Lot 65 Resident Is Laid To Rest ‘The funeral for Mrs. Peter Clar- kin was held Saturday morning from the Charlottetown Funeral Home to St. Ann's Church, Lot, 65, wher Solema Requiem High Mass was celebrated by Rev. charles McCarthy, P.P. Deacon and ' sub-deacon were Rev. Aus- a “ISLAND NEWS PAGE. GUARDIAN NEWS BUREAU TELEPHONES: Summerside 8031; Alberton 68-2; Montague 97-2; Souris 32-2 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Mon., Nov. 30, 1959. 3 off by 5,000 pjersons from their homes and killed at least, 15. yg Two cars were badly smash- ed and the drivers taken to Prince County Hospital for treatment of minor injuries re- @eived in a head-on collision about two miles west of Mis- couche about 8 a.m. Sunday morning. Martin DesRoche of Miscouche, said to have been the driver and only occupant of ae DRIVERS INJURED NEAR MISCOUCHE SUNDAY a 1049 Chev. ear going east re- quired some stitches to close a cut on his nose or face. Alyre Perry of Richmond is reported to have been the driver of the other vehicle, a 1947 Chev car, which had been — proceeding westward. Mr. Perry received a painful bump to his head in the accident and a passenger in Enmore Man Rescued — From Pond At side SUMMERSIDE — Edward Noye, 41, of Enmore had a close shave last Friday evening when he stepped over the abutment at the Summerside electric light plant and dropped into seven feet of water. However Noye had been seen the of the plant only sec- onds ier and his plight was goon discovered by foreman ISLAND BRIEFS GOING OVERSEAS Pte. Edward MacLeod, RCA, who has been visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John L. MacLeod of , left Thursday for Camp Gogetown, N.B., Private Mac- Leod will leave Camp Gagetown a her om the same Visi parents & ae, Althea MacLeod of Montreal had the pleasure of spending some time with her bro- ther prior te his departure for Europe. MACNEILL FUNERAL — The wneral for Mrs. Ronald B. Mac- took place Saturday morn- from her late residence in St. John SS ee tist Church. Requiem High Mass was celebrated by Rev. J.D. Kelly who also officiated at the inter- ment im the church cemetery. Pallbearers were Martin F. Des- Roches, James Carver, Frank MacNeill, Albert Landry, Eric DesRoches and Leo DesRoches. MARSHALL FUNERAL — The funeral of the late Mrs. Duncan Marshall of Kingston, was held Saturday afternoon from the Cut- cliffe Funeral Home. The ser- vice at the home and grave was conducted by Rev. George Kil- len, assisted by Rev. “Ponald Nicholson. A duet “Beyond The Sunset’ was sung by Mrs. Mer- vin MacPhee and Rev. Mr. Nic- 2 af holson. Members of LOBA, King- | ston, attended in a body. This service was conducted by Mrs. Neil Campbell, worthy mistress; Mrs. Clifford Holmes, chapiain, and Mrs. Elmer Walsh, deputy mistress. Pall bearers were Arnold Beer, Ira Auld, Edward Newson, Pyrus Holmes, Elmer Younker, Lyman Newson. Inter- ment was in Clyde River ceme- tery. Professional Cards Chartered Accountants T. Earle Hickey & Co. Canadian Bank of Commerce Building Summerside, P.E.I. Phone 2235 Insurance R. E. Ellis & Son Limited Fire — Auto — Casualty 5 Summer St. Summerside Optometrists E. E. Parkman Opt. D., R.O. Phone 3287 Summer St. Summerside B. F. Hunter, R.O. Summerside, P.EI. Phone 3116 Smallman’s Building Photographers The Read Studios D. W. SEARS Barristers George R. MacMahon, LL.B. {Also Keasington on Saturday’s) Phone Summerside 3551 25 Water St. Summerside A. B. Campbell, B.A., « IB. ‘ Phone S’side 3818 Crockett & Gallant Bidg S'sidt George Morrison and Alan Clow, an employee. Mr. Morrison grab- bed his spotlight and then using the lights of the plant truck as well, discovered Noye floundering in the water and heading out toward the middle of the pond. Allan Clow and an unidentified young man jumped in the water and brought the struggling man to shore. = A doctor was summbned as a a ae his car, Arthur Baglole escap- ed with bruises. The impact of the accident left the two cars almost head on, with the Perry ear far over on the. right shoulder of the road. The ac- cident was investigated by the Summerside detachment of the ROMP. eralissimo Francisco Franco's 20- | year regime. Eisenhower's last stop before | reaching Washington Dec. 22, a/ five-hour stay in Rabat, wilf\in- volve one of the touchest issues of his trip—Morocco’s demands for the evacuation of American S'side Sea Cadet Receives Honor Chief Petty Officer Donald Mac- Neill, 17, of the Summerside Sea i Lim z i ssf During the past summer. while at HMCS Acadia, apart from qualifying for his CPO certificate, Donnie also qualified for the in- termediate and senior swimming CPO DONALD MACNEILL , ; and after a full program will de- certificates, his certificate for| part from New Zealand around communicator (semaphore) and/ March 18th. received the award for the best | cadet in sports among the bands- men. There were about 60 bands- Other cadets attending ithe S‘side Break — Investigated In order to get into the canteen thief or_thieves broke a pane | ass the porch door to) the first barrier, then broke | second pane in the inner door to break under investigation. MAY CLAIM SUPPORT LONDON (Reuters) — Courts -would be able to order a wife to pay maintenance to her husband under a bill published Thursday. Under the bill, if a husband's earning .capacity is impaired through age, illness or disability, he could ask a court to order his wife to maintain him or. their | children. SPANISH CHURCH The great Gothic cathedral of Leon in Northwest Spain dates from 1199 AD. mie soon to open the way for unifica tion of the Korean peninsula. course will come from the United This was largely a repetition of Kingdom, Australia and New Zea- earlier resolutions passed during men taking the course from var- ious maritime céntres. The Canadian party comprising one officer and 17 cadets is ex- pected to leave Vancouver on the bases. Weather Foils SS Arcadia on Monady, Dec: 28th, land. Donnie is a grade 12 student at Summerside High School and is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Francis MacNeill, Duke Street. S‘side Y's Men Weather conditions Saturday | forced Summerside Y's Men to make a temporary change in their plahs to take to\ the woods for Christmas trees. A spokesman for the Y's men | said a change of plans was ne-, cessary due to the large amount | were the police who rushed to the scene afid took Noye to Prince County Hospital. He was released on Sunday and is, expected to appear in police| court this morning.’ | } Final Continued from Page heads of state on official visits to the Holy See. ie The president will stop briefly; Sunday in Turkey—the country is) under pressure from neighboring | | Russia to renounce Western mil- itary bases—before flying to Ka- rachi for a 36-hour visit to Pakis-' tan starting Dec. 7. FACE RED THREATS Both Pakistan and India, Fisen- hower’s next and longest stop, are} facing threats along their borders from Communist China. Eisenhower will ride in a horse-' drawn state carriage through Ka- rachi to the home of President Mohammed Ayub, military ruler of Pakistan, for strategic talks. From Karachi, Eisenhower will go to Kabul, capital of remote Af- ghanistan, which is the object of | a high-pressure friendship cam-' paign from its big northern neigh- | bor, the Soviet Union. Five hours is scheduled for the stopover be- fore the president continues to New Dethi for his Dec. 10 to 14! visit to India. Although Prime Minister Nehru, has declared that India will hold | to a neutralist line in the face of | Chinese threats, Chinese - Indian disputes will be high on the list of subjects he will discuss.,with Eisenhower. / DEVELOPMENT PLANS The Indian statesman also will brief Eisenhower on his country’s | ambitious development plans, | partly financed by U.S. economic aid. The Indian government aims to give Eisenhower a reception at} least as warm &s that accorded {to Nikita Khrushchev and Nikolai | Bulganin when they came to New, | Delhi four years ago. | Eisenhower will visit Iran for) ifive hours after leaving India. | |Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlevi said at a press conference Satur- day that his two-hour talk with Eisenhower will involve Iran's re- quests for more military aid. The ruler said the Iran wants to improve relations with Russia, which recently waged a campaign of hostility against the country, but said Russia must respect Iranian integrity. | The program for Eisenhower's 24-hour stay in Athens Dec. 14-15 has not been published but he is jexpected to discuss international | & mux plans and Balkan problems with | Premier Karamanlis. SHORT BREAK Eisenhower takes a break after | visiting seven countries in t® days ,and boards the cruiser. Des 'Moines for a Mediterranean cruise Dec. 15. Two days later, he meets Pres- | ident Habib Bourguiba of Tunisia iin Tunis to discuss North African problems and economic and social relationships. The president’s schedule takes him to Toulon, France, Dec. jand by special Paris for three days of talks on summit prospects with President de Gaulle, Prime Minister Mac- millan ‘and Chancellor Adenauer. Spanish officials are making feverish preparations for Eisen- hower’s overnight stay in Madrid on his way home from Paris, the first visit to Spain by a major |Lord Selkirk arranged moisture on the trees and that) they are intending to make the} trip on the first day of. heavy frost. If weather conditions had prov- ed favorable Y's men had plan- ned to bring back 170 trees! which would be used to trans- form .a large portion of Water) + Canada Co-sponsors Resolution On Hungary By JOSEPH MacSWEEN_ Canadian Press Staff Writer [against the 1956 rebels. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (CP)}| This -super-heated subject will Canada has joined in co-sponsor-'share attention at the UN this ing a resolution on the question | week with the question of Algeria of. Hungary, scheduled for debate|—another perennial subject. Afro- in the 14th General Assembly of | Asian nations prepared a resolu- light of eontinued reprisals |the last five years and drew from | Soviet delegate I. I. Tugarinov the ;comment that the West sought to establish the “reactionary” Syng- ,man Rheé of South Korea as chief of the entire divided coun- try. | The vote was 49 to 9 with 19 abstentions. Only the Seviet bloc voted against the proposal. Five countries were absent. Wallace . B. Nesbitt, vice-chairman of the Canadian delegation, reiterated his country’s, view that the way ‘should be kept open for negotia- tions on how .an election could be held, but: “The one principle on which we insist .is that elections must be ‘free and must be ecarried-out un-/§ der effective international super- vision.” Or sree ¥ ORD EOE a i na i MR. FRED PERRY announces the opening of ‘PERRY'S FUNERAL HOME ——INSOURIS. Mr. Fred Perry today announced the opening of the Perry Fun- eral Home in Souris. Formerly of Summerside, Mr. Perry took his apprenticeship-with one of the Island’s oldest establishments,— the Compton Funeral Home in Summerside, and for the past six years has been the embalmer at. the Charlottetown Funeral Home. Mr. Perry’s assistant at the Perry Funeral Home in Souris will be Mr. Regina'd Peters of Rollo Bay. The funeral home is located on Church street in Souris. s 24-Hour Ambulance Service | Phone 133 | Day or Night Perry's Funeral Home SOURIS sere ee mee ee EP ities .| Street into Santa Claus Lane. | “The clib members are also in- trees, which will be sold, on the armouries lot on Dec. 10 | Patron (Continued from Page 1) the Oughton and the Dykes i there had been mass migrations | from the Highlands to North ed. Concerned about this trend, and wishing to see Highland emi- grants settle in a British Colony, | for a) group to go to Canada \and he} chose Prince Edward Island as| | his first settlement. .“‘Later Lord Selkirk sponsored emigrations to! the Red River district of Mani-| toba and to Ontario, but Prince} Edward Island was the first and | most successful venture,"’ the speaker declared. | ‘Most of the immigrants re-| mained in the Belfast area, and the descendents of these pioneers are here tonight.. Some went to} Clyde River and a small group— mostly people froom Uist—settled in an area near Georgetown,” de- clared Mr. MacLean. He said it was interesting to note that Bel- | fast was named for a city in Ire- | land because the land had been originally owned by an Irishman. | And the neighboring community | of Iona was named for a place in| Scotland, scene of St. Columba’s } missionary work, “but today | Scotsmen live in Belfast and Irishmen in Iona.” | Scotsmen maintain their cus- toms and traditions in the new) world, he said, but they were de- nied -that..precious. privelege in Seotland following the last. at- tempt to place a Stuart oni the English throne in 1745, FORCED OUT Xhe subsequent prohibition of 4 the Gaelic language and the Scot- tish dress forced the Highlanders out. They came to the new world | so they could once again be free | to live as they pleased. ‘‘That’s | why our forefathers came’ here in the first place and it is only right that their descendents should maiptain their colorful traditions and culture,” said Mr. MacLean. This they can do and stili be good Canadians. Residents from all parts of the | Belfast district, from Charlotte-| town and from Montague attended | the dinner which was sponsored | | by the Ladies’ Auxiliary of the Canadian Levion, Eldon Branch. The program, staged by the, tartan-clad Selkirk Dancers of | Belfast, consisted of a Highland | Fling by Debbie VanlInderstine, | Elizabeth MacPherson, Gloria! Buchanan, Janet Buchanan; and | Doris MacPhee; a pipe sobo by | George A. Fraser; the sword | Teacher Wanted ig, Experienced teacher want-| ‘ed train north to) for Alberton High | School, commencing Jan. | 4, 1960. ‘ Applications accepted until Noy. 30th , Mrs. Blanche England, Secretary. ' jwestern head of state under Gen- ten em ARRAN ORO | Scottish solo. by Gloria Buchanan, | the United Nations this week. |tion calling for settlement of the He will pass-up—the elaborate fending to out into the woods! The 82-member ‘assembly will!war in which France has been Vatican ceremony reserved for | and Po ar a total of 799 Consider a bluntly worded report battling Moslem rebels for five by New Zealand's Sir Leslie! years. Munro, who stressed widespread! Western countries — Inchiding concern “regarding the imminent ' Canada—have expressed hope for possibility of further executions” | President de Gaulle’s plan for in the Communist-ruled country! peace, offering Algeria integra- where rebellion was-erushed by tion, free association with France Soviet tanks in 1956. for independence through a vote Munro, special UN representa-'to be held within four years after tive on Hungary, said there was |fighting ends. a prolonged blackout on essential} The Algerian debate is bound to Carolina, Mr. MacLean explain-|news from Hungary—he was not/he sharp, although the French allowed to visit the country—but have indicated they will not at- new evidence now had come to tend the discussions, in line with |their country’s argument that Al- geria is a domestic issue. , ~*| The opponents of France, par- a tee oe ham. {ticularly some new states in Af- aa. ond Gate Mac ‘Maas oe \rica, are not noted for restraint. companist was — ‘tae Mace- | France. criticized earlier by the Rae of Cherry Vallgy | UN for her plans to test an atomic ‘A Sanit te tee Lames @wak pro- | bomb in the Sahara, has much sed by Roberts West and was at stake in the way of prestige. responded to by Mrs. Ross Mac- ask FREE ELECTIONS Pherson. — | On Friday, the 82-member po- The Haggis was carried to the litical committee called on North head table by Omer Ferguson. A | Korea to consent to free elections special thanks to the guest speak- | er and all who took part in the! pvening’s entertainment was ex- tended by Mrs. Charles Nichol- son. Head table guests were: Hon. Angus MacLean, Mr. and Mrs. Dougald MacKinnon, Mr. and Mrs. George V. Fraser. dance by Janet Buchanan: a ATTENTION Alberton Rate Payers I will be at the Friendly House from now until Christmas from 2 to 5 in the afternoons to receive payment of school taxes. Mrs. Blanche England, ; Secretary. ANNUAL MEETING The annual meeting of ‘the East Prince Lib- eral Association will be held at the banquet hall of. the Canadian Legion Home, Summerside on Tues- day, December 1st commencing at 8:00 p.m.° Special speakers. Everyone welcome, - NEIL R. MacLEOD, Secretary. Your Electric Light Bill Can Be Paid At Our Office Open Saturday until 9 P.M. Montague Electric Co. Ltd. & ATTENTIE HOLLANDERS OP P.E.I. Sinterklaas en Zwarte Piet willen op zaterdag 5 Dtc. 1959, een bezoek brengen aan onze kinderen in de .zaal van Central Royalty’s Women Institute. Zaal open zeven uur. /Programma begint om half acht precies. Let op. onze wegwyzers aan de. Brackley Pt. Road. Komt allen! Het belooft eengoede avond te worden! f ATTENTION P.E.l. DUTCHMEN! St. Kick and Black Peter will visit our children on Saturday Dec. 5th, 1959, in Central Royalty’s W. 1. Hall. Hall opens at 4 7 o'clock. Program starting at 7.30 sharp. Watch for. our signs on the Brackley Pt. Road. 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