~'—“Ir-riar-«,Y_I‘>rf_ ,i;~. NEW GLASGOW JUNIOR FARMERS WIN TROPHY Dave MacLean (centre) of the Farm Credit Corporation. federal department of agri- culture. presents a trophy to Sterling MacRae. lOCAl BRIEFS IS PATIENT Derrill White of Brookfield is a patient in the Prince Edward Island Hospital. COUNCIL PRESENTS Premier WR. haw an Mayor A.W G‘audet were pre- sented with gifts in appreciat- ion of their Centennial Rear ac- tivities at. a reception held last night by city council members at City Hall. FINED $10 In Traffic Court yesterday morning Justice the Peace Albert Dinnis fined one man $10 and costs for passing on a solid white line and adjourned the case of another for passmg on a double white line. HOTEL BOOKINGS The Charlottetown Hotel has some 100 bus tours and four conventions booked for the 1965 season and there is a possibil- ity that two other conventions xiii confirm bookings at a later ate D. MATTRESS BURNS The Montague fire department was called out at 3 p.m. to tnc home of Alan Nelson, Montague. to extinguish a blaze in a mat- tress in the basement. The mattress was destroyed and considerable smoke damage re- sulted. represent- ing New Glasgow. P.E.I.. Junior Farmers. at the an- nual dinner meeting of the Junior Farmers of P.E.I. held last night at the Queen Hotel. The trophy is presented an- nually to a unior Farmers Club with the highest stand- ing in community projects. Looking on is Isabel Stead of Fortune. president of the or- ganization. Among special guests at the meeting were Premier W.R. Shaw and Min- ister of Agriculture Andrew MacRae. Won'iS’r City Magistrate James Has- lam yesterday termed “ridicu- lous" reasons given by John Henry Reid. charged with operating a restaurant without, a license. for asking to be tried by another magistrate. The accused made the request in city police court Wednesday after citing a number of in- cidents he said showed Magis- trate Haslam was biase against him. The magistrate turned down Reid’s request yesterday. statg. ing he had examined the rea- sons given and “the more I examined them the more ridiculous I see they are." One of the main reasons had been that Mr. Haslam. in his capacity as a lawyer. ‘had done some legal work for the busi- ness of the accus . The magistrate said if the Crown had objected to him on this basis. he would have had to turn the case over to the county magistrate. It was stated Mr. Haslam had instituted garnishee proceedings for eid's sister as book- keeper for Johnny's Fish and hips. Regarding the arrest of the accused on a warrant instead of a summons the magistrate stat- ed the’ court had to decide on procedural action. He dealt particularly with the charge that holding a court ses- sion on a Saturday afternoon CARI) PARTY HELD The winners of the card party Thursday night at the Com- munity Centre are as follows: ladies' first. Mrs. A. Ford: sec- ond. Josie Blanchard; gent's first. Frank Arblng; second. Vernon Gay: consolation. Dan Chipman. Josie Peters: freeze- out. Mike Blanchard. Mrs. Mar- garet Creamer: door. Mrs. Fred McMahon: special. Mrs. Mar- garet McConnell. PROMOTION A former Islander now serv- ing with the Royal Canadian Dragoons at Camp Gagetown has been promoted from cap- tain to major. The promotion of Capt. Walter L. Conrad to n.'ijor was recently announced by t defence department. Major Conrad is the son of I Lieut. rs. F. . Conrad of H Upper Prince Street. Charlottetown. BRISTOL WOMAN DIES .this phase of the operation Ci’ry Magistrate epAside was following unusual proced- ure by saying in case of such arrest a hearing must be ac- corded an accused within 24 lSlAND NEWS PAGE' Eastern And Central Districts 1 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Fri., Dec. 11, 1964. 5 Some 44 governors represent- the P.E.I. eachers’ Federa- tion will attend the two-day an- nual meeting of the board of governors commencing t h i s evening at Federation House in Charlottetown. The main items of business will be consideration of resolu- tions submitted by the various locals and the election of of- ficers scheduled for tomorrow at 11 am. Chairman for the resolutions discussion will be rank Costello. while chair- man of the nominating commit- tee is Mrs. Marjorie Dover. Also on the agenda are re- marks by the president of the federation. Thomas Hall. prin- cipal of Athena Regional High School. who will also report on the Canadian Teachers' Federa- tion. Charles Campbell. vice presi- dent of the Island federation.. will give a report on the Atlan-L ing the 10 provincial locals of at P.E.I. lF Governors Open Annual Tonight tic Conference held in October the vocational institute ' Charlottetown. ohn eo will report on the recent meeting of the Atlantic Provinces Ex- amining Board at Prince of Wales College. members from Hunter River. Kensington. Montague and Souris will be introduced to the board. The treasurer. Winnifred Stevenson. will pre- sent the auditors report and the l964-65 budget will be an- nounced by Weston Carmody of the financial committee. Various committee reports will be given by chairmen; Davis Lidstone, pension com~ mission; Francis MacNeill. sal- ary; Frank Costello. property; Gordon Bovyer, audio-visual; Alice Fraser, research a d report of the CCRE Invitational Conference on Research. The provincial executive will meet this evening and the en- tire scssion will conclude Satur- day afternoon. ero Limited at Giant's uni-nor. said during the search for Quin" land and Smith that the Cygnu' an all - weather coast gusru. They said most vessels avail- able for search and rescue work 'Con‘lnufli fmm P329 it are fair-weather ships not suit- could have left Shclhiirne in the' FARMERS .— O l l .1 .0 In his latest uproorious comedy hir Shows 3:30 - ‘7 - 9 ' Sat] - 3 - 7 - 9 '. Just a simple hillbilly weddin‘ it: f". ~ ...a guga alanda shotgun: a, .A. .‘r :17 ’ 'ua-uul- made of the implications of' for service during storms morning and reached the drift. other related matters be the. ay of un . la mile or so off shore it it had subject of study of the land use William Molfatt. general maii- i been known in time that the Cy. ' authority already recommend- rigor of British Columbia Pack- gnus was nearby. ed by the federation of agri- cum 44444***** 'one resolution pointed out that I, I, the cost of education continucs‘ Clampel‘l’ increase and since ‘ agreed that farm properties bear a relatively higher ,nro- "SHOTGUN WEDDIN’ " e .. it was resolved that con-,1 sideration should be given evising a more equitable <ys~ tem of taxation for financing education. minimum wage does not applyl to workers in processing plants, ‘ one resolution asked that the: f” wage regulation apply to men: I and women employed in the: - l COAST GUARD i i tContinued from page i ‘ RCAF rescue centre at Ha was notified. t 7:05 a.m available ship was the 229-toot oast guard vessel Walter E.‘ Foster which could leave Saint ‘ John. N.B.. at 8 a. . By 9:30 the lobster boat was offshore near Clark’s Harbor on Cape Sable Island. Efforts to‘ lreach her by two other fishing. Ivessels were thwarted by heavy i ble forms of land tenure and thatlon the Atlantic coast or in the‘ing boat while it “as hilll “my 1 0n the financing of education. . Cordially anII'eS you to a portion of the burden than dol Stating that the prrwincial;j plants. tre reported that the nearest spotted anchored about one milel lseas. In the early afternoon the Souris RCMP Conducting Safety Series SOURIS Souris detach~ ment of the RCMP is conduct- ing a highway safety campaign in the elementary schools here. RC have given lectures and shown films to about 350 students of Souris Elementary School and St. Mary‘s Convent. ilms shown were “ nk Tail". “Look Alert. Stay Alert". “Bicycle Safety" and "Case of Tom Tucker". They are also touring other schools in the detachment area to lecture on highway safety. ’11 in ‘< hours. Since the arrest in ques- tion had been made on a Satur- ay the accused would not nor- mally be in court until Monday morning— providing an inter- vening period longer than the stated 24 hours. He said Mr. Reid's remark: regarding that hearing had ap- parently resulted from poor ed- vice because “whoever gave you such advice is obviously ‘11 ot familiar with city by-laws." OWN NAME The magistrate then stated county records showed the busi- ness of Johnny's Fish and Chips to be under the name of John Henry Reid and indicated this disposed of the statement it was operated by Mr. Reid’s sister. He concluded by stating “I am going to proceed with this case. I will hear the case on its merits and will give the accus- ed a fair trial.‘ When he said he would pro- ceed in the morning Mr. Reid stated he would be out of town for a few days and. added he had to get his witnesses together as some would have to come from the mainland and possibly Mon- treal or Toronto. He was told y Magistrate Haslam “you can get them from Vancouver if you wish. but have them re." The accused was remanded to Tuesday. December 15. with ball to stand. Hazelbrook I Derciilmen‘i Is Cleared Local railway officials last night reported that the derail- ment at Hazelbrook. which oc- curred at mid-afternoon Wed- nesday. except for the repair- ing of the track was cleared by daylight Thursday. he‘two derailed diesel units were placed back on the track a work crane from Char- lottetown. Immediately after 0‘ '< sectionmen started in to repair he tre and replace ties chewed up by the accident. The track repair was com- pleted early in the forenoon and normal service was resum- ed immediately. PRODS CHURCH HAMILTON. Ont. (Cpl—The Church should more con- cerned about world problems an ht to argue less about the credibility of Old Testamentl stories. Rt. . Ernest M.’ Howse. moderator of the United Church of Canada. said Wednes- day night. Belgian Ship Loods Pulp At Souris SOURIS — A Belgian pulp boat. the GTV Teti N.. was scheduled to return to Lan- brugg, Belgium. last night. af- ter loading about 1.200 cords of 3 puipw T e boat'was loaded by Al. bert uigley and Son of St. Peters. It carries a crew of 18 men under Captain Athan Anagnosto- Cerebral Palsy Montgomery Hall. Charlotte- 'll be the venue for the fit Conference on Cerebral Palsy to be held June 4. 5 and 6. 1965. it was announc- ed yesterday following a plan- ning meeting at the School for Cerebral Palsy and Mental Re- tardation in Moncton Tuesday night. Brig. W. W. Reid. deputy minister of welfare for P.E.I.. is conference chairman. Theme of the conference is “Parental Responsibility in the erebral Palsy Program." Among the projected panels is one dealing with sheltered workshops and actiity centres. Special speakers will be secured for the conference. Dis- Conference Set For City In June I965 Fredericton: Mrs. Lloyd MacCallum. Cerebral a sy arents’ Association, Charlottetown; Mrs argaret acdonald. rehabilitation councillor. Charlottetown; Mar- McGuinness. supervisor. special interests, Canadian Re- habilitation Council for the Dis- abled. Toronto: Frank E. Wel- lard. secretary. erence on Cerebral Palsy. Halifax; Lieut.-Col. J. M. Kin- naird. executive director. Nova cotia Chapter. Canadian Re- habilitation Council for the Dis- abled: Mrs. Sigrid Day. as- sociate executive director and Mrs Marcella Brown, public relations co-ordinator. habilitation. U: m ": PD Atlantic Con-- sun-ms o rope apparently broke and the boat drifted helpiessly' “dd out to sea. The Shelburne Coast Guard. 3 weekly newspaper, said editi- rially Thursday that by the aft- ernoon of Dec. 1 rescue head-i quarters in Halifax “discovered the fisheries patrol boat Cygnus had been tied up at the wharf in Shelburne all this time." MOST SHIPS UNSUITARLE The paper said the 153-toot' Cygnus spent almost two hours/ TEMPTATION AND TERROR AWAIT YOU AT OUR MIDNITE SHOW TONITE THE SCREEN’S MOST SENSUOUS BEAUTY IN THE WORLD’S MOST STARTLING STORY! trying to get out of harbor but “it was soon obvious she was not a fit ship for the. type of operation. She returned ‘ to port at about 4 p.m." ‘ The paper said the rescue «:en- . tre was asked to send a lieli-l coptcr at 9:50 am 1 bu ' the answer was "that it was tooE windy to consider this type ofl rescue." ‘ "Before noon the wind slack- ened for awhile and another re- F/ely lempfress and inhuman beast. . . the strangest pair in all the annals of terror! cussion groups are planned. as well as several social events and tours of establishments of interest to the group. Baby sit- ters will be provided for dele- gates with children. A large attendance is expect- ed for the meeting in the ladies“ residence of Prince of Wa College. Delegates will come from New Brunswick. Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island and Newfoundland. Previous conferences were held in Sack- vile Fredericton. NB; Halifax and Amherst. N.S. Attending Tuesday night's E .II Child Struck, Makes Escape Unsccithed Five-year-old Irving Hardy of 187 Prince Street was struck by a car around noon yester- ay. in front of his home. river of the vehicle was Mrs Violet Cairns of 158 Prince meeting were Savrii Baiani. president. Cerebral Palsy Par-I ' Association. Moncion: ‘von Melanson, provincial dir- of re- (B ‘ = n in ector and co-ordinator Lorne Valley poulos. Icy Street Causes Crash At Intersection A two-car collision occurred the Eustou-Cumberland street intersection around 4.30 p.m. yesterday. City police. who investigated the accident, said Elwin Her- lihy. Charlottetown RR 2. driv- I” p Woman Dies MONTAGUE occurred at her home in Lorne Valley on Thursday. Dec. 10 of Mrs. Alex H. MacDonald. for— merly Katherine Maude Pill- man of French River. in he!" 89th year. The late Mrs. Mac Donald leaves to mourn sons Earl and Lloyd both of Lorne Valley. also two brothers Elmer and Fulton both in west- ern Canada. The funeral arrangeman The death Street. City police said the child. who was examined at the escaped Polyclinic. apparently iniiii'v. . TAP MILLER B v .rpaf George 99 ing a small car of foreign make. was proceeding north on Cumberland. and. because of the icy condition of the street. was unable to yield. The car collided with a truck driven by Ronald Ford of 28 Gerald Street. Damage to tie car was es- timated at $200. and $60 dam- age was sustained by the truck. warms-r for the... Excellent lighting, s a men‘s wear ad combination. Walter O‘Brien. Charlotte- town. has received word of the death in Boston. of his aunt. seven years ago. They leave a family of several daughters and one son all in Boston. The funeral was held in Bosto . ed service for Captain Alexander Capt. MacDonald Is Buried Wed. MONTAGUE — The funeral MacDonald. Montague. former- ly of Lochlomond. Scotland. was held from the Montague Funer- al Home Wednesday. Dec. 9. The late Captain MacDonald was born on the Isle of Skye and came to Canada earlier this year following the death of his wife to live with IIII daugh- ter rs. . Martin. Mrs. MacDonald passed away in March of this your . He loaves to mourn besides domici- one son. Roddy. In E m Branch of. the; attended the funeral. with Colin N80 conducting the graveside service m 0"“ tilt oouudlu the Last Post and Reveille: Ilium were no. Ewen. Alon .m- p. McAdlm. ‘ M. ii... rem-'2 In the aims and... ’l'” Vendor-this. Sterling Mac . Interment was In the Cardigan l m. The Rev. ac. Lowery 'of St. An- Proobyhrin Church. Shiffer-Hlllmdn Suits Top of the line suits are y when you Quality material. excellet IIIIIIIIIIp and correct styling yours with Shifter-Human. II slack pants. Prlccdct 29.50 89.50 m: Stewart Dewar. lei-l Haydon. Arnold Leod Step into Style Hooleys the Island's finest men‘s wear store . . . offer you Shifter-Hillmun quality plus guarantee of Hooleys Men’s Wear reputation. credit facilities and the d up to an unbeatable Visit Hooley’l soon. buy suffer-Ilium Quality Priced at 95.00 Shifter - Hillman Pants Canada's finest slacks. real quality guilty rorcons OI ty 'I'opcoeto II assorted shades and 'slues. Real warmth and style. .1 -.- Aamnuunamn OLII'I II'C have not been completed. i Open Errory. Nth except Saturdays Till Christmas! island fu 7O GRAFTON ST. How to ra your fair lady with an elegant fur . . . utylesl Her choice on "’ MILLER BROS. LTD. o . This Christmas . TRANSISTOR RADIOS . ELECTRIC GUITARS . RECORD PLAYERS the one she‘s dreamed of! coal. stole. jacket or wrap from our fashion collection and Persian in the style and weight she prefers. Prices to suit everyone end convenient payment terms may - Cencrentola Overture . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Rossini I” “3”” - - - 5m” “0‘” ‘0‘ the 3‘“ Siegfried Idyll . . . . . . . . . . . . ........ .. \l‘airner Pastoral Suit l,.-irrson she‘u adore . . . "Free gift wrapping refers ltd. flamma‘ ‘ quest was made to search and. rescue for a helicopter with thei same result. At approximately I p. . ' swun o the northwest and shortly after tn: the boat broke her anchor rope.‘ The paper said "no satisfac- tory answer .has been given to the question why did search and rescue officials not know the Cygnus was tied up at the Shel- burne wharf and why is our iarea where 2.300 lobster li- cences are sold is there no res- cue vessel available in case of emergency.‘ The Yarmouth Board of trade 'Voted Wednesday to ask tho ifederal government to estah'vshl I IOIIIY and Mutant: NAIII Prose-v1 EUALLOBRIGIDA ANTHONY QUINN VICTOR HUGO'S An ALLIED ARTISTS Pldul. - mum byJEAN DELANNOY CINIMASCOPE Written in the man by JEAN AURENCHE m JACQUES PREVENT TECHNICOLOR comm °°°"°"’" ""5 Showarllz45 * t ‘A’ * *¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ A Musical Santa E RECORDERS. ETC. ROS. LTD. Charlottetown Confederation Centre CONCERTS FOR CHRISTMAS A Prelude To Christmas featuring The P.E.I. Centennial Choir an evening of Christmas music to delight the whole family Sunday. Dec. 13 - 8:30 Adults $1.00 - Student's 50c vari'rf‘: THE HALIFAX SYMPHONY presents a concert of Familiar Symphonic Music An evening of light popular music to delight the whole family. te a Christmas kiss: gift Choose a in all her favorite of muskrat. mink. Kollnsky program ......'.'.'.'.'.' ' Matighn-ll'illiams Mendelssohn p.m.... .. 7-«'.‘.-‘.¢..'..4.‘.;.;.;.-'-"::. ‘ Italian Symphony Wednesday. Dec. 16 - 8:30 Adults $1.00 - Students 50: 3r "‘5 on. A cm of Entertainment Theatre Gift Certificates The ideal gift for family and friends. Available in $5 hooks. each book contains five $1.00 vouch- ers which may be exchanged or applied towards any attraction If. the Confederation Centre Theatre. Confederation Centre Box Office Open Daily ism-5:00; Friday Eve-Inga 7:00-9:00-Phone 892-2484 l for men." Dial 2-1273 ‘—