‘ 2;; i, 4......” 41‘... Eh. ‘awll » in ‘ berton. They are seen here left to right: Mrs. Lewis. her great granddaughter Terry and Mrs. Edward Lewis, Al- Anne Reynolds, her daugh‘er. FOUR GENEthioNsmi/irrfnr ALBERTON John MacFarlane an her granddaughter. Mrs. Francis Reynolds. all from Courtney. B.C.. and are now visiting Mrs. Lewis. Mrs. Maritime Co-Op Printers i Past Minister Hear Report On Magazine Conducts Sun. viewpoints on existing social and economic ills that the sec- ular press often does not print; Shareholders in Maritime Co-. operative Printers Limited met yesterday at Montgomery Hall. in one of a number of meetings being held this week in conjunc-, and cooperation among all vo- tion with the 55th congress of cational groups in the Mari-i the Co-operative Union of Can- times." . ada. . Circulation is 15.271. and 57‘ The organization publishes the cooperative organizations hold bi - monthly magazine, “Theishares in the magazme. the re- Maritime Cooperator." whichqport says. ‘ according to the annual report Also speaking at the meeting} of managing editor Kay was retiring president Peter J. iardins. "is now in its 25th year MacKenzie of Antigonish ‘ of service to the adult educa-i e Co-operative Union of Ca- tion and co-operative movement nada and the Canadian Co-op-. in the Atlantic provinces." eratige Cretdit Society 3150 held Her re ort states the maga- PM” meemgs Yes 91' 3)" zlne‘s aidis as follows: “to form‘ “(135' the CCCS hows “5 311' public opinion in favor of co- “ual,m°9tmg and the Cyclaoard operatives and help create the 0f ,dlrecmrs meets again; 9311' Iocial and economic climate in “:h‘le' women attend‘“?! the. which these peophps organiza, five-day congress Will taken. hon! can best nourish; to give on a tour. Delegates will attend our people informafion and a: north shore lobster boil later In a ay. The CUC begins its annual meeting tomorrow morning. Highway Grant Not Enough ' to encourage a spirit of unity an Church Service Rev. ALBERTON condu cted ship A large congregation from all ; points of Montrose pastoral i charge were present to wel-l ‘ come their former minister andé e e . his wif . The MacDowells are spending ‘ a holiday at their summer home in Clinton. Former Islander Dies In Portland Mrs. Leona A. Sloan of 57 Elm- .wood Street. Portland. died Sun day morning in h short illness. . , Born in Prince Edward Island.‘ C“ September 24. 1889. a !daughter of John P, and Angel-; iina Arsenault Gallant. Mrs, Sloani amount” by consent ‘0 Aug- 4 .was educated in Prince Edward,‘ "St 3' . capital after how .Aiex. I 12 with ball to stand. 5 der MacDowell of Belleville. Ont, in w l Elmsdale United Church Sunday and Joseph Ronald Sock. all of even Lenn m‘charged with illegal possession. ‘ISlAND NEWS PAGE Premier Smallwood {Will Receive Degree “Wt. ed poi ics. ' th cam sign which broughti ed e p into confederation.’ 0 . has been premier of New. foundland for 16 years. a .long-‘ er period an a of his 191 ‘predeces . a h red sev-. eral books on Newfoundland. and ‘ ' ' “wants: 1 pent in promoting of . his Liberal party. i .Four Chargedi lWith Theft Oi Battery YN Evidence of two crown wit-{field- PREMIER SMALLWOOD Scotia‘s New B hoard yesterday at Queensl .County magistrate's court in the lb lease of William John Larkin.l .Newtown Cross charged with! " are and control of a vehiclelegates the original while his abilities Were impaired .afltm conference here by alcohol. C t rm“? 1‘ ow witnesses were 5 .: . Dfiiid nPowers and Cst. Miles iggef‘altlon familY. Th9 Foster. RCMP detachment. {in the SDU auditorium. Montague. The accused was re- l rts. The latter five represent in 2 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Tues. July 21, 1964. Other provincial premiers to be honoured by SDU are Princef {Edward Island's Walter R. Shawf Robert L. Stan- Algona. . WfiCk's Innis JV Trustees. nesses and the accused “'9‘? iRabichaud; Quebec‘s Jean Les-1 . Smallwood represents latest addition no the Con- . ceremon- get underway at 4 pm Kiwanis Clubs Edwar B. Moylan, Jr.. Miami. Florida businessman was elected president of Kiwan~ is International today at tho organizations 49th annual con- vention in Los Angeles. accord- ing to Gene Richard. president of the Kiwanis Club of Char lottetown. As head of Kiwanis Interna- tion. Mr. Moylan will be official c-iokesman for some 000 ' ‘ ' ore an 5300 l anus to clubs in the United States. Can- ada. Mexico. the Caribbean. Japan. and Western Europe. He succeeds Cape May. New Jer- sey businessman. Charles A. Swain. who has held the presi- dency during the year immed- iately preceding. Prior to becoming president of Kiwanis International. Mr. Moylan served one year as pre- sident-elect. one year as treasur- er, and four years as a trustee of the organization. He has been a Kiwanian for 43 years. New officers and trustees are: Edward C. Keefe of Oklahoma City. Oklahoma. President- Elect; Mel. R. Osborne. East York. Ontario and R. Glenn Reed. Marietta. Georgia. In- ternational Vice-Presidents; W. Clyde Glass. Louisville, Ken- tucky. Treasurer; Nelson 0. Fuller. Centreville. Alabama. Harold M. Heimbaugh. West Hollywood. California. Ted R. Johnson. Capital City, Denver. . Colorado. Robert F. Weber. Do- troit. Michigan. Jack Willis. East Kildonan. Manitoba. (re- .clected). and Wes H. Bartlett. Iowa. International The Los‘ Angeles convention of .age: and Ontario's John P» 30' Kiwanis International was high- lighted by a near-record crowd five provinces which sen: def. and a slate of headline speakers confeder- in 1364 and feature events. Delegate Ito the convention adopted resoo lutions upon which Kiwanis’ service programs for 1964-65 will be based. recognized "the best all ‘round Kiwanis clubs and districts for 1963," and develop- International Elect President, Trustees ed new ideas in community ser- vice and club a The 1965 convention Golden Anniversary tion - will be held in City. on. - tho Conv New York Business Indicators" Soar To New Heights: NEW YORK (Am-Business indicators 3 o a r e d Good Shipping Season Seen QUEBEC (CP) — Port offi- cials are predicting a prosper- ous shipping season for Quebec City in the light of a report for the first six months of 1964 that show a 37-per-cent increase in both loading and unloading op erations over the corresponding period last year. In June alone. stevedores loaded 253.444 tons of merchan- dise and unloaded 560.005 tons -an increase in both oper- ations of 3.190 tons over June of 1963. Shipments of grain to Russia. as well as general cargo, have shown a healthy increase. So far this year. Quebec City has shipped 25.000.000 bushels of grain to Russia. compared with l5,000.000 i corre- sponding period last year. Two ocean freighters. Totem Star and Henrietta . e. begin taking on Russia - bound heights, c o m p I n y earnings ted records. and thevstock market followed suit last week. a shaky start Monday 'and Tues- day to close the week at an historic peak for the third con- secutive wee‘k. based on the popular averages. This ex- tended the s u in me r rally through six wee . Good news from all sectors of the economy furnished the basis for the market's move: i Business leaders predicted substantial gains in - mainder of 1964 and president Johnson agreed. Industrial pro- duction. gross national product and non-farm employment were at new peaks. Construction con- tract award estimates for the year were boosted. housing starts rose and retail sales tor the latest week were well ahead of a year ago. A flood of first-half earnings included many never before matched or u n matched in years. grain today SET OFF BLAST UPPSALA. Sweden (AP) -- A new underground explosion in Siberia was y by the selsmological institute here. It was th rd i a Soviet series which seemed to have an interval of nine weeks tween blasts. The institute said it could not tell whether nuclear .ey lasts or ‘ioro dinary chemical explosions." Although it was only the sev- enth most active issue. General Motors. a market barometer. was the feature of the week. It gained tfi—the most of any of the to volume leaders. But more significant was that tho stock set all-time highs in four of the five sessions. GM earn- ings are duo in the next two weeks. Hero is the story on the averages for the week: Dow Jones industrial—up 3.34 to a closing high of 851.35. ssocist Press muck—up 3.1 to a record 322. ard and Poor’s Silo-stock index—.65 to a record 84.01. In addition. all components of the AP average and railroad and udlity parts of the Dow fines average were at historic s. Despite the general rise. vol- ume fell disappointing market technicians. Not once did the daily total I: x c e e d 5.000.000 shuns. the average for the first six man 0 year. weekly total dipped to 23,503,800 from 25.594.771 a week ago. .********** SHOWS 2:30-1-9 THE LONG REEF Australia's Great Barrier Reef stretches for 1.250 miles. and measures 12 to 150 miles in wl th. year. manded by consent to August Rotary Presents RCMP MUSICAL RIDE JIILY 25th & 27th 0 I’.M. Joseph Henry Raymond Sock. _. Louis Frederick Joseph Sapier. ox Island. pleaded guilty to theft of a car battery. All were remanded to Queen's County jail until July 22 for sen- t nce. John Wayne Casford. Douglai : t.. and Stewart Ferguson. lGranon Street, both charged ‘with break, entry and theft at iMacKay’s General Store ini Stanley Bridge. were remanded to July 22. Donald Keith Higgins. Stan- hope. charged with criminal ‘ ! negligence in the death of Dun- ; ican Alban Maclnnis. was re-. imanded by consent to August 124 i l l i I i i l Fran- " Charlottetown. ' l Charlottetown DRIVING PARK The case of Ha MacKinnon. of 200 pounds of oysters. was] . TI Liquor Cases lrsiand and claim; to Portland 35? A Bristol resident was fined. — . a young gir. e was marriediszo and costs or 30 days for? Says Shaw CITY crOUI'T ‘tithedthtian1:11;):4 ‘John W. Sloan who: illegal possession of liquor. Two _ 50c The A H a n t i C Development Board annOunced an allotment of up to 31.000000 for improve- ment of trunk roads in this pro- vince in addition in norma highway programs. The n t h e r Atlantic provinces will receive up to 33.000000 each. Premier Walter Shaw said in an interview that the Island's “whole problem of transporta- tion extends farther than that." Monday next government officials plan to meet with Dr. Frank Weeks. executive direc- days. tor 0‘ the .ard‘ to dlscuss Earl Christopher. city. charg- what the premier called “board ed with being drunk and diam policies that affect the province deflv‘ was remanded until July in general." ‘ The government here h a 5 been pressing federal authorities for financial assistance so that a system of all-weather high- ways could be established west to east in PE. T Fifteen cases. 11 of them in- Magistrate A. J. Haslam. QC. resided - .I Sterling Ralph Roberts. city. charged with drunken driving, fence of impaired driving and was fined $125 and costs or 30 ays. ‘ Frank Harley and Peter Red- mont. city. both charged with loitering. were each given 20 D- There were nine drunk and incapables. Three accused were; 'each fined $20 and costs or 20 0. another days suspended. Two others received fines of. ‘ SurviVing are six daughtersfi in a public place were each fin- i volving liquor were heard in Mrs. Beatrice M. Kimball, Mrs. ed 520 and costs or 15 days. i city police court yesterday. George ‘___._.____‘ Stairs. Mrs. owry Mrs. Portland of South Portland.'Also two sons,j pleaded guilty to the lesser of- Egglg’ngfi and J0“ T- Sloan Two sisters. Mrs. Anna w-lmjprogram for a series of inter- Mrs. 1Rose Edgerly. Portland and three Gal t ert of Flint. Michigan and brothers. John PET. Philip lan Gallant of . Petersburg, Florida and wimam; CTV network. said published re- Gallant of Yarmouth. Maine. stir-190115 that the ' t . .. . . . Montague Electric: and Lar- idesert politics for teleVisioni . . 15 grandchildren sndfprompted Miss Whitton to call, te” Pharmacy' souns' ioff the show. Prayers will be said Wedneo‘ July 23. from the Conroy, Portland. FolJ lowed by Requiem High Mass in ays. one was given 20 days. St. Josephs Church at 8:30. In- ' Calvary Cemetery. vive. Also eight great grandchildren. day. Funeral Home. terment in South Portland. James :men charged With intoxication} TICKETS: CANCELS pROGRAM From members of Charlotte- : town Rotary Club or any of OTTAWA (CPl—Mayor Char-f the following stores: 0‘ lotte Whitton has cancelled. Hughes Drugs; Old Spain; 391305 to tape 8 30-min11te Pilot MacKenzie and Vernie‘s Bar- ber Shop; W. R. Jenkins Ltd. Parkdale; Ellis Brothers; Horton's General Store, Mur- ray River; Ralph Sanderson. St. Peter's Bay: the Village Diner. Morel]; the offices of View shows for the Canadian Television Network. Stuart Grif- . fiths. vice-president of television st; station CJOH. a member of the mayor migh l. is believed the govern- ment's representatives for as- sistance called for far more than the 31.000000. and could? possibly be in the range of 315,-? $20 and costs or 10 days. and $10 and costs or five days spectively The remaining two. were remanded to July 21 and‘ July 25 respectively. There were two traffic casesi 9 3' ’ l’ a .'t,i'li"‘?bu ir , siz‘TL ' : sainttttfl‘ i re- One accused charged with in- sufficient equipment drew warning. An accused w sign failed to appear. NEGRO DOWNED BY COP knocks down a negro din'lns Int M's dhorden. In the background at left another new and policeman fight. The police force In the area has been heavily strengthen- ed since the new wave of vio- lence began. (AP Winpboto) l a charged ith failing to stop at a stop PLAYING TUESDAY ONLY - SHOW AT DUSK Ionic QW’ mg Most 5-yearold chick in his THE ROYAL WINN'IPEG BALLET Confederation Centre TODAY THROUGH JULY 25 “Uninhibited joy” . . . . . The Boston Traveller “Sassy is the word” . . . . . The Boston Globe EVENINGS $1.50 up MATINEES ALL SEATS $1 .00 — MON TO. SAT. — WED. and SAT. 8:30 pm. 2:30 pm. MON.-WED.-FRI. Ballet Premier Bitter Weird Pas de Deux Alma-yous Bach? The WINNIPEG BALLET present: 0 programs: TUES. - THURS. - SAT. Pas de Dix Recurrence Un et unFont deux Les Whoopsdc-doo PUPPET I TODAY through AUG. 1511: THE CANADIAN THEATRE Mon - Frl 2 pan. and 4 pan. Sat. 10 1.111.. 2 p.m,. 4 p.111. Fri. Eve, at 8 p.m.—SPECLAL FAMILY HOW! GALLERY TH‘EATR Box office. Queen St. Phone 2-2464 (after I p.m. 2-2407} Adults ‘1." Children 00o SUNDAY. JULY ONE NIGHT ONLY “I: la a series of Sunday Concerts ISLAND CENTENNIAL YOUTH CHORUS An evening of Choral Music Conoucted by Christopher Gledhill SEATS $1.00 & $1.50 26 — 9:00 P.M. Visitors Welcome In Casual Clothes “COME AS YOU ABE—BUT COME" firm“ . IT'S BUN — SEE IT NOW! TODAY - WEDNESDAY - HOT ONE IS HER-E — This one has all the ingredi- ents to make it the Hottest Cornedv of the SHOWS 2:30 - I - I MONTGOMERY BILSAM 'S‘I‘JOIIN ‘m an. ya no: u up: mar 'com-NvE-soo-th-iAm-rosuR-Reo .icmi B BIETT W mm-‘m II m ‘ ¥¥¥¥¥****i ¥irr¥¥¥¥¥¥4 WHEN Gary 4: CARY and AUDREY n... a Game of Danger — EXPECT TH‘E UN'EXPECTED! TONIGHT — ASTMLEY DONEII rut-ur- alter MaflhaU/hmes Cobum Amul- TECHNICOLOR' SHOW ABOUT 9:30 Audrey CONFEDERATION CENTRE BOX OFFICE- Open Dally .................... .. 10:00 up. - 10:00 pan. Sundays 7 p.m.-9p.m. (2.24“) after I pun. 2-2401 ART GALLERY AND MUSEUM OPEN . 10 mm. — 8 pm. ya ........ .... .......... .. 12 noon-9:00 pm. RMAUBANT OPEN Monday to Saturday 9:30 9am. to 12 Sunday .. . ......... .. 12 noon to 12 pan. pm. DON’T initial-44.411? .ii .. mm. t