—‘ WEEKEND SALES CONFERENCE BEGINS at the The conference continues day with sales meetings and a reception and dinner. and a golf tournament is scheduled Approximater ll represen- tatives of the brokerage firm. Nesbitt - Thompson Company, began a weekend sales con- ference for the Atlanth region with a reception last evening Charlottetown Hotel. to- for tomorrow. Attending the meeting are. left to right. A.K. S’side Christian Church Celebrating Anniversary SUMMERSIDE ——- This com- ing Sunday. Sept. no. the con- gregation of the Christian Church in Summerside will ob- serve the 106th anniversary of the congregation in this area. This Christian Church influ- ence dates back as far as 1811 when Alexander Crawford be- gan a work on the Island which eventually established is Chris- tian Church Cross Roads. wi tness in Summerside was organized in 1858 by Donald Industrial Award To Be Presented Vancouver Man V. M. Knight. chairman of the Provincial Governments' Trade and Industry convention at Dal- vay this week. has announced the winner of the Canadian In- dustrial Award for 1964 has been won by Col. (Hon) Frank Mac- Kenzie Ross. CMG. MC. Knight of St. John. The recipient. a former New tenant-governor of British Col- umbia. is chairman of the board and director of several major Canadian companies. The award is made annually to a Canadian citizen who, In the opinion of a board of award appointed by the chairman of the Trade and Industry Council. has ost signllicant contribution to the industrial de- velopment of Canada in the pu- blic interest. The award will be formally presented to Mr Ross in Van- couver at a later date. WESTERN Crawford in the home of Benja- min Schurman. Lot 16. They immediately began a work in Summerside and erected building which was burned in the big fire of 1907. In 1909 the present church was erected and in recent years ex- tensive renovations have taken place which resulted in a large educational plant in the base- ment of the church. a church parlor. and kitchen facilities. Within the last two years the Sanctuary has undergone ex- ‘ iensive renovations. Services this Sunday will be conducted by the present min- a. Mulch. Charlottetown: H. D. u y. Halifax. Atlantic sup- ervisor; Harold Hendricksen, Montreal. a partner of Nes- bitt-Thompson. and J. R. Ob- orne, Montreal. vice-president and general sales manager. ber of staff at the high school and on Monday evening parents and interested friends will havel opportunity to meet him and other members of staff wh n have come to the school this term. Mrs. Herman Corcoran. pres- ident. has also announced that new officers will be installed at this meeting and that prizes 0.- fered by the district women's institute to pupils from the. con- vention area making highest marks in the government exam- inations for grade 10 will no warded. Entertainment will be provid- ed by Henry O'Malley and his orchestra. iSiAND NEWS PAGE Western And Central Districts McNAMARA lContinued from page 1‘ ers and the pilots of US. planes that had been in the air over the scene. It was hoped daylight would The Guardian, Charlottetown, Sat, Sept. 19. 1964. .i provide some affirmative evt- dence. The Gulf of Tonkln. on the eighteen minutes Charlottetown. Sun rises toda Former Summerside Man Receives CNR MONCTON —- Three lppnlnf- ments in the express freight ..- partment of Canadian National Railways In New Brunswick and Nova Scotla. have been announ- ced by J. G. Davis, CN'I Mar-l ltime area manager. Sherman S. Parlee. a native . Nine Added To Faculty At St. Dunstan’s Seven full-time and two part-f time professors have been ad ed this year to the staff of St Dunstan's University. it was learned last night from SDU president. Very Rev. G. A. Mac- donald. full-time professors a r e' 1w man Ismet Abu-Isa. who his PhD from Northwestern Un- at 6457 and sets at 7.16 pm. iversity and who will be in t'ie Rises Sunday at 5.58 am. and c sets at 7.14 pm. All times ADT. [Father Roche Attends Mee iln Winnipeg Dunstan's Universtty left yesw ferday for Winnipeg to attend the annual meeting of the Can-f adian Catholic Trustees Assoc-i iation which is being held today. i Delegates from all parts of Ca- nada will be in attendance. Father Roche is attending the meeting In his capacity as exe- cutive director of the Canadian Catholic Education Council. The task of the cmincil is to encourage and coordinate ac- WEATHER ister. Rev. D.L. Hewlett. The TORONTO (Cpl — Observe“ morning message is emu-ed temperatures from the weather “Formula of Triumph”. The office: evening message. “The Marks D I ":3" of The Lord Jesus". Pa.“s° 56 Special music will be supplied vzmce v "3e 49 63 by Mrs. M. Zimmerman and “52:1!” 4b 60 Mrs. A. Rowledge. In the ab- Edmonmn" "‘ " 44 S7 sencc of regular organist. Mrs. Calgary '" 37 '53 M. Morrison. Lowell Huestis Regina ‘” " :34 will be guest organist. Winnipeg . 61 75 Toronto . .. 57 69 - ' Ottalws 45 65 Nova SCOTIan Montreal .. ..49 on Q ebec . . ... ....44 61 -d Fredericton . 43 55 IS PreSI eI'I‘I' Saint John .....43 54 oncton . .45 52 G {Halifax .49 oz WY roup‘Chariottetown . . 48 55 . ....46 55 At the final business session Yarmomh __ H 47 55 of the Eastern Canada Associai- St. Jnhn's' Nnd' “‘45 55 tion of Highway Officials Thuls~ Boston H . ' . _ r, 71 day 15. E. Langley. Bridgewat- New york 64 32 er. N.S.. was elected chairman HALIFAX (CF) _ Th, wen- f Other officers for 1965 term are. C. . omas of Halifax who is the new secretary- treas- urer and the three directors: Cleve Sinclair of Middleton. N.S.: Palul Rouse. Fredericton. N.B. and Gerald Allen. Glar- lottetown. The officials have been meet- ing here since Wednesday and their convention came to a close last evening with a reception. ther office says although the Eastern Maritimes were still cloudy with a few light show- ers. the western regions had. cleared Friday night. An area of high pressure cen— tred over Western Quebec will approath our district today. ushering In cool. dry weather. Except. for afternoon cloudy periods over the Eastern Mari- times. today will be a sunny dinner and a dance at the Char- lottetown Hotel. BRIEFS To STUDY AT DAL. Reginald MacAusland. Jr.. Tuesday for will begin studies at Dai-bousie University. VISITOR FROM [LIL Harry Dyer. Kent. England. accompanied by his daughter. Sylvia. recently visited his cou- W. sin. Mrs. J Waugh. Alber- lon. ‘ Home And Schoo Opens Monday At Alberton ALBERTON —— " n. 9P0 sibility of parents" is the title and cool of a brief address to be given by Paul Batchilder at the open- town 9.17 a.m. an lag meeting of Alberton Region- al Home and School Association p,m_ High "do Sunday at Char. Monday evening. It will be fol~ Iottetown 10.22 am lowed by a discussion period. p. Mr. Batchlldcr Is a new mm and 6.53 pm Summerside and chilly day. with tempera- tures ranging from the d- 50s to about 00. - . Regional forecasts: tivities of Catholic organizations dealing with education in an- ada. It is not confined to church activities. but is concerned with all educational areas in Cans- dian high schools. f Father Roche will return to d i : the province on Mon ay. Agriculturalists 1 See Potato Fields A five-man group from Italy , and Venezuela visited P H n c e County and the Wood Islands district this week to study pota- to growing and harvesting The agriculturalists, accom— panied by an interpreter and Glen Ramsay as guide. are in- terested in improving potato growing in their own countries The delegation met with Mm- lslcr of Agriculture Andrew MacRae and other members M1 his department along with 15-. land exporters of seed potatoes! at a dinner at Royalty Oaks last night. Delegates are: Dr. Luigi Mae- sal. director of Potato Studies Centre. Bolgona: Professor L41. , Rev. Edmund Roche of St. Douglas Boylan. BA hemlstry department: Edward Benson. MLS from Catholic Un- iversity of America. the new; librarian; Cy ril Byrne. MA lDublin University/l. English; Y.1 N. Jodhi. PhD (University of British Columbial. physics; D. J. O'Connell. MA (Toronfol. ec- onomics; Gary Thessing. MSc. (Notre Damel. mathematics: and Winston Pineau. BSc. D Eng. (SDU) mathematics. The part-time professors are . BLS lMc- Gilli history: and Rev. Faber MacDonald. BComm. (SDU) re- ligion. ‘ Men’s Ass’n Holds Session BEDEQUE —- The Bedeque Men's Association of the Unit- ed Church held its monthly sup- per meeting Tuesday. Sepl.-15 in the Church Hall. The presi- dent. Arnold Henderson. was in chair. Grace was said by Rev. RM. ameron. Unit 2. of the S provided the meal, for which they were thanked by Ivan o-v- 5‘ Q . Dawson. 'Ilhe hymn-sin if was led by Ralph Callbeck with Mrs. Edna Jenkins at the piano. Sidney al period. Sidney M u r r a y and Ralph Call’heck gave an account of the Stanhope Conference. A filmstrip “Receive and Ye Shall Give" was shown. Meet- ing closed with the Benediction by Rev. E. S. Weeks. gi Fenaroii. experimental eta-V tion. Bergano; Dr. Eduino Ca-t nestrini. Italian Federation andi Farmers' Co-op. ome; Dr. .luw. an Carmona. Caracas: R. Brooks i commercial assistant at tile; Canadian embassy in Rome.: and Florent Beaudette. Iirade; and commerce department. 0t- :1 tawa. I Prince Edward Island. East- ‘ern NB. Counties: Sunny with a few cloudy periods and cool: northwest winds on becoming' light in ilhe evening. Low-high at Charlottetown so and 58.‘ Moncton 36 and 58. i Outlook for Sunday — Sunnyj High tide today at Charlotte. d 10.55 pm. At Rustico at 4.33 km. and 7.21 . . 11.33 m. At Rustico at 5.34 a'.m. tide RETURNS ROME Howard Waite. Sr. of Summer- side East has return home mm the Prince County Hospi- DIES 1N MASS. Mrs. Ella Burnett. tin former Ella Mulligan of Kinkora. dieo recently at West met-vim. Mug-i in her 72nd year. She is sumved by a daughter. Marion Mrs. Charles O'Hearnl. Som- EWIHO: two sons. Raymond. Ca- Iliofllil. and James. B o s t on. Maud and several sisters and brothers. RETURN PROM us. Mrs. Ilene Hughes. Kenslng- ton; Mr. and Mrs. James Law- less. Sulnmerfield: Arnold Mc- Ivor and Harold Mulligan. Kill- ‘ml'n. have returned from a mo- tor trip to Boston. Dedham and 5°mel‘V’llle. Mans. Mrs. Hughes and Mr. Mulligan attended the funeral of elr sister. Mrs. Ella Burnett, in rville. SCHOLARSHIP .12; Judge Sebollrlllip set "P . 9 11 d the T RO- I‘""“' High School and plans to Jl‘tller fits education was pro. ""IMHI to Walter Chaiseon. son [34 RICHMOND ST. Saint John. Ha H.R. DOANE AND COMPANY; I1 WINSPEAR. HIGGINS-STEVENSON S DOANE Chartered Accountants Montreal, Toronto. Winnipeg. Edmonton. Calgary. Prince Albert. Vancouver . CHARLOTTETOWN lifax. St. John's. "n’inii’ 1 GRANITE BRONZE * Craftsmen Skilled Memorial 4 smcs 1332 I ll II Aeolian Organ My Conditioced C hope! fol "en-budge 6-D” IN NEW ENGLAND Out Atbol D. Mocteod is familiar with your funeral problems for New England. Contact liim for promot and efficient service. SERVICE IS A "LONG" WORD fl (5 [0/196 50/), IM'. 1979 Massachusetts Avenue eral Service CAMIIIDOI ‘0. HASI. VERE BECK & SON LTD. If Montague and Charlottetown Since 1870 the spot! to yownei l obtained ‘, Murray conducted the devotion-2 “lOCKHEEDCOMPUTING REGISTER" The amazing new "Lockheed ‘ Computing Register" which computes and prints a complete invoice automticaliy on IT ITEMIZES ‘I. The gailonage delivered 2. The price per gallon 3. The total dollar sale SERVICE IS OUR BUSINESS This new kind of "mechanical Brain" actually does all the computing for each customer's delivery individually. automatically—and with In line with our policy of providing our custmers with the finest modern service at the lowest pos- sible cost. we are proud to announce this new "Au tomatic Invoice" service. . If you have any questions. please call us. and we would appreciate your passing along the news LOCKHEAD COMPUTING”: east side of the Indochina Pen- insula. is enclosed on the west Viet by North Nam on the nort'i by China's Kwantung province and on the east by I Hainan province of China. lnformants said the US de- stroyers did not report seeing ‘any attacking craft. but that 1what appeared to be vessels. 1 possibly torpedo boats. were ob— laerved on radar from several Qmiles away. i There was every indication that the government was pm- ceeding cautiously before mak- ing up its mind about the sig- nificance of the incident. if any. Since the first 0 lvm eu« counters b e t we e n US and Communist vessels last month the policy has been for US. de- ; stroyer patrols to travel in i pairs. . George E. R e e d y. White House press secretary, told re- porters the defence department “has made the only statement and “i am no SHERMAN S. PARLEE p ‘ anticipating any other at this of Apohaqui. N.B. has been ap- tlme' I . . . 1 pointed terminal traffic mana- hagwbiinsakip€rfififll§mi6:33:25“ lger. express freight, at Monc- , . V V - ton. He has been succeeded as He deemed to SW'SM‘QIIS? :2: assistant terminal traffic man- ager at Halifax by W. G. Mathe- son of Moncton who has been supervisor. express freight at M‘mcmn m" the "89' Iw" 3'93” ator Barry Goldwater. com- Raymm‘d R‘, G‘deIII- Wh“ merited when he landed in has en terminal traffic mam >ohmiesmn' w. Va, for a cam. ager at Fredericton for the past paign speech; ‘iwo years succeeds Mr. Mathe- “I hear Lyndon's 1n mnre .50“. as SUWTVISM‘. OXDI'OH . trouble. Something happened in .mle at Moncton. lthe Gulf of Tonkin and with i Mr. Parlee began his career I this big communications sys- 1with Canadian National express item that y0~yo McNamara has ‘as a wagonman at Sussex. N.B. .i’bee bragging about. they‘re ,in 1926. He held successive posts 1waitins for an air mail letter {at Campbellton. Montreal. Sus-. sex and Summerside. P.E.I., be- ‘i lfore being appointed chief clerI-v iht‘éd back to Washington later lat Moncton in 1942. Later he‘Fnday night "0 see what I can ‘served as agent at Yarmouth ‘10 '9 help out." and alternated between Sum. Othelals in Washington Indi- president got first i . nc1 en. GOLDWATER COMMENTS Johnson's Republican ncnt for the presidency. merside and Moncton before be- lcalred that they d0 "01 consider‘ ing appointed training supervi- ‘W at M'mmal ”‘ 1945' The Pentagon said the inci- In the followmg years he ser- dent occurred a. 9:30 Hm. Fm lved .35 age" 8" Tm"). Sum‘; day night Tonkin Gulf time. imerstde and New Glasgow and i which would have been 9:30 gin 1958 became traffic SuperVI- am. in Washington. i sor at Campbellton. In 1961 he ~—— .. *_-..._ . _ . .. ~ ‘nas promoted traffic supervisor JAIL EIGHT SAROTEURS ; at Moncton and a year later be- ngTomA (Reiitersl-«Eight came supervisor. express freight 1‘ South African Negroes can. at Moncton. Late in 1962 he mov- victed of commiting and (on. 'ed to Halifax as general agem spiring to commit sabotage in and in 1963 became assistant Pretoria between June. 1962. terminal traffic manager. and January. 1964. were sen- l Mr. Parlee is married to the tenced Friday to prison terms former Kathleen Johnston of ranging from five to 15 years. .Summerside. They have tw 0 Two of them were sentenced to I children, Charles. aged 22, Is 15 years. one to 12, four to eig'it with the Royal Canadian Moun. i and thfI other to five years. there is any new crisis at this time. ’Noted Irish O'Casey TORQUAY, England ensue-Scan 0‘ ‘asey. the Irish playwright, in a nursing 'home after a heart attack Fri- day night. 0' ‘asey. 84. was born ( In a Dublin sl Playwright Dies In iondon tReut-‘ sympathetic to the Irish char- acter. Eventually. The Plow and The Stars won favor Will both Irish and English audiences and took its place as one of the books -‘older brothers and sisters. just to find out what happened." i Goldwater said To planned to um of Protestant par- outstanding dramas of the time GREAT AIR WAR ts. Compulsory edUcailon was un- known in lreland when he ’3 3 :5 1‘ a ho). so a had no formal st' lonlln: “Born in a tenement house, I write about them." O'Cascy . ‘mm, said. SLMMERSIDE—Battle of Britain Sundav honoring the “Famous few" who defelld- . ed Britain in the dark days . of 1940 will be observed to- -' O'Casey's plays were a mix- lure of anger and pity. laughter and tears. in his native Ireland. some of his works provoked vtolent con- troversies and even riots cause of his satirical perception of Irish foibles and of his in« dividual approach to the sub- ject of nationalism and religion. orrow_ The Battle of Britain has special Significance for the RCAF. In Aug. 1940 under a baptism of fire. .\‘o. 1 Squa- dron of the RCAF embat. tied the enemy near .011— CHARACTERS WERE VIVID don. won its first Victories His intimate knowledge of the and suffered its first cas- people he depicted gave his ualltes. characters a vividness whit-'1 (‘omP‘W’d "I (Janad‘an established him as a master of pilots. a not her squa- his craft. dron. No. 242 of The RAF O'Casey taught himse” to Fighter Command also won ‘read and write with the aid of E" the RCAF and canada great distinction for Its ac- tion during air battle. In addition to the station parade services planned for RCAF Station Summerside. distinguished citizens w ill lay wreaths at the cenotaph v in Memorial Park. Summer ' side, at 10 a.m, Sunday. \2 These include: Group (‘ap- lain A. G. Dagg. command- ing officer. RCAF‘ Summer- side; Mayor W.E, Jenkins: Dr. H. Clark. president of Summerside Branch of the Royal Canadian Legion and R. Inman. president of the RCAF‘ Association. an old dictionary and school- formerly used by his a young man; he seldom- missed a new play at Dublin's Abbey Theatre. going without a meal to buy a seat in the pit. He made his name overnight when his fourth play - The Shadow of a Gunman —— was produced at the Abbey in 1923. In 1924, O'Casey‘s Juno and The Paycock was an even big- ger succeSS and later estab- lished his reputation in London. where it was produced at the Royalty Theatre. His next play. The Plow and The Stars, was a drama of the . ilrish Easier rebellion of 1916.‘ ANTS LARGE it was a compassionate picture The largest species of ant. the of a disrupted people but glistening black dinoponere gi- icaused a riot in Dublin. largely ganiea, measures more than one because it was considered un- inch in length. Horse and Sulky A GRANADA LOUNGE Presents 'The Downtowners Trio' led Police in Montreal and dau- i ghter Susan, five, is at home. ‘ i__.___————-——————-——-— I GALACTIC PROBLEM ' , Scientists are trying to work ,out a meth of classifying the. PURITY DAIRY :17 Kent Dial 4-7125 “Parents Prefer Purity Product's” Thurs., Fri. and Sat. Nights for your dancing and listening pleasure ‘I to 12 pan. Members and Guests Welcome. 100.000.000.000 stars in the Milky! ‘ Way into surveyable groups. HOMEO _- V's-u as u...“ .u...‘ .. ... PRINCE flux“. 4‘ computer accuracy. 245 ElM AVE., ATTENTION ‘EGISTER Sold 8: Serviced By NTREAL. TORONTO 8i HALIFAX ROBERT C. "Your Shell Agent for Ch'town 8: Ch'town West." CHARLOTTETOWN WNERS! J Robert C. Barwise FIRST IN . EDWARD ISlAN with the RNG OIL EQUIPMENT BARWISE PHONE 894-4316