- ter Fair. Woody. was . MacDonald by arriving home in them dasicelled holiday parties and ~~ % EAST RIVER DAIRY KING “Little York Farmers Have 2 Sires. ~ Nominated For Canadi Almon Wood ‘and Sons, Little Ontario bull in the artificial in- York" have had two of their re-|semination centres. gistered Ayrshire sires nominat- River Dairy ~ King . was ed for consideration as All Can- 'the t prize bull calf at. the adian. ' |Atlantie Winter Fair, Halifax Donholm Victory’s Woody has | land the reserve junior champ- | been nominated asa yearling ion. —~ ; bull. East River Dairy King has! Dairy King's dam, East River been nominated as a bull calf. \Fancy Girl, was the grand) It is unusual for one breeder champion Ayrshire female at to -have two animals nominated \Charlottetown this. year. The | from: his herd in. the one year. |Fancy Girl tow was third for The Woody bull, was the. first'|Canada in the list of ‘production prize senior yearling bull and |stars'’ which has just been re- the ‘grand champion at Charlot- |leased, Her production was close tetown in August. He was the se- |to 15,000 pounds milk and her _.cond prize yearling —bull_at— the-.combined— breed -chass “average Atlantic Winter Fair and the \for milk and butterfat was. 185. bull that beat him went on to; Dairy King’s sire, .Donholm become grand champion. Indeed | Betty's Star, has been classified he was grand champion later “Excellent” which is tops for last month at the Royal Winter | conformation, and he was grand <> 1 | SUMMERSIDE — This morn- ing a catechetical institute -con- sisting of a two-day series of lconferences and demonstrations ‘on the teaching of religion opens School. >| The inetitute, sponsored by the jrecently established St. Paul's Parish CCD, has as its prime purpose to better inform parents. and teachers of new texts and being used to “com. \municate- the Christian mes | ‘sage’. > \~ It will deal with the biblical liturgical approach to teaching | : |religion and will feature i |sbooe, sample lessons |assietant, archdiocesan pn sr ithe institute and several local j jexperts in the field of cateche- | \ties, will chair the workshops. | Mr. Payne, 77, is a native of Ottawa. He obtained his high | School education at St. Patrick's ‘College and studied philosophy | Five Charged To ‘58 Car SUMMERSIDE — In County | Court here Tuesday morning five | Borden ‘men were charged with wilfully damaging a 1958 Consul automobile, the property of Ga- - |vin Joseph Curley, to an amount exceeding .$50- .The--men were Leonard Joseph Noonan, Charles James Noonan, Donald Joseph Noonan, all of whom elected trial by 1 and pleaded not’ guilty;. James Eldon Ber- nard and Colin Patrick McInnis, both of whom elected trial by judge without a jury. Magis- trate W. Chester S. MacDonald adjourned al five cases for one week. 2 - Robert Francis White, RCAF Summerside, and Clarence Wad- dell, Carleton, were each fined $75 plus costs or 15: days for driving*'while impaired. John Chatles Folland, Carle ton, was fined $100 plus costs or 30 days for driving while his H- cense was suspended. David Lloyd MacDonald, Bor- den, was fined $10 plus costs or seven days for driving without due. care. and attention. ' Post Office jan: AWArd Employee in- | champion at Chartottetown im Dies At 54 | 1964. The Woods sold a\ half in- terest in this bull this) year @2) jonny Edward Creighan, %4, MacGregor Brothers of Pictou, an employee of the Charlotte- Nova Scotha town Postal department, “died (Monday lottetown Hospital. ' Sherwood Cow “re Tate Mr Creighan aa Just Misses before entering howpitel earier Class Mark «oak “ire Lego iat & cow owned by A. MacRae | After leaving and, Son, Sherwood just missed \topping her class for. Canada im | years at Hughes Drug Company the period listed in the current | where he made a wide circle of issue of the Canadian Ayrshire |friends. About seven years ago, Review. ‘he accepted a position at. the Fairvue Burton's Honey pro- local Post Office where he was |duced 13,824 pounds milk, 592 employed at the time of his pounds butterfat for breed class | death. . Queen Square ——t Fair, Toronto. - “Wallace Wood told the Guar-_. ae @ian yesterday ‘‘we are proud | of our purchase. of this animal. Passengers bought her calf, so we were run- | ging abit of a risk,.as the dam Of roupie herself.’’ T 0 * But this year Woody's mother, SAINT JOHN, N.B. (OP) — reserve grand champion Aye | @hire female at the Royal Win- | oe tithe arr pari gb Selwood Victory, a well known of here Tuesday, said there was 1 warning before the-.crash. laa said: “until we were dumped | on Fie floor.”’ ° only two years oid when we Had No Hint had not had chance to prove Donholm Supreme Candy, wae Joseph C. Rogers of Saint John, sired by | treight train. 16 miles northeast "We didn’t know a thing,"’ Rogers, who was in the lane ‘coach behind -the locomo- tive. id the train was ‘‘mov- f HOME FROM HOSPITAL Little Blair Dorsey was dis-" charged from Western Hospital Alberton on Christmas eve, an@ he spent a happy Christmas with | through the whole train,” but | fis parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Dorsey, Tignish. FROM TORONTO Everett Profit, Toronto, spent | Christmas .with his parents, Mr. | » , and Mrs. Car! Profit, Alma. a VISITS PARENTS | Helen Kennedy, Toronto was | from of them home on time to — Christ- | 5’ tias with her parents, . and | Mrs. Roy Kennedy, Waterford. | SURPRISE VISIT Diahne MacDonald, who is employed in Toronto, sufp! her parents Mr. and Mrs, Earl time to spend Christmas with wedding invoices, statements and _ all your job printing re- quirements. All “— guaranteed. i Stationery, AT CHRISTOPHER CROSS invitations, Mrs. Ray Handrahan and dauw- | ghter. Marie, along with her son Pau! and his wife of Boston) spent Christmas with her son | Leo and his wife at Christopher ! PARTIES CANCELLED Drifting snow and high winds GUARDIAN - PATRIOT CENTRAL PRINTERY get-togethers in Tignish on Box ‘ . ing Day (Monday) the IMT bus’ hi... Phone 4-8506 was. unable to make dts reguier | sont - ‘me landed bende-| javerages of 177 for milk, 184 for | The late Mr. Creighan was butterfat™ Her average test was | the son.of the late-Mr. and Mrs. 4.28 percent butterfat. The , Sn J. Creighan- He is surviv- cord was made as a satel 3 ed by his wife, the former Mil- year old. dred Costello of Charlottetown, Honey’s milk production- top- |two- sisters, Mrs. Charlotte Mc- ped Canada for the’ period. It |Quillan and Annie, New York, the cow that did top the class. |Charlottetown. A _ sister, Sélwood Ida topped the class on | predeceased‘ him. the strength of more butterfat|~The remains are. resting at Mary, ‘more than Honey. from where the funeral \take place Th KEEP TO TRADITION — 9.15 to the Church All Englhish—sovereigns~since (Holy Redeemer { \Edward 1 (13th century.) Have [High Mass at 9.30. been crowned in. Westminster | Interment will be in the Rom- 'Abbey. ‘an Catholic cemetery. the Most Requiem will hold their H reece at Miscouche “Regional Highs Teachers College and With Damage . |MiscoucheMeetingsBegin pe On Teaching Of Religio and theology at the University of Ottawa. He is studying for his Masters Degree in religious edu- cation at Loyola University. He is on the staff at. Ottawa also teaching in service training pro | gram to teachers of religion for parish schools of -religion. : A letter from St. Paul's sh to pastors, religious and lay of- ‘ganizations in Prince County on the forthcoming institute stated “We are acting in the sincere iconviction that many Catholic .the institute. . Ref set sig n oF of. — A program leaders feel the urgent need of ae To was presented | | toist), Mountemn™ end “S{iveriied by the Girlie’ Choral Club; rne Bells,” by the school chorus; “O Holy Night" by Eva Strang; “The Birthday of a King" by. Anna Rayner and Francis Phil- jdips: ‘Yuletide Night” and | “Christmas Hymn" by Barbara | Harris, Myrna Hardy and Janet ot | Craig: “Thy aLittle Ones, Dear | Neill (so- Linda MacDonald, Eva) guidance and programming is by students of O'Leary Region- | Strang and Cynthia Smaliman; | our attempt to adjust to the al High School_a few days before | Slee chances whiclt are taking lace oun & a~ few days before p” a) catechism texts and tec to attend the institunte which | will be climaxed by a banquet upon its .completion Thursday. A special invitation has been ex- tended to sisters, priests and lay 5 s i 8 & = = sland News Page tical office, Ottawa, will direct |? The Gaastien, Charlottetown, Wed., Dee. 29, 1965 CNR Employees Hurt ‘When Trains Collide. INT JOHN, NB. (CP). — in and equipment were work- ee to clear the CNR's main line [between Moncton and this port | city Tuesday night following a jmorning crash between a CNR }passenger train and a freight | train at Nauwigewauk, 15 niiles northeast of here. Two crew members of the pae- fered- a fractured’leg,_” lacera. tions and other injuries, and en- gineer Wallace Crawford of Saint John, who required treat- ment for shock. Mr. Beers jump- ed clear just before the crash. | An official said an investiga- tion has begun into the cause of the accident which occurred at | a switching point at 9.35 . a.m. School, he eee for many. was more than 2,000 pounds over_|and-one brother, Thomas .B., in iproduction. She had 3 pounds |the Hennessey Funeral Home will) morning at noe te Worship ‘Mayor : E ._. Walter J. Cox and Mrs; Cox : NEW YEAR'S RECEPTION «For Gentlemen - at -The City Hall on : | -Saturday, January Ist, 1966 |. | From 11:30 a. m. to 1:30 p.m. © - Gonire are requested to paseo calling eards. senger train were injured. but | AST. The. passenger train was the train's 65 passengers escap- |en route to Moncton from Saint ed with a shaking. A CNR | John while the freight train of spokesman said the line was ex- | 80 cars was standing idle on the pected to be reopened late Tues- main line. day night or early today. : A CNR spokesman at Moncton The passenger train, compris. | said the trains were scheduled to ed of three coaches and two oth- | pass one another at the éwitch- er units, replaced a regular one- ing point. He said the passen- car railliner on the Saint Joha- | ger train, which slowed down Moncton run before Christmas, | before the collision, was to have ‘A spokesman said the railliner | taken a siding while the freight is to go back’ into service when | passed. season traffie ‘‘falis| The passengers, most of them | off.” | thrown to the floor.by the im- “Injured in the collision were | | pact, were returned to Saint fireman Johnson Beers of Har-|John by bus and later trans- court, near Moncton, who suf-| ported to Moncton. Both locomotives were lifted |from theit wheels by the crash Craft Named | and hurled onto embankments beside the tracks. Other units For C.B. Lakes a —— OTTAWA (CP) — The navy’s| N. S. Needs 1 anti - sibmarine | ! ‘ hydrofoil ship due to be k k launched in 1966 will be named More S un s HIMCS Bras d'Or (Golden Arm). | be ae ; o will OLFVILLE, N.S. (CP) — ar tee experiments, car. A wildlife. biologist says Nova ried out by inventors Alexander Scotia could use more skunks. Graham Bell and F. W. (Casey) | Dr. Donald Dodds, head of Baldwin on the Bras d'Or lakes \Torsiay ware, "s6S3" Ghatak Uni- jon Cape Breton Island between | Ve sa t skunks— | 19M and 1920. |despite certain unpleasant’ qual- ; ities — are valuable in farm } ef | country because they destroy new, submarine -hunter | Piast popula will be 151 feet long and will my | erastically by’an outbreak of di- fa being) bulla: Geral; Ques, by (r2ne? more ‘han. 0 soso ame, Marine Industries Ltd. under a but the province could ve more contract awarded to de Havil- land Aircraft. of Canada, Tor. 2 Wem De .seid onto. gee [ A British - built 4 » ROYAL SECURITIES * CORP. LTD. 137 Grafton St., Ch’tewn A. M. Wilson, Mgr. 4-588 under direction of | the girls’ mi: their paar teacher, ques." old Over 100 persons are expected . Selneiens were Go Tell It Om | students; Mrs. Har- and “Silent Night’ by Choral Club; “What | \Child Is This?” and “God Rest | lYe Merry. Gentlemen" by the | sins; Jane — Elisabeth Plattg; Wonderland” | Jack — Leo Murphy. : “Winter ~The Yarmouth Castle Disaster For the 375. passengers of the ‘pleasure cruiser Yarmouth Castle, the is four day cruise from Miami to Nassau was-to-be a holiday. Just four- teen hours ‘after sailing, the news came through which was te shock “<< and horrify the public, The Yarmouth Castle had sunk, a burning hulk © a jand “White Christmas” led by the boys. ee Following. the singing by ev. eryone of “Jingle Bells,” and aa intermission, came the presenta- tion of a one-act play, “Whee Pop Reads The Christmas Ca- irol,” directed by Mrs. Johe Greer. The characters were: jw \nior — Paul Hdwkins; pop — Joseph Lynch; Mary — Carol Ann’ Hazelden; Paul — Lloyd Oatway; mom — Barbara Cou which-etaimed eighty-nine lives, This week, Weekend Magazine carries the full eyewitness story as seen by one . of the herges, a Canadian a i who survived — Terry Wise the third Purser from Markham, Ontarie. . John J. Butler, Comptroller tun @ue to the storm. oneal 4. é Seager Ea MR A i it OOS De Poo oat in tee i A hp TREN RAP ie ST WITH ~ WEEKEND 10° 4 MAGAZINE and Colored Comics STILL ~~ The Evening Patriot ec At All Newsstands ~