Soe ee TELEPHONE 8506 Buyer meets seller with Guardian Want Ads. Dial 8506 ask for ciassifjéd ad taker, for quick resuts. VOL. LXXII NO. 177 Kept Amid ».E.1. PO! ‘Queen S Appointments f ns ‘stents Mary MacNeill, 16, of ‘Murray as the result of a car crash near River is dead and six others are ere ee, ee Fishing Rights Stir Feelings “TONDON (Reuters) — Britain Murray River last night. The injured are Mrs. Harper Lecco of Pt. Pleasant who has a broken leg. Mr. Lecco broken limbs, Juanita » broken leg, Joan Lecco, broken leg, Barry Lecco with possible fractures, Stephen Palmer with a broken leg and possible serious head injuries The accident occurred on the Commercial Read about a mile 'Durelle Seeks New Contract Shaban, manager of world light MONCTON (CP) — Chris Ft SMILES FROM Charlottetown | night preparatory te greeting | monarch will be seen by tens of skies for goday were hoped for as | their Queen today. Shown here in Island citizens ‘bedded down last | typical smilling pose. the touring|in the province. AGREEMENT NOT PREDICTED Foreign Minister's Conference thousands of Islanders and visi- tors today during her short stay (CP Phote) | Queen And nd Prince Philip | Due In Harbor At 10 A.M. ST. JOHN’S, Nfld. (CP)—Pro- gressive Conservative Leader Malcolm Hollett said Wednesday he will oppose Premier Small- wood for the St. John’s West leg- iskature seat in the Aug. 20 gen- Jory Leader Accepts Smallwood Challenge but it could not be learned im what ridings. DOG RESCUES TINY KITTENS Edward Island stands | will have ‘received her first wel- a ies, Sek. Quecripene: oe ee body end c d” unofficial es- ier Mendel Gases | Gib Guan sales Goat ce ielbed, cert and seed out their own Land and Prince Philip. | in a destroyer back in 1951 as she greeting of welcome long before Party is due to land ‘left the province she will sail this the Britania reaches the actual Charlottetown at 10 o'clock | time in the Royal Yacht Britannia waters of the harbor. RCMP this forenoon and the round of as she comes to P. E. Island. ships- willalso accompagy the By 3XCK BRAYLEY FINGS rope welcomes and presenta-| The Royal Canadian Navy de- Royal visitors. ’ Canadian Press Staff Writer | with such understanding and sym- start almost immedi-| stroyers Micmac, Iroquois and With the Island observing a POINTE CHENE, N.B./ pathy and was so kind and the Royal visitors step | Athabaskean join with the Royal holiday in honor of the-Royal visi- note of sadness in the | thoughtful. She’ started out by —. | Navy ship Ulster to form the offi- | tors, practically everything ia happy 1§% thousand - mile Roya. | asking me to accept her. “sym- long before that, the Queen ' cial escort but harbor craft ef Charlottetown that can said will Tour occurred at the end of Wed- | pathy and I almost started to cry. — oe an 2 nestiay’s busy schedule when the | She understood anc then she said HUMID IN EAST the Britaifhia’ and her precious Queen again charmed the weather | something nice and I felt a lot care. and kept her appointments be-|better.” Reports indicate that some ef @weea thunder showers. The Queen and the prince spoke the sea dogs may come from as . : : far as Shediac where the Queen Just after she boarded the/to ali the family representatives and Prince Philip embarked on “Britannia—first time she's been | and spent considerable time talik- the Royal yacht last evening. en thé royal yacht since she left|ing. to some individuals. They The rain storm of yesterday it at the Lakehead 9—e rain | switched from English to French and the resulting forecast of Squall churned the wide waters /@s the occasion demanded. ‘ | showers for today left many wor- er er eee EXPRESS SURPRISE. ried about what today’s weather ous rainbow provided what Mar) ‘The prince questioned Capt might bring. However the prob- itimers hope is a clear weather! Remand Jenkins of Escuminac at nve‘op alld las sbilities indicate thet the dy omen. There are only three days length about how he survived the’ will be sunny and hot, although left of the “day tour ending in | storm, his method of fishing, the By THE CANADIAN PRESS | lw Hamilton the Steel Company ‘he Halifax weather office did Halifax Saturday night. : dius ef his boot—"“end be asemnel From sea to sea, hot weather | of Canada ‘catied in extra mea Mention a risk of an early afler- The rain held off long enougt | suprised that we had 40 footers enveloped Canada Wednesday | 4144 wall ak bes ee eee for the Queen to make a sympa-|and not something smaller, al- with the added discomfort of high workers wou Although the present Queen and thetic and sometimes cheerful | most like a rowboat.” humidity in the east to ent os eaech tine te treat | oe ee ee ee Dound of survivors and relatives| ins Clifford Kingston, also of The hot air hung over Prince | furnaces, See eee oe is twenty of victims of the Northumberland | poy du Vin, held her two chil- Edward Island, Nova Scotia and : a ta. see, ae Girait fishing fleet disaster. dren chose and wept quietly 2° New Brunswick. I was worse in st Fi hack in 1939 when King G be TELL OF TRAGEDY _ the Queen spoke in sympathy. She and numerous spotted Fore ire and .Queen Elizabeth, now the As the Queen spoke quietly 0 | said, “it was so nice of her. .” thunderstorms and showers Queen Mother, wae guested on the widows and children, dressed snq~ then she broke down. brought ere Stubborn the Island by one of the worst im black or wearing black arm-| when the Queen arrived at the rain storms of the summer. bands, she was obviously moved | sot where she met the fishing Montreal suffered through its | - Today's crowd of Islanders will _ @s some cheerfully told how trag-| families, her whole happy or of 16th day of above - 9). tempera-| ST. BERNARD des LACS, Que. be augumented by thousands ef @dy had struck their homes a plasant day changed and she Approaching Arctic air, (OP) — Firefighters held their | visitors from every province in The little group of disaster vic-| walked to the first survivor ob- te cause a Mde-|ground Wednesday in a battle Canada and from a large part of tims stood on the wharfside sad/| viously concerned. ty tonight. against a mammoth forest blaze | the United States. @nd almost pathetic in compat™/ The meeting occurred at & coast was sunny and | that bas scorched a 300-square-| Flags. pennants and streamers ison to the gay hundreds in shorts | point within sight of the usually temperatures about | mile swathe through the Gaspe proclaim the welcome to the City and beach garb who had cheered | peaceful strait which had churned much the same over | Peninsula. Two communities re but the real welcome comes from the royal couple down to the/in an angny storm June 20 and Prairies and warmer | mained in the glare of the flames, | the hearts of- the people. dock. claimed the lives of 3% men, of was forecast. in danger of déstruction if the| In capsule form here is where “Tt was so nice of the Queen | whom ‘the bodies of 17 are still Ontario tempere- | calm winds should freshen. the Royal party will be: - to spend the time with us,” said | unrecovered. from the high 70s; Throughout the day ffames |10 a.m. Arrive Railway Wharf. Mrs. Burton Chapman of Bay du “lars, Willing Cheimen of Baie of 93 degrees—in Rock-| crackled around St. Octave de | 10.15 am. H.M.C.8. Queen Char- Vin qne of the widows. “I told | ste sae ie left with five chil- Ottawa. Today tem- | ‘Avenir and Sacre Coeur des Lan-|_otte. -muech we appreciated, wavedees the. Queen’s berge were expected to-drop |des—a faw miles south of this vil- | 10.35 a.m. En route to Frosted sad ar how mach we aoe | moved away from the jetty. She to the low 80's. ~ [lage which lost eight houses to| Foods plant via Rochford, Graf- lated her gifts to the Fishermen Continued on Page 5 Col.. 2) Windsor, » man who tried | the flames Tuesday. But the wind | tom, Weymouth Streets, Long- heat by sleeping om | remained slight—from the south | worth Avenue, St. Peter’s Road @ secondetorey veranda fell out | at sbout five miles an hour, and | Brackley Point Road, Sherwood struck the ground 3 | the dog - tired firefighters were| Road. ae aS oe ee eens eS ee ee fracture of the ditches and hold their ground. Brackley Point Road. 12. noon To DeBlois home in Dal- vay via Brackley Point Road, through Brackley Beach. 12.40 p.m. Arrive DeBiois resid- Ki § ence 2 p.m. Leave for Charlottetowa Colosseum via Bedford, St. Peter’s Road and Hawthorne Avenue. 2.40 p.m. Arrive Colosseum. 2.50 p.m. Go to race track. 3.35 p.m. Leave for Government House via Hawthorne Avenue, St. Peter’s Road, Longworth Avenue. Euston Street, Am- brose Street, McGill Avenue, North River Road, Brighton Road, P.E.I. Hospital driveway Government Pond Roadway. 4 p.m. Arrive Government House and Iceland are currently em | ¢om Murray River. ‘ : : tender . gaged in a war of words in their|" fariy information said the coy _ ce sgn eral election. FLORENCE, Italy (AP)— | for garden party. fong-standing dispute over fish-|;eoco car was in collision with P ° Mr. Smallwood said in a radio-| “Whoever tried to drown three 5.30 p.m. Leaves party. ing rights off the Icelandic coasts. | an American car which was not |%Y night he would seek to ne- TV address Tuesday night he/| little kittens in the Arno (7:30 p.m. Private dinner at Gev- The Icelandic government has | immediately identified. The Mac- | 0tiate a new guarantee of $20,- ; . | would leave his riding of Bona- | ‘River here hadn't counted on ernment House. prepared @ booklet setting out | Neill girl and Palmer were im|000—a $5,000 addition to the or- \vista North and oppose Mr. Hol- | Susana, the cat’s best friend. | 10.15 p.m. Fireworks at Fort E& Iceland's case and criticizing | the American car, it was stated. | iginal $15,000—for the scheduled lett to “see who speaks for New. | Susana, a German shepherd | ward, Victoria Park. British policy. Dr. Lemuel. Prowse of Char-| wortd title fight against cham- foundland—Mr. Hollett or yours | dog , heard the kittems meow- FRIDAY ( : truly.”’ ing desperately as the current z them downstream. |? 2-™- Leave Government House - The British foreign office re- ported Tuesday night that the ——- lottetown emmpanelled a coroner’s jury last. night. No further’ details were avail- able at press time. - Soviets Heckle Nixon tAP)—Hecklers loaded with un- fsiendly questions and arguments US. Vice-President Rich- ard Nixon Wednesday. “Nixon told his hecklers to get their government to stop jam- ming American broadcasts s0 they would know the truth. He asked why Soviet troops are in Poland, Hungary and East Ger many. : Herbert Klein, Nixon's press aide, broadly hinted that Nixon thinks the Soviet government has primed trusted agents with hos- tile questions and pfanted them among otherwise friendly crowds. The heckling began Wednesday morning at Novosibirsk, 900 miles east of here, wheré Nixon's So- viet tour had brought several examptes of warm response Tues- day. BIG, SILENT CROWD Flying Wednesda to this hoom- ing centre in the eastern Urals, noted for its heavy industry and armament mills, Nixon found a bigbut silent—crowd. Outside a steel mill Nixon got into a discussion with the plant gupérintendent, Nicolai Stravtsev. “You are jamming Western ra- dio broadcasts.” Nixon told Stravisev. “You dont know the truth” ce ith Loaded Queries “What you present is not ideas but dirty slanders,”’ Stravtsev de- clared, Nixon went on: es “You can stick to your own ideas, but you ought to have the right to choose what you hear and read. Why must you let somebody else. tell you what you must hear?” “TI am surprised that. a bright man like you should stick to such an outmoded system,”’ Stravisev retorted. Nixon, whose patience had worn thin, wound up the unexpected debate by shaking hands with the superintendent, we WHERE-TO-FIND-IT . Announcements, notices 11 Births, death ete., .... 2, 11 Classified section .... 10, ll Finance, - markets ..... >i Comics Features 9 Charlottetown news ...... 5 SNE © fds ca cedaseic 4 Island mews .........-.. 2,3 MND Fi is: ons 6st eeeiecss 7 Women’s page. ........... 6 Late reports from: Guardian news bureaus in Summer. side, Montague, Alberton ' and Souris, and from special cer- respondents now appear es the Island News Page. | | weight champ. | Pion Archie Moore Aug. 12. in | Montreal. “Tm going to seek the extra $5,000 to help defray expenses we've encountered since the post- ponements,” said Shaban. “I don’t know exactly what the ex- penses will amount to, but it will be close to $8,000. Terms will be discussed when Durelle and Shaban return to Montreal. The Moore-Durelle re- match has twice been curtailed, from July 1% to July 29 when Moore reported a bruised heel, and from July 29 to Aug. 12 when Moore’s wife became ill. SOMETHING IN WRITING “I’m going to get something in writing when I return to Mont- real,” said Shaban. He would try to change the $15,000 guarantee and’ 20 per cent option for Dur- elle. Moore’s contract calls for a $175,000 guarantee and a 40 per cent option. Durelle, who resumed glove work here Wednesday following a week’s layoff, said he’s going to end up losing money if the promoters don’t come across with more money that won't be .de-# =|ducted from his guarantee. So far, he said, $3,000 must come as | an” expense advance, plus close to $5,000. ‘Im losing money all over the hace moaned the Canadian and British Empire light heavy- “Already I'm about $6,000 in the hole and it will be $8,000 by fight time. “T’'ve practically lost all my summer. I cotld have fought in Moncton four or five times and made more money, than I'm go ing to get against Moore. The only money I'm making is on fishing, I've got to pay my five men. And for equipment to jnext Wednesday even if they fail private talk of nearly four hours to make every effort during the next found differences still East and West. agreement guaranteeing ‘its war- won rights. in West Berlin, miles behind the Iron Curtain. At the last minute, the Western Big Three offered to limit their West Berlin garrisons to 11,000 men. and to join. the Communists in checkingpropaganda in both East and West Berlin. : By HERB ALTSCHULL GENEVA (AP)—West and East decided Wednesday to halt foreign ministers’ conference by to find a way out of the Berlin crisis. They may recess or they may break off the talks entirely. No one was willing to pedict that there would be#zreement by next Wednesday. Even the nor mally optimistic British were ror- trayed as depressed over the prospects. “There is‘no evidence to indi- cate there is new hope for a Ber- lin settlement,"’ Andrew Berding, assistant U.S. state secretary, the | up and West Big Four would take the problem for an unspeci- fied period if the Germans could not agree among themselves. But the Soviet Union insists the Al-| lies must get out of Berlin and wants the size of the garrisons reduced now. Highly placed Western officials said the West would much rather have a recess than a breakoff. Wednesday's Herter - Gromyko session followed the exchange be- tween east and west last night! told reporters. Maurice Couve de Murville, the | French foreign minister, told the French cabinet in Paris: ‘’The re- sults. are not encouraging and it is not possible to be optimistic.” OTHER COMMITMENTS The Wednesday ending was agreed unon after U.S. State Sec- retary Christian Herter informed Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gomyko he had to leave Geneva by next Thursday because of com- mitments elsewhere. Berding said Gromyko did not resist the idea that the conference must be wound up in a week. The two men agregd during a week to narrow the pro- | separting } The West insists on a -signed 110 Gromyko has proposed an 18- month truce during which East of documents designed to clarify their positions on Berlin. Herter told Gromyko he would have to leave Geneva next Thurs- |day to take part in‘ a meeting}. of the foreign ministers of the Organization of American States in Santiago, Chile, beginning Aug. 12. eo Berding ‘said Gromyko and Herter reached agreement, te wind up the conference by an ‘ed- nesday “with or without ment.” Joe O'Brien Wins In ‘Richest’ Race YONKERS, N.Y. (AP) — heavily favored Blaze Hanover gave up the lead once, then surged in front with one-quarter of a mile to go and won the $113,- 812 Hilltop Trot Wednesday night at “Yonkers Raceway by 1% lengths over Willowood. Joe O’Brien a native of Al berton, P.E.I. droye Blaze Hapn- | iParent Fears over, owned by the S.A. Camp Farms of Shafter. Calif., to vic tory in this. richest two-year-old harness race in history. A year ago the same stable finished sec- ond in the stake. Willowood,’ property of Robert W. Sidley of Painesville, Ohio, was among the first_four in the field of ,eight most of the way. But he couldn't keep step with jhere to finance a new Blaze Hanover, who was clocked in 2:08 1-5 for the mile Dick Richargéon to have driven Witlow ; he was shaken up | 1 The accident at Spring Valley, N.Y., enroute to the race. Billy Haughton was the replacement. The judges called for an im quiry after two horses broke stride near the finish. One was the Newport Stock Farm’s New- port Mercury but his third place finish was allowed. Demands Heavy OTTAWA (OP) — A father fes- tified he may have been too de- manding of the son who with an- L other 19-year-old pleaded guilty lto theft of $73.264—from—a_ bank . life id Mexico, Oharles Leclere told Magistrate Joachim Sauve “I ask myself was Wednesday a private plane I too demanding on him. I don’t The fiery premier called the election after Mr. Hollett and Rex Renouf, the only other P.C. member in the 36-seat House, op- posed his resolution condemning the federal government’s handling of Term 29 of the Confederation agreement. The Opposition leader predicted the Conservatives would form the next government. Candidates will contest aj 36 seats. Further de- tails of the Conservative. election campaign are expected to be known in a day or two. The Liberals will contest all but three districts—St. John’s Fast, South and Centre. These will be contested by members of the Newly - formed Newfoundland party, which plans a limited cam- paign. Newfoundland Party Leader James Higgins, who represented St. John’s East in the legislature dissolved Tuesday, predicted the Newfoundland party will form the official Opposition in the next House and make up the govern- ment of Newfoundland after the subsequent election. He and A. M. Duffy. Newfound- land party member for Si. John’s South, will be seeking re-election. Mr. Smallwood said Liberals will not run against Mr. Higgins and Mr. Duffy. They resigned from the Progressive Conserva- tive party July 20 to protest the federal government’s Newfound- land Grants Act. They voted for the premier’s resolution condome- ing Ottawa’s action. Nor would Liberals seek the st John’s South seat held by Mr. Renouf, Mr..Smaliwood said. He “under, " the Newfoundland party would contest this seat. Meanwhile an unknown quan- tity is the ‘unborn Labor party. President Larry’ Daley said the Newfoundland Federation of. La- bor would be running candidates carried She dived in and pulled them ashore one by one. Now it looks like Suisiiste owner will have to adopt. the kittens. Susana already has. for Airport via Kent, Great George, Euston Streets, Long worth Avenue, St. Peter’s Road, Brackley Point Road. 9.25 a.n@ Arrive airport. 9.30 a.m. Take off for Nova Scotia Queen Elizabeth Liner Figures In Collision NEW YORK (AP) — The a ury liner Queen Elizabeth, largest in the world, collided with a freighter in fog Wednesday in New York harbor. There were no injuriés aboard either vessel, although more than 2,000 lives were momentarily endangered. The freighter, the American Hurter of the United States Lines,. stove a hole in the hull of the 83,000-ton Elizabeth above the water line. With 1,959 passengers aboard. the queen of Britain's merchant fleet was forcell to return to her Hudson River berth for repairs. She was only about 90 minutes out of Pier 90, en route to Europe, when the collision occur- red at 3:29 p.m. EDT. It was just after sunset when the Queen Elizabeth returned to Pier 90, her upper decks crowded with passengers. A crowd of 2,- 000 was at the pier. Many were friends of relatives of passengers. As a scar from the collision, the Plizabeth had a five-foot dent with a three-foot hole on her_right side about 20 feet back of the bow. Officials were hopeful that the damage eculd be repaired s quickly, perhaps even overnight. One of them said: “If that’s all it amounts to, we might turn her around and leave tomorrow.”” The. American Hunter, 10,460 tons, suffered a two-foot indente- tion in her bow, also above the waterline. Both ships were in pilot waters. where trained harbor. pilots di- their movements. And the rect 4 Elizabeth had radar. which is supposed to protect it againat mishaps in fog or darkness. There was no immedate ex- Queen Mary, an 81,237 ton liner. The Blizabeth arrived here from Southampton Tuesday and was delayed five hours in the harbor by fog. After a fast turn arcend, she began loading pas sengers for the eastbound cross ing at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday. At about-2*p.m., the Elizabeth master, Omdr. G. H. G. Morris, gave the signal and the liner he gan~ moving out from her: West 50th Street pier.