— Fa lea otea eated PLAN- CENTENNIAL VETERAN’S WEEK Provincial. President, F. Pius Smith will hold a- meeting of representatives —of all. service clubs in P.E. at which the \ outline’ of the. proposed events Some delegates recently met in Ottawa to discuss and draw up plans. for the Roya} Canadian .Legion’s Centennial Year Veterans Week, schedul- ed to be held June 11 -fo 17. for the week will be given 7. ) > ") > Oo se attending the 1967 On Thursday evening Three of the se alte riding . Victoria 52 73 . WEATHER Edmonton .....- 69 f : Saskatoon 51 74 * -TORONTO (CPi Tempera- Regina eset 8 75 tures TONER ob cacsce ns 67 89 Low overnight High Tuesday Montreal ........- 68 4 Dawson 33 81. Quebec 63 85 Snag ae 46 82 Fredericton Ss 8 Vancouver .:...- 52 74 Saint: John 52 78 fe fo fe ae SP Oe » WATUSI! SWIM! DOG! THE MONKE HITS! TUNES! . | ~ RECORDINGS THE: HIP-EST. HAPPIEST “SHOW EVER FILMED! AT DUSK (gait ya heer the mug.» ya Meet the Wai ail Ya foe) great 60-60 Gals Mero Gocowne Maveh pee AS Karman Prooucron / £ / '¢ ‘- f Mary Aw Mos ¥ 7 (rao Everen- a \ ~ JowO Bre. ; Four Lins Picrome «be Me rec SUB Today Thursday SHOWS 2:30-7-9 PENSE! a / SIDNEY POITIER so ANNE BANCROFT ARE GIVING THE PERFORMANCES OF T SHADER THREAD, ‘ ! PARAMOUNT CTURES ces OWECTED BY wCED ar CHEN AL ON DoE OOK ner etcrmmenn ee he II IIIS PELL Le ee * sy | HEIR LIVES IN | the Ottawa sessions were, (LEFT TO RIGHT) Provin- cial Secretary V.E. King; pro- vincial President “Smith and K.M.. Johnston, DVA_Djstrict Administrator, Charlottetown Moncton 57 81 Halifax 55 72 Charlottetown 62 78 Sydney 58 80 Yarmouth §2 77 St. Johns, Nfid 59 77. Boston : 72 95 New York 77 8 Miami 78 6 - New Orleans a) 4 Tucson 80 % \Los Angeles ‘ 39 74 HALIFAX (CP) The wea ther Office says although skies will become sunny —in-——most places._this morningclouds—will ‘gather this. afternoon. Scattered showers and a few thundershow ers are expected in the late af- ternoon and early evening in | most localities. - The passage of a disturbance through the Maritimes Thursday will bring clearing to all regions by evening. Regional forerast Annapolis - Valley, Nova Scotia, Cape Prince Edward Island, | Brunswick: -Sunny and warm ibecoming cloudy with showers jand a few thundershowers in the Lafternoon;—winds~ licht increas- ing this Morning to southwest /20; low-Hizh at Kentville. and |New Glasgow 60-85, Svdney 55 Tand: 83, Charlottetown 60 and |78, Moncton -and Fredericton 6 and 85, Saint John 3% and 75, Edmundston and Campbell- ton 60 and 78: outlook- for Thursday, afternoon clearing: J temperature change : | High tide today at Charlotte- town 6.30 a.m. and 7.59 p.m. At {Rustico at 2.11 a:m. and 1.41 p.ma-Summerside tide eighteen minutes later than Charlotte- town. Sun rises today at 5.54 |a.m. and sets at 842 pm. All times ADT. Northern Breton, 4 | Funeral For Father Gillis The funeral for Rev. Dr. Ber- nard Gillis took place on Tues- day morning at St. Dunstan's Basilica where the —Requiem Mass of. Concellebration was celebrated by Most Rev.’ Mal- colm A. MaeEachern, Bishop of Charlottetown assisted by Rt. Rev. P.F. MacDonald, V.G., Rt. Rev. William Simpson, Very “Rev. FJ. -Maloney, C.Ss.R. and Rev- Walter Reid. The Masters of Ceremony were Rev. Faber MacDonald and Rev. -Robert- MacDonald. Rt. Rev. P: McMahon delivered the eulogy. : ; The following priests were pre- sent in the sanctuary: Msgr. J. 'A>-Sullivan, Msgr. R. McMahon, Msgr. G.A. MacDonald, Msgr. P.F. Hughes, Msgr. J.P.E. O'- Hanley, Msgr. J.N.- Poirier, Rev. M.J. Rooney, Rev. Robert MacDonald, Rev. David Me- Tague, Rev. U. Gillis, Rev. Ben- nett MacDonald, Rev. Arthur Pendergast, Rev. F.L. Mullally, Rev. FW. Bolger, Rev. J.W. Pineau, Rev. Patrick Walsh, Rev. Leonard McKenna, Rev MacDonald, Rev. Reginald Mac- Donald, Rev. .C.J. McCarthy, Rev. Eugene. Murray, Rev. Clar- ence Roche, Rev. -Harold ken, Rev. Wilfred Keefe, Rev. O.P. Wood, Rev. A.P. Macdon-. ald, Rev. . Preston Hammill, Rev. Edward. Steele, Rev. Owen By JAMES NELSON OTTAWA ‘(CP Would yeu = to make more money¥-bv pris enterprise than his fellow cab-~ drivers working for the state . That is being done—in Bel- grade under new economic re goslavia, says a noted Canadian week there delving into what seems to be a new Communist revolution of the quiet sort O. J.—Firestone, vice-dean of social sci8hces at the University of Ottawa and formerly »p } flight economic adviser to the { Canadtan government, also jfound -thesé® developments * startling in the context of a Marxist society: . , —State - inspired enter prizes which can’t make a. profitable and competitive go - of it are being allowed to go bankrupt. —The egalitarian principle of equality of incomes is go- ing by the boards; and work ers_are being paid on incen- tive rates reflecting their pro- ductivity. —The collec tivization of farm lands is being stopped, and people with smal! land holdings are being encouraged to Sell produce at the best ag they can get on the mar LOOKS TO WEST “Yugoslavia has hecome _tn- ternational - oriented, outward looking.f{o the West rather than inward’ or Communist-oriented only,’’ the 53-year-eld— professor and consultant said in an inter- Sail Boats To Shediac A squadron of Charlottetown Yacht Club sailing cruisers leaves independently this mern- ing for Shediac,"N.B. and the starting line of the annual North- ‘umberland - Strait sailing race between Charlottetown and_ the New Brunswick port. Last year New W.D. MacDonald, Rev. Allan |the race started in Charlotte- town and finished’ in Shediac, so ithis year the finish line will be here. The yachts from New Cro- }Brunswick and Prince- Edward \Island leave the-starting line at |Shediac at 7.30 Friday evening, Given a-fair breeze, early finish- ers should be sailing through the gap into Charlottetown harbor Quiet Revolution Is Changing believe that a taxi driver-in-a Communist state could impor! his own -foreign-axntemo! |: ” it on the streets of a Commu nist capital city, and be allowed | form which is spreading in Yu- pri economist who. fecently spent a m “in a textile. mill now receiving them. : . Yugoslavia * on his’ veturn from. pre- ‘ada ‘would charge wages. and senting a paper to the Yugoslav-salaries as well as other ex- ; e for Economy ang bor- penses~ to” its gross sale and Affairs in. Belgradé compute a net income’ or-protit he’ asked one high- charges only its other expenses Communist theoretician to sales in Yugoslavia, and then ntroduction of some |divides its profits between re- principlés of a_ free enter- investment’ in expansion and economy squared: with workers’ incomes st socialism The taxi driver can, “if -he given the frank an- wishes, invest his own money in mat-experience had a foreign car—French Pugeots that state planning can cost $5,000 at the official rate of bogged down in too. exchange. By showing . enough ich detail and too great an ef- |enterprise to work longer- hours fort to direct the economy from |and charge premium rates for Instead, the planners |the somewhaf more. luxurious vy concentrate more on broad |Service,.he can meet his costs and objectives, and tend’|and pocket a profit oe: price—and market forces} On. a visit to the University supply and ‘demand play a-of Belgrade, Mr. Firestone dis- placed baste pr Mary He swer ved become the tor c p to let fy , —— eer role } jcussed his own special field. Some of the pringjples of the jeconomics, ~with his. opposite - few economics of “Yifgoslavia number and asked’ to see the are to pave the way ‘for llibrary. He found there most of 2A freer and economie- |the same basic reference books ally more expedient distribu. jin English. that the University -tion_ pf capital’ accumulation of Ottawa has here... fhrolkgh the market and = For its cou in international economics, t¢t University ’of |Belgrade uses a Czech text and an American text, the latter one the same as Mf. Firestone “uses here prices ‘ee Income distribution ae- cording te work performed —"A ‘freer action of the laws of the market__. .” “Elimination of undue 1h ee ah d sary stra- we_mreraee woe nou | MiPs REQUEST of foreign -trade (Continued from page one) exchange.”* and — foreign * | ‘leads inevitably to a ines” of CAN DOUBLE INCOME democratic- freedom.” Mr. These quotations,are from a | /%0™Mpson was convinced that report presented to the Central |! the public knew the eventual Committee of the League ot °° of ithe plan “they wouid Communists of Yugoslavia last |TeJect it. vear—as—a—forerunner to adop- In— proposing —hisamendinent, tion by, the National Assembly |Mr. Batdwin said it was time of the new economic reform. © | governments told the people ex- >How does -the ‘new economte | actly what each ‘new welfare | ‘reform-work in practice?” ~program-—would--eost- and then Mr. Firestone says a worker @8k whether the people wanted the equivalent of -§100 a month | Original estimates of costs of in dinars at the official rate of government programs_were ai- exchange—or $300 a month in | ways well below the actual cost. | terms of Canadian earning | The result was increased taxes | power—can double that if he|for the small consumer. moves to metal-working where| Jack — Davis (L—Coast-Capl- | productivity is higher. llano) compared doctors who | An enterprise which in Can- loppose- medical care to sep bi - | aratists They didn’t —propose CIT Y AREA ;eoncerned about ‘an imaginary | problem.” : The Commons lacked a quo- jrum of 20 members throughout _ ELLIS FUNERAL — The fu- |ping to 14 in the 265-seat House | neral for Lester Ellis of Donald- | as Mr. Davis spoke. E ston was held on Tuesday, July | SEES PITFALLS j 12. from. the’ Cuteliffe Funeral} pr. Lewis Brand (PC-—Saska- by Rev. Donald MacLennan, as-|the same pitfall_as the one that sisted “by F.E. MacPherson. | set up medical care in Saskat-: | Hymns sung were “The Lord’s | chewan—it was trying to. guar- My Shepherd” and “Abide | antee availability of physicians’ | Eastern and Centra! Distticts ' Island News Page The Guardian, Charlottetown, Wed., July 13 1966.° 5 objective of tHe Conservative |pro\ ive to be rec- party but he doesn’t believe a on¢ile: the program. see comprehensive —-medical care Sta! Knowles (NDP—Win- program is going to be in op- nipeg ‘ Centre). said it had . eration next year. taken t rals just 47 years The type of program would to a plank in thelr depend._on the provinces and 1914 plati . Mr. MacEachen’ would cer-| He press government to tainly have to ‘“‘come to grips’ go ‘‘all ¢ ’ before the with Alberta before implemen- summer recess and said Mr. . tation MacEachen n effect prom- “Consultative federal- ised -this Studies .of ‘medical ism"*“weuld have.to be used to.care had . n made_for 3 the-utmost,’’ Mr, Dinsdale said years The. conflicting views of the ‘sit Koy TONIGHT ~ Mavor Moore and Eric House In An Evening of Comedy | A Selection of humorous selections from the great “Surely w ym ft ' Festival Ca ’ Club Comedy Classics, Also Picino Stylist Penny Loynd Membership Available at Door a Lecture Theatre Confederation Centre ‘fe are in a po- eee baret Howard’s Stars in Nutty Rev with : Theatre Confederation Centre of. Howard The Turtle —<—<—<——$—$—————— een od ue ~~ the Canadian Puppet | : ‘jin attendance in a body. -=re="Fhe~Bishop -MacEachern—As-— Sharkey, -Rev. D. Gallant, Rev ; i . *|sometime Saturday morning. P. Arsenault, Rev. Charles Che- The Charlottetown - skippers verie, Rev. James Smith, Rev. | and their boats are-——Fom ‘Ben: Reginald Phelan, Rev. Franct$|son and his oa Blue . Peter: Corcoran, Rev. Clare MacDon-|Bob Borden's Priscilla: Lou ald, Rev. A.J. MacLeod, Rev. |Johnston’s. Thrumcap: Art. ‘R- Ettsworth, Rev. LT. ~-Mac- |Love’s—Mystic; Wen MacLaine’s: Donald, Rev. F.J. Ledwell, “Rev-|Nanette: Walter Pickard’s Aeo- P, Murnaghan, Rev. L.W. Lan- |lus, and John Simmonds’ Lady drigan,.Rev. F. Cameron, Rev. Anne. A couple of the boats left K.C._MaeMillat, Rev. J-H. Le- |here as early as a few days ate Clair, Rev. C. Murphy, Rev. Ed- making a holiday cruise of it. mund Roche, Rev. Eric Robin, The main body was to set out to- Rev.T. MacLellan, Rev. B, Cro- day with departure times stag- ken, Rev. T.P. Butler, Rev. L.B gered from dawn through until Dooley, Rev. W. MacIntyre. ./n0on. A number, of power cruis- Rev. Lorne MacDonald, OMI, |¢Ts from the local club are also | Rev. Allan Noonan OMI, Rev. A. Making the trip across the | Gillis Strait and back; some of ‘them |. The Sisters-of the Congrega- (St7,°ing fuests and shore-bound tion of Notre Dame ~and the | Following the finish of th 'Congregation of St.Martha were _| f ora / : jrace here Saturday, -the prizes will be presented at 7 o’clock- -Saturday~ ; ene a tTnrere ~ ON- HOLIDAY City: police court clerk, Bert |Campbell left yesterday io | d his holidays in Torento aeniaitiargaeeai-be | filled by Charles Ready. PASSES AWAY The death occurred at the {Truro Hospital of Mrs: Fred | MacKinnon of Debert, N.S. She lwas the former Betty Phillips tof Newfoundland. Fred MacKin- non was formefly from’ Arma- | idale, PEI. MRS. COX RECOVERS Mrs. Walter —Cox, the P.E.. end, is reported making a satis- factory recovery following sur- gery Monday. Mrs. Cox is ex- pected to spend a. few weeks recuperating quietly. PUPPET SHOW Small but vocal fans°made a spontaneous — and | | META DAR MAES anes ‘ELIZABETH TAYLOR RICHARD BURTON wife of | A MOTION PICTURE RARELY, w= 2s. Sec IF EVER SURPASSED IN SUS- Hospital over the week- enthusiastic. BOSSE SEEEAS EA SLE DS sembly, Fourth Degree Knights of Columbus, under Worthy Pi lot D.J. MacAskill, formed the Honor Guard. Interment took place in the Catholic Cemetery where the service was conduct- ed by Bishop MacEachern. & audience for the Canadian Pup- pe: Theatre's. openingat--—-thé- Confederation Center -Monday a‘ternoon. Audience participa- tig is a vital factor in ~ this |year’s hilarjous new show, as i; the puppet shows of the past summers, and if Monday’s | audience is typical, then the | snow is a sure. success for the Festival of Music and Laugh- | ter.’ LOGGER MADE GOOD TORONTO (CP)—Dr. Bronius 8. Vaskelis, who worked as a ‘umberjack, carpenter and builder while studying -lan- guages at the University of Tor- onto, has been made head ef the languages. department at Lafayette College, Easton, Pa., after three years on the ‘staff. Dr. Vaskelis edits a Lithuanian publication. > . TONIGHT Through | Saturday @ Canteen Service @ Show at Dusk evening: will be a steak barbecue dinner, a concert provided by the regi- mental band of the P.E.I. Regi- ment, and a dance highlighted by a troupe of musical perform- ers from the Confederation Cen- jtre theatre. _TAKE A_TOUR ON. AMERICA'S ON Tours LONDON DOUBLEDECKER BUS" Pallbearers were Ar- thur Ellis, Cecil Ellis, William Youland, Harold Court, Charles | Reid. Cecil Miller.. Interment | was in Donaldston cemetery. —MURPHY FUNERAL — The funeral for Mrs. James Murphy was held Monday morning from | her late residence, 3 Spruce | Street. to the Church of the ‘Most Holy Redeemer. Requiem | High Mass was celebrated. by | her pastor, Very Rev. F. J. Maloney, CSsR, who also con- ducted the service at the grave. Present in the sanctuary were | Rev. Charles. McCarthy, ev. | Clifford Murphy, and Rev.. Wil- liam Cimmerford, CSsR. At- tending in a body were the man- jany solutions and they were ee the dinner hour, attending dip- Home Service was conducted |toon) said the bill would face With Me.” services. This effectively de- nied doctors the right of a pir- vate practice and that’s what | the -fight was all about.” Walter Dinsdale (PC—Bran- | said a medicare 7 plan for all citizens is a policy . Afternoon 2 and 3 p.m. Admission: Adults 1.00; Children 50¢ | ee ee agement and staff of the Co-op ‘Supermarkets._and-members— of the Co-op Housing project. I f bearers were Reginald Murphy, | William. Griffin, James Mc- Cabe, Alfred -McKearney, Rus- | Roman Catholic cemetery. eee teeomnennctananeyoae “EASTERN NORTH | LY AUTHENTIC leave the Confederation SS eee EY Confederation Centre a onight At 7.00-P.M.— The Ladies of The Provinces Confederation Parade — an lle Centre (box office door) Queen St. 10 a.m. —11:30 a.m.—1:30 p.m. 3.00 p.m.—1:30 p.m. City tours last one hour. Rates for city tours—Adults $1.90. Children under 12 years 50c. era. ABEGWEIT SIGH Charlottetown TSEEING TOURS Dial 4-9966 Se, Showing Tonight Sanora DEE BoBpy Darin s O D OCONNOR, boveyor eostaring A THBOT TREY STOR TET a == DRIVE-IN THEATRE OT SMa She’s a Career Girl—Bachelors are her Specialty! Show at Dusk eA sce tes Sean deaetameaniarerteiaataoeialies RRO ARCA Pic Rae 5 na emp omnia oer CHARLOTTETOWN SUMMER FESTIVAL 2 ee ANNE OF GREEN GABLES Barbara Hamilton - Peter Mews - Dean Regan 8:30 ‘A unique Historical Pageant recalling fashion modes of the Confederation MEMORIAL HALL Admission $1.00 at the door onfederation Centre AT THE” : ; and Jamie Ray as Anne teeeaineetd aed