TELEPHONE 8506 Buyer meets seller with Guardian Want Ads. Dial 8506 ask for classif' taker, for quick results. led ad PAGES ,u agreement between the I I an I and Il‘-:‘I , ~ m1 ,0! which the, employees of sewage and Water Commis- members, was signed. large measure fear of “life is fear of them- I F all: the long established of cmversion." 'Ilr. Cutler said, however, , : gum n Is not all bad. “I has its ingredients for a lite of A; bemused production, in- I, a» services, new products , services and greater leisure." floss LEG-AL AID uncommittee on legal aid Uni held a workshop under the w of prominent legal aid from across Canada. 2 some of the prac- , Meme commuting legal panel agreed that one of . problems confronting It legal aid association is w cases, especially the rapect Sam Lerner of “Wummmumn with the vast- 4blockIade of Quemoy. by the Dcplrtmeut. on". PM 0‘5“ last night at City Hall. hr hummer I ' WATER COMMISSION, UNION SIeN AGREEMENT sinner and Miss Eleanor Hermes Present at the cere- sey, Recording Secretary of the many were (seated), E. E. Claw- son, Commissioner; K. M. Mar- tin, legal adviser to the Com- mission; H. R. Bevan, Commis- some sort of residence qualifica- tion for giving legal aid. Eric Teed of Saint John, N.B., said ‘the senior lawyer has as much duty to assist in legal ‘work as the junior. Yet most of our legal slidpanclu or: made up of More.” " By GENE KRAMER TAmPEl (AIP) — Ciliang Kai- Shek and his chief strategists con- ferred with United States fairy officials Eriday on measures to break the Communist artillery No new attempt was made to ‘supply the 100,000-man garrison five miles off the mainland. A massive barrage Thursday turned back a convoy and showed no ship could hope to survive long on Quemloy’s unloading beaches. An Alasocilated Press corres- pondent aboard a supply ship forced to retreat tram Quemoy said: ' “The Communist blockade is highly effiective and critically ser- ious. The Chinese Communists can make the landing areas corn- pletely untenable whenever they Mn. Ont, said that some con- MIoo should be given to filUl‘CI‘IIII resort.” " figynm'mrmm , r (Reuters)— bdy'or his turbulent life . . ,selebralted their golden anniversary in a sun- “ Villa on the Mediterra- gfie homer British prime min- wife, Clementine, : u IPe‘da-y‘ “happily and is“? u messages of in 15mm all parts of the is r i I he. well-wishens included the ‘ , l ane Minister Macmil- . firesident Eisenhower, Pl‘esident Rene Coty and de Guulle. italfgll‘ams and letters have dabvered forthe last two HI’S’. a Postman Who has run we Service on a motor y Alone a winding lane to MOI Villa! kin Ghurchills insisted on no i What triend-s de- . jun” 35 their 'second honey- PICTURES , ‘ I ,Ofily concession to the full-lie interest in the an- ? W was to allow a dozen , Renters past the police , h to take pictures of them Gibalcuny. I v Tummll,.33, wearing a white Slut. panama hat and tax} the legendary Churchill h hm' Tecewed the local mayor : ‘5 afternoon. a, beggeahij'cld Lady Churchill . em weari b1 e- dress. 11g a ll \ T elight-year . old grand- :‘gfhier. Arabella, marked the 51°“ by recitilIg—iaultlessly- desire." . 5 Mark to her famous grandfather a poem about roses. Arabella and her father, jour- nalist Randolph Churchill, were the only close relatives here for the anniversary. The Church-ills have three other IN GOOD HEALTH Both Churchill and his wife are in good health, friends say. He is fully recovered from a two-month bout of pneumonia and pleurl'sy earlier this year. It was a fall day in 1908 when a rising young politician, later to be described as the “greatest Englishman of his time," married a 23-year-old social beauty named Clementine Honier. At 33, Churchill was already president of the board 'of trade and a cabinet minister. “Clem- mie" was a notable speaker, an intellectual and an athlete. Churchill wrote years later: ‘My marriage was the most for- tunate and joyous event which happened to me in the whole of my life.” Churchill’s private secretary, Anthony Montague-Browne, said the golden wedding day was pass- ing happily and quietly." RAID SPECIAL MENU. There was this special menu for evening dinner; _ Oeufs m‘ayonnalse (eggs With mayonnaise) . Langouste a l’armorlc'aine (lob- ster with a spicy sauce). ‘ Poulet en sauce (roast chicken and gravy). ’ ' ' Glace (ice cream). Champagne Wais served Union. (Standing), Dr. Brendan O’Grady, Conciliation Officer Hon. B. Earle MacDonald, Pro- vincial Treasurer; Hon. Alex awyers Hear AutomaIiOn ear SurpriSineg Strong At Friday’s session the associa- tion approved resolutions urging that more emphasis be placed on ethics in law schools, and that considenation be given and a sub sequent brief prepared and sub- mitted to the federal government on the proposed new bill of rights. Nationalists Coniér 0n “SuppIyIineIp- emoyg Communist artillery pounded the'Quemloy landing beach for an hour Saturday, probably trying to hit an unarmed transport plane bringing men and supplies tron! Taipei. The plane may have carried a small group of Ameri- can correspondents. , Unofficial, unconfirmed reports said the plane did not land. A Nationalist defence spokes- man said Red guns on. the main- land hurled more than 7,000 high explosive shells at the beach area between 5:10 ann. and 6:06 a.m. An American command spokes- man said no supply convoy was enroutetoorlntheareaSa-tur— day morning. Chiang’s strategy meeting took place at Malt-1mg in the Pesca- domes. This island in Formosa Strait is the assembly point for convoys to Quemoy. joint staff chairman, Gen. Wang Shu-ming. other Chinese military leaders also were there. The meeting took place as some American commanders pri- vately acknowledged that Quemoy eventually must strangle unless a way is found to get more than the present trickle of supplies through the Red artillery curtain. Nationalist pressure is growing for American approval to bomb the mainland gun positions in an effort to silence them. There are demands for the U.S. 7th Fleet to escort the Nationalist supply ships closer to Quemoy, along with increasing talk of air drops to the beleaguered island. So far the U.S. fleet in its escort opera- tions has limited itself to “inter- national waters.” Lt. Gen. Ko Yang—foil, deputy allist supply ships once they are within three miles of the islands. He claimed this was more of a burden than a help. and urged be smashed by planes... “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dewf’ CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1958 By RELMAN MORIN LITTLE ROCK (.AiP)‘—- Gover- nor Orval Flaubus Friday ordered the Little Rock schools not to open as scheduled next Monday. and the law empowering him to do this was immediately chal- lenged in a state court. Faubu-s acted less than five hours after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that Little Rock schools must admit Negro stu- dents. la a flurry of legal actions, these developments came in rapid succession: 1. Fiaubus signed into law a bill authorizing him to close the schools. ‘ 2. He issued a proclamation based on this law, ordering the schools in [little Rock not to open next Monday. »' 8. A Little Rocklawyer, chal- lenging this law, said he was ask- ing for a declaratory‘judgment to avoid Eaubus orders on grmmd-s that it is in conflict with the Ar- kansas ' SERVED WITH SUMMONS 4. A sheriff served Faubus with a summons to appear in court to show cause why an injunction should not be issued preventing him from closing the schools. 5. Faubus signed a sheaf of other anti-integration laws. They Maclsaac, Minister of Weltare and Labour; Charles McQuaid, Union and J. Reginald Mahar, acting President, who signed on behalf of the Union. Veterans Affairs Official Dies; Hod Bee-n Here OTTAWA (0P) John A. Malclsaac, for many years an of- ficial of the veterans attairs de- pnntment, died in hospital here Friday at the age of 74. The native of Sydney, N.S., en- tered the federal civil service in 1918, serving at Charlottetdwn, coming widely known as a pen- stuns. advocate. For 10 years he was president of the Civil Serv- St. John’s and Ottawa and be ice Association. ' .Eatons Have New Vacation Plan TORONTO (OP) -—- The '1'. Company Hunted Friday a new vacation sched- ule for its 50,000 employees across Canada, giving a three-week paid holiday to those with five years’ service or more and four weeks to employees with 20 years or more. The schedule is effective next year. Previously 10 years’ serv- ice entitled an employee to a three - week vacation and four weeks were given on completion of 25 years. The company said the schedule will provide an extra week’s holl- day to about 7,500 employees next year. ' CREATED DAN McGR‘EW Sourdough POef Tournament But NO Fish WEDGEPORJT, NB. (CPi—eThe elusive Atlantic bluefiin tuna Fri- day was well on its way towards contradicting. worn expression that internatian competitions for the big battler inneariby waters have always produced results. The tournament headed for its third and final day today without a single bite on record. Unfettered by weather and given unlimited compass in travel, teams from Mexico, the British Commonwealth, Cuba and the United States Friday drew the second blank day. Bright sun, a gentle northwest breeze and temperatures in the high 605 Friday presented ideal conditions. But there wasn’t a nibble. ‘ He conferred with Rear-Ad- miral Roland Smoot, head, of the U.S. Formosa defence command, Rear - Admiral Paul Blackburn, the U.S. Formosa Strait patrol cormuander, andithe' Nationalist LANCIEUX, France (ICEP) Robert W. Service, sourdough poet of the Yukon gold rush days who rhymed his way to riches, his best-known work — he put the manuscript away. But a month later he plucked a name out of $1 bank ledger and in a few hours the famed cremation of . included .a measure furnishing tuition payments by the state to p ri v a t e or segregated public schools for the education of stu- dents whose schools are closed. Another a uthorizes segregated classes in a school building which may have been integrated. 6. The governor ordered an no. disclosed number of state troopers to report to his office..'lihe reason could not be learned immediately. They began appearing at once. HELD OFF SIGNING The quick developments set the stage for a tangle of legal actions. They may bring Eaubus into a headon collision with the federal government. R. N. certificates are being is- sued to 39 candidates who were successful in the codification ex- aminations held in this Province earlim- this year. as registered nurses in the Prov- ince of P. E. I., were trained at one of the three following Schools: The Charlottetown Hos- pital School of Nursing; The Prince County Hospital School ing. .étrsenault. Donna Lee, Summer' - s1 e. . Arsenault, Mary Florence, Tig- uish. ’ ' Bevan, June Sylvia, Charlotte- town. Black Shirley, Coles Island, N. B . Brown, Mary Theresa, Ken- sington. Carruthers, Augustine Cove. Caseley, Jean, Wilmot cmmander of the Quemoy garri- son, criticized the U.S. convoy system which leavesthe Nations that Communist shore batteries died Thursday in this peaceful Brittany hamlet at the age of 34. Service, whose Dangerous Dan McGrerv was known than himself, before he was gripped by a fatal heart attack. He was in the midst of a poem died. Street, in the big home he bought here some 30 years ago, long af- ter his days in the Canadian Yukon territory. , He went to Canada at 20 after bank in Glasgow. where he had been taken from his native Pres- ton, England as a boy. WANTED TO BE HOBO boy or a hobo,” he said in later years. . , He tarmed for a while on Van- couver Island but then went back Bank of Commerce in Victoria. Then the bank transferred him to legend began. Snow Falls In New Hampshire New England states got a fore- taste of winter. cord, N.H., and Houlton, took a glass of cognac. throughout. Afterward. ChurchillL of 35.9 degrees, a record for the BOSTON (’AIP) — An inch of snow fell on Mount Washington, N.H., overnight ‘nd the tempera- ture dipped to 24 degrees as the The weather bureau reported the mercury registered 33 at Con- Me. Hartford, Conn. reported a low date. Boston’s minimum was 49. He made his way to Dawson, centre of the gold rush of 1898, and from his friendships with the grizzled prospeglors of that era he got the inspiration for his poems about theNorthland. The epic about Dan McGrew was written for the editor of the Dawson Star, who asked Service for a poem with local atmosphere. And using something of the style of Britain’s Rudyard Kipling, whose works be admired, Service sat down one evening after supper and worked until the early morn- ing hours. Not satisfied with the finished product—although it later became probably better had- put aside busy pen only minutes on the longevity of man when he Service died on Robert Service serving an apprenticeship in a “I wanted to become a cow- to banking with the Canadian Whitehorse in the Yukon—and a Sam McGee was on paper. “Man from Tennessee." The real Sam McGee was a Canadian businessman, who died in Alberta almost 40 years later, but to millions the world over the name recalls the man from Tenn- esse who “ . was always cold. but the 15nd of gold seemed to hold him like a spell, “Thbugh he’d often say in his homely way that he’d sooner live in hell.” He finally found warmth and. peace “on the marge of Lake Lebarge" where the poem’s nar- rator cremated the southerner in the firebox of an old lake steam- er. These two poems and others he later sent to Toronto, where they were published and made an immediate sensation as Songs of a Sourdough. Service spent from 1904 until 1912 in the Yukon. and in the lat- er part of that period wrote al- most constantly. Songs of a Sourdough was published in 1907. and was soon followed by Bal- lads of a Cheechako, The Trail of ’98—3 novel — and Rhymes of a Rolling Stone. WROTE WAR BOOK Then, towards the end of the First World War, during which he served as an ambulance driv- er in France and later with Ca- nadian Army Intelligence, he wrote Rhymes of a Red Cross Man, a book of poems about War- time incidents. His lifetime output was a staggering 1‘,000-odd poems pub- lished in 13 books, half a dozen novels and a two-volume auto- biography. His verses —— don‘t call them poems, he once said— are best Valley. . : Robert \ , ‘ Service‘ Dies In France ram wirrn AnmnAis . described in his own words: “I don’t believe in pretty language and verbal facilities, but in get- ting down as closelas I can to the primal facts of life; down to bed- rock. “My idea is to write something that the everyday working man can approve of — the man who usually fights shy of all verse or rhyme." LEFT DAWSON IN ’12 . Strangely. enough, after he left Dawson in 1912 Service never again returned to the Yukon, al- though he visite'd Vancouver just a few years ago. His cabin still stands in Dawson City and his wife and daughter visited it in 1942. After the First World War Ser- vice had many adventures in Europe —— he was a correspond- ent for the Toronto Star during the Balkan Wars of the ‘20s — and eventualy settled in France. He had married a French girl, Germaine Bonrgoin of Paris, in 1913. '. When France fell in the Sec- ond World War he escaped to ‘ England on the last cargo boat, but he returned to France after the war. ' Service, who spent winters on the Riviera and summers in cool Brittany, had asked to be buried here. His wife and their only daughter, Iris, were making fun- eral arrangements Friday. GOAL: 100 YEARS . Service had wanted to live to be 100, but even five years .ago he seemed to feel the end coming. In a typically self-effacirg verse, he'wrote: “As nothing-ness draws near How can I see, Inexorably clear, ‘ My vanity. My sum of worthiness, Always so small, Dwindles from less to less, To none at all.” of Nursing; or the Prince Edward Island Hospital School of Nurs- Released by the P. E. I. Asso- ciation pf. Nurses odfice yester- day the names of the successful Faubus waited after the secretary of state’s office usually closes before the laws that permit - to close the schools, and take other actions respecting them. At 4:26 pm, four minutes be- fore employees usually leave the office, they were told to stand by. While this was taking place, the sheriff served the summons on Faubus. Lawyer Kenneth Coffelt of Lit- tleRocksaidhefliledthesuitcu behalf of Mrs. Gertie Garrett, a. segregationist. “But she simply does not be- lieve the schools shofld be closed,” Coffelt said. 39 Candidates Pass R.N. Exams Coffin, Dorothy Stewart. Creed. Helen Elizabeth, Stur- geon. Cornish, Ellen Olga, Howler. Dam, Mariea Louise, Charlotte Ethel, MI. The young ladies, now qualified WW1! Ellis Ethel Lillian (Mn) Sum- mer-side. , England, Joyce Isabella, West Royalty. I . Fitzgerald, Gertrude Lillian, Georgeww-n. Gallant, Barbara Ann, Glar- lottetown. ' St. ~' Gillls Bernadette Alycls,, Peter’s Bay. Humphrey, Marlon Roberta, Remington. * findidates appear below in alpha- omfigw’ N o r I“ ' Enen' tical order: ’ .4' A H. w Annear, Joyce Elaine, Lower mmam'suah me' ' mmm- . MacDonald, Anne mun, Soul‘- 18. . MacDonald, Lucetta Mary, St. Peter’s Bay. ‘ McCarthy, Morell Rear. McQuaid, B e r th e Therese, Richmond. Catherine Noreen, McQuaid, Margaret Wilena, Redford. ' Millar, Edith Audrey, Sum- merside. p ‘ Morrison Barbara May, Sum- merside. ' Noonan, Pauline Joan, Char- lottetown. ' Paquet, Mary Joyce, Sour-is. Praught Elizabeth Corinne, Cherry Valley. I Roberts Elizabeth Jean, South- port. Ross, Constance Mary, Flat River. Rossiter Hilda Eugenie, Morell. Seaman, Mary Grace, O’Leary. Sharam, Joan Lois, Charlotte- town. Silliphant Donne Irene, Sum- merside. , Tantan, Mary side. Taylo ,’ Shirley Marie, Lower Montague. -' Weeks, Mary Edna, Frederic- ton. . Says Red Chino Is ’Anxious' For Agreiement WALRJSAIW (Reuters) — Oom- munist Ohina’s ambassador re- turned hene Friday and said he is “anxious” to reach a peace. full solution of the Formosa pute in his forthcoming negotia- tions with the United States. In a statement read to report- ers, Ambassador Wan Pin-nan said he had returned Peiping to receive instructions on the re sumption of negotiations which were suspended last December. “'lille Chinese people love peace and they are fully convinced that they can defend peace,” he said, ‘Recently, our chairman, Mao Tse-tung, said if both sides‘show goodwill the negotiations may achieve some result. “As a representative of the Chinese People’s Republic, I am most anxious to see that such a result he achieved in Warsaw." Truck Roadec At Amherst Today Rae, Summer- 40 contestants will take part ing here today. . B., secretary manager of dcmalde. C I Stoneham, AMHERST (cr) _ More than In the Maritime truck roadeo open- C.W. Moffa-tt of Sackville, N. the sponsoring Maritime Motor Transport Association, said four clases will be featured including the new class for semi-trailer t-an- expectations." NOT MORE " THAN 0 MOSCOW (AP) — The Soviet government annouuc today it found the “destroyed and burned” wreckage of an American plane on its soil and protested what it called UJS. violation of its border. The announcement also said the bodies of six airmen Were found. > ’ A note to the American Em- bassy made public today was the first word from the Soviet Union about a U.S. Air Force C-130 which vanished Sept. 2 with 17 men aboard on a flight over Turkey. The fate .of the III remaining airmen remained a mystery. FIND WRECKA'lE (In Washington the state de- partment said in an announce- ment Friday that Soviet fighter planes intercepted the U.S. turbo- jet transport plane in the area of the Turkish-Soviet border near Kass, a point about 95 miles in- , , WEATHER ' Sunny with a few cloudy intervals and a little warmer; light winds. Low-high 10 and 60. Sunday—Sunny. FIVE CENTS USSR Protests Violation Of Border By US. Plane Faubus Orders Schools In little Rocho Remain Closed On Monday Burned Wreckage Is FOUHCI; Fate Of II Men Is Mystery the plane was found 56 miles northwest of Yerevan, capital of So-iet Armenia. The Soviet note gave no indi- . cation how the plane came down. It merely said “the remains of a destroyed and burned”planehad been found along with “the re- mains of bodies by which we pose siny assume that six members of the crew perished.” ‘ At the same time, the note said the American aircraft had “pene- trated a significant distance into. the Soviet Union and fell in ter- ritory of the U.S.S.R." It referred to this as “evidence that the plane intentionally vio- lated the USSR. state borders." Richard H. Davis, the U.S. Em- bassy ch arge d’arfiiairs, was handed the note Friday. Dovishadsentanotetoihe fiorm’gn office Sept. 6 asking any information about the missing plane. The plane had been on a flight out of Adana, Turkey, tak— side Turkey). The note said the wreckage of DONIDQN (CP) — Plume m. ister Macmillan” Friday night‘ pledged all the resources of Brit. ish diplomacy to’fiud a peaceful wayout of the Far East crirsis. But, alter three major policy declarations within 24 hours, he left unanswered the question of whether would go along with the United States in defend- ing Quemoy and Mrtsu, the off- shore islands, against Cldnese Comunist invaders. Macmillan, melting a political speech in his home consti. meaty. stressed that Britain is under no to help defend either the small Matsu and Quemoy ou-t- posts near the China coast or the Nationalist Chinese stronghold of Our American allies have neither sought nor received prom- ises of support from us in the Formosa area,” he said. issued two official state- ments dining the day declaring She had given no promise to sup- the U.S. militarily in defence of the offshore 'slands or For- m part in a check on radio-wave intensity. Macmillan, Pledges Britain TO Aid In Peaceful Settlement mum statements decried theIIseofforceindreareaand- urgedepeacefulsolution; ' CITES OBLIGATION "The fact that we are not mil- itary involved puts all the greater Obligation upon us to help in any way we can, by private consulta- tion and public action, to secure a peacttul solution of these prob- lems." Macmillan told the politi- cal meeting Friday uigI'nt. , The allies throughout Emope and Asia, meanwhilq applauded Eisenhower's appeal in his 'lihursp day buoadcest‘for anemia» ' ated settlement of the Formosa crisis. The lone exception was Notion- elist China, which messed doubts about “the wisdom of en- .‘ g into any negotiation wit! Communist aggreésore.” From London to Manila, states- men, politicians and newspapers accented Eisenhower's peace call. They differed slimy, how. ever,‘ on the “no appeasement" section" of his speech. PRINCE ALBERT, Sask. (CP) Prime Minister Diefenbaker said Friday he takes “encomn'gement from the fact that direct talks be- tween the United States and Com- munist Chinese representatives are expected to begin soon in Warsaw.” The prime minister was com- mcnting in a prepared statement on the address Thursday night by President on the Far East situation. The statement: The statement last night .by President EisenhoWer outlined the gravity of the situation in the Far East and the terrible conse- quences which could result if the present period of tension were to lead to an extension of conflict in the men. ' I take encouragement from the fact that direct talks between P/.M. Encouraged Red China, U.S. To Hold Conference United States and Chinese Com- munist representatives are ex- pected to begin soon in Warsaw and from President Eisenhower's expressed hope that it shImIIId be possible for pmctical progress to be made in such negotiations to- » ward resolving the existent ls- suesn . GL 0]" UN ROLE I am glad to note that the presi- dent referred to the possibility of the influence of the United Na- tions being brought to bear upon the situation, for this, as I stated in the House on Sept. 6, is a course which is always available when peace is thre‘ate..;d. I earn— estly hope that the Chinese Com- munists will respond to the presih dent’s suggestion for peaceful set- tlement, for it would be catastr- phic if they would frustrate them by further aggressive action. ) Some VisitOrs' ,The remarks of some of the 10,000 plus visitors who signed the visitors’ book at the PIE. I. Tourist Bureau in 1958 had a wide range in variety. . Some were witty, some caustic, some nostalgic. Some were com- plementary and some, .not so com- plimentary. Here are a few of the gems: A Halifax sailor wrote “Wow!” A New.York lady commented, “I ’ ? I ? *”. An elderly Ontario lady, “Wonderful P. E. I. Here at last. We love it". The vivid re- marlm of a young hipster from Mass, “The most! The romantic strains of a young Massachusetts couple, “The best place in the world for a honey- ‘moon,” The sentimental remin- isceuses of a little old lady from Red Deer, Alberta, “Few changes in 51 years.” There are many other remarks: a gentleman from San Quentin, .Califomia, “Weaker Jail than we have." An obviously confused Texan, “Crummly and beautiful.” A family of Montrealers, “A de- lightful farml‘ y vacationlan From a Toronto couple, “Beyond BOOk Gems At P.E.I.‘ Tourist 1 Bureau received help, cooperation and courtesy.“ Ayoung man from Quebec, “Very nice girls.” A couple from Ohio, “Very wet rain." A Yellowkmfe' , N. W.T.- couple, “We found P. E. I. the tidyest province in Canada.” A couple from Rosedale, N. Y., “Beaurtihll quite country. We‘re coming again." From an appar- ent de-segregationalist'firom little Rock, Arkansas, “Better schodls than we have.” U.K. Narrows Trade Gap LONDON (Reuters) ’4 Brita-in narrowed. its trade gap—the ex- céss of imports over exports—to 33,400,000 for the month of Aug- ust, government trade figures showed Friday. This figure is 6500000 lower than the deficit for the month of July. - Exports totalled 257,800,000, or 28,000,000 less than in July. Imports amounted to 304,400,000 From a family lfrom Windsor, Ontario, We have 33,000,000 less, than the pre- vious mouth. .