The RIMES Cape dc Made leine. under Omnmand B.A.l-I. rbwriglit, arrived in Char- lotth yesterday and dock- ed at the south \ de of the new Department of Trans- port rrf. Shown above is the chirp following her arrival FIRST OF THREE NAVY SHIPS ARRIVES - crewman rig a canvas cover over the mar. The ship will clear pout morning. Another drip, the HMCS Ourt or R. Davidson) will arrive and dock at the DOT wihmf my ISLAND NEWS PAGE Western And Central Districts middleUSBristdofdieAm- attests Navyunder William otuvston today mart. The drips wit hdrp in the Natal day celebrations in usurious-sown Sorrow. Glimpse Inside Life Of Opera Given By Company M By GEOFF TURNBULL "Ah, it’s when the baton lifts. and the curtain goes up - then, the excitment. the suspense! Every performance I notice is somehow different Yes, it's all wort i ...” The opera singer’s glorious, rapid tenor waits through from» the balcony into the drawing room, the silly little maid swoons with delight. the knowledgeable. fickle wife bustles with feigned an- noyance, and the opera is on. “This life certainly has its ups and its downs. but the heights. they make up for all the rest.“ Bill Lord (quoted above) is .1 WESTERN BRIEFS this...“ RETURNS HOME Wendell Shaw has returned to his home in Bloomfield after be- ing a patient in O‘Leary Com- munity Hospital for several weeks. GUEST OF COUSINS Mrs. Erie Thomson. Carleton. has been a guest of her cous- ins, Mr. and Mrs. Brenton Ram- say. South Kildare. WAS PATIENT Mrs. Sterling Wilkie has re- turned to her home in Alberton after being a patient in the Prince County Hospital for the past two weeks. IN WESTERN HOSPITAL Eugene McCarthy, Brockton. is :1 patient in the Western Hos- pit . VISITS KIN Mrs. Vernon England. Alber- ton. had as weekend guests her sister, Mrs. Ernest Harris of Summersideand her brother David Miller of Winnipeg. IN WESTERN HOSPITAL Mrs. John W. Skerry, Alber- ton South, is a patient in the Western Hospital. VACATION AT COTTAGE Mr. and Mrs. John Peters and family of Wimripeg are spending part of their vacation at the Mrs. Peters is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Pridham. VISITS ELMSDALE Mr. and Mrs. Edward Hudgin. Scarboro. Ont., are guests of the later'l mothdr, Mrs. Percy Mat- thews and other relatives in Elmsdale. LEAVE. on HOLIDAY t. and Mrs. Edward McCue. Alhcrtoh,‘ spend luvs today to aholidsyhiSouris FROM NOVA SCOTIA ‘Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Welsh. WIIII their daughters. Judith and Christine. New Glasgow, N.s., visited Mrs. Fred Hardy, Alber- lon. last week. ARSENAUL'I' FUNERAL -— The funsnl for Sylvere .r. r. ‘Arsenault was held ,Wednesd "10mins from his tats residence to st. James Church. Egmont 3y. when solemn Requiem "th Mass was.celehrated by Rev. Francis Tsrdlf. Deacon was Rev. Arsenault and 5"” d , Rev. John Buote. Seated in the ‘ teary were “In Nasalrs‘ (not. Rev. Int MacD-ald and Rev. young man. He has been with the Canadian Opera Company since leaving the University of Toronto five years ago, first as a very junior assistant. now as company manager, prop and set designer. For a year and a half he has been married to Arlene Meadows, who sings the lead role in Die Fledermaus. WHAT’S IT LIKE? What's it like being married to an opera singer? “Fascinating. And the way anager lie went to 'Ilomnbo Universibv at the time it was reaching its rpealk, its golden , am, and here he "caught the bug" which has held him ever since. ashes come out of that period which today are among the best4 own in Canadian theatre- designer Les Lawrence. direc- tor Leon Major, and many more. "Our toiirs dro pose special problems. Everything must fit into one bus. All our baggage. all our sets and costumes, our lighting equipment, and the com- itse we are. travelling on tour to- pans! gether with the company, we do not have to face that hard 20 weeks separation which some of the company must. Touring can he very hard on timely life. “Though on our last tour there were three married couples. and we acted as sort of chap— crones for the company. Very respectable." Bill not a healre - connected family, as a boy 9 used listen to ‘ ‘ Metropolitan Opera from_Ne-w York, and even u ‘ sets 1191.11: Christmas tree lights for effect. The stage Is alight with gay colors and mobility. The silly little maid ls recog- nized but laughs her way out of a tickllsh IIBIIBBIOII.- The knowledgeable, fickle wife flirts. unknown In her rlsgulsc. with her husband, and steals his watch. Then the party Is over. and it time to W for what has passed. Originally Bill to study architecture, but the arts call him more strong- I artist for a . has given that up completely now. Pridham cottage in Montrose: CRIMP (Continued from page 1) ms of business on sch DEBATE INDICATED One isathe government's bid- a. re 0 “The sets are made of steel. It's cheaper than lumber and we don’t have to worry about federation Centre) is the same design as the one we took on the tour earlier this yeai', but it was specially built for this trip. I putdt together last week." he must cater to stages everywhere from 14 to 50 feet wide. BIG HAPPY FAMILY opera together in both ve “But: we're one big, happy fam- ily travelling together." art form. It has music, drama, vise ..When it's there, When ' most exciting the ultimate everything - uai delights.. it’s really there. good, it’s e thing there is." The time has come for the denouncement. the unravel- ing. The scene is a jail with a delightful, drunken trailer. The silly little maid arrives because at the ball the war- .. '2 ts den was very attentive to her. knowledgeable, fickle wife finally reunities The plot with her husband. as been kc, and the ending is sung to the delights of champagne. The opera is over. - for interim spending authority for August and September, item which the Progressive Conservative opposition has in- dicated plans to debate until about Aug. 7. ' There is a Fiscal Arrange- ments Act putting into effect' new tax arrangements with the provinces and then the House is scheduled (to return fro debate on the government's proposed maple lea . any Conservatives are pledged to . sign to the utmost. even if it means a federal election on the st issue. They lnsistaoanadian flag must have as one element of it the Union Jack in the cor- her as it now appears Canadian Red Ensign. If the (lag debate is can battle the flag dr.» Labor U.K. (Continued from page I) will fight the campaign mainly on education, pensions, housing and land prices. employme and, above all, plans to combat the rising cost of living. These issues have often been pushed into the background by debates Brita 's inde- H a. on defence a pendent nuclear deterrent and 's plans to nationalize building land and re-uationsliss ee. In one view. all the efforts by Macmillan and Douglas- Ilome. his successor. ma the deterrent an election issue have not persuaded Tory back- room strategists that the voters 3‘ Canada Family Size Increases OTTAWA (CP) — Canadian families are increasing both in numbers and in size, the bur- eau of statistics said today in a specal report. The bureau reported there were 4,314,000 families in Can- ada on June 1, 1963, an the of 75,000 families from June, 1962, and 174,000 since the 1961 census. The average Canadian family in June. 1963, consisted of four 3.9 persons for the previous year. The figures do not include the Yukon and Northwest Territor- Families were biggest in Que» bee and the Maritime provinces the bureau said. Average fam- ily size in these provinces was 4.3 persons. Families in the Prairie provinces averaged 3.9 persons. Ontario families 3.7, British Columbia 3.6. Families with no chldren made up 24 per cent of those in Quebec. 24.1 in the Atlantic provinces. 28.9 in Ontario. 28.3 in the Prairie provinces and 31.4 in British Columba. persons. up slightly from the people By RELMAN MORIN NEW YORK (AIM—Senator Hubert Humphrey of Minnesota has topp d a United States— wide poll of delegates to next month’s Democratic party con- vention who stated a preference for the vice-presidential nom- then on die party's 1904 US. election ticket. I-I re was named as a first choice by 341 delegates. Attorney - General Robert F Kennedy, named by 230. ran second. More than a dozen other Democratic leaders were listed as personal preferences. The majority of the delegates declined to state a choice, on the ground that President Jo - son should be permitte ‘0 his running mate for the 3 election. Most of these said they would vote for any- body the president wants. add- ing that they have no preter- ence of their own. MADE NO DECISION “I have made no decision," Johnson said Thursday at a press conference. But he de- clared he would want the wee- presidential nominee to be 1L- ‘tractive, prudent and progres sive with a compassionate con' sideration for the welfare of the name Nov. 1 of Democratic con- vention delegates was taken by Associated Press correspond cuts across the U5. ey bev gan questioning delegates July .4 .3; The Democratic national com mittee lists 3,052 delegates, with 2,316 votes. in the nominating convention. In some states. del egahes have fractional votes. The convention opens Aug. 24 in Atlantic City. Eight hundred and thirty-six The Guardian, Charlottetown, Fri., July 3-1, 1964. s' Vice-Pres. Poll Topped By Minnesota Senator persons stated preferences in the AP poll. More than two- thirds named Humphrey and Kennedy. An Idaho delegate favors Mrs. John F. Kennedy, widow of the late president. “This would be the best opportunity in a long time to elect a woman to high national office," was the com- merit of the unsigned question naire. Sargent Shriver, director or the US Peace Corps, and tin F. and Robert F. Kennedy's brother-in-law. was named by 63 delegates as their choice. Senator Eugene McCarthy of Minnesota came next as the preference of 50. Others mentioned were Call- fornia‘s Governor Edmund G. Brown (35), United Nations Am bassador Adlai E. Stevenson (27), Defence Secretary Robert ‘S. McNamara (26) and New York's Mayor Robert F. Wag- ner (24). MUSKIE MENTIONED Some delegates stated prefer- ences for senators Mike Mans- field of Montana, the Senate majority leader; Abraham 1. Ribicoff and Thomas J. Dodd of Connecticut, Stuart Symingu ton of Missouri. Edmund S. Muskie of Maine. J. William Fulbright of Arkansas and Rich- ard B. Russell of Georgia. Six Alabama delegates named Governor George C. Wallace as their choice for the nomina- Several delegates said John- son's health—~he was stricken with a heart attack in 1955—ls a factor in considering the pai- ty‘s nominee for vice-president this year. Said Thomas II, Reece of Payton. Utah, “Democrats must Ship Subsidy Goes To NEIcI. crating everything for fear House for perhaps the last something might break. The t‘me. 56¢ we're 115108 here (in Con- That occasion also marked the last speech before the House of former prime minister Macmillan after 40 years service. Neither Churchill nor Macmillan is standing for re- election. In a bemused comment on the closing parliament, the weekly New Statesman notes _ that of the cabinet formed by rates, it was no longer econ- Bm “mm that Pu“an ll! Macmillan in 1959 only the "ad- omic to operate the boat serv ex- hesive” Transport Minister Er- ice “and representations weie pensive and a lot of hard work. nest Marples remains in the received from trade and other post to which he was then as. signed. But it was on the Labor Opera, he feels, is “almost Party that the “most devasta- ice, , . ting blows have been visited". The deaths of Labor Leader Hugh Gaitskell and Deputy Leader Aneurin Bevan followed a bitter struggle within the over unilateral disarma- og sthip service to help it maintain OTTAWA (CP) — Transport. Minister Pickersgill said Wed- nesday the government has p- proved a $248,000 subsidy to the Newfoundland - Canada steam- its one-ship run between Hal- ifax and St. John's, Nfld. In a written reply to Davrd Orlikow (NDP -— Winnipeg North), Mr. Pickersgill said be- cause of a change in railway organizations to maintain this long - established regular servo face the responsibility of select. ing a vice-president who. if the emergency arose because of Johnson‘s health, could be a great presidenr." r 1) Ain‘t Alb Iovs' wu- , has...“ "a.m.-u. DEATH NOTICES Received too late for Classified death notice coumn par ment and the party's new unity under Harold Wilson ' garded asoeofthe ou ing political events since the Second World STRETCHES SESSION The Tories—now in power for 13 years—stretched out the life of the Parliament as long as possible in the face of Labor's popularity in opinion polls. Among other events of the period were: —- e frustrated attempt by the government to join the European ommon arket. —Macmillan's 1962 purge of one-third of his cabinet in the face of byelection losses. —The prolonged 1983 st-mg- gle for the Tory leadership which ended with two of the government‘s sblest mem- bers. Iain Macleod and Enoch Powell, on the backbenches. —The decision to give the lords the right to become commoners, thus enabling the Tories to pick the 14th Earl of Home as prem r. The Parliament passed 240 sets and the Tories are proud that 13 of these granted inde- pendence to former colonial ter- ritorles. In summing up, the mass- circulation Daily Mirror’s polit- drama JOIINSON -— At Summon-side July 30, 1964, W. Brewer John- son of Central Bedeque. aged noon, tlhen to the home of his daughter. Rx; ardin, Free- oerment in the People’s ceme- tery, Freetown. Visiting hours Friday evening from eight 10. TUPLIN — At Surmrmerside July awry Tupiin pic's cemetery. MA NALD — H u m b e r Memorial Hospital, Weston, Ontario on Ju TI, 1964, Emma, aged 79 years. Widow of the late Reuben Macdonald of Charlottetown, P.E.I. Mo- ther of Jean (Mrs. A.L. Smith) of Intrusion), teas and Doris (Mrs. D.A. Mitchell) of Toron- to, Ontario. Sister .W. Roper of Montague and Frank Roper of Chilliwack, B.C. Re- mains will be resting at Cut- cliffe Funeral Home Thurs- day and Friday until noon. Funeral will take place from Zion Presbyterian C hurc h, Charlottetown on Friday at 2 pm Interment in Peoples cemetery. Charlottetown. eluded by then, the Queen may have a bread and‘ but- ical reporter says the be asked to participate in some ter as their chief interest. has been high. kind of ceremony msrkln! tbs Ceflllniy the most ignant “But the curtain should have adoption of a Canadian flag. moment of this parliament been rung own 12 month. She and Prince Philip are came this week wheat was rigs." t um" i the m to fl here from One omens vo un- resen s ng n She Swill return at bounded admirati and gun. “at house is: Conservative. to London and Prince Philip tude to Sir Winston Churchill. 353: Labor 201: Liberals 7; in- will board the royal yacht Brit. who in his 90th year visited the dependents 2; vacant 7_ annia to make some visits 2. other con . The announcement did not in- THIS WEEK _ m A1- THE dicatc Prince Philip’s {rather itinerary. TO OPEN CENTRE The Queen and Prince Philip are to fly to Charlottetown for 6 8M (kt, 7s open the new Fathers of Con- federation Memorial Cantu. Then tey aboard Britannia to Quebec City, where Oct, 10 the Queen will attend ceremonies marking the tooth i Confederation formally their first resolution agreeing in principle to seek terms for on of the Britt‘s North merlcan provinces. A Opposites Leader Distan- baker said the news of the Queen's visit to Ottawa would be received by all Canadians g o r: BAY VISTA MOTOR INN CAVWMSH sienna DANCING . Friday and $1.00 per person Ne minors Saturday Nights finest all wool fabrics, a variety of shades. Regular._ short and stout models. For year round wear we give you the choice of the house. Handsome- ly tailored. smart new patterns. WEATHER HALIFAX rep)" —- The wea- mained over the district as dri- er air continued to flow in from the west. This dry air is cool enough so that temperatures in most localities today (Friday) will climb to only the high 60s and low 70s. Saturday is also expected to be a mainly sunny day as a high pressure area now over North- western Ontario approaches the Maritimes. Temperatures gradually moderate on Saturday. egional forecas : Nova Sco- Prince Edward Island, New Brunswick: Mostly sunny and —. .. 5'31 ning to west 15. Low high at Halifax, Yarmou-th ville 50 and 72 Goshen. Sydney 72, Edmundston and mer. High tide today at Charlotte- town at 10.53 a.m. and 12. a.m. At Rustico at 11.03 a.m and 12.11 a.m. Smmnerside (rides 18 minutes later titan lottetown. Sun rises 6.10 a.m. and se All times AD’I‘. sounds. from their _ foreheads. TORONTO (CP) — Observed temperatures from the weather office Min. Max. Dawson ....52 69 Prince George .45 76 * Vancouver . . 54 62 Victoria . . ..52 80 Edmonton .56 73 Calgary ...50 79 Regina ....55 85 Winnipeg 51 76 Toronto .59 72 Ottawa 55 70 Montreal . .58 70 On bee . . . . . . ..52 67 Fredericton . . so 75 Saint John ..55 74 Moneton . . .61 73 liialifax . .. ....60 7O Charlottetown . . 59 78 Sydney 08 St. John's, Nfld. . .59 75 Boston .. ....M 88 w York .. . 00 88 fiber office says late evening only a few clouds re- cool. Winds increasing this mor- town 53 and 70, Monoton, Fred- ericton and Saint John 50 and Campbell- ton 48 and 67. Outlook for Sat- urday — sunny and a little war- (litres- today at 8.28 p.m. SEA SOUNDS Porpolses make two kinds of a whistle from their larynx and a choking noise W‘E‘ These two men are the top two favorites to be President Johnston's runnin mate for vice-president in the upcoming else 'on. They are Sen. Hubert Humphrey (left) and Sen. Eu- gene McCarthy, both of Min- nesota. They received 341 votes and 50 votes respective- 109 we cuorcss at the Democratic convene tion. Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy and his brother- ln-law, Sargent Shriver, dim. tor of the Peace Corps, receiv- ed more votes than McCarthy but they were eliminated by President Johnston in a sur- COMMUNISTS WANTED JAKARTA (Reuters) — Th Communist - controlled Indone- sia Trade Union Federation has demanded the inclusion of Com- T munists in President Sukarno's c ' et ov rcosne current economic dificulties, the off!- cial Antara news agency said hursday. QUALIFICATIONS: SALARY: Local 406. PURITY DAIRY “Parents Prefer Purity Products” 317 Kent Reg. to 59.95 Reg. hugs tau! 544354364 July 24. 1964 DLA Here's a “not-to-be-missed” opportunity to save on men’s wear. We’ve drastically reduced prices on everything to make room for Fall merchandise. If you’re smart you’ll shop early for thesa better buys. ' Clearance of m Fine quality year round and summer weight fabrics ex- pertly tailored. Regular. Tall Short and Stout models. to 69.95 Reg. to 85.00 PLEATED AND CONTIN- ENTAL STYLES. Summer weights and year round fa- brics are in a complete variety and awaiting your selection. Every imagin- able shade, pattern and styling to suit the man who cares about his clothes. Sizes 90 to 44. Reg. 8.95 - 10.95 80 Pair 5.99 MIEN’S SLAX CLEARANCE STRAW HATS are. 3.95 ms 2 _ BUYS FOR Roys‘ Famous Brands Reg. 1.08 Sport Shirts 1.19 BOYS Boys' regular to 2.39. short sleeve cotton. 8 button knit SHIRTS 1.49 SPORT SHIRT CLEARANCE Men's and Young Man's Styles Reg. Price to 5.00 O SportSliirts O Knit Shirts 2 - __ "The Entrance to a ~ men’s mo sovs‘ wean momma. airman. Victoria General Hospital Halifax, Nova Sootia. Requires the services of a Cardio - Pulmonary Laboratory Technician University Degree or equivalent. Canadian Society of Lab: oratory Technicians certificate desirable. Commensurate with qualifications and experienca Full Civil Service benefits. Further information may be obtained by contacting trio'- Director of Cardin-Pulmonary Laboratory, phone 422-1361,‘ Application Forms may be obtained from the Nova Scotta Civil Service Commission, P.O. Box 943, Dennis Building. Granville Street. Halifax, Nova Scolds. GOLFERS! National brands, fashioned . Golf Styles. including some short sleeve dress shirts. Sportsmen! Big range of patterns. . tensiva color combinatl h checks and plains. I with” '