“DINNER MEETING — Charles Downe, president of The first dinner meeting of the Charlottetown Credit Gran- ters Association was held last night at the Basilica Recrea- tion Center. Left to right are » WESTERN BRIEFS ‘1S PATIENT Mrs. Nina “Sudbury, Central Bedeque, is a patient -in--the Prince County Hospital. IN HOSPITAL Monte Gardner, Central Bede- que is a‘patient in the Prince _ County Hospital where he has ' undergone: surgery. *- BOARD MEETING A dinner meeting of the Sum- |;, merside Board of Trade is sch- eduled tonight in Summerside, at 6.30 p.m. Special speaker -will be Thomas J. Flood, manager of Industrial Enterprises. Incorpor- |onjy ated. Other items on the agenda are the presentation. of certifi- cates- to —, pone and a tourist committee report. B 18 REMANDED A local ue Alfred Cahill pleaded ‘not gu to a charge of theft over $50 when he ap- peared -before Megistrate, R.S. Hinton, QC, in Summerside town police court here yesterday. Cahill elected trial by judge and jury and was remanded until ar The charge was laid in connection with the theft of a chest of silverware from R. T. Holman Ltd... Gordon MacKay Cousins of Kensington, entered mo plea on a charge of impaired driving. His case was ation: ed until October 11. WESTERN | FUNERALS DOUCETTE FUNERAL The funeral of Clifford Doucette pl as _the Compton Funeral Home to St. John- The Baptist Church, |> 3 4 ao, where Requiem High Mass was eelebrated at 9 a.m. by Rev. John Kelly. Pall bearers were Grant- MacMillan, Benny Arsen- euit, Sonny Duggay, David and Gary Simmons, and Floyd Clow. * Flower bearers were Everett, Austin, James and Ronald Sim- mons. Interment was in- the church cemetery, with Father 3 Kelly officiating. As GAUDETTE FUNERAL The funeral of Ray Gaudette was held on Monday from his late re- sidence in St. Felix to St. Simon and St. Judes Church, Tignish, where Requiem High Mass was celebrated by Very Rev. M.J. Rooney assisted by Rev. Pat- rick Walsh. The choir was un- der direction of Rev. Ro- lande Durant. Honorary pall- bearers were Leo LeClair, Clif- ford Shea, Alfred Perry, Francis Gaudet, Alcide DesRoches, Ar- thur DesRoches, Kevin Des- Roches. Gerald Keough, Arnold Keough. Pallbearers were Char- les Harper, Bennett Keefe, Ed- gar Gaudet, Joe Dorsey, Edgar Peters, Leo DesRoches. Flower- bearers were Dale, Douglas and Bryan Gaudette, Bryan Keefe, Douglas: Martin, David Des- Roches, Wilbert Christopher. In-. terment was in the Chur-ch cemetery. the Charlottetown Board of Trade; Joe Walsh, ‘president of the Charlottetown Credit For Unbelieva TORONTO (CP) Leslie iFrost, former Conservative pre- mier of Ontario, in a, letter | Mr. published in The Telegram Tuesday, comes—to_the,. defence jot Pierre Sevigny and critl- | Walter Rogers Gives Address Walter Rogers, National Pre- sident of the Credit Grantor’s Association, was guest speaker at the first regular meeting -of the Charlottetown Credit Grant- ors Association held last night e the Basilica: Recreation Cen- . ys ers spoke on the bene- fits to credit grantors of be- fouging't to-such a Bae mal organiza- tion. He mentioned ‘that not would the individual bene- fit by associating with other men and women in this field, but, that he would also benefit by the miaterial and- courses available to him through the or- ganization. One such course leads to the designation ‘Certified Consum- mer Credit Executive’ and is widely recognized throughout the credit fraternity as a high de- Also touched on by Mr. Rog- ee The ‘meeting was adjourned er aa a question and answer pe MARTIN — At Charlottetown. on Monday, October 3, Sylvia Martin of Saint Charles in her 85th year, Her remains are rest- ing at the Perry Funeral Home from where the funeral will be held on Thursday morning leav- ing the funeral home at 9 o’- clock for Requiem High Mass at 9.30 to St. Charles Church, Saint Charles. Interment in_ the ‘Church cemetery. LaPIERRE — At his home in Bristol, Monday, October 3, 1966, Anslen LaPierre age “4 years. Remains were forwarded Tues- day afternoon from the Charlot- tetown Funeral Home to his late residence. Funeral Tuesday morning leaving house at 9.10 for Requiem High Mass at the Church of the’ Little Flower, Morell at 9.30. Interment in the Church cemetery. MOONEY — The death occurred in the Charlottetown Hospital on October 4th, 1966, of Mrs. Phillip Mooney of Peakes Station. Her remains are resting at the Hen- nessey Funeral. Home from where the funeral will take place on Teresa’s Church, St. Teresa's for Requiem High Mass at 9.30. Burial will take place in the church cemetery. MacGREGOR — At Graham's Road. October 3, 1966, A. Cam- eron MacGregor in his 89th year. Resting at the Cutcliffe Funeral. Home -until Tuesday evening then to his late residence until Wednesday noon. Funeral from New London United Church, ser- vice commencing. at 2 o'clock. SUMMERSIDE, Interment. New London ceme- tery: ° LT OAL AS HOUSES P.E.t. Visiting hours, | ; Friday morning to St. | Granters Association and Ron five members attended the “ meeting: - Spence Report Criticized ble Finding cizes the ‘“‘unbelievable find- ing” ‘gf the; Spence report on Mr. Sevigny’s part in the Gerda Munsinger affair. Mr. Frost, who now lives in political . retirement. in Lindsay, Ont., says Mr. Sevigny, associ- ment, ‘was “branded as a po- tential traitor and perjurer” in the findings of Mr. Justice Wishart Spence made public Sept. 28. “This is a travesty which should be protested with all the strength and vehemence we pos- sess.” The Spence report found that the relationship between Mr. Sevigny and Mrs. Munsinger in 1959-61 constituted a “‘startiing’”’ security risk, but added that no actual breach of security was vident. Mr. Frost writes that it [vai “unbelievable” that the re- port found Mr. Sevigny had nei- ther disclosed nor betrayed any state secrets, but left the impli- cation that “he might, have.” Writing ‘as. an old Canadian soldier,” Mr. Frost says, “I rebel and protest against any such heartless and unconscion- able implication.” Mr. Frost, now 71, served in the Canadian infantry in the First World War and was. se- aba wounded in France in ate defence ministér in the Dief-.|~ lenbaker Conservative _govern-. sland N Western and , |The Guardian, Charlottetown, ews. Page Central Districts , Wed., Oct. 5, 1966. 8 the world faces a kind.” He spoke at an outdoor mas Peter’s Square, worldwide prayer day for peace. tiff said. cial and other disorders, ing: before tens of thousands in St. leading a Roman Catholic “We will pray for peace, es- pecially in the Far East... a peace that will not be imposed by.jtreachery or by force but by negotiation conducted with honor and humanity,’’ the pon- The pope -referred also to ra- “Nor -will we forget. in our Pope Declares World Facing Dizzying Gamble With Fate VATICAN CITY (AP)—Plead- ing anew for peace in Viet Nam, Pope Paul said Tuesday “dizzying gamble with the fate of, _man- prayer cas a. places .in the world where hatred and strife trouble civil harmony. «We are still concerned with Never should we grow weary of s |considering and taking up this theme,-since —it-concerns the dizzying gamble with the fate of mankind.” The pope recalled his speech before the UN General Assem- bly one year ago today, when he urged an end to war. “Our cry for peace,”’ he said, “must ring out again from a sorrowful heart; for during the past year the conditions which make peace possible have not SAY-s improved.” Impaired Case at St. jo fomin in oe ward Alexander. Adjourned ee cae een Co. Ed- CFB, France Fires Fifth A-Test + PARIS (AP)—France se. -off the fifth atomic blast in its se- jries of South Pacific tests Tues- day over Mururoa Lagoon near Tahiti, the defence ministry an- . jnounced was the.last inthe series, The experimetta ent configuration. enriched uranium. the question of peace. .. . WHILE VISITING Charlot- tetown on a fund-raising trip, ~|. Miss Yamake (left) and Miss ernor and Mrs. MacDonald at = f : 7 to the early plantings,” Mr. Government House yesterday | REDUCED Tivcadded with. convietion: . Sachike ; met Lieutenant-Gov- morning. (Continued from page 1) ion that the market™trend is strong. Both men agree pretty well _ He is now digging a 45-acre field for-Earl Phillips, in the O'beary* area,. and: the yield is under 300 bushels to the “acre, The ministry said the blast I device was similar to the ‘last one Sept. 24 in its content of plutonium, the statement said, but the pluto- nium was contained in a differ- Addition of plutonium gives . more: power .to..an. atomic. explo- sion, but France still is about two years away from & thermo- nuclear or H-bomb> because of allack of sufficient quantities of Two ‘charming Japanese girls, who are visiting Canadian cities in an effort to obtain funds for Japanese Girls Meet Officials US. Uses Biggest Guns Wilson Freeze Is Com : By CARL ‘MOLLINS BRIGHTON, England -|day night put teeth by a British government peacetime. Minister Wilson. aims, if not for some of methods, ulsory - (CP)— ,|The Labor. government Tues- into its wage-and-price__freeze _by._mak- ing—it_eompulsory.__It__is the strongest power ever assumed in The cabinet doelalon to make was compulsory the freeze it intro- duced as a voluntary measure 10 weeks ago was taken a few hours after the Labor party had endorsed the policies of Prime The Wilson endorsement, by show of hands, came at the an- nual party conference.: Although couched in vague terms so that even Wilson’s critics could ap- prove, it enabled the prime min- ister to claim. he had ~ the support of his party for a In Viet Nam ‘HILL NUI KIEN, South Viet Nam (Reuters) —, The ‘United States Army Tuesday put its biggest guns to work for the first time in Viet Nam. U.S._ officers said the target was a North Vietnamese mili- tary radio transmitter near the Laotian border, about 1% miles inside. the three-mile-wide de- militarized zone between North and South Viet Nam. ‘ Four giant, self-propelled 175- millimetre guns pounded _ the target. with high-explosive shells from a range of about 12 miles. “The guns,—in-size, rai and destructive power. the biggest artillery pieces ever manufac- tured in the U.S:, were brought to this plateau two days ago to support-U.S. marines and South Vietnamese troops fighting the zone. ‘ 7 We use all the brains we can get to stay first i in freight. We're using: electronics in a big way—to keep things moving—at saving rates and speeds...to. guide 101,000 freight cars ey across the ———continent...to tell any customer where his shipmentis along our 35,000 miles of track...and, best of all, to keep human brains free for’: the creative solutions—the big new ideas that keep CN up-to-~ tomorrow. Were one of the biggest users of electronic data | processing’ equipment in Canadian business. Because brainpower drives a ‘modern railway faster than any other fuel. Form though Mr. Phillips is a really Mr. McCardle said he planted [&00d potato producer, Mr. Wil his potatoes between May 25 jlis said. and June 10. His Sebagoes, for eee ae -|example, —had- tremendous...tops, CFCY Radio on the.reason for the poor crop. . but there wasn't enough moisture the Redemptorist missions in ie pies the season to grow the tu- pan, were introduced to three . ‘ iaant ‘ In his Kennebecs Mr. McCar- hal eee top officials yes dle found that ‘the areas aaiaes the tops are the lightest the: tu- -After meeting Lieutenant-Go¥-horg are better. But the : ernor--and ‘Mrs. MacDonald at i aged bec yield is also down, he ob- Government House Misuho Yam- served, sake and Nagadi-Sachike were a Middleton man grows 173 introduced to Mayor Walter Mr. Willis suggests paliitoee TE: Cox, who presented them_ with planted up to the 25th or the gold medallions imprinted with |27th of May — this is particular- the city coat of arms. They were. ly true of Sebagoes — went. dor-’ taken to meet Premier Alex |mant in the dry-spell in August. Campbell later in the afternoon. |And the tubers just didn’t grow: The young ladies arrived in jwhen the rainfall occurred late Canada the last of June, and jin August, or early September, | plan to leave near the end of |whenever the good rains came. November. Their companion on |The potatoes really went dor- | this fund. raising trip,’ Father |mant when the dry spell struck, ; F.A. ‘Cunerty CSsR who came |Mr. Willis said.. héme to Canada in the spring of | This is true of central and wes- this year after an absence of 12 |tern P.E.I., he observed, though years. a8 a Redemptorist mis- {he’s not so sure of the Eastern sionary in Japan. He. expects to |area. return in the spring of 1967. (The. Guardian learned indir- While on their visit to Char- jectly yaese: € sy afternoon, lottetown, the girls were the | though, that a large grower, Em- guests of the Holy Redeemer Ja- |mett. “a in the Greenfield |* panese mission club. They stay- |area; not far from Montague, is ed at the home of Mrs. Joseph |also finding his crop below ex. Gillan of Queen’s Court. pectations.) Minor of grea Communist forces just south of | Sebago potatoes planted after MANY PRESS FORWARD - |May 27, and to June 10, are a Besides Labour, Conserva-|reasonably good or) Mr. Wil- tives and Liberals, 27 minor |lis believes, though in that re- parties, many with only ome |spect he is at variance with Mr. candidate, fought ‘the 1964 Brit- |McCardle. Wed., Oct. Sth: => ‘ish election, 2.05 pm. “The late crop t¢ tar superior ahs is ‘ ie yh Seed 1 ule da oe Me, $ 2 ete