“The barrier of illiteracy ts melting away. but the barrier of poverty remains since five setae Seas Re Vv. r . oe staat of the P.E.I. the Canadian Bible ing of the meeting and Proctor was‘acting secretary. Reports were presented on fin- ances, circulation and store op- eration. The 85 branches of the district contributed 509.69, an increase of $1,100 over 1964. A total of $22,436.37 was trans- Wonnacott, PEI. Bible Society Told Poverty Barrier Continues District Secretaty: Rev. Don- ald M. Quigg, BA., BD., Saint John, N.B.- wins sures’ (e. place a: comy of Anchor Bible in the Confederat. Samson. .| NEW EXECUTIVE Li Findie cete emivics cai ~ \executive elected to the PEL |District of the Society. Patron: Chief ~ Justice Thane . Campbell, Summerside; Hon- orary President: Rev. EC, Evans, Charlottetown; Presi- dent: Rev. John G.E. Ball, Char- lottetown; Vice-Presidents: Rev. F. Louis Elias, Charlottetown; Rev. Raymond L. Gillis, Clyde River; Rev. Malcolm F. Har- low, Charlottetown; Rev. Cecil | fered to the national office at Toronto, reported Don Wonna- cott, treasurer. SCRIPTURES DISTRIBUTED i the year scriptures) distributed in citizenship presen- tations, Christmas and Easter) selections for hispitals, ures for Jails and other of need. Scriptures and talking book areas script- | itary: Ralph J. Rupert, Charlot- \tetown; \nacott, Charlottetown. Named to the executive com- mittee were: Rev. David H. Barwise, Murray Harbor; Rev. 'J. Henry Tye, Charlottetown: records for registered blind per- | [Gordon L. Bennett, Chdrlotte- gons are available free. T he town; S.H. Burhoe, Charlotte- scriptures have ne ree \town; Rev. Mr. Clark, Charlot- lated in whole or in part, in tetown: Rev. E.E. MacDougall, 1,250 languages. Charlottetown;, Rev. D.A. Camp- An increase in sales of 16 per- bell, Charlottetown: Roy Camp- eent for the Canadian Society bell, Central Bedeque; Vernon book).store was reported by the \Craig, Bedeque; T.D. DeBlois manager, T. J. Humphrey. Rev. Donald M. Quigg, dis-| trict secretary, sine his | activities and commended the people for their whole-hearted support. : During the business session it DEATHS - KEEFE — The death occurred | at Souris Hospital Wednesday, March 2, 1966, of Mrs. Wesley ~W-- Keefe’ in~her:-88th--year._Re- mains will be transferred from | Dingwell’s Funeral Home to her ~Jate-residence;-Bay Fortune,this | n, Rev. Horace L. Estabrooks, Central La, : Rev. T.J. Humphrey, Charlottetown: C.R. Leard, Alberton; V.S. Ling, Charlottetown: Rev. B.C. Low- jery, Montague: E.S. MacEach- jern, Summerside; §S.M. Mac- i|Kay, Albany; Erle MacMurdo, Kensington; Heber MacPhail, Coen ‘Rev. Malcolm Me- aig Charlottetown: Mill, Kensington; Capt. yg sen, Geor, Capt. Ray- afternoon. Funeral will be held Saturday aftérnoon at Bay For- | tune United Church with service | commencing at, 2 p.m. Interment in the church cemetery. DALEY — At the Charlottetown | Hospital March 2, 1966, Cecily Daley, formerly of St. Mary’s Road, aged 66 years. Resting at | the Hennessey Funeral Home | until 1 o'clock on Friday, then to the home of her brother, Ed- ward Daley, St. Mary’s Road, from where the funeral will take | place on Saturday morning at | 9:15 to St. Paul’s Church, stur- geon, for Requiem High Mass | at 9.30. Interment in the church cemetery. BREHAUT — At Montreal Gen- eral Hospital March 2, 1966, Bertha Elizabeth MacLure, be- ’ Joved wife of the late Frederick D. Brehaut, Murray River, in her 77th year. Dear mother of Claire,” Montreal,. and Shirley (Mrs. G.J. Hughes) of Carmar- | thern, Wales. Remains will ar- rive this evening by train and will rest at the Murray River Funeral Home until noon Sat- urday; then to the United Church, Murray River, for fu- neral service at 2 o'clock. In- _terment in Murray River ceme- SHAND — Suddenly"at' Sheffield, e Englaind, March 1, . Wil- liam B. Shand of Lethbridge: | Alberta, father of Mrs. Grant | Travers, 144 Nassau _ Street | Charlottetown. Interment will | be in Lethbridge, Alberta. DOYUE — At Augusta, "Maine. Monday, Feb. 2%, 1966, Fanny | M. Doyle, formerly of Roseville, P.E.1., in her 87th year. Resting at the Rooney Funeral Home, Alberton, from where the fu- neral will be held Friday, March | 4th,. leaving the funeral home | at 9.30, to St. Mark's Church. Lot 7, for Requiem High Mass at 9.30. Interment in the church eemetery. ” led project | Tuesday getown; mond ~ Nelson, ~ Charlottetown: Rev. Maxwell Nesbitt, O’Leary; 'Rev. Donald Nicholson, Belfast: Rev. W. Philips, Charlottetown: |Rev. A-E. Pie , Milton; Don- jald Samson, Charlottetown : a IG.A. Tannahill, Kensington; 0: Weale, Charlottetown: TEX ‘Worth, Charlottetown. Other executives named are as follows: representatives to ke general board: Rev. John G.E. Ball, Charlottetown; R.J. Rupert, Charlottetown. Alternates: holson? Belfast; Heber Mac- | Phail, Cornwall. Auditors: Ralph R®. Carr, H.R. Doane end \Co., Charlottetown. ‘ Rev. Donald Nic- | navidson: Valerie's First own- Area Project Is Approved ALBERTON — The centennial project proposed: for Alberton Regional High School area was approved in principle by the Home and School Association at its March meeting. The propos- is a sports field which would be for the use of all districts in the region. Members of Tignish Home and ‘School’ Association; who~had jbeen invited to present a panel ;discussion, were unable to be present. Community life will be the | program topic for the next meet- ing. Mrs. Ernest Linton, Mrs. Al- ton O’Brien,, Norbert Sorkn and Kenneth ‘Pridham will take Part in a panel discussion. It was decided to change the | night of the meeting to the last in the month. This month the meeting will be on the 29th. Should weather be un- ifavorable it will be held the fol- lowing evening. President R.D. McKinnon pre- | sided. Following the meeting \there was a social hour during iwhich refreshments were serv- Western and Central Districts The Guardian, Charlottetown, Thur., March 3, 1966. 3 Missionary Speaks t Churches Here SUMMERSIDE — Alice Port- \a8 in English at “the Jackman er, a missionary to India for the Nursing School. Christian Churches (disciples of. During her recent furlough. she | Christ) stationed at Bilaspur, In- took graduate work a dia, is visiting the Island and |M.Sc. degree in nursing at the will speak at several Island University of Toronto. She plans churches the week of March 6th ta ee to the 13th. of March. 2 Serving as a missionary with’. During her stay on the island the United Christian Missionary she will speak at the following | Society, a major agency of the churches: Summerside Christian | Christian churches, Miss Porter |Church, March 6, 7 and 8;, Cross went to ee ea bade im 1954 and has |Roads Christian Church, ‘worked ly in nursing and 9th at 8 p.m.: New Glasgow} nursing education at the Jack- |Christian Church, ‘March 10th; |fore Jackman Memorial nursing (March 11, 12 and 13th. schdol. She has been called on to} In Summerside she will epeek | help in the government training | ito the junior church on Sunday program for nurses in the state morning and the evening service of Madhya Pradesh... at 7 p.m. On Monday she will Miss Porter is- an ordained conduct a workshop for women | minister and a registered nurse, jin the afternoon and speak at a ‘| What man Memorial Hospital an South Lake Christian Chureh, ore sland News Page Bobby Hull's Best Game Almost Went Unnoticed | CHICAGO (CP)—There was a 1 nis solid — five-foot-1C, 193- play for a Chicago-sponsored *\night when Bobby Hull looked pound frame ‘enables him to | junior B club in Hespeler, Ont., like anything but a idol. An accidental high stick had squashed his nose against a "tface, leaving him barely able to breathe and with a- couple of shiners that matched -the black on his Chicago unifprm. didn't show was the shoulder injury, suffered two weeks earlier, that had to be frozen before every. ganie. | But the Black Hawks were a. game away from elimination in their 1963 Stanley Cup semi- final against Detroit Red Wings. |As long as the solidly-built left lwinger could skate, he was. the |biggest scoring threat they had. SCORED THREE | So Hull in 4 minutes of lice time, beat Terry Sawchuk teen-age March with three whistling drives and \diverted the Detroit defence be- laying a perfect pass to \Erie Nesterenko for a fourth goal. othe Red Wings -pulled away with three third-peridd goals to \win 7-4. But even if Hull even- jtually scores 75 or 80 goals in |@ Season, many of his fans will jalways single out that game as has passed proficiency tests in |banquet in the evening. the Hindi language, and teaches |she will speak at a youth mis- ithe greatest of his career. it also offers the 27-year-old flatten opponents who ‘attempt | to bodycheck him and the force of his slap-shot raises bruises | on a goaltender despite his pro- tective* equipment. Chicago coach Billy Reay frequently complains that some, players aren't. overly — fussy | about the methods they use to keep Hull under control. He re- | cently singled out Ed ‘Westfall. of Boston Bruins as one .who \resorted to hooking and holding. “It's a-shame that the most: colorful player in the league has to be checked. illegally,” the coach said. Hull, resolutely soft-spoken in| interviews, observed mildly that | Westfall appears. more inter- ested in playing the man than the puck. But his play has be- come noticeably more robust in response to the closer checking. FIGHTS MORE NOW v | Last season, when he won, the Lady Byng Memorial Trophy for sportsmanship with -playing ability, Hull a re | only 32 minutes in This year, ‘his total eet haa | reached the 60s and he has been | involved in several scuffles with | over-zealous opponents. ; But there has been no corre-| jand hasn't spent a winter at ‘home since. Graduating to junior A hockey in St, Catharines, he jumped. from there to the Black Hawks without playing” a game in the ‘minors. Hull lost - out anrvonls to Frank Mahovlich of Toronto Maple Leafs for the 1957-58 rookie awatd. It turned out to - be the only individual NHL tro- yphy ‘available to him that he failed to win. But Hull ‘has yet to‘ see’ hie mame on one NHL award—the Prince of Wales Trophy, which goes to the league's first-place team. With or without Hull, the \Hawks have never achieved that lstatus in their 37 years of jleague membership. That's all ithe incentive he needs to keep trying to put the puck into the jnet. O’Leary Maroons ‘Topple Regals O'Leary Maroons defeated Alberton Regals 3-0 in a reg- Souris Woman Is Injured In Accident NEWPORT, Me. (AP) — Five passengers, two of them Cana- adians, were seriously injured when a Bangor-Boston bus‘ skid- ded on ice and overturned near here Tuesday. At Sebasticook Valley Hospl- tal in Pittsfield are . Isa. belle Power, 47, ALBERTON - Benjamin Jos- eph Buote, St. Roch, pleaded guilty. before Magistrate W. Chester S. MaDonald at Alber- ton yesterday to a charge of stealing three gallons the pro- oochthg on cwlbryge gai gg involved in the — theft | Gas Theft Case Adjourned, Two Charges Are Dismissed For operating improperly eq uipped vehicles Donald ‘Alden MacDonald, and Man- cil, Lloyd Bell, Ellerslie were fined $10. and costs. Verne Blanhard, Cape Wolfe received a fine of $10, and coste for tee © ee less to him than Chicago victor-: sponding change in Hull's un- failing amiability off the ‘fce No NHL player is more with autogr aph-seeker 3, graphers or interviewers. Golden Jet a bit of supporting evidence in his constant efforts to convince skeptical sports writers that goal scoring means jular West Prince League hockey *' game in Alberton arena Tues patient | photo- | day night. |opening frame, the second per- » a three-room bungalow io sub- urban Chicago during the hockey season, returning in the | bedroom .|have come with the goals. \CLUB MOVED WITH HULL When he came up as a 19- year-old rookie im the fali of 1957, the club fad finished out of the National Hockey League playoffs 10 times -in 11 years and had spent the last four in ‘ period. - Penalties ‘went to A. Wallace of Alberton, A. Collicutt and H, Gard of O'Leary. - Referees were Jim Cox, Paul Batchilder and Gary MacGregor. ee GET A Hove Hull indulges bi of . Souris, P.E.L., Mrs. Cora Cooper, 70, of 5 Glenburn Court, Saint John, N.B., and Fidele J. Thebeau, 42, : of Waltham, Mass. Dr. Ernest W. Stein said Mrs. Power has a head injury and tee: R.J. Rupert, : D.| broken collar bone and rib A. Wonnacott; Gordon Bennett; | Mrs. Cooper a head injury ond S.H. Burhoe. : : Thebeau a chest injury. committee (1967 | All were reported in good con Nominating Annual)—Rev. Malcolm F. Har- low, Charlottetown, (chairman); S.H. Burhoe; T.D. DeBlois; VS. dition. The bus’ driver and. 16 other passengers were treated for minor injuries “at the crash scene. Trooper Dean Jakins said the bus hit a 75-foot patth of glare ice on~a curve and ‘ckidded ints into | _ | guard rails, mowing down seven posts and a utility pole oe it turned over on its side and | slid down the embankment. Car Strikes City Youth released from hospital in Char- R. -Webber, Summerside; Secre-|head when struck by an auto- Honorary ‘Treasurer: | yesterday at 12:10-p.m:— lArthur G. Putnam, Charfotte-| City police jtown; Treasurer: Don A. Won- | youngster was struck lottetown upon_ examination | after he received bumps on the | |mobile on Weymouth Street Side Boys lead ee te ae ‘Suomobe driven by Mrs, Baby | ‘ Weymouth Street. He was taken to hospital: by | ambulance and Semper examination by—Dr. |Grant. \ Two Take Two At North River Halifax HALIFAX (CP) — Paul Mac-. ain s slap-shot goal at 17.59 | of the third period gave Halifax | Junior Canadiens a 6-6 tie with {London Nationals of the OHA |Junior ‘A’ series in am exhibi- person was not present in court and the lamps on a motor vehicle case was adjourned to March 9.| Milton Charles Barrett, Charges against Charles Jos-| ‘ton and Gordon Blair Sharpe, eph Deagle, St. Edwards ot | West Devon, were fined driving without a license and | each for driving without due his brother, Bernard Joseph Dea-|care and gle, also St. Edwards; of per- | ; Arsenault, Water. mitting” an unlicensed person|ford, was fined $10. and. costs On eras thers (nah = stop at'a stop \fined $20. I Barry ‘Lloyd Miller, Sine ton, was ‘fined $10. and-costs for | operating equipment requiring An Alberton man was fined $20 ing an operators license: sion of liquor. Unique Protest Seen In Ottawa |—--By-MARILYN—ARGUE. __;—Members_join_ OTTAWA (CP)—Pr..ests are | terms—‘‘This way the store common in the capital, but ajcan't go broke,’ * says Mr. La-| group of Ottawa consumers is|Berge, public relations director |t;, staging one» that they feel is of the Canadian Union of Public = ents scaasy SS San PP it rs ago, seven families capita n. ins he Cndier. tive Supply |\Tefunded if they withdraw. Depot, a non-profit store which Member family has one vote. they say supplies food needs of | Store stock is chosen by ‘‘best members at savings of 15 per buy’ committees which test leent under supermarket prices. beyprenie =v inform members Tonight the co-op, now grown CAN GET SPECIAL ITEMS to: 76 member families, opens'a Members may request spe- jnew, larger store under a full- time manager in the citys west cific products on a survey sheet, . $10; | third intoxicated in a nie place. |Maurice a. chauffers—license. while hav-jand costs for unlawful ~posses- i while |the ~~ cellar: They -moved- up to: is passion fifth that year. Since oll they for raising purebred cattle, @ ave never been subject. he clearly prefers to ~ - worse than hockey 9, ,off-th les ‘conversa- Hull’s contribution over that tion, He cune @ €00-scre ere, scoring championships Pio stocked with 160 Herefords,.. three years as the NIIL's top partnership with bis 2 goal scorer, with both ‘otal | \prother Dennis, currently e left virtually eertain to increase by winger with St. Louis Braves, Soo the Hawks’ oan curren" League affiliate, foined| ‘The herd, which he describes BRAKE JOB consecutive seasons, a | AFTER: MORE PAY mark unmatched by Richard or | It was during one such pro- the great Gordie Howe of De-|motional junket in Hawaii hast troit, hig only serious rival summer that Hull was quoted) a sharpshoot- as —stating his intention to get ‘a $100,000 contract this season. \He diplomatically denied the aie STATISTICAL “SIDE __ statistical achievement story, ‘but there appears to b will ever end the arguments ag little doubt that he will to ig telative mefits of the \tually become the first the giants | pot to receive a six-figure a modern hockey. . Richard, whose mark of 50| The The eldest of 11 children ‘goals in 50 games Hull failed @ cement company mill ito reach this season, is- best man, Bobby left home for ‘NOW ONLY” $20.59 At oor aot location, of Euston’ and Weymouth. - remembered for his devastating | \first time at the age of 14 Opp. Ch’tewh Curling Club. HA lend. Ot is holding an open |house three nights this week in or make special bulk orders of ae a Oca GIGANTIC . [butst of speed and pinpoint ae- jeuracy when the puck came to him anywhere inside an + ponent's blue line. Howe, the fabulous right | \winger whose 20-year cereer has | brought him every NHL career | scoring record, «is more hin tile, relying increasingly Here are the results of ice tion hockey game before 3,000 T. racing on the causeway Wed- |night.’ .|nesday afternoon: y “| Londo; getting two-goal per- CLASS A TROT AND PACE \formances ‘from Walt McKeck- Audrey's Pride (E. Bernard)*1,2 nie end: ‘Stan Allen, was trailing ’ 211 |5-4 efter 40 minutes of play, but | : _ 33 |moved in front 6-5 in the third | Audrey's Pride owned by E. [period before MacWilliams’ ty- | Bernard; roe Fingo owned by ling goal. G. The Canadiens built up a 31) feet ek ait. \first period margin, but the Ne- | CLASS B TROT AND PACE tionals outscored Halifax 3-2 in| "White Choice (E. Clow) ~ 1 1 |the’second-to pull-close.— Brown Budi ( es) 22 Rod Bossy was the big gun for Miss Metis UW, ‘maa 3G 35 the Halifax Juniors, firing a hat- 6-3 |trick..while__teammates Mike 4 Hornby and Brian O’Byrne join- | ied. MacWilliams with a goal) _ |apiece. Maurice St. -Jacques and | * |\Neil Clairmont were the. other {London ’ es Nationals’ metminder Norm |\Farr.turned aside 33 shots, while | iGeorge MacNeil was called on Times: Ww, H:2. ‘GLASS C TROT AND PACE Thunder Girl (F. Macisaac) 2'1 | Valerie's First (R. Drake) 1 3 | Murray’s Price (S. Ford) 4 2 [to ee ecter aaa eile be Dance Party (G. Fitzpatrick) 3 4 euro tonight. MacNeill’s Best. (A. Pineau) 5 5 | Lacky Frisco (D. MacNeill) 6 dr | Thunder Girl owned by R. ‘Lake Level Is Below Average CORNER BROOK (CP)—The |water level at nearby Grand |Lake has dropped below season- able averages,’ H. K., Joyce, ‘president and general manager of Bowaters Newfoundland Pulp | and Paper. Mills Ltd., said in a statement to employees here. However, he said there was no immediate cause for alarm. The lake supplies the com- ipany’s hydro- power plant. at |Deer Deer Lake, about 30 miles north Os ‘of here, and the.water level is. ras First — cureniy' incor bow nor mal for the ter season Sparked by the three-goal per-| The problem is expected to formance of Joe MacDougall, continue until the spring thaw Corran Bann whipped- Tracadie ‘and runoff. CLASS D TROT AND PACE Jet Timer (FE. Bernard) 11 Joly Day (W. Ford) 23 Evening Date (G. Fitzpat- ‘rick) 32 Try Sack. (A. Pineau) 4dr Jet Timer owned by P. Mul- | eas: %, %:2, | Corran Ban markers for Corran Bann were | | Lake have increased in the last E. Doyle (2), and E. Reardon, | ithree years because, of growing E. Mitchell and W. Doyle e requirements for power by the one apiece.M. Kelly and Fitzpatrick had one each. TO ee ee A MacLeod and A. Murph called only three penalties. Next | COSTS, NOTHING ;) game will be. played Sunday | 3 to night at the SDU rink: HEADS Commission + Check our Prices | VATICAN CITY (Reuters)— IS Alfredo Cardinal Ottaviani, @ $ Men's Ist Quality .95 leading conservative, has pbeet | SUITS a appointed head of Pope P. new commission of bishops on | 13 ‘birth control, Vatican sources -$. Comey's Fon Said Wednesday. His deputy will | 4 loth \be Paul-Emile Cardinal Leger $y. g a of Montreal, a progressive. The |$ ex Gua on a 8 commission was expected to > fa t consist of about 15 bishops, [Wesccesccerecceseeoed } ours is unique because we sep- Cross 8-2°in the first game of.| mr: Joyce said demands on | the..CYO:. finals... Also_ recording | the. Bowater. -Power..Co..at Deer SHHFSSSSSOSSOOOS a ; LaBerge says # wouldnt jan ambitious bid for more; nay a gingle person to join, members. _ | The new premises are @' far cry - from what ‘the co-op has \had in’ the past. | Members once picked up |stocks from the wholesale house in a station wagon and divided |single girls, say, sharing it in the basement of a mem-/|apa'ctment, it would be profit- bers house. They expanded to | able.’ a shack at a skating rink, then| Household needs like soap and -_|to an_abandoned_.street_car harn |Cosmetics have been added to and later to a tiny shop, the food shock but impulse buy- ing is stil sternly frowned. on. CALLS IT A PROTEST “We keep the candy behind the | “The~store is-a~-minority- pro--| counter--- where —the—— children test against~supermarket | sell-/can’t see it and we don't ar |ing — expensive ads, trading| the most expensive brand | stamps, soft music and light- jing,’ says Roy LaBerge, one of | the projects organizers. ‘We never expect to appeal to | lthe majority, though. Lots of |people want to spend $8 or $10 \a week for the emotional satis- |faction of going to one of those —| Taj ahals. | . “There are a lot of co-ops in | Canada, especially on the Prai. | |ries and.in the Maritimes, but | they approve of the ideological protest. ‘A single person wouldn't buy | enough food to make it worth his while, ee oe way they do in Hot Water Hot water at the turn of a tap—300 gallons of hot water in just 15 minutes. Power | WATER HEATER Palmer Electric Ltd. Fitzroy St. Dial 4-8543 arate operating and food. costs.’ Members pay $1.50 a week to | over operating’ expenses includ- stpre rent and salary. for | | full-time ‘manager’ Cy., Warner, |23, a graduate of st:* Freel | Xavier University with mer- | chandising _ experience: Corner Brook Pulp and Paper Mill and this city. The power plant also supplies | mines in northern -Newfound- jhand ‘and the American Smelting ‘and Refining Co. Ltd. im Buch- Lans, Nfld. | : _ Hootenanny Main Brace | Commodore Room Tonight - 9 to 12 Come along join the fun All New Talent $$$ $ $$$ $$ $ $ _ Members and Guests ; SPECIAL © though some have just to_ show | tinned goods at eye level se | the chain | aaa 15 Pc. Bedroom Ensemble finesse and physical aT aeeath ‘ol confound faster - Tt. op. | iponents. Of. the three, jeesily the most See tekat | |playmaker. HAS POWER TO BURN With Hull, the sak docoeay | an the hardest shot os game =e hos | lever known. | “Hull hasn't a eee ts \the verdict of ee Bathgate, the. 1 foeet erae : who has attempted to check the Blonde Bomber: since he came linto. the league. ‘Unless you istop him in-his--own end, « ~you- \don’t have a’ chance.” ‘BOOK ~ CONTINUES: A ATER The Card Shop SALE LL THIS WEE nanan nd The Maroons led 2-0 in the — ies. With his wife, Joanne, and/iog went scoreless and the In the nine years since Hull sons Bobby, 4, Blake, 3, ~~ O'Leary -boys added another joined the Hawke, the victories Brett, 1, he lives modestly in marker in a hard fought final . Cornet - - Crockett & Storey Ltd. \ / | i] Distinctive modern styling; baked plastié finish; dovetailed drawers, nylon drawer glides; adjustable mirror; quality “construction. Finished in Sandalwood or walnut; ensemble bookcase bed, double size,’ silver ribbon spring, . spring filled mattress. Regular 232.00—12.00 monthly, Same Ensemble, but with panel bed «:..... “Terie AAS 134 Kent St. Dial 4-5559 | ~ CROCKETT & STOREY LTD. “Dedicated to Home Improvement” 177" Charlottetown ths tendo