MONSIGNOR. P.F. MacDon- ald, left, accepts a scroll pre- sented to him yesterday at a reception in his honor at Saint Pius X parish hall. Rector of the parish, Father MacDonald was recently elevated from the rank of Right Rev. to Rector Of Saint Pius X Parish! that of Monsignor. With him above are Rev. Andrew Mac- Donald, assistant rector; Ur- bain LeBlanc, president of the laymen’s association, and Mrs. J. Eugene. Daley, pre- sident of the parish Catholic Women's League. Honored On Becoming Msgr. Some 200 parishioners of St. Pius X attended a reception in the parish hall yesterday in honor of Rt. Rev. P.F. Mac- Donald, on the occasion of his elevation to the rank of mon- The reception was sponsored ne IN CITY HOSPITAL P. Adolphe Doucette, Bishop Street, Charlottetown, is aj patient in the Charlottetown | Hospital. HAS SURGERY Arthur Cantwell, Charlotte- | town, is a patient in the Char- | lottetown Hospital where he un- derwent surgery Friday morn- ing | 1s CONVALESCING Mrs. Everett Wakelin, Sher- wood, is convalescing at home following surgery in the Prince Edward Island Hospital IN HOSPITAL Delbert. Jewell of Cornwall is a patient in Prince Edward ts- | Sue land Hospital where he has un- dergone surgery. UNDERGOES SURGERY N. Aubrey Cutcliffe of Freder- | fctonis a patient in the Prince | Edward Island Hospital where he recently underwent sureery.| EASTERN | by the parish laymen’s associa- | tion and Catholic Women's | League Urbain LeBlanc, president | of the laymen’s association, read an address on behalf of the parishioners. A purse ~was | presented to Msgr. MacDonald by Reginald McCarville, trea- surer of the association. the Sisters of taining the wording of the ad- dress, was also presented to Msgr. MacDonald. During the reception, back- | ground music was provided by | Wilbur MacInnis, organist for Pius X. The gathering was catered to by ladies of the parish. St Two Breaks Reported Near Mount Stewart A thief or thieves broke into «wo ‘Mount Stewart service sta- tions over the weekend, Char- lottetown RCMI detachment said last night. While exact losses were not known, they were not believed of great value. Service stations involved were Harold MacDon- ald’s Service Scation and the ll Service. Station operated by Alonzo Birt. Police said the breaks were reported around 9.30 a.m. yes terday, and it is thought they occurred Saturday night or ear- ly Sunday morning. Entry was gained in both cas- es by breaking glass in the large sliding doors. Police are cominuing their in- vestization ISLAND NEWS PAGEIUS. Union Chiefs Urge Eastern And Central Districts | The Guardian, Charlottetown, Mon., Jan. 18, 1965. 5 Local MP Says Balcer Exemplar 0 Heath Macquarrie, Queens MP, has described Leon Balter as an exemplar of the tradition which led to the Progressive Conservatives becoming a na- tional force in the days of Mac- Donald and Cartier. “Today the co-operation of reasonable, moderate men of goodwill from French and Eng- lish speaking Canada is as vital jas it was a century ago,” he | stated Mr. Macquarrie said many of | the anxieties voiced by Mr. Bal-| |cer are*not of a regional nature) {but ‘‘are shared by Conserva- | tives in all parts of the country.” “Tt is imperative for Canada’s political stability that the his- toric Conservative party repre- sent and express a consensus of the views of Canadians of all re- gions, classes, races and reli- gions. The contribution of Mr. the Precious. Blood, and . con-. FUNERALS MacINNIS FUNERAL — Fu- neral for Mrs. Sarah Macinnis was held from her late residence to St. Peters Church, St. Peter’s, where Requiem High Mass was celebrated by Rev. Bennett Mac- Donald, who also conducted ser- vice at the grave. Pallbearers were: Harold MacDonald, Nor- bert Hughes, William MacInnis, | Francis MacKinnon, Francis | Steele and Brent Gillis. Inter- | ment was in the church ceme- | tery. HAYTER FUNERAL -— The funeral for Mrs. Mary Adelaide Hayter was held Sunday, Jan. 17, from Murray River Funeral Home to the Church. of Qurist, ‘was by Willard J Walls. Hymns sung were The Lord’s My Shepherd, Abide With Me and Safe in the Arms of Jesus. Flowerbearers were: Freeman Whiteaway, Russ ell Moore, Donald Stewart and Da- niel a. Pallbearers were: Donald Young, Harry MacKay, Willard MacLean, Malcolm Liv- ingstone, Hastings MacLeod and Roy Buell. Interment ‘ook place-'- “Murrer iver ceme- terv MacINTYRE eek Funeral for John D. MacIntyre was held from the? Funer- al Home to St. Mary’s Church,. Souris, where Requiem High Mass was celebrated’ by Msgr. J.A. Sullivan ‘who also ‘¢onduct- ed service ‘atthe ‘grave. Mayor E. Lavie and town clerk Mrs: Genevieve Roach, and the ris town council attended in body, members of Canadian Le- gion Souris branch also attend) ed in a body, Honorary pallbear- ers were: Lester O'Donnell, Ba- sil MacDonald, Donald Camp- bell, Roddie Chaisson, Dan Jar- vis-and Fee Roach. Active palle bearers were: John Jarvis, Wil- liam Pie James Jennings, Bruce , Harvie Poole and, Edmund Lavie. Legion vice was conducted by Milton = icky. Last Post and Re- sounded by bugler George .. Interment. was in — CITY. AREA FUNERALS ser CROSBY FUNERAL — The funeral for Carl S. Crosby was held Saturday, Jan. 16, from the First Baptist Church, where service was conducted by Rev. Malcolm Harlow and Rev. T. R. Goudge. During the~ser- vice Mrs. Douglas MacKenny sang I Come To The Garden. } Pallbearers were Francis Cur- ley, Ben Mills, Heath Crosby, Hector MacDougall, Norman Corish and Lawrence. Durant. Remains were placed in Mac Lean's- Memorial Vault, later to -be interred in cemetery. McQUAID FUNERAL — The funeral of Mrs. Hubert McQuaid was held Saturday from the Charlottetown Home to St. Joseph’s Church, sung were Rock of Ages, The Lord’s My Shepherd and Abide With Me. Attending in a body were the e of the Dept. of Health and members of the Royal Canadian Legion. The Legion service conducted we Ene cae, Last Post were Sera wittiete non. Mrs. Harry Conway: City Dies Unexpectedly At 45 The funeral of Mrs.-Harry|husband are five children, Conway, 4%, will be held this/ Linda, 17, Paula, 15, Michael, morning from her late residence, | 12, John, 11 and Helen 8; also 60 Hillsboro Street, to St. Dun-| her mother and father Dr. and stan’s Basjjica for Requiem! Mrs. J.H. Blanchard, Upper High ; | Prince Street, city, and two Mrs. Conway, the former | sisters, Bernadette (Mrs. J. E. Louise Blanchard of Chartetie-| Arsenault), city, and Beatrice town, had several months ago| (Mrs. (Dr.) J.M. Beauregard), ; open ‘heart surgery | Montreal and. three” brothers, and appeared to be improving | Elmer, Francis and Wilmer all rapidly. Death came. Thursday, | of Charlottetown. A brother and Jan. 14, with unexpected sud-| sister, Alfred and Rose prede- denness. at the Charlottetown | ceased her. Interment this morning will be the Catholic cemetery. Cornwall Boy ONE FAMOUS Found In N.S. (Continued from page 1) John Hugh .Gallagher, 15- year old boy missing from Cornwall since Jan. 13, was tal. Surviving in addition to her | jn | this }across the oceans, | mountains, across the Prairies because we are made of sugar candy.” That reference to conquest way across the centuries, | across the as prime minister on the last three days of that year. Two more meetings with Roosevelt, and with then Ca- nadian prime minister Macken- zie King, were held at Quebec City in August, 1943; and again in September, 1944. For the first Quebec confer- ence, where plans for the 1944 invasion of Normandy were made, Churchill, then 68, was accompanied by Lord Morah, the physician who attended him at his last illness. -_After-_ two—-days of _meetings. with Canadian government offi- cials, Churchill special train Aug. 12 to Nia gara Falls and then to the Roosevelt country home at Hyde Park, N.J. He returned to Quebec Aug. 15. Roosevelt fol- lowed two. days later, and they conferred with military chiefs for a week. WENT FISHING Churchill spent a week after the first Quebec conference trout fishing in the Laurentians with Canadian pulp and paper magnate Frank C. Clarke, a longtime friend who later en- travelled by}. located in Sydney, N.S., over the weekend, Supt. A. S. Me- Neil, RCMP, said -last night. The boy apparently travelled by train to the Nova Scotia city where he is believed to have relatives. The RCMP said the publicity relating to his disap- pearance had resulted in sev- eral telephone calls to them from people who had seen the missing boy. One. of the callers said the boy was heading for Sydney. ‘Islander Killed In Auto. Accident. Word has beefl received of the death recently overseas as the result of an automobile dent of LAC Malaolm Ri- chard MacLaren formerly of St- Peter’s Bay in his 26th year. He leaves to mourn his wife, the former Simone Wilbur of Moncton, ‘N.B. and two children, Grant, 23 months and Darren 10 months. Also his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fulton MacLaren, S. Pe- ter’s Bay, and four brothers; Edward and Barry in Chariotte- town, Donald, Montreal and Da- vid, Dartmouth, N.S. The funeral services will be held in France. tertained the British leader for two months in 1946 at Miami Beach, Fia., after his electoral defeat by Labor. |by travel and settlement was }echoed in a personal recollee- |tion’ on the eve of Dominion |Day, 1954, during his last visit! | to Canada. . i The 1944 meeting at Quebec, |. | “T have beenall over Canada|Sept. 11-16, mapped strategy | | in my time,” he said in a na-/for finishing off the war in Eu tionwide radio broadcast then,/rope and pressing the cam- “and I have most vivid pie- | paign against Japan. aa tures in my mi of many) After re-elec as prime places ‘from Halifax to Kicking timinister, “Churehill -vistted “Ot- Horse Valley and further on to}tawa Jan. 11-15, 1952, for talks | Vancouver, where I caught a) chiefly concerned with building |lovely salmon in the harbor im/the strength of the Atlantic al- about 20 minutes.” liance: “Prevail over the dan- His first visit was a lecture | gers and problems of the fu- tour as a young man of 26, a ‘ture, withhold no sacrifice, newly-elected- member of the! grudge no toil, seek no sordid British Parliament, fresh from) gain, fear no foe.” |adventures and renown as a On his departure for Wash- |war correspondent in the Boer ington from that visit, he told War: ta cheering crowd: . | His last visit before the Sec-| “I am not going to say jond World War was a private | goodby. I am only going to say trip in 1932 when he met with) au revoir.” then the late R. B. Bennett, prime minister of Canada. |MET NEAR CANADA But at the end of his 28-hour final visit June 29-30, 1954—two months after he had been Churchill had his first meet-; knighted, nine months before he ing with Franklin Roosevelt, | resigned the British prime min- wartime president. of the United istership—his. voice broke when ‘States, almost within view of|a reporter asked him when he Canada at a secret battleship! would return. rendezvous in Placentia Bay,| ‘I do not want to make an Nfld., Aug. 9, 1941 — slightly engagement as.to when I shall |more than four months before| be back,” the 79 - year - old his first oficial visit to Ottawa | statesman said then. - f Tradition Balcer and his associates is an essential and valuable ingred- ient of this consensus.” Mr. Macquarrie said a lead- ership convention ‘“‘might serve a useful purpose in clearing the air.”" He added there was noth- ing in the constitution to prevent calling such a convention. Mr. Macquarrie, author of 4 forthcoming history of Cand- dian Conservatism, said he be- lieves Canada’s basic political system functions best when two broadly based are mu- tually ¢cémpetitive on electoral confrontations. . He said solutions to the prob- lems now -besetting nationa) un- ity would be seriously retarded by an increase in strength of third and fourth splinter parties in Parliament. Arthur Wright Is Candidate In City Ward 4 3, Arthur Wright, announced will be a candidate in coming Charlottetown elections. He will be running in hundreds of former ‘slander’ Tua tile : wie: z z i 3 _ - f: ull he up- | said cle |" “i. The Gov't Operate Ra | WASHINGTON '(AP)—Rail la- |bor union chiefs urged Saturday that the United States govern- ment and operate the coun- try’s railways. A management spokesmen called the proposal a men. . |.G E. Leighty, chairman of the Railway Labor Executives’ sehen mh, SU hooped the Familiar At Old West Kent — ‘Frederick D. Ward Dies i i | ie ful ll F 5 i F 8 if Li ret Ut ii : a Ee it a hw railway labor to establish ade coltly mecsnsen Oy and workers. T “When You See “Charade”: “STARTS TODAY sont ds Cary «_ nt ' +5" : Sea Toe en as a Dee THE UNEXPECTED * ro