= HERS] ttt PEE ee eee ee ee ee eek ales Se ae TO ISLAND WATERS LANDED Th: strange looking“7t88-pictur-' hews. Found tangled in a cod net|by Alberton fishermen. It is be- a above was caught at Alber-|the unusual looking “denizen of | lieved to be a species of Sun fish, more commonly found in _ Press Invited On Britannia For Seaway Ceremony FFtE ci al 3 g | ti i | a R | | — - i f “HF Fee TFEE vt fe z 2 FF at He a‘ i & | ; i i ag L | a z : U 2 g i i 3 Canadia.w and United and: Washington their wives, re- Queen’s verandah stern. The Queen and Philip, President and isenhower and Prime Min- irs. Diefénbaker, stuck bridge through most for . better view of engineering achieve- so they could be seen LITTLE SANDS Mr. Ewen Hume, Massach- usetis, is spending a few days visiting his zhi tt : ree ai, Roe 5 z i E ag ry fi fll Fis x F 2& i ey i ; : / ck t } é 2 >t g rf ij ‘ 3 3 B itt > R a Z Ht if gsi? Hg ir ieee Bly g F i i 4 Ht “i i if rf : f fe i | i! 55 i : € E i at sf f if af i ee i | ; i m ? Ri better by those ashore. After the opening ceremonies ashore at St. Lambert, the Queen and the president came aboard the yacht in friendly convérsa- tion but ‘at a slow pace. The Queen was in what is obviously! a favorite color — turquoise— while the president wore a dark business suit. They were followed by the tall prince and Mrs. Eisenhower in a dark and white speckled crea- tion. Mrs. Eisenhower, ina happy-mood, offered her arm to the prince. With-a-galiant-gesture he took it and they boarded the yacht like a young couple on a first date. As the Queen and president reached the deck of the yacht a 21-gun salute boomed out from one of the escort destroyers—the Gatineau and at the same time a ‘dap of war veterans gave three s ‘oth for the Queen and then for the president. They were| rewarded when both went RELIGION BY VERY REV. GEORGE First Moderator of the LET VISIT KINDLE FIRES OF LOYALTY Our Queen and Prince Philip are now in Canada. The Queen has come as the Queen of Cana- da. She is enthroned by -heredi- tary right, the. descendant and heiress of a royal line, and she rules by the free consent of her people. _ One day, after we had joined the army in France, we saw a number of young officers saluting \their commander. There was no sign of compulsory submission to arbitrary authority; instead there was the glad recognition of . happy to follow wherever he might lead. Deeper and more joyous by far is our welcome to the Queen. | She is the head of a mighty com- monwealth of nations, but she is also our Queen, the Queen of Ca- nada, and we are her subjects by our own free choice. No elected head of a self-gov- erning nation was ever more en- thusiastically. welcomed than our Queen will be wherever and when- ever she appears among her people. PERSONAL In the first place, this loyalty is versonal. The Queen is loved and is inmeasurably worthy of that love. ’ It is of inestimable worth to the Commonwealth that it has a per- sonal head, loyalty to whom catia, out an emotion that sweeps everything before it. King Charles I fought to main- tain “the divine right of kings’ and to impose submission on his subjects by force, but whatever the technical terms by which the experience of the centuries has led her people to define and lim- it the royal prerogatives, our Queen rules by the free consent of a devoted peoplé who have pledged their lives to maintain and defend that for which she stands. t We were in the far west when World War I broke out. We felt the surge of our people’s respon- spent’ the evening at Alex Blues This was the occasion of Mr. and Mrs. Sencabaughs 32nd wedding anniversary. Mrs. George B. Hume, Brook- lyn, has moved to her home in ‘ \ and: c _to the side of the yacht and | waved an acknowledgement. | SPASMODIC ERRUPTIONS It was. tly 1203 p. m.-by the yacht's tlock when Britannia passed through a ceremonial gate to open the seaway of- ficially. This set off spasmodic eruptions of fireworks and bal- loons. Some of the rockets re- States flags which floated down on parachutes. The Royal Mar-| ine Br d played on the deck while a military Band played ashore. The church bells pealed in Montreal and the surrounding towns but they were too far away. to be heard on board. { A group of the Canadian-U. 8. parliamentary group waved from shore and one member shouted-a reference to the president’s sea- way opening speech in which he referred to his poor French: “That prairie French was pretty good.” And another hailed the lyacht with: “We all fell in love AND LIFE C. PIDGEON, D.D., LL.D. United Church of Canada jse in our centres of population, but more impressive still was to see men coming in from the far- lthest reachest of the north to) join the defenders of the Empire. It revealed the fact that in the 'remotest corners of Canada the ‘fires of allegiance burned as) brightly as enywhere in the! world. DEDICATED LIFE The presence of our Queen gives a new turn to this partiotic devotion. Her entire life is dedi- cated to her people. Their pros- perity and power is her glory; the greater they become the more splendid her crown and throne. Everything that her position means and brings she has pledg- \ed to their service. When'\ one inks of it, the ord- erly way in which our institutions work is astonishing. We have just had ap election in which our political parties have contended strenuously for power. | Our authorities are the heads of jone of these parties. Yet the moment the issue is decided, the victor is cepted as the authority over all. We do not need to go beyond the Americas to find examples of par- ties in defeat who take to the |; woods to carry on the contest with weapons of war. But in our | ish - speaking democracies | the decision of the majority is ac- cepted by all, and the opponents of the party in power became Her ajesty’s loyal opposition. know that we are human paigns are often waged with: bi but it is the duty of the victor to consider the van- quished as equally entitled to his care. All that is best in this heritage son of our Queen. LET US So let us make this visit of the Queen and Prince Philip the™oc- casion for kindling fires of loyal- ty that will blaze up brightly and let us provide these fires with fuel that will burn ses steadily through ail the years to come. As we sing our national anthem may we make # a real prayer both for our loved Queen in all her graciousness and also for; ourselves and our country: “Thy choicest gifts in stor On her be pleased to pour Long may she reign: “EH Little Sands. Neb ie Mr. and Mrs. Claud Dewar, |May she de laws, Montague, were visitors to her |And.@ver givemg*Cause — brother’s Some, Mr. Carteton | To! sigg with ° “and voice Hume and Mrs. Hume, Little|Ged"save the Queen. Sands. eee Friends here regret to hear of {Our loved Dominion bless the passing of Mr. David John |With peace and happiness, Saunders, Mount Vernon. : and relatives in Little ton Me to hear of the sud- den ilines@ of Mrs. Margaret Gil- lis, Newton, Mass. Her sister ie Little Sanda. From shore to shore; |And let our Efnpire be United, loyal, free, True to herself, and Thee of ours is represented in the per- ts i Lt ti e ee [S28 & f é L ji Ht itl 5 i make the Queen and ident chucklé., At one spot a pass- ing U. S. déstroyer had painted its own name and then the greet- ing Welcome Queen, Hi Ike the cement sides of the lock. QUEEN DUCKED When a new pop of broke out at one spot ident playfully asked to duck and she went through motions of trying to from the fire. The official party of 56 the Queen’s silver grey - dining-room on polished ony. Th® Queen had special. of caviar sent out as a side dish for the press lunch aboard. An international flotilla eof United States, British and Cana- dian ships, manned from stem to ster.. with white - clad sailors, cheered the Queen through a re- view point at Lake Louis late in the day as she eontinued the royal cruise. The president left the ships at Beauharnois to re- ik There were many things .to' if i ° & zo E | 2 E i | i : ‘ mi i 4} \ / i vit ial eEEE Hi | i fF J rt i >» z ? z g Fas Eo ! | yi 3 i : i : | e F g i turn to Washington. WELLINGTON Miss Evelyn McPhee was very kindly remembered on her birth- day, June 13th, at her home, when friends assembled to ex- tend good wishes and present her with gifts. A very pleasant time was enjoyed by all present. Mr. Reid Baglole, employed in Moncton, N.B. visited his par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. John J. Bag- lole, recently. His friends here are pleased to know Mr. Jerry Richard is able to be out again following his re- cent illness at his home in Mis- couche. Mr. and Mrs. Meddie Arsenault accompanied by Mrs. John P. Arsenault attended the wedding of a relative in Charlottetown re- cently. Congratulatiops are being ex- tended to Edward, Stanley and Leonard Arsenault on graduating with each a certificate in a weld- ing course at Vocational School in Chartottetown. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Galfant, Dieppe, N.B., Mr. Frances Gai- lamt of Toronto, and Rev. Sister cis Barlow spent the week-end at their homes. : Mr. and Mrs. Oyril Gallant have returned home from Indiana U.S.A. where they attended the wedding of their daughter Mary R.N. They also visited other re- DISTRIBUTORS oy cold weather. Welcomed with’ “|for inventory depending on ter- - | titory covered. was so named by Jacques Cartier in 1534. ROIS AGENTS and WANTED vice for_automobiles, trucks, ete. Easy starting in winter, eves with weakened battery « caused vice ' stations. Capital required Safeway Electronics Mfg. Corporation, 1500 St. Catherine St., West, Suite 212, Montreal 25, Canada. rT. PROFIT FROM CANADA'S PROSPERITY Through a single invest- ment in Investors Mutual, you can become part-owner of more than 100 widely diversified “bluechip” see- urities. You'll get attractive divi- dends, income tax credits, and a share in the growth of Canada. Free yourself from investment worries through Investors Mutual —Canada’s largest mutual latives en route. Mr. Gerald , Moncton, N.B., recently vgsited his paresis | here. 5 Mr. and Mrs. Bernard and family, Hunter River, recent- ly visited Mr. William Barlow here. Messrs. Jack Harkness and Keith MacDonald recently motor- ed to Charlottetown. Mr. Russell Barry is a patient in P.C. Hospital. RUSS TOUR OFF AUCKLAND, N.Z. (Reuters)— The Russian Classical Ballet Ea- semble, scheduled to open a tour of New Zez'and and Aus‘ralia here Thursday, has called . the reason, impresario Robert whole thing off without giving | fund. G. F. Cameron District Mgr.. Summerside J. “oer 4 J. Fulton Pierce Charlottetown. ER il St te ce aaa ie AO EM ee a hs aa EE e Potato Growers ath se i i (f With every 4.00 purch- ase of gas! June 26th to July 2nd. 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