Cpl. TH. Noonan, CD and bar, of Albany, P.E.I., just Seen over 25 years” service in the Royal Canadian Air Force. Cpl. shown receiving his retirement has Noonan is COMPLETES SERVICE on certificate a gift from GC, G.F. Ockenden DFC, CD, Base Commander of CEB Centralia, Ont. n LOCAL School Completion BRIEFS Highlights Meeting | Completion. of Community s |School, a talk on the Boy Scout WORD RECEIVED movement by Gordon Kerr, com- Word has been received by) |missioner of the Provincial Boy Mrs. W.A. Smith, 148 Euston | gcout Association a panel discus- Street of the death in Toronto | sion on reading, and a book dis- <of her sister-in-law Mrs._L, J. play highlighted the April meet- _[ing of the Tignish — — a “School Association in the sc ‘CANDIDATES |auditcium on Thursday, evening. Four -persons during «the past. president: Mrs. Frank Arsenualt. Moore.. few days have announced that | they would-be candidates forthe} Progressive. Conservative. ae al ~-nation—in- -Fifth-Queens.— entering the convention sae in| presided. _ In appreciation of the hours donated to make Community School gifts were -presented= to jeach class room teacher by. one -ation—for—the provincial | election of May 30 include former (se pe cs the meet- Mayor A. Walthen Gaudet, Ivan |ing and congratulated the home G. Kerry, manager for Master | and school association for having Feeds; John N. Kenny, Chat- | the movement set up in the area lottetown businessman and long- under the leadership of William time—naval-veteran—and— Mrs: peqersen and Rev. Arthur Pend- Charles McQuaid, wife of Char- | ergast of Palmer Road. The Tig- lottetown Lawyer Charles R. McQuaid. ANNUAL MEETING The Hospital Association ot | Prince Edward Island will hold | its sixth annual meeting at the Basilica Recreation Centre on- Wednesday May 18. Registration will be at 9 a.m. on the morn- | ing of the 18th. — DAYLIGHT TIME For the first time in Can- | adian National’s history — its | trains are now running on day- | light time. It will be into effect until “OctOber 29. Other years; the schedules remained on stand- ard time. The spring schedule for Island Motor Transport Lim- | ited also went into effect yes- terday with all buses operating on Daylight time. | CITY COURT A Fort ~ Augtistus -resident, Daniel Ketly, charged with driv- ing a motor vehicle without care and control and while intoxica- ted was remanded to April 25 when he appeared in city police court Saturday morning. Bert Campbell, Justice of the Peace acted in the absence of magis- trate A. James Haslam, QC. Gary A. MacLeod, city charged with failing to stop at a stop sign was fined $5 and costs or © two days. | CITY AREA FUNERALS CURRIE FUNERAL — The funeral for Mrs. Robert Currie was held Saturday, April 23, from the home of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Campbell to New Dominion United Church where < service was conducted by Rev. Ray- mond Reynolds and Rev. Ray- mond Gillis. During the service Mrs. Shirley Wood sang Good Night. Congregational hymns | were Unto The Hills and For- ever With The Lord. Pallbear- ers were: Thomas Murphy, Lem- uel Gorveatt, Wilbert Currie, Miltan MacLaine, Alex Mac- Lean, Walter MacEwen. Flow- ‘er bearers were: Mac MacDon- ald, Jack MacDonald, Donald P. MacDonald, Gerald Mac- Isaac, Sandy MacNeill, Forbes | ‘laylor. Interment took place in the church cemetery. PETRIE FUNERAL — The) funeral for Mrs. Alex Petrie of | Suffolk was held Saturday, April 23, from the Cutcliffe Funeral | Home to Spring Park United | Church. Service was conducted by Rev. C.C. Lewis. Hymns sung were Abide With Me and Rock Of Ages. Pallbearers were Keith Burrows, Leo Sheehan, Hazle- ton Sheehan; Robert Ross, Ver- non MacKinnon and George Gallant. Interment took place in Floral Hills Memorial Gardens. FISH TIPS SCALE A full - grown ocean sunfish May~measure 11 feet-long—and | weigh 2,000 pounds. - |nish troop will be assisted by 'Mrs. William Gaudette, Nelson | Myers, Lorraine Gaudet, — and hers: Eileen Chaisson will assist at Palmer Road... ,Cubs and scouts were very act- ive in-the village of Tignish for many years, under the leadership of the late Claude-A; Kinch and | Joseph A. MacDonald, but in re- leent years the organization has ‘been dormant. | PANEL DISCUSSION ‘A Panel discussion on reading followed M-. Kerr's, outline , of scouting. The Panel consisted of Mrs. Hazel Hogan, Mrs. Joseph | Dorsey and Sister St. Eileen. The chairman Austin Bernard intro- | duced the panel and gave a talk on the SRA Reading Laboratory | that is now in use in the higa school in Grade Nine. On_request from Provincial |Home and School Association to | associations across the Island to |trustees do not attend. If schools | work to help have Ghisctionable publications removed from news- stands a book display was set up consisting of reading material for pre-schoolers up to the adult level. This book-display sponsor- ed by the Tignish Home and School Association will be set up at the co-operative self service store in an effort to keep good reading material before the pub- lic_at all times. The high school Drama Festival. semi-finals for Prince County will be staged in ‘the -school- auditorium-on-Monday- and Tuesday April 25 and 26th, |at 8-o’clock. Congratulations. was extended to Ge-ard Doucette a grade eleven student at the high school for being chosen by the Canadian Red Cross Society as one of two Canadian high school students to visit Europe this sum- mer. Both boys will attend an Inter- |national Red Cross Youth centre in Poland, as well as visit the League of Red Cross Societies and the International Red Cross headquarters in Geneva and other, pgints-of interest. ARE NAMED Gerald Keough, Mrs. Carman Hogan and- Walter -Ohistopher were named to the nominating |committee to bring in a slate of | new directors for the May annual meeting. Rev. Arthur Pendergast spoke on the importance of having school consolidation studies in the area, so children can have equal opportunities all over the | Island. Gerald Handrahan spoke on the importance of holding zone meet-+——- ings and seeing that every trustee is present at the annual meeting of the Regional High School. It was felt that far too many are a be handled in a demo- cratic “way every. rate-payer’ |should become interested by at- |, ltending meetings. _| Other speakers were: Sister St. Mary Arnold, — principal, Island Scouts Double Number | Eight Boy Scouts, double the number from last year, will pay exchange visits with scouts in other provinces this year in the ‘federal. government sponsored Centennial Exchange Program. The eight boys will spend about a week-at-the home of their ex- change partner in either Al- berta, Ontario or Quebec — two in each of. the ee _provinces, four in Quebec. ~The-boy--with- whom: the-Island- scout stays will in turn’ at the guest for about a week at the P.E.I. scout’s home. The boys will travel free of charge. Each registered troop on the Island is invited to submit one application-to—the -program: One scout-will be chosen from —rural areas in each of the three coun- ties, three fromthe Charlotte- ;town district and one from the Summerside district. fee a q Before he entered the law Pro: | |fession he taught school in sev- eral districts of the Province. For a number of years he served | as magistrate for Kings County. Surviving are his wife, the, oe Lottie Hughes of -Soutis Fgasdulll Week. | Is Announced | | | Church, Donald, Charlottetown. The funeral will be held Tues- day morning with Solemn Re- quiem High Mass at St. Eugene’s Corran’ Ban at 10 o'clock. = TRIBUTE O'Domell yesterday paid” the | following ‘tribute to Joseph W. MacDonald, former Kings County | magistrate, who died Saturday after a long illness: “The. death of Joseph W, Mac: Kiwanis International is "Donald, QC, over the weekend spearheading the 43rd annual |'@™Moved one ‘of the most eeler—- observance of Canada - U's. | ful characters of the Prince Ed- Island News Page |. -+Kiwanis--has—grown.-up~simultan--+ , said J. Frank MacMillan, presl- Goodwill Week, April 24 - 30. This year also marks the 50th.) anniversary of its service in | both the United States” and Can-' ada. Kiwanis was founded in De- troit, Michigan in 1915. The rirst | club in Canada was founded in| Hamilton, Ontario in 1916. ‘Thus | eously in both these nations,” dent. of athe Kiwanis Club of | Charlottetown. | He went on to say that April | 28, which falls within . Canada-. U.S. Goodwill Week, is the 149th anniversary of the signing of| the Rush- Bagot Agreement | lwhich demilitarized the 3000 }mile border between-Canada and the United States; hence the dates selected for the ’’week.” To dramatize the peaceful na- ture of this coast-to-coast’ boun- dary line, Kiwanians in both countries have worked together to set up some 35 ‘‘peace mark- ers,’’ one at each principal port of entry. “Kiwanis has worked con- stantly_in—this,and--in other ways,‘to cement even further the good neighborliness which is the hallmark ‘of Canadian- U.S. relations,”’ J. Frank MacMillan added: Canada- U.S. Goodwill Week, which is now widely. ob- served, was established by Ki- wanis. commenting’ on Canada- U.S. re- lations, has said, ‘‘On that bor- der we have no soldiers. have no weapons. We have only Headq Office Hours 9 Kings: County Progressive Conservative — Former Legion Hall Montague Phone _ 838-2779 Tong and enduring friends.” uvarters A.M. to 6 P.M. President Lyndon B. Johnson, |” We | ward Island Bar Society. “Mr. MacDonald was for many years County. Magistrate for Kings. and during his-tenure- of | office’ his judgments brought | about very few appeals to high- er ‘courts. “A native of Grand Tracadie, he taught school in various sec- tions. of Prine In~ Souris; wh he ‘served: as principal’ he was. recognized as one-of the best teachers ever to serve that eastern Kings town. “Mr. MacDonald was always most helpful and that. assist- ance has been most appreciated by the younger barristers. “In ‘his King’s County magis- trate work, he had a large volume of cases.and te this. writer he handled all of these in a most ¢apable manner. “To his wife, the former Lottie Hughes, and his two daughters, I extend my sincere sympathy.”’ BRUSH UP BUSH . Ontario has epent $20,000,000 on improving parks, camp sites, trails, portages and picnic grounds in 10 years. ward.Island. |. WEATHER TORONTO (CP) Tempera: ‘ Low overnight High Sunday President Is Elected SUMMERSIDE Douglas MacFarlane, a Bedeque farmer was Saturday night elected pre- sident of the P.E.I. New Demo- cratic party at the annual meet- ing held here. He ° succeeds Charles Campbell of Montague. Elected. to. vice-presidential positions.representing.the three. Island counties were -Fohn Fitz- patrick, Summerside; Clifford Murphy, Charlottetown and Joyce MacLellan. ; It was learned from Cliff Ash- - field, Maritime organizer of the NDP’s that a. major topic dis- ‘cussed at the meeting was the extent_in. which the party would w |partctpate ‘m the forthcoming’ field told The Guardian: yester- | day that details on this matter - | would be finalized at a meet- ing of the provincial council te be held in Charlottetown on Apml 29 The .meeting was not open te the press. . BIRDS RANGE FAR The most abundant bird in the world is the Wilson’s petrel, the smallest of-all sea birds. - + pteeeeecesss ptt eeeeeem : FAMOUS FOR +o BRANDED INSPECTED z STEAKS:. ZAKEAS tt ooo 28H : a ; ae Mia os 11 38 | | Eastern and Central Districts [Vancouver sc. 30 8. The Guardian eemrleteionn, Mon., April 25, 1966. ‘5 | Yellowknife ...... 14.. 2 | Regina) ic tickces | 26 54 Winnipeg 37 51 < ; Churchill aa Joseph Mac) ; North Bay 39 45 . 7 fe Onda ; Toronto ea 44 ~ $1 | TU : aay [Sea wa 43 37 ontreal 43 52 | 5 : ; ae pee es 40 42 oe : " ; Fredericton ....-: 29 48 : big Saint John ........ 31 45 Dies Atter | | | ness .|Moncton§ ....++s+: 29 53 ‘ i | Halifax 29 4 q | 27 52 Joseph .W. MacDonald, QC, ! daughters. Ellen. Douglas Mac- oe 20 4s Charlottetown, died Saturday in Donald, also. of Ottawa and | Yarmouth ae ae nites el, em he Pallet at canne oe: 20 45 was 81. Death followed:a long States. Reese ut et rv c ners | _ Two brothers and a sister also New i 46 50 A native of Grand Tracadie, | survive. They are: Rev. Leon Miami tee 7 = he was a son of the late. John ard MacDonald, Roman Catholic |s+ Louls ....rers-- 6174 William MacDonald and his | parish priest at Wellington; Ber- Tucson pene 52 23 wife, the former Catherine A | Inard in Grand Tracadie; and| || MacDonald. (Mary Ellen, Mrs. John C. Mae-| HALIFAX (CP) —-The wea, ther office says intermittent rain that began in New Brunswick Sunday afternoon had moved across the province and much of Nova Scotia by late Sunday _night. Snow was | mixed with the rain at first. “rain enters Cape Breton _ this “occasionally | _As the leading edge of the | HONDA BIKES Where to buy one?” ‘Douglas Bros, & ‘eo a7 Down Payment 7 @ Long Term Financing Jones _of course! __ morning, the winds in western regions will shift from _a_souith- erly to a westerly direction. To | signal the end of the rain. How- .- ever, cloudy weather will con- tinue, and afternoon tempera- tures will be much the same as on Sunday. Regional forecasts: | Prince Edward Island: Cloudy with intermittent rain, occas- | jonally-mixed-with- snow -at tirst, | ending near noon, temperatures winds south 15, shifting te west -15-near noon: Low-high at Charlottetown 35 and 48. : “High tide today at: Charlotte-) town 3.08 a.m. and 2,07 pm. At Rustico at 9.18 a.m. and. 11.21 p.m. Summerside tide eighteen | minutes later than Charlotte- | town. Sun rises today at 6.22 | a.m. and sets at 8.01 p.m. All! times ADT. BIRDS ARE THEFT-PROOF | BRAUNSTONE, England Penn’s Leicestershire pigeon loft; but he’s not worried. ‘I’m toping the thief tries to race them, and they'll return home,” he said. 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