aS ; aa By & , bee ca as ie 8 JOSEPH MacSWEEN iam Press Staff Writer D NATIONS, N.Y. (CP) da’s proposal for a global f on atomic radiation ed unanimous approval in the 4th general assembly of the United Nations Tuesday. Assembly president Victor A. launde of declared the ot wansimote on a show of ands after 14 countries — from sides of the Iron Curtain— poke in support of the resolution te-sponsored by 11 countries. ‘The vote in the 82-member as- mbly was 78 in favor, none inst and no abstentions. Four plegations — apparently eaught surprise when the vote was were absent. External Affairs Minister iMoward Green termed the vote icularly gratifying” since by across-the-board nature {t in- ated that all other members the UN took the same serious + of the radiation problem as Canada. WORLD-WIDE BASIS Britain, the Unite d- States, France and the Soviet Union all spoke in favor of the resolution, which calls for sampling and an- alysis of air, water, soil and food on a standardized basis all over the world to determine the haz- ards of radiation. Communist Czechoslovakia was @ co - sponsor of the proposal, along with Argentina, Austria, Ghana, Ireland, Italy. Japan, Mexico. New Zealand and Nor- Way. In. introducing the resolution, Green reiterated Canada’s offer ‘to receive from other states ra- diation samples collected accord- JT} 4) Siaarc aidNot - LONDON (OP) — Sir Winst.- Churchill was seized . Tuesday m:ght in another bout with his old | chest trouvie. He is two wees short of his 85th birthday. sisted his illness is not serious. ‘Lut it sent him to bed Tuesday afternoon and forced him to can- cel a meeting with West Ger- Many’s Chancellor Adenauer, who is visiting London. A secretary at Churchill's Lon- don home told reporters: “There's .othing to worry -gbout. He has been in bed for gome hours with an indisposition gbout the chest—what you'd ex pect in a man of his age.” “Nothing sevious — he's just tired,”’ said his. son-in-law, Avia- tion Minister Duncan Sandys. “He is’ indisposed,”’ said his private secretary. “We hope he “will be up and about again shortly.” The news of Chirchill’s illness €amie after two weeks of fog and - PAANAGER Frederick Shaw Martin has been appointed manager of the Ottawa offices of Greenshields and: Co. Inc., and their Stock Exchange offiliate Greenshields and Co. Lid. Mr. Martin is a native of New Perth, P. E. L, a member of the Prince Edward Island bar, and was executive ‘assistant to the former. Solici- tor General of Canada, Hon Ross’ MacDonald. Royal Twins Not Expected _ LONDON (CP)—The Daily Ex- Press says there is no evidence that .the Queen is going to have twins, despite rumors. to that ef- fect. Columnist Anne Scott - James; writes: ; “The doctors cannot be abso- lately certain because she - has mot been x-rayed, but the beat of one infant heart has. been through the stethoscope.” Green: _ A resolution requesting “all | Federal Government employees to immediately bring to the -at- tention of their Federal Mem- bers of Parliament the urgent necessity of the Government ap- proving a general upward revis- }ion for ail. classified Civil Ser- | os a 'vants” was unanimously pas-ed jat a meeting of the Prince § me |ward Island Federal Civil Ser- | vants held at Birch Court last night. The meeting presided over by R:W. Betton provincial vice-pre- sident of the Civil Service Fed- eration of Canada, was one of many meetings being held across} Canada to provide the public with information relative to the. stand taken by the Federal Civil Ser- vice in their request for higher salaries and to seek public sup- port in their presentation to the he ing to methods recommended by the UN scientific committe on the | Government which affort. inti SEE SIONS, : _of | the Civil M rejected t Serious ; chilling Tan. He will be 8 No-. ; A member of his household said) angry’, he emphasized Churchill cxpected to be at the! danger of, letting themselves be Tlouse of Commons today. Television Rules To Be Announced By DON HANRIGHT Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP) — The first Ca- ;madian broadcasting rules specif- ically for television will be an- ment-appointed Board of Broad- cast governors. i Underlying aim of the new TV regulations — to take effect next year — will be to ensure varied, high-standard and comprehensive television programming ‘“‘basic- ally Canadian in content and Si character”—as demanded im the 1958 Broadcasting Act. However, there has been spec- ulation that the governors, while still trying to satisfy that de- mand. have diluted some of their original TV proposals to which strongly at public hearings here two weeks ago. Most § contentious of the pro- posed rules were the require- ments that the weekly program- ming of every TV station be 55- ;per - cent Canadian, that two peak-viewing hours be reserved | every night for BBG - prescribed programs meeting the conient rule, and that most types of mor- ning TV be banned. \ OPPOSE ALL THREE against all three ideas. Their major contention was that the 55- per-cent rule would. result in a loss of program quality as sta- tions spread their budgets thinly across the many more produc- tions required. Z ~ And this, said the Canadian As- sociation of Broadcasters, would defeat the high-standards, pur- pose of the act. The C. A. B., WHERE-TO-FIND-IT Announcements, notices . 17 Study Of Atomic Radiation Is Unanimously Approved InUnitedNationsAssembly, At least three countries — the their readiness to participate in U.S., Japan and Norway — have|such a co-operative program of already offered to utilize their|Colection and analysis, the Ca- laboratory facilities to, help other countries. Similar offers were ex-| analyze on a regular basis sam- pected from other nations. Said| ples of air, water, soil and f{:cd “If other governments indicate! stations in each category”. ‘MOTION IS UNANIMOUS - Island Civil Servants Back Salary Demand | It was learned that Churchi.i| profound shock’’. was visited by Lord Moran, his | ; i . personal piiysician. The visit was Civil Service Friends and family alike i) siated to te of a routine nature.! treated and mounced today by the govern-/ ‘ | that g dcasting cannot be; ihe Queen on her Canadian tour | achieves b tion. {last year. “ CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, WEDNESDAY, nadian government as an initial offer is prepared to receive and from 20 to 25 foreign sampling Service Commission for higher Civil Service salaries. The resolution also urged the Federal ‘Members “to. consider favorably the inclusion ‘nthe new Civil Service Act provision for some form cf direct negotia- ting procedure between staff a>- “Covers Prince Edward ‘Island Like NOVEMBER 18, 1959 The Dew” \ 18 PAGES oviet Mikoyan Wishes ; 7} ore Of ¢ anada 1 sociations representing Federal Government employees and cur Se RED VISITOR IS SEEN WAVING FROM PLANE GUEST SPEAKER Guest speakers for the meet-) ing were E.K. Easier, formerly of O'Leary and now of Ottawa, secretary of direct affiliates of jthe Civil Service Federation of} Canada,-and Ralph Tombs. Ot- tawa, secretary of the National Joint Action Commitiee. Remarks were also made, by Heaths Mac- quarrie, M.P. for—Queen’s and John A. Macdonald, M.P. for King’s. Other speakers included By ROBERT RICE Canadian Press Staff Writer | George Cheverie, who introduced} _ ST. JOHN'S Nfld. (CP)—Tae tion of the presentation by the! on Canada’s newest province. salary increase im the Civil . “he said, ‘‘Let me assure you .that to recognize the value of its, Civil Servants came t@ me as a) for higher ireight raies. NO ELABURATION Te Be Shorter |} OTTAWA ‘CP)—Future royai| itours im Canada likely will be Although he contended that the shorter and on a regional basis. had been shabbily| says Esmond Butler, secretary - was “righteously |to Governor-Gine al Vanier and the iormer press officer to the Queen. Howeve;. transporting At Buckingham Palace. it is/ucis into central Canada. feit that six-week Canadian coast- | w-coast tours are a thing of the ‘Sod is used for increasing rev- rast,” he said in an interview enue to the railways,” the brief Tuesday. “With improved air transporta- tion. it is considered the Queen ued railway fre:ght rate increases lLaely will make more frequent | will be sei‘ous anc almost catas- | visits for specific Canadian. en-| trophic.” : gacements ana shorter regionai One witness called by the prov- tours.” ince—-Dr. Parzival Cope of New- Mr. Butler has taken up his dut foundland’s Memorial University s@8 as secreiary to Maj.-Gen. Van- | —said transportation costs are an representing 41 of Canada’s pri-' ier after serving on the Bucking-| important element in the price of vately-owned TV stations. insisted! ham Palace press staff and wita' -ensumer zoods.in Newfoundland. Said Dr. Cope; an economic: rrofessor: | (Continued on page 5 col. 2) commission on irai.sportation, the government of fiery Premier Jo- seph Smau weod-sought ‘very spe- "| Newfoundland government _sa.d/ ial’: consideration in any solu- Leod, who introduced Mr. Easter.| :ueSday -inat any new freigat/ "0" ” ae Sie; Mosier aatinal tie ee boost would cause “al-| “ansport -robiems———_——_ ree ques-| most catastrophic consequences}. “The government submission, +presented when the commission The brief did not elaborate on possible al.ernative methods ier mereasing .ailway revenues. yoserver- indicated that Newfoundland supported a Mai- jiime demaid ior some new form of subsidy ot government help in, Atlantie prod- “Unless some alternative met- Catastrophic Results Seen lf Freight Rate Hikes Again ‘The expences of transporta- ton -are mainiy ‘responsible for che higher cos. of living in New- foundiand. Higher freight rates z even ‘urther above that pre- vailingon_ihe mainland, and de- / press living standards even more Angus MacLean | No.2 Russian At By DAL WARRINGTON Canadian Press Staff Writer ALIFAX (CP)—Deputy Pre mier Anas as Mikoyan, No. 2 Mexico flight. That had been de cided. by the captain of the air- | craft — a fou--engine turbo-prop Sana tr "eu. denial Uelen,- flew Tiyushin-18 of the Soviet Aeroflot uere from Moscow Tuesday for airline. i aa overnight visit and hinted ne| A party of 27, including trade might like to see more of Car-| wificials aad Russian newspaper ada in the fusure. men, accompanied Mr. Mikoyan. He also threw—a hint that Pre- They stopped for two hours at mier Khrushchev himself might | Xeilavik, Iceland, en route. visit this ccun‘ry if the Canadian | , The deputy premier was governmea? invites him. éressed almosi entirely in black wie Se | —biack har biack overcoat, dark Mr. Khiuchcuev $ right . hand | suit and. maroon tie. . man seemed in jovial mood as F te stepped from a Soviet airiiner| - He talked frecly about bomb at Shearwater airport. He was| ©ts and .rade. But he hedged on greeted by Fisheries Minister Au | POlicy matiers. He reiterated the gus MacLean for the federal gov-| Soviet view tuat nuclear tests einment, ?cemier Robert L. Stau-| Should be darned Greets Halifax tests if other powers do not. I hope it will be possible to ban the tests completely, PRAISES MAC I know Mr. Macmillan (the British prime minister) has ex vressed his views on this subject - understand tue United States ts not likely ‘o resume the tests but undoubted)y there is some oppo- sition to this course . . . . “Publi¢é cpiuion demands that ihe tests be stopped.” , Mr. Mia«cya™ sad ne thinks there are prospects for increas- ing trade vetween Canada and tae Soviet Union=but some’ diffi- culties have to be solved first. “Our busines.men on both sides ficld of Nova: Scotia and Dr.| “We have piainly stated. that Amazasp ‘routuman, the Soviet| W are mot gong to resume the ambassador tu Canada. j He quip=cd with reporters who} questioned him beside the plane} and waved. his black homburg to a crowd of about 100. “In the ruture anything cau happen.” te said when asked if ne would visit viher parts of Can ada sometime. But he added that ne may stcp in ‘his country again on his way home from Mexico, ! where he-will open a Soviet trade | fair. By Red Dep HALIFAX (CP—Soviet Deputy | Premier Anastas Mikoyan said) Tuesday the cold war is thawing) and the international atmosphere is changing radically. ° _The No. ussian - said ‘at a press conference Premier Khrushchev's recent visit to the United States and President Eis-| enhower’s planned spring trip to MOBILE KHRUSHCHEV On a possible Canadian tour by Premier Khrushchev, he said, ‘Mr. Khrushchev is a very mo- be person and he likes to tra- vel.” aes : He told porters through an in- terpreter ‘incre is no special sig- aificance in the choice of Halitas | for a stopover on the Moscow-| Civil Service Commission to the | " , i ins low. the h of the r raj; opened the first of a two-day) below those of the rest t Government for higher salaries. | 8 it eee. ee nearing he.e, aenounced post-war| country.” I did ” ont that the re : horizontal freight rate increases} ernment would turn down our j F T and said ‘other means” must be and honest request for a uture ours found to meet raiway demands | OTTAWA (CP) — The federal government Tuesday denied it |broke an agreement with New- ifoundiand in the dispute last | said, “the corsequences to tue) March over sending RCMP rein- veople of .his province of contin | forcements during the violent log- gers’ strike in the provinct. In a statement of defence filed in the Exchequer Court, the fed- leral government denied - that | Newfoundland Attorney - General iCurtis requested the ments—as the province claims he |did The government's statement ‘was in reply to the province's Ere (og an REL NIT PI aE PT = ee eee, Ae £3 SB ase. 3s 2 a ioe eA eA yen, 2 ty «ig wees Oe poe Hees ht TS ee pee Sap cia BAL ou a raat tre i ‘ & 4 ‘ € +* “se eae j 4 - of ‘ o . we « é : if . Site ‘ ON we ¢ i i i a 7, 2, Mage ee Wes ee ugie gy Oe ee Ee gts eM eee er a oe ie OOK by eee ee ete ews bee: 6, C.F tf 4 po WE a 4 <7 ; 7, r , ' i a the broadcasters objected 80} ‘ Private, broadcasters argued| | Pe . ” avg es: ~~ CAT AND DOG motorist who found -him lying on highway fecives friendly atten- | convalescence. ARE FRIENDS tion from family cat during his immobilized ys Sadly injured pup tshen to ee east-side Vanctuver home by a | by Births, deaths, ete., .. 2, 17 Classified section . 16, 17 Comics, features ......... 15 Charietietown news .... & Finance, markets 13 Bits - 2,3 + he Women’s page .......... 6,7 Late reports from Guardian news bureaus in Summer- side, Montague, Alherton and Seuris, and from special cor- respondents new appear’ on the Island News Page. va \ me etek or Eads se Federal Cabinet Denies Nfld. AgreementBroken reinforce-| Russia are “big steps ... to-| ward the easement of the inter- national situation." “Things have become better. | All the world is welcoming an! easing in the international situa tion. The cold war is coming to an end.” | Mikoyan spent 45 minutes at. jthe press conference in a radio i station studio. While Canadian | eens snapped his pic- ture, Russian cameramen ground out film on reporters. BACKS EXCHANGES Mikoyan said the exchange of visits should be continued. He credited—“‘in order to be just”— statement of claims filed in the court in launching its suit for damages against the-federal gov- ernment. The province is suing for un- stated damages on the grounds it should fiaG ways to increase hhade,”’ he said. uty Leader Prime Minister Macmillan with “takipg the first serious step to- ward this easement’ by visiting Russia earlier this year. Mikovan also had these ‘an- swers to reporters questions: Tf he were invited to Ottawa on his way back from Mexico, would he accept? “Difficult. now to an- swer .. . I would have to ask the commander of the -plane.”’ On strontium 9: “We, like all Cold War Thaw Seen the countries of the world, are_ concerned .... When will Russia put a mas into space? “I don't know.” Diefenbaker Sends Wire “@TTAWA (CP) — Prime Min- ister Diefenbaker Tuesday sent a message of greeting to Soviet Deputy Premier Anastas Mikoyan on the occasion of his visit te Halifax. had to hire additional police on its own to meet an ‘‘emergency” after failing to “get RCMP pin forcements despite two requests in March to the then RCMP com- missioner, L.H. Nicholson, QUIT LATER Commissioner Nicholson _ re- signed after © Justice Minister Fulton decided against sending ithe reinforcements. ' The ROMP acts as.a provincial police force in the province un- der a contract. between the two governments Newfoundland’s damage suit -The fact that Canadian govern- ment bonds were selling lower than those any other western | centres on one clause in the con- nation excepting Cuba was due) a ; " to the present federal govern- | tract which states that when the! anest’s snisiinndli 5 the natiiie® , Provincial attorney - general be- oe mg © eer ie 3 tary affairs, Mrs. R. A, ilieves an emergency exists and) MOH lasks for RCMP reinforcements, | Kinnear of Port: Colbourne, Ont-| the federal government shali in- ae said in Charlottetown last) | “President of the national fed- eration of Liberal women, “g°s. Kinnear was guest speaker at} if, in the opinion of the attorney- general for Canada, the increase is possible “having regard to ee : j \ \other responsibilities and duties re a which last night} ;of the force.” closed the annual meeting of} the Prince Edward Island Lib-! eral Women's Association. | Mrs. .B..Earle-MacDonald,_pre-+ sident of the women's associa- tion presided. ' Mrs. Kinnear was introduced by Senator F. Elsie Inman of Montague and thanked by Mrs, W. ‘E. Smaliman of Summerside. SPEAKERS | “Newfound'and’s statement - of; claim. said that on two occasions in “March Mr. “Curtis requested lreinforcements on the advice of the commanding office of the RCMP’s Newfoundland division. It said that both. times Mr. Fulton—attorney-general for Can- ada\-‘‘formed the opinion, having regard to other responsibilities | i and duties of the force. that such! Other speakers included the} an incréase was Ypossible.” ,local party leader and former The felergi government's Premier of the Province, A. W. reply. filed Tuesday, denied that Matheson; Aiden Mulligan of Kin- Mr. Fulton had decided the in-| Kora president of the Island crease was possible. Liberal association; and Robert ——________—- | MacLeod of Charlottetown, pre- sident of the provincial Young Liberal Association. A short sing-song was led by former min- ister of highways and public, works, J. George MacKay. | Seated at the head table were Construction | Drop Reported Mr. and Mrs. A. W. ‘Matheson, OTTAWA (CP) — An August-'B. Earle MacDonald, Mr. and ©Septemver drop of 5.5 per cent) Mrs, Mulligan, Senator Inman, | in the value of building permits | yrs Edgar Heartz, West Royalty, issued by Canadian municipalities wre | H. Poole Montague. was reported Tuesday by the bu"| vice-president of the women’s reau of siatistics, | organization; Mr. MacLeod, Mrs. Septemvcr's iotal of $231.314,000 _-. was down uy $13,534,000 from the | Kinnear, and Mrs. MacDonald. | : Charter members Mrs. John month previous, but still 4.4 per cent higher than the Sptember,| Rattenbury, Charlottetown, and 1958, values totalling $221 ogy Mrs. Heartz: were introduced to Residentiai construction in Seo- | #e_ meeting. | tember was authorized in Septem-| Mrs. Kinnear remarked that it | ber to the extent of $128,593,000,| WaS &@ sad experience for Can- chort of ihe year-earlier. total of! adians to find:their bonds selling 9133,217,000° “but well up from $0 far_below par and “almost $112,033,000 in_August last. at the bottom of the ladder.” Permits. :n Suptember covered| Continuing her attack on’ the $102,716,000 in non-residential Diefenbaker monetary policies struction, compared with 968.773. Mrs. Kinnear said that increase 000 in August and $132,815,000 in| iu interest rates was a common sphnt on rear leg, the dog shares meals with his new friends. - (CP Photo) September @ year ago. occurance, | = A 4 Tory Regime Blamed — For Finance Bungling a 7 MRS. R.A, KINNEAR “The Conservatives made ex- cellent neediers in opposition, but they are poor administrators when in power,” she said. “The for a reasonable and fair rate of interest is most impera- tive when we realize that today we borrow to\build homes, buy farms, cars, washers, furniture and clothes. “We are a nation buying on the installment plan. Inflation is here in a big way. What is the federal government doing to stop it? The Conservative govern- ment has to borrow on such a heavy scale that there is little left for industry or individuals.’ House construction was drop- ping at an alarming rate and the cost of living was going. up, Citizens in the older age groups were the first to feel the squeeze of inflation. : “The mere $55 old age pension is not sufficient to meet today’s living standards," Mrs. Kinnear said. So-far as housing was concern ed, the decision ‘to close the door on further loan applications made recently by Works Minister Wab (Continued on page 3 Col. 3) . i DP,