« ~"MacKenzies ..Covehead-Stanhope Community _ Centre -recently: etal wide avveal ig $55,100. —< g MISSION. PRIESTS Rev. Saude Primeau, CSsR, (LEFT( and. Rev. Emmanual Demerah, CSsR of Windsor, Ontario, are seen seen a trustees of St.. Pius arish minutes after their ar- rival in the province. The mis- sionaries arrived by plane last night to conduct ‘a two-week preaching phase which will climax the six-month parish renewal program at St. Pius X Parish, Parkdale. Seen dis- cussing the two-week program are: (FROM THE LEFT) Fa- ther Primeau, George Chev- erie, Father\Demerah and Pe- ter Doyle. ‘Preaching Phase Opening = Brings Renewal To Climax St. Pius X Parish, serving Roman Catholics in the com- munities of Parkdale, Sherwood, East Royalty and a small part of the City, will bring to a climax the long range program of Spir- itual Renewal with a two-week Preaching Phase that begins to- morrow. the new type of parish renewal. The preaching phase will be opened tomorrow by Rev. Claude Primeau, CSsR and Rev. Em- manuel Demerah, CSsR, two prients who work closely with Father Boyce in directing the area mission underway in Wind- | Sor. Ontario. Father Boyce will | join his ‘co-workers next week, The parishioners and _ their and this will mark the fourth iests, Rt. Rev. P. F.- Mac- id, V.G., pastor, and Rev. Andrew Macdonald, LOCAL BRIEFS RECEIVES WORD Mrs. Campbell MacLeod, Mel- “ville, has received word of the death of her brother Ralph ~ofEdmontor:;—-Al- berta. Burial will take place in Alberta. VISITS FATHER Mrs. Ralph Mellish arrived from ‘Germany on Monday te visit her father, Mr. A.S. Stew- art of Millview, during his iil- ness in the Prince &dward Is- land Hospital. ‘ CASH THEFT ‘City police réported that -a’> thief or thieves took a quantity | of money (about $300 cash) but no merchandise in a break at a store on Victoria Ave., owned by. Robert Lowther. The incident was beliéved to have havpened sometime Thursday evening. , --T0. AMHERST Byron Sharp, manager of the Bank of Commerce, Montague accompanied by Mrs. Sharp and their daughter Betty leave this morning for Amherst where Mr. Sherp will take part in the an- nual Canadian Imperial Bank ot Commerce Curling Bonspiel held for the bank managers. Also ac time that he has come to the parish to keep in touch with the assistant | gress t pastor, have been involved in the | ." ¢ me RETR ene preparatory phase since October | * "This't type of Renewal has deep- | ly involved the parishi ners in a unique dialogue between them- selves and the renewal preach- ers. The priest now come to St. Pius X Parish with an insight into the conditions of life, at- titudes and preblems_ existing in this. area. This will enable them to preach with a know- ledge of the parishioners unheard of in former times. “The Missionaries “themselves have received a great deal of s-evialized training in the’ fields | of. Mission Technique, the Lit. urgy -end Religious Education. Fathers Boyce and Primeau |. hove-snecialized in the new tvve of mission, while Father D>- merah is a reCognized exfert in| -the-field-of-Religious Education. | _ Father Boyce was born in Saint John, N.B., and attended school there before going to St. Mary’s College, Brockville, Ont. for his seminary training. He was cr- dained to the priesthood in 1957, and scent the next three years preaching parish missions | throughout Canada. In 1961, Father Boyce spent a year study- in¢ in Evrove where he obtained his Masters*Degree in Religious Sociology. Last summer. he at- tended an International Confer- | jence in Religious Sociology in Bercelona, Spain. He also. spent two years doing varish mission work in the Most Holy Redeemer Parish here. Father Boyce is in | gre-t demand as a sreaker in both Canada and the United States. inthe field of Mission Technique. OTTAWA NATIVE . Father Emmanuel Demerah fs a.nctive of Ott2wa. Followin his ordinetion to the rriesthood. he served as a R-demrtorist Mis- sionery out of St. Patrick’s Par- ish, London, Ont. for two years: companing the Sharps will be H.M. Smith a former manazer | They expect to return to the pro vince on Sunday. FINED $125 A fine of $125 and costs. or 30 days wes imposed upon William | Jacob Faithful, Charlottctown | RR 5, who wes convicted of im- paired driving. He appeared be- fore Magistrate A. James Has- lam; ©C, in city police court yesterday. Vernon MacKay, Murray’ River, convicted of joyriding was fined $50 and costs or 30 days. Everet®} England Brooks, city, charged failing to stop at a stop sign, was fined $5 and costs or two days. CARD PARTY The following are the results of the card: party “held at the and as Director of Vocations for the Redemztorist Fethers in of the branch at Montague. | E>stern Canda for two years: U-on his eraduation from the International Institute of Catech- letics in Belgium in June, 19%4, Father Demerah was anvnointed Associcte Director of Religious Fducation for the Diocese - of London. In Jenuary of 1966, he | wes anpointed Directcr of Ed- | ucction for the Diocese cf Lon- don. He is also a member of the Bocrd «* Directers of the new Intern-‘ienal Scheel of Religious Education (The Divine Word Centre) which ts scheduled to open in London, Ont. in Septem. ber of 1966. He is in charge of Public Relations for the new school and will also be one of its lecturers. Among his many other duties, Father Demerah finds time to lecture at Mary Grove College in Detroit.and to serve as Chair- man of the Commission on Cat- ladies’ first, Mrs. Lea Misener; second, Mrs. Gerald: Robinson; consolation, Mrs. Carman Ellis; men’s first, Joseph Robinson; second, Ira Marshall; consolation, Frank Lewis; door prize Mrs. Gerald Robinson; freeze out. Mrs. Har- old MacDonald and W.W. Clow; tournament winners, Fred Hughes and Mrs. Cyril Morres- sey. Pearl Elliot Dies Suddenly Mrs. Pearl. Elliott, the wife of the Rev..G.A,D. Elliott, died suddenly at her home in Pownal yesterday. She was in her 7ist year. The Elliott's had planned to PROMINENT PART The Parkdale Lion$ Club arid. Women’s Institute will play a porminent part in the Salvation | Army Capital Fund Appeal in May. These two groups will be“ resxonsible for the organization and canvass Mf the Parkdale- Sherwood areas. . City chairman for the appeal | {fs W.R. Jenkins with TD. De-| Blois in charge‘of the business } and special names division. Mrs. Julian Herring is _ residential ‘ chairman assisted by mre. DK. MacLeod The objective of tie priwin T their. son: at ‘not yet leave today to attend the open- ing service to be conducted by | the new United | Church in Gtitiningsville, N.B 'on Sunday. Surviving besides her iuisband are one son, Rev. Waldo Elliott uf Gurningsville, N.B.: four grandchildren:- , four __ sisters, Mrs. Lodge Lane Pownal: Mrs Leslev Brventon, Winsloe; Mrs. Elmer ° Ccl+s,- Mlton: Mrs. Herry Currie, Aimsbury, Mass.: two brothers, and Ira Saunders, both of Char-! lottetown The funeral arrangements have been arranged. lip Jost, Robin Jost. !teok place in Floral Hills Mem- sion of Essex Count. | Father Claude Primeau was born in Foleyet, Ont. and grew up_ in Windsor, Ont. He made his novitiate in Montreal and made his profession as a Redem- ptorist on September. 15, 1955. After his ordination in preaching missions and retreats and was then assigned to St. Patrick’s Parish in Quebec. While in Quebec, he worked | with the Air Force, served as curate at St. Patrick’s Parish, parish of Ste. Foy. In 1964 he went to. Paris, France to study at the Institute Catholique and to do field work with the €-P-M-T- Missions a’ L’ Interieur) While Primeau . specialized in Mission Technique with special refer- Liturgical Celebrations. In. 1955, he was appointed Associate Dir- ector of the Generel Mission pro- gram for the London Diocese- echetics for the General Mis- 1960, | Father Primeau spent some time | and then as acting pezstor of the | «(Centre Pastorale des} attending these Institutes, Father | ence to Mission Preaching and | WEATHER TORONTO (CP) — Tempera. tures: . Low overnight High: Friday oe erage venee 8 39 aveee oekael ae 59 ;}Edmonton ....... 2 ‘46 aateaaeae =—-29-___%— Wanipes Seaen bane 1B of 0-29, jToronto .......... _ 24 31 SOMERWE icc cessece 2B 30 Montreal .:....... 32 36 Qeenee ee Sesees 34 35 Fredericton ...... 35 49 Saint ‘ John *35 4, Moncton mo ee ee DPN SSeS ROE ep eg 30 36 Charlottetown cae 47 Sydney... s00e 31, 4 Yarmouth ........ 33 49 St. John’s ........ 26 30 AMONG: 55 oes 5055 32 36 ROG i cine csesss 46 52 [Atlanta .....c<sse% 28 53 Wamee: oc siasebees 44 70 MEGINS: s.stacentes 61 <74 |New Orleans ..... 35 58 - \Los Angeles -.... 55. 66 HALIFAX (CP)—The weather | office says a strong high pres- | sure area centered just to the east of Newfoundland has slow- ed the eastward motion of a disturbance approaching the Maritimes from the New’ Eng- land‘ States. As a_ result mild, ae ae 8 eee con- tinue to cover ail of the Mari- slowly across the district. On Sunday cloder and drier air |fust to the west of the Mari- | | times er edge slowly east- | ward. Regional Sitadadi: Prince Edwatd Island: over-. CITY AREA —— CAMPBELL FUNERAL The funeral for Samuel Camp- bell was held Friday, March 25, 1966 from the MacLean Funeral | Home where service was con- ducted by ‘Rev. Malcolm Har- low. Attending in a body were the members of the First Bap- tist Church choir. Hymns sung were Abide With Me and What A Friend We Have In Jesus. Ho- norary, pallbearers were: Dr. J. A. Clark, William MacKay, Jack Maclair. Pallbearers were: Col. D.N. Bell, Ralph _ Balderston, Alan Campbell, Alan Jost, Phil- Interment |orial Gardens. i | Ralph. Henderson, | HENDERSON FUNERAL CURRAN. -FUNERAL..—._ The funeral for John Curran of Aven- dale was held on Friday morn- ing from the Jenkins Funeral |Home to St. Joachims Church, Vernon River, whére Requiem | High Mass was -celebrated by the pastor. Rev. Urban Gillis. Rev...Clifford Murphy was pre- officiated at the grave. Pall- bearers were J.A. Keoughan, |James Power, Aeneas Curran, James Whelan. Merrill Murphv | and Philip O'Donnell. Interment | was in the Church Cemetery. FLYNN. FUNERAL. — The fu- |meral for the.late Florence May Flynn took place on Friday morning . from the Hennessey Funera] Home to St: Dunstan’s Basilica where Requiem Hi7h Mass was celebrated by Mszr. William Simpson. Service at the grave was conducted by Rev. Gerald Tingley’ Burial took place in the Catholic Cemeterv™ The pallbearers were:. Stewart Leigh, Jack Doyle, Frank Hughes, Reg Cronin, Ernest Bradley, Patrick McKenna. The funeral for baby Samuel Allison, son of Mr. and Mrs. was held Thursday, March 24 from the MacLean Funeral Home where serfice was conducted by Rev. G.G. Wyrwas. Attending in a body were the staff of Palmer Jack Kirby, Elliot Wright, Pros- per Peters, Garnet Lowther, Ar- | thur Myers, Jack Carr, Etwin | Corbett. Interment took place in | Clifton Cemetery. ‘WHELAN FUNERAL — The funeral for Mrs. Thomas L. Whelan was. held Thursday morning from the Charlottetown Funeral Home to. St. Dutistan’s Basilicia where: Requiem High Mass swas celebrated by her * pastor Rt. Rev. William Simpson. Everett Saunders, Vessey, | Present in the sanctuary were George A. MacDonald William Cumerford, | CSSR. ‘Pallbearers were: Lloyd | Cairns, Gerald Proctor, Cyrus JJ. Connolly, .-Fergus Rt. Rev |and Rev. Connors, Harold Saunders. In- terment ~~ in the eer Cemeter: ere y service ‘conducted by Father Cumertord: sent in the sanctuary and also|* Electric. Flower bearers were. cast intermittent rain beginning this morning, ending near mid- night, mild; winds 20 diminishing to a this after-| noon; low-high at Charlottetown feed pdr outlook for Sunday, cloudy town 1.31 a.m. and 1:14 p:m. At Rustico at 8.07 a.m. and 9.15 ‘p.m. High tide Sunday at Char- | ilottetown 2.11 a.m. and 1.39 p.m: At Rustico at 843 a.m. and 9.53 p.m: Summerside tide eighteen minutes later than Charlottetown. Sun rises’ today at 6.08 a.m. and sets at 630 and sets at 6.31 p.m. High tide today at Charlotte. | p.m. Rises’ Sunday at 6.07 a.m.” e: We Of Milk To Consumer mB Seems Likely To Increase By NEIL MATHESON Milk consumers will likely have to pay an additional two cents per quart for their milk, it appeared after listening to a thy discussion Friday™ ‘agnong the people who produce the milk for processing plants, and representatives of those plants which distribute it-in var- ious Island centres; Th* 0¢r- sion was the meeting of the fluid milk section of the, P.E.l. Dairy- men’s Association. The general concensus was that the requested price in- crease, when it comes, will ‘mean two cents extra per quart at the doors of consumers. That |would mean 24 cents for pas- iteurized milk and 25 for homo- genized in centers where the price is 22 cents and 23 cents | respectively now. |. No price increase was suggest- ed in the resolution approved, however, as there was reluc- tance to act until a question now before the Legislature the Province is resolved. . increase in the price of bottled milk now should result in a cut corresponding increase in the purchases of ‘Tri-Milk’’, brand name given to a reduced- milk, which undersells the bot- tled milk, according to state- ments made by a number of One Summerside distributor | said that the disputed product lent of three cents a quart, while | his plant can only offer two/| cents; “I can't compete with that’, he explained. Another man said that this reduced milk product has es the entire | milk trade at Summerside airport. NO CONTROL The legislation which was sug- ‘bring the “Tri-Milk” product un- | ‘der control of the province's /Milk Control Board, the same as |the regular fluid milk is now. No control is.exercised over it .now:| The final resolution asked the —lexecutive to seek a price in- if the requested legisla- | | erease |tion on the ‘Tri-Milk’”’ product is passed. If the legislation is not passed, the association is re- quested to call another meeting in the near future for further discussion on prices. The request for an increase tn bottled milk now stems for the most. part from. the recent an- times today. Rain will spread | mouncement that milk going into | the manufacture of butter, for ale will be subsidized so |that the producer will be assur- ‘ed of $4.00 per hundredweight at | the plant. The development -vas | explained further by Canada’s agriculture minister {Greene, at a dinner meeting of the .dairymen's association last night. The feeling is that }will not produce milk for he | fuid-trade untess the-price-isin-. creased, and this in turn would mean a higher price to the con- jsumer. There were indications, too, that the people who process and distribute the milk will ask the milk control board for more money as their share of the milk dollar. Arthur MacRae, - Sherwood ' was named president of the as- | 'The producers in the ead } | Side area are concerned lest an in sales of their product, with a the! fluid producers at yesterday's | pmeeting. lallows the retailer the equival- | igested to the legislature would | IJ. | farmers sociation. Eugene Cullen, Char- lottetown is ‘vice-president. J. Lincoln Dewar is the secretary- | treasurer. Retiring president Daniel A. MacPherson presided | at the sessions yesterday-~=~ Mr. MacRae reported .to the and early autumn pasture: meeting in the Dairy Farmers of Canada ‘annual meeting he at- | tended recently are 200.000 fewer dairy produc- ers in Canada now than there were in 1950. Earl Adams, provincial dairy dairymen sending milk for cheese wére paid an average price of $2.92 per 100 pounds for milk, and at the averagé net valugpfor a pound butterfat of 81,53"cents The farmers shipping cream for butter manufacture were He said there | jpaid an average net vahie ot | |71.09 cents per pound butterfat. | The total milk production last | year was slightly higher than in 1964, despite a ‘falling off in pro- | duction ~in-the-dry —late-summer-+ | months owing to lack of mols | ture. ‘ The grade of butter was boiter | ‘than the. previous year P.E.I. was the third highest in Canada so far as quality is con- | cerned. There was also a substantial | increase in the percentage of | first grade cheese which ar Adams attributed largely thigher quality milk. New it ling standards played a part in jthis development,. the dairy. su- perintendent observed. Island News Page Eastern and Central Districts The Guardian, Charlottetown, Sat., March 26, 1966. 5 Federal Minister Greene. Faces A Busy Schedule Canada’s agricultural’ ee | ter J.J. Greene faces a busy round of activity here today. With Mr. Greene are his deputy, S.C: Barry; Dr. J. A. Anderson, director-general re- search branch, and _ William | Bird of .the crop insurance | administration. He is scheduled to have breakfast with a selected group | of farm leaders at nine o'clock | In the Charlottetown Hotel. They include Arthu> Mac- Rae, Sherwood, president of the Dairymen’s Association; Daniel_ MacPherson; Oyster Bed Bridge, immediate past president; J.A. Rodd, presi- dent P.E.I. Federation of Agri- minister; Allison Profitt, Free- town, manager farm establish- +—ment—board;_R.L._Burge;. Five _ Houses, chairman potato mar- keting board; George Howatt, French River, president potato produeers’ association; J.L. Dewar, New Perth, secretary Federation of Agriculture; Leo P. MclIsaac, Mermaid presi- dent of the Beef Producers Ate sociation The federal cata will lunch with the provincial cab- inet -at noon; he will visit the Experimental Farm at 3.00 p.m. and he is scheduled to meet with Liberal Leader Alex Campbell at 4.00 o'clock He culture; Agriculture Minister MacRae; S.C. Wright, deputy DRUG THIS 178 Queen Street WILL BE OPEN SUNDAY. SPECIAL In All Popular Pastel Shades -egular $1.50 WAGES WERE Low Irish immigrants were paid 85 SENTENCED TO DIE. TUCSON; Ariz. (AP)—Charles Schmid Jr., 23, was sentenced Friday to die June 17 in Ari- zona’s gas Chamber for the ikilling of two young girls. Schmid ..was.convicted_ of _mur- dering his former girl friend, Gretchen Fritz, 17, and her sister, Wendy, 13. daughters of ja prominent Tucson heart sur- |geon. They disappeared last summer and their bodies were later found buried in the desert. CATTLE ROAM FAR The world’s largest ranch, | Alexandria Downs, Australia, is 111,000 miles Phy extent ‘and feeds 60,000 cattle. ‘« 4 s Confederation . YASS HAKOSHIMA . an exotic and unusual entertainment by a world famous artist Tuesday, March 29—3:30 and 8:30 p.m. Afternoon: Students Matinee 50 cents” Evening: All Seats Reserved. Price $1.00 to $2.50 On sale Confederation Centre Box Office Monday through Saturday noon to 5:30 , cents a day to dig New York | State’s Erie Canal, jopened in 1825. ‘Mortgage Funds Available on resident‘al properties H. L. SEAR 110 Queen St. Dial 2-1271 entre fggtote which | Now Only ... 69c | as featured g DANBURY | Jackets | TIP TOP See our complete selection _ priced from Perma Crease Trousers she in press 17: 22% 99 Grafton St. cal “a SEMPLE’S PHARMACY Ltd. 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