ee ee Re ee ee eee eT 3 “yj The GuarMfan, Ciiarfottetown, ‘Tues, May 26, 19 ; , Cnt. tat pont anset of Mp tene/to term tel end Gedy ont the Nassau afterward benefit | bed littered chi al PS ost from the Mberal tax lowe here.|reihore’ tee utreng ‘tondee (daughter Nancy, wae charged Fghteen monte later de FEATHERS AND FIRE touch, with murder. — ar Os ek . He was found in the morning| TWe Prime guspect was his Naney sprang to her husband’s| | Dut havenond with his head smashed by three |Ftench-born son-in law. Count Al-|defence and after a sensational | American private detente, blows. An attempt had been made/fred de Marigny, busband of] trial, de Marigny ‘was acquitted. help with the ee ~ Stirs Nassau Gossip questions again are being asked. WOULD REOPEN CASE The renewed interest cs the most sensational unsolved|the intervention of a local pol- rt , Modern crime, .is|itical leader, Stevenson, sunny beaches of/secretary of the minority Liberal Progressive Party in the island’s House of Assembly. Stevenson last week put a resolution through the Assembly asking the govern- ment to reopen the investigation and to call in Scotland Yard to help. It was during the night of July 7, 143—a night swept by a howl- ing tropical storm and crashing thunder—that Oakes was killed. The vittim—worth an estimated $200,000,000—developed the Lake- shore Gold Mine in Kirkland Lake Street. A good crowd ttendance and all en- sant entertainment highes score went Hogan, and a con- on prize to Mrs. J.T. Arse- nault. Refreshments were serv- Mr. and Mrs. nault and Mr. and Mrs. Niel Mc- Nevin, Charlottetown, were Sun- day visitors at the home of Mrs. Urbain McGaudet and Miss Jos- ephine Gaudet, Tignish. A hearty welcome is extended to Mr. and Mrs. Edward P. Gaudet, who recently came from Halifax, N.S, to take up residen- HIGHEST PRICES FOR q:7g Ti. £ AND ALL GRADES Or METALS, ALE BOTTLES, HIDES AND SKINS: ce in Tignish. $4 .00 Mr. Vernon Gaudette was SCRAP 1 among the graduates from ‘Prin- ce Pe Vocational School, BATTERIES EA. received his certificate: J . in Welding. Congratulations are earners eee extended to Vernon by the resi-|} 455 Kent St. Opp. Eaton’s dents of Tignish. . wom t »* ‘TORONTO UNIV. PLANS EXPANSION Business and university offi-|Canadian Bank of Commerce, Dr. C. T. Bissell, university pre- sident, and M. Wallace McCut- cheon, vice-president and manag- ing director of Argus Corporat- fund-raising drive of which $12,- 600,000 will be asked in public appeal. Student enrolment is ex- pected to increase at the univer-_ sity to 23,000 from 14,000 in the L-O-N-G-E-R sell ALL ALL A/ew/ NL EN) aoe Sica Here’s where FINA leadership is born From one of the most modern refineries in North America 4 come the quality products that have established Fina as a leader. It features every latest refining technique... k ut = sre A cl —— MeKinnon por Mr. Me- cal few vanes. ae BATTERY ‘including the Alkylate Unit that makes Super-Fina McKinnon, president cteere — ey ee en possible — the only new motor fuel produced : Tignish, was elected to serve on q Rignlih, was slactod te sores #8 25 years. Another good reason why you should... | Letters, Photos Sought Of Least Known PM ~ OTTAWA (Special) —Wanted, to help fill an important gap in Ca- by Mackenzie from which, ft is said, no one has escaped. for Prince County. The rate pay- ers of this Tignish district and members of the Tignish Home and School extend hearty con- gratulations to Mrs. MacDonald, and all feel she will fill this po- sition in a very fitting manner. Mrs. MacDonald is also Division president of the Catholic Wom- en’s League. For a new kind of battery — built to supply the power pee of = muni og seas guaranteed to last Power insist on Burgess all batteries — ~ onl Bur these five great features: . TT e Exclusive Chrome Protection turn in at the sign of leadership / «drive out with nada’s early history, any old let-| STUDIED OBSERVER Messrs. Elphege Bernard and| Sealed in $ . tr teel e- ters, photos, papers, speeches or! Thomson has worked his way | wajor Evans, of Fredericton, N. . f d aduveniers of Alexander MacKen- ee ae a. 7a ae B. spent the holiday week-end in e Guaranteed RADAR LITE con i ence we. Obeery Tignish and tried their luck at ¢ Leakproof Céande’s Sneet afl Z ; MacKenzie can rank as one of| Period Mackenzie stayed there. ose light — Canada’s least-known Prime Min- isters, though he ruled the coun- try for five crucial years. im- Confederation. treasure hunt,”” said Dale Thomson, 35, who is working on 350-page biogravhy of the dour Scot who carried the victory in 1873 on the the Pacific Railway and was ousted in 1878 ‘a devression as difficult as Mr: Thomson, who left his post with the Liberal varty last No- vember—he was formerly private ‘ gecretary to Louis St. Laurent— to work fulltime on the biography, now divides his hours hetween a summer cottage at McGregor 25 miles north of Ottawa. and the narrow book-lined aisles of the Dominien Archives and Perliamen‘ary Librarv. Research on speerhes for St Lavrent first drew Thomson to MarKenzie. “T wee teocing hork the hie toric princivles of liberalism in Canada.” he sald in an iInter- view, “‘and came to realize that manv of the ideas and ideals of MacKenzie could be usefully ap- plied to our times.” The problem looming larest In Markenzie’s dav was relatons with -Rrita‘n as the voune colony sourht to find a nlace in the sun. Perhans MacKenzie’s most Jest- ing achieverrent was to establich Canadian d-'evrates on an eaual rank with their British counter- parts in negotiations with the growing revublic to the south. WORK GOT BOOST ° Thomson’s work got a consider- able boost when a large store of papers and letters of the early Prime Minister were handed over to Queen’s University, Kingston, ; Robert Prime Ministers: | MacDonald, | but do not forget old friends left gain to ae lace “widotilim-aurier, Borden, Bennett and |behind at Tignish. ; Mackenzie King. Mrs. J. Foster Skerry was Mackenzie’s grandson. Her hus- ane civil servant in Ottawa, had planned to write a biography of his ancestor whef he retired. However, there are still some weak spots in the chain of. con- temporay material on Mackenzie, especially for his later years when, half-paralyzed, he stepped down as Liberal leader. site he studied was the jail buik 2 He is still looking for copies of Mackenzie’s own paper, The Lambton Shield, which ran for 18 months between 1852 and 1854. Other relics which Thomson is hoping to unearth are papers held by relatives of his second wife, Jane Sym, whose father was a farmer near Sarnia. Mackenzie came to Canada at the age of 20 as a sort of advance +| guard for his family. They fol- lowed three years later, includ- ing his six sons: Hope, James, Robert, Adam, John and Charles. He took te politics early and seriously. The son of Scotland can rank as one of Canada’s most successful politicians at the ballot box. He never lost a federal cam- paign and was defeated in only one contest, running for alder- man in Sarnia on a prohibition ticket. In looks and manner he was almost the prototype of the stern Victorian head of the household. He signed letters to his daugh- ter: ‘Your affectionate father, Alexander Mackenzie.” RIGID MORAL CODE Mackenzie's rigid moral code was probably the main reason for his downfall. Unwilling to trust any of his cabinet colleagues not to indulge in the, then rampant patronage associated with the Public Works ministry, he took that portfolio for himself and the dual role of Prime Minister and Public Works Minister wore down his energies making him an open mark for the rapier wit and par- liametary subtilities of Sir John A. MacDonald. It was in keping with his sense of what was right and proper that MacKenzie should have three times refused a knighthood for what he considered democratic principles. When fllness forced him to step down as Opposition Leader in 1880, two years after his defeat, Mackenzie mellowed and show- ed more frequently the flashes of humour and generosity which he had always kept for his in- timates. Themson’s biography, due to be published late this year or early next, will add to the grow- ing list of works on Canada’s TIGNISH Miss Susan Gaudet, Moncton, N.B., is visiting with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Gaudet, Tignish. Nine members of the Tignish held in Birchwood School. At this trout fishing. They report a good catch from the Tignish streams. Miss Elizabeth Gavin, Tignish, visited for several days with Mrs. Emmett Gallant and fam- ily at Christophers’ Cross. Potato planting is in full swing in this area at the present time and some farmers have sections seeded with grain: crops. Sincere sympathy is extended to Mrs. W.J. Gavin of Tignish in the recent death of her brother, Mr. Justin O’Brien. Mrs. Gavin is at present in Oklahoma, U.S. A., with her son,. Rev. Justin Gavin. The news of the sudden death of Dr. Urban Christopher at his home at Egglaston Square, Rox- bury, Mass., was received by his friends in Tignish with great sorrow, and to his sister, Mrs. Mrs. Ernest Wade, Belmont, eph Christopher, Arlington, Mass., all extend sincere sympathy. Mrs. Irving Mockler has return ed to her home in Skinners’ Pond after a two week period spent in City Hospital, Charlottetown, where she underwent surgery. Mrs. Mockler’s Tignish friends are happy to see her so well, and prove in health. Mrs. Wilfred Boyce, accom- panied by Mrs. John Smythe and Miss Doreen Harper, Tignish, motored to Summerside on Fri- day and spent the day attending to business. Mrs. James Christopher has re- turned from Ottawa, and has opened her home in Tignish. Mrs. Christopher spent the past six months in the Dominion Capital visiting yer brother, Mr. G.A. Ready. Mrs. C.A. Kinch has returned to her home in Toronto, Ontario, after a pleasant weeks visit with relatives in Tignish. Friends of the Kinch family (who left here a few years ago) were happy to meet Mrs. Kinch and were pleas- ed to get news from her husband Claude and their family. Mrs. Kinch reports all are well and happy in their Toronto homes, hostess on the evening of May COMING SOON The All New I} Mass., and his brother Dr. Jos-|- hope she will continue to im- e Advanced Design Buy the best... Buy Burgess construction ig brilliant, with 40,000 candle power. modern concrete ey CANAD! LIMITED FINA = Finest In North America po onal maatice cee view ef a section of Camp Gigtewn, Grenada, Ga. STOW! STRUCTURE: One of many reinforced concrete barracks, General Contractor: B. Perini & Sons Canada Ltd. STRUCTURE: Mess Hall built of concrete masonry and stucco Qonstruction.—General Contractor: R. E. Stewart Construction Corp. P CGAGETO made with ee MARITIME CEMENT — —-= STRUCTURE: Gun Drill Maintenance Building, General Contractor: Atlas Construction Co. Ltd. Concrete is one of the most versatile and economical of modern building materials. It permits greater flexibility Vg design...is adaptable to contemporary architecture ..durable... fire- “proof... .low initial cost...and requires “itt maintenance. For these reasons it was used for ‘all: major buildings at Camp Gagetown, Canada’s largest military training establishment. f One ee eae of letters | Ladies Auxiliary to the Canadian T A U N U S ™ ; was held by Mackenzie’s daugh-| Legion, Tignish Branch No. 6 at- : . — a * |. Miss M ‘ Built by Ford in STRUCTURE: Central Heating Plant. STRUCTURE: Int i f Gun Drill Maint Bid; ae pt in a gp ane aes jo es ee re oe West Germany i General Contractor: Byers Construction Co. Ltd, General Ganteatars Alen Cuaatrestion Co. “a: ios or : ay ots saan ere and ae held in Kensington on Wednes- The Lexury Small Car e.e some Siedergelies ‘box - 2 | cay evening, May 20th. $ 2 Door Sedan ‘4 COMPANY some hall- There were six members-of the|] @ 4 Doar Sedan GrizvTime GeCMeEeN® irc Mackenzie's close connections | 7igish Home and School Assoc- @ 2 Door Comb.-Station one oY. Re ( lellen ‘weet ts Chavatielees be Wagons 46 ST. GEORGE ST., MONCTON, NEW BRUNSWICK—TEL. 92-2331 with Sarnia—he-was a contractor SHIPPING POINTS: HALIFAX, N.S. CHATHAM, there for 20 years—have taken Wednesday, May 20th., to attend s R JOHNSTON . oy Senne He Thomson to the Chemica! City for |the annual meeting of Provincial @ We Sere he oeend iv Be |e Saas ceed, waa cash Gh Polen Bh, Bal O00 TOP QUALITY CONCRETE STARTS WHEN YOU USE. MARITIME CEMENT © Supplied throughout Maritime Peavt~aa«