www.mmynnm 0 Modern MoreII Creamery Swings Into Operation By DONALD MaoLEOD Butter production has begun at the new $300,000 Morell Co- operative Creamery and it is expected that cheese process- ing will begin next Thursday. Fire destroyed the former creamery last year and the new plant is as modern and fire proof as up-todate construction techniques will allow. The new building, built on the site of the old — overlooking the WAR ANNIVE Maren Rim —- measures 98 feet by no feet and has capacity for 40.000 pounds of milk {or c at a time. The old plant could handle 10,000 pounds. The the new plant holding tank at has a capacity for 20,000 pounds 9 m cream FOUR. CARLOADS modern equipment ‘ The most for the manufacture of butter has been installed and plant manager Reg MacAdam said RSARY PARTY MAKEUP GIVEN OTTAWA (CPl—Makeup of the official Canadian party at next month's war anniversaries ceremonies in ’ bee s annmmcc“ Prime Min- ister Pearsmi. Canada will be. officially represented by V r te 1' ans Minister Teillet. Senior C. G. iChubby P o w e r. wartime air minister. former veter- ans minister Marcel Lam- bert. Lt.-Gen. Guy Simonds. wartime Canadian ar ml commander in Northwest Europe. and Paul Pelletielr, deputy veterans minister. Both Mr. Teillet and Mr. I. mbert were prisoners of war. The Canadian ambassadors and their military attaches in Frnce. Belgium and Hoi- ind will join the official party for the ceremonies in their respective countries. Fourcoremonies are planned: At Beny~Sur~Mer Canadian wa-r cemetery near the in- vasion be a c h e s in Nor- mandy on June 6 at 6:30 p. 0 mark the 20th an- niversary of the allied inva- sion of Hitler's Europe. the Vimy Memorial near Arras. France. on June 9 at 11 am. to commemor- ate the 50th anniversary of the start of the First World War. At the Menin Gale Me- morial in Ypres. Belgium, on June 10 at noon, another 50th anniversary. At Grocsbeek Canadian war cemetery near Nijma, gen, Holland. on June 12 at 4:30 pm. This ill be a joint Canada - Netherlands event as the Dutch. when they learned of the Canadian plans. postponed their Lib- eration Day ceremony. held annually on May 5. Canada's 4th infantry Bri- gade Group. which forms part of the NATO. forces. will provide a military con- tingent of 50 men and the military band of the Black Watch I'Royal Highland Reg- imcntl of Canada for each that similarly modern equip ment for cheese manufacture is being installed and should be ready for operation by next Thursday. Refrigerat i o n accommoda- i tion at the plant will hold four carloads of butter and the elec- tnicai defroster will assure that refrigeration is kept at maxi- mum efficiencvy. Temperature in the refrigeration area will .18 ept at a constant five degrees 1 below zero. ‘ There was heavy demand for cold storage lockcrs at the old plant and the now ouc pi'oi'itlcs 250 lockch with a capacity each of six cubic feet. Heavy protection for the re- . frigeration area has been pro vided. 0n the outside is four- incli brick. then a oiie~inc|i air space. a six-inch block. inclicss of cork and then the four-inch block wall finish. The rest of the building has an eight-inch wall. with one inch of 'insulation and a venccr brick finish on the outside. . CURING, ROOM The cheese operation is quite bu V a "I require about ‘ two-thirds of the plant‘s floor . space. The cheese curing room measures 40 feet by ~10 foot and is 14 feet high. It has tempera- tures and humidity control. Thr temperature will be kept at 60 . degrees and the relative humid— ity will be 70. The cheese holding room will i have its tempcraturc kept at 411 . degrccs. I The. plant has two hoilci-s .n .v the basement. to provide steam and in the basement there is a large holding room for dry stor— age which will include the equipment the plant will have available fior farmers. There are 350 three coinpressms in the basement and the remainder of 1space is being held For the pos- Prime Minister Announces Changes In Civil Service OTTAWA 1CTN—Prime \iinis-i tor Pei ha announced changes in the senior civil ser-i vice. including appointment of. c Marcel Cadieux as undersecre- Q tary of state for external a!» [ fairs and the addition of a sec ond deputy minister in Statc' Sccrctary Lamontaizne‘s dcpart- I nicnl Dr. George Davidson. dircé- tor of the bureau of government organization. will become sec reiary o‘ the treasury board un- der the reorganized treasury hoard setup announced in Jan- ncry He will rank as dcpnli minister of the now dcparl mcnt. .ican Miquelon will continuo as deputy registrar-:cncrai oil Canada with the rank of deputy 1 minister. relinquishing the post oi undersecretary of state to (i G. E Steeic. assistant rlep- uty finance minister. Thus both . Mr. Minuelon and Mr. Steelei will rank as deputy ministcrs Mr. Cadieux. 49-year-old dep- nty undersecretary of stalc ioi . external affairs. succeeds \‘or man Robertson. 60. undersecre- tary since 1958. Mr. Robertson: recently was named chief Ca nadian negotiator for the Cow ncva tariff-cutting talks of I11.-l (icnei'al Agreement on 'l‘arift'si and Trade v Mr. Davidson. 55. will assume his duties under the present an ‘ ministrative structure of treas l ury board. pending legislation‘ to make thc board a scparatc government department with its. own cabinet minister. Privy. Council President Mcllraith has‘ been designated as the new minister. TRANSFER PLANNED Dr. Davidson and the bureau of government organization will 1 he transferred to the finance' department from the prime minister's oilficc. pending par~ liamentary approval of the new. treasury board setup. His an Wintment is effective May 15. in a in: a second deputy‘ minister to the secretary of state‘s department. Mr. Pear” son said this will give Mr. La . l Two Refineries Cut Sugar Price MONTREAL CT“ 7» Two Montreal sugar refineries — St Lawrence and Canada and Do- minion - have announced a lti-cent reduction in she whole- sale price of sugar to $l3.50 a im-poud b .g. i The third major refinery. A1» lantic Sugar. kept its price un~ changed at $13.60 a toopouiidr bag. . The last price change. in i Which all three refineries were. Involved. was a :ltlcent incrcasc i :2 “3.60 a immiind bag Aorii ‘ I The price of sugar Ilns changed as times this year—2i ‘ increased and 13 decreases. A spokesman for a retail food ; chain said Thursday's small dip ; current retai. , prices which are 73 cents a five ' will not affect hound bag and $1.55 a iii-pound hag FERRY SINKS PORT AUSTIN, Midi. (GP)- The ferry J. W. Curran, which left Sault Ste. Marie, Ont. Fri- day under low for Kingston. "Ink during the night two miles tmi‘tlrenlt here In about "Q take Huron United States Coast ills Whom then-echwbia minto O montagnc greater help "in dcal especially with questions of art ministratlve and financial poi i Last January Mr. Lamon- tagne was made responsible for the CBC. the Board of Broad» cast G ov e rn o r s. Economic Council of Canada. National Film Board. National (inlicry. Centennial C o m m issinn. Na— tional Archives. National i.i brary. National Museum. Iilf.‘ Canada Council and the Qucrn‘s Publisher. Mr. Steele. 4-1. joiiicd Ilic Ii nancc dcpartmcnt in 1031. His appointment as iindcrsccrctary state is effective May 13 Mr. Cadieux. a native n{ Montreal. joined the cxtcrnal affairs department in 1941. Ho lins scrvcd in London. Paris and Brussels and was uanicrl assistant undersecretary and lo ‘gai adviscr to the department in 1956. He has been deputy ur. ‘ dcrsecrctary since Wit). UNDERWENT OPERATION Mr. Robertson. who recently underwent a serious lung opei- .ation. was serving his second term as undersecretary of state for cxternal affairs. He will limit the (‘anadian dclcuntion at (icnei'a \vhcn 'l‘i‘adc Minisicr Sharp rciurns ncxt wcck. Dr. Davidson. born at Bass River. NS. s been rcspoi. " sible as head of the bureau of government organization {oi implementing the rccnmmcnda tions of the GIHSst'O royal com mission on government organi- N h: 5 5 The c o m ml s s l n n recom- mended establishment of the treasury board as a separatc dcpartmcnt and transfer of 1hr hiircau as part of it. The board is to be generally rcsponsibic for administrative co—ordination and for improving management in the public service. Mr. Davidson was thc fii'il ‘ deputy welfare ministcr on thr formation of tho fcdcral depart. ment or national health and we: fare. He was chiefly responsiin for the inauguration of famin allowances in I945 and the uni» vcrsnl old age pension in 1952 Hr was deputy immici‘ation minister from 1960 until 1963. The new external affairs ic- gal adviser will be Max Were shot. assistant undersecretary. H. Courtney Kingstone of theI department‘s legal division has been designated Canadian coun- sel before the International Joint Commission. succeeding Mr. Werstiof. LANCASTER aboard to operate a bland. isible future expansion of the ation i A pump in the ll(‘\\' plant WIII‘ ‘ provide 180 gallons of water a seven ‘ minute for plant operations. A second well is available to add 1 to the water supply it necessary. it is expected that the plant will have a buttermilk drier in operation within a year though there is a good demand for butler-milk now that more hogs are being fed. I On the receiving end of the t t plant. one man can receive sample. drain milk cans and place them on the straight line can washer on the cheese sidc ‘ of the operation. 0n the cream side. the cans come in along an automa‘ic conveyor belt. go on the weigh- ing scales. pass through a ro- . tary washer and are sent back 5 outside. I Milk is dumped into a pas. teurizin: vat where it is licatcd ’10180 degrees. then goes i through a plate cooler where it is cooled to 48 degrees before ibeiniz piped into the . Ipound capacity holding tank. 1 After the cheese is nianufiic lured. it zoos through a va ciium of 28 pounds which con tracts it and “takes the holes out of it." i BUSINESS OFFICE The business office. located at the front of the plant. has thei mopane glass on two sides and fhas a sales floor for certain creamei-y items. The manager's } office is alongsidc. ‘ The plant will handle dairy i‘ products from all over Kings I County and from a large part oi i Queens County. The new dairy facilities worc constructed unch" the dircctioi. of Hamilton Phalen. Charlotte- ? town. i Served by the plant are more than 600 members. President of the co-opel'ativc is .l.S. Suthcrland. St. Pctcrs ‘ ’icc president. is Sidney Andci' ‘ son. Secretary is Louis Mt" ‘ Guire. Directors in cl u d 0 Walter Dingwell. Thomas Cullen. Ron iald MacDonald. John Shvai'kcy. .Ohester Mac-Cartbe and Reg ‘1 Lewis. in charge of butter-making is ‘Alban I‘Ildcrsliaw, and c ecsr processcrs are Reg. Smith and Maurice Burhoc. Office staff consists of Miss Shirley Anderson and Mrs. Mary 'eot'e. (‘thnrloltclmvll 1 l l 1 i Compliments of ( Maritimes) lid. CONGRATULATIONS To MoreII CO-Op Assoc. Ltd. on the opening of their new Creamery McLEAN & SON I Electrical Contractors) P.E.I. CONGRATULATIONS To Marell Creamery On The Re-Opening Of Their Plant Sincere Best Wishes For The Future IRVING Charlottetown Oll l.TD. . P.E.I. CONGRATULATIONS TO MOREll CREAMERY On The Re-Opening Of Their Dairy BATHURST CONTAINERS Ship anything, anywhere in BATHURST CONTAINERS mg:- at .~.« 1. w. ..;».... «a _...........a.- 9.4.33 «aw-yank! The management and directors are proud to announce the opening of their new 5300.000 creomery in Morell. Designed to service the farmers of Eastern P.E.I. with improved hand- ling of their product at a modern. efficient plant. The public is cordially invited to attend the grand opening of our plant Monday. May 11th. Another co-operotive operation designed and built for its members. t—‘t. . J. S. Sutherland President Louis McGuire Secretary SERVING EASTERN P. E. ISLAND Shown above stuff of New More" Creamery EDICATED, EXPERIENCED Directors Are Left to Right John Sharkey Chester MacCarihy Reg lewis Woman co-or CREAMERY— DIRECTOR Not Shown Walter DingweII Thomas Cullen Ronald MacDonuId Sidney Anderson Vice President a. u. a . . {$0. .