EC. Plow, C.B.E.; D.S.O.: General Officer Sol. D.A. MacKinnon. D.S.0., , ;,k ,,, ...-' . TOP - The C. 1'). Decoration is conferred upon Major K. K. Ken- nedy. Slzifi Sergeant P. Donald. and Staff I. CITY AND C de . the J. iiac-l Sergeant R.J.iC.B.E., D.S.0.. C.D.; Staff Sgt. ABOVE LEFT .. siaior-General. G. in it-out or the Cenotaph during- E.D. l Monday tevenlng's G.O.C. annual Commanding ” ' ' Eastern Command. chats with Lt.- f Lt.-Col. Macxlnnon, ls attired in same uniform he wore Left King Monday night at the Armour- ics LEFT - Staff Sergeant Mac- Donald, Major-General E. C. Plow. CENTRAL I mates. Storey Electric DR. A. W. ALLAN'S office will be closed until July. . VISIT m-srnn Mlllincry. Gt. George Street. "where every style is Hi-Style." gey's Pharmacy. open I am. In I p.rn. HIGH HONORS - Miss Fran- ecs MacDonald, who won "Very Seven theoretical musical exam- inations conducted by the Univer- sity Conservatnrium, McGill Univ- ersity. was a pupil of Mrs. Ralph Arsenault, Charlottetown. Frances is a daughter oi Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. MacDonald, 74 McGlli Avrnuc. FARM FOREMAN - Mr. Thom- as Hunter has been appointed fore- man of the Charloh-'--wn Experi- IIOUSE WIRING - Free est!-'ADELLA'S MILLINERY hats clearing at 81.96. 33.95. High Distinction" in the at-ndei 32.90 at. WATER SAFETY IIINT: He wouldn't bother to learn to swim an upset boat was the end oi him. CLEARING seed barley at re- duced prices all this week. Certi- W5 73'-'4" "" -ll" '"'"- 0'' Ificd No. I grade. 3. B. Jones. Bunbury. Phone 5749. ORPIIANAGE - Mrs. H. S Iienderson was re-elected treasur- er of the Charlottetown Auxiliary oi the P.E.l. Protestant Orphan- age at the annual meeting Friday. Mrs. J.H. Cerry was elected sec- retary. A line inadvertently omit- ted from the published report made it misleading. VISIT POSTPONED-Sir Savillc: 'Garner, British High Commission- er to Canada will not be paying a visit to this Province according to a message received by Premier A.W. Matheson over the weekend. during World War I. ABOVEiBandmastcr. Brit-ladier G. G. K. iutiirr - Major - Genersi;Peake. l).S.0., E.D.. C.D.; Major. Plow inspects the Queen Char-iGcneral Plow. lofle High School Band. ltroml to Right, R. lvo Cudmos-e,l I I King, Major Kennedy. Brigadier G. G. K. Pcake, I).S.O., E.l).. C.D. BOTTOM - Officers participat- ing in monday eveningls G.0.C. "annual inspection oi No. 2 Militia Group are: LEFT - Lt. Col. A.H Peakc. C.D.; Lt. Col. A. W. Rogers, Guardian Photo. .F..D.: Mrijor-General E.C. Plow, C.B.E.; l).S.0., (5.1). General Oi- liicer Commanding. Eastern Com- mand; Brigadier G G. K. Pealte. D.S.0.. F.D.. C.D.; Lt. Col. K.M. Johnsotn. E D.; and Lt. Col. J.K.L. Irwin, Cl). Hold G. O. C. Inspection Oi Hundreds of cltiiens were pre- sent at the Ccntotaph on Monday evening to see Major-General E.C. Plow. C.B.F..; D.S.O.; C.R. take the salute during the G.0.C. an- nual inspection of No. 2 Militia Group. Accompanied by the music of two bands. the P.F..I. Reece Regiment (l7th Recce R.C. A.C. and Queen Charlotte High School, the large parade marched along Grafton Street past the saluting box. having been pre- viously inspected by Major-Gener- al Plow. PARADE parade were: No. 2 Militia Group Headqusrtus. commanded by Brigadier G.G.K. Peake, D.S.0.. BIRTHS TOOLE-At the Charlottetown Hos- pital on June II to Mr. and Mrs. Composite units of the colourful , . table .t. No. 2 Militia Group Units E.D.. C.D.; P.E.I. Reece Regi- ment (l7th Rccce R.C.A.C.. com- manded by Ll-Col. A.H. Peaks, C.D.; 5 Signal Regiment R.C.C.S.. commanded by Lt. Col. K. M. Johnston. F..D.: nrid 5 Medical Company. R.C.A.M.C., under the command of Ll.-(”nl. .l.K.L. Irwin. C.D.. H Section of No. 5 Provost Corps. commanded by Officer Ca- det K. Judson. accompanied the parade. Charles Mactlregor was in charge oi the Reece Band .the Queen Charlotte Band being un- der the command of Ivo Cudmore. Major-General Plow was ac- Monkley. age In. Resting at the Bowness Funeral Home, funer- al service at St. Maryts Anglican Church at 2 pm. Wednesday June 19th. interment in Peoples Cemetery. PERRY - At St. Nicholas on June Itth, John F. Perry in his 0. (2. H.Q. area "thirteen Islanders are to attend the Junior Red Croea Leadershili Training Centre for the MIIIIIIC Provinces during the latter part of August. three of them as staff personnel and the remainder as delegates. Miss Marie Bowness. Director of Junior Red Cross for P.E.I. announced yesterday.' Accompan,:... Miss Bowneas. who is in charge of program pro- paration and direction, will be Paul Cudmore. Field S uper- visor of Swimming. Water Safety Department. Red Cross James M u r ph y. a teacher from Summerside- High School. and the following delegates In school representatives: Lorraine Campbell (Alberton High School); V.rginla Silliker tO'Leary High School); Armand Des Roches (Mis- couche High Sehooll: Sandra Jar- dlne (Keiisingttm llitvh School); James Gallant and Kevin Blab quiere (Stella Maris High 5CI100Il: Aileen Noonan lRochiord Square School); Ann McCabe (Noise Dame Academy); Ronald Mcvlcar (Queen Charlotte High Schooll; and Bev- erly Morrow Isouris High School). PURPOSE OF COURSE The purpose of the Training Centre, which will be held at the University of New Brunswick form August 21-29th. is to provide a broader knowledge of the aims and program of the Red Cross. both nationally and internationally. in order that students may return to their schools equipped for leader- ship in Junior Red Cross activities during the coming year. Approx- imately I0 delegates will attend from the Atlantic Provinces and Quebec, with three delegates In- vitcd from the U.S.A. Sponsored by their school. Junltr Red Cross, Home and School As- sociation, and other community Training Course To Attend Red Cross In N.B. M188 BOWNESS Ifoupl. the delegates will partici- pate in 4 numbe of activities. in- cluding discussion groups. skits. panels, parade of ideas, activity Kroups, etc. Swimming pool facili- tlel will be provided. and a chicken barbeque and trip to nearby Camp Gagetown are included on the vari- ed program. Outstanding speakers and consultants will lecture and act as ndvisors to the delegates con- cerning the topics to be studied. STAFF MEMBERS .- Dlrcetor of the Training Centre will be G. E. Malcolm MacLeod. principal of Southern Victoria Re- gional High School. Andover. N.l!.. other staff members being Miss June Pemberton. Assistant Nation- al Director, Junior Red Cross and Miss Marlon Bate. Director, Junior Red Cross, New nrunswlck. Storms Cause Huge Loss In Alpine Areas MILAN (AP)-Floods. fist-sised ballstones and a tornado have , taken at least 11 lives in the Al- pine sectors of four countries. sixty or more persons are in hos- pital with injuries. Damage in smashed homes, ruined crops and dead livestock was estimated M 0 ii d a y at 8150.- I ooo.ooo. Italy was hardest hit. with ; the weather also lashing France. Switserland Ind . At the same time torrential rains flooded wide areas of Tur- key. with at least thee persona drowned and eight missing. The alpine storm centred in Northern Italy's Piedmont and Lombardy. The worst twister In It- allan history razed two villages and left a swath of ruined farms. "it ,was like a great column of smoke which swirled upon us with l i E 2. E :31? and half-pound hailstonas added to the terror. T It! were drowned in E 3 5' E homeless there, in in 1111! and several hundred in Roads washed out in the tourist moun- tains oi Southern Germany. Homes. trees and crops suffered widespread damage. but no deaths were reported. Hoods its the Swiss alps caused widespread ruin to crops. The resi- dents of several vlllazes in a iloodcd valley linking Zermatt with the Upper Rhone had to be evacuated. - Pegs.-I TIT! GIIITIIIQV WEATHER (CF - Tempe.-.. TORONTO Igor tuned the Tomato publkj ti 38-'B'3SB':t888l3S'r3'38l HALIFAX (CP) - Th office here says a large i.i.IIfif.'f', sure area from Quebec is foreign; to cover the Marltimes today, ,4, By THE CANADIAN PRESS Seventy-one Canadians met vio- lent death during the weekend as the nation chalked up one oi the worst two-day weekend fatality records ever. A Canadian Press survey from 5 pm. Friday to midnight Sun- day showed a total close to the all-time short weekend record set July 12, 1955. when 77 persons died. Thirty-three Persons. most of them children and teenagers. died DY drowning In summer weather spread across most of Canada and Quebec and Ontario sweltered in By SEYMOUR TOPPING IBERLIN (AP) - The restlve people of Communist East Ger- many, who four years ago Mon- day rloted against Soviet rule. got new U.S. and West German pledges of eventual liberation on this anniversary. Huge bonfires blazed along the borders to tell the East Germans Illtz west had not forgotten the I953 uprising. Inside East Germany police har- red demonstrations. But June 11 was remembered - t 'ly by the thousands of workers who vainly fought with rocks against Russian tanks. And also on univer- Promises To East Germans Are Used On Revolt Anniversary rad Adenauer and broadcast over East Germany by powerful trans- mitters In the American sector at Berlin. Adi.-nauer led West Germany in memorial services. Speaking in the Bonn Parliament from a rost- rum draped with the bannera oi the West German states and the eastern provinces. the 81-year-old chancellor said: "The dead remind us of the freedom we do not possess. They remind us also oi the thousands who are still in Soviet prisons. They remind us never to give up the fight for freedom. They re- mind us we must stand together sity and high school , which today seethe with agitation against the regime. U.S. State Secretary John Fos- ter Dulles sent an anniversary message pledging the United States and its partners "to inten- sity efforts to restore Ger- many as a free and united state." Dulles' message was addressed to West German Chancellor Kon- in all t t ' German In isolated West Berlin leaders placed wreaths on the June I1 memorial. I massive statue de- picting a man shaking off a yoke. It was in East Berlin that the June 17 revolt first exploded. It spread like wildfire to other big Industrial centres and was not put down until the overwhelmed East Germans called in Russian tanks. Baptist Guild Holds Meeting The June meeting of the Font Levy World Wide Guild of the Charlottetown Baptist Church was held last night at the home of Miss Elsie Casiord. In the absence 'of the president, Margaret Aifleck presided and Jean Downe was in charge oi the devotional service. The theme was Friendship. Mite boxes were opened and a fund for new churches for new communi- ties was begun. A nominating commottec con- companied at the saluting base by Major N. Buckingham. C.D.. C3. and Captain Anderson, a.d.c.. both oi Halifax. N.S. Also present at the saluting base were Colonel J.H. Shaw. E. D.. medical advisor. Lt.-Col. J.'I'. Davies. C.D.. and Major O..R Simona. M.B.E., C.D. Lt.-Col. A.W. Rogers. E.D, was parade commander; Major I. J. Harper. M.C.. C.D.. parade ad- jutanl. and R.S.M. J. smith. par- ade R.S.M. INVITED GUEBTU Among the invited guests pre- sent when the salute was taken were: Lt.-Col. D.A. MacKlnnon. D.S.0.. C de G; Col. F.I. Andrew. O.B.E.. E.D.: Lt.-Col. R Paton. MC.; Group Captain W. Swetman. Officer Commanding R.C.A.F. sto- tlon. Summerslde; Captain J. J. Inspector I-J. sistlng oi Georgie Rodd. Jean Downs and Hilda Lewis was nom- inated for the new year, and Hilda Lewis was appointed as delegate to the Association at Central Bed- eque. Greta Walker told about her missionaries. Rev. and Dr. R.hl. Bennett of India. who are hospital workers. Isobel Rector led the study which dealt with Baptist work in Oruro. Bolivia. A delicious lunch was served by V the hostess assisted by Margaret Affleck and Margaret Dolliver. -Die-Ienboker At Loss For Words OTTAWA (CP - Prime Minis- ter - designate John Dlcfenbaker was at a loss for words Monday night to express how it feels to be almost prime minister. He described it as "a iceling that cant be readily translated into words." "For a humble person like my- self." it was hard to say how he felt when a great responsibility was placed on his shoulders. "it is in that spirit I approach my task." he said when he met reporters after emerging from Government House where he ac cepted Governonoeneral Massey's Invitation to form a new govern- menl. I3 Ministers the 's first major heat wave. Traffic accidents claimed Si lives and seven died in mis- cellaneous accidents. The worst single accident oc- cured at St.-Evariste. Que., where four men were killed in a head- on collision with a truck. Quebec counted 12 others dead on the highways and 11 drowned. One man died in a plane crash. Ontario recorded 14 deaths by drowning. including three double drowntngs. seven died in traiilc accidents and five in other mis- hsps, including three American tourists who died in an explosion of a summer cabin north of Sault Ste. Mario. The Maritime provinces were relatively accident - free. No vio- lent deaths were reported in New- foundland or Prince Edward Is- lland. Two persons died in Nova ;Scotia highway accidents and one itirownlng was reported from New Brunswick. Three teenagers died at Ste. Agathe, Man., when their car plunged through a ferry guard chain Into the Red River. One R. C. A. F.- R. C. N. Hold Joint Anti Sub Exercise HALIFAX (CP( - The navy hnd air force open a two-day joint snti - submarine exercise in the Gulf oi St. Lawrence Tuesday. Navy officials said today nine warships front the navy's Atlantic Command and RCA? and navy aircraft from Greenwood. N.S.. and Sumnierslde, P.E.I., will taki- Irt. Ships Include the destroyer ae- corts Micmac. Huron and Iroquois of the navy's lst Escort squad- ron and the Ottawa. Assiniboinc and Saguenay of the 3rd squad- ion. Aerial support will include Nep- tune aircraft from RCA!" lot and toil Maritime Air Command squad- rons based at Greenwood. Lancas- ters of the RCA! operational train- in unit at Summerside and navy Avengers based at sumrnerslde. surface and air units will pro vlde anti-submarine protection to I coastal convoy represented by the new ocean - going tug St. John. which will be routed between van- tous ports in the gulf. OW them will be the submarines - llance and Aniphlen if the Royal Navyts Ith lubniarine Squadron based at Halifax. ' Orange Assn's In Convention VANCOUVER (C?)-lame TN 71 Fatalities Made Weekend One Of The Worst On Record other drowning was counted in Manitoba and one in Saskatche- wan. British Columbia had two traffic deaths and Alberta recorded three. one miscellaneous death was reported in Alberta and one man was drowned at Whitehorse in the Yukon. Mill Destroyed At Middleton, N. S. MIDDLETON. N.S. (CP-Fire here Monday destroyed the Mid- dleton Milling Co.. and left 25 men ivithout work. Herman Isaac. a director of the firm estimated damage at 3100.000. partly covered by insurance. Firemen from Middleton were aided in fighting the blaze by de- partments from Kingston and Nic- taux. 9th Conservative Prime Minister OTTAWA (CP - John Dicfen- bsker. 61-year-old Prince Albert. sask.. lawyer is the ninth Con- servative prime minister oi Can- ads. The others since Confederation: I. Sir John A. Macdonald. July 1, I367. to Nov. 6. 1873; Oct. 11. I878. to June 6. 1891. 2. Sir John J. Abbott. June 16. 1891. to Dec. 5. 189. 3. sir John Thompson. Dec. 5. um. to Dec. I1, 1894. 4. Sir Mackenzie Bowell. Dec. 21. 1894, to A ril TI, I806. 5. Sir Char cs Tupper. May I. 1896. to July 8, I896. 6. Sir Robert Borden. Oct. I1. 1911. to July lo, I920. 7. Rt. Hon. Arthur Meighsn. July 10. 1920. to Dec. 29, 1011: June 28. I926. to Sept. 35. I926. I. Rt. Hon. R. B. Bennett. Aug. 7. 1930. to Oct. 23. 1935. on the other hand. there have been four Liberal prime ministers since Confederation in 1&1: I. Hon Alexander Mackenzie. Nov. 1, IITI. to Oct. II. lI7I. 2. Sir Wilfrid Laurler. July ll. IIII. to Oct. I, I911. 3. Rt. Hon. William Lyon Mae- kensie King. Dec. II, 1921, In June I. III; Dept. II. IIII. to Aug. 7, IIII; Oct. II. IIII. to Nov. , XIII. 4. Rt. Hon. Louis Itsphea It. Laurent. Nov. 15. IIII. to June 21, III1. .: PIONEER 1'!!! First steamboat on the It. Law- rence River. the Accommodation, made her first trip from Ident- rcal to Quebec in IIJI. I-1 C -1131 fine weather is . reeled. Texnperatures will TL about the same as Monday 1,, 111031 FIICGI. but more seasonabig mdtnsl Iredoremt for rim, communities that were exception. ally cold Monday. gorecassts: . ova cotla. Prln 34 land and New BHITIGIWICKIIZIH-(CTIIQI; with a few cloudy intervals; not much China In temperature; light IDIIHU winds. Low-high It New GIIIIOW 40 Ind 70. Charlottetown to and G2. Moncton 45 and s5 Fredericton 50 and 70. Campbeul ton 45 and II. Saint John 50 and 65. Edmundslon J0 and 70. High tide today at Chariot (town at 1.44 s.m. and 2.12 pm, gum, nierslde tide eighteen minutes lat. er than Charlottetown. sun rt... iotltnav at as am. and sets at 3.0: 2 Overdue Nfld. ' Sealers Are Safe ST. JOHN'S NFLD. (CPl-Tu men overdue at a nothern New. toundland utt' ent after a seal hunt in a I-foot boat have been lighted and "are safe" the lit: AF said Monday. No other details were immediately available. A search of the count waters south of St. Anthony about In miles northwest oi here. was start. ed by RCAF rescue craft from nearby Torbay airport. USAF planes from Stcphenvllle and as RCMP aircraft after the men fail- ed to return. The two were identified as And- rew Heatli. 36 and his nephew, George Heath. 24, of St. Anthony. The men left St. Anthony. June 4 to hunt seals at Groals Island. 20 miles south of the st. Barbe settlement. and told relatives they would return in seven to nine days. RCMP said no further word was heard from the men. and their craft had apparently become jam- med in ice that still clogs the north- ern Newfoundland coast. Sees Threat To Sunday KEBWICK. Ont. (CPl - A United Church of Canada official urged church laymen to present a solid front against the "complete commercialisation" of Iunday. Dr. Romar R. Lane. Iuistant sloretary of the United Church board of evangelism. was address- ing delegates to the fifth national conference of Value church lay- men. Commuting on eutoinstion In in industry and an ever-an in crease in leisure time for niost Canadian Dr. Lane said that un- less the church laymen are cars- ful. the Sunday they know "might justend ssonedayofalons weekend lining on tnturstisy night." "quality "value TAYLORS JEWELLERS LTD. i . meat I Fnnn to succeed Mr. Cy- C lly, V.R.P.; ' run it-. Pickard. recently retired 5" Stvme lit" " it” ';,''”;"t I"? 6"!" T00" ""9 Elli"! Me in year, forwarded Saturday -1- mi... R.C.M.P.; Chief of Police APO Ofddlfldd delegates from all parts of Can- ” tram that position. The announc Mt . "”"3t "t' """'"m ;.;;' 2, 9""dt- 50”" ”"l'"'t- ' t””'- ' lemon from Common Funer-1 c.w. MacArthur. M.M.; Lt.-Col. ads this week will attend the an- .' meat was made yesterday by Mr- '"t"" "hit," tag: I” ' " "”v ””' ”"- Home to his late residence at rm. Storey. s.p.; Lt.-Col. .1. r 8ACI(VAILLE,N.B. (CP)-This anal convention of Men's and R C- P"9"I- 5"P"I"'93d"'I 0' Gwnnmen ' aw" "EGAR-I-y,..Ag 3,, Ch"-10gum'. St. Nicholas where funeral was MacDonald. ED.; Major A.W. Ma- teen graduatea were ordained into Women": Orange Benevolent Ae- ' "t9 F'""- M'- 3"”? "' It 9" nun wimmas - Following g.,.,,..., ;..,., mi. 195-, to 3,, held this Monday morning to st. thuon; Lieutenant J-mes Clapton. the inlnistry of the United amt-ch soelations of British America. I employed at the Ch-rlottelown 38- were the prize winners lut nisitt ....t Mn”, -rim... 'n...;t, in... John Baptist Church Miscouche, C.D.. and Lt. aemtit Macxessle. of Canada sntmy at the closing Although recreational and he new Wm be ,I mm” of an ABERDEEN t . IIOPIIMIIII FIVE '0' I WW”? 0' at a card party held in spring Park. Betty Mufphy . son Lawrggggl for Requiem High Mass at I ordination series of the chnrclis iness sessions coincide la a num- 151 . t I 5' !!If8- hail: I..adles' lat. Miss Josey Blan-i am-mi a 15'. 3 us. s.m. Interment Church Ceme- Mlttlttmc e0IfROI!00- her at cases. the men and ladies ANGUS ASSa1ATI0N- 3"” 19m 3t :K'm' Rt! t- 2 l l 1'0 ATTEND M-"-A-A- 3"" mm m' ”w",-.' nit", Hullgf-i:l:l:lENMAN IAt the Prince Edward Is-l l ' ' Rlchald GIV.n am ltethuuunmaigcai miss:-I-LI .”.'.n”lt”ti'.t'.'5 6”” G”"'..sf' (INIIIMW L b m 5 I g 3'9 --.”''- 3- G”"”" M'c't M (i:i0:it'5Imil:t" rim, GEudeItI' anti." land Hospital. June is. ism. tel MCPIIAII. - At Montreal June . ,if,";3:, g.,..,' min. ;'wama sen sins. urged to Tm t 3 . the city 5;-terdw by Nam 0- ,0. 0-g..'t., r - ti.,..' . Mr. and Mrs. amid Enman. :5 mil. Lydia McPhaIl wife of tap EXOCUIIOH Stay 3...” am-lush. New Waterford. For the men it will be the inn rnllll JIWIIL. Q; gl e route to Innnll IMGKIIII 0' 5' as snow rreeseeot. Mr. and Mrs daughter. Linda Dianne. I lhs.' late Dr. McPhall formerly of N3. uh. 3.1,, mg. 3.35, 0.. N s.u..tu.y '::v-,' -I 5; Maritime nmm Auxllllrltl M" 3..-den MacDonald Ii ass. . i surnmerside. in her Ioth yen! I'ItEDERI(.'I'ON (C?) -Joseph o,',.::' mm", 3.5.. pd.-:93, g ' . g ::cist.tLonA':f.'.l eotnsnenc" me'sutodJ rm” Ear" -. The Gum" cAm.lu p. M the mud Remains are expected to srrlvelltlerre Richard has been given m 3.1 up, nun, gig . . . v u. at the Compton Funeral Home automatic stay of execution be Dam ,, au.t...ygs., 11.3,; V '1 ; T”''”I''''w7 ”' "R" 5" "90"" ll 'W"'"mI"' C M"""”'I"I II”'VI” "' this evening (Tuesday) from cause the a dvlsiee of the E 1, map. ' V W" '3' WW" to tho most time 3-t'"l-V- 1'90 Wt '0 M'- "(I where the funeral will be use Iepnsnss Court at lewlr-swteh - James Manse Irma. Wednesday afternoon at I o'clock Interment Pewles Cemetery. Surnmerslde. MARRIAGES Richard. weight I lbs. I! on. BOCWALI:-At the P.lI.T. Hospital ' June 15. M7. to Mr. L. noswall IQ 3:1. lee- ii .5 it. s