S455 ~ fterday to lowing Waltham, Mass.: _ cemetery. Flowers gratefully de- - Thousands of people from near and far lined streets yes-. Watch one ofthe biggest parades eber staged in "sland News Page Western and Central Districts The Guardian, Charlottetown, Sat., Aug. 20, 1966. 3 od In a. privately financed program, 80 college stu- dents left their pleasant sur- roundings as summer -con- gressional interns in Wash- ington and spent two weeks living and studying life. in the Bedord-Stuves- ant Negro slum of Brooklyn. One’ of them was Chris Chris Harte, Stanford Uni- versity sophomore . from = Corpus Christi, Tex., and intern with — Representative John Young (Dem Tex.) Harte is the son of Edward H. Harte,- president and publisher of the Corpus Christi Caftler and the Times. He tells of his ex- periences in the following article. 8 onan lien tnn danced WESTERN FLAVOR Charlottetown The above scene added a touch of west- —~ern-flavor-—The—children-—are seen here as the parade pro- NEW YORK ‘of »us—mostly fresh from the (AP)—Nineteen summer clean, interns ceeded ° down Queen Street well-ap- This was one of the many. in- SS arn -———————-_ Washington—gathered teresting entries old . brownstone ‘house Cardigan Woman Rushed To An Albatross Aircraft of 103 rescue unit, Greenwood, carried out a double air evacuation: yes- terday ‘when Patrick Doucette, 69 of ‘Sydney, N.S.‘and Mrs. Stanley Ferguson, age 33, Cardi- gan, P.E.I. were airlifted to Vic- W. S. Reeves Passes Away SUMMERSIDE Walter Scott Reeves. Jr.;-36,- of Hamil- ton, Ontario, and formerly. of “Freetown, died ‘suddenly at. the home of A.S Johnson, Belmont Lot 16, on Tuesday, August 16. He was the son of. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Reeves. Ross's Corner Besides. his parenfs he is sur- vived by his. wife, the former Pauline Johnson of Belmont Let 16, three daughters, Linda, Eliz- abeth and. Esther, and the fol- brothers _and_ sisters: Lorne and Norma of Ross's Cor ner, Seaman of “Summerside: Derothy ~( Mrs. H-C~-Harrington, Framingham, Mass.): Roger, Eleanor ‘Mrs, Lester), St. John. N.B.; Jen- (Mrs. Gerald McCarville), E nie “Kensington; Lioyd, Lower Free- town Pilgrimage Reporting Vacancies OTTAWA’—. The .Rova! Cana- | dian Legion ‘s finding it difficult: to fill the plane on its last pil-/ grimage to Holland scheduled for September 19 The tenth pilgrimage will bring to over 1,000 the number of Canadians who have visited war graves of relatives in Holland. While in Holland, the Cana- dians will be guests of Dutch fa-; milies. They will visit’ cemeter- les at Groesbeck and Holten.| Other trips will be arranged for those wishing to visit other ce- meteries. Any next of kin or relative of | a Canadian buried in Holland is invited to get in touch with Le-| gion headquarters at 465 Gil- mour Street, Ottawa MacDONALD — At the Sacred | Heart Home on August 18, Rev. George MacDonald in his 64th year. Resting at the Hennessey Funeral. Home until 3 o'clock on Sunday afternoon then to St Peter's Church, St. Peter's Bay to lie in state till a Mass of Concelebration on Monday’ morn- inz at 10:30. Interment in the Chvrcvh cemetery. CAMPBELL — At Sea View, August 19, 1966, Arthur Campbell age 56 years. Remains resting at the Davison Funeral Home until’ Monday, then to St. Stephens Church, Burlington, where funeral service will be held at 2 p.m_ [Interment in Church cemetery. Visiting hours from,2 to 4 o'clock in afternoon | and from 7 to 9 o'clock in even- | ing ; i STOREY —_At Civingston and MacArthur Nursing Home, Fri- day, Aueust 19, 1966. E. Stanley Storey of 13] North River Road. | Resting at the MacLean Funeral | Home until 9 a.m. today then to St. Peter's Cathedral for funeral service commencing at 10 o’- clock: Interment in Sherwood clined iin Memoriam In loving memory of (Thompson and F-Lt. Nurse Cork: ‘ors, Central Lot jheart of . Brooklyn's \Stuyvesant_ district —....- Eager- but apprehensive, {| CB. Walton. A resident of Moncton, N.B. [00k at life and problems Charles Bernard Walton was teeming Negro tenements. lon a impaired driving charge by |to “live beside, work with and Magistrate ‘James B. Johnston, learn from the disadvantaged. : QC, in Queens County Magis-| We got an abrupt introduction toria General Hospital, Halifax. jtrate’s Court yesterday. © ito. ghetto life. Mrs. Ferguson was involved)” Rajyh Jenkins, city, charged | jin a motor vehicle. accident at |with “failing to stop at a stop |meat Bangor on Thursday night which ‘sign had his case adjourned_to resulted in her being rushed to A ioist 29 to fix.a date fpr the Kings County Memorial Hos- | ; a RIED : | Harry-Matthews._.city, chats scattered” hunks~ of meat~ from {pital. then moved to Charlotte- ¢q with breaking, entering a pro-| ’ jtawn. lperty committing a criminal of- the. Street and carry it in a |. Mr. Doucette required tmme- ae , fence therein was remanded to i\diate~medical. attention and Mrs. | i : /August 22. ‘Ferguson was admitted to neur> josurgery. During the flight the = BK Serta patients. were tended by Dr Russians May Buy Cattle | Volkswagen thought to have been t C d lariver by Kenny Batchilder of | - rom ana ea iGeorgetown left the highway at; = |Bell's Hill and rolled over. | Batchilder was rushed to the: ‘Kings County Memorial Hospi- jto buy breeding tal for treatment. It was report- |Canada ed he was not . seriously hurt ”/farmers were told .here_Thurs- crowded. * ‘Damage tothe car was exten- 7 4ay. | Some of the 15 boys and: four ] ! sive. Members of. a hay nave group of Canadian farmers vis- €xPe-ted to be called “whitey, Halifax shovelled from‘ a—-truck, ter. any. of us had seen, yet the um of CFB Greenwood. - stores was uniformly poor. The Montague RCMP Detach- ment- investigated another accl- n ident earlier this week -when a standards. ' ‘area of at least 300,000 persons. ‘Residents must wait 15 to 30 From Reuters-AP minutes for an ambulance. MOSCOW ‘CP).—Russia plans There were no outdoor swim- cattle- from ming pools. Parks and (Officials assured them of the spread acceptance. -\purchase pians at a long meet- . ling held‘ to discuss. Canadian- jaduit-led groups trying {Soviet tradiig prospects. .The farmers said they were told Russian officials would fly | | e °@ Minister to Canada within the next few | i | ; iweeks to conclude a deal on | A number of trustees from | cattle purchases. No details or |Athena Regional High School | ‘as : jand various district schools met quantities were disclosed. |with Gordon Bennett, minister of education, in Charlottetown [here Wednesday yesterady to discuss the : . solidation plans for the elemen- | by Ivan Volovchenko, tary schools in-the Athena High minister of agriculture, and a prodding was necessary. School district-.and:a 16 room large group of Soviet farming extension to the preset build-/and. trade Trustees ‘Meet With city. agencies. We grievances. 'GET SOME RESULTS night on specialists. They are Stuyvesant families earn ing: ion-a 33-- day: tour. of 10 Euro- ‘than the $4,392 a year which The trustees of 18 school dis- pean. countries. _ | 7 tricts which includes all but six: Members of the group said has been shipped from east and in the Athena High School area they were also assured that | west coast ports. have met in connection with Russia plans to make use ‘of| N. Nelousov, vice -president consolidation of elementary port facilities at Churchill, |of Exportkhleb, told the Cana- School area have met in CoD- Nan. to move some grain re- dians about the Hudson Bay nection with consolidation Of cently bought from Canada. stops.- His organization handles elementary schools in the dis Canada's prairie provinces Soviet grain shipments. trict. It has been decided at nave heen campaigning for such{ The Canadian farmers leave these meetings that the Pro- | shipping routes. Up to now all|today for Krasnodar and re- turn. Aug. 22. gram would require the . con-|Canadian wheat sold to Russia 5 DRUG STORE OPEN THIS WEEKEND tion plan will be presented at the annual meeting of the rate- payers to be held early next month. If the .plan is. adopted there © will be four elementary schools | set up as follows: 1. St. Elean-| 16, Belmont and Linkletter; 2. Central Bede- qque, ‘Mt Stowe), North Bede- que, Fernwood. Chelton ‘Free- town, Lower Freetown, Lower Bedeque and Bedeque: 3. Bor- den, Carleton Siding, Searltown | and Albany Village, 4. Wilmot and Travellers Rest. No announcement regarding the meeting was made yester- day. : BECAME TOP STUDENT TORONTO ‘(CP)—An 18,vear-- old Toronto student who spoke fo English when, he came to! ; ' 154 Prince St. Canada from MHungarv_ nine years ago has become the fon | ‘ ae i te weoree ana Serre Will Be The Only Drug Store Open Saturday a 3 i 1 7, 96.1-per-cent average was the Evening and All Day Sunday. highest known in ‘Ontario. ci : to race at FREDERICTON RACEWAY MINIMUM PURSES—Single Dash $150; Double Dash $300 Fast class-will race for a purse of from $500 to $800 depending on number “of horses. Minimum purse $500, and for each horse over 5, $100 will be } Hugh Garland MacKinnon who died as the re- sult of an accident August 20th, 1965. Missed so much by Mom, Dad, Sisters and Brothers. added to a. maximum of $800. For stall space call Arthur Kelty follect 4758001, Fredericton or write Community Racing Ltd., Box 1553, Fredericton, N.B. By CHRIS: HARTE | fined $100 and costs or 10-days| The two weeks’ mission. was None of us ever had seen raw \some pieces falling into- boxes trial. jand some on to the street, I saw a deliveryman scoop up_the ishovel directly to a store coun- ‘RATES. HIGH—STORES. POOR : | “Food prices were higher than Neil Green of Calgary 69-71. Jim Collins of Winnipeg and quality —and——eondition—_of—the Bill Wright_Jr___of _Edmonton | jeach had 14! _|_ Almost_every house we saw. George Knudson of Toronto iwas unfit te Hve--in by our and John Henrick of Stouffville, es Ont. matched par of 142. | There were no hospitals in an THRILLS GALLERY | | Fowler thrilled the gallery on this year, Canadian jfields were few and over- |" CANTWELL’S Dial 4-5132] Racing Mondays & Thursdays until Nov. lth. I | Students Spend Two Weeks In N.Y. Negro Slum Area the city ‘considers the =minimum ‘aftér 54 holes of play. adequate : high rents and prices make this /$15,900 parse. | ;eondition worse. | Mayor John V sored the Brooklyn project with '$15,000 donated by individuals /P@" sible meeting date in a speech | land private foundations. Two of the - birdies were ltoday on th On. successive two-week pessScored with long putts—40 feet the second, where he was only U a foot off. He was not over. par | | .. {on any.;hele~ Friday. tattempt ENDS TODAY z ported Alliance - for - The tournament to apply a The win- Johnson declared ‘“‘the family income. Sky-|ner will receive $2,000 of the must set new siglits.”’ Crawford’s card birdies and only showed five Lindsay spon- y_ 8p one hole over th. The oné-over-par. was & learly December. ~\six on the 518-yard 17th. 1 the or-|three rounds Crawford Ours was the third. with results! the pro- | In-what was described by high | .S. government officials as an ‘second- stage booster’ to the. U.S.-sup- Progress} ends today \aid program for Latin America. | Several months ago, in a visit ito Mexico, Johnson proposed a imeeting of hemisphere chiefs of |state. He gave no clue on a pos- fifth anniversary | *% jof the alliance, ‘though the tar- iriods, four groups ot about 20\0n the 10th and 18 feet on the |get date is understood to be leach came toa Bedford-Stuyves- | 16th. ; ant Elated iganizers -plan to map out three. played here—including "| Officials’ described the presi- has gent’s: speech as a major one, jailmed at helping prepare a pos- 8 N\ fom cn leconomte development . had fhe par-three 18th hole when his | Pl e had as ts goal 2 S-per-cent ineres five-iron shot from the tee hit Jo nson Urges New annin eine aceses aot g yin i lthe pin and stopped an inch : m ca income. [trem the hole For Latin America Economy x0: tie presien ove | Of the four birdies, on ; ia ata 50 Sere ras iRowler’s rd. Game on, WASHINGTON (AP) ~ Pres-\tions as areas for priority’ ac- and in e uture. annual -per aah! ouitts. Thé-tthers ceed ident Johnson has called tion. ‘ capita growth rates ee sic MAlane Se He used nist og for the economic integration of Johnson noted that the hem!- crease to the | range of four ta dutts’ in all : “ “"\tatin America and a united,.sphere program for reform and six per cent. ra : f drive to raise living standards. ep Fowler hit, all greens except H.R. DOANE AND COMPANY WINSPEAR, HIGGINS, STEVENSON & DOANE alliance | » Chartered Accountants (34 RICHMOND ST., CHARLOTTETOWN _ Saint John, Halifax, St. John's, Montreal, Toronto, Winnipeg, Edmonton, Calgary, Prince Albert, Vancouver a ee a oe oe ee ey LONDON DOUBLEDECKER BUS b or four more programs for next amateur Wednesday — he has ‘sipie agenda forthe Hemisphere =e summer . bees over- par on only fqur | summit TRE Johann Wace Tours the.-North Shore Beaches | c ‘ [ROR jsome priorities to consider. in , uf fi ; The weather was cold and the years ahead. He said . SUNDAY ONLY Tournament .|windy for the second straight} “The question is whether — Dalvay,. Stanhope, Brackley with a stop for swimming at | CALGARY pointed offices of congressmen Fowler of Calgary carded ajmonton in 1963 in 4 in—an_four-under-par 67 Friday to take |monton in 1963 .in the tourna- | in. che the _ second-round lead ins the|ment won by Al Balding. Bedford- | Association a |Canadian Professional we | Association jhad come to work im the “cor-|136, six under par. | 100 nerstone project, a privately, Fowler was one. of four -play- [Assessed $ jfinanced progran’ designed _toers tied -at 69, two under_ par, | : "give college students a close-in after the opening round Thurs- | é day. - at couver isegger of Beloeil, Jack Kay of Toronto 70-70. and | $ | 40-member Sirls in our group may have | “CORBEDT-FUNERAL — The | Ys Jfuneral of Heber Corbett ~ was | jiting Moscow said government but we were surprised at wide- held Thursday afternoon from | p his home-—to Alberton I spent the mornings in small, CGhurch where service was con- } 5 to- OT | ducted by ganize, neighborhood tenants to) jington. Hymns were The Lord's apply pressure on landlords and wy Shepherd and. Rock of Ages. conducted pa)! bearers were Perley Hardy, | survey,s tried to get residents |Ljoyq Oliver, ‘Henry’. Myers, | ito talk freely about their hard- | wilfred Gaudin. |ships, and followed up on major vitt and Dén Campbell. Flower- |bearers were : |Leigh Corbett. The Canadians, who arriyed| Sometimes we could convince | and Wesley Hardy. a landlords to make repairs for was in Woodlawn cemetery. Dur- | con- |seven-day visit, were received which they were legally respon-' jing the hour of the funeral all | deputy ‘sible. But more often official pjaces of business were closed - out of respect to Mr. Corbett who | Almost half —of- all- Bedford-*had been-one of the town’s mer- | less chants for many years. Ends Today In q round remaining in the 54-hole | tocrnament | Gilford,-Ont:;-with- 68-69—137. | Wilf Homenuik—of- Winnipeg, | opening-round.leader with a ‘six- Four players were deadlocked By KORKY KOROLUK (CP) ” thetourna- (expanding populations ‘agriculture and championship — with | Golfers \@ championship. with second. place with one is Moe--Norman of | under-par 45, ballooned to a-74 | : : ~ Friday. He held third place | August 22 ” 29 with a 36-hole total of 139, three | a : ~ \under. par i = 140.- Lyle Crawford of Van- | had 73-67, Jack Bis-}| Que. : 72-68, | Fedturing— = - © 10% 4 ‘Packard shoes on P.E.L. © Expert fitting by qualified staff “WESTERN: — ff © 20% off ail other school shoes. FUNERALS 7 = ee : Unned j Rev. Ronald Pock- | Herbert Lea- | Jimmy Corbett, | Roy Campbell | Interment | / _ Special Attraction — From U. S. Football Fields to Charlottetown Drum And “SPARTANS” 2 & EXHIBITION. GRANDSTAND day. and about. noon rain began | progress lies ahead in unity ar jto fall. But Crawford said he |{solation. Our sister repudlies in enjoyed the adverse conditions. |Latin_America must decide that Crawford has never won the |uestion’ for themsélves: For our CPGA. The-closest he has come.|part, we believe that effective Frank |was a fourth-place finish in. Ed-|unity is vital to the needs of Johnson” also listed education, : “Back To School Days” é es Sau - : © Largest stock of children's Savage and _ "Cavendish Beach and a tour of Green Gables. Bus leaves Travel Bureau at 1:00 p.m. sharp l Adults $2.00 — Children under 12 years $1.00 [| ABEGWEIT SIGHTSEEING Tours. J Charlottetown & ati Phone 4-9966 soe timita- ‘leat emt ce i i oe Te a oe ‘rum off all Savage and Packard school FIELD DRILL TONIGHT... 9:30 p.m. Maritimes ee Harness Racing — Pari-Mutual Betting—Post time 8 p.m. With o