_ was The first Red Seal home owners outside Charlottetown were of. finish? presented With Red Sea] certificates of adequate wiring yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. M. smart MacKay of Bunbury were in your M .a You Invent p m ll Managers of the eight Island at we fix“, H branches of the Bank of Nova 3"“ H Scotia will journey to Saint John, ‘ m hm. 01.13., on Wednesday to attend a two . day conference of branch managers from Prince Edward Island and New Brunswick. The conference will be held on Thurs- day and Friday of this week at the Admiral Beatty Hotel. Attending the business sessions will be senior officials from the bank’s general office in Toronto who be returning from the Bank of Nova Scotia’s 127th. An nual Meeting being held in Hali- fax earlier in the Week. DELIVERY presented with the certificates by P.A._ Murnaghan, deputy minis- ter of industries and natural re- sources, on behalf of the Elec- tric Service League of P. E. I. The certificate guarantees ade- Eight Island BNS Managers To Attend N.B. Conference The main business will deal chiefly with . . . key aspects of banking such as credit policies, staff training and modern bank— ing methods and operations.” Principal speaker at the Thurs- day evening dinner will be Pre— mier Hugh John Flemming of N Brunswick. Island managers attending the conference will be William Hay- ward, Charlottetown; J. W. Coug- hlan, O’Leary; R. H. Smith. Sum- mersid'e; J. S. McLeod, A1- bany; R. C. DeGras-se, Cra‘paud; G. S. E. Spicer, Kensington; B.F. McCarten, Morell; and I. G. Phillips, Montague. IN TOWN! Order It C‘N‘R Net 0 pe‘rating Income For October Was $5,701,000 In The Morning It's Delivered I In The f Afternoon " Operating revenues of the Canadian National System for the month of October, 1958, amounted to $62,944,000. Expen- ses, taxes and rents totalled $57,243,000, resulting in a net operating income for the month of $5,701,000. In October. 1957. operating revenues were $62,781,000: ex- penses taxes and rent were $63,- 042.000’. and the net operating Income deficiency was $261,000. Comparing the operating re- venues of the two months. the report shows an increase of $163,“ 000, and shows a decrease of $5,799,000 in the cost of expenses, taxes and rent, or an overall in- crease in net operating income of $5,962,000. . Considering the operating re- A Venues for the year up to Octo- ber flat, the report shows a W 0f $584,872,000, while ex- “ fl“ ““ ‘N.'Wiltshire WMS “a all m \ . u ,1. no: -_ Hold Meeting 2 Euro" On the evening of November 71th, the members and associate x members of the North Wiltshire ‘ United Church met in the Church gr their annual mite box open- g. ., The meeting was presided over by the president. Mrs. Fr a nk ' Mitchell, who welcomed the r nests. , A devotional period, led by Mrs Godfrey was followed by a pro- . tram of readings and recitations and a solo by Mrs. Reginald Clank. ‘ The offering was received by . Mrs. George Godfrey and dedic- ated by singing “We Give Thee . ‘ But Thine Own.” ‘ COMING EVENTS Christmas concert Watervale School. December 22. 1958. Reserve December 19th for Giristmas Concert In WheatleY we “0 I Diver Hall at 8 pm. mm my ‘ Organizations using this column a“ ‘0 promote their meetings and entertainments are requested M place their announcements 13 d . 0! the name of the Organization or 0f W - Group who are sponsoring the AM event. . M . I{Modding Car Quaker Dairy wit“. when at $3.25 per. ctw. this is . M the last: specials bfore frelght m- . ‘ creases. Ellis Bros. Central Roy- , altar. Dial 3223. Murray Harbor Baptist Church 3 Chicken and Plum pudding sup- per and bazaar. December 4th. Bazaar at 430 and supper at 5 . ll’tlock‘. _“ Card Party Hampshire Hall. ., ‘I'Sday. December 4th. Spon- I’ loved by Hampshire wt. T I Dance Fortune Hall Every wfidnesday night. Websters hcstra. 6"” Hockey meeting will be hen at the Recreation Centre in New Glasgow. Dec. 3rd. at 8.30 p.m. All interested plcasc attend. Special meeting of Cornwall Hall, wednesdav RVEIllng. Dec- ember 3rd at 8 pm Dance Farpsf Hvll F'rl. dlyrDeccmber 5. Web‘sm" or. ohestra. lunches. penses. taxes and rent totalled $596,188,000. a deficit of $11,316,- 000. For the same period last: year the operational revepues were $640,646,000, and the expenses, taxes and rent amounted to $637,913,000, a net operating income of $2,733,000. Comparing the operating re- venues for the two periods. the report shows a decrease of 655.- 774,000. while the cost of ex- penses. taxes and rent de- creased by $41,725,000. giving a net decrease of $14,049,000. \ WATE RVALE SCHOOL The following is the report for the month of November of Water- vale School. RECEIVE FIRST RED SEAL CERTIFICATE quate wiring for. and the safe operation of, the appliances of today and tomorrow. Those at- tending the official presentation were: from left to right, A.D. Gypsum Workers Return To Jobs WINDSOR. N.S. (CPl —— Man- ager M. E. King of the Canadian Gypsum Company said Tuesday that between 85 and 90 workers have been re‘hiped at. company plants and quarries here since a 134mon-t'h strike ended Nov. 20. The first few workers. mem- bers of the Nova Scotia Quarry Workers Union (OLC), returned to their jobs last week. The first sizeable group was rehired Mon- day. Mr. King said the company’s work force now stands at about 190: One hundred men returned before the strike was settled. SOUGHT HIGHER WAGES About 400 worked in the plants when the union struck Octi- 31, 1957, for higher wages. union se- curity, a shorter work week and other benefits. Mr. King said he hopes to have most of the men back by Dec. 15, The cases of about 30 workers will go before an arbitration board. The company said their actions during the strike were grounds for dismissal. Several demonstrations and rock-throwing incidents ocuri‘ed during the deadlock. The 30month wonk contract gives the men an immediate 11- ccnt hourly pay increase. eight cents more in six months and an. other five cents in 18 months. The union struck for a 15—cent in- crease. K RESCUE CREW SINGAPORE (Reu-tersl -~ The British motor vessel Anshun bat- tled heavy seas Tuesday and rescued the 23ama'n crew\of an Italian freighter which sank in By ARCH MacKENZIE , Canadian Press Staff Writer ' OTTAWA tCPlr—Thc Canadian Manufacturers Association sub-l ' mitted Tuesday that the public, employers and individual employi— ees are in “much more need" of legislative protection than ‘unions‘ are and called for revision of‘ Canada's federal labor laws. Trade unions now possess the power to cripple the economy “at will." said a brief submitted to Labor Minister Starr. It asked that unions shoulder legal respon- sibilities equal to those carried by other groups in society. QUEBEC lCP‘ _ Provincial police say documents they re. police back up their opinion that a Canadian Indian is inventing the story that he is responsible for the 1953 deaths of two Ameri— can hunters in the Gaspe Penin— sula bush. But the family of Wilbert Cof~ fin. 43—year-old prospector who ml; H.13.}3ugde.nv League sec. was hang-ed in 1956 when con- retarytreasumr: w. V. Burke ‘wcted of murder for one of the _ . . :slayings is hoping that the new “mung wmmd'm' Mr‘ Mumag developments will prove him in- han and Mr. and Mrs. MacKay. noccnt. - I The casehof three Pennsylvania - hunters w 059 mangled bodies were found five years ago he- Blamed For Collapse 'cnmc a topic of speculation again VICTORIA (CPI The Dominl Cameron. Maritime Electric Co. after Francis Gilbert Thompson, 35. a Mohawk Indian, was picked up last week by Miami police. He yield them he and a companion, .Joh-nny Greene. shot two of the hunters. PURE INVENTION ’Fake Contession’ Opinion Said Backed By Documents ceived T u e s d a y from Miami ' Tho S’Lpngo hrwi was pro scnlod by eight representatives of' the CMA. They spent about ant hour with Mr. Starr to providel verbal elaboration of ideas first outlined last April. The minister has asked quali- fled groups for suggestions re- garding possible revision of fed— eral labor statutes. DENIES VICTIMIZA'I‘ION Claude .lodoin. president of the 1.000.000-member Canadian Labor Congress. commented that the CMA brief is “factually false," particularly in indicating that in Ottawa in an attempt to deter- mine Thompson‘s movements. Thompson was charged by Mi— ami police with grand larceny and breaking and entering in con- nection with thefts from a luxury yacht. CONVINCED 0F INNOCENCE At the Coffin family home in York Centre, near the tip of the Gaspo Peninsula. the convicted max '5 mother said Tuesday she has always been convinced her son was innocent. Francois Gravel of Quebec. one of Coffin's attorneys, , said 70- year-old Mrs. Albert Coffin tele- phoned him asking if there were any developments. He quoted her as saying: "we're all still praying down» here. We always knew that some day someone would clear bur boy's name." Coffin was convicted specific— ally of murdering Richard Lind—4 sey. 17. of llollidaysbur-g. Pa, in' June 1953. Slain at the same time inn Bridge Company Limited was blamed ,by‘ a royal commission Tuesday for the collapse last June of Vancouver's partly built Second Narrows Bridge. Eighteen Monday. Quebec's deputy attor. ney - general. Charles — Edouard Can-tin, said a summary of Thompson‘s answers to a series of questions his department sent were Lindsey's father. Eugene Lindsey. 45. and a friend. Fred'- eric-k Claar, 20. TRIED TO STCAL PLAI'E Miami police made the story ap pear “pure invention." After looking over the complete replies to questions which arrived from Miami Tuesday. a depart- ment spokesman said they “con- firm the opinions already given on the subject of Thompson." The department also received Thompson's picture and finger— workmen were killed. Dominion Bridge is the main contractor for the project. Two spans across Burnard Inlet col- lapsed June 17. ' A 1.1004palge report by Chief Justice Sherwood Letty chairman of the commission inquiry. also said there was a lack of care on the part of consulting enginbrrs. .‘ . . Swan, Wooster and Panthers in Prim“. fhtifggermfits were he- not requiring the contractor to l g sen MP eadquarters submit plans of falsework under the bridge. ' Evidence was given before. the commission that. a faulty section of the fal=sework~ta temporary support under the outermost span of the bridge—was the cause of the collapse. Chief Justice Lett's report was released by Premier Bennett, who said Highways Minister A. Ga-glardi and the British Colum- Grade I: l. Edna MacLeod; 2. Vincent Walsh. Grade VIM: 1. Sheila Quinn; Grade VII: 1. Janet MacLeod; 2. Margaret Quinn; 3. Gerard Grimes. ' Grade V1: 1. Eileen Wrsener; 2. Allan Traindr; 3. Joseph Hay- eSGuaadc V Sr : 1. Maureen Walsh 2, Helen Quinn; 3. “any Quinn. Grade V J12: 1. Betty Quinn: . Tru Wisener 2 Crag:I III Sr: 1. Theresa Hay- es: 2. Eddy Tlrainor. Grade III Jr.: 1. Vincent Mac- Leod; 2. Mla-urice Wlalslh. Grade 111; 1. Theresa Machd: 2. Faye Quinn; 3. Bernadette Trainor. Teacher—adds Kelly. CN‘R Announces 2 Appointments MONCTO‘N ——— Two senior ap- pointments in the road transpor- tation department, of the Cana- dian National Railways were announced yesterday, by C. Gillespie. regional superinten- dent of the company’s highway operations in the Atlantic re- gion. James C. K. Norton of Mono- ton has been named to tlhenewly created position of superwsor of cartage services for the Atlan- tic region and Claude E. Flan- nery of Moncton to that of ac- countant. The CNR’s region wide road transport department operates 130 vehicles over 5,279 nules of Maritimes routes serving thou sand of cities and towns. Finds Wife Was Wealthy LONDON (Reuters! m Freder- ick Tuttle. 87, used I hand over most of his'old age pension to his wife who often complained of their poverty. She told him she could not af- ilord help in the house or. the garden and made him get rid of his dogs because they cost too much to feed. Tuesday. Tuttlc applied in court here for a reasonable share of the £100.000 fortune he never knew his wife possessed until she died lasI year. She left most of It In a aha!th beaivcathmg him only £52 a vest The judge awarded him £20 a week tax free. I Christmas Lights Inside and Outside Spot Lights For your car Aerial With Light Rear Aerial with Light Attached I Square Car Mirrors Christmas Wrap ONLY 2.79 For GIFT SUGGESTIONS 18]. Great George St. EASTERN Am sum in. BOSTON t'AiPl~—A civilian who never before piloted a plane was y charged Monday with trying to‘ steal an air force jet to fly it to,‘ India. Donald L. Lutman, 35, of ‘; Bound Brook, N.J., was arrested , Sunday at Hanscom air force; base in Bedford when he pulled a wrong lever and set off an en1 plosion which knocked the canopy off the jet. 1 l STOCK REDucuoN ~SALE! Dial 6917 Diamond Rings $25.00 up I Men's and Women’s Watches from $24.75 103 Grafton For That Someone Special Choose a Gift of Jewellery! NOTE! See our Special Christmas Novelties w. w. WELLNER up. Jewellers Since 1868 II "It‘l- Dresser Sets from $3.50 VISIT. OUR . TOYLANDE Men s & Women’s onyx Rings Come in today and shop at your leisure in our Toyland from $875 on our second floor. We are sure you will see the greatest toy display that we have ever had. I LAYAWAY TODAY . . . F. A. m“! m“ 129 KENT ST. Say “Merry Christmas” With LUGGAGE "YOUR SIMPSON-SEARS STORE" bia highway and toll bridge . authority were ‘albsolvcd of all ' blame. Q LIGHT FIXTURES . . residential, the South China Sea 7m miles ¢°meI¢I¢I~dnd chum" nortth of here. The British vessel. 23h?“.i“°é§.5‘li”.l”.t2 {this 0 SWITCHES & ‘RECEPTACLES . . . jflgfi,e§hfn4fg‘*st°g 2033335,}: light and heavy duty. weatherproof was sinking and being aband- dDM' 0 DIMMERS FOR STAGE LIGHTING ‘ HORNS & BELLS . . . low voltage tie/mpm m“ MOTOR STARTERS . . . various Slzes “ O NEON TUING . . . various shapes, AT EASTERN AUTO! 5 suitable for window lighting Sleighs'and . , Toboggans O INTERCOMM. one only 12 station. For the kids__ , w CHAPPELL 8. C0. VISOR PACKS jte—efing “Pei—l ‘ Phone 8325 / 161 Queen St. Covers From 39: ; For ou-hhego f o l k. here‘s the gift that will go over BIG! A of matched luggage will take them places in style. Especially when you choose from our wide array of smart numbers . . . for him . for her. All sizes and styles. All out- Revision OI Labor Laws Is Called For By CMA manufacturers are. victimized by big trade unions. Mr. Jodoin said the brief seeks to weaken the union role of striv— ing to obtain. a fair Share of prof- its for members. He said the group now is on record as seek— ing the right-towork laws re. jected in the Nov. 4 United States elections. The (EMA brief said it accepts the principle of collective bar- gaining without reservation and the fact that most unions make an honest ctlfort to obey laws. But enforcement of existing laws and addition of new provi- sions were required to modernize legislation passed when trade unions had been relatively weak. CIVIL REDRESS It suggested civil redress through courts for unlawful strikes and Crown prosecution where strikes occurred before the end of legal conciliation proce- dure. It asked the outlawing of sec- ondary boycotts -— or picketing against an employer not involved in the dispute in order to get an employer who is—and of picket- ing in disputes between unions on jurisdiction. The OMIA said it does not seek legislation banning check-off ar- rangements set up in collective bargaining. But it. did feel that legislation is necessary in the field of compulsory union mem- bership. Moore & McLeod Ltd. o' a, - '- ‘.. 3-. .. *'I'o Enchannncnt “sf-it‘s? or 2.4% at... : Christmas Candle, guy and charming, contains six Blue Grass Petal Water; for the both..............................$I.00 Blue Grass accordion-shaped Puff- I’qu Dusting Powder. In shining foil container..$ I .25 ' and $2.” Sparkling Tree BaIl’ with two lovely surprises inside . . . Blue Grass Solid Cologne for hu‘ handbag and a Stop Rod Lipstick ..... .. Blue Gum Both Stand holfi Hand Lotion, Flower Mist, Atomizor, heart-shop. .......~u«u»...... . Blue Grass Hand lotion and Bath Soop....................$2 2 Flower Mist in one of thro. famous fragrances—Whit. Orchid, .Iuno Geranium, Cor- notion...........................$2.50 standing values! JONES DIAL 3188 itMoore 8: McLeod l Limited Your Christmas Shopping Centre L The Gunilla, (maflottetown, Wort, Doc. 3. 19.6fm“ No Additional l Anthrax Cases I Are Expected she's so REGINA (CPL—Deputy Health beautlful “ Minister Dr. F. B. Ruth says; there will probably be no more cases of anthrax in Saskatchewan 'Ilhe province's first human vir him of the disease in years, Lind- Gail ArplIa-nd. 6, was neleasr from hospital Manda y at Lange humg, 150 miles northwest of her The girl suffered cutaneous a illmax. a mild 50mm believe spread by a cow that died week ago on the Alpltansd farm. The animal died five weeks bc' fore the girl caught anthrax am district Dr. E. E Because a high fashion bracelet watch. Oanlsson, said the carcass may bf 1? "3’"? too old tor the laboratory to dis W" ""'"'" cover cause of death. ""b-m'k-w' Dr. Roth said further outbreak $3273“ of the disease' are unlikely, _bu warned that the M can 135- Look forthaf BULOVA difference “for years and years" under tho right conditions. There has never been an an itlma-x epidemic among humans. lln Saskatchewan. ' at Better Jewelers Everywhere - ANNUAL MEETING OF P. E. I. PLOWING MATCH and AGRICULTURAL FAIR ASS'N. WILL BE HELD IN Bridgetown Halt Monday, December 8 at 7.30 P. M. EXHIBITORS INVITED ALBERT ACORN, Secretary. GIIIS 3 to delight'him y in the. Nick -——~4'.« L \Bluestone and B.V.D. Shirts In handsome new collar styles $3.95 up SPORT SHIRTS In high style fabrics, patterns—a gift he’ll ‘ appreciate $3.95 up ABBEY TIES Choose from a. brilliant array of shades . . . Club Stripes, Plains and Patterns. $1.00 up MAN-SIZED HANDKERCHI-EFS ‘ All shapes, sizes and styles 25: up , PYJAMAS Designed for style and comfort $3.95 Up Men’s Hose . . . . . $I.00 up 5. A. McDONAlD " FIRST FLOOR