»__..Rarkda’ MARY FIELDING, (left), , make up artist for Parkdale Junior High’s ‘‘drama_ night” puts the final touches on Car- ole Morley for her part im “Scrambled Eggs’’, one of the - Drama Nights Sta ale Students By Parkd le. Junior High Schooi plays presented last évening. Marsha Proud and Kathleen Scully are all ready for their dance as two of the flapper- ettes. : j | ged off to erettes' a troupe of ten girls danced their way back to. the| roaring twenties. . A farce comedy, ‘Scrambled | Eggs” by Helen M. Clark -was| ‘directed by Weston. Carmody. | Michael Browh _ playéd Joey) Stafford, a writer, and Paul | Carver was Nicholas Hustea, his friend. The weal a lively ‘start as the flap-| Ithy widow Lucretia | ‘Church Officers Are Elected By St. Paul’s Anglican Church The annual meeting of St. | Paul’s Anglican Church, Char- | lottetown, established by royal | warrant in 1769 was held im the | Parish Hall last night with a| large attendance. Ven. Arch- deacon J. T. Ibbott, rector of | St. Paul's presided. | Four new vestrymen were) | elected to replace a similar | Gill, B. H. Cook, Walter Wilson, | number _-whose term of office | Gerald are Dr. Temple Hooper, | Orin Simons, Donald Ross and | Daniel Tweel. Continuing mem- | bers Gd@pyne, R. E. Giggey, B. H. Cook, Dr. Frank Jelks, W.*V | Stevenson, Elmer Bulman ahd | Allison Gill The new church wardens are | Dr. Frank Jelks and Kennett! Old Charge Laid Against Accused One charge, on an alleged re- cent offence, was withdrawn against an er charge, alleging an offence in 1957,. was laid against the same) accused in Queens County mag- istrate’s court before Magis- trate James B. Johnston, QC, yesterday. The charge withdrawn was one of possession of stolen goods, an automobile battery, valued less than $50. Withdraw- al was made at the request of Deputy Attorney-General J Arthur McGuigan. NEW CHARGE The new charge alleges that on Aug. 6, 1957, Edison Damer- ell McKenna, Toronto, broke and entered into the meathouse of Lorne Donald Nicholson, at} hinted at an election’ on the 1s- sue of Senate reform afterthe “sordid mess of the Coyne af- fair.” He had batked away | ing was opened with prayer bY | anton were appointed to attend accused, and anoth-} $50 | Charlottetown an ISLAND NEWS PA ‘The Guardian, Gharlotietown, Tues, Jan, 23, 1962. d Queens “The: position, of st magistrate for the City &f Char- | lottetown was made pleasant and easy by the complete lack of in- terference,”’ former magistrate, K.M. Martin, QC, said last night at a banquet given itr his honor at the Charlottetown . Hotel “In my 32 years in that posi-- St. Mark's Has Annual KENSINGTON — The annual | meeting of St. Mark's Anglican | Church, Kensington, was held recently, with a good attend- | ance. The rector, Rev. Ronald Par- | } sons presi and -opened the | meeting with worship. In his) | address he.asked the men of the) | congregation to interest them- | selves in the work of the CBL. \ He also noted repairs and im-| provements needed on. the ch-| urch property. ' : | @atisfactory reports were giv- Jenkins succeeding George Ives | en by the officers of the various and G. -B. Whiteside. | church groups. Of special im- Other positions filled terest was the report of almost representatives to diocesaM 199 per cent attendance in the synod, B. H. Cook abd, Dr.| sunday school. 4 Jelks; substitute repreSenta- | “"Cecii Mill was elected to act | tives, Kenneth Jenkins, and R. | 45 warden for the coming year G. Boyne; representatives to | with Dg Dunning who has al- diocesan church society, Allison ready served one year. New rs on the vestry are, Proctor. : | Gordon Cooke, Elmer Burt, ve- : - a \slie Coulson,. Edmund Moore, treasurer and R. E.- Giggey, Ivor Cotton:and Wayne Cham- vestry clerk. Church envelope | pion, Donald Caseley was re- — is Mrs. Leith Mac vestry clerk. Mrs. Har- i el ‘ old Mill was re-elected treasur- orgs 0 . oe eee by |er and Oliver Profitt was ap- Women’s Auxiliary. The meet- the | Pointed auditor. Cedric Owen and Horace Bry- Archdeacon Ibboft who also) 2 ; the DCS meetings. Other com- closed with the benediction. mittees are, nominating, Cevil Mill, DS. Dunning angginer Moase;cemetery, Wal Moa- se, Gordon Mill and Horace| Bryanton. ‘JFK SEES (Continued from page 1) ‘ary | KM, Martin Honored | By City OnR etirement. tion there an occasion when the or any of the councillors to me and ask- ed me to lay Joff that fellow or. gO easy on fellow. There are not too cities that can boast of a like that,” he said, 3 a Mr. Martin’ tendered his de- signation to the members. of the City Council, Nov, 18, 1961, and was later replaced by A.J. Attend! ception and diniier were former mayors and councillors, former police chief A. A. Birtwhistle, who was Charlottetown police chief from 1927 to 1949; C. W. MacArthur, Charlottetown police A.W. bers. of the City Council, Charlottetown lawyers, A toast to Mr. Martin was Proposed by Charlottetown law- yer;Allison Gillis, who stated that the honored had a deep sense of feeling’ for . the young people of the province and was associated with the scout movement and the YMCA. Mayor A. Walthen Gaudet, who presided at the function, | the stated that he wished Mr. Mar- tin the very best of good health and enjoyment and wished Mr. Haslam the best of luck in his new position. Mayor Gaudet presented a : watch to Mr, Martin as a token | + of sporeciation. on behalt —-of- attending the function. than for those in the high | goals . | brackets. | Is oS ee Pleasant Valley, and stole- a) | 3 | ASKS STANDBY POWER | town High School quantity of meats, valued at)“ ir. iso asked stand auth--| @igan High 7-2, Given t “option, Mc! enna, | rity to start, or speed up, $2, who is c led by John P | ye iene a | other pump-priming activities in Nicholson, elected trial by 8) case recession threatened: judge and jury. Following the! “since: the Second World War dlection, the accused was _ TF €| Kennedy said, the U.S. has a manded until Jan. 24, at which | four recessions. When rae time a date will be set for pre-| office last January jt-Was in the liminary .hearing. Bail was set | grip of the lat one. at $1,000 and two sureties “of| “The dowftrend was re- $500 each. | versed,”’fe said, and the gross Delay in the layirg of the in- na al product grew from an formation was reported due t0|afinual rate of $501,000,000,000 the accused having left the pro“|in the first quarter of 191 to vince shortly after the lence|@ record annual rate_of $542,- was committeed, taking up -res-| 000,000,000 in the last quarter. idence in Ontario; from where| ~~ Unemployment dropped to 6.1 he return few weeks ago. (from 6.8 per cent of the labor Pleading guilty.to dri v ing| force, he added, but was “still while his: abilities were impair-| far too high.” €4 by. alephol, Jackie Alexander! For 1961 as a whole, he said, McPhail, Victoria, was fined $100| the gross national product was and costs or 10 days in . j aj ].| $521,000,000,000, and he predicted Counsel} for the fefence was Les-| $571,000,000,000 in 1962—a “giant | 000,000.000 of public works and | attack Georgetown markers. G. Scully two and S, both goals for the losers. The Georgetown team shut out Morell 3+). Goalgetters were P. Waish B. MacLean and A, Burke. In the final game Morell Pee Wees soundly trounced George- town Pee Wees by an 8-0 score. Rovers Defeat Bombers 13-9 | Cape Traverse Rovers romped to a 13-9 victory over Kensington Bombers in Prince County League Hockey action at Kensington rink last night. This was the first defeat for the testimonial re ¥ auditorium last evening as the ‘pupils staged two plays and se-) _ “A Matter of: Record”, a dra ma by David Merrison, was dir- bers of the cast were Margaret | Bell-as Alice Lamper, a wealthy | Graves, her secretary; Linda Gaudet as Sally O'Brien; the Lamper, a ne’er do well cousin, | Winnifred were played by Bren-| and Richard Baldwin and Don-| da Mutlow and Claire Daley | Kinkaid and Brady, the two de-| Kay took the parts of Olga Lane, tectives. a movie star, and Ivan Smith, its renditions of ‘My Home’s in| Thé program will also be pre-| Montana”, “Home on the sented at the auditorium tonight. ual, “Go Tell-It-On The Moun- | * ° tain". The first half of the pro- Driver Fined “BackKHome Again” by Connie . , MacKay. ” “= $125 In Court | while intoxicated, but guilty to | | the lesser offence of driving by alcohol, Pius Ernest Mc- Carthy, Charlottetown, was fin- | B R | E f- s by Magistrate A.J. Haslam ' in city police court yesterday. ; : John P. Nicholgon, while the BROTHER DIES prosecution was conducted by Road, received the sgd news of Convicted of being drunk and the death of his brother, Thomas disorderly, using abusive and | en Jan. 22. tz, 173 Water Street, Charlot. | ‘ : 20-da: ENTER HOSPITAL ee eae eee guson, daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Ferguson, Spring, Prince Edward Island Hospi ._ for tonsillectomy. Sinclair Nicholson, a native of this prévince, died Dec. 31, veral specialties. ected by Patrick Connolly. Mer } author; Sally Martin as Jane cook; Joey Brown as John) Carrington and her daughter nie MacInnis ‘as Lieutenants| Carole Morley and Leslie Mac- The senior music class gave| her husband. | Range’ and the Negro spirit- | . gra ded with a reading Pleading not guilty to driving | [ O C A while his abilities were impaired $125 and costs or 40 days in | Counsel for the defence was John Morrison, Mt. Edward. Chief of Police C.W. MacArthur. Morrison, in Saint Jebn, N.B. profane language, Melvin Hear- | Jeunes’ ed Eiiaabets Yor pended sentence, d received | Park Road, have entered the DIES IN B.C. at Nelson, B.C., at the age of 62 years. His survivors include a brother, Robert, at Belle Riv- er, and three sisters, Mrs, Alex J. Gillis, Flat River; Mrs. Alex MacLean, Fiat River; and Mrs. oe Stewart, Vancouver, _ PRIZE WINNERS Prize winners at St. Pius- X card party last night were: ladies’ first, Mrs Marie Thompson; second, Mrs. Janie MacAleer; consolation, Joan «MacGaugh; men's first; Brent Essery; second, Gre- gory; consolation, John Doyle; doorprize, Mrs. Wendell Mor- -Tissey; freezeout, Mrs. Wendell Morrissey and Myron Mortis- sey. 4 LING FUNERAL — Te seral for Albert F. Ling ‘Was held Monday. Jan. 22 from the Maclean. Funeral Home to . .the Fairview Baptist Church, <7? Rustico Road, where service was conducted by Rev. T. W. Howard and Rev. AE. Pier- Seaman.y. Preston Neil, Irving Neil and Raymond Ling. terment took place in Portege cemetery, -... INMAN FUNERAL — _ The funeral for Mark D. Inman was held Monday, Jen, 22, from the MacLéan Fimeral Home to Canoe Cove Kenzie, Hector MacNevin, | Colin MacFadyen and. Robert | 2 cornea ke ledne from that heesise of hostile] ter O'Donnell and produce same to the police | Public opinion. FAILED TO APPEAR chief. | Then~ there had been rumors; On the charge of possession of Two persons pleaded guilty to) %f @ snap election on the basis intoxicating liquor in a p Pace ;| of the legislative program out-| other than his residence, an ac having possession of intoxieat-| ° lined in the throne speech. But | cused failed to appear and his stride.” COLD RECEPTION Kennedy's plan. for ~authority to cut income taxes has met a ‘eold reception in a Congress | jealous of . purse’ strings and 4 | ing liquor in a place other than | their respective residences, and each was fined $20 and costs or 30 slays. ; | Of two perséns charged with | being drunk and incapable, one | ment’s budget should be placed | gPleading guilty to being intox- was fined $5 and costs or two | days, and the other $10. and | costs or five days. EARLY ELECTION (Continued from page 1) expectant press” at a time of) government deficits -and serious! problems. “What a circus performance that turned out to be,” he-said. | “The double shuffle ended in no | deal.” : | NO FACTUAL BASIS | At the night sitting, Mr. Dief- baker said Mr. Pearson had oened horror at reports of ' division in the cabinet. “The exaggeration which was given to recent instances had no basis in fact,” the prime minister Said. “The unity among us is always strong, and I know most effective.” The Conservative government had had nothing in the nature ot what happened in 1944 when Defence Minister Ralston, a “great Canadian patriot,” had been shoved out of the Liberal cabinet. Mr. Diefenbaker said Mr. Pearson's voice softened when it had come to election talk. This: reminded him of the 1958 Liberal motion “give us back our jobs.” The reference was to . Pearson's ‘proposal soon after he was elected Liberal leader that the then minority Conservative government resign and the Liberals resume office | ' ‘ > tion last year that the | CAN UNDERSTAND | asked abroad ‘they are living | son said five Ontario byglections last | week had indicated declining government popularity. Mr.’ Pearson said. the govern- | before election. The ‘sooner an election under these conditions, the better for Canada but the worse for the government. : | Mr. Pearson said he can un- | derstand the government's de-| sire to wait. f The prime minister -“‘has —al-| ways placed great faith in the healing virtues of delay, as in the camouflaging magic of con- fusion.” Mr. Pearson accused the. ao- ministration of “shocking mus- management” of internationai economic policy. - The government's policy, par- ticulariy’-in relation to British’ membership in the European Common Markét, had gé the ‘voters before an}. from inconsistency to incoher- ence. sort | Jone Hornet tally. — case was adjourned until Jan 29..The magistrate ordered that a summons be issued for his ap- pearance. | taxing power. But the presi- ident said he was not asking | Congress to delegate its taxing |power but only to authorize a temporary, emergency step, | subject to the check rein of con- | gressional veto, “in situations or 15 days. | where time is of the essence.;’ Fines of $5 and costs or two| Under the plan, Kennedy days in jail were meted out to|could “trigger” “spending on an-accused for failing to stop at| public works when: a “stop” sign, and to another, 1. The unemployment rate for walking on the wrong side had risen in at least three out of the highway. of four months (or four out of re le led Stanhope : Takes Game least one ‘percentage point higher than four months (or six Stanhope Braves nipped Mil) ; - (fects previously authorized by ton Hernsts 31% a hockey including federal months) earlier. The president then ‘could lay ut: | Congress, _ ov night at North | Huiidings, reforestation or re- | |geeding of range \ands Scoring for Stanhope were. 2 $750.900,000- in grants to Ellis and Calvin Chap | states and communities for such peli. Stanford Rodd potted the ‘things as hospitals, airports, | schools, sewers, street repairs. feated in a public place, another ‘accused was fined $20 and costs | out: . | 4. $750,000,000 to speed pro- By- worrying about trade daa- gers instead of concentrating on opportunities, the government} had forfeited a good deal of} Canada’s bargaining position. The government been | blind and stupid about what was going on in Europe. Everywhere, people were ask- ing “what's wrong with Can- ery If the gevernment was not aware this question was being in a fool’s paradise induced by their pwn propaganda.” . NEED CHANGE | "There's nothing wrong with Canade-that a change of gov- "t fix,” Mr. Pear- Mr. Pearson also taxed the government with a “shocking refusal to make up its mind on on weapons. .. “Could there be a more com- plete abdication of govérnmen- tal responsibility?” | the nuclear warheads for them | categories as he saw fit 3. $250,000,000 in loans to-state and communities. 4. $250,000,000 more to be ais- tributed among the first three ing millions of dollars on: na- clear carriers while delaying a decision on whether to acquire ANNUAL BANQUET CHARLOTTETOWN the Bombers in three games and the first win for the Rov- ers. Referees Danny Lunn and Joe Bernard kept a close check on the fast and rugged affair, disting out a total of 15 penal- ties, of which eight went to Kensington. G. Dawson was top scorer for Cape Traverse, making the red light blink on four. occasions. Teammates George Keough and Pat Neonan each picked up three goal “‘hat tricks.”’ Other | goals for the winners were scor- ed by C. Thompson J. Cutcliffe« and B. Cutcliffe. 7 K also had a four- in the person of W. Taylor, F Thibeau fired two and B. Thibeau, Earl Dunning and J. Jollimore one each. Kindly send donations to P. 0. + ” CANADIAN LEGION The fovernment was spend- ~? Mrs. MLA, Mrs. J.C. i Bridge open pairs champion- » words of welcome and present- ed Rotary literature and a re- cognition button to each. - John Legerwood | wide variety of g mater- | “Rotarian” and* the world-wide | distribution of the magazine, |-Going into the preparation and | distribution of ‘The Rotarian” | the speaker said that each year 195 acres of Canadian pulp is | processed and rolled into a rib- | bon of paper four feet wide and | 7,000“mniles long. Every known method, of transportation dis- tributes 90,000 mailbags of the magazine to 136 eountries and into half a million mail boxes. Allison MacRae in giving a’ talk on his classification in Rotary, “Automobile parts and accessories” said that the type of business referred to is part and parcel of the whole auto- motive business, a very import- ant factor in the Canadian eco- nomy, “Latest statistjos: show—that about 13 cents ~of-every dollar spent in Canada ig either for a ear, car parts or fuel,” he said. | Describing the early attempts | ‘to produce a self-propelled road vehicle, the speaker said that | some years before the French | Révolution a crude steam | ed vehicle plied the of Fra H. BENNETT CARR Insurance Counselling Phone 4-8817 — 4-5435 Charlottetown, P.E.1, Bex 516, Ch’tows First Prince Liberal Meeting Tignish Legion Hall, Tuesday, Janaury 23, 1962 : will he held. Cie 8:00 P.M, TONIGHT...TUESDAY...JAN. 24th PO Reception at the branch home 6.00 to + ee 6.30 p.m. Banquet at the Charlottetown ||. ALEX. MATHESON Hotel at 7 p.m. ; ; All Welcome ~ Charlottetown Duplicate |~club's Rotary Club / 1961 Islander P z the one. D. MacKensie count. | 2! sppesting each month in the | is [ : I ort jie tee j a f E : Bes es | g E i Hite i E a 5 ; ef : i ak | £3 fl j g f per = 3 ! i Z i [ i i fit td : i Hy | ge i eS epee ee alFiel a ut i ? aE Fei I f B i if é gt w adventure of astronaut John H. Glenn Jr. ; | Engineers spotted a leak in | "9 Gt. George St. Dial e561 a vial oe supply system | - Charlottetown s astronaut Stee’ ue oval mga | SOE Raa eae | perhaps caused failure of 6 valve to cee be I Se anes ee , cause of tiny dust particles. +e & eis a I 5th-Annval Charity Ball of Prince Edward Island Chapter for Poliontyelitis’ . . nce, Such a vehicle carried Dist. Supr. Sun Life of Canada and Rehabilitation. — , FRI. EVENING, JANUARY’ 26 AT CHARLOTTETOWN HOTEL Tickets available at the Charlottetown Hotel and Myers Studio, or by calling 4-8220 or 4-9551. zxxwerkek“kekekK *¥ AT lovable Mississippi River boat gal © is now teachin’ a stuffy college the joys of learnin’.... livin’ and lovin’. — / . hs REAL FAMILY FUN ‘=| TODAY - WED. - THUR. OTA kek kk #4RK «