ME Mrs. Alban Farmer pre- sents to Louis Gaudet and Roy Vessey the trophy em- blematic of the men's pairs N’S PAIRS BRIDGE CHAMPS ehampionship for the Char- lottetown Duplicate Bridge Club. The trophy was won by Mr. Gaudet and Mr. Vessey in 1962. The trophy for the men's pairs championship is presented annually ' by and Mrs. Mr. Alban Farmer. Eastern And Souris Legion Reviews Year, Names Officers “Public Apathy Is Problem . For Prov. Safety Council Apathy on the part of the pub- | 500,000 persons have been killed | law and support the safety coun- | .576q by the branch was traffic accidents merica since 1899 and over 4,-| According to Mr. Meikle, the ning Trophy 000,000 persons: tjured: He~said+ couticit-ts seeking to -have-am-;~ -pye~yeyst Safety Council is faced with, ac- there were 4,000 fatalities from | endments made to the province's} traffic accidents in Canada last |traffie act which will provide! examination of lic toward the prevention of highway accidents is one of the eording to council George Meikle. As guest speaker at yester- day’s luncheon meeting of the Charlottetown Rotary Club, Mr. Meikle suggested that if acci- dent statistics could be present- ed in the terms of human mis- ery rather than as cold, hard facts “‘we would be more aware of our responsibility”’ in the pro- motion of highway safety. “What do we do when we read news reports of accidents?’’ he asked. ‘‘Do we shrug out shoul- ders, say ‘too bad’ and turn to another page?” He said ‘we might pay more attention if we could measure the sorrow of a chairman mother at the loss of her son,/Vince is rapidly becoming “‘in-| the grief of a-son mourning his | famous because of its highway) father, the pain-filled hours death rate. I have been told by spent in hospital or the depres-| some traffic authorities that it sion and misery of a young girl | is impossible to have a fatality- forced to spent the rest of her;free year in the province. life in a wheelchair as the re- won't accept the fact that one |Fire Chief Douglas Coffin pre-| Adams. The officers were installed by Bruce L. Stewart, provincial re- presentative, to dominion com- sult of some accident.” LOCAL BRIEFS HOSPITAL PATIENT Billy MacEachern of York Point and Charlottetown, is a patient at the P.E.I. Hospital. IN CITY HOSPITAL Mrs. Vince Gallant, 266 Syd-| Ordinary fines brought a total ney -Street, is a patient in the | of $41,527 in City Police Court, ‘clerk B.G. Campbell told City | Council in his annual report last, night. Court costs added another $3, @ patient in the Prince Edward | 994 and the dog tax $925. The totals, minus witness fees |and other disbursements, meant | $43,848 was deposited in the of- fice of the City Comptroller, an Charlottetown Hospital. Is PATIENT Mrs. Frank H. Watts, York, is Island Hospital. IN HOSPITAL Jeanie MacMillan, Cornwall, fs a patient in the Prince Ed- ward Island Hospital. IN P.E.1, HOSPITAL Mr. and Mrs. Sydney Sapderson, Winsloe is a patient in the Prince Edward Island Hospital. IN MONTREAL HOSPITAL Jean Tierney, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Tierney, Char- lottetown, has entered Montreal General Hospital for a heart setEs ? bende i z> al #2 ie a eatit i 2 i a x gF ] et| in A in North cil in its work. |year. “If we had a malignant for compulsory disease in Canada that took that | all vehicles when they are regis- many lives,” he said, ‘we would| tered and for a periodic examin- have a federal agency set up to| ation of drivers. “Once a driver find the cause. As it {s, the job| sets a license,” he said, “he is left to dedicated groups like|can always get one. If we are | going to lick traffic deaths, per- Mr. Meikle said “in this pro-|iodic examination of drivers is vince last year 33 persons were|one of the things we must killed in highway accidents. | have.” safety councils year ago those people sat in! their homes with no thought of ” | being killed. Unless the highway | death trend is changed, at least | 30 people who are alive today) | will be dead next year. And that is not fantasy.’ The speaker said that the pro- |person must be killed. According to Mr. Meikle, 1,-| years, perhaps 10, we can have| Routine business was carried |a fatality-free province. But it\ on with a short discussion on SA 7 will take the help of everyone to bring it about.” FETY POINTERS A number ‘of pointers in safe driving were given to the Rotar- ians by Mr. Meikle. These were: wear seat belts; drive careful- ly, obey the law and practice courtesy; turn headlights on at dusk; drive defensively, as if every other driver were a mo- : Teport infractions of the Court Returns {27 jin good condition. | In five | Show Increase js. Fire Brigade . To Acquire Ice Auger siding. | boring holes fire the = = is ee iu s 2 g 3 g 4 i i ef agi ra® ie Fe... i z ‘ei 1 i i shee tig § ecb} & é Following the regular Arthur firemen = - i * T\ the town hall last evening with | Protestant in the aEP . EL z ° ing a hockey meeting was held day night. ing a view of Souris Harbor. bringing the total membershi for 1964 to 234. The ‘blood donor elinic highi successful, for the year. ~ prowratr vr ea Gordon Cheverie. Executive: Harvey chairman; Thomas A. Fred Jennings, |W.E. Pierce, Bruce. L: Stewart, | | MONTAGUE — The regular |Frank Praught, Harold Poole, monthly meeting of the Monta-|Martin Birt, Donald Osborne; gue Fire Brigade was held in| RC Padre, Rev. Wilfred Kost: Padre Rev. Minor hockey saw 750 boys en- rolled while the newly- formed Charlottetown Figure Skating Club had 137 active members SOURIS — MB. Fitzpatrick was re-elected president of Sou- tis branch, Royal Canadian Le- gion, at its annual meeting Fri- spon- | winning the Man- “assets: t tance to needy veterans and) ory of the late John D. MacIn- past president of the | “ity. gpant-at-arms, Neil F. MacIn-| tosh; service officer Donald F.|hungers. It is, in a very real Campbell; secretary-treasurer, | sense, a way of life”. Central Districts The Guardian, Charlottetown, Tues., Feb. 2, 1965. 5 } ganization in the province to be- come. an international member of the Canadian Figure Skating Association. The 10-week life of the sum- mer playground season saw 52,- 834 youngsters take advantage of the slides, swings and other forms of entertainment provid- ed in various sections of the city. cl of the season was the Day at Memorial Field with some 500 boys and giris taking part. Mr. Fax noted installation of safety belts on swings and re- liable supervision had held acci- dents down to the remarkable low of only 17, all of a minor na- ture. Minor baseball attracted 325 boys from 6 to 16 with 90 boys junder 10 in the farm league; 104 | in Little League under 13 years; Among the highlights of the) and 49 boys under 16 in the Babe year's activities reported by the | Ruth League. Those over 16 president was the addition of 20 years old numbered 82 playiiig’ feet to Legibn Home command-} in a éour-team league. The two extra diamonds opposite Mem-| | A total of 32 new members| orial Field provided the much were received into the branch | needed extra playing space. P| Tennis interest increased with |70 youngsters taking instruction | | while older people betrayed a Y | deep interest with 40 men tak- ing part im a four-team men's! weil. = | formation .. a ladies basketball league as ISLAND NEWS PAGE Sunshine Follows Recreation Activities Blizzard Covered Wide Field A wide- ranging field of en-jand became the first sich or- deavours was revealed to Coun- cil last night in the annual re- port of James Fox, recreation director, when he outlined acti- vities from women’s basketball to summer playgrounds for chil- SYDNEY (CP) — A blizzard that dumped as much as seven jinches of snow on most of Cape Island early Monday the day as | Jan. 24. Breton ended later in abruptly as it arrived. Accompanied by winds to 59 early on the Monday before the miles an hour that piled drifts; first bulletin -was issued by his up to seven feet and elogged| physician, Lord Moran, on the several roads on the eastern! afternoon of Friday, Jan. 15, section of the island, the storm | the newspaper stated. — passed across Cabot Strait and| For most of the 13-day illness, moved into southeastern New- he was uneonscious. It was on foundiand The Island's coal mines normal production after storm abated. , Many miners | the newspaper said. the could not get to work at height of the blizzard. Bright sunshine followed ‘the | | storm and city streets were re- ported clear. RCMP: said main highways had been plowed. Air Canada reported can celled two early flights to Syd storm missed the rest of | aritimes, with only a few flurries in eastern Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island. But four to six inches of snow had | fallen on the southeast coast of | Newfoundland before dusk and | winds — were. reported between. 50-60 miles an hour in some e in Halifax es | caped the brunt of the storm along the Avalon Bi areas The weather said most of and winds Peninsula and the | that he spoke his last words, hee em Uh on ee nls ss Be < “4 Churchill's Last Words Are Reported LONDON (Reuters)—Sir Win- ston Churchill's last words be- fore ‘he died were ‘I am bored with it all,” a London -evening newspaper reported Monday. The tabloid Evening Standard reported the 90-year-old states- man spoke those words in the presence of his son - in - law, Christopher Soames, five days after be suffered the fatal stroke following which he died | } Churchill's final illness began | |Jan 15, when he was rather | gestless but without recognition, Record Claimed For Blue Marlin WHANGAREI, New “Zealand } | caught off Hawail | Surcharge May - Be Eased Soon LONDON (Reuters)—The con- troversial British industrial im- ast May. f 2 pl i Fe i i MONTAGUE Montague residents go to the polls | iv B i i ! f : i ? § | i in f a j Tt 3 i He L : i i 2 z e i , , ; : f 4 : f 7 i it if i t iif i of | ui : : #25 zg fi 5 bf F Fi i tt 2 = » v 2 e "a i Ht f I i : ef BRAZEL FUNERAL funeral for Miss Emma F ; i a i i i thir: it azel i, z i F ef i | ! i : i f : i i | | | alk F iy s > ”" » —_— ire: K Cor THe! i E | : + yr Hite a F f E gF li ay ug 45 : q iv zt F R RE: a z rs E : Fs | : . 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