LOBSTER CATCHES on Sat- wrday ranged near the 1,000- pound mark for a number of Tignish and Alberton fisher- men which is considered ex- ceptionally fine fishing from traps only one day in the water_A total of 27,000 pounds was landed at the Tignish Fisheries. factory at Jude's Point where the factory staff Wide: Variation In Lobster Luck The luck of the lobster fisher- men varied from excellent in the western part of the Island to poor*in the eastern section where operations were at a standstill because of ice which prevented fishermen from set- ting traps. Lobster catches Satunday ranged near the 1,000 pound mark for a number of Tignish and Alberton fishermen. A total of 27,000 pounds were landed at ._ the Tignish Fisheries Factory at Jude’s Point where factory staff worked until midnight pro cessing the large catch “This “haul-is-considered—excep- tional for only one day of fish- ing as traps normally do. not catch many lobsters the first day or so. It usually takes a week for any firm indications of prospects However. conditions were much different further east along the North Shore with Rus- tico fishermen hauling a few ~sters in that-area: DEATH NOTICES Received too late for Classified death notice column TREMERE - At the Prince Edward Hospital, May 9%. 1965. Mrs Olive Tremere. Hampshire. in her Wth year Resting at the Cutcliffe Fu seral Home from where funeral will ve held Tuesday with service commen- ting at 2 o'clock. Interment will take place im Hampshire cemetery ND At the Charlottetown Hospital. Sunday. May 9, 1965, John Golland ef Charicttetown and former. ly of East Point. His remains will rest ‘this evening at 7 o'clock at the Perry Funeral Home. Funera! arrangements be announced later f 2 > t his home in Hope River. Leo J. Reid. age 79 z i were transferred Funeral Home to from where the fu- place Tuesday morn- Ann's Church. Hope Solemn Reuiem High Mass Interment in the church | take ois ee tees zit il At the Victoria General Halifax, May 9, 1965, Mrs. 178 St Peters Road. er remains will rest at i i At | ber late residence, North May 9%. 1965. Mrs in her 7&h year Re were transferred from the An Funeral Home to the home of her “daughter. Mrs. tra McCoubrey, Cavendish. Funeral Tuesday, May 11, Cavendish United Church, with wervice commencing at 2 pm inter- ment will take place in Cavendish is ivf FLEMING -— At her home. 9% Dor- Street, Saturday, May &, 1965 Fleming in her 74th year the where the funeral will be Tuesday morning, leaving the fu- home at 845 for Requiem High at &. Dunstan's Basilica at 9 interment in the Catholic i i WESTERN FUNERALS ‘cents per pound. worked until midnight cessing the large catch. Alberton boat (above) a for the fishing grounds Fri- day with a full load of traps as the Ao season got un- derway. Practically all traps | are. ow on the grounds and Mrs. Marcia’ Collard” of Bea- j } | | consville, Que. arrived § in all early indications are for a Chari a tae aaeneee re record season. adjudicate the P.E.I. Dance Festival for 1965 which begins this ‘morning at West Kent School. : Official opening of the four- 4-H Speaking | Winners ~ which averaged one Are Named Heavy ice. moved into — the Covehead area and fishing con- ditions were at>a standstill Fri- day with no reports from that area as vet Some traps were reported set | in the Covehead East a 1“ st. districts during the first, two days but traps were not hauled either Almost parallel conditions ex> isted from Tracadie to East Point. A spokesman for the Mo- ‘rell Packing Co: stated Saturday that some boats were going out, but they were only running lines and.no_attempt was made to get ‘traps in the water. They thought it might be the middle of the week before they saw any lob- * SOURIS — Rev. J. J. Dunpag, St. Mary's Hall, Souris. Winners were: junior division, Anne Campbell, Ronelda Mac- Donald, Heather Rose len MacDonald, Mary Lou Mac- Aulay and Francis MacAulay; senior, Brenda Bennett, Loma Burke and Nora Avery. The contest, which had 27 en-| tries,was sponsored by 4-H clubs from Souris Line Road, Chep- ‘stow, Fortune, Little Pond, East ~-Baltic-and--Lakeville- Judges, were M. J. McQuaid, Milton. Fitzpatrick and William Acorn, MLA. Fishermen in the Souris area ran traps before ice settled in late Friday. Ice poles were tied on trap lines to prevent traps from being moved and lines re- maining fixed. The same conditions existed in the Naufrage and North Lake areas.with ice setting in Friday and remaining over, the week- tending more of the. meetings. 4-H Club pins were presented to each speaker by. the es and the speakers presented gifts to the judges in appreciate. for their assistance. Winners will speak at the Montague Saturday. was chairman of a 4-H _ publie| speaking contest held recently at: and | Dianne Dixon, intermediate, El-, The chairman urged parents to’ encourage cub ‘work by at-) Kings County 4-H Club rally in\ end” No traps will be set until the ice flow moves. The south shore fishermen were busy setting traps Friday and those in the Victoria region had set a considerable number but none were reported pulled as vet. The picture was much the same in the Murray Harbor district which seemed to be clear of ice due to north wester- ly winds which kept ice flows | clear of fishing grounds. Although lobsters were scarce over the weekend, a few Char- lottetown stores had obtained them late Saturday and were selling cooked lobsters at 9% the shortest notice, both from underground and from other in- stallations. SURFACE TO SURFACE Also new was a track- mounted rocket concealed in an armored pod. Experts said it) is a surface-to-surface missile ‘with a 30-mile range. There were many more sur- face-to-air rockets than in prev- ious Red Square parades and more than 100 tanks, including 20 of the latest T-62 tanks, inever before shown although they have been in service since 1963. There were also anti - tank Charlotietown Funeral | GALLANT FUNERAL — The ‘funeral for J. Cyril Gallant was held Friday morning from his «late residence to the Immacu- late Concevtion Church. Well- ington Centre. for Solemn Re- quiem High Mass celebrated by Rev. Leonard MacDonald: dea- con. Rev. John Cash: Subdea- ton, Rev. John Kelly. Rev. _Ir- vin Gillis was seated in the sanc- tuary. Pallbearers were: Archie Arsenault. Harold MaclIntvre, Herbert MacQuaid, Jack Bar- _ low. Glorice and Augustine Gal- lant. Interment was in church cemetery. LACKY FUNERAL — The fa- neral for J. Wilfred Lacky was held Saturday afternoon from the Compton Funeral Home to St. Mary's Anglican Church, Summerside, where service was conducted by Rev. Robert Tuck. Hymns were Unto The Hills and The Strife Is O'er. Organist was Everett Penwarden. Pallbearers were: Edward Foley. James Connell, Judson Rogers. Claude tves. David Morrison and Mor- ev Bell. Honorary. pallbearers were: Lowell Hancock, Leslie Simmons. Arthur Allen, A.A. " Tony) Williams, RSP Jardine and Sinclair McKay Interment was in Peoples Cemetery. c Rina missiles, bélieved to be new, mounted in fours on the backs /of scout cars. After the parade, Russia's elite gathered in the Kremlin Palace for a reception. In his reception speech. Bre- \thnev said ‘‘there are still RUSSIANS (Continued from page 1) evil crimes,’’ including the use of gas “No other country in the world has such rockets,” aj) sis : Moscow television announcer ee thee a cana ener told an estimated 40,000.000 : armed forces ‘“‘have everything viewers in eastern Europe. The \necessary to rebuff an enemy.” Soviet communications satellite Molniya I also carried the pro- gram to Vladivostok, 6,000 miles to the east. The giant 117-foot rockets consisted of three parts joined together only by thin struts. For about half their length they resembled huge cylinders, with a flat rear end and a rounded nose. In the middle was a sim- ilar but shorter cylinder. Also unveiled for the first time were three-stage inter- continental missiles powered by solid fuel. Tass said they are simple, reliable, fully auto- mated and can be launched at WESTERN BRIEFS HOSPITAL PATIENT Shirley MacArthur, Atberton, is a patient in the Prince County Hospital. IN. HOSPITAL Mrs. John E. MacKay, French River, is a patient in the Prince County Hospital, Summreside. sale to be GROUND galore. = Dance Festival Bi, jy Has Wide Range Of Credits day festival will be held at 7 o’clock this evening. Mrs. Collard has adjudicated | for the past 14 years throughout | Canada and parts of the United States. She has adjudicated in | ‘such places as the Canadian Na- tional Exhibition, Toronto, the Pacific International Champion- ships in Victoria and Nanaimo, B.C., and n Vancouver, Edmon- ton, Saskatoon, and Southern California. This is her first visit to the | Island | Mrs. Collard is an adjudicator ; ' of the Scottish Official ~——* of Highland. Dancing and a or of the Canadian onficial Board of Highland Dancing. She teaches Highland dancing in Montreal. One of her poate was West Scotland junior chamipon in 1963. = anater won the junior overseas cham- pionship. my ISLAND NEWS PAGE Western And Central Districts The Guardian, Charlottetown, Mon., May 10, 1965. 3 Play By Tignish Hig Cops Western Final TIGNISH — The Tigsish play Aunt” and “The Pampered Dar- “The Hills Send Off Echoes”, ling”. - Cars Collide At Richmond SUMMERSIDE — The local detachment of the RCMP report- ed one accident over the week- end. A rear-end collision involving _two cars. driven-by Clair Cam- eron of South West -Lot 16, and Howard Gaudet of St. Louis, was | reported at 2.30 p.m. yesterday at Richmond. The two cars were travelling east through Richmond when ithe accident occurred. Mrs. Gau- ‘det, a passenger in the Howard — car, suffered a severely ankle. imately $400 — $500 da- received between the — mage Membership Is Tripled _ Sunday ee UC Special Service The’ service was conducted by |- Ricky Hardy. Portions of Scrip- ture were read by Diane Hardy, | Heather Currie and Hardy. Charlene Fraser and Carolyn Fraser led in prayer. The offering was received by by Douglas Fraser. A story for the younger child- | ren, “‘God’s Room,” was told by | | Earline MacAllister and | | for theolder pupils, “God I | She Hewmt OF Neness,” ‘and. the pr led. “A Gift For Mother." REPORT FIGHTING BEIRUT. Lebanon ‘AP'!—The Iraqi army is fighting Kurish. tribes in all five provinces of’ northern Iraq, reports reaching Beirut from Baghdad said Tues- day. Wounded troops were be- ing brought to Baghdad by train and helicopter, the reports added. There was no confirma- tion from the Iraqi government. Earlier reports said the north- ern war began April 3. - ATTENTION USED CAR and TRUCK BUYERS DON'T MISS STEWART MOTORS LIMITED mammoth used car and truck at the CHARLOTTETOWN EXHIBITION May 12th to May 15 inclusive. MAKE YOUR PLANS NOW - to bring the entire family and attend this great sale. OUR ENTIRE STOCK - of approximately $75,000 worth of used cars and trucks will go on sale. Everything must go, so there'll be bargains a . == Of Citizenship Council : io etn ote west’ “The Pen of My Aunt’. by O'- ‘WO cars. ern zone of the provincial dra- Leary regional high, was direct- Beale tise teen tideecte ex |Stecchare cf Gx coat ease’ WEATHER judicator Mrs. Helen Roberts of ' Members of the cast were: pd Halifax as the two-day presen- zabeth Platts, Ariel Lacky. tation of four plays was Murphy and Liovd Oatway. — TORONTO ‘CP) — Tempera- pleted in O'Leary Regional Pampered Darling” by Mis- ‘ures: School Saturday night. couche regional high. was direct- : Min Max The Tignish play won three ed by Sister St. Yvonne. Mem- Dawson . -.....-..- aS other awards as well: best di- bers of the cast were: Carolyn Prince George ...29 6 ‘rector, Aubin J. Gallant; best Poirier, Barbara Ann Malette, Vancouver’ ..... -- “a actor, Kevin Perry; and best Syivia Gaudet. Guy Doiron, Victoria - -..-..---- 6 38 ‘supporting actor, Terrence Ar- Frank Gaudet Cecilia Des- Edmonton ........ a. 2 | senault. Roches, Leona Fougere, Rose C#/gary - ---------- = | The other member of the all- Anne Richard, Earl Ar Regina cose eee 2 8 jmale cast was Bernard Toues- Mark Presseau, Gerald Mc Winnipeg... .--- xo 8 nard who received commenda- gall. Toronto a neee ssa 80 -tion—for—his—splendid—perfor-<—Two plays were presented Fri- Ottawa _—---.++.-: 57 81 mance. - day-night--““The Tempest” tact 2- Montreal ——-.«++++---51 78 Tignish now advances to the ‘Scene 2. directed by LJovd Sim- Quehe: Sceleeea 66 finals at Confederation Centre, mons by Athena’,Regional High Fredericton veer M2 70 © Charlottetown, Sefurday. May Schoo! with Rosslyn Shaw, Dji- Saint John ae : 30 15. ane Laughlin and Bill Essery Moncton 37 — awards ogg ed and “The Hills Send off Ech- en = vi presentations, O° oes” presented by T te- r ~ 3 itt mdeliae lee - os Aunt” presented Saturday night; Master of ceremonies was Yarmouth ........40 49 best actress, Carolyn Poirier in Earl Jelly of O'Leary. MES eee | 53 “The Pampered ae, by Awards were presented by Boston rary vee a5 | Miscouc! Regional igh Ron Irving, director of drama New York ....-...- 38 78 School; best ae ac- for Prince Edward Island Also Miami - « cee-on etd 87 tress, Elizabeth Platts in “The on the platform as an observer New Orleans ..... 69 a6 Pen of My Aunt”. was J. Eric MacGregor, presi- Los Angeles ... ,...— 75 Plays | presented Saturday dent of Prince Edward Island 52" Francisco . 43 61 {night were: “The i .of My Drama Festival Association. $542 PAX — (CP) — The wee- ther . office says drier airgis pushing south across New Bruns- wick and was expected to reach mainiand Nova Scotia before Sone forced back again by arm moist air from the south. \ Pr aagrecncab which will be ing toward New Brunswick oe may bring a fresh crop of showers into the western re- = by late this evening. ‘égional forecasts: ‘ By BRENDA LARGE gional and internationa! inte- boar WS Eastern Shore: | OTTAWA (CP) — The Cana- gration of states. Cane Bret ca oe ae ‘dian Citizenship Council has The citizenship Counci! pre- ve. on, ‘more than tripled its individual sented its annual awards—in- Island Cloudy, with a few | membership in one year, J__T. Thorson of Ottawa told the council's annual meeting Satur- +—Me. Thorson, 76-year-old—for- |mer” Exchequer Court _ judge, ‘Said the past year has been “one of great activity” for the ,council, which was founded in |1940 as a national voluntary or- | ganization to promote the ideals \of Canadian citizenship. | Earlier on Saturday. Mr. |Thorson was re-elected presi- 'dent of the council for a second one-year term. He said individual member- iship in the council had in- jcreased from 191 “in” April,-.1964 to 533 im April, 1965. “Our organizational member- ship is in a very healthy state too. We now have 89 national or | provincial groups’ — with the council.” j TO VISIT MARITIMES The council president has tra- | velled over 11,000 miles since last December on a speaking tour which has taken him to all | parts of Canada except the! Maritimes and Quebec. He will visit those areas this fall. j Professor Dallas W. Smythe. ' chairman of the sdcial sciences division at the University of Saskatchewan, was the keynote speaker at the council's annual meeting. which was centred around the theme “‘the citizen and \the mass media of com- munications.”” Prof.\Smythe said at the clos- ing banquet of the meeting Sa- turday that modern technolozy | used by ‘the communications j media could work towards re- _department of citizenship men’s Christian” Association made outstanding efforts wards the enhancement of citi- less than the past 10 vears. organization or influence.” NAVY, TAKES COLOREDS reds ‘people of mixed blood). from white aes HAS PNEUMONIA — — Charles Mountain, King Street, Summerside. is i! with pneu- monia in the Prince County Hospital. TIGNISH CARD PARTY A card party for the Tignish Sports Recreation was held at A Special Message To Fishermen Purchase that —_— this sale: NO PAY- MENTS UNTIL JULY. the Bernard Hotel Friday even- ing. Ten tables of 455 were in play. First prize of the evening was won by William Handra- han. Freezeout prizes went to Mrs. Thelma Harper and Mrs Boyd Bernard. The Women's Working Auxiliary of the Sports Recreation Association held a food sale in the co-operative store Saturday. AMPLE PARKING Great George Street COME ONE AND ALL STEWART MOTORS Ltd, The awards are presented ‘o- change in temperatures: “organizations which havé winds increasing by noon to to- programs that are national in scribed_beaver pelts—to-the-€a=——sunny periods—in-_afternoon:—fog~ nadian citizenship branch of the and immigration and the Younz Wo- patches clearing during morn- ing: widely scattered rainshow- ers ‘ending before—noon;—hittie— light northerly 15. Low-high at. New Canad2 durinz not Glasgow and Goshen 42 and 6), zenship in Canada durinz vi Sydney and Charlottetown 40 and 3. High tide today at Charlotte- town 7.47 a.m. and 7.29 p.m.-At Rustico at 3.32 a:m: later than Charlotte- town. Sun rises today at 6.03 tions unchanged by the storm. They will be trained separately am. and sets_at..8.16 p.m. All January had fallen four off the times ADT. ‘Cancer Victims - Watching Trial © By EARL AYKROID ' are on trial charzed with fraud CHICAGO ‘AP)—Cancer vie- and conspiracy tims across the United States , Since the start of the trial~ are watching developments in a April 27 in US. district court. and 2.07 | The South African Navy re- p.m. Summerside tide eighteen cently started recruiting Colo minutes Chicago courtroom where the a jury of seven women and five sponsors of Krebiozen. a drug men have heard the drug, de- used by some cancer patients, scribed by prosecutors as hav- *+ing no value in the treatment be | of cancer and hailed by the de- Man In ured | fence as “the discovery of the 1 a.” patients, many af As Sports Car aa say the receive Krebio. zen regularly and depend upon it to keep them alive. take up Overturns most of the limited space avail- able in the court of Judge Juk ioe —-cysuio aS of Elmsdale is a patient in the They listen with rapt Western Hospital with, injuries tion as prosecutors “a received Friday night when his Prove charges contained in, a car went out of pops a @-coust indictment that cuses the drug's sponsors of curve at Alberton South and - conspiracy and mail fraud in its’ turned over pinning him undef- promotion and sale . neath the vehicle. Discovered in Argentina by He is reported suffering a Dr Stevan Durovic, a defend head cut and burns about the ant. the drug was brought te hands and stomach received the United States in 1949 and, from the hot muffler for many years has been a sub-. The car. a sports model, was~ject of controversy amonz its extensively damaged. ‘Sponsors. government agencies and medical. groups. Off AMA SAYS USELESS r Colonial Put The American Medical Assoe- eod ciation in 1951 termed Krebio- Knudson In L zen useless in the treatment of FORT WORTH, Tex. (AP)— j06ar = So eg gg A res ei ies bsg National Cancer Institute also: forced a 24-hour 7, * reported the drug was ineffec-5 final round of the $100,000 Colo- tive in Sones § of cancer nial national golf -tournament. 15 july, the government Intermittent rain coupled y.\nc4 the dros from distribu. with lightning and a tornado tion in interstate commerce but ‘alert forced the field to returm i+ si) is available in Mlinows, to the clubhouse twice. wheve-—-t—le—menafactared= a9 Headed by Canadian George pr_ Durovic Knudson. the players will at- The defendants say they have tempt Mondav to complete the never claimed that Krebiozen™ run for a $20,000 championship js a cure for cancer, only that paycheck. it is of benefit in treatment of © Knudson, 54-hole leader at- the disease : one-under-par 209, had matched On trial with Dr. Durovic, 59, regulation through two holes are Dr. Gage oneal Ivy. 72, chief ~ and was one stroke ahead of sci backer of the drug Bruce Crampton when play ‘or of medical re- ended. search at Roosevelt University, Crampton started the round Chicago: Marko Durovic. 64. a in a two-way tie with Tony lawyer and brother of Stevan, Lema at 210. Lema got a break and Dr. William F. P. Phillips, of sorts by the washout, having 52, a physician who prescribed slipped one shot over par at and administered Krebiozen. the. second hole. . If—play—is—resuiied—Monday,_{F-YOU-ARE-NOW TAKING + ab gprs an ning | A LAXATIVE ONCE, TWICE or - Al Geiberger, Don January.| THREE TIMES A WEEK .. MEM YOU suouo Buy BR ropart the Lazative Tablet with the GENTLE DIFFERENCE Take gentle-acting Nt... . Nature’» Remedy' There is no letdown, ne uncomfortable after-feeling. Mt is an all-vegetable laxative. For over 70 years, Nt has been giving folks pleasant, effective relief overnight. Chi Chi Rodriguez. Doug ers, Gardner Dickinson —e i Julius Boros Rodriguez opened with a birdie Sunday and parred the second hole to move within two ishots of the leader. Sanders also had picked up one stroke at the first hole and carded pars at Nos. 2 and 3 Boros. Geiberger and Dickin- son were even through the holes completed and their posi- pace. ecutar- * CHOCOLATE COATED - JUNIORS. , Why do smart comptrollers save money with Long Distance? THEY CAN FIGURE Have you ever compared the cost of a Long Distance call with the cost of executive time, secretarial time, waiting time? And shave you ever thought of how much more the directness of a conversation can do for you? Only the human voice gets through with all the meanings of the words, with a man’s personality and friendliness and humour—and only a two-way, spoken conversation can ~~ get immediate action! Maybe there is food for figuring here. Why not try a Long Distance call today; you'll find that words do so much more when they are spoken. & - Long Distance, the next best thing to being there Uj