ore John Ling Laundry Co., 169 Queen Sireet, yesterday was doused damage ~ Ject are M.F. Schurman Co. Ltd. of Summerside .and Charlotte- CROWD SEES SHOW MOUNTIES’ Ritter and his Ranch Boys by some 1,300 persons | put on a highly suc-| Monday night at the | city boys auditioned with group and took part in the program. David Gallant and Dedi Wynn sang while Norman Stewart and Keith Robinson played the guitar. grave were conducted by Rev. Harold L. Mitton. A firing squad from H.M.CS. Queen Chariotte, under Mac- . .'. is to see whether or not aded Sunday in the first tory of the force. The me] consisting of 450 officers and ¢ ee a BATTLE FLAG PARADED drum- | men— biggest Among the participants were ee ee Be le oS ue behat, non dowel recone are cease and some 3,000 spectators to Rock- cliffe barracks near Ottawa. Housing Authority Squabble Brings Member Resignation ST. JOHNN’S, Nfld. (CP)—Three members of the St. John’s housing authority have resigned on the hope that their action “will bring about a settlement’’ between the federal and provincial govern- ments on the make - up of the authority. ' Maj. A. H. Crosbie, Hubert Kelly atid John J. Murphy dis- closed their resignation in a let- ter to Premier Smallwood, who said the three had shown “‘pat- riotic spirit.” The premier has indicated the dispute arose when federal Works Minister Green and W. J. Browne, Newfoundiand’s mem- ber of the federal cabinet, re- quested that Liberal housing au- thority members be replaced by Progressive Consefvative party Premier Smaliwood announced in the legislature April 3 that the Newfoundiend government would sue the federal works department and Central Mortgage and Hous- ing Corporation for breach of contract concerning subsidized had assumed possession and ed- ministration of 192 housing units instead of the housing authority, contrary to a 1956 agreement after he refused to comply with the request that Conservative supporters be named to the com- mission. The action is now before the Exchequer Court of Canada. The three resigning members stepped down after drawing lots at a supporters. Defence bers. Industry. ls Said Hampered By DAVE McINTOSH Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP)—United States Defence Secretary Neil McElroy says Canadian defence industry has been adversely affected by the Canadian government’s de- cision ‘“‘to buy complete: weapon systems from the U.S.” He adds that “the thing that Canada is trying to do in order to provide some continued busi- ness for their defence industry there is any way in which some of the component parts of these systems can be manufactured in Canada without any sacrifice in cost.” This testimony by Mr. McElroy Et SRETe bitte a with their cameras and who check their watches by. { -| mame of the clock. before the U.S. House of Repre- the resonant chimes broadcast daily by the British Broadcasting Corporation’s Overseas Service are aware that Big Ben is not the Big Ben is in fact the name of the 13% ton bell which sounds the deepest note in the chime. In this picture E. H. Williams (left) and Mr. Wrighton are seen checking the nuts and bolts of the giant hammer of Big Ben. It took a team of sixteen horses to draw it across London (1859) from the Whitechapel Bell BIG BEN IS 100 sentatives appropriations commit- tee—a transcript has just become available here — provides the background to two amounts in- cluded in additional Canadian government spending estimates tabled in the Commons Monday. SUSTAIN CAPABILITY One amount is for $5,000,000 to “sustain” technological capability in the Canadian defence industry and the other is for $450,000 to establish sourees for the produc- tion of component parts for elec- tronic equipment. : Officials\ explained that the $5,- 000,000 is for development of pro- grams for production of eompo- nent parts for weapons. They added that this develop- housing here. He said the OMHA | ™® Justice Minister Fulton. (CP_ Wirephoto) fence production-sharing arrange- ments with thé U.S. whereby Canadian firms are enabled to bid on manufacture of compo- nents for American prime con- tractors. Officials declined to give details on how the money will be spent, saying that Defence Production Minister O’Hurley will deal with this aspect in a Commons speech. PRODUCTION LAG Mr. McElroy said in his testi- ny: “T think it is almost a certainty that at least for a period of time there would not be as much pro- duction in Canada as there would be expenditure of Canadian dol- lars for U.S. manufactured goods of this type. (Defence equipment) “They (Canada) are simply asking us to see whether we can- not encourage American manu- facturers to place some orders in Canada.” : Mr. McElroy added: “I think it is a very modest kind of re- Guilty Plea ‘Is Accepted Accepting a plea of guilty to a reduced charge of driving while impaired Magistrate K.M. Mar- tin, QC, imposed a fine of $100 and costs or 20 days on a Char- TTY NEWS PAGE TELEPHONE 8506 — ASK FOR NEWS DESK By ALAN DONNELLY ~ Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP)—The Commons broadcasting committee Tuesday voted, by a narrow majority, to crack CBC secrecy on advertis- ers’ payments for sponsored tele- vision programs. Despite the stated disapproval of Revenue Minister Nowlan, a group of Progressive Conserva- tives carried by a vote of 11 to 9 a motion which will require the CBC to disclose how much of the cost of TV productions is covered by sponsor payments. Mr. Nowlan, backing the opin- ion of CBC vice-president E. L. Bushnell that the disclosure could harm revenues of the _publicly- owned corporation, said pay- ments by individual sponsors should not be given. CLAIM NOT PROVEN But Art Smith (PC — Galgary South), sponsor of the motion, said that claim had not been proved. He criticized what he called ‘‘the rather loose way” in which the CBC negotiates what the sponsor payments shall be. As part of Mr. Nowlan’s argu- ment—he said it was his personal view, not a government. stand— the minister said that next year Two City Women Named Officers Mrs. Thompson was educated at Prince of Wales College’ and the Forsythe School of Dental ‘| Hygienists in Boston.:She is em- ting in competition with the CBC in major centres. “In d@ few months,” he said, the Borad of Broadcast Govern- ors will receive applications for these competitive stations and “the monopoly will have been broken.” Mr. Nowlan, who reports to Parliament for the CBC, has in- dicated previously the govern- ment was ending the “single sta- tion” policy of allowing only one TV outlet to operate in a single area. But Tuesday was the first time he had said how- soon this will come about. SOLE ’RIGHT AREAS At present CBC TV stations have sole broadcasting rights in six major centres: Halifax, Mont- real, Ottawa, Toronto, Winnipeg and Vancouver. J. W. Pickersgill UL — Bona- vista-Twillingate) said that if the committee voted for Mr. Smith's motion, it also should insist on private operators disclosing their costs and advertising revenues. That would be an unfair way of dealing with private business. The CBC already has provided the committee with cost and rev- enue figures for a number of pro- grams without identifying the private TV stations will be opera- program or sponsor. | Peter’s drew a 10-day sus- city man Failure to stop at a red traffic light cost a Grand Tracadie resi- ment program is related to de- ' foundry and Londoners ; 3 5 Foyt 2 2 : Seif z : 5 "| need for a ‘‘diagnosis and cure’ Education ‘Cure’ Said Necessary REGINA (CP) — The urgent for modern education was empha- sized Tuesday at the Imperial Or- der Daughters of the Empire na- tional convention. Mrs. A. R. Jewitt of Lennox- ville, Que., national secretary of the order’s war memorial scholar- ip and bursaries, quoted Lewis arroll's description in Alice in Wonderland of education as ‘‘reel- ing and writhing . . . and then the different branches of arith- metic—ambition, distraction, ugli- fication and derision.” . OTTAWA (CP) — Government Proposals to expand unemploy- ment insufiance coverage and in- crease costs to workers and em- ployers are shaping into the big- gest parliamentary battle of the session. Sitting after sitting of the Com- mons industrial relations commit- tee — which is studying the gov- ernment measure—has exploded into verbal crossfire with veteran ‘Paul Martin (L. — Essex East) leading the foray against the Pro- gressive Conservative bill. 7 Chairman R. Hardy Small (PC —Toronto - Danforth) drew new Opposition outbursts Tuesday as he demanded that the committee, which has been meeting mornings also hold afternoon sessions while the House is sitting to speed up consideration of the bill, tagged by Mr. Martin as containing ‘‘un- fair impositions” and ‘hidden 2 Mrs. Jewitt said she is con- vinced the root of the trohble is “wrong éducation — education twisted from its proper purpose, which is the training of the in- tellect, the enrichment of the mind, and the illumination of the ae... LIBERAL STUDIES “I am equally convinced that this proper end of cducation can be gained only through the stud- jes and activities we cali “* ‘lib- eral’.”’ Mr. Jewitt, Wife of A. R. Jewitt, Unemployment Insurance Debate Shapes Up As Major Row In House their responsibilities as an Op- Position. Standing in the Commons: Pro- gressive Conservatives 207, Lib- erals 48, COF 8, vacancies 2, total 266. - Mr. Martin said Prime Minis- ter Diefenbaker had pledged at the opening of Parliament not to make i difficult for the opposi- tion to carry out its functions and responsibilities to Parliament. Sitting back quietly, taking # all in, wag Labor Minister Starr’ ‘called as a witnesg to explain the bili’s individual clauses. OTHER CRITICISM The bili also drew criticism out side the Commons. The Canadian Metal and Min- ing Association said in a telegram to the committee is ‘‘considerably distrubed"’ by the proposed in- surance rate boosts. This would add substantially te operating costs, .The Canadian Life Insurance | H & 7 - fH rs efe f x i & [ fh i Buss iH ged el Bs RF i : {it Wie a lb g<e38 E E piles for the project a few weeks The pouring of concrete be- within the past few days. new breastwork is being least 15 feet beyond the tend southward to the foot of (Continued from page 1) the four Atlantic Provinces to investigate the extent to which the seaway may effect the flow of export and import traffic now moving through Atlantic ports between foreign countries and points in Canada outside the At- lantic area. The study is also concerning itself with the outlook for an all- water movement of commodities between the Atlantic Provinces and the Great Lakes area, and to determine the probable effect of the seaway on industry in the Atlantic area. Mr. Mann however expressed disappointment that an applica- tion requesting lower seaway tolis for interprovinciel traffic had not been found acceptable to the St. Lawrence Seaway tolll’s commission. The executive manager’s re- port says the commission has been of assistance to shippers associations where requested but it pointed out that the success or failure of these associations de- pends entirely upon the: interest of these participating companies and the efforts made at the local association level. The chairman of the commis- sion is A. Murray MacKay, Hali- fax, chairman of the board of Maritime Telegraph and _ Tele- Island’s representatives are Vice- Chairman E. D. Reid and B. Graham Rogers, director of | transportation for the province. president of Bishop's University at Lennoxville, earlier was pre- sented with a national life mem bership, the IODE’s highesa honor. Born in Truro, N.S., she has been an IODE member since 1918 and has served the order in Truro, Halifax, London, Ont., Lennoxville and Sherbrooke, Que. In her report, Mrs. Jewitt said 30 bursaries of $1,600 each and four overseas scholarships of $2,000 each will again be offered in 1960 from the Second World War memorial funds. Offiders’ Association, represent- ing 87 life insurance companies, said in a brief there had been a gradual departure from sound in- surance principles in the insur- ance commission's operations during the last two years. Beene most inexpensive salesman you can employ ---¢ | GUARDIAN - PATRIOT WANT AD Phone 8506 | | saan ADULT POLIO CLI will be beld at the Community Centre, Charlottetown on Wednesday, June 3rd 7:00-9:00 p.m. First, second and third inoculations will be. given ——SS === INOCULATION . NIC = Ke kK ok ek KK HX HK & Kuan Yew eaid he could Monday ec Singapore deciding further action. The eight P.A.P. % ing . + + *x * x KH X ¥ Singapore Leader Shouts Defiance | By FREDERICK COLEMAN SINGAPORE (Reuters)— left-wing leader Lee any with “four helicopters two battalions of local in- fantry.”’ ‘Lee, whose People’s Action Party (P.A.P.) swept to an over- whelming victory in Saturday’s election, become Singapore’s first prime minister if Goode releases eight P.A.P. leaders ‘under dtention. ] Goode Monday night was re- ported consulting London before leaders were de- tained in 1956 after a series of strikes paralyzed the colony, The P.A.P. was carried to vic- tory on a wave of anti-colonial- ! = peg, where since 1956 he has been superintendent of the Trans- cona motive power shops. His new appointment becomes effec. tive on June 1, SEX . eictown Hostal. 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