— ms; monks march from Budd- i W Goddess of Mercy statue in mm, Japan, after unveiling of . nemorial to Allied dead of World B Five eysterday morning raz- gdflle home of Mr. and Mrs. ‘ Russell I-licken, Whim Road, and we the couple and their two children without food, clothing ml shelter of any kind. The fire was of unlmown origin, and oc- curred when-Mr. Hicken was at work with the Hillisboro Con-1 ; gu-notion 00. The house was not i Recreation Roo : The new recreation room of the 1. Canadian Legion Home, Souris, M2 will be officially opened on June M 19, it was announced at the re- . gular meeting held on Tuesday ~ evening June 3rd, at the Legion .~ Home. With the installation of modern ll lluorscent lighting, under the supervision of Mr. Frank Pran- 'gllt, the room received the last . touches for its completion. The ceiling is white, outer walls a , pale green and the inner walls . and canteen of Douglas Fir grparlels. Tables of plywood de- It all M II} I ll In in In 30 " signed around pillars and sup- ports, with pleasinlg contrasts of shaded arborite covers, give the effect of comfortable roominess. The opening will be marked with l lobster supper followed by a dance. During the meeting the Legion ‘:1 agreed to sponsor one team of the Little League in baseball. H Oomrade Lem Plaquet reported II Ihattlle new diamond was in in so M- .- TRIBUTE TO ALLIED WAR only ‘some 50 colorfully-garbed Bud- War II, last Sunday. A white marble tablet, honoring more than 48,000 soldiers who died fighting against Japan, was un- covered in base of the 80-foot- Fire Destroys iWIlim Rd. Home insured.’ The family are presently stay- ing at the home of Mrs. Hicken’s father, Mr. W. D. Fraser. The Red Cross Disaster Relief visited the family in the after- HIOOIXI and made provisions for food and clothing supplies. A sum of money, Mr. Hicken’s last week’s p-ay, was also lost. « Souris Legion Opening New In This Week Donations were approved of $100 each for two fire disaster families, one in Bear River and the other in Souris. The Secre- tary also read acknowledgements from the Red Cross Committee for a donation of $25, and from the -Mulgrave Disaster Fund for a similar donation. A letter of thanks from the Easter Seal Committee was received for a donation of $25. , The usual grant of $60 for prizes for the pupils of the three Souris schools was approved. Also approved was a. donation of further treats to a member patient in the Sanatorium. Hope was exrpressed. that Le- gion members and the public generally would again actively support the Blood Donor Cam- -paign in August. It was also announced’ that ar- rangements are being made to the Veterans’ Monument at the corner of Main and Chapel .»= readiness for league play. .4 Streets. I Arnold Swenson of Lancaster, N. B. was elected president of The Maritime Olptlometric As- -» Nation at the annual meeting i held yesterday evening at the Charlottetown Hotel. Mr. SlWlen- » son succeeds B. F. Hunter, of erside, Following the business meeting Iherepreueuraltlves of Prince Ed- -‘ ‘WI Island, Nova Scotia and ‘ 9'’ Brunswick were addressed Dr. George Fisher, D.V.M., ‘ V-Sn of Charlottetown, Director, ; Veterinary Services, P.E.I. Government. The title of Dr. Fishe-r’s ad- Ifss was “Let’s Stop and Milt" In it he stated“ .....no W11‘! can stand up to the test “Wine once the family is broken ' "fflfhe family is our basis of ' Vlllzaltion." .31 Fisher went on to say that ' "‘$I111day Schools and all organi- "m",n\"I1 youth groups only all‘ I Dloxlulately 25 percent of our .1 i7'5““‘?h are touched and the other nwlercent are not included .... .. °» 35 parents, are not resum- hg 0111' responsibility.” he said. I "HER OFFICERS m°lh_er officers elected at the R0 HE were: vice-president, lbfilt S. Wile of Liverpool, N. ‘usecretary-¢trea«sui'er, W. Tre- e_.Gard of Sussex, N. B. M 118 the course of the ban- “ Mr. B. F. Hunter present- ‘ MFW0 colored photographs de- ', Wilts Island scenes to Dr. CY Ma 111‘ March, Jr., of Concord ss. ix; Mfimed at the Head Table were: mimd Mrs. B. F Hunter, Sum- Amfllde, P. E. 1.; Mr. and Mrs. R_ (1 Swenson, Lancaster, N. . “Rh *5 and Mrs. J. Arthur Car- . h°1‘S. Charlottetown; Dr. and 1' \' Geonee Fisher, Charlotte- EASTERN GUARDIAN -°°NCRErl«: BLOCKS, grim; dseflsoned. Order now, ;‘ Llgue ehV€_1‘y. Phone 123 Mon- ‘ W- Rlchard MacLean. I0HE- REPEAT Polio Inocula- , . Tn” I01‘ the following week I uesday. June 17, H oly . D. THa<ll in St. Peters, 7 — 10' athwrsday, June 19th, W.I. June 20E1‘“111la. 7-10 p.m. Friday, 330 to ’ St‘ M31‘3”s Hall, Souris. all I N./B. Man Elected President 0IiMia ritime »Optometric Ass’n town; Dr. Arthur March, Con- cord, lM‘aS‘SI and Mr. Edward Higgins, Toronto. _ Following the banquet enter- tainment was provided by Miss Eileen Grant and ll/Iisses Ger- trude, Pauline and Bernadette Doyle, Charlottetown. ' Miss Grant sang “Somewhere a Voice is Calling” and “Tam- my”. The Doyle trio sang Hopeur’ AIS el! and “Back in the Old Routine”. MORNING SESSION . Yesterday morning the Mari- time Optometrists were welcom- ed to -the City by Mayor Edwm C. Johnstone. . Following this the visiting de- legates heard a discussion by Dr. Arthur March, Concord, ll/Ba.ss., president of the Massa- chusetts Society of 0D’00me‘II'i5¢5 on “The Law of Supply and D1?- mand Related to Visual Care’ . Dr. March also spoke on several phases of Optometric work. A talk ‘on “Visual Care for Canada” was given the delegates by E. B. Higgins, managing dir- ector Canadian Association of Optometrists. The wives of the delegates were escorted on a drive through have fllood lights installed on. OTAWA, (Special) . Two pro- jects totalling about $56,000 are to be started by the Public Works Department in.Kings County this year, John A. MacDonald, con- servative MP for Kings, disclos- ed Monday. Conltracts have already been awarded for both projects. A contract for $25,125 has gone to Morrison and McRae Limited, of Summerside, for construction of a retaining wall at Beach Poin-t. Completion date is April 10, 1959. The second contrcat, for $30.- 868, was awarded to Stanley Reid, Contractor, of Port Hilford, N.S. for repairing the wharf at Montague. It, too, is to be fin- ished by April 10 next. The Beach Point project invol- ves construction of a retaining wall of sheet steel piling tied back with steel tie rods to a concrete anchor. It will be 160 feet long and form the outer face of the work. ~ Steel sheet piles used in the project will be driven to a min- imum of three feet into rock or 8.7 feet below low water. The wall will be tied to the concrete anchor with two-inch steel tie rods with ends upset to 2-1/2 in. The concrete anchor wall will be two feet wide and four feet high. Stone fill will be placed at the back of the steel wall to form a slope. It is estimated 700 cubic yards. of clay fill and 250 cubic yards of stone fill will be required in this project. high statue. rue Bilddha is de- dicated to the more than million Japanese who perished in the- war. (AP Wirephoto) Partial Returns (Continued from Page 1) candidates, a sharp contrast to At Montague, the existing curb, plank deck, untreated stringers and caps will be removed_ Pil- ing now in use is to be trimmed where necesary so the caps and concrete surface will have a slope of one inch in eight feet inwards from the channel face. This will be followed by the con-sructiocn of a timber concrete laminated deck on creosoted caps. Upon completion it will be 336 feet nine inches long andvary from 10 to 44 feet in width. $56,000 Contracts Let For Kings County Project The timber base of the com- posite deck will be built "of cresosoted two-inch by four-inch and two inch by six-inch plank- ing. 'l‘op surfacing of all work will be of three-inch thick asph- altic concrete laid in two layers of one and onehalf inch each. Total of 11,000 feet board mea- sure nf creosoted timber, 8,000 square feet of creosoted timber- concrete laminated deck and 2,500 of untreated timber will be used for repairing the wharf. Disciplinary (Continued from Page 13 and seconded by Councillor Has- lam. It superceded ‘a previous mot- ion introduced by Councillor Gaudet and seconded by Coun- cil-lor'Baker, chairman and mem- ber respectively of the Council’s finance committee, the jurisdic- tion of which includes the offices occupied by each of the above mentioned employees. The original motion asked that the City Clerk “be dismissed forthwith from the employ of the City of Charllottetow-n for his misconduct at City Hall on the 30th day of April, 1958” with the proviso that arrangements be made to place him on 50 per cent pension “as of this.d-ate of dis- missal". The resolution noted that this proviso was added in view of Mr. Ful1erton’s “many long years of the 42 who ran in 1953 when only two were elected. Standing of the legislature at d-issolution. was; ' Liberal-«Progressive 34, Progres- ' sive Conservative 10, C1C3F 5, So- cial Credit’ 1, independenrt 3, In- dependent Conservative 1, Labor- Progressive 1, vacant 2. T-otal 57. Premier Campbell, 63-year-old farmer, voted in Winnipeg and then went to Portage la Prairie which is in the centre of the Lakeside riding he has rep- resented since 1922. Mr. Roblin, who will be 41 to- day, looked forward to a rest af- ter voting. Named leader of the Conservatives in 1954, he is lead- ing the party in a general elec- tion for the first time. CALM AND COLLECTED Mr. Stinson, 54, has led the OCIF since 1952. He said he stayed “pretty calm and col- lected” on election clay and in- Patriot. .- NOTICE TO PATRIOT SUBSCRIBERS Patriot subscrption accounts may be paid at the Montague. Souris or Summer- side offices of The Guardian and The The Guardian --The Patriot past services to the City.” MOTION WITHDRAWN With the consent of its spon- sors. this motion was withdrawn after the Mayor had read to Council a letter from the City Clerk asking for three months leave of absence and subsequent retirement on half pay. A phylsi-cian’~s statement indi- cating that the City Clerk’s health would no longer permit him to carry out the duties of his office was appended to Mr. Fullerton‘s request. Before fin-al approval amend- ments were moved to each mot- ion. Stating that he could not see how the Council could “dismiss with one hand and give a pens- ion with the other” Councillor Foster moved clause authorizing payment of pension to Mr. Fullerton con- tained in the original motion in- troduced by Councillor Gaudet. The amendment was lost when a seconder failed to come forward. In the subsequent vote on the motion substituted for the or- iginal, Councillor Foster voted nay. ‘ Councillor Foster stated that certain facts contained in the Police Report “warranted con- sideration of dilsmlissal”; but in.- stead of imposing disciplinary action “we are rewarding out of public funds.” COUNCIL WARNED At one stage he warned Coun- rlVIIlnE i also stalling BOX orrlcn OPENS 7:30—-SHOW A I TONIGHT and WEDNESDAY JUNGLE MYSTERIES! SHOCKING nuns: SAVAGE SPECTACLES! . " A LOVE THAT BELONGED IN THE AFRICAN JUNGLE WHERE PASSIONS BLAEE BEYOND CONTROL nu Illlllllill ' EXTRA! MUSICAL .— CARTOON ---v}’ T DUSK / aid inlraducing EDDIE CALVERT ‘Ill: Man with the Golden Trumpet" ITBDON PRODUCTION 0 I COLUMBIA PICTURE TECHNICOLO R9 Exrnal ollilro cil that unless they came up with a very suitable motion to re- place the one originally propos- ed, “we are blinding our eyes to what has taken place and fail- ing miserably in our duties.” Taking the view that Council could not discipline one man ded when it had failed to do the same to the other, Councillor 0’Neill with regard to the re- solution respecting Mr. Abbott, moved that the portion calling for a severe reprimand be de- deletion of the leted This amendment was second- ed by Councillor Boyles, and on motion received support from Councillor. Gormley. It was defeated when Council- lors Ga-udet, Baker, Hiasllam and Hyndman voted against its adop- tion, Councillor Eoster abstain- ing. In seconding this amendment Councillor Boyles stated that he felt since this was a first of- fence on the part of Mr. Abbott The Guardian Page 5 Tuesday, June 17, 1958 “little severe”. He should be given another chance. I19 ad‘ In defense of the motion, Coun- Council’s first duty Was “I0 1001‘ ahead”. , “We can't do much about what has occurred in the past. but We can remove the causes so that nothing can take place to cause’ the same thing to happen again. he said. VOTING respecting Mr. Abbott resulted as follows: (for) Councillors Gaudet, Baker, Haslam _ and Hyndman; (against) Councillors Foster, O'Neill, Gormley and Bloyles. ' Councillors Arseuaullt _ Rae did not attend last night’: such disciplinary action was a special meeting of the Council. ‘TODAY ONLY -- CAPITOL ' I . JAMES GLEASON ,» -r SHOWS 3:30—7—9 COM.I‘NG -- WED. and THUR. IIIE MIISI SIISPENSEFUL IIIIIIIIN PICTURES EVER‘ MADE! ZERO Paramount Fgresentsi DANA IIIIIIIIIIEWS |IIIIlI||E|.|. -. |llll'|]|-Ill Builds To The TENSEST 50 MINUTES .r/' ' ,, IN THE HISTORY or THE SCREEN! _: . from I slay EXTRA! CHAMPION IRISH. .v‘ V monouolmnnns tended to “cruise aroun =” his constituenlcy otf Osborne. In a dull campaign that prd- . duced no new issues and little ex- citement, the Liberal - Progres- sives sought re-election on the basis of the government’s record. The Conservatives accused the government of a stand-lpat policy’ and inertia. They promised a new deal for agriculture and in- -creased grants for education. The OCIF proposed extension of socia=l security measures with‘ the money to pay for them coming from heavier levies on the de- velopment of natural resources. Atomic Bomb Kills Soldier SWANSEA, Wales, —- (Reu- ters) — A British soldier died from the effects of an atomic bomb explosion off Christmas Island in the Pacific last year, a leading British veteran’s or- ganization claimed Monday. W. F. Francis, secretary of the ' British legion’s branch here, said the soldier “contracted leu- kemia, a blood disease, as a. dir- ect result of taking part in the) atom bomlb test.” ,—' The soldier, 20-year-old Royal Engineers salpper William Brian Morris, died Saturday after an built illness of six months. ‘i. The legion said Morris con- tracted the disease while serv- ing with an atom bomb disposal unit «on Christmas Island — Bri- tain’s Pacific atom testing cen- tre. An application for a pension was rejectedby the of pensions after an Investigation _ found Morris’ condition was not attributable to the atomic tests. - Francis said an appeal is pend- ' ing before the House or Lords appeal tribunal. WELFARE MEASURE Victoria. the first state in Aus- tralia to provide old age pension-s passed such legislation in 1901. the National Park area yester- morning by their hostesses and had lunch at Gregor’s Hotel, Brackley, before returning to the city for a planned shopping tour. Office and practice procedures will be discussed in several ses- sions tomorrow with Dr. March and Mr. Higgins as speakers. up to and including June contact— TENDERS Tenders will be received by the undersigned of a fire hall in Cardigan Village. Lowestor any tender not necessarily accepted. For speclflcaticms 23, 1958, for the erection Eufigcnfi .afl€'3" EARL Ma.cDONALD, Village Clerk. 39 Dun. and 7.-10 pm. 01‘ seconds please at-; a Wine 4 all. NOTICE , The week of , JUNE 23rd’ to 28th. ‘I958 has been proclaimed CLEAN-UP WEEK for the Village of Cardigan anal: As true today as rilways_. .. when better automobiles are 3 K will build them o-.-Io ..ae.»mu. ;.».sm«....s<..,.o:............»v manna cnggmalluzuuuazsannczllsnaursca,.. aaaauussn. -sauuameg CDSDBUBE1 snsuaanbnuscaaa arsrhsn F or, styling, dependable performance and pride y of ownership, thére’s nothing to match the ( magnificent ‘B-58 Buick! Never before has the pride of owning a Buick been more thrilling than it is today. From Dynastar grille to gleaming tail towers, Buick sets an unbeatable pace in style. And no other car in its field can match Buick for performance, dependability and absolute driving luxury! See your local dealer today rfor the best buy on the best Buick yet. These Big Buick Features Are Standard Equipment * MIGHTY B-12000 ENGINE ; : : delivers 12,000 pounds of thrust behind each piston stroke. that’s light on its feet. * THE MIRACLE RIDE ; : : big, buoyant coil springs on all four wheels: * CONTOUR-FRAME CHASSIS 2 2 s makes Buick the first big car *DYNASTAR GRILLE 2 ;' : the face of fashion for ’58.= A GENERAL MOTORS VALUE M-22538 cillor Gaudet stated that the ' Voting on the oringinal motion and Mc-. ALLISON MacLEOD' 126 CUMBERLAND STREET ' DIAL 7364 V I