AT CATHOLIC NURSES ASSOCIATION one table suem It the MM gins Catholic Nurses ASIOCIIUOB ygnquet held at the Charlottetown 3,: night included left to lithi- More Than I00 Convention OI over one hundred nurses regist- ,,,d on the opening day of the convention of the Maritime Coun- ul of Catholic Nurses at the Charlottetown Hospital. The Maritime President, Miss Gertrude Curtis. welcomed the at- 4' members and official greetings followed from His Ex- .-giiency. Most Reverend Malcolm uacriachern D.D.. from Dr. Mat-Millan and Mr. Frank 0- Neil. from sister Mary Irene. RN- nd Miss Alice Trainor. R.N. Business sessions opened With mepgion of reports from delegates ,( .5. nine )'eprelEDIQd Maritime giildl. At 11.30 a.m. all members attended a dialbgua Mass in the mgpiigi chapel. the celabrant of in Mass was Rev. Joseph Mills. )?l'lIIlIl! chaplain. The sermon wgg delivered by Rev. William simpson. Father's sumon was eutred around the theme of the cuventloh "Nursing A Pathway in sanctity". A delicious noon meal was serv- gd in the hospital dining room by (5 student nurses. I, Mr. Wilfred Driscoll, guest spell!- er; Miss Alice Tnalnor. President of the Charlottetown Guild. Rt- Rev. Patrick McMahon. D.P.. Rec- Register At Catholic Nurses Rt. Rev. Patrick McMahon. Chaplain of St. Veronica's Guild. opened the afternoon session with a talk to nurses on their dual role as members of the Mystical Body of the Church and as mem- bers of the Nursing Profession- At 3.30 pm. a symposium was held entitled "The Catholic Nurse. Her Role in the World To-day." The participants were as follows: Rev. Richard Ellsworth, D.D.. Dr. John H. Maloney, Sister Mary Stanislaus. RN.. and Mrs. Vernon Bolger, R.N.. B.Sc- The first paper presented by Father Ellsworth treated of "Suffering and the Pat- ient"; Doctor Maloney talked on the "The Catholic Nurse and Edu- cation": Sister Mary Stanislaus selected as her topic "Modern Veronica's": Mrs. Bolger's sub- lcct was "Nursing Progress and The sceptics". At 5.00 pm. Benedicition was celebrated in the hospital chapel by Msgr. McMahon. During the Benediction service. Father Jos- eph Mills lead the assembly in hymn singing. Catholic Nurses Hold Banquet At Charlottetown A-banquet for the Maritime cougcil of Catholic Nurses was rigid at the Charlottetown Hotel- mt evening. The banquet room was filled to capacity with 102 guests. Mr. Wilfred Driscoll. B-A sueat speaker was introduced by Mgsr. McMahon. htr- Driscoll save a meaningful. thoughtful explana- IIOI of the part played by Catholic Nurses in the promotion of spirit- uality among their patients and associates. In a stirringtpresenta- tin. he urged nurses to heed the request of Christ to lend Him their hands and hearts in service to humanity. The speaker was thanked by Mrs. Bolger. After the banquet. Mrs. fan Mac- Milian delighted the guests in the singing of popular songs. her ac- runpsnist was Miss Audrey Gal- lant. Mrs. Charles Wiilett present- ad a lovely choice of thoroughly enjoyable readings. A singsong for the whole group was lead by ' Father Joseph Mills. the accom- paalst for the sing-eong was Mr. Harold Wood. who entertained the rgmbera in solo requests. COMING EVENTS lingo Hope River tonight i legular dance Mount Ryan Hall every Thursday. Booking clover seeds. Macaul- gn and Boyle Ltd. Dance Millvlew Hell every Fri- night. Pantry Sale. Simpson Sears Fri- day. 2p.m. in aid of Kingston Hall. Dr. Rcddins office closed this mix. Attending convention in Ifnrctan. ace every Thursday night Md C an Ingion Hall. Webat Orchestra. an lee Indian River Players pre- Imi "Suspect" in Mt. Ryan Hall. Friday. June at. Curtain s.so. tllfrry Valley Y. P. U. Home faking sale. Simpson Sears. Fri- CQ. June 14th. 7 pm. gmmare Sale. Yellow c.s buil- . s. Argyle shore W.l. Friday. y p.m. PW”! meeting Ki atoa Hlclr Canadlaa Legion tooni'ght at 'V-"'- I-esloa Rooms. Grafton qua. an members please attend. gt to Vllltahire Factory on 't In and Fridays. Will tale butter on Tuesdays only and ill on Fridays only. Maclaod and An .2 I513 ".t."'iif..3'.;'"' J3 Tbsdsys. Wlllqteke bus Entlter llnndaylvlllb. and Iar monthly meeting. Ern- I "M Irish do atltutez Found Macbowell will be hauling g Mllltown Cross Women: wood O'Connor lllildbl thou! Wot-nen'a iadttute: Mrs. Claude Iecltensie Fredericton Women's atitule: Per Pearl Nicholson 14.! Rollo la! plus Conway Kllmutr Women's . Me: Per Mrs. A.. rlnIay- . 1 1 &&.AIm t0oh:PerMsnDnrIea as B. C. Faced With Teacher Loss VANCOUVER (CPI-The worst teacher shortage in years faces British Columbia, Ian D. Boyd. president of the B.C. Teachers' Federation, told an executive meeting. "One of every five secondary school teachers outside of Van- couver is not qualified for the position he holds and this condi- tion will be worse next year," he said. More people must be recruited for teacher training and the large scale drop-out from the pin ' ' each year should be discouraged. "Approximately 650 t h 3 will leave the profession this year and - . . a considerable number of these will be'seeking new and more remuneratlve vocations." federation to induce more creasing scholarships school graduates. for high mm The name of Louis Goudeau, first known surgeon in Montreal, isusahown on a notariai deed dated Contributions Town of Souris: Collected by Mrs. John R. MacLean. with Henry Larter as Chairman. Town of Borden Per Mrs. Reg. Rodgers. This amt. represents com- pletion of Borden canvas. bringing total collection to 8158.50. Wood Islands West Wo- men's institute: Per Mrs. Robert Cook Hampton Womena insti- tute: Par Mrs. Amy Duns- 15.00 st. Teresa's Women's In- stitute: Per Mrs. Chester Bradley Pembmke Women's insti- tute: Per Mrs. Carl Graham Orwell Women's institute: P a r Mrs. Lorna Mac- Donald W0 East Baltic Women's In- stitute: Per Mrs. Herr! nu Women's in- RI Long ver M" Per Mrs. loll) itu: P M . At- III I! H N 1L”' - Howe la! Per am In- 9 Ben Wornerra nstifutez Per Mrs. Adol-c 10, lnsII- I I Wff I'&It&: Women's to- Narth Rtver Womerrs in- C1' PC II. It An effort is being made by the. stu-i dents to take up teaching by in-' Additional Red Shield: 3155.00 I SM) - tor. St. Dunstan's Basilica. Rev. Joseph Mills. Chester, N.S., Mari- time Chaplain; Miss Gertrude Ar- senault. R.N., and Miss Gertrude hr n' DINNER Curtis, ft.N.. Sydney. N.S.. Mari- tame President. Guardian Photo Bandleader Jimmy Dorsey, 53 Died OI Cancer On Wednesday NEW YORK (AP)-Cancer kil- led bandleader Jimmy Dorsey Wednesday, less than seven months after the death of his brother. Tommy. Thus ended one of the great combinations of the Jazz age. Jimmy was 53. Tommy was 51 when he accidently choked to death in his sleep last Nov. 26 at his Connecticut home. The brothers came out of the Pennsylvania coal fields in the 1920s to set American feet tapping to the sentimental beat of their music. Jimmy played the clarinet. Tommy the trombone. They broke up their band and went their separate ways in l935 after a heated dispute over artis- tic style. it was ill years before they were reunited on the same band stand. ”Jimmy was never the same af- ter Tommy died." said Lee Castle. a life - time associate who now leads the Dorsey band. "He really! was broken-hearted. He didn't talk about anything else." LUNG GROWTH Jimmy was operated on last January for a lung growth. He re- joined the band and took it on tour but was forced to leave it in March and enter ” "I The Dorseys reached a peak of their career in the year preced- ing Tom-my's death. For the 1955- 56 television season. they shared Jackie Gleason's Saturday night television show. Tommy. who billed himself as The Sentimental Gentleman of Swing. was tall. rather spare. hot tempered and with ready fists. Jimmy was shorter. dapperly ro- tund, a quiet stylist who long was king of America's iuke boxes. The brothers were.born h:Shen- andoah. Pa. Jimmy was a coal miner in his youth. It was the father. Thomas F. ERIE Dorsey. a self - taught musician with a small brass band. who gave the boys their first musical Instruction. He also taught Castle. who grew up with the Dorseys. The brothers started out to- gether in small hands in 1922. FEATURED STARS Eventually. the Dorseys -struck out for themselves with their own band. It featured such stars as Glenn Miller, Charlie Spivnk and Bob Crosby. all of whom later formed bands of their own. Castle said the Dorsey's cele- brated leud was caused by differ- ences over music and nothing else. The brothers were playing the Glenn Island Casino in nearby Westchester County when they argued about the beat of a song. Tommy stalked off the platform vowing to start his own band- He did and it L as famous as Jimmy's. Jimmy was divorced in 1949 by his wife of 21 years. Jane. She claimed he sat up at all hours lis- tening to his own recordings. They had one child. a daughter. Mrs. WANTED USED CAMERAS Trade-in your old style camera Big trade-in Allowance . TAYLORS JEWELLERS Quality cameras svoiuellllitl ' WE'VE GOT THE GIFTS FOR THE DAD IN YOUR LIFE . . RIGHT WEARABLES THAT COMPLIMENT HIS TASTE Ministers Consider Taking Industry Jobs VANCOUVER (CP) - Several Presbyterian ministers have con- sidered leaving the ministry Ind ggngjobginiudustrysotbeycan help meet the church's financial pads, says Rev. Lloyd Hender- son. mayor of Portage la Prairie. Man Mr. Henderson told the 83rd gen- aul assembly of the Presbyterian Church i.n- Canada Tuesday he would himself tell!!! 1'3"!" "ill be a member of an assembly which did not permit church ex- tension- Mr..IIendersoss, who has been mayor of his cit? I" 10 years. said later in an interview he has been offered a 825.000-a-year lob as an economist. The McGili Uni- versity economlcs and political science graduate said his church stipend is 33.0!!! a year. He said he knows of a Toronto Presbyterian minister who has conaide and taking a 312.500-a-year Job as a stained-glass artist. PAY BOOST PROPOSED Rev. J. A. Munro. home mis- sions secretnry. said his commit- tee is anxious that "the sting of poverty be removed from manses of. our church." A proposal to in- crease the stipends of ministers to same from 32,800 a year was referred to a special committee. Owen Channon. Quebec City newspaper editor. urged that a S2.000.000 budget be set for 1958 because "our church is in a state of crisis." The budget was fixed at a record 31,680,000. Mrs. W. R. Adamson of Oak- ville, Ont.. said the assembly must "find an answer to the question of the place of women in the Julie Hilton. Since he never remarried. Jimmy will be buried in the Ro- man Catholic faith to which he belonged. John's. Newfoundland. to: GULF & NORTHERN M. V. FERGUS Freight will be accepted until June 14. for next sailing of M. V. For space reservation and freight rates apply P. O. Box 232 - Dial 8737 church-” Sh 0 women missionaries are ordained by the Formosan Presbyterian Church but the Canadian church does not admit them to the min- iatry. Plan Review Of Defence VICTORIA (CPICA "thorough review" of Canada's defence or- ganization will be made by a Coa- aervative government if it takes VC. said Wednesday. Gen. Pearkes. re-elected in Es- quimalt-Saanich with a wide ma- Iorlty, is considered the most likely choice to succeed Ralph Campney as defence minister. Commenting on a Clnldllll Press dispatch from Ottawa that a reappraisal of the department's top administration was likely Gen. Pearkes said: "A Conservative government will make a reappraisal of our obligations as far as defence is concerned and of fulfilling these responsibilities in a most econo- mic way." Duplication must be eliminated. he said. There was not likely to be any drastic changes in Canadas' de- fence commitments to NATO and RESERVE WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26th For Lobster -Supper in ST. PIUS X PARISH BASEMENT ' Time 5:00 to 8:00 Admission 31.25. Tickets available from church mem- bers or at door. Children's tickets at door. 5 p.m. Friday, Fergus to St. SHIPPING CO. LTD. BENEVOLENT nusn SOCIETY MONTHLY MEETING Tonight 8 O'clock At Hooley's Men's Wear Stores saidcaaadlanetae office. Mai-Gen. G. R. Pearkes. y ailianeaa. Unification of the armed forces into one service is not immedi- ately practical but "is a goal to mod at-" On changes in the defence ad- ministration. Gen. Pearkes said a new government would be guided by advice by the chiefs of staff. "It would be unwise to make any statement before that advice has been considered." VALUAIILE TRADE Frozen fish fillets boosted Nor- way's exports of fish and fish products to a record 8l45.000.0tll In 1956. ddllj DAMASCUI. lyric (AP) w'!'IIe Arab League's eutral office to- day hlackllsted the 10.171-too U.s. tanker Memory Liberian flag. A awhl-lllll Md reporters the vessel had defied Arab boycott regulations "carrying strategic cargoes" to Israel. A Danish tanker. the 144- ton Ulla Danielaen. also was blacklisted on the ground it bad operated a year under charter by the zim Israel navigation eorn- same fee. - .,.. . ...-. The Guardian Page'3 which files the The Prince Edward Island Art Society be accepted. Fekso cgnug A limited number ol non Thursday, June 13, 1957 paintings-one per entrant-will be exhibited accompanied by the ESPECIALLY FOR DAD CHOICE GRADE "A" TURKEYS CHOICE SHOULDER BEEF ROAST FRESIILY GROUND HAMBURG MAPLE LEAF 2 lbs. 59: BOLOGNA lb. 35c GROCERY SPECIALS LIGHT QUARTERS Shelled WALNUTS lb. 69: MIRACLE WHIP-16 OZ. JAR Salad DRESSING iar 49c OGILVIE ROLLED OATS 5 lbs. 53c JEWEL SHORTENING 3 lb. tin 89: TASTY PAK PEAS BAKERS . Chocolate CHIPS pkg. 23c PLYMOUTH-V; LB. TIN Boneless CHICKEN tin 45: NEW woonnumrs Deodorant 8: Beauty Soap 2 fins 35: . FASHION- O V O O Reg. Size 2 for 23: Bath size 2 for 33: GRAVES vrramszrzn Apple Juice. 48 oz. tin . . . 29: YORK CHOICE-15 oz. TINS Waxleans. 2tins45c WASHABLE STRAW HATS MEN'S SLACKS 9.95 to 25.00 SPORT SHIRTS 3.50 to 9.95 MEN'S Hose 1.00 to 3.95 SWEATERS 5.95 to 10.95 . sronr JACKETS -9.95 to 19.95 II00lEY'S M NS' WEAR I39 II" II. CIIIARLOTTITOWII TEE - SHIRTS l.95 to 4.95 DRESS TIES l.00 to 3.00 NEW PERFECTION . HONEYMOON ICE CREAM V2 Gal. 98c Pint 28c nv GIVING rum THE BEST EATS YOU CAN BUY-THAT MEANS THE GOOD BUYS AT Pl.ERCE'S AND nan IS sum; 10 an rucasam DIAL FOR PROMPT AND 5 4 FREE DELIVERY Avg. Weight 9 to 12 Ills. LB. - -- 39: TIIESE TURKEYS WEIGII ON THE AVERAGE OF I TO 12 LBS. AND ARE FEES!-ILY KILLED. YOU CAN'T AFFORD T0 MISS TIIIS OUTSTANDING BUY 3: BACON ENDS lb. 39: BEEF (UNDERCUTS) ' TENDERLOINS lb. 85c WE HAVE A LIMITED QUANTITY OF NICE PLUM? FOWL WEIGHING ON THE AVERF AGE OF 4!: LBS. 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That special softness now comes in delicate. baby-soft colors. ,.-'3'” is I '- You'll be delighted with the attractive new cello pack of four rolls-so easy to pick up at your favorite store. . to complement your bathroom- Pink. Yellow. Blue or Green urr -um Puanx esetiebls in mm will x..;..X