VIEW TRAFFIC SAFETY FILM Cnst. Tan Oland; RIGHT, a showed-a film on traffic safe- «torium. On member of the traffic. squad ty at a meeting of the Air Ca-- Cast. ‘ of the Charlottetown Detach- tnent of the RCMP last night Fisheries Co-Operative! Celebrates Anniversary By EDITH ELDERSHAW TIGNISH — The 40th Anni- ‘versary of the Tignish Fisheries Co-operative Association: was celebrated at Tignish on Wed- mesday, as over 300 fishermen, ‘their wives and guests had din- mer at the Legion Home and listened to tales of: long ago that were tossed around by eeveral of the remaining char- ter members, and progress of the future told by many of the epeakers.' . The day began as a holiday for the fishermen. Church services were held at St. Simon and St. Jude church at 3.30 pm. This was followed. by dinner. Master of ceremonies for the occasion” was Hubert Gaudet one of -the early: organizers. Seated at the tiead table were charter membérs and speakers, Joseph A. Arsenault, Charles Gavin, Hector Richard, John M. Handrahan, Harold Cormier, Michael McPhee, . Ferdenand Gaudet; Rev. Patrick Walsh, Very Rev. M.J. Rooney, Harold Phillips,. president of West «+ Prince Board of Trade, Robert ‘— \Campbell,MLA, and «Aubin J. Gallant, chairman of Village Commissioners. Fifty boys and girls from. the Tignish Elementary School with their principal, Sister St. Char- les, and music director, Sister St. George, entertained the gathering with folk songs. : Rev. Patrick Walsh introduc- ed guest speaker Rev. Dr. Rich- ard Ellsworth, vice-president of Saint Dunstan's University who MOTHER OF LIFE The sea, he said, is the mother of all life, the womb of the world that covers 70°per cent of ‘the earth’s surface. He went back to the formation of the world and spoke on the early plant life and the first appear- ance of lobster and fish. Dr. Ellsworth in his remarks said he hoped he had in some emall way agoused the fisher- men's ousity. ie ative fishermen, he said, should deal with the sea im its own terms. Occasionally,. he said, there are strangers who come among you who tag lob- eters and take sarnples of water. Have. great respect for those men, he said, as it is through men like these that we come to know about-our environment. delivered an address about the |’ _ WESTERN _ FUNERALS STEWART FUNERAL - The funeral for Mrs. Lizzie Stewart of Hamilton was held from the Princetown United Church at Malpeque on Monday afternoon, with the services heing conduct- ed by Rev. Frederick Lloyd. The hymns. sung were. ‘The Lord's My Shepherd” and “Jesus Sa- vior Pilot Me."’ The pallbearers . were Arthur Owen, William’ Sin- sqelair, Lloyd Lockerby, James M. Ramsay, Keir Ramsay and Wil- liam C, Donald. Interment was in the Peoples Cemetery. MATTHEWS FUNERAL — The funeral of Mrs, Russell Mat- thews was held on Thurs- day from the Rooney Fu- neral Home to Alberton United’ Church. A family service in the funeral home at 11 a.m. was conducted by Brown Jardine, The service in the church at 2 p.m. was conducted by Rev. Keith Whitney, assisted by Mr Jardine who led in _ prayer. Hymns were “Shall We Gather | Mil At The River?" and’ ‘The. Old Rugged Cross.” Soloist Alvin Ashley -sang ‘How Great Thou Art.’’ Honorary pallbearers were Hudson Pridham, Norman Oli- ver, Fred White, Jolm Connolly, Lester Wallace and Theodore: Le- wis, Active pallbearers were George Irving, Gordon White, John Inman, Arthur Wilkie, Le- mont. Hutt and Robert Campbell. Flowerbearers were Wilbur Fra- ser, Archibald Fraser,\, Samuel dets No. 60 Squadron held at Prince of Wales College Audi- The day is coming, he ‘said, when the sea will be farmed, not fished. He wished the Fish- eries Co-operative every suc- cess and urged them to con- tinue to show the way. OTHER SPEAKERS : Other speakers were: Rev. kAllen MacDonald; Kenneth Mac- Lean, president of Co-operative Union’ of P.E.I.; Herb Cheverie, department of fisheries trade training school, Alberton; Rev. A. Pendergast; Very Rev. M.J. Rooney; Wilson J. Shea, general manager of Tgnish Fish- Given Ci ~ ” s to Larter’s case hs FEe Ee i ; F I County Jail Term hy Yout the judge. fit a chance to investigate and give @ report ared-away;-but-if-t-he-y-, don’t show signs Island News Page Western and Central Districts ishioners of St. Paul’s Anglican — on Jan. 17 in the Parish Hall. | Thé rector, Rev. Louis Elias, comed the gathering. In present- fourth how the “guidance of in all choices . those meee coe vrean mai nal departments. “With a spirit thankfulness and praise we oo continue to progress”, he said, he |“using, where. pos , Modern methods, pai wag le terns; rejecting old traditions which are valueless and retain- meaning 4 ath Al Cosas and truth. stian together, ene =, Sonne . with spec em a a wor of the youth. The rector displayed a chart | showing an increase of 100 in the parish population over a -year| ;ago: Also indicated was an_in- |crease of over 50 in the number confirmed ants. An- chart showing the com- parison between the total amount R |Our givings within the church z great of mankind their. role jn the Viet Nam But the U.S. was war. g fet The Conservative chief said the Liberals used the publicly- owned CBC television network peace for a year and if he leaves the province he is to consult the probation officer. Vincent Mac- Intyre. The sentences are to run s : e day evening from the Jenkins Funeral Home to the residence of her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Irving afternoon with service commétc- | ing at 2 o'clock. Interment will | be in the church cemetery. 19, 1966, Bessie Clay, " town, in her 97th year. Resting | at the Cutcliffe Funeral Home until noon Saturday; then to Dundas. United Church for fun. | eral service commencing at 1,30 . p.m. Interment in the church cemetery. ; 4 : a tal TTd | | : i jipedl CLAY — At Charlottetown, Jan. ] GUARDIAN - PATRIOT | | i ! q a $2 dt z z Na CENTRAL PRINTERY Phone 4-8506 i s a in the : i 2 8 3 : jee ag er; annual report IE retiring vestrymen, ° ald tween Rector Calls For |Modern Methods Thé ‘annual meeting of the what we rector, wardens, vestry and par- he said. Church, Charlottetown, was held TRIBUTE PAID Tribute was paid to the vari- \Ventry ter their iecrlt darieg the chairman of the meeting, wel- "for their w t | year. Special thanks went to the George Ives, property warden; Don- Samson, treasurer: J. Andrew Likely and Eric L. Tedford, for their work All buildings were in a'state of good repair and fire insurance coverage was adequate, reported property warden, George E. Ives. Heating of all buildings had ‘now roan ee ae sys- ch was being found very satisfactory. It was expected this would result in a savings in fuel costs ber at the same time heat was maintained in all buildings. The parish hall is tiquated for the activities Sunday School and all tions using it. temedied in through separate action. The financial report, presented by the treasurer, Donald Samson, showed a surplus of income over expenditure’ due in part to in- creased envelope offerings but more to special bequests. standing obligations were reduc- ed substantially. Expenditures on ‘Tepairs and maintenance showed +a-decrease, although accounts for | recent conversion of Parish Hall ‘The. |furmace to oil-fired remain un- the OFFICIALS ELECTED | the rere two names church report. All showed pro- gress with anticipated increase inactivity for the forthcoming spend for ourselves,” organiza- This was to be wear future elected to replace ones are: Tom D. -\toward the needy should equal \DeBlois, H. Edward Miller, Henry ' Purdy and Fred C. Younker. Vot-| ! ing resulted in a tie ballot he- which. was broken by Voting again on the names of those not the first ballot. Diocesan Synod _representa- tives elected were: Gerald Proec- tor and M. W. Weeks with alter-| ‘ nates John Morris and Mrs. W. ition R. Aitken. ‘ Diocesan Church Society repre- sentatives are those of the prev- ious year: Donald Ross, Walter pone Ernest Bell and Daniel Reports of all other church or- elected on Refreshments were served by the Evening Branch: of the Wo- men’s Auxiliary at a social hour enjoyed after the meeting. RIFLE SHOOT °° The following isa result of a recent shoot of the PWC rifle _ jclub on Jan. 19 at the RCMP ri- fle range: Scott MacDonald Geoff Moore |Bob Currie Gordon Mills _.iWendall Brown Ernie Prowee ‘|Don MacLean Charles Mutch Sandra Younker Barbra Warren en — In Seminar an- the bers of the Canadian sions. Out- by rail to Istanbul Character | Turkish Revolution.” The i SDU Student | To Participate It was learned ‘lastnight that arts participate in the- WUSC Inter- nie kk kk kk kok *k WHAT IS IT.. & HOW MUCH TERROR CAN YOU STAND universities all across Canada. He will join the other 43 mem- delegation in Montreal during. the third week in June for orientation ses- On the conclusion of these ses- sions in early August, he will travel by air to Europe and thea Theme the seminar wi be: Changing "ot the pro- Dover ton, John MacNeill of Beach ‘Point, Arthur Bruce of: North |Lake and J.E. Burden of Char- lottetown. ‘ ; Clete Pokter of Abransey Village, Harvey Hutt of Alber- Radio Hanoi \Jolts Hopes | SAIGON (AP)—Radio Hanoi jolted. hopesthat_a more _lest- follow the military lull marking H\jthe advent today of the new year. The North Vietnamese tion broadcast calls of both the Viet Cong guerrillas” in South |\Viet Nam. and “a North Vietna- mese spokesman for harder at- \tacks, ta oR SSLLLSRBRRRKKAEB STORY 58 B uF | “RUMPELSTILSKIN” Saturday, Jan. 22nd at 1:00 Pm. and 3:30 Admission; Children 50c; $1.00 . i ant —s WHY 1 ton of snow per minute | .. Without lifting a shovel! An Ariens 6 hip. Sno-Thro will remove 60 tons of snow per hour. Think of it. No shoveling. No lift- ing. This 2-stage “one man gang’ has 4 speeds forward and power reverse; Just guide your Ariens through the deepest, wettest, meanest snow con- ditions. This winter, stop lifting— start living. Team up with the ONES ING. Ariens SNOTHRO \: A 3 Filled with tingling suspense, @ lot of fun, and a liberal sprinkling of sex ing peace in Viet Nat might | outlined junar sta- “Enjoy an Evening of Fun and Entertuin- ment Featuring Night Club Star "GRAHAM BOWSER” Popular and Western singers Alos LES ALEXANDER & THE SMOOTHIES. Special Prizes for Spot Dancing : ’ HORSE and SULKY CLUB | Members and Guests Welcome . . (AG TODAY-SAT. A DARING & DRAMATIC. TONIGHT & SATURD Natlonal Director ls Guest Speaker Ralph Wendeborn, the national director of the raseuyea’ i vo was guest a - dale ie ae of the Home and School Association held quoeay night in the Junior High The theme of his speech was on poverty and the part the school child can play through work in Junior Red Cross. He . to the parents and: \teachers how ‘classmates may help each other from becoming dropouts. , ‘Parkdale School was chosen for the Island to send a display of school work from all grades to New Zealand. Ps Numerous book reports doné*by the. pupils were.'on display for the reading of the audience. tater “Shows 8:30 - 7. - 9 - Sat. 1-3-7-98 aye be, 3 Pep Ge se Ok i? i ern EA nig eae pep ae ke & hy wows voi 3 tetany ‘ | . 4 | ; 3 : Fine SRE WOR Bp gee a