file members of a federal election. the party as to the man who will! said, he convent- jhead if in the years ahead. was organist at the Cathedral for many years and was follow- ed-—in-the-—post = by—his--daughter Ethel, Mrs. Byron Brown When she retired a younger sister, Bessie, Mrs. Joseph Dou- gan, took over and continues to play. Occasionally. she is reliev- ed by- her brother Albert Blan- chard. Together the family has supplied music for the church for the past 80 years. Every organist member of the family served at one time or another as accompanist there-—-for the singing of Lucy whose long-held notes filled the vast church. Miss Blanchard had also been the soloist of note in the wide- ly known Corpus Christi Choir which was organized within the cchureh—-by th “yore PONT WH ThA — AUF ‘fathe?_as-choir_direc DAME Lucy Blanchard was born ‘in Charlottetown—and_as_a_girl at- tended Notre Dame ~ Academy where she got her initiation into the musical field. Although she had no formal training her na- |tural ‘mezzo soprano voice made her. famous in her native land Surviving are two brothers, Cornelius and Albert, and five sisters: Ethel, Mrs. Brown; ‘Jean, Mrs. Jack McAleer, who Lbas also played the organ at the | Basilica; Bessie, Mrs. Joseph ; Dougan; Mary and Nettie --All She was predeceased her father and mother, two brothers, Lou- is and Jack, and one sister, Ida The funeral will be held this morning with Solema High Mass at 8.45 at St. Dunstan's Basilica. Interment will be in the family plot in the Catholic cemetery. Wilmot Man : Is Fined $125 SUMMERSIDE ~ Arnold Kig- gins of Wilmot was fined $125 ,and costs or 15 days on an im- {paired driving -charge—vesterday iftown police court Magistrate R. S. Hinton, QC, jfined a Summerside man $20 with the Degree of Bach- and costs or 10 days on a drun- | «ve kenness charge ° Cars Collide In Summetside | SUMMERSIDE A 1965 model car driven by Enc John Bliss of RCAF Station Sum- merside receivéd an estimated $300 damage Thursday when East with a 1964 model driven Summerside The Arsenault | damage. ‘ health, was named bv his A WORD OF WARNING! matter of naming a new leader House colleagues to head the Don’t over fuse. Always use the proper size fuse. - Don’t In- vite disaster .., CHECK YOUR | ELECTRIC SERVICE LEAGUE OF P.EL- | inated | standards of Place des Arts.” of them reside in Charlottetown. |/7 Said Credit To°Charlottetown By JOLA ZIELINSKI MONTREAL ‘Special The audience was _ almost ifke an Island audience so warm and receptive” said Johnny Wayne im speeking of the sell-out audience at. Place des Arts. on opening night of Wayne and Shuster in Montreal. | “Five minutes on stage con- *vinced us we were in the pre- sence of friends” Montrea! received Wayne and Shuster with warmth and ad- miration, as shown by the re- views of. the show. These critics are the toughest in Canada, ac- knowledged Johnny and went further to gay, “I feel they sum- medup what-the-rest of Canada, will have to say in what I call rave reviews NOT “SMALL TOWN” Johnny feels that the show is good public relations and publi- | city for the Islahd. Since it orig-| in Charlottetown, the cast felt concern a show coming out of Charlottetown would be treated as ‘‘small town’, but “after the performance the general opinion appeared to be that it had lived up to the high “The Island should be very proud; no one could possibly have called the show a small town performance’. Johnny thinks that the majority of peo- ple were extremely surprisd, for they didn't expect. anything |: quite so big “and good-looking. So “...whai is good in Charlotte- town is goo? in Montreal’’ tics remarked that the show was wonderfully put together, expen- sively costumed and mounted. | Some script changes have been made but the show is ba- isically the same as seen on the Island. The orchestra was a new" addition. The typical Island hu- |mor in the show was well ac-| |cepted and the song “Charlotte. | town"’ was a big hit with the au- dience. } A few Montreal reporters | thought the show could have had a more French-Canadian theme. The general feeling among the cast was that the show was great as it stood and did not need to be adapted especially | for French-Canadian audiences. | Rather than being annoyed at Wayne and Shuster's subtle digs at the disunited state of Quebec | | August Ferry ' Traffic Figures | Are Released A large »-increase -in., traffic} on the Borden-Cape ‘Tormen- | tine ferries for August, 1965,/ compared te the same period! \in the previous year has been reported by government trans portation officials The service carried 189.950 | vehicle passengers and 5,575 rail passengers last month,. an increase of 13, 589 vehicle pas-| eengers and 1,118 rail passen- gers over August of last vear. Last month the service carried 57,302 vehicles, an increase of 5,481 over August “In Memory of Mrs. Albert Paul who departed this life Sept. 11, 1964 Thoughts today, memories forever. The Family. PRAY Sa 7 a AOOOAMAQNS ‘$ PURITY DAIRY “Parents Prefer Purity Products” 4 h 4 4 4 4 ‘4 “4 4 317 Kent St. Dial 4-7125 wVY { LORCOOCOLEES | e2ees 8420004 May We Accommodate your — eco STERLING HOTEL is the clace te stey! Fe - cPOCCrereeo Here are out a few of the Sterling's teatures: ® Licenced Otning Room | 8 free Parking fer 69 Cass @ Family ané Group Piass @ Commereta) Rates ‘ » Cri- | + | & ge 1964 j and that does not infer that Quebec is a state. Yet the French got the most laughs from the song containing the lines “It’s so quiet you could hear a pin fall. It's Dominion Davy in Montreal’ Johnny feels that the show has passed its first major test in the Canadian tour —- the French enjoyed it. o SUCH EXUBERANCF The cast encountered a few technical difficulties and minor accidents co-operation went, Confederation Centre stage hands did as well, or better than the crew at Place des Arts. Suspended bookshelves are sometimes used, but whén the set didn't come down com- pletely in one number, it was obvious that this book Shelf was not designed to ‘hang from the ceiling. Marylyn Stewart injur- ed her ankle in the “Beatles” bs ” > | ‘ $4 ae % Pn he As far as back-stage | “One thing about your daily newspaper... ~” number when she jumped rath- er high and landed the wrong way I guess | forgot myself’, she said latr. “I get so carried away in that act’ The show goes next to Wind- sor, Ont. where :t will meet a second test: playing to a partly American audience A SURE HIT Just a word about another Is- land-born show, “Anne of Green Gables’. Johnny Wayne thinks that it has the makings for greatness. He said that “Anne’’ could play now at Place des Arts and give them all the shock of their lives. It would thrill the audience and astound the critics. And sooner or later he feels that it will hit the limelight on Broadway and in Hollywood. He finished by saying ‘“Char- lottetown may yet give all Can- ada a big lesson’. ot i & ps ; ballet +3 i eda } You can pick it up when you want to. Put it down. Go back to it in your own sweet time. No one ever stops you in the middle of a sentence to make you read an ad. You can take the ads or leave them alone. But you prefer to take them. We know that. “A survey. of 42,000 homes from coast to coast revealed that 93°, and 94% of the people in the middle and upper income groups respectively prefer daily news- paper advertising to other types of advertising. Another survey validated by the Canadian Advertising Research Foundation showed why: they find newspapes “Coven Prince Edwerd lelond Like The Dew” : W And § Success In Montreal | Island News Page Western and Central Districts 9 Georgie Read Barton Exhibit The Guardian, Charlotetown, Sat., Sept. 11, 1965. Opens Sunday At Art Gallery A reception Sunday will open an exhibition of 2! paintings by Georgie Read Barton at federation Centre art gallery Mrs. Barton, who divides her time between Borden, PE! and New Jersey, was born in Summerside, and she is a grad- uate of the Mount Allison Un- iversity School of Fine Arts. She studied also at the Arts Students League of New. York where she studied portrait yand landscané painting under Frank Vincent DuMond and sculpture under Arthur Lee. She has exhibited with the Ro yal Canadian Academy, the Na- tional Arts Club of New York, and the Hudson Valley Art Asso- % o;/ (92 é ~ Con- Yo): In fact, they usé their paper guide (83%) _ = So you might be led to assume that newspaper advertis- ing has a greater influence on Canadian buying habits. than other advertising. You'd be bang right to read them. Even thou time about it. __ ciation, and she is now president ot the board of this latter asso- Frequent exhibitions have won her several awards including the Gold Medal] of the Hudson Valley Art Association, and the Bronze Meda! from International Busin- ess Machines for “notable con- tribution to the art gf the world.” In addition to the paintings which are from her own studio, a few have been borrowed for this exhibition from various col- lectors on the Island as well as in the United States. 1S TUNED IN Rhodesia (AP) CHURCH SALISBURY, The campaign for a new or- gan in St. Cuthbert's Anglican — advertising more ‘reliable (41°), PHONE 4-8506 DISPLAY ADVERTISING DEPT. ALTE AOE ET TI UI TE ATRL TT a EE TERMI M TR Re 2 Permitted By New Regulations New regulations issued un- der the Roads Act 1965 in- crease the gross weight of mot. or vehicles and load on. Island highways -fer certain categories of vehicles The regulations, effective Sept. 1, 1965, increase the max imum” allowable gross weight | Heavier Trucks on the front axle. of a truck from 8,000 pounds to 10,000 >pounds The maximum gross” weight for a five-axle tractor and semi-trailer is Row 74,000 pounds Among others, changes incor- porated in the new regulations relate to the use of the so - called “pony” axles. It is understood that the new regulations Will be enforced on .an ‘‘axle-weight" basis rather than.a “gross. weight" basis church, Gwelo, was given extra meaning when the existing 20. year - old-electronic instrument suddenly tuned itself into a news broadcast in the middle of ‘a hymn you can take your own sweet time reading it and less irritating as a daily shopping Most advertisers, of course, are well aware of the tre- mendous buying influence newspaper ads have. Which is why they continue to run ads. And why you continue gh you take your own sweet