as to what wage increases are | ° ; | to be made for various trades”; N, Vietnamese Confederation Cen t re Bratt d he added.” U S PI eo aed April 21st, Increas Y A meeting will be held tonight Bag U. anes. | plus next season's con- PUBLIC SPEAKING WINNERS -| OPRAWA (OP) — Canadian 258,900,000), barley 191,700.00 | Gi2°"Ss 4, Moatntenance men Tamese gunners sot down | — a ; Eee ieee oe where he won distinction {or }| wheat stocks an esti-.(171,500,000, 184,800,000) rye} a6, join in the is ex- |three U.S. jet planes Sunday FOR ALL i : - ert ee ant : : . ea bravery in the field. mated 750,000,000. bushels. 16,000,000. (11,800-00-_-_18,000,- | onted that eli he fin. (during heavy. air strikes a 3 Winners” im the | United | was the winner of the senior; termediate; and Fred Chap- Before his retirement 11 years |March 31, up from the 717,700,- 000), flaxseed 18,600,000 (14,- is _ a eee neg ial Fe TnL meer : (¢ Ohurch public speaking con- | Terryl Robbins, centre, the in- man the junior. ago, Mr. Ripley was manager of |000 bushels a year ago but well 000,600, 12,800,000): 2 ‘ 1 aie pes oe fore A vs | . MEMBBRS 4 test for. Kings County are the Hunter River branch of the |below.the record 904,400,000 of TOTAL HIGHER IN 1966 ca Shaner eee | B52 pare ae ‘ . ‘ pictured being presented with their prizes by~ Arnold Van- 2 weOnmee—e U.S., WEST ed a new s era in our history. Last year $41,000,000 was Royal Bank for 22 years. Prior to this he was bank manager | in. carrying out a:protest for a| Summerside Wo To Hold Protest SUMMERSIDE Approxi- recognition of the. workers as & mately 60 construction workers | bargaining unit'’, Rejean Char- voted unanimously to join with | lebois, representative of the kers in Charlottetown | Labourers International Union fellow works of North America told the meet- ing yesterday. higher wage scale in this pro-| He went on to say that vince, at a meeting here terday. Becausé the workers are dis- | since you were small, that when satisfied with increasing living! union has tried to come in costs and wage levels here it a here it has mostly always failed. their intention to call a wage | It is our idea to form a union protest. meeting during normal that won't be a fly by night but working hours, bringing their something that will stand on it’s problems to“the immediate at- | feet for many years to come” tention of employers. .in the | he said. construction field. “There is no law against stag- ‘The first step toward a fair | ing a demonstration in trying to increase in wages would be the| get people together to stand ‘Island News Page _. Western and Central Districts b> The Guardian, Charlottetown, Mon., April_18,1966. 3 Canada March Wheat Stock 1957, the Dominion Bureau of Total farm-held stocks of- all Friday. five major, grains were an esti- @ rkers Meeting. for what we need’’, the speaker | | added. | -Mr. Charlebois went on to say | that it is the general feeling of | various officials on the Island | that we have to keep up with the | the Maritimes on ‘tax basis, but | yes jabor movement has always been | it is a different story when they | | very poor.‘Facts have proven | are expected td keep up with the | rest of the-Maritimes on the ‘same’ wage. level. “Right now we have to show / employers that we are existing | and close the two major build- ing projects here, namely the pital extension: If we close these two major jobs the con- tractors will have so much | money tied up in be ready to come to terms with | us. If the contractors have to | take people from tte other side | here they will have to pay double your wages’, . Mr... Charlebois told the meeting. I “Once your employers re-| cognize the unit-and they sign aper to the effect you will be | a | able to, return to work, taking | + some time out for various meet- | ings, and negotiations will begin | | +|new high school and the hos- |. | | | % ing over the Island. Hamilton assumed his posi tion as National Director the movement has made a rapid | growth from coast to coast, A highlight of the programme is the ferences ‘held each year. Roy Hamilton, will arrive and will address meeting Presbyterian Men represent- Europe:.has about 375,000,000 , head’ of livestock. 4u, Community Concerts HERE TODAY the. Island.this, afternoon, | a- dinner in Zion Church of | “BONUS . congregations - from all Since Mr.. | FOR NEW MEMBERS! Enjoy “The Irish Singers Presbyterian Mén's™ Con- | and Dancers” at the |struck below the border, hitting 15 miles fom the Buddhist cen- A 50c reduction on two ‘STEELE —- At the Charlotte- town Hospital on Sunday, April ‘17, 1966, Of Frederick J. Steele, any increase in the armed forces, Strength at present is 64,000 men short of the 1970 Htarget of 500,000. + 122 Spring Park Road. Funeral | ‘arrangements will be announc- | + | 1 ‘McPHEE — Suddenly at Lower »Montague on April 16, 1966, Jo- ‘seph E.. McPhee,. DeGrosse Marsh, age 47 years. Resting at theHennessey Funeral Home “where the funeral will take place ‘Wednesday morning at 8.15 to St. George’s -Church for Re- >quiemHigh-Mass~—at-9.30:—Inter- ‘ment in People’s Cemetery. ‘DOYLE — On Sunday, April 17, 11966, Mrs. Desmond~“Doyie;-Mt- ‘Stewart, age 73 years. Resting at INDUSTRIAL (Continued from page—one}— of 1,000 farmers and hundreds of jobs for farm men.and women.” The premier said there had been criticism of the govern- ment’s work with .the ARDA program. ‘‘A-total—expenditure on ARDA projects to the need. of 1965 amounted to over one and a half million dollars and $788,- 000 of this was an obligation of our province.”” The premier said, ‘‘citizens of Tall classes agree we have enter-, able to cast a ballot for both councillor and assemblym an without need of a qual- ification. Charlottetown will elect merside is a completely seper- ate constitutency with two mem- OA 5 cnaiccivicrenidbienncadpesghgbiicta at This will be the first electi forthe Liberals-under ership of 33*year-old Alex B. ‘Campbell: four members this time and Sum-+- on of ‘his parents followed by funer- the-lead-—-al-service—in- FUNERALS DAWSON FUNERAL — The funeral for James Edward Daw- son was held Sunday, April 17, with.a_short_service at the home t Church, North—Tryon, Service| was conducted by Rev. R.A. Laurie Ripley Laurie Ripley, retired mana- ‘Ber of the Royal Bank in Hunter iver, died suddenly in the ‘the Hennessey Funeral Home ‘from where the funeral will take _ place on Tuesday morning at {9.15 to St. Andrews Church, Mt. ; Stewart, for Requiem High ‘Mass at 10 o'clock. Interment in ‘the church cemetery. ‘WEBSTER — At the P.E.I. Hos- pital Saturday, April 16, 1966, ‘George Edward Webster of 59 ‘Longworth Avenue in his 72nd ‘year. Resting at the MacLean |* Funeral Home from where the Prince ard Island Hospital on urday at the age of 70. B in Amherst, Nova Scotia, Mr. Ripley was a veteran of World War I. He served with the WESTERN BRIEFS. | 85th Nova Scotia Highlanders --.CAR OVERTURNS. A 1953 Monarch driven by ifuneral will be held today April 418 with service commencing at LAC Donald Brownrigg, Cana- Summerside ‘it overturned on-the Trans Can- ‘930 p.m, Intermeft in the Peo- dian ~ forées> base, sple’s Cemetery. jwas extensively damaged when ‘RIPLEY — At the P.E-T: Hospi- ada Highway at North Tryon at ‘tal Saturday, April 16, 1966 Lau- /6 p.m. on Saturday. The accident ‘rie W. Ripley of Hunter River in| ‘his 7ist year. Remains were | transferred from the Andrew’s | ‘Funeral Home to his late veel-| ‘dence. Funeral Tuesday, April | ' 19 from ‘Hunter. River United) ‘Church with service— ‘ing. at 2 p.m. Interment will take “place in the People’s Cemetery, | GAUTHIER — At the Charlotte- + was ,investigated by the Borden RCMP’ detachment and no injur- ies were reported. ELEVEN MEMBERS -In Thursday’s Guardian, Charlottetown. jexchange visit to Winnipeg, for \two weeks next July, the name 1 the | names of eleven 4-H members | ‘were listed to represent Prince | Edward Island at the provincial | Billy Decker was listed in error. { j Dies Suddenly tery. satiate Gillis. Hymns sung were: When He Commeth and God Sees The Little Sparrow Fall. The choir sang Safe In The Arms of Jesus Organist was Judy Dawson. Pallbearers were Richard New- son, Wyman Waddell, Sheldon Dixon and Lloyd Mayhew. Inter- ment. was in the Church Ceme- HISTORY PEEKS THROUGH The £.s.d. symbols for Eng- lish money ~ represent the Ro- man coins librum, solidus and Greeting Has Rare Warmth MOSCOW. warmth to the peoples of the West and dropped Peking from first to fifth place ‘on the Com- munist list. -~ The slogans often reflect im- peer “changes tn’ Soviet pol- ay. a i Anew slogan’ on Viet Nam, while repeating demands own problems alone. Britain, United States, which had been grouped. together in a single slogan, each got a_ separate, denarius. argains me warm _ greeting this time. alore! (AP)—The _ Soviet.] Union came out Sunday with | | May——Day-—greetings—of —rare-| for | withdrawal, added a phrase | stressing the need for the Viet- | jnamese—people—to—solve—their- France and the | | i Iderstine, president of Trinity ; fro! ) [derived from agriculture, the|with the Royal Bank in Harve An estimated 450,400,000 | 1300-000 bushels, com Me CO tre of Hue. sank Confederation Centre Men’s Association, Montague, eer highest ever reached in the prov- Station, NB. before coe pe St. , representing per |pared ber poet yo a. oan | U.S. Nips xi Saigon an rk strike sl Concerts on Friday evening. The judges It was decided to set up ajince. Over $7,000,000 from fish~| Deters, Cape Breton, as bank |Cent of the total, were held on | ago. at i Hoo T rne lsimed “SE a tegiment beloved | all agréed this was an out- (three-nation working grroup con- ing, the highest to date. Over | anager there for six years pr-|farms the bureau said im the) arout 73 per cent of all farm- n P ourney | to have filtered from North Viet at the exc i piasedere i aad re teen ssa goothbe eee rece ane - great jor to his moving to Hunter Rf- |thid of its spectal field crop re peld stocks of oats and 9 Pet | SANTEAGO. (AIP)—The. United X2™- as ‘| series. | AP) — onfederatios provincial competition isto be States | ambassa secretary Karl. building boom. There has been a |Ver- Om was compiled CeMt..or more of farm stocks of | states beat Mexico 71-64 Satur- | c : * held in Trinity Church Hall |German State etary ulat-| Besides his wife, the former report piled each of the other four grains —e ; : es : Charlottetown in the near fu- |Carstens.to discuss details of |Steady increase in our populat- | MacCannell of Charlot: |{rom a bureau, survey of grain | vr. -iocated’ in’ day ‘night in ite first-round ‘ -Centre ion indicative of more jobs. yo fi - =; Were" 10Cal in’ the Praitie |panie in the- wotld amateur | ture. Johnny Meerburg, left, |the troops question. When the Legislative Assembly |tetown-now residing in. Hunter held on farms: from ~ mill Te | provinces | a Box Offic i Rainer Brzel, deputy leader | Ui tscived cates. River, a son Gordon of Bradal-|"s, amd from information |“ pistribution of farm - held Chi oe. ° of Germany’s Christian Demo- |‘ ; rviv supplied by the board of grain | o1aj Per doe Chile. i FORAGE SEEDS DEATHS cat Parte. after talks. ig |C0r W. J. MacDonald there /bane, alee survives clude a bro |cmulssloners eh on Be ae The Americans, shed 42] cee Cp aN al cra’ 2_§ ; were _17_Progressive Conservat- r survivors include a bro- : : anitoba— Wheat 39,000,000 1 : FED - Washington on the NATO cri-|ives and 13 Liberal opposition |ther, Dewitt in Winnipeg and} Stocks of all five major |hys':21s,oats 38,000,000, barley 5 en height on ot OS an | See ee ee Join Now ' BRUCE. — At the Prince Ed- |sis with Defence Secretary Rob- | members. three sisters: Reta, Mrs. George oan oe ed sail 10,000,000, rye 1,400,000, flax- | hackboards CORN SEED Reser _ ‘ward Island Hospital on Satur- er McNamara, told reporters; NEW ELECTION ACT Smith, Dorchester, N. B.;|y 128 oe compared wit | seed 2,300-000. In other opening games in the | 3 For Th :day April 16, 1966, Mrs. John |the United States wanted West This election will be the first |Blanche, Mrs. Jerry Brownell, |// Oe A eres eee, an | neskatchewan — Wheat 307-|two-week tourney that ends LAWN SEEDS e Bruce of Heatherdale in her |Germany to strengthen. its|one fought under the provisions |Seattle, Washington; and Ola, |te Tecord of 1,512,200,000 eet tm 59 099 bushels, oats 62,000000, |April 30, Bulgaria ‘beat Peru ‘5th year. Resting at the Mon-|armed forces. He quoted Me-|of the new election act which|Mrs. William Walsh, Seattle, | "2" Ibariey 33,000,000, flaxseed|751, Spain downed Argentina) GARDEN. SEEDS Best Season ‘tague Funeral Home. Funeral |Namara as saying NATO's |provides for 32 seats instead of Washington. = = Go oe en on laa 81-70: Yugoslavia defeated Pan- | Packaged - Bulk son. ‘from the United Baptist Church, problems could be solved. | 30 as before. : grains M March 31, with “alberta — Wheat 99,000,000|ama 84-79, the Soviet Union | ie ; ini This will be the first election 1965 and 10-year average fig- ee eer | oe , : - Montague, Monday, April 18 at pore a aes ey eee in which there will be no prop- WESTERN = ures in brackets, were: * | bushels, oats 60,000,000. barley |edged Puerto Rico 5451 and Ever Offered “2 p.m. Interment in Valleyfield |Uwe Von Hassel, in a newspa- : : 74,000.00, 2,800,000, flax: | Brazil, defending cham-| Rx : _ cemetery. | a iper article Sunday, ruled out (erty vote. Every voter will be Oats 247,100.00 _(241:400,000, | 204 2,200,000." 800,000 ae ae Pareuey’ 5s. | Exhibition Dr. 892-1671 The Salvation Army | “PEL BUILDIN G APPEA L _— sk Architect’s Sketch of proposed Charlottetown Citadel Za) -town Hospital Saturday, April | and should have read Betty Dek- 16, 1966, John P. Gauthier, North |ker, Sherbrooke. She is president ‘Rustico, in his 76th year. Rest- lof Sherbrooke 4-H club and is a | ‘ing at the Charlottetown Funeral | noted speaker, singer and ac- - Home from where funeral will |tress. be held this morning leaving fu- , *neral home at 8:30 for Requiem ' ‘High Mass at . Stella Maris. _ Church at 9.30. Interment in the ‘ church cemetery. : Ae millinery. HONORARY CHAIRMEN Hon. Walter R. Shaw Premier—of P. 8.1. PRIZE WINNERS “Two-of the door prize-winners at the annual farm machinery show in Alberton recéntly were | Mrs. Burton Rayner of Green- mount and Mrs. Winston Ray- | ner, Cascumpec. elearance Walter J. Cox Mayor of Charlottetown George A. Key, Jr. : Mayor of Summerside Bruce H. Yeo 2 Mayor of Montague PROVINCIAL CHAIRMAN Brig. A. W. Rogers, E. D, BUSINESS & SPECIAL NAMES. _ CANVASS ; STARTS TODAY, APRIL 18th + MacNEILL — At Miscouche on | ' Saturday, April 16, 1966, of Gab-| Tiel MacNeill of Miscouche in | -pis 72nd year; Resting at the | ““bowness Funé‘al Home from | where funeral will be held on | 1 Wonderful opportunity to save on your Spring Into Summer hats. Yes, we said hats! The prices are so tempting you'll want te buy et least twol Check the prices then come quickly te Holman’s! : 30 Years of Service Speaks For Itself... fe For the Finest f Ss ; Tuesday to St. Jchi j y PROVINCIAL TREASURER ‘ een Misebathe. for Recta QUALITY MEATS SPRING MILLINERY R. G. Boyne T. D. DeBLOIS—Chairman ’ High Mass at 9 a.m. Interment | Visit SPECIAL aiiaiiy' ee : : PUBLICITY COMMITTES “fn the chureh cemetery. visiting | Queen St. Meat Market 98, 7.98— 3.97 W. R. Burnett For over eighty years The Salvation Army has been serving “hours 2 to 4 and 7 to 10. < are GROUP! ee ; Ws teres the people of Prince Edward Island. Anyone in need who has " Formerly 7.98 te-11.98 , CHARLOTTETOWN CHAIRMAN ; a - ; oe atu 5.97 ag ae ever_turned_to. them has been given__help. The a 4 SPECIAL NAMES, CHAIRMAN offered has been both immediate and practical. The services 4 ily - : Leatesuemnehabe ; performed by The Salvation Army are needed more today : BETTER SPRING MILLINERY Mr. Clive Cudmore than ever before. New Welfare offices are to be included in Residents of P.E.I. who attain the age of SPECIAL Mr. Robert MacLeod the new Citadel shown above. These will cost with 1966 ‘19 years must register separately under ee eee cathe maintenance an estimated $35,000.00. We feel the people of . GRUUP! nee CAMPAIGN ORGANIZER Prince Edward Island would want to assist The Salvation — P. E. 1. the Hospital Services Commission of -For information regarding Hospital Insurance ' " Charlottetown, P.E.L 6.47 to 12.47-+ Captain R. A. Nelson R. G. Boyne, Chairman Capt. R. A. Nelson, Sec’y, CH'TOWN ADVISORY BOARD Army with this portion of construction costs—as a token of appreciation for over eighty years’ outstanding service. This is YOUR ‘opportunity to serve The Salvation Army. Give NAME TO THE CONTRIBUTOR ROLL.” BP st apace Pa N. Siewert liberally to the Red Shield P. E. I. Building Appeal. ‘Address all correspondence to NW. Lowther, MM., @.¢. , ” HOSPITAL SERVICES COMMISSION | Coan Residential Blitz Begins May 3rd ELIGIBILTY SECTON S'SIDE SERVICE COMMAITTER - —_——— a “Post. Office Box 4500 a |. “HELP THE ARMY ATTAIN THEIR GOAL—ADD YOUR} a i ae