SHOWN ABOVE discussing ea int in one of the plays to be fesented this year to audien- here are Dan MacDonald Thanks to the initiative of the wnarlottetown Kinsmen Club, the aple of Prince Edward Island his fall will again be privileged BD witness two outstanding plays faged by The Canadian Players. Marking their third successive in Charicttetown insmen sponsorship, the travelling To will stage two plays at een Charlotte Hich School on sovemDer ection of Tony Van Bridge of r oo 7 professional are Shaw's “The and Shakes- y of Excrors”,. 1 of Stratford vill star in The 5 preduction of “The s Disciple’, while Dan Mac- eid of Pictou, who adjudicated 1959 P.E.I. Drama Festival i play Angelo in the “Comedy Errors.”’ Also in the touring company wiil - Mict Leech who tcok nat Summ erside’s CAF Station in 1952-53. The Devil's Disciple is consider- a by many to be one of Shaw’s y best pley pke fun at it and says that he has perely taken the normal parts of acl he will, the orphan, the heroic ifice, and has deceived people hinking that he hes created Masterpiece. Whatever hinks the fact remains that The y and contaifs far less of his ordy steeches than is usual. It is the story of Dick Dudgeon, young man ecmmitted to the Devil who's disciple he wishes to p. The scatting is the Revolution- y War in 1777 and hinges around m incident where Dudgeon fs nistaken for a clergvman, Ander- on. He is taken by the British and. sentenced to be hang- Me Dudgeon persuades Anderson’s Judith not to, reveal the de- heptaon as the clergyman is of p value to the Revolution r, He battles the Bettich and wves them from the area in ime to save Dudgeon. Shaw presents Central Bur- soyne, leader of the British forces is a man tired with British High Sommand bungling. The trial scene presents a contrast between he intelligent cfficer 2s personif'- d by Burgoyne and the wiupid OCAL BACK INJURED 'Glen Cotton of Parkdale is a satient at the P.E.I. Hospital as » result of a back injury receiv- od while at work several weeks igo. caved TENTERS HOSPITAL Mrs. W.G. Mingo has entered he P.E.I. Hospital where she will undergo surgery. CARD WINNERS Winners at the card party held » St. Pius X Parish Hall last light were as follows: ladies’ irst, Mrs. John » Cummiskey; econd, Mrs. Henry Perry and firs. Herb Handrahan (tie); iensolation, Mrs. Elva Burke, fent’s first, Robert Bigeley; sec- ind, Bill Cardiff; consolation, jeorge MacAulay. The freezeout was won by Mrs. Joseph Trainor and Mrs. wewart Higgins, and. the door Mize by rMs. MacFarlane, 7. Both be under one} s. He himself rather | 8 Old melodrama, the reading of| Shaw | Devil's Disciple is an outstanding} end Douglas Campbell. men will star in each of presentations of the Can- adian- Players in Charlottetown City Kinsmen To Sponsor traditional British army personnel as shown by the local commander Major Swindon. A large part of j the story centres around the re- lationship which devoleps between Dudzeon and Anderson's wife. The play was first presented in New York in 1897 and was an im- mediate success. It opened the fol- lowing year in England, and was toured in North America by For- bes Robertson in 1903. Last. year the Canadian Players toured the play in the United States, as far as is known for the first time since the 1906 tour. This year, it wil be shown from Newfoundland to Victoria B.C. The Comedy of Errons; presented by Canadian Players throughout Canada this year, is one of Shake- speare’s earlier plays. Although short and cleaverly written it is not performed to any great ex- tent. It was used as the basis for the musical Boys from Syracuse which shared successfully on Broadway and as a movie. It fs a tale of mistaken identity. The wife of a merchant of Syra- | cuse bore identical twins, while two of them were away from home. At the same time in the Same inn, a poor woman also de- livered identical twins and as was | embarked on the same ul mext month. Mr. MacDonald whose home town is Pictou, N.S., adjudicated, plays here last year. the custom at the time, the mer-| vants for his own sons when they should grow up. On their way back to Syracuse of each set of twins and mother was picked up by fisher- men from Corinth while the mer-! chant and the other children were to their native Syracuse. eighteen the brother living in Syr- acuse sets out to find his lost twin accompanied by the servant who | They go with the merchant to Ephesus. At the same time the other pair with their mother who has become an abbess also go to Ephesus. . The merchant ts seized accord- ing to the laws which prevent a} merchant from Syracuse trading in Ephesus and given until night- fall to raise a ransom or be killed. From here on in the play comes more and more involved | until it all ends in a happy mect- ing. The merchant and his_ wife are re-united and the brothers find | each other and they all live hap- LONDON (Reuters) — The tu- mult of a month of glectioneering died away Sunday as the trium- phant Conservative party settled into office for a third straight term. Prime Minister Macmillan, whose Conservatives almost dou- bled their parliamentary major- ity in Thursday’s general elec- tion, worked on plans for a sum- mit conference and the recon- struction“of his cabinet. The 65-year-old politician, lead- ing his party through an elec- tion for the first time, hammered during his campaign on the pros- pects of reduced world tension opened by the chance of summit talks. s Informed sources \say Macmil- lan may fly to Washington soon to work out final plans for a. top- level meeting. Any changes in the government were expected to be minor, with no switch in major posts. Mac- milian has promisd to create a ministry of science. PLUNGED IN GLOOM The weekend was a gloomy one for the battered Labor party, whose leaders are bewildered by their trouncing. Hugh Gaitskell, also leading his party for the first time in an election, voiced his determination to “attack again and again until we win.” The gwing to the governing party gave the Conservatives 365 seats in the 630 - seat house of Commons with Labor holding 258, Liberals six and one Independent. The first confused aston’shment at the magnitude of the Conserv- ative victory gave way at the weekend to attempts to find the cause. Some observers decided the im- pact of television campaizning was negligible, since Labor ef- forts on the small screen gener- ally were conceded to be more effective than the government's. | BETTER OFF The explanation for the Com seryative suctess appeared to be the single one that Britons are betler off any ond Gdns want to, . compared to 1955/ pily ever after. ) i ' t upset the trend by a switch In! government. | Labor’s efforts to discredit the | government for its handling of colonial affairs in Cyprus and Af- Tica and by recalling the British attack on Egypt three years ago apparently had little effect. The Labor party is certain to conduct a_ self-examination—and possibly reorganize—as it' enters another period in the wilderness. The left wing is certain to see | the cause of failure in Labor's} shift to the right during the last five years, and call for a return} to a more socialist policy. | The leadership is likely to ar- gue that while a shift to the left) may revive the enthusiasm of so- | cialist voters, it could alienate the middle class floating vote. LIBERALS HOPEFUL The Liberal party, a major o- litical force early im the century | but insignificant since the war, took hope from doubled support. | Spokesmen even talked confi- dently of replacing Labor as the chief opposiion. Liberal strength im the Ccm- Mons remained at cnly six seats but popular support throughout the country more than doubled "The party’s leader, Jo Grim- ond, personally underlined the Liberal resurgence by increasing his winning margin in his own constituency, the Orkmey and Shetland Islands. The result gave Grimond 12,099 votes to 3,487 for the Conserva- tive and 3,375 for Labor. Grim- ond’s plurality increased to 8,612° from 7,993 im 1955. TAKE NO CHANCES LONDON (CP) For two weeks bomb disposal experts carefully dug up a suspicious object in a playing field in the Catford district. They finally un- co an old bucket. DE SANGEROUS HABIT IPSWICH, England (CP)—More than*900 grass'fires in Suffolk this sumpner were caused ty motor-| ists tossing lighted cigareis out of their cars, say fire department i CITY NEWS PAGE TELEPHONE 8506 — ASK FOR NEWS DESK Automatic Rail-Laying ls Fast And Efficient With the arrival here last Thursday of a 15-unit a atic rail-laying outfit, raik ing on Prince Edward Island caught up with the rest of the nation. With operations that formerly required hours or days of back- breaking work performed with ease in minutes, rail replacement is no longer a wearisome or monotonous task. The job is per- formed rapidly, smoothly and efficiently by 15 separate ma- chines operated by a crew of 110. E. R. Colewell, roadmaster-in- charge stated that his outfit averaged just over three miles of single line each day. Only hold-ups were trains, crossings, and bad weather. 10-MILE JOB Now working east of Winsloe | track-laying crew will replace the entire CNR line between Mile 5 and Mile 15 on the Charlottetown-Borden route. Powerless in the steel jaws of | Station, ‘the the extraction machine, the steel spikes that hold the rails in place are removed in less than a second. Putting up even less _|resistance to the power wrench are the heavy nuts holding the splice bars togeth The loose rae ts plates ‘lare then toss Side to make way for the routers which gouge out the excess ballast between the ties; the adzers. which re- level the surface of the tie; the Slum Rehabilitation Project. Gets First Tenants This Week | * By ROBERT RICE’ ' Canadian Press Staff Writer MONTREAL (CP) — Quebec's | again ——Hfect-gets its first inhabitants this|W@y for the new dwellings. The pioneer slum rehabilitation pro- week. Thirty families are to move! ment, four *2-storey blocks and ajeasy visit to President Eisen chant purchased them to be ser-| Oct. 15 into modern, airy pleas-|pumber of two-storey buildings—| hower. workmen face onto press ahead on other buildings in|rather than oi streets. Mance a storm wrecked the ship and one, housing project in the heart of the | the commercial district of Mont- ant apartments while the $16,000,000 Jeanne real. They are the first of about 800 families—about 3,500 people alto- rescued by another boat and taken| gether—to get new homes in the | project, scheduled for completion | Upon arriving at the aze of| by 1961. Other similar slum clear-| gy ntovn Montreal. there will bel w ance projects are being consid- ce ant N ered. Federal Public Works Minister Walker and Quebec's Municipal Dozois are to, launch the low-rental scheme in|SPARKED SQUABBLES a special ceremony at the site. Affairs Minister dauber, which applies a coat of creosote to the shaven portion; and the gauger and pre-gauger, which automatically ensure that each new tie plate is placed ex- actly right. CRANE HOIST With new splice bars already attached, each new 1300-lb rail is hoisted into position by a| travelling crane. Last five units! in the outfit include a power wrench and four spiking ma- chines. Each old spike hole is plugged by hand before the new tie plates are laid. One man checks for spike stubs that may have heey missed, while another sweeps the rubble off each tie end before the adzer reaches it. All signal joints are checked by a member of the railroad’s 4 signal department, Wooden pegs, tie plates, etce., are scattered algng the right of way by an ad- vance party, while the anchor spikes are placed by a special rear party behind fhe main | crew. IRECRUITED ALL OVER Mr. Colewell said the crew was | which was held in Charlottetown recruited in all sections of the | Maritimes. They had begun work | ‘on April 27, had worked in Que- f . |bec, and all over Nova Scotia jand New Brunswick. | 52 In Mac's New Cabinet ly be the last this seasoh, he | | added. One of the highlights of the | and Summerside this Thanks- Maritime Hi-Y Cort‘erence Government House yesterday By FRASER. WIGHTON LONDON (Reuters) — Primeternment team, which is gan working on the formation of! majority. a new cabinet—though only al limited shakeup is believed plan-| changes this week. ned—by interviewing some of the prospective members. and Sanguinet streets, Old, dingy homes, jammed with families,| sources placed little egg Bagh se posts. . . : ports that Maemillan, w ast} SS ew ek led the Conservative Party|privy seal and home secretary, jto its third successive general/again will occupy the unofficial buildings—one 14 - storey apart-|election victory, would make an|role of deputy prime minister. Summit prospects were , |cussed Monday when Macmillan|0f minister of science which the ; : .|government has promised to cre- | As mew apartments are fin-| Called a meeting of his old cab late eo lished, more families will be) et. } : peers Eventually, the| The prime minister is known to| It has been widely speculated whole area will be landscaped|be anxious to have West meet/|that Alan Lennox - Boyd might and cleaned, with playgrounds, a! East at the highest level as soon| Wish to give up the arduous colon- | sports centre, recreation hall and| as practicable. Political quarters ial secretaryship, lots of parking space. | here talked about the period from|held for five years, to return to a } Even though the project is in; parks and squares MEETING ment to this persistent rumor. , osurces said they believe it un- Tiscount Hails r avenues have been widened to],..J, ~~ ; | Viscount Hailsham, lord presi keep motor traffic moving around likely that Macmillan would fly|dent of the council in the eabinet the project - | to} Washington to discuss the sum-jand chairman of the Conserva no through traffic. Neighboring| has been reported here. ports he planned to give up both ' The project sparked squabbles | Six of the 30 families are to be} in Montreal when it was first pro-| millan held private and separate pure speculation and it was up given symbolic keys to their| posed, Opponents sought to have| talks with several of his ministers’ to Macmillan to decide his future. apartments. COVERS 20 ACRES The project covers almost 20 acres just off St. Catherine Street be- | between St. Dominique, Ontario Contract Let For New Tug for $45,410.75 has A contract been awarded to Russel-Hipwell|C°St- The rest comes from city Tumult OfElection Dies Away In U.K. Engines Limited, of Owen Sound, Ont., for construction of a 37- foot 6-inch Twin Screw Tug for|tion,” says Mrs. Leo Paul Bro-| Prince Edward Island, it was announced by the Walker. The company submitted the lowest of six bids on the project in response to public ad- vertising. It is expected that work will be completed within four months. The hull of the new tug will have a V-bottom with a single hard chine running the full length lof the vessel. It will have twin screws turned by diesel engines through hydrautically, operated reverse-reduction gears and twin tubbers manipulated by mech- anical’ means. Deck equipment is to include a_ hydraulically powered towing winch. Plans and specifications were prepared by the Harbours and Rivers Engineering Branch of Public Works, and the project will be under the supervision of the department’s district engine- er at London, G.N. Scroggie. Technicians : Hear Report | About twenty laboratory, techni- cians met at the Health Centre on Thursday night last to hear F.W. Jelks, Ph.D., give a report on work done in the Provincial Lab- oratory on standardization of lab- oratory tests. Following his talk a discussion was conducted by Doctor John Craig, Director of Laboratories, on technical prob- lems previously submitted by the technicians. The program concluded with a “ying of the colored film strip, Me&iical Laboratory Technolo- gist’’, first of a series, being pro- duced by the Department of Labor with the assistance of the Na- tional Film Boari. : Plans were discussed for ” the annual meeting of the P.E.I. Branch of the C.S.L.T. on Novem- ber 12th. Members will hear a report from the Provincial Direc tor, Sister St. Hugh on the new by-laws and the convention in Cai- gary im June when the Island member on the executive Was hon- ored with the special. presenta- tion of a ten-gallon hat as a mark of appreciation of her attendance. Minister of|™ake new people, not new super Public Works, Hon. David J. slums. | morning. Three of the young giving weekend, was a visit to | CONFERENCE DELEGATES VISIT GOVERNMENT HOUSE enant-Governor; Marg Parker, Charlottetown secretary of the Union and chairman ef the planning committee for the conference, and Frank Bishop, Moncton, a representative on the Maritime Union executive, people are shown above talk- ing to Lieutenant-Governor Union, His Honor, the Lieut- Walter F. Hyndman. They are Brian Backman, Halifax, pre- sident of the Maritime Hi-Y- CAPITOL on the makeup of his new gov- backed | Minisier Macmillan Monday be-|now by a 100-seat parliamentary) He is expected te amnounce his The key men, such as Foreign | Secretary Selwyn. Lloyd, are ex- At the same time, authoritative|Pected to remain in the present R. A. Butler, at present lord Defence Minister Duncan} Sandys is mentioned as possible; _|first holder of the new portfolio} dis which he has! mid-November to mid-December.| business career. But he so far has given no personal encourage- mit situation with Eisenhower, as tive Party, denied on Sunday re- After the cabinet meeting, Mac-|offices. He said the reports were the families relocated in a subur-| ban area in north Montreal. They claimed the new homes in down- tcwn Montreal would quickly de- generate into slums again. } Some circles. — the most out- spoken led by ex-mayor Jean Drapeau—said the land should be used for commercial develop- ment, But he was overruled by city council and the provincial government and the project went! ahead, with the federal govern- ment paying 75 per cent of the NOTICE TO THE MOTORING PUBLIC In view of the fact that complaints have been lodged with the Department of Education regard- ing instances of dangerous driving in passing school buses, particularly by the drivers of trucks, attention is directed to the following amendment to The Highway Traffic Act, assented to March 29, 1956: 42 (7) The driver of a vehicle approaching from either direction a vehicle, clearly marked as a school bus, which has stopped for the purpose’ of receiving or discharging any child, shall stop the vehicle immediately before passing such school bus. | funds, “It will bring up the whole sec- |chu, mother of seven. “It will) | She fs to move with her hus-! | band and children from a seedy, | | but clean two-bedroom flat to a/ jrew six-room, two-storey house) plus basement, They pay $25 a} month for their present four-room | flat. The new rent will -be $84 | | plus $14 for heat, light, hot water jand janitor services. (Sgd.) R. R. BELL, Attorney-General. Department of Attorney-General Province of Prince. Edward Island ' NAMED TO COLONIZATION October 7, 1959. QUEBEC (CP) — Jean - Paul terme of Quebec has _ been! eee eran Ss: <S=:| ADULT POLIO CLINIC of colonization, the department announced Fridsy. He has served 50 years with the government in| the lands and forests and colon-| The Adult Polio Clinic for Ist, 2nd.and 3rd inoculations for Bridgetown and surrounding dis- tricts will be held at Bridgetown School Wednes- day, October 14, 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. ization departments. HEADS.CBC OPERATIONS TORONTO (CP) Appoint- | ment of J. W. R. Graham, 44, as director of television operations for the CBC was announced Sat- arday. The announcement came trom A, K. Morrow, ‘recently ap- pointed director of English net- \——— * works and the Toronto area. 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