| i i l l I I I I ‘1‘”? l l l Dishwashlng doesn't seem to be. all drudgery for th o s e cheerful lasses. iicre attack- ing kitchen duty with a smile. The girl 5. Beth McLeod tic-ill and Bea Hogan. both VOLUNTEENS WORK AT CLINIC grade 10 students at Queen Charlotte High School. are “volunteens”. who are help- log out at the Charlottetown blood donor clinic at Zion Church Hall. The girls belong to a group of Junior Red Cross members whose Volunteer du- ties include summer work at city hospitals as nurses' ss- sistants. Newsmen Gather In Ch’town lo Record The Royal Visit With the approach of the ar- rival here next week of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth. Char- loitctown is moving into th forefront of the international news scene as it becomes the local point of news media for the Commonwealth. Newsmen with worldwide rep- utations are arriving here al- most daily in preparation for the day when this old city be- comes the “heart” of the great multitude of nations forming the British Commonwealth. At the same time security for- ces are moving quietly on th e some as preparations of trem- endous significance are being made to guard The . So quietly. in fact. are they moving the only noticeable ripple is a change in tension around the new Fathers of Confederation Memorial Buildings which Her Majesty will officially open next Week. 0 .G. Britten ls Ordained Friday evening. Sept. 25. a large congregation participated in an impressive service during which Edward G. Britten. BA. BTh. was ordained to the Bap- tist ministry and inducted as Pastor of the Tryon United Bap- tist Field where he has been working since the last of May. AsSisting in the service were: Earle Jenkins, Alexandra. Mo- derator of the P.E.I. Baptist As- sociation. who gave the Invoca- tion and Declaration and Cow- iiant; Rev. Horace Estabrooks. BMPQUE readthe Scripture; B. C. Wood.Crapaud, church cleric. read the report of the Ordl a- tion Committee. Dr. MR. Cherry. Acting Dean. Acadia School of Theology. Wolf V1119. N.S in his ordination ser- m‘m save Mr. Britten a tour told charge. viz. to be a steward. ' priest or ambassador. I pro- Dhet or teacher. and s pester or 'hepherd. Rev. Keith Edison. Pastor of Summerside Baptist Church. save the charge to the church. reminding the members to show ‘0“? and respect and to give “Wort and encouragement to "Mr new pastor. Mrs. «Rev: TB Tingley. Bayslde. Nd. FUN soloist, sang “Spirit of Gtlilfieticend Upon My Heart" Ind the church choir. under the direction of Jo-Ann Wood. ran W‘"tl°ws of Heaven." “Cm” among the interested “I’M! and relatives present at s occasion was Mr. Button '33” father. Dr. C.A. Britten. gm" pastor of Bedeque Bar» h.” Church. now retired and “Mt in Summerside. 0‘” "I Province guests lnclud Willi 9 i 8- 3. g. fii 3' Howard of mm 'Riverl gimme“. ledsque. sad i The security Which would be most lost because of the calm- ness which normally prevails :I' ere. Just how many people will be here simply to report on the ac- tivities is difficult to say. but educated guesses place the total at 150 newspapermen at least and approximately 50 radio and television commentators and technical crewme So far at least five of the larger London. England. papers will have reporters on hand. These will be from . Mail. Telegraph. Express. Sun and Times. It is also ex ted representatives will arrive from the London NeWs of The Worl and the Independent Television News. Other papers represented will be New York Herald Tribune. Chicago Daily ewe. Chicago Tribune. New York Times Bos- ton Globe. Halifax Herald. Ham- ilton Spectator. Montreal Gar ette. Montreal Star. . Press. Time. Toronto Star and Star Weekly. Globe and Mail. Telegram. Vancouver Sun. Win- dsor Star. No French language newspapers have signified tentions of having men here. Q- E5 to Daily '0 In the international field of radian Overseas Britis‘i Tele- communications. Assomated British. Pathe. the American .Broadcasting Corp. National lBroadcasting Company. Canad- lian Broadcasting Company and a num private radio sta- tions including two from Mon- treal. Besides these there will be men and women from Canadian Press. Associated Press. Unit- ed Press International and the F a] News Photos of Toron- Press headquarters have been set up in the Basilica Recrea- tion Centre and a briefing for all reporters will be held there Sunday night. In connection with the secur- ity regulations a vast. amount of interest has centred around the special automobiles to be used during the Royal visit. How- ever. information regarding them is singularly lacking. It is in reported they have not yet ar- 11 < ed in Prince Edward island. but when they do no pictures of the cars may be taken excepting as they pass along city streets during the various parades to be held. ISLAND NEWS PAGE WesternrAnd Central Districts The Guardian. Charlottetown, Thurs. Oct. 1, 1964. 3 By CHRISTOPHER GLEDHILL (The following was written especially for The Guardian by the director of music for P I) The Community Concert As. sociation is to be congratulated on their luck or good judgment in securing the services of the Societa' Corelli. a chamber or- chestra of twelve strings and s continuo, for an outstanding con- cert on Wednesday night. This concert was the first of the new season. and also the first Community Concert to be held in the Confederation Thea- tre. To most music-lovers Italy is thought of pre-emiently as the land of opera. True enough. in the latter part of the eighteenth century down to very recent years opera has been the main preoccupation of Italian music- ians. In Italy itself the opera is almost as popular as football among all classes of society. Yet before this intense spec- Ialization set in aly led the world for two or three hu1dred years in all branches of music. The grand Italian tradition of instrumental music of seventeenth and eighteenth cen- turies formed the main stream of music throughout this period until the rise of the German tradition. The only serious contenders in this period were the French, and even they were led by Lully. an Italian by birth Handel's ‘music is saturated in the tradition of Corelli. and this made him more of a cos- mopolitan. musically speaking. than Bach. whose roots lie deep in the Lutheran German trad- ition of chorales and chants. This chamber orchestra gave a very finely disciplined per- formance throughout the even- ing. Tradition - once again tradition - says that. chamber music stops at the magic num- ber of nine. Anything above that number becomes an or- 0utstanding Concert ls Season's Opener chestra. At the same time. this 1 group played more as a cham her group than as an orchestra. The very fact that they dis- pensed with a conductor significant. I might also men - ion that they scarcely. ever re- turned their instruments except at intermission. and yet their internation was beyond re- s ~E '5 rs G The Corelli COI.‘OI'I.0 Grosso was a noble piece of work. and was played with meticulous at- tention to style. The penulti- mate movement. I fugato. was rich and satisfying. reminding one of two other works, the Gratias of the Bach B minor Mass and the William Byrd Golden Canon “Non nobis. Do- mine“, which both use the same motif. Mirella Zuccarini gave s sparkling performance of the Haydn D major piano concerto. It is not Haydn at his greatest. perhaps. but Haydn is always interesting. even when he is not working at full pressure. The Suite from Purcell‘s Ab- delazer contains the theme that Benjamin Britten put on the map in his Young Persons' Guide to the Orchestra. which we heard last summer played by the Na- tional Youth Orchestra. The acearbities of Purcell‘s false relations are appreciated more today than they were in the eighteenth and nineteenth cen. turies. Geminiani's Concerto Grosso in G minor is a fine and vigor- ous work. and I was very happy to make my first acquaintance with it. The orchestra played it. with authority and feeling. To send us away in a good mood the Sinfonia Concertante of Boccherini was chosen. This is a pleasing work with some interesting contrasts of violin and cello timbres. Some of the figuration is rather facile. Boccherini is a Haydn without the wit and the flashes of deep BRIEFS i l insight of the Austrian master. Summing up. this was a very satisfying concert by a group of fine musicians that we. would like to have the privilege of hearing again. Arrivedercl! which opened the programme‘ 3v. . A well known resident of Montague. Daniel Reilly cele- brated his 90th. birthday. on Saturday, Sept. 26. Mr. Reilly is in excellent health and is able to read. hear and get around on his own. on Saturday friends and neigh- bors called to congratulate years of good health. was born at Forest Hill but spent the greater part of his life in Montague. A fisherman and lobster packer by trade. he retired only three years ago. Since his retirement he has travelled considerably in Eastern Canada and United States where he visited with his family. WEATHER TORONTO ICP t temperatures from - Observed the weather office: Min Max. Toronto ....45 61 Ottawa . ..38 56 Montreal .. .. . 45 59 Quebvc 38 55 Fredr i‘icton 34 62 Saint John .....4l 60 Monrton ..45 62 Ha".ax ... ....51 57' Charlottetown . . . 49 58 Sydney 47 55 HALIFAX (CPI —- The wea- ‘!.er office says skies had he- the district late today. This system will dominate the wea- ther for the next twn days. re« sulting in mainly sunny a. cool conditions today and Fri- ay. Regional fonecasts: Northern N.S. Eastern Snore. Cape Breton. Prince Edward Island. Eastern NR. Counties. Lower St. John River Valley. Sunny with a few cloudy per- Iods: cool: nor-tth winds 15 in. creasing near noon to Artifical Kidney Subject Of Talk DRIVER FINED The report of the County Magistrate's which appeared in Wednesday's issue of The Guardian. it should have read. Alan brey. Cavendish was fined $10 and costs on the change of driving without due care and attention, not $20 and costs or so days for illegal possession of liquor. The Guardian regrets any misun- derstanding or inconvenience which may have arisen rom the original report. SERVICE HELD Com ' tal service for R. Percy Schurman was held Wed- nesday afternoon at the Peoples Cemetery. Summrsiide wit Rev. Keith Hobson officiating. Pallbearers were: Louis Cairns, .B. ‘ Robert Schuman. Graham Conrad. Pete Chandler and Carl Moose. Dr. Alan J. MacLeod was the guest speaker Tuesday evening at a scientific meeting of the Prince Edward Island Branch of the Canadian Society of La- boratory Technologists. The meeting. held in the Con- ference Room the Health re. was well attended by sion of Laboratories and hospitals. Dr. MacLeod. a former resi- dent of P.E.I. is s specialist in internal medicine and has I practice in Halfax. He chose as his subject "Mo- dern iesting of Renal Func- tions." Juring the course of his tail; Dr. MacLeod described in some detail the’ use of the artifi- the technologists from the Divi-‘ the west 25 and diminishing sunset. to light. Low-high New Glasgow. Gnshen nad Syd- ney 40 and as. Charlottetown 38 and 53. Moncton 35 and 50. Fredericton and Sanit John 38 and 55. Outlook for Friday — Sunny and cool. High tide today at Charlotte town 6.37 a.m._an 8.55 pm. A Rustlco at 1.53 a.m. Summer- side tide eighteen minutes later than Charlottetown. Sun rise.- today at 7.09 a.m. and sets at. 6.56 pm. All times ADT. him and wish him many more = He '. l i come mostly clear over the Maritimes late Wednesday. 1 High pressure centred over . Western Quebec Will move over i Mental Retardation -= Unnecessary cial kidney and how it has to tributed to medical science. Small Lobster Possession Results In HeaVy Penalty ALBERTON — Ivan Chester dams. Montrose. was fined $350 and costs or six months by Magistrate W. Chester S. Mac- Donald st. Alberton yesterday when he pleaded guilty to pos- session of 1031 undersized loo- sters. In addition I 1956 Dodge car used in connection with ‘hs DEATH NOTICES Received foo Isle for Classified death notice column the Prince tember so. 1064. Mrs. Par-me as Phillips of Remington. aged 79 years. Remains res-ta log at the Davison Funeral Home until Saturday noon. then to Keir Memorial Church. McCAR'mY —- At St. Elizabeth Hospital. Brighton. Mass. . 27. 1964. Augustine Mc- m . William. daughtefl. Them McCsnt Theodore tHilds) Gallant and MP9 John months. Cpl. RC Pettitt told me from 'I‘ignish received fines of em sion of liquor. offense was ordered confiscat- Fishery officer Thane Douglas described a cannery set up at the home of the accused where two crates and two bags of lob- sters ware found along with s bdler. tubs. three cases of emp- ty tins and 32 filled and sealed tins which were sent to the fish- ery laboratory and found to be unfit for human consumption. Stephen Archibald Mclnnis. Tignlsh. and Jack Franklyn Smallmsn. Locke Road. receiv- ed fines of 8200. and costs or three months for selling liquor. Five Ebbsfleet youths. Steph- en Joseph Gallant. Benjamin Joseph Tremblsy. Alfred Joseph 30“ Gallant. Charles Joseph Dou- cette and Carmen James Cos- tain received fines of $25 and costs or 30 days for stealing ar- ticles valued at less than $50. from s commercial vehicle. In addition they were ordered to pay damages oftwo dollars when signalled to do so by Tig-« nish Policeman Howard Foley. eter Austin» Gallant. Alberton South. was fined $10 and costs for driviing without due care and attention. A _ vsiu- ed at less than $15. knowing they ad n obtained w comm.- ting an indictsble'offense. adjourned for two weeks. Earle Kenneth Wells. Alber- ton was fined $10 and costs for unnecessary spinning of. wheels E cu was heard on an impaired driving charge against Milton Elmer Smalimsn. 0- WII by Melville ' Leary. represen Campbell and the case rnd'to Oct. 14 for Garnet mood. and Wayne Joseph Peters. Mary were fined ' and or ndays for damage to .0'-. Mary Regional High School. The charges were laid on May 28 nd deferred at that time for school was ‘ ad sentence . 0'. s sentence. Damages to the were paid by'tite accused ISSUE PLANNED HONG KONG (Reuterst—A special set of t'iree stamps will be issued throughout China to commemorate the 15th anniver- sary of the Communist eo- Tbe th ee ple's Republic. prise a composite whole. but each has an independent design of its own. the New China news agency said. r stamps are designed to com-l Affliction? "' i Entry halfofihevictims could i e saved simply by using the knowledge we now have! ' end in October Reader’s Digest about the dan era that face our babies, bot fore ‘ and after birth . . . and the I breakthroughs in research t may save you and your I child from hopeless heart- t break. ri’t miss this in- formative article in October i Reader's Digest, now on sale. each. The articles were all re- turned. A sixth youth involved in the case. John Emmett Csr- ragher. Ebbsfleet was not pre- sent and his case was adjourn- ed to Oct. 14 A Tignish Justin Hogan was fined as costs for speeding and his cense was cancelled for those resident. w i i b e n and li the court that he had chased Ho- gan at speeds up to too miles per hmtr. A resident of Aiberton and one at and costs for illegal posses- Edgar Joseph Perry. Tignisb was fined .10 and costs for dri- ving without s license and 95 and cost for falling b Light Docket In City Court "pecan charges bmugbt s fine of 315 and cats to Ernest Keith Waite. Halifax. and S10 and costs to Kenneth Hayfield Show. West Royalty, when they appeared Magistrate AJ. Haslsm. GO. in city police court w. One person w: fined 820 and costs cram days for illegal pos- or. A resident of Jobs-son's River was and costs or two days for failing to stop It s stop den- BUTTER ... u. 55'. ZION CHURCH H WIENERS 3 Lbs. ‘ FREE]! GROUND] HAMBURG 2 us. 89: FRESH ROAI'HNG PORK. . . . u. 35¢ FIRST. GRADI IEAMLESI NYLONS' 2 n. 89: son Maxims surmss M‘ IULK PAR Sic L'B. TO‘DAY’S RED CROSS BLOOD DONOR CLINICS ALI. — CH'TOWN 2—4&7—9F.M. AT LEAST 1.085 DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED THIS WEEK—BE ONE! SUPPORT YOUR UNITED FUND sernn SKIN ONIONS 2 us- 296 PICKLING cuxas ONIONS, carcass. GREEN TOMATOES BMVENSTIENE its-49C OI ISLAND APPLES first. saw means» consensual) or. DRAWN air sins. MULLIGAh DORCHESTER s'r. armour. sauna, v TE A Ii. 69' SEE OUR LUCKY DOLLAR AD WINNER or DISHES ' t i l t l 7 Expect High I Winter Fair ' Attendance HALIFAX —- The lflti4 Mimi- tic Winter Fair attendant-e fr:- ures are expected to eXt-cmi 1963 figures by appmxiinatcty 000 “We anticipate an alif‘ilflilllf‘f‘ of 100.000." says Fair PrcSi- near Don Gland. “This total tslout ts expected tor less wr'w: based on the tremendous inter- “? generated by last year's fair which is now being shown [in inqiiirics from both compet- ing exhibitors and the general liuihlic. Of course. our decision to extend the fair period from such to nine days is also an important far-tor." Atlantic Winlcr Fair office manager Sandra Thomas re- ports that entrir-s in all divisions are swelling each day's mail. An excellent light, horse lurn- v lcompetition for ii ‘.i:. in l the livestock. home craft h?" crafts riii'isrons shows sun:- ébeing even kccner than dui'i 'IIII’ '63 exhibition. I The fair is st-lioriiileri to open Friday Oct 30 and \\'lll run nine ’days tlii'riiigli l.'l Nov. 7, REMAINS FOI'VI) Bfl\'\' ‘Rmitci's Romain: 4' a Roman fortress dating back to 370 \D rave been found near the lower RlllllP village of Kleve near the Dutch border. ems-s: _\\ ASON SALE” theBEST SNOW TIR for ALMOST MAKES UN or WIN you 'd \ r; 21* 49:». TER DRIVING THIS REVOLUTIONARY NEW TIRE 'AS INTRODUCED LAST YEAR. Early pole! were “Mantel But the bad weather gave q too soon (for US) and Iorgu numbers were ‘uosuld. Now we need warehouse space for big, uew-seuson's chimes - and pound stocks (produced lest Jonuury and February) must gal These fine use IRAN” NEW . . . one:st the sum us these now being produced . . . but MI»: than Iii: the. with new ship-mm we on selling fliers of almost HALF THE PRICE YOU'LD EREC‘ TO PAY. You've got to be “quick as s bunny” to such in us his big swing .. . lt’u TUIEL ESS IL ACKVALLS .50/14 (Ln/IQ (8.25/l4) (Eds/IO (ESE/Ill Visitor's!" Lust m, with In Introduction of new seoad du- uigrsu, w doddud to discontinue Ilse WINTER EX- PRESS, which had prove. no reliable for almost u Jun-ode. Iut he many customers said “NO”, and so many punt uuuss “Issued so demand the WINTER EXPRESS In! "pl-count purpuuue H us. simply could stud uIIoed to disappoint mend New In "TER EXPRESS . . . the "uld MMuI" . . . I. buck In ION production. letter «III, as u spu- uld su-Ismudvesusy utter, prices are at us- ALL~TINE LOH quuusu in out of the molds bus already Doors covered. you pay only for musicals and labor. The result . . . HUGE SAVINGS for YOUI Usetbe IUNUS COUPONS Ius FREE INSTALLATION OPEN ’Tll. 9' TUIELESS ILACKVALLS 6.3M WIS/Ira Lie/IS IOJS/Ia 7.60/15 (8.65/19 wells uIse “Noble ll 26.” pi res. - NO TIME LIMIT ' NO MILEAGE LIMIT slightly 22.45 I emu “ Q t .5 I l‘ THURSDAY & FRIDAYg CNADIAN TIRE ASSEETATE STORE 96 Queen St. STEWART & MacRAE Dial 4-8569‘ . V l it” + expect to pay I! 7n. i