a ibegan his with —hautbeys—arrases.“and alarums/ Is Included In Se | By NANCY WHITE | The first hint we had about the zany collection of creativity ‘that is: Don Cullen was in the biography he sent us/ in the spring: Most of the Summer Fes-! tival performers sent factual} \name-age-height roles sheets, but. ithe star of the Village Revue | “The news of Don /Cullen’s imasterful portrayal of Ebenezer Scrooge was proclaimed in sql- 'emn tones throughout the halls of Howard Public School by | from without. (dies) It launched | /Mr. Cullen on a# veritable orgy | jot imitating teachers.” | So we knew someone wonder- |ful was about to happen in Char- lottetown, as they say Cullen made his entrance, tall, gaunt, pale, baggy-eyed and wearing a turtleneck sweater iThe sweater is a uniform, act- ually, usually,.worn tied by the arms about the neck or wrist. MAKES ROUNDS He's probably the best knowl performer aroiind the Centre it- self. because when he come in, he wsually makes ee I lrounds ofthe staff. He talks in a variety of voices. frequently using a pseudo-British revue ac- cent. And all the time it’s ideas and more ideas colored with a is his ability to whistle two|™Moved around the country, and notes at once.-It's incredible. He|the Chartottetown edition will in- just opens his mouth and out | elude interviews with actress comes a recorder duet He Jamies Anne . of - Green - Gables claims he’s commissioned Harry| Ray, apprentice Gracie. Finley, Somers to write ‘Concerto for and Centre guide Michelle Roy. 5% arr ‘T'mer Festival mainlv to do The! Andrew. Pursed Lips’ for him. |As an added attraction,. there's He was brought to the Sum: 'the voice of ‘Smiling Jack Me. joining Cullen in .the N Collection Ot Creativity lograpiny muine delight at ar aeren: ; rife is euitay beard.” Z i 5 | BUCKINGHAM, Que. (CP —A General Manager lcs DON CULLEN = Pager i ibe sapere Charlottetown Board of Trade ee. ee ee Set",- a CBC radio show for, zany show Tn fact after listen. nearby Masson Monday after’ its . dreadful. - | teeny hoppers and -even. olders, ing to “The. Action Set’ one Don Cullen is a man of many/that he's been dojnz the past day I went right out and bought talents, most startling of which Year. This summer the-program a radio College one study ing philosophy: at ee University i of Toronto. - Cullen spent ‘two newsle lyears’ on the editorial staff of CBC's National TV News dapat: : ) F J ment, then» wrote 4 telev! : : z lealled an Six and a.radio show|2 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Wed., Aug. 24, 1966, | with the splendid tite. “ Pro- > lgram That Dares to be Known by Bad Taste Alone. He also appeared as a writer-performer, on CBC's Quest, and as @ prin-! leipal on Playdate, Close-up, On ithe Scene, Time of Your Life, jand Across Canada One of his most recent radio assignments: was 4 program af satire called What Went Wrong with the World In 1960 he and a friend found- éd Toronto's Bohemian Embassy | l now the oldest coffee house in| ithe country, Don tells me that ithe night they opened it up. they were still irving to figure out) how. to make coffee, and that the club was listed for a year ‘in the Yellow Pages under Con- sulates and Other Foreign Gov- lernment_ Representatives’. ~Phat's-when-thev—cot—invited_to {all sorts of magnificent functions and were sent Christmas cards | by people like the mayor of the air brakes failed while shunting, jured- when the diesel engine cars on a siding. Nobody was in- ended up. ‘derailed but upright THE CHARLOTTETOWN BOARD OF TRADE EXTENDS THANKS “Appreciation is extended to the Char- \ Florists and Nurserymen who assisted in creating the .Charlottetown ‘Board of Trade’s "Flower Garden City” entry that won the 1966 Gold Cup and stitutional Float. . : Special thanks are ialsadie to: 1 leity. (Cullen pours it’ : ~~ bts le have to take their Christ [mat card lists. trom the Yellow © Keith , Bunbury Nurseries ages. Revue seems to be Don Cul: ; George " Sidmount Gardens | len's meat. !n Toronto. he wrote ye rent, |) Tae wee Chick Witliams, Williams Florists tions of The.-Village Revue and,| © Charles Beazley, Flower. Cart |as a result, was asked to. join. @ =the Broadway company of “Be. | Charles Mac » West End yi the Fringe e toured eeathe 4 North America for eight months Nurseries {with the show. AND So that's“a bit of- the score on @ Seal Axa, MacLean’ $ Funeral Don Cullen. a clever, talented | guy on whom someone should do a major Profile vate once. TRAIN RUNS RAMPANT Home C, W. Moffatt, » Don's Action Set_work is his] latest assignment in a t.v.-radio career that began with acting jobs in, believe. it: or=-not, <'The Last of the* Mohicans *- and "Tug Boat Annie” Before that, -he made attemptsi ‘at more average modes of liv-' ing, spending one year at Ryer- son Institute, one at the Toronto Village. Revue in the Festival; CBC convertible It's kind of a Cabaret. Club; originally -with) : Barrie Baldaro. But Baldaro| changed his mind at the last | : a |minute, so Cullen was left to run the show,. with the helo of} |Don Ewer. and other people from ithe ‘Festival Company. And s ORIGINAL manuscript of = Stephen Leacock's Sunshine + Sketches of A -Little Town {a “Sheld by Dr.‘Ralph Curry? dir- ; @ctor—ofthe- Stephen Leacock Ontario, The manuscript was purchased from Mrs. Barbara Nimmo, Leacock’s niece, -for $20,000, a gift’ to’ the Leacock ard Publishing Company, pub- {somehow the {fob got expended lishers of Weekend- Magazine |into master ceremonizing every Perspectives.’ Stephen Frank- | night ‘at the club with occasion- ‘lin, left, represented Weekend | al use of material like his fam- Magazine. The Leacock Home ous bird calls or his story about CANADA | Hothe by the- Montreal Stand- ia-in-background. | Westminister Abbey. Shop In One _{ Stop -At i. = o -—Saucer_ Parade Shield_for the- best In-_| » Memorial Home in Orillia, + Manuscript Loss To US. | lled By Purchase Foresta > The loss of Canada’s most im-| ry, director of the Stephen Lea-; ~ portant literary manuscript. to | cock Memorial Home and a lead- | | orous sketches first published in the United States-has been fore-| ing Leacock scholar, confirmed | the Saturday edition of the Mon- stalled by its purchase in Can-| that Mrs. Nimmo was thinking | treal Star between February 17 ada of one offthe largest sums | of selling the manuscript and had’ and June 22, 1912 and only later ever paid in this. country for} been approached to part with it.| published in book form. such a document. Dr. Curry, who has spent the! Jack McClelland, president of It is the original handwritten! past eight summers at the Lea-| McClelland and Stewart and manuscript of Sunshine Sketches | cock Home. and his winters as a' Dodd, Mead (Canada), Leacock's of A Little Town by_Stephen Lea-/ college. professor back home in’ publishers, said today: cock. The volume, popular to | Georgetown, Kentucky, added: ‘Sunshine Sketches is clear- this day throughout much of the} that the manuscript of ‘Sunshine | ly Canada’s most important lit- world and beloved by generations} Sketches undoubted|ly_ should-_be| erary. manuscript._It-is-the Can- of Canadians, was written by/in Stephen Leacock’s old sum- | adian classic. The. most widely- the great humorist in 1912 and| mer cottage where it could be | read admired ad ever written has been ‘described as ‘‘the most seen by summer visitors and | by a Canadian. ,» has gone Canadian book ever written.’ |available to Leacock scholars} through. more seditidan and sold The manuscript has been pur-| alike. But their modest budget | more copies than any other Caf- thased for $20.000 from Leacock's | made -its purchase impossible. | adian book and it is selling better niece, Mrs. Barbara Nimmo, of| He added however, that he| today than it was 20 years AWC: vy. Bloomfield Hills, | Michigan,| thought Barbara Nimmo, who} through a dift from the Montreal) had spent her childhood sum- Standard Publishing Company,| mers at Old Brewery Bay and publishers of Weekend Magazine | lived; with her widowed Uncle and its French language coun-; Stephen for 10 years while she terpart. Perspectives. The gift, was attending McGill University . to buy the manuscript was made/ and afterwards had been mar- to the Stephen Be een Memor- rs from the familiar porch of fal Home on Old-RBrewery Bay,| the Leacock home, would really T T designated as an -historic. site| prefer the manuscript to he there, 0 oronto “and. owned by the Town of if it were possible. Orillia A week later negotiations for Leighton Warren, head of the | IMAGINARY TOWN the gift to the Leacocx Home and Photographic Department of the} It_was the turn-of-the century! the purchase of the manuscript Royal Ontario Museum, Toron- Ontarin town on the shores of)! had been completed to, with Mrs. Warren and his two! Lake Couchiching ‘transformed Although the -annua! Leacock young daughters, have returned} into the imaginary town of Mari-| Medal for Humor, won in 1945 by ‘to. Toronto: after a visit ‘to his “posa about which-Leacock_-wrote!-Weekend Magazine—_associate Native prov ince in Sunshine Sk ketches editor Greg Clark, established an’ “Mr. Warren. was the photogra- | The manuscript, written in ink obvious bond between ‘the great pher with a group of eight which} in Leacock’s strong and flourish-| Canadian humorist and magazine! included historians, political scl |@ ine hand, will be officially turn-| publishing today, it was only entists and archeologists who ed over to the Leacock Memorial) after negotiations hac: been com- were sent recently to Iran for Home in a- simple ceremony. pleted andethe -manuscript taken three and a half months by the, Island Native Has Returned today ‘11 am. Wednesday, Aug- from the Detroit bank vault_to oy ust 24 be brought to Orillia, that an Pronto University ‘and the Ro-| The discovery that Canada was even closer connection. w.as Ya! Ontario Museum to- photo- in dancer of Insing forever the. learned graph and study _the Iranian Crown Jewels This collection of jewels is the greatest in the world. An anno- : Yellowed newspaper clippings in Mrs. Nimmo’s possession re- vealed that the late Lord Athol original of the humorous literary masterpiece came in a -chance remark made two weeks ago at Georgian Ray: Weekend Mag- stan, former publisher of the tated book is to be published azine writer Stephen Frankjin| Montreal Star and the Montreal which will contain the Warren was told casually that Mrs. Nim- Standard (‘the forerunner of Photographs mo, the owner of the manuscript, | who had heen .vacationing at Orillia, was negotiating the sale of Sunshine Sketches to the Un- “iversity of Chicago where Lea- cock had d his Ph.D APPROACHF)) Mr. Warren’ war the: photogra- pher for the honk, “Art Treas ures in the Royal Ontario Mu- seum.” Before ‘leaving Iran the Can- adians were guests of the Shah Weekend Magazine), had com- missioned Stephen Leacock to “write something about Canad- Fan ie: , FIRST PUBLISHED The result was Sunshine Sket- earner A visit to Old Brewery Bav . and a talk with Dr Ralph Cur. | “Growing with 1+—-Canada—z Crapaud WEDNESDAY, AUG: 3lst Official Opening 2 P.M. ° Highland Music, Midway, ® Highland and Step Dancing Classes @ Burke Pipe Band and Majorettes This simple; no pendity, plon.is based on shores in Conada's Original and most experienced mutual \ fund, and provides: for ‘dollor avereging and Winpeunding of incéme, Write or send this for free prospectus and 33... years record, without obligation. crus OF LIVESTOCK ONLY EASTERN SECURITIES Ce ee COMPANY LIMITED B. C. Woods /¢. Max Thompson Le cota “DEBENTURES chagrin, he finds himself. doing ae & : ces -|more musical comedy type act- ae ing in the role as the summer | GUARANTEED INVESTMENT esses. RAISED THE TRE CERTIFICATES _ Provincial Exhibition co also plays the Welsh Clergy- -in The Ottawa Man and cues in Turvey as- Lieutenant - PERMAN EN T. Pc gg in’ the’ season, Cullen the ire of the P.E.I. ee Bureau by donning pith helmet and monacle to beeome | a big snake hunter for newspaper | and radio interviews on the oc- easion of the departure of a chicken snake from a north| shore cottage. (In his hunt he! would. use a crowbar ''to separ- late the girls from the boas,"’ he | said.) Last. week he masterminded | the ar ite eae fs eae d orial Hall. It was planned, a bit,! ‘ although not rehearsed. First, he : Issued in amounts from $500 to. $100,000 $ asked about a dozen people ff}m. ~*~ larger amounts subject to negotiation theatre and art gallery to an idea meeting, then spent the next week or so alternating be- twen great enthusiasm and a state_of desperation as H day hove in sight. What made it hard g;on him was his phobia about asking other people to do things for him. He doesn’t like to. And there were some problems like last minute out-backing. None- theless this first P.E.I. Hanven- ing was a success and Cullen's own performances (“The sermon tonight is taken from a can of Campbell's tre-am of potato |soup’’) were, of course. the highlights. He is just so good 6% 7 tor any term from 1 to 5 years Established 1855 — Federally incorporated and supervtsea: j eee SAVINGS -TRUST SERVICES - MORTGAGES Please send me an application form and folder for O Debentures o (0 Guaranteed Investment Certificates |LATEST PROJECT ' Name__ x - Cullen's latestproject at—the 'Festival was the preparation of Address cd Saturday morning’: s “Action Smet oe Phe cee lec el a ele ee | lof Iran. En route home they. |visited England, Turkey, Russia and Germany where they visit- jed the _museums_of those coun- tries et Mr. Warren is the son of Mrs: {Leigh H. Warren,, Longworth « f Ave. | 129 Kent Street, 892-2417 Donald Stanhope, MANAGER ‘ate —— | Girls’ Slims - In corduroy, denims, stretchy viscose and _nylon, a Sizes 7 to 14 years. Priced from ; ‘ $3.98 to. 5.98 Girls’ Long Sleeved: T-Shirts In roll neck styles. In checks, stripes and plains. Col- . ors of red, brown, black, white, gold, blue and cran- berry. Sizes 8 to 14 years. Priced from— 82. 19 to 3. 49 Girls’ Fall Dresses In Axnela and cotton, dacron and cotton, Dan River wash and wear dark - eottons, wools, velvets and all wool worsted. In plaids, checks and plains. In i5 year. Priced fom" A OB to 11.95 Girls’. et Nylon Knee Hose In colors of navy, white, red, beige, brown, blue and green. Sizes & to 914. site O9C-0.98 0 Girls’ Sweaters In 100% High Bulk Orion and wool blencs. In crew neck, roll neck, pullovers, sleeveless shells and button front cardigan styles. In colors of red, white. navy, hunter green, royal, black, brown, cranberry and pink’ Sizes 8-14 years. Priced from— 2.98 to 7.98 Girls’ Fall 2 Piece Suit In orlai acrylic and wool tweeds. In crew neck .and roll ‘peck, long sleeve pullover and cardigan styles. In colors cranberry, blue, heather, gold and red. Sizes 7 to 14 Pictured above‘is Constable Walter Carver of the Parkdale Police selecting the lucky winner of the Fine Arts Northum bria draw held Saturday afternoon at the Coliseum. The lucky ‘Wihti@r was Mrs. George MacKinnon, Kinross. Mrs. ‘Mac- Kinnon won an electric. Fry Pan. Also in the picture is Mr. W. : Robertson, Atlantic Regional a neet and Mrs. Mary Webster, Wilmot Valley, P. E. I. repre- sentative. i 144 Richmond $1. — Seeretary $ President of years. , Priced— ~ $8.98 to $9.98 Child's & Misses Shoes For back to school wear. Styled In brown and black with straps, vinyl soles. Sizes 5 to 3. $3.98