= « “UXXIT NO. 252 “4 RTE tooo aoe “3 7 Firm Steps KEENNESS OF students tak- ing the recently initiated diesel engine course at the Vocational School was shown officials visit- ing the school yesterday. Above, left to right, are: C.W. Gil- » christ, managing director, Can- adian Good Roads Association; Hon. Philip Mathescn, minis- ter of highways; Gordon White, deputy minister; Hon. Fred Cass, QC, Ontario minister of “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1959 highways and president of the association; Floyd Buell, -die- sel course instructor; Barry Poole, student, Roseneath; and Reg Nicholson, student, North Tryon. Promised Good Roads Association Officers Check Up On Diesel Training Class NEW DELHI (Reuters)—Prime Minister Nehru said Wednesday his government would take firm steps to halt Chinese Communist frontier encroachments, reliable sources reported. The premier addressed | closed-door meeting of state governors: now holding a convention in New Delhi. He talked amid widespread In- dian anger ver alleged frontier “trespassing” by Chinése Com- the 13, munist troops and a week-old bor-) der clash in which nine Indian border police were slain and 16) were captured by the Chinese. Nehru told the gevernprs his goverment is deter: yy de-? fend India's borders. The neutralist leader also said *@ firmer policy toward Commu- ‘ nist China does not- mean India is joining the Western bloc of na- tions in the cold war. The premier said there will be. no change in India’s basic policy ef “non-alignment” with East or “West. First hand information on the success of a project in which they played a vital role was re- ceived yesterday by officials of the Canadian Good Roads As- sociation who were visiting Hon. Philip Matheson, minister of highways. Hon. Fred M. Cass, QC, pre- _sident of the association and On- ‘tario minister of highways, and C, W. Gilehrist, manazing direc- tor of the association, went with "Mr. Matheson \to the Vocational School to learn what is being doné in connection with a course on diésel engines organ- ized this fall. EXPERTS SUPPLIED The association, at the request of the provincial department of highways,’ had supplied free a Speculating on Nehra’s speech, committee of experts to make a political circles ruled out any| break in India’s diplomatic rela- |preliminary study | needs of Island in diesel training. Their tions with the Peking govern}... was supplemented by an ment. Storm Death Toll Climbs LONDON (Reuters and the Continent suffered under thusiasm of the boys on and course. Since the| such venture by the association the second day of gales heavy snow Wednesday as damage and death toll rose. Storms that claimed seven fives in Britain and two in Bel- gium Tuesday, killed at least one| keen to learn, more person — a’small boy—in| Floyd Buell. Scotland and a fishing boat was/said. Mr. missing Wednesday night with aj trained in British Columbia six-man crew in wild seas. |what they Britain particularly impressed by the en- | they pet expressed pleasure at | its success. Students at the school are their instructor, Murray Harbor, Buell was specially to | on-the-spot analysis er several months. It was the first time that eal association had been asked to advise in this way, The C.G.R. Association of- ficials were keenly interested in saw yesterday and the it was the first give the course. Civil Service Salaries To Be Hiked In Quebec By RICHARD DAIGNAULT Canadian Press Staff Writer QUBBEC (CP)—Quebec’s 25,- 000 civil servants Wednesday re- ceived news the Quebec govern- ment is going to’ Spend millions this year and during the next four years to increase their salaries under a new reclassification ap- proved by the cabinet. Premier Pau! Sauve signed a $2,000-page order-in-council put- ting into effect the new classifica- Major Roads Are Reopen FRANCONIA, My tion and the salary boosts as of Nov. -1 for 19,169 government em- ployees who fall under the aw fabeitey of the one-man_ civil serv- ice commission. gIncreases will show in pay cheques of Nov. 15, For, 6,000 other government workers, men and women whose salaries are set down by laws, employees of government boards, commit tees and commissions, tradesmen and unskilled workers, salary revisions’ will be an- nounced in a few weeks. However, Mr. Sauve said, the increases of these workers will aiso be retroactive to Nov. 1. What the full cost of the in- crease in salaries will be was not immediately known. This will be AP)—' estimated when all salary classi- Majot highways through two of/fications have been revised for the world’s best known mountain) al! the government employees. passes, one buried under a giant The cabinet Wednesday dealt landslide and the other washed| only with the main body of civil oyt by torrential rains, were re- apened to traffic Wednesday. Crews worked feverishly the damage occurred last Satur- servants, those who fall under the civil service commission's author- since | iy. Mr. Sauve said the increases day night to clear the two_United| wculd-amount to $7,040,626 for a States highways. Route 3. through fali 12 - month period. However Franconia| {cr the remaining five months of Notch was covered by 28 feet of|the current fiscal year cost of which came the side of Mt debris down crashing| the increases would be $2,933,595; Lafayette “From now on no one will be —opposite the Old Man of the! paid, according to what they look Mountain. Rowe 3 is the artery from Boston to Canada. mam ike.’ tmile, said Mr. Sauve with a It is expected that the 15 stu- dents taking the, nine-months course will make’ a direct con- tribution to provincial improve- ment in dicsel work both on the farm and in the machine shop. NEED IS APPARENT Deputy minister White said the need for training men here was more and more apparent as thos> already proficient In “iescl wer. were ‘eaving the prqviace of more lucrative positions else- where. _ Asked why he was taking this (Reg Niche Nicholson, No North Tryon, Campaign Against U.S. is Intensified In Cuba By HAROLD K. MILKS HAVANA, Cuba (AP)—Cuba’s rejection of U.S. government complaints over Fidel Castro’s behavior suggested Wednesday that the anti-American campaign tere probably will be intensified. The men who have been most hitter in the attacks on the United States appear to have the _ premier’s ear. Cuban-American relations have deteriorated — since May, when Castro’s sweeping agrarian pro- gram became law. This limits the- size of plantations and ranches and provides for distr- bution of seized acreage to land- ‘less farmers. Critics say the Castro regime is in economic trouble and must create a crisis to hide its dif- ficulties, Castro’$ supporters deny such statements as of counter-revolu- tionary inspiration. STATE-CONTROLLED FARMS A growing complaint is that the agrarian reform ‘program ap- ears to be giving control of Cuban farmlands not to farmers but to the state through the in- creasingly . powerful Institute of Agrarian Reform. Castro’s cabinet started a néw phase of government control ‘Tuesday with passage of a wide ranging law to control minerals and other natural resources. This law provides a five-per- cent tax on mineral production, plus 25 per cent on ores and min- erals exported. Immediately af- fected will be such American firms as the $75,000,000 Mao Bay Mining Company, just starting nickel and cobalt production; the $85,000,000 Nicaro nickel. plant, owned by the U.S. government, WHERE-TO-FIND-IT Announcements, notices .. 23 Births, deaths, etc., .. 2, 23 Classified section .... 22, 23 Comics, features ......-- 21 Charlottetown news ...... 5 Editerials .....-s. sae @ Finance, markets ........ 23 Island news .....- ooescte: * Sports ce deadees Women’s page 6 Late reports from. Guardian news bureaus in Summer- side, Montague, Alberion and Souris, and from special cor- respondents now appear on the Island News Page. particular course, Barry Poole, Roseneath, told The Guardian “I have been interested in me~ chanics for a long time and for the last or three years I dreamed vot taking a diesel course tike this.’ Asked what he would ee done if the course had not ered by “the go’ scan a ne saua “nothing T guess. I could | lever eftocd to go away to| study it”, His remarks were concurred in by fellow student, | two and various American oi] com-; panies. | Castro has hinted in various! speeches that a law is in the) making to give his regime con-| trol of all industry, even to run-| ning factories if necessary. | a Western Summit Meeting OTTAWA BUREAU OF THE GUARDIAN The new Borden-Tormentine ferry will carry 68 automobiles be a double-ended craft with rs at both ends. Capable of loading and discharg-. ing vehicles and passengers at Fight For Life Is In Icy Seas MOSCOW (AP)—Izvestia Wed- nesday__reported a three - day battle in icy seas between Si- beria and Alaska to save 30 persons board a blazing passen- ger ship, the 1,773 - ton Dvina. Three sailors died in the sea drama Oct. 15. An S O S was received here at the ministry of the high sea fleet and in Viadivostok, The story does not say why the distress call apparently was not picked up by other ships at sea and regular international rescue units. Orders were flashed to the ships Klara Zetkin, General Pan- filov. Decembrist and the _ ice- breaker Admiral Makarov to speed to the aid of the stricken vessel. The position was given at a | Po nt near the Bay of Anadyr, 'which lies northwest of the U.S. ‘teland of St. Lawrence During the early evening hours rere was an explosion of stifl- explained origin and flames egan to spread through the ship. COFFEE BREAK BRINGS BEAR COLD BROOK, N.Y. (AP) A woman hunter has a bear- skin to prove that a coffee break can pay off. Mrs. Lawrence Mock of East Herkimer was hunting with her husband near here, northeast of Utica, Monday and decided to return to camp. As she was drinking a cup of coffee, she saw a large | black bear lumber across a | nearby swamp. “I grabbed my rifle and opened fire,” Mrs. Mock eaid. Her first shot hit the ant mal. Enraged, it charged at her. Mrs. Mock said she | ired two more shots. One of them hit the bear and it <eeled over. .% LUNCHEON GUEST men Wednesday paid high tribute | sonalities connected with the Is- jand’s agriculture during a testi- town restaurant, Central figure at the luncheon was senior livestock field Harold W. Clay, who in_ his a near legendary figure. In that time he became recognized hogs in the province. Mr. Clay is to retire in a short time. QUALITY IS HIGH During a program of advanced registry initiated by Mr. Clay; the quality of hogs was raised from 39.8 grade A to almost 60 per cent at the present time. Isl- and Yorkshire breeding stock of Canada and to the United States. Within recent years Sweden asked that some Island Yorkshires be shipped to that country. In this program of development, Mr. Glay did not always smooth sailing. As a matter of fact, he found outright opposition and there were many who _ told him that his breeding program could not work. He kept on with doggetl deter- mination and yesterday he was able to sum up his efforts in these words: “No man should be a party to = anything Federal and provincial livestock to one of the most-,colorful per- | monial luncheon in a Charlotte- years in agriculture has become | has been shipped to all provinces’ Livestock Men HonorH.W.Clay building up our swine industry in Prince Edward Isiand”’. (Continued on page 5 Col. 1) ‘ “snadified ice-breaker” | judge in Pittsburgh. That delay— | intended to give the union time either end, turning before dock- ing will be unnecessary. Department of Transport of- ficals explained the handling of the ship and shorter the turn- around time at both ports Official sources state that the new ferry will be completed in 1961 and may be in service later the same year. . Estimated cost of the -new ferry is $3,500,000. Termed a she will be able to operate in all but the mos: extreme ice conditions. Specifications call for a vessel 280 feet long and 60 feet broad with a loaded draught of 13 feet. A 670-ton craft, it will carry 300 passengers at a cruising speed of 13 knots. The proplusion unit | will be diesel-electric. By comparison the Abeigweit, | which commenced operations in| 1947 is 372-feet over-all, had'a! net tonnage of 3.605 and cost | $7,000,000 to complete. Constructed to carry a total of | 69 automobiles, the Abeigweit | can accommodaie approximat ely | 60 of the longer present-day veh-| icles on her automobile deck. Using ,the railway deck, she! can “erry a total of 134 vehicles. | With a maximum capacity of 950 passengers the Abeigweits en- gines are capable of developing | 12,000 brake horsepower. TRANSFERRED Ralph Des Grasse, manager of the Crapaud branch of the bank of Nova Scotia has been | transferred as manager of Ox- ford, Nova Scotia and leaves Not Se: By HAROLD MORRISON Canadian Press Staff Writer ember, the date favored by Pres ident Charles de Gaulle of France This decision, announced by President Eissnhhower at h press conference W edna di . vir- wally rules out the pos y of er East-West summit mecti Eg | this year. Russia, the United States and Britain favored a summit 1359 meeting but France opposed it, -. eisuggesting next spring. France |drew support from West Ger | many. In expressing his readiness attend a mid-December Western | meeting—presumably in Paris— | Eisenhower in effect captulated ite the wishes of de Gaulle Fis today to take up his new du- ties. Mr. Des Grasse has been manager of the Crapaud bank since it opened aimost three years ago, and has provided | active leadership im board of trade work and other commun- ity projects of that area. His wife and two children will re main at Crapaud until housi can be arranged at Oxford. Horace Brown, of Saint John, N_B., will be relieving manager at Crapaud until a new manager is appointed. US. Steel St rike Drags AtLeastIntoNext Week WASHINGTON (A4P)—The U.S.|! Supreme Court réfused Wednes- day to require the steel workers! union to hurry its appeal from’ an order that would end the steel strike, now 106 days old This probably means the strike | will drag on at least into next week..- ~In a brief order giving no rea- sons, the high court rejected a government request that the tack-to-work Taft-Hartley injunc | tion become effective promptly if the union did not file its appeal; by noon today. By so doing, the high court let | stand a six-day delay granted the union by an appeals in Philadelphia Tuesday that up- held the back-to-work order is- sued earlier by a federal district court to carry its case to the Supreme Court—is due to expire next Monday. QUICK RULING The ruling came a little more than seven hours after the just- ice department had formally re- quested the court to lose no time} and uphold the back-to-work or-| Ger “so that the emergency | created by the. steel strike may} not continue longer than absolu- | tely necessary The steel workers union's law- \yers opposed the speedup proce- dure sought by the government, contending there are serious stat-| utery:and constitutional issues in- volved and that these require un- hurried consideration. Arthur J. Goldberg, the union’s counsel, filed a document ques- tioning the high court’s right to) take the case at this stage, The | union said a delay of a few more cay s, “would not irreparably harm the rational interest.’ j It ‘Yank Balloon with his telescope without know- | ing what it was. I've never seen anything like it,” commented Walter Cum- mings, wateh supervisor at New- ark, NJ. airport An unidentified elderly lady told the Port, Me., weather bur- eau: “Such goin’s on scare me looked like the Russians, to ne & T | cere re oF rr | es nationally for the outstanding suc- |? cess he achieved in directing the | ~ HAROLD W. Clay, (centre) senior livestock fieldman for the department of agriculture, tries out one pipe while admir- ing two others that were’ pre- re _ _sented him’ yesterday in honor of his forthcoming retirement after 37 years of being a:sociat- ed With agriculture. Looking on with approval are S.C. Wright, i‘ n said he made no secret! Wanted By Mid-December New Ferry At Borden To Transport 68 Autos © Resa) = East. West Talks _ enIn'59 | of i earlier the fact that he favored an Western meeting. SOLDIFY UNITY Now, he added, Western diplo- mats can go to work, to develop sments and solidify the tern position on major world 1- sues ‘ WASHINGTON ‘CP: The! *| Western powers have expressed a readiness to hold a Western summit conference in mid-Dec “ Ve We don't have to re mind ourselves that if we would ualize an East - West ut tne Western posi- good. strong, co-ordin a. 2 ould be very Eisenhower said. to de Gaulle’s = senhon wer rejected sug- \ t German Cham- : rad_Adenauer that an ast-West summit take up dis- armament but leave the German oh n abeyance The Western powers agreed, er, there would be no East- disarmament pact without firm guarantee on bilaterial in- ion and control. ever on ina bed indeed.” a ha no Ion rearnt U, at spect French Newspapers Have Own By ALAN HARVEY Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON (CP) — Amid com- plaints about rensorship lon and concern about anti-demo- cratic actions behind the Curtain, hardly a word is heard aBout the tough treatment some newspapers suffer in France Last week, as i has doné on Many previous orcasions,. the French government seized copies n Cey- jof V'Express and !'Observateur, charging ‘the two left-wing papers with underminine army morale L’Express is a bricht. bril lantly - edited weekly nuhtliched under direction of Jean-Jacnues Servan-Schreiber, who served as ja French army lieutenant in Al- | geria and wrote a bock stroncly |eritical of the war against the even—a few more weeks, | rebels. HITS AT INIQUITIES Week after week, undaunted by successive seizures that cause the paper considerable finahrial toss, l'Express hammers away at what Tron i- Probiem its mind on foreign : tand affai rs. The result is that the seamy side of French politics tends to get little publicity in France and perhaps underplaved outside Correspondents sta- Paris may feel they “live with” the regime, Bulogistic accounts of Gen. de Ganile’s first year as head of the French state stressed the re g@imes economic achievements, brushed off the Alserian war ang made no mention of tortures and atrocifies peak the republic tioned have to mn BANNED EDITION L’Express, read by foreign afk rs in Ottawa and capitals, was week because it pub ished a picture of a French gen- named him, along with several other generals. as being efforts to prevent from following 2 fa specialists diplomatic other saz7ed last eral It in the covernment nflyential Wheral pol cv in Algeria. James Cameron, writing in The Newe Chronicle, says the seizure of VEwrrecs and " VObservateur vas ordered by the army coun- cil and that the prime minister’s office meekly obeved, thus show- : vho runs the country.” The. paradox that the papers aoe ished by the government for protesting about a plot against the covernment seems to have struck nehody.” e it believes to be the excesses and Creates Stir iniquities of the Algerian war To the rghit wing, it is anti France.” NEW YORK (AP)—The civilian| The paper gets little support i'snace agency’s big inflatable| Apart from | Observateur. edited | sphere created wonderment Wea-j| by Claude Bourdet and zeneta!ly nesday among millions along the |considered more extreme than eastern U.S. seaboard from South ||'Express, the French pres Carolina to Maine |predominantly mcht winc—seme “The craziest thing in the| would say servile though Le world,” said Professor Rober: Monde is independent in spirit Brown, director of the moon- Serre watch station in New Haven, Conn., who tracked the objeci| GAMBLERS BLAMED Face Mont s a). By OU! PAUM Canadian Press Staff Writer MONTREAL cP: Maurice ;|Couture, a young married Vion s trealer, is faced with thousands of Sidollars in medical bis p ty because a man wanted to cambie at a race track Couture, 35, is in his fourth ho (left) deputy minister of agricul- ture and R.D, Crawford, chair- man of the livestock committee of the agricultural council. ‘lof the men pulled out a pital since two men atiec ed and robbed him and hic wife during their vacation in Maine He and his wife. Lise parked by the road Julv % stone’s throw from a main h way at Old Orchard Beach, Me when twa men studying a road a} ere i imap approached them PULLS GUN “We, thought to ask directions during an interview they en ” were suid Co Then tture My the atin wife tried to warn me but at same moment he shot me.” The bullet entered ,the side of Couture’s chest and lor near his spine. The men snatch $190 the Coutures were goin spend for their holiday and fled shee iged od siim a blue pane! truck " He. was moved to an Old Orch ard Hospital, then was transfer red to the Maine Medical Cenjre at Portland where an operation to remove the bullet was delaved for three weeks becanse pneu monia had weakened him Two} weeks later he was flown to Notre | Dame Hospital here for a five week confinement. Three ago he entered the Rehabilitation Institute of Montreal, - ¢ ta} weeks | Pie Of Medical Bills treal Man Centure had no hospital, healt® gent nsyrance zens of Old Orchard twq neichboring come fund raising drive sad They felt it- ther cen'd do _ from the fund But ! hills alone in Maine $2.007. He has ll te get ‘the U.S doctor bills sd all t's. frem his medical he “The cit Reach and mimit a¢ = had a o w”” he was the least He on 1 Ann hit heenita ssf more than ments e Air Preblems Near Solution > Ry TOM MITCHELL Canadian Press Staff Writer MONTREAL ‘CP)—After three af »sed-doer huddies with represematives, Ca- 1 aviation mon fécl they are closer to solution to some of tae ndustry’s most pressing prob- cer At overnment tom The sessions. held during the nual convention of the Air In tries end Transport Associa- tron, revolved around problems |for both ‘the carriers and the i piane builders Main thorn in the side of thé builders has come through, the overnment’s decision to buy American equipment for Cana- dian air defence—leaving an in- | dustry that boomed during and after the Second World War os contracts without iis | biggest source of income. dn military