s.o.u. SENIORS HERMAN CONNELLY MAURICE GAUTHIER Herman John Joseph Connolly I Maurice E. Gauthier-—Science, ,Arts. was born in lona, P. E. I. ‘W38 born In Green Valley, On- To A Close At The first annual “Homemaker Show", put on this past week- ;by Simpson-Sears of Charlotte-I gtown, draws to a close today. TheI :‘event, one of the first if its kind‘ ever held on the Island, attract- ed throngs of P.E.l. residents. During the show visitors to the event watched cooking demon- strations by Canada Packers Senior Home Economist. Sally.. met with and talked to represent- firms displaying merchandise at the show . . and had a word with Forbes Kennedy. player with ST. CLAIR FISHER Bringing DayIi I”Homemaker Show” Draws atives of many of the leading" the Detroit Red Wings of theinoon today, Devoted His Life To ‘ Noon Today National Hockey League. The show, instigated and organ- ized by Stewart Jones, has been acl-aimed an outstanding success. Refreshments . .. demonstrations displays . . . and contsets . . .all worked together to attract the public. .and on display for their viewing were the latest styles and fashions in furniture, luggage, flowering, camping e- quipment . . .and many, many other merchandise lines. Starting Wednesday of this week, and continuing daily and in the evenings this week, the show will come to 1 close at ght To People on January 7, 1937. He acquired his primary education in Iona; East School. He came to "St.i Dunstan's in the fall of 1952 as a student in grade XI. This May, ' Herman leaves S.D.U. with a Bachelor of Arts Degree and a first class teachers’ license. (Barter Studio) Forecast Record Peacetime Deficit In Ottawa Budget -By HAROLD MORRISON Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP) — The govern ment will present Parliament with a budget next month featur- ing the greatest peacetime (E,-ficit in history, it was learned author- itatively Tuesday. There is no talk in federal quar- ters of any major tax cuts. But even so, current forecasts place the 1958 - 59 deficit at be- tween $600,000,000 and $750,000.- 000. Some authorities believe it: may go even higher. The deficit, which will mean a rising national debt and step- -St_.. Clair Joseph Fisher—Arts, arm in 1933 Hi I d :;Saintty” “I/aaharborn at Fort ;, .. s eary e uca- ugus us, . on Jan. 8, By DENNIS NEELD tion was obtained from a num-11937. At the tender age of 2 LONDON (Ap;__Au ber_ of institutes in Ontario, after Which he headed East arriving at S.D.U. in the fall of 1956. years. he moved to Peake’s, where; he received his early, education. In September, 1952,] his life, life. William Willett carried on a love affair with daylight. A millionaire builder of man‘- IThlS year he graduates with a Bachelor of Science Degree. His abilityand sincere friendli- ‘ness suit him well for the field of Medicine which he intends to follow. during the course of its delibera- Itions. One of these supplementarv ;ies may deal with federal pay- ,ments to provinces under the na- tional hospital insurance scheme. Bookkeeping on the govern- ment’s spending during the last fiscal year ended March 31 has not yet been completed. But the indications are that the outlays- including those for old age pen- sions——came to about $5,500,000,- 000. - Now the government is opening its purse to greater outlays on public works of various kinds to counter the impact of recession and the indications are that the ped-up federal borrowing from the money market, would result from virtually stationary rev-I eiiues and record expenditures of total bill may push spending per- haps to $5,800,000,000 or $6,000,- INTO THE RED INK enrolled at St! Dunstan’s. While< lat S.D.U. he has served on the executives of W.U.S.C.C., .S.M.C. and the A.A.A. This year Ihe graduates with a Bachelor of‘ Arts Degree. sions, Willett always instructed his designers and foremen: “Windows require great atten- tion so as to obtain all the ligli-t possible." But his great crusade, carried on against scorn and ridicule, was for daylight saving. He died in 1915, a disappointed man, little dreaming that within a year his plan would be adopted in Britain and eventually would spread around the world. Willett was approaching 50 when his great idea hit him. An early riser, he daily swung out of bed at 6:30 to go riding through the pretty Petts Wood near his country home at Chislehurst, outside London. HITS ON PLAN It was May, 1906. The sun was streaming through the trees. yet none of it penetrated the blinds on the windows of houses d/Wille lpluses chopped the debt to some, $11,000,000,000 by March 1956. Finance Minister Fleming pre- dicted an $80,000,000 surplus for the last fiscal year, though the figures which will be produced when the new izlget is pre- sented may in - .:what below _ _ _ that There m.a_ _ 3,, he a tiny passed on his ride. The bir s and deficit tanimals were awake, ‘but man But because of the Size of the‘; snored on, a slave to his recently budget and the smallness of the‘ Perfected alarm dock- expected balance—either in the M.“’5 °1°°k’ he "ea5°“°d- red or in ‘the bla-ck—-authorities 5“°“*d be his Servants not his master. feel they can safely descri-be 1957- 58 as the year of the balanced budget. Slowly the details of his planl began to form. Put the clock' back and forward according to [Parliament in 1908 but was re- ferred to a committee and of- fectively buried. A similar fate befell the measure when it was reintroduced in 1909 and 1911. Meanwhile, Willett had gained some support. A rising young Briton named Winston Churchill predicted that some day a grate- ful nation would erect a statue to Willet and lay sunflowers at his feet on the longest day of the year. I His village of Chislehurst in. Kent adopted the scheme, and meetings were held throughout the country to support it. Then, in 1914, came war. Even Willet abandoned his campaign. 1915, he had given up all hope. WAR HELPED IT But ironically, it was the war that finally brought his plan; success. Britain was plagued by ‘a coal shortage, and leaders finally realized that longer hours of daylight would save fuel. ‘The bill passed by 170 votes to 2 and daylight saving first be- came effective May 17, 1916. But‘ there still was opposition. The 200 residents of E-bernoe in Sussex refused to adopt the new time, contending that Greenwich mean! time was ordained by God and i-t was a sin to change the clocks. No statue to Willett was ever NOT T00 CONCERNED They seem_none too concerned over the likely size of the cur- rent-year deficit. The previous the seasons, sleep in darkness, take advantage of the extra‘ hours of summer daylight. I In 1907 he published a four-, perhaps as much as $5,000,000,’ However, revenues are not ex- 00o_ ted to keep pace and the gov- First indication of the size of ernment will so deep into the federal spending will come soon red- A deficit Of“ between $600.-‘ after the 24th Parliament is 000,000 and $750.000.000 Would be opened Monday_ The book of es-‘ the largest since the annual war- timated expenditures for the fis-‘ time deficits of more than $2.- cal year that began April 1 000.000.000h1the years Of 1943- likely will be presented within§45- ‘ ' two or three days after MP5 as-‘. The nai10h3l debt P059 I0 8 semble. biggest peacetime deficit occur-' red in the depression year of 1933 when the administration went into the red by $221,000,000. page penny booklet, The Waste' of Daylight. It ran to 19 editions and eventually grew to 60 pages.‘ It was translated into half a dozen, I There was a larger one of‘1a“g“age5- $390,000,000 -in the fiscal year ended March 31, 1920, but that was a spill-over from the First World War. The biggest in re- cent years was one of $142,- “Everyone appreciates the longl light evenings,” Willett wrote.. “Everyone ‘laments their shrink-I ing as autumn approaches, Now if some of the hours of wasted sun-, light in spring, summer and au-1 I SUPPLY RUNS our ; The reason is that the govern-I ment’s current supply of funds to‘; carry on business —— obtained‘ through governor-general’s war- rants-—ruiis ou-t May 15 To get new supply—this time voted by Parliament the government must first present its estimates of expenditures on which to base its request for funds. Supplementary estimates will be added later covering various decisions of Parliament reached COMING EVENTS Oliver MacLeod will begin.haul- lng cream to Wiltshire beginning Monday, May 12th. Cleaning grain daily, ‘Elmer MacDonald, Crapaud. Don't miss V ago In St- Andrew's Hall Mt. Stewart Mon- day 8 p.m. Chickens, jackpot $15.00 door prize. - Cleaning grain until May 20th. Everett Gallant, Oyster B e d Bridge. - Notice Dance cancelled in St- Peters Bay Hall until May 24th- Come to the entertainment in Cornwall Hall tonight. Dance Iona East School every Monday night. Good music. Final card party Dunstaffiiage school Saturday May 10th. Spe- cial prizes. Kindly reserve August 27th for the Crapaud Exhibition to be held at Crapaud. Opening Dance Bonsliaw Inn Hall, Tuesday night, May 13; Burns orchestra. Closed on Wednesday and hors- es shod on the first Monday of each month only D.B. Douglier- I)’; Vernon. There will be a special moth- ers Day service in North Wilt- shire United Church on Sunday May 11th. at 11 a.m. Cnoducted by the Mission Band. “Ye all come." to the Orient Hotel Victoria, for a fresh Lob- ster Supper with home cooking. Sunday, May 11th. Leslie McDowell will be haul- hlg Cream to Wiltshire Dairying mpany on Tuesday until fur- 81‘ notice. S_ee The Easter Monday Play Ahlgale Goes Hay Wire, In Mt. Ryan Hall Monday May 12th. curtain 8:30. Reserve Wednesday, July 16th 01‘ Lower Montague Regatta. nd entries to Dan»Condon. Low- 91' Montague. Eldon players present two one- 3“ Plays with specialties. Cher- ‘'5’. Valley Hall, May 14th, Cur- lain 8.30. Sponsored by Cherry Valley Y.P.U. ¥_’mDlete supply of field seeds, ""°th3‘, Clovers, mixtures. and glasses also Turnip and Mangle ht ‘ eiyour requirements early W!‘ Charlotietou n, Summer- and Kinkora Mills. P. L Moi'- ‘ “ed Service I record $13,400.000,000 in 1946. But eight consecutive post-war sur- 000,000 in 1955. The last one, $17,- 000,000’ was in 1956_ tumn could be withdrawn from! Federal Contracts, Tenders Are Announced By Ottawa OTTAWA (CP) — Federal ex- lpenditure of about $52,075,000 is irvolved in contract awards or tender calls issued in the last few weeks, the works department announced Friday. ' The federal expenditures in- clude the letting of 38 contracts from British Columbia to New- foundland. There are about 143 projects for which tender calls have been issued, representing estimated expenditure of $41,- 000,000, the denartment said. The awards included: Construction Newfoundland — Bay de Verde, recbnstssruction of breakwater, Chiholm Construction: Co. Ltd., Antigonish, N.S., $280,800; Burin, new federal building, William A. Trask Limited. St. John’s, $83,450; Gran-d Bank, RCMP detachment quarters, Mark Gosse and Sons Ltd., Span=ia~rd’s Bay. $57,333- Nova Scotia — Barrington Pas- sage, new federal building, Aren- burg Constsruction Co. Ltd., Hali- Ifax, $39,999; Dartmouth, Marine ‘stores building for transport de- partment, Fundy Construction Co. Ltd., Halifax. $515,530: Whale Cove, breakwater wharf, Mosher ‘and Rawding Ltd., Liverpool, $117,495. New Brunswick ——- Richi-bucto, the beginning and added to the; end of the day, many advantagesl would be gained by all.” I CONTROVERSIAL TOPIC I owillett sent his parngphlet to? memvbers of the Houses of Lords! and Commons. Soon daylight? saving was as controversial a subject as votes for women. _ A daylight saving bill reached‘ wharf extension, Price Construc- tion Ltd., Moncton, $68,460. Quebec - Bagotville, addition .and alterations to federal build-I ‘ling, J . O. Lambert, Quebec, $41,- 078; Sept-Iles, wsh-arf, Gulf Mari- time Construction Ltd., Matane, $1,142,994. Cudmdre & Rush Plumbing and Heating Always at your service. 48 Douglas St. Phone 9550 Dredging Bonavista, N«fld., Babb Con- — struction Ltd., .I-Iarbouir Grace, Nfld., $31,125; \Baileys Brook, N.S., R. A. Douglas Ltd., New Glasgow, N.S., $7,544; Dingwall, N.S., Maritime Dredging Ltd., Charlottetown, $55,500; Buctouche, iN.B., Dennis and Roger Leblanc, 7Buctouche, 61,560; Sorel, Que., Theode Robidoux Inc., Sorel, $10,- 725. I I I i i ‘. I I I I ' “BEST BY TEST” OUR SPECIALTY CHOCOLATE MILK Please ask us in advance MAY CHANGE NAME OTTAWA (CP)—A new name for the Canadian L-egion —- now officially known as the Canadian Legion of the British Empire Ser- vice League—will be considered by the le‘gioii’s national conven- SUNSHINE ISLAND DAIRY DIAL 4251 VW erected, but C h u r c hill later wrote: “He has the monument he would have wished in the thou- sands of plying fields crowded with eager young people every fine evening throughout the sum- mer, and one of the finest epi- taplis that any man could win- he gave more light to his country- men." SPECIAL CHINESE DISHES TO TAKE OUT Dinners from 11 to 7:30 Special Chinese Egg Rolls SUNDAY SPECIAL CHICKEN and STEAK ISLAND GRILL Dial 5228 r’ . noor orvoun LOVI I I JEWELLERS LTD. tion at Edmonton May 25-30. Do-i minion secretary T. D. Anderson; said Thursday the. convention,‘: held every two yearshailso will bel asked to consider again whether; to join the World Veterans’ Fed-1, ieration. V-E DAY I ANNUAL MEETINGS I I I CANADIAN LEGION L. O. A. L.0.A. Boyne Lodge Room GRAND ORANGE LODGES 0. OF P. E. I. Will be held THURSDAY. MAY 15th I At 10:00 A. M. All Veterans Are Invited To Attend V-E DAY CHURCH PARADE SUNDAY, MAY 11TH. Parade Will Fall In At Medals Will Be Worn PARADE HOME AT 9:45 A.M. L.O.B.A. IS LATE . . IF YOUR GUARDIAN . OR MISSED L.0.B.A. , St. Paul’s Hall Special delivery service missed. and a paper will be delivered right to your door. am. to 9:00 am. if your paper is 1949 “ °’ 6561 available between 8:30 I I I I at2 LEGION FUNERAL For our late Comrade. , ‘ on. H. M. MacKENZIE Attention Farmers: In stock aI 1. from Trinity United Church ED'S 173 Great George St. I DIAL Ed’s Slogan: “To maintain the P.I'I'Is For the Fastest Service in Town, Call serve — the goal for which we strive!" TAXI Charlottetown 6561 goodwill of those whom we ‘United which numbered around When he died at 58 on March 4, ‘- ' HOLD REVIVAL - The Rev. and Mrs. Lloyd Faul- kner of Minneapolis, Minnesota are holding revival services nightly in Calvary Temple Har- ley, Parkdals. This young couple have tra- velled from coast to coast across Canada in practically every state of the United States. Their min- istry has also reached Jamaica, Cuba, Mexico, and the Cayman Islands. Mrs. Faulkner was the founder and leader of Full Gospel Youth 1,000 young people from the Min- neapolis and Saint Paul area. She also served as music direct- Lets Men Take Wives To Sea Saturday, May 10,1958 The Guardian Page 3 Jollcoeur, Outremont, Que. _ All plan to continue their work in the wildlife field. Mr. Erskine will conduct research into the life B.C. water fowl, and Mr. Stiven will do research on the sooty grouse of Vancouver Island. Mr. Jolicoeur will continue re- history of one of a species of- search on Arctic and sub-Arctic iwolves. SCOTS CASTLE Stirling Castle in Scotland was built in the 16th century -by iJames V, father of Mary Queen ‘ of Scots. MR. PERRY F. HERE FOR 3 DAYS! ROCKWOOD Mr. Perry F. Rockwood: or for the raidlo and TV pro- grams of the Minneapolis evang- elistic auditorium. Mr. Faulkner whose widely ac- cepted ministry as a speaker at gelist will be the Guest Speaker at the Charlotte- town Bible Chapel, May 9, 10, and 11th. SPECIAL Music Solos and Duets by Mr. Joseph Wootton and Miss Stella Jarema with Miss Beryl Grant at the Ham- Well known Radio Evan- MONTREAL (CPI —— Capt. P. Eibo Hansen has a seafaring cu-, pid aboard his Norwegian cargog ship Sunvictor. Rather than lose good crew- men to landlubber's jobs when they marry, he let's them bring their wives along on Atlantic voy- ages. 0 “Many young men are at- tracted to the sea,” he explained in port Wednesday. “But, natur- ally, sometimes cupid interferes." So he hires the wife as a stew- ardess or cook. Three of his pres- ent crew, including his third mate Arne Andreassen, have their wives aboard the ship. They are all from the Sunvictor’s home conventions, Cam-p meetings, and youth rallies has been a blessing to thousands, ministers Word and prays for the sick every night at 7:30 except Mon- day. This Gospel team features a great musical programe on piano organ, and accordian with vocal solos and duets. Pastor Victor Jackson extends a personal invitation to you to attend these meetings-beginning May 13th. port of Aréndal, Norway. “The arrangement works very well. The w:ives are good sailors and do their work well. The hus- bands are happier and more con- tent. Best of all I have a full crew." Give Wildlife Scholarships VANCOUVER (CP) —— Wildlife conservation scholarships have been awarded to four University of British Columbia students, Dr. Ian Cowan, head of the depart- ment of zoology, announced Wed- nesday. Awards were made to Anthony J. Erskine, of Halifax; Alan Sti- ven of Fredericton; W. N. Hols- God's, mond Organ. I ORDER OF SERVICES Saturday May 10th at Charlottetown Bible Chapel 8:00 p.m. Sunday May 11th Charlottetown Bible Chapel 11:00 a.m. Sunday Afternoon May 11 Montague Bible Chapel 3:00 p.m. ' ‘ Sunday Evening May 11th Charlottetown Bible Chapel 7:00 p.m. RADIO RALLY Mr. Perry F. Rockwood and his team will be holding an after Church Radio Rally at the Queen Charlotte High School Sunday at 8:30 p.m. worth, Benalto, Alta.; and Pierre Moore 3. Mcusoo LTD. ’ HAS THE NICEST GIFTS 5 FOR MOTHER Remember Mother's Day. Sunday. May Ilth. The younger you are the easier it is That’s what the middle-aged “duffers” say on the golf course when a teenager breaks 80 for the first time. . / It’s the same story with family protection. The younger you are when you first arrange it, the more likely you are to be insurable. And the younger you are, the lower the premiums, too. The Mutual Life of Canada is helping thousands of young Canadian: , plan for future security. Talk to a Mutual of Canada man soon I and he’ll show you how Mutual’s outstanding dividend record really pays ofl_for the young man on his way up. A\\\\\ F’ Branch Office: Bank of Nova Scotia Bldg. Charlottetown, P. E. I. J . Eric Shephard, Branch Manager \\ <3i..M-.I_w_A.Li--=_E ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA -Isrmisum nu, nun omen: urnnoo, cm. W E \\ Ph. 3734 ‘ ' Representatives: J. E. Devine Cyril Gallant J. W. Crosby Allison Gill Magdal§i1mI‘sI:itds, P.Q. M“d°“'l”'"‘ E. J- Mc0ABE Albert Gallant c. 0. min. Charlottetown Rustic» o’Leaq