Sank Teller sads Guilty ease in Mexico. further character evidence im Sauve sentence next week. d that all the money taken nee ‘Ullrich also said po- ‘have a sworn statement from Man and woman who smuggled youths into the United States the trunk of their car The puple was not identified but po- Pe said the $300 paid for the s-border trip had been recov- In the statement, the couple qd Boudreau and Leclerc threat- d them with a revolver. . THREAT The two youths took the wit- sss stand Tuesday morning jonly festify that they made no pats to get over the border. had it arranged previously ‘we would pay them $300.” jlerc said. “There was no 2 lening at all.” By JACK BRAYLEY Canadian Press Staff Writer FREDERICTON (CP) — The watched three exciting s in her first Oanadian harn- race experience here Tues- iy night and declared, “It was mply thrilling. I enjoyed it.” She made this enthusiastic nent in talking to 25-year- a Joe Goguen of Mencton who home the winning horse, beland, in the Queen’s Special 00 free-for-all race. With an owner's sharp percep- told Joe he had timed Wt brilliantly‘ ’ “When did you think you could in?’ she asked. “When I was half way down stretch.”’ said Joe, _— perspiration from“his brow 7* was Abbeland’s 117th win ‘ip Syears of racing and he made record for himself with a mark F-2.07 2-5 for the mile. HiLIP INTERESTED TOO Prince Philip followed the race #h glasses and also interro- sted both Gogue and Wib Jar- me of Chatham, the owner. He anted to know if Joe was a pro- gsional and when Joe answered | the affirmative, he asked what » did in witt®r, Joe said he orked in a big department pre in Moncton. The royal party drove to the ack, the Queen wearing the me cobalt blue satin summer mening dress she wore to the iyate dinner ziven by Lieuten- #-Governor O’Brien just before e meet. When she arrived at the track Black Watch band played The yeeh and the several thousand ectators in the grand stand ng spontaneosly. She started ymediately to study her racing rm and \seemed to thoroughly joy the’ new experience of siching harness racing Cana 4) WA <r) — Bank teller A tiie: Supedey pleaded to stealing $73,264 from an bank to start new lives The 19-year-old boys, from sub- Eastview, were remanded today in magistrate’s court i be given. Magistrate Joa- indicated he will Police detective Louis Ulrich nN a the mid - - city branch of the r - Dominion bank has Queen Is Thrilled 3y Harness Race | Sizzin FREDERICTON (CP) — ADT, one hour and 33 minutes after leaving Trenton, Ont. The whine of the royal Comet’s engines drowned out the artillery salute greeting the arrival of Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip. Tt was a tough day for the gunners all around. Their blank wadding started a minor grass fire, and when the 21-gun salute had been fired they had to rush forward and stamp out the drought-dried grass. Meanwhile the Queen took ‘the salute from a rigid and precise green-garbed company of Black Watch regulars from .nearby Camp Gagetown. The Prince all trotters. She watched them in the post parade and seemed to study their individual movement. However, the sultry night air had encouraged myriads of bugs, fiies and moths—some of them as big as birds—and she had to pause from time to time to use her racing form as a swatter. Lieutenant Governor O’Brien and other members of her im- mediate party also waved forms defensively but the Queen seemed to enjoy everything and smilingly acknowledged the gal- lantry. It was recalled that just a year ago her sister Margaret had watched the harness race card here until she was chased by a thunderstorm. The Queen gave in to the squadrons of flies and bugs as soon as the special event was over, though she held things up for many minutes as she talked animaiediy with owner Jardine and driver Goguen. When she left the track the crowd stood and gave her a hearty round of apyiause. KEEN QUESTIONS Later Mr. Jardine said he was amazed at her keen questions on raining, past performance. ~ Royal Tourists began—the Mock. time and last leg of their North American tour in bright sunshine The Oran’ - oe will, ward directions as the big Mark carry Her Majesty Queen Eliz-| Ty Lincoln Cont nad it ontinental is being City bes agent _. —— driven on to the runway at the highways Thursday was flown) 4itport. Specially made by the here yesterday in a “Flying Box-| Ford Motor Company for the ear.” bore A = A. on Royal tour, the car will be driven . A. Wood-' Thurs-tay by Szt. Stallard. ng 95 Weather Greets Royal Tourists ing off the Queen's hat. He held onto it during the brief airport and 9%5-degree temperature here /| ceremony. ‘> Tuesday. WELL-TANNED * Their plane landed - atthe}. - the -@neen and Prince Fredericton ainport at 2.12 p.m. notably tanned since (Continued on Page 5 Col. 2) LONDON (CP) — The Conser- vative government defeated a virtual censure motion by the Labor Opposition over the gov- ernment’s plicies in Nyasaland 317 to 2A Tuesday night os Gitlin Gata s iamact at a@ government fact - finding com- | mission sent to the British cen- tral African protectorate after 51 Africans were killed in putting down an alleged massacre plot. The cemmission’s report, pub- lished last week, said it found no evidence. of a massacre plot. A government: motion accept- ing certain of the commission's Tindings but making no-reference to its rejection of the plot allega- tion was carried 316 to 252. — The Opposition presented a motion accepting the report as a who'e. : LABOR ACCUSATION The Labor Party accused Prime Minister Macmillan of be- ing ready to sacrifice public honor for the sake of winning an election. James Callaghan, Labor affairs, made a mistake in appointing the commission. and had sifted He said Macmillan would -de- fend the policies of Colonial Sec- -|retany Alan Lennox - Boyd “‘be- -| cause a major resignation and re- shuffle three months before a general election a blow.” The commssion’stepert_ was | openly critical of many points in the government's Nyataland pol- | said the government felt it had | about | Sunday sermon. No sooner had he mentioned field of adult education included the bomb than a loud crash ech-| the organization of Maritime fish- oed through the little church in| ermen into a ¢o-operative move- ment. These co-operatives now do an annual business running into a “police state” lence against Africans. . Attorney-General Sir. Reginald | sion ANTIGONISH, N.S. (CP)—Dr. Moses M. Coady, a broad-shoul- dered Roman Catholic church- man who founded the co-opera- tive movement in the Maritime provinces; died in hospital here Tuesday. He was 77 and had| been in failing health for the last six weeks. Church Crash NORTH HALEY, Que. (CP) Rev. ‘Georges Pellerin talked the nuclear bomb in his, q this border town.95 miles east of Montreal. (expected © | ried for the door and found that October) would be too much of | ;@ 150 - pound iron eross on the His startled congregation scur- icy. B described the territory as, Manningham-Buller s and reported/the votes were taken that the that police used unnecessary vio-| government was not bound to ac- Te ee ee > \Virtual Motion Of Censure Defeated By British Govt. said before Monsignor M.M. Coady Dies In Hospital At 7/7 Msgr. Coady was priest, TRAINING John M. Richard, district com- ‘By JOHN SCALI NOVOSIBIRSK, Soviet Union (AP)—Vicée - President Richard Nixon was hugged and cheered by enthusiastic crowds in this ‘western Siberian city Tuesday. It was the warmest reception of his Soviet tcur. About _ 20,000 applauding and cheering Russians greeted N_xon this factory city of 830.000. Oiher thousands lined the streets. So- viet security agents had to strug- gle to prevent his being mobbed | by friendly crowds. Another crowd of 1,500 waited and his wife as they arrived in| teacher, —orator;—philosopher_and author. Although he rose to the rank of Catholic domestic pre- late in 1946, few classified = on religious grounds. He retired from leading the ex- tension department of St. Fran- eis Xavier University here in 1952 but remained active in the de- impaticntly for four hours at a theatre Tuesday night where. the Nixons attended a ballet ver- formance of Swan Lake. The crowd burst into cheers when appeared on the front septs .between the second and missioner for ~ Charlottetown, leaves Friday to attend a Canad- ian scouters’ training camp at Blue Springs, near Toronto. The week's course is designed for adult leaders, members of the! | provincial training team. Cheering, Hugs Are Enthusiastic , third acts. i Georgi A. Zhukov. chairman of the Soviet Union cultural com- mitiee, said he was afraid the enthusiasm of the crowd would get out of hand several times. “Tl was afraid he was going te be hurt by a bear hug.” said Zhukov. “But they were hugs of friendship.” to the somewhat ehitly turnout of a few hundred persons when the Nixon party arrived in Moscow \last Thursday. A Soviet jet brought the Nixons from Leningrad in 4% hours. En route, Nixon persuaded So- viet officials to let him see the Siberian branch of the Academy of Sciences. a secret research complex under construction here. His tentative plans call for a tour of the community today. —The welcome was in contrast. partment until recent weeks. His guidance is credited with helping thousands of Maritimers out of the economic depression of ee 290 FAR-REACHING PLAN His play for economic co-opera- tion and social betterment spread far beyond the Atlantic provinces. His accomplishments the (Continued on Page 5 Col. 6) ‘church steeplé had crashed inte | two nearby parked cars Damaze was estimated at $500. No one was hurt. 2 VILLAGES THREATENED ST. BERNARD des LACS. Que. (CP) — Rising winds Tuesday might breathed fresh life into huge forest fires in the northeastern Gaspe Peninsula district after a day’s respite. Two villages were again besieged. In Quebec City, 350 miles to the southwest, provincial author- -|ities were deciding whether to call anmy help. Sgt. Adrien Boisvert of the pro- vincial police in nearby Ste. Anne des Monts said St. Bernard des Lacs and Sacre Coeur des Landes, a few miles to the west, are again im danger. The fire is raging over an area of 300 square miles, he said. Eight houses were destroyed here Monday night. All the women and children of this vil- lage’s 30 families were evacuaied Monday. MEN STAY BEHIND The men remained to fight fire. Some 25 of them were stranded in the smoke-clogged village for a time Monday night but a shift in the wind saved them and gave the village a reprieve. Sacre Coeur des Landes was also menaced Monday night and some of the 60 families were evacuated, More were taken out Tuesday night as flames licked at the village outskirts. No injuries-have been reported. St. Octave de l’Avenir, 15 miles southwest of here, was spared for Rain Awaited In. Fire Fight ST. JOHN’s, nfid. (CP) — A | house were destroyed. Loss was Rising Winds Carry New Peril -For Fire Theatened Villages the time being as the flames tapned east and headed through the Gaspesian Park toward the mining centre of Murdochville 45 miles to the east. Henri Keiffer; chief of the for- est protection service, said in Quebec City that the park, a sportsman’s paradise, is not yet heavily damaged. MAY CALL IN ARMY He said the army has not yet been called to. help fight the blaze, he said, but_a call is being studied. A .call for army he'p would have to come from Prem- ier Duplessis. . Some 500 volunteers were work- ing beside 800 regular firefight- ers. Premier Di&plessis asked the minister. of lands and forests for a complete report on the fires so that “necessary measures”’ could be taken. A Red Cross station«-at Ste. Amne des Monts, of here, reported Tuesday that 72 people had lost their homes and all their belongings in the flames uated from settlements. The fire threateping St, Bernard des Lacs is the worst of three major outbreaks burning pine, Fire Destroys Old Barracks NORTH SYDNEY, N.S. (CP)— Firemen brought a blaze in an old army barracks near here under control late Tuesday but the building and a nearby guard- estimated by or owners at about $10.000. The buildings ‘weit situated at Kelly's Beach on the shtre of pee See. cetinaans <b Sats ee across the highway. The hangar pn_- style. om eietanatataeniie The first pas- =e cow involved | > weight and conformation resources department spokesman WHERE- O-FIND said another couple of .days of gq: = rain will bring three large Lab- Te iT rador es under control. Announcements, we Tr 3 “The fires are not out. They’re Births, deaths me em smoldering’ following rain/ Classified section ~14, 15 storms Sunday and Monday. the | eee mere “| spokesman said. Fog covered the | caine os sc Bee Teas Editorials io ere paenre 4 The fires are at Paradise Island eee 23 River, Lewis River and Gilbert Sport ect 3.9 |River. They have burned more, Women’s page . gi [than 1,300 square miles of valu- Late reports from Guardian | @ble timber, mostly black spruce. mews bureaus in Summer- | Firefighters Tuesday were side, Montague, ‘Alberton and | ™aking headway against. the Souris, and from special cor- | Lewis River fire which threat-| respondents now appear on |ened for severa’ days to destroy __| wae sot im immediate danger. Sydney Harbor.—Firemen—from five departments fought the blaze. For a time it was feared adja- cent homes were in danger. The two-storey barracks build- ing, built during the First World War, stood on Highway 5 near the western outskirts of this town. It had been sold to a Sydney real estate company. Both build- ings were to be torn down. An old aitplane hangar built by the Royal Flying Corps durirg the same war faces the barracks 12 miles north} and 218 people had been evac- | > rz z é 2 spruce and cedar timberland in the valleys and mountains of. the Gaspe Peninsula. The second is 15 miles south of Matane, about 50 miles west of St. Bernard des Lacs. The third is about half-way between the. other two, burning along the Cap | Chat River and the foothills of | the mountains at the northern fringe of Gaspesian Park. NO ESTIMATE OF LOSS The loss of timber has not been | estimated. One lumber company | alone — the James Richardson Company Limited of Cap Ohat— has lost 35 square miles of its FORMER CH‘TOWN RECTOR IS SHOWN The Queen leaves St. Mark’s| last church service of her Cana-| the guest of Mr. Massey at his Anglican Church in Pork Hope, dian tour. With her is Governor- Ont., afier morning service in —T ee ‘church. z& was tn General Massey and t*e rec‘or, ‘om ee ae ee NIXON HARRIED BY RED PRESS newspapers Tuesday portray- | ed Richard Nixon as a man stymied time and again by political questions from keen workmen during the US. vice-president’s tour of Len- ingrad Monday. Reports of the Nixon tour featured his exchanges with workers and passersby which made Nixon appear to dodge questions. Newspapers linked the tour coverage with criticism of the Armeerican exhibition here. The Literary Gazette says a Rus- sian touring the show ofien A description of Nixon's visit to Leningrad reported the following exchange: “A worker said: “We offer a son- trol system but you turn it down.” “Mr. Nixon had nothing to say to that.” NOT A TRUE PICTURE The Literary Gazette sug- gests that the American ex- hibition was not designed to show a true picture of Ameri- can life. summer home. House, tear Port Horc. DON PEACOCK Sinton Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (‘(CP)—The Board of Broadcast Governors, in fulfilling 2 purpose given it by Parliament. Tuesday preposed television broadcasting regulations requir- tg a minimum of 5§ per cent) _| Canadian content in any weekly Program scheduled for Canadian | TV stations. In statements issued at a press. conference the board said “the! standards for measuring Cana- dian content wil! be those pre- scribed by the Board of Broad- cast Governors.” A reporter asked Dr. oral Stewart, board chairman, thing but censorship by the board as far as Canadian content is con- pal Dr. Stewart said he could see; no way of the rd avoiding this jextent of censorship. It had been directed by Parliament to es- tablish broadcasting. regulations aimed at keeping a basically | Canadian content in program- ming. ’ BEGINS IN 1960 The proposed regulations. plicable -only to TV_ stations, would go into effect in mid-1960, Probably July 1. But the board wif hold public hearings here Nov. 2-3 at which |ten submissions will be given a chance to make oral representa- tions about them. The board by Nov. 15 will an- -S5pe Canadian Content Required Of TV Stations all interested parties making writ-| a |Hits Steelmen jhave drawn their last full pay | Sone-and hardship eases_develop. mounce the regulations and the exact date on which they come into effect. Since last Jure 1, TV stations |have been operating under the | same regulations as radio sta- | tions. These called for a basic Canadian program content but set | no minimum percentage. Joey Wil Opposit mier Smallwood announced Tues- , day night he will leave his pres- | ent electoral district at Bonavista North to oppose Progressive Con- | enrvative Leader Malcolm Hollett | im St. John’s west in next month's provincial election. ' Mr. Hollett won the seat by acclamation in the 1956 election. | “This announcement will go across Canada and attention around the election in St. John’s West,” he said in a radio and. television address. yours truly.” WILL FOLLOW HIM . The premier said that # Mr. Hollett decides to run in another district. He would not file. his nomination papers until Mr. Hol- lett’s intentions were known. Bonavista North has supported Income Pinch By STERLING SLAPPEY Pittsburgh (AP) — The eco- Romic squeeze is turning into a pinch for striking Steelworkers. Most of the 500.000 strikers cheques and now can look for- ward to little or no income until their contrywide labor dispute with the: steel companics is set- fed. - The strike began July 15 but most of the workers -had two weeks plus a few days of pay coming when they put. down their tools. Practically all of that back- log pay has been passed out in the last few days. Form here on most of the idle their savings accounts. So will be many of the 78,000 workers al- ready furloughed in industries. al- lied to basic steel, When savings accounts are committees within local wnions step in and quietly arrange credit with shops, banks, landlords and other creditors. NO STRIKE PAY “The United Steelworkers Un- ton has no strike pay as such,” a union spokesman said Tuesday. “But locals of the union have thoroughly trained committees of Batterwood (CP Wirephote) ' eight to 16 members who work in The proposed TV regulations also provide that up to two hours of broadcasting time each day during the peak-listener peried, from 8 p.m. te 11 pm! be re served for purposes prescribed by the BBG. Programming during these two hours must be at least ‘53 per | cent Canadian. |Oppose on Chief this could be construed as el gr JOHN'S, Nfld (CP)—Pre-;Mr. Smallwood solidly for years. The premier said he re ceived the support although he had only visited his district 10 times ina sma ny years. Until today, Mr. Smaliwood said, St. John’s West was repre- sented by a man who is satisfitd with what Mr. Diefenbaker has said and done about financial aid for Newfoundland. He said Mr. Hollett has “de- ap- across Canada will be centred | fended Mr. Diefenbaker and praised him and has set himself up as Mr. Diefenbaker’s cham pion.” “We will see who speaks for! Newfoundland — Mr. Hollett or! workers will be at the mercy of | OTHER OPPOSITION The Liberals would not contest the St. John’s South seat held by the only other Progressive Con- servative member of the legisla- ture, Rex Renouf. Mr. Small- district he wilt oppose him in that | wood said this decision was made because “‘it is understood that the new Newfoundland party will op- pose this seat.” Liberals also would not contest St. John’s Centre. held by A.M. Daffy, and St. John’s East held by James Higgins, the two mem- bers of the Newfoundland party, who bolted from the Pro-ressive Conservative party July 20 in pro- test of the federal government's handing of financial terms under the Newfoundland Confederation agreement. Work Contracts Are Extended NEW YORK (AP)—The Steel- workers ion and_three major luminum roducing firms night's expiration date. The agreement, which removed the threat of an immediate strike in the. aluminum industry, ex- itends current contracts 3 days beyond the date of any settlement in the Steelworkers Union's pre- ent negotiations with, the steel in- | dustry. The Steelworkers Union went on strike in the steel industry July..15 after union and industry negotiators failed to reach agree ment on a new contract. Tuesday's agreement was reached by the union with the aluminum Company of America, the Reynolds Metals Compang, and the Kaiser Aluminum and Chemical Corporation. Olin Ma- thieson Chémical Corporation and the Ormet Corporation. aise AF et Sn ee & ee emergencies, agreed Tuesday to extend work. contracts beyond Friday mid-—