TELEPHONE 8506 Buyer meets seller with Guardian Want fds. Dial 8506 ask for classified ad Tx Noi pores bo ee na ; SGT. KING IS DECORATED [mais Regiment filowing the an: ‘Major-General MP. Bogert, ’ a g Eastern Army Com- tits Me Withdlanieg Madd a e ‘AWA (CP) Canada’s forces will get more in- : from the United States defensive atomic weapons f a new agreement made Monday. Canada - U.S. agreement, in the Commons by Minister Diefenbaker, will this country to obtain previously restricted data military uses of energy. agreement, similar to one by the U.S. and United last year, does not storage of American nu- warheads in Canada. This be covered in a separate now being worked out by of the two countries. A agreement is expected to feady for cabinet considera- ERICTON (CP) — Lond British publisher peer raised in New Bruns- was saluted Monday on the p of his 80th birthday by'| te pealing of a 25-bell carillon, gift of Lord Beaverbrook to St. —* Presbyterian Church The weather was bright and and the musie resounded ( the city. Andrew’s minister Dr. T. Watson commented in his ser- isit Purpose Speculated GENEVA, (AP) — Nikita rus ‘sg visit to Albania aroused widespread ion in the Western camp. ant in this East-West lutes Beaverbrook nals Regiment following the an- | nal GOC’s inspection of 2 Militia Group last night. Sergeant King | tion in several weeks. Mr. Diefenbaker said the agree- ment announced Monday will open the way for transfer to Can- ada “at some future time’ of military reactors and any special nuclear materials required for them. PROPELLANT TYPE Military reactor is defined in the agreement as a reactor for the propulsion of naval vessels, aircraft or land vehicles and military package power reactors. Canada now is studying the economic and military feasibility of building nuclear-powered sub- marines or other vessels. The Canada-U.S. agreement on con- struction of the DEW radar line in the Canadian Arctic provides that power for stations may be supplied by small reactors. mon Sunday the congregation was pleased Lord Beaverbrook had returned for a time to his! home province. Lord Beaverbrook arrived Fri- day aboard a plane owned By | New Brunswick industrialist K. | C. Irving, after a flight from Lon- don, Eng. He will return to Eng- land June 13. Although only in the city three days, he is already a familiar sight striding -briskly from the Lord Beaverbrook Hotel to the Lord -Beaverbrook Art Gallery, his latest gift to the province. He™ spends his time at the gallery examining every detail of the building and the hanging of paintings. He was to be a special guest Monday night at the final perfor- mance of an army day pageant in Lady Beaverbrook Rink, de- picting early Acadian life in the Fredericton area during the Eng- lish-French struggle for supre- macy in Eastern Canada. WHERE-TO-FIND-IT 11 Announcements, notices . Births, deaths, etc., 2 and 11 Charlottetown news Finance, markets . veenee “i Island news ....... ce : iis ii ists babaricss Woman’s page ............ ‘ Late reports from Guardian news bureaus in Summerside, Montague, Alberton Souris, and from special cor- respondents now appear on See er eS oe ee WEATHER ° j r | Sunny and westerly winds 15. Low. : high at Charlottetown 40 and 70. -overs Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, TUESDAY, MAY 26, 1959 22 PAGES wor =oe® FIVE CENTS D was distinctively honored as the! recipient of both the Efficiency Medal and the Canadian Forces “tiaseuae (See story on Page —} phone-call-at work from a woman orelInformation|lsComing Mr. Diefenbaker announced Feb. 20 that American Bomarc anti-aircraft missiles to be in- stalled in Canada in 1961 will be fitted with atomic warheads. He also made clear that the navy and army will eventually acquire American atomic warheads. No atomic warheads would be manu- factured in Canada. i ae el JOHN WRIGHT S’side Man Is Delegate OTTAWA (CP)—The names of Canada’s delegates to the Atlan- tic Congress, to be opened in Lon- don by Queen Elizabeth June 5, were announced Monday. The list is made up of 30 non- parliamentarians and 21 mem- bers of Parliament, including al- ternates. The congress will bring toge- ther 650 non-government dele- gates from the 15 MATO coun- tries. Canada’s delegation is headed by Harry Jones ‘PC—Saskatoon). Non-parliamentarians include: Fred Harfield, Hartland, N.B., John Wright, Summerside, P.E.I. Tin nitinpeddic ie ‘Carnegie Heroes Is Earned OTTAWA (CP) — The govern- ment Monday declined to produce minutes of a meeting last August of the Unemployment Insurance advisory committee although La- bor Minister Starr last week said the request was “reasonable.” Mr. Starr reversed his position 2 Children Unharmed TORONTO (CP)—Two children who had been reported kidnapped Monday were found unharmed on a street near their home in sub- urban North York. Ricky Harris, 4, and his sister, Alare, 5, childrefi of the treas- urer of a clothing company, were reported kidnapped after a woman took them from their home shortly before 11 a.m. The woman told a maid she had come to take them to Tor- onto’s west-end High Park. Their mother, who works for a down- town advertising agency, told po- lice she later received a tele- who said she would never see the children again. Mr. Harris was in Oshawa on a business trip. Police searched High Park but ; found the children on Calvington Drive, not far from their home. Police said they started tele- phoning a list of numbers thad been given and at one them a woman answered said: ‘Sure, I've got the kids here.” 4 had taken the children intending to go to High Park for an outing but changed her mind and vis- ited a niece who had just had a bed ¥ baby. brought to the Maritime Prov-| inces arrived in Charlottetown by rail over the weekend and was unloaded and assembled at the railroad yards yesterday. The bhydraulicaliy-operated 14- foot blade attached to the 40+ monster machine is 48 inches a can exert a push of approximaie- ly 60,000 pounds. : A 375 H.P. Cummins diesel pro- vides motive power for this modern mechanical giant wich can attain a top speed of 28 per hour in either forward or reverse gear. It is equipped with power shift and torque. transmission. - tails for $5,000. Brought to the Ishand by the Barker Equipment United College Posts Filled WINNIPEG (CP) — Dr. W. C. Lockhart, principal of United Col- Tege here, announced Monday night that all staff positions have been filled and when the college opens for the fall term it will have a full complement of pro- fessors. Canadian Control ‘Is Lacking’ Over Yanks’ Bomarc Missile OTTAWA {CP)—Defence auth- orities said Monday that a shaky aspect of Canadian adoption of the American Bomarc anti-air- craft missile is that this country has no control over development or production of the weapon. If development of the Bomearc- B, the solid-fuel missile which Canada ie scheduled to put into operation in late 1961, were slowed in the US., Canada would have to wait longer for the the Island News Page. weapon. This problem has come to the forefront in recent weeks because of the controversy between the US. Army and Air Force over air defence missiles. The former is reported dead set against con- tinued major investments in the Bomarce. HAS AXE TO GRIND The US. Army has an axe to grind, however, because Kt wants to see continued development and production of its Nike-dHercules * Each of its four 20-ply nylon)? tires is seven feet high and re-|/ Starr Reverses Stand On Committee Report Monday and said he could not agree to a formal motion for pro- duction of the minutes in the Commons on the ground that such documents are privileged. They were first sought by Paul Martin (L — Essex East) at a meeting of the Commons indus- trial relations committee. Re- fused there, Alexis Caron (L— Hull); carried his appeal to the floor of the Commons. At that time, Mr. Starr said “I believe the request is reason- able’’ but advised Mr. Caron to go through the ‘routine proce- dure”’ required—a formal motion calling on the government to pro- duce the papers. Mr. Caron placed such a mo- tion on the Commons order paper during the weekend. But when it came up Monday Mr. Starr de- clined to produce the papers. The motion was defeated by a vote of 130 to 27, the CCF’: sid- ing with the Liberals. The August meeting of the ad- visory committee considered the state of the unemployment insur- ance fund from which unemploy- ment insurance benefits are paid. MONEY GIVEN TO EMPLOYEES CAMBRIDGE, Mass., {AP)~— A 72 - year - old manufacturer, “aiming to have the fun of giving while living” hes 71,450,553 “to 400 eee after selling his business. Harmon P. Elliot sold his Elliot Addressing Machine Company to Bessemer Securit- ies Corporation of New York with the understanding \ the corporation would continue the plant and keep the employees on the payroll. Employees with service of 10 years or more get between $3,500 and $4,000 each with no strings attached. Brackley Beach construction pro- ject. In charge is driver-operator enti-aircrea®t missile, frst tour of the Atlantic Provinces. Premier Matheson will a a ee k on June In Cold Water MOUNT CLEMENS, Mich. (AP)—In a night of horror, three young men and two girls were drowned in northern Lake St. Clair after clinging for hours to their eee 16foot rowboat. Three teenaged girls aboard ne Soagta, Ae Zale were come shortly after dawn Monday by a@ search boat. The girls, near hysteria, were in shallow water surrounded by the bodies of their friends. Coast guardsmen said the five victims apparently succumbed from weakness and shock in the SO-degree cold. The water was | Rot deep enough to cover any- | One's head. They were found half a mile from Strawberry Island, four miles south of Mount Cle- mens. ‘Biggest’ Bulldozer*Exe rts Push Of Approximately 60,000 Pounds The biggest bulldozer ever ak as a demonstrator on the| machine's manufacturers, Clark ee exception” Equipment of Benton Harbor, Michigan. \ Too large for a single unit, the O.K. “Skip’’ Noel of Greenville,| big bulldozer arrived here in two| Tenn. Mr. Noel represents the railroad cars. sere Five Drowned the control seat nime feet above) Heri- N.S., was singled out the Carnegie Hero Fund Com- mission Monday for a special }gold medal citation. other such mass 35 years since the Andrew Car- commis- HF mini . | tion derground in the Springhill mine Oct. 23, 1958 caught more than 150 men at work. After eight days of rescue efforts, much of it car- Tied on under extremely danger- ous concitions, the casualty rolls listed 74 dead removed from the mine, one man who died later, and 99 men saved. 379 PARTICIPANTS The special award cited ‘‘of- ficiais and workmen of the Do- inion Steel. and Coal Corpora- Limited and local doctors The com- who riskec their lives.” Oil Power Protested OTTAWA (CP) — Opposition Leader Pearson protested in the| Commons Monday night that the government is seeking unneces- | sary cabinet power over oil im-/ ports in its bill to establish a National Energy Board. It is of the greatest importance | that everything be done to en-! courage the export of Canadian’ oil, he said as debate continued | \* the proposed energy board. But the Liberals ‘“‘take to the bill's would empower provision that the | ‘Andrei Gromyko ToAtten dFuneral The announcement was made at a press conference called after Monday's meeting, during which ately trying to confuse the talks with false charges against West >| Company. .|REBUKES GROMYKO and 20 minutes in the hope of \breaking the deadlock in the talks. The conference, will meet ear- lier today to allow Herter, Selwyn Lioyd of Britain and Couve de Murville of France to | fly together to Washington for Dulles’ funeral. US. Secretary of State Christian |‘ y| Herter rapped Russia for deliber- ‘Award | Springhill - Rescue Workers Cited For Special Gold Medal ‘Stop Threats’ Red Is Told British Economy Is Stronger Now HALIFAX (CP) — Sir Saville Garner, United Kingdom high commissioner to Canada, said Monday the British economy is the cabinet to act in future, or| stronger than at any time since authorize the board to do so, on import of oil as well as its ex- * port... afternoon prepared to pour 303/ west of the building housing Whit-| ton, the firm which brought “the gallons of ae Oe ele talent not die We densl a ee eo of the shop doing the each of the four seven-foot tires of this ki ize American-made} ground is Roy 1. McO:acken, NB-| which lead to the control deck is) cubed am Holman’s| PEI reoresentative of the Barker! 0.K. “Skin” Niel of Greenville. ing on .the row of metal steps the Second World War. “There are sound reasons for believing this strength will be ee eee SRT TOS ee , ~ 7 oS oa x maintained,” he told a service Club. luncheon ‘ Gir Saville, on a Maritime tour, said British exports to Canadian and United States market. are increasing but the goal has not yet been reached. . . . The United Kingdom had a favorable balance of trade with the United States in March, 3969: This is the first month since 1865 in which we sold the Americans -|more than we bought.” Sir Saville said that as Britain continues to make economic gains _ .|and Canada resumes her expan- MECHANICS YESTERDAY Poriiag Let Semnedintely to the Bauipment Company of Frederic- Tennessee, driver-operator and turers. Edgar Whitlock, representative of the . manufac- pro- tire- i job, stands by one of the big oan wheels. An unidentified | wnuth atendia hetween the wheels. sion, increased dollar investment by the United Kingdom can be expectad. In the field of trade, British businessmen, will continue to in- crease their efforts to crack the “difficult. market.”’ \ “Canada is a tough market and . our exports are still short of what we should like. Nevertheless, they . are increasing. “Those British businessmen who have shown energy, imagina- tion and patience heve reaped their rewards here and\will con- tinue to do so. “Must of them well realize . .. that thcir goods must be sold on their’-merits and that the appeal to sent’ment will have and should | | have no effect.” Text of Sir Saville’s remarks were released in advance of. de- Farm Harvest Nears Record PARIS (Reuters) — Final con firmation of the success of Presi- dent Charles de Gaulle’s auster- ity plan for the French economy pects of a near-record farm har- vest. The danger of late frosts is practically over and the ministry of agriculture foreses a good wheat crop, record eS ot fruit and wee potato crop and a 24 per cent in os ue ae wine harvest. / Ww \ was expected Monday with pros« « >