TELEPHONE asoo Buyer meets We ‘it Ads. Dial seller with Guardian 8506 ask for classi- fied ad taker, for quick results. 14 PAGES Making his first public ap- pearance since his inauguration, His Honour Lieut.-Governor F. Walter Hyndman and Mrs. Lona Turner's Daughter Held For Court Action HOLLYWOOD (AP) —— Lana Turner's teen-age daughter was ordered held Monday to await further court action in the fatal stabbing of Johnny Stompanato, a romantic figure in her mother’s life. ‘ The court refused to release Cheryl Crane, 14, to either of her parents or her grandmother. She was ordered detained until April 24 when she will appear for a hearing to determine whether shewillbemadeawardofthe juvenile court. A At that hearing, Cheryl could be freed, made a ward of the court and released to her family, or made a ward and placed in a private or a state institution. In juvenile cases under Califor- nia law there is no definite pro- nouncement of guilt or innocence and no fixedsentence. The tall, shy. schoolgirl has been in juvenile hall since Salt- urday. She was taken there from. the Beverly Hills police station after killing Stomxpanato, 32, Fri- day night while he was quarrel- ing her mother in the actress’ pink boudoi-r. Stompa nato was stabbed with a knife. Moior Qua ke- Is Recorded FAIRBANKS, Alaska (-AP)-A major Alaskan eanthqu-ake was recorded on sei.-smographs in North America Monday but its centre apparently was in a little inhabited area where chances of damages were remote. The quake, starting at 5:91 am. (11:31 a.m. AST), swayed light fixtures and toppled goods from shelves but caused no damage. An observatory in Hawaii placed the quake centre on the Alaskan mainland between.Nome and Fairbanks. . Observatories at Victoria, B.C., and the Universities of Washing- lon and California rated the quake severe enough to cause damage in a popul-ated area. PRESENT BIBLE JOHANNESBURG (AP)-— Prime Minister Johannes Strij- dom received a Bible Monday “in thanksgiving and apprecia- tion of the Christian manner in which he has ruled the country.” The presentation was made by ¢l:A:postolic Mission. Departn em, Ottawa stage presentation of “Abigail Goes Haywire” the Easter Mon- Rush Re HALIFAX t(CP)—-Sweating re- pairmen worked in drenching rain Monday trying to repair Dominion Atlantic Railway \trac-ks damaged by high tides la-st weekend. Working between the daily tide U. 5. Jet Seeks To Set Record YOKOTA‘ AIR BASE. Japan (A~P)—4A silver jet Srtratotanker streaked off the U.S. Air Force runway at dawn today for Ma- drid, trying tor a new world dis- tance and speed record. The flight will be non-stop and without refuelling. The swept-wing plane took off at 5:37 a.m. (4:37 pm. AST Mon- day). The flight originally was ‘scheduled for -last Saturday but was postponed due to bad Weather. The KIC-135 tanker Jet Stream, military version of the Boeing 707 Jetliner, also will attempt to crack the speed record between Tokyo and Washington, D.C., on the 12,488 . mile stratospheric rfligiht to Spain. A lesser mark to shoot for will be topping the 6,325-mile flight Gen.- Curtis Lemay made last ‘-Novernber between Westover, Mass., and Buenos Aires in a KC-135. MAXIMUM FUEL LOAD The four-engined ship carried a maximum fuel load -—- about three railway tank cars full—and a crew of seven. The flight com- mander was the Strategic Air Oommand’s Brig. Gen. William E. Eubank, 45. A second KC-135 is expected to take off 24 hours later to back- stop the flight and wing through Madrid if adverse wind-s or over- consumption of fuel forced the first ship down at Washington. ' The present unrefuelled dis- tance record is 11,236 miles, set in 1946 by a propeller-driven PV-2 Neptune flown by the U.S. Navy from Perth, Australia, to Columbus, Ohio. From Tokyo to Washington, the time record is 31 hours. 25 mni-utes, set 13 Walls 880 by 8 Hllthnrileu as Second Class Man by the Post Offic- LlEUTE:NANT-GOVERNOR ATTENDS PI.AY Hyndman as Patrons of the Charles Auxiliary of the Char- lottetown Hospital are greeted day play sponsored by the St. by Mrs. Frank Mccarron, Pre- pairs In Tide Damage peaks the workmen were trying at South Mai-tland, in Nova Sco- to build up a washed out dyke at South Maitland, in Nova Sco- »tia’s Annapolis Valley, crumbled when raging Bay of Fundy tides reached their highest peak in 18 years during the weekend. The worst appeared over, but it be several days before things are back to normal. Though peak levels have been passed, tides could still cause damage if dyvkes are not re.- paired, railway off’-iroials said Monday. The muddy Bay of Fundy, whose normal tides are said to be the highest in the world, churned over its banks Friday night and Sunday, sloshing wa- ter on the streets of Windsor and forcing some Parrsboro families to leave their homes. The tides dropped almost as fast as they rose, leaving wet basements, mud - covered highways and crumbled dykes. DYKE BREAKS A dyke near Annapolis Royal (broke under water pressure Mon- day, but workmen said the dan- ger wasn’t great because of re- ceding waters. . ‘K Meanwhile other parts of the province also got a taste of the water as high tides, wind and heavy rain belted coastal areas. Several south shore highways were flooded, and lobster fisher- men say their traps were badly diairnaged. . The winds which followed the tides disrupted shipping in Hali- fax Harbor Monday morning and the passenger-cargo liner Nova Scotia brushed a pier when blown by 50-mile an hour gusts. Several other ships anchored in the stream until the winds died. But heaviest damage was con- centrated in the Annapolis Val- ley. It will be several days be- fore regular rail services in the valley are restored,. at DAR spokesman said Monday. BUCKED STIFF WINDS CAPETOWN (-AP)——The three- masted U.S. scientific schooner Vema arrived in Capetown from ing 75-mile-an-hour winds which damaged her foremast. The ship is on a 34,000-«mile cruise as part of the U.S. In-ternational Geophy- C-54. si-cal Year program. Anti-H-Bomb Marchers Swing Fists On Final Day ALDERMASTON. E n gl a n d (Reuters) ~— A crowd of about 12.000 Monday packed a field out- side Britain's tightly - guarded nuclear weapons and called for a ban on thevjoine . , l'l.VtlI‘o:en bomb in a rlcmonstra-‘rcaclied 5.000 a.S81fl- Thousands: with ' more ‘meeting on the mild and cloudy lion thal ended in a Clash hecl-:ie1's. The mass p1‘()iESI against "nu-f clear madness." climax of ai four-day peace march. almost] broke up 7r‘. a non-peaceful melee‘ when rnavcciicrs attacked a heck- 11112 sound truck. The rlumnn.<h'.'-ilum s I .1 2‘ I 0 (1 Good l-‘ml:-i_\ in Tl';ll{llQ.'ll‘ Square? and I'r‘a(u1‘(‘(l a 50-miic march to} this l0\\u by banner - ca1‘ryj11g men. women and children. \w ..;, :',‘—3 an it "- of nbrut 500 lrfkiuu. mi: 1 \ '. o._a.‘in': by {LC l'0aLl~;.i<‘ ;t_n.i y ‘ill: n'.‘}'.li‘-llll in rl~u1'.~1: ha -. Soul 3.000 S'..'!".L‘x"r m]; ‘x: W3‘ ‘§;A.I‘Hi‘(":_‘.' only REGAIN NUMBERS The procession doubled on dry. cold Sunday. Tired legs and flag- ging spirits revived over the last establishment 10 miles from Reading 85 more d the ranks until the parade; came for the Easter Monday holiday- But the tired walkers——whosei5 . . . 4 leaders had Just briefed them on; the merits of silent, passive pro-N 1csI—explnded in fury when a‘ sound truck greeted them here with :-1 scoldinfl. -, LoL:r|spcake|'s ml vlhr: truck} manned by two Oxford U_1l3\’91"-‘ Sm. students and the bro her on one. blared at the marchers as they ncarecl their cool that they, were “voting \\'itl1 your feel for‘ soviet imperialist dornmation. j 15;.-nu:r_< on the .-Mics 01 £110 4.1-u.;-L, d e 5 c 1‘ i b c cl the protest Marchers ripped out the loud- speakers, rocked the truck from side to side, dented its lug-gage compartment and smashed a tail light. The driver, Norris Mc- Whirter. was punched and dem- onstrators tried to drag him out open-air; of the truck. Organizer of the march, Miss Pat Arrowsmith, appealed to the angry crowd. “This is a silent protest," she shouted. “We are not using vio- ' lence." But police had keep back the crowd. Thty pre- vented mar‘-c-hers from carrying out threats to roll the truck. The rally approved a resolu- ltion, to be delivered to Prime l\'linis1’cr Macmillan and the United States and Soviet ambas- sadors in London, which urged the three governments “to stop the testing. manufacture and ma »,3,.d_,..-_, ;m h,.,,.(,_,. m0“._im,.,-C13 as Khrushchev’: Bunionstoring of nuclear weapon-s im- ‘hi-‘ll. rain ."..:(‘. 3.23:1)-_' feet, | Do rby . l mediately.” the Antarctic Monday after buck- ' to step in to its Enarritimt "Covers Prince ‘Edward Island Like The Dew” CHARLOTTETOWN CANADA. TUESDAY, APRIL 8, 1958 at last sid-ent of the organization, the Community Centre night. Boys Play With Matches, Mother And Sister Die EASTVIEW, Ont. (CP) — Two young boys playing with matches Monday s t a rte d a fire that caused the death of their mother and a younger sister. Inspector Ray Simmons of the Ontario Fire Marshal’s \, Office said investigation showed that the sons of Mrs. Annette Brunet, Denis, 4, and Michele, 3, set fire to kitchen towels. Mrs. Brunet led the boys to safety from the burning four- room apartment and then died in the flames when she returned for their sister, two - year - old Monique. ’ Firemen, atiter fighting the flames in the apartment - busi- ness block in this Ottawa suburb for one hour, found her ,_b.u,rned body in the kitchen. ‘ The father, Jean-Guy Brunet was at work. About 50 persons, many of -them ch ildren, escaped as flames licked through the struc- ture. Damage was estimated at $20,000. ' Judy Garland In Taxes Case - NEW YORK (AP)—Judy Gar- land was given 2A-hours grace from further court questioning Monday, after her lawyer said an effort is being made to raise the $8,673 in back taxes she owes New York State. The actress-singer last Thurs- day turned over a quantity of jewels and clothing in lieu of $10,000 bond imposed to prevent her from leaving New York. Her lawyer, Maurice Green- baum, advised the court Monday that an attempt is being made to raise the back income taxes and ‘asked a 24-hour postpone- ment. It was granted. FAMOUS POST The original Fort Churchill on Hudson Bay was established as a trading post in 1688. WEATHER Cloudy and milder; northwest winds 20. Low-high at Charlottetown 32 and 13. NOT MORE THAN FEDERAL GOV’T ACTS _ New Floor Prices Fixed For But’rer, Hogs, Wool Complete surprise was expres- sed yesterctay by H. Roy Bevan, Chairman of the Sewage and Water Commission “that the City Council would want to push an important bill through in the dying moments of the Legisla- ture, asking that the powers of the Commission be vested in the hands of the City Council”. Mr. Bevan, in an interview fol- lowing a meeting of the Commis- sion yesterday afternoon felt that “such an important question could easily have been settled during the civic elections held two months ago." He pointed out that the Sewage and Water Commission is a body, elected by the citizens of Char- lottetown and could not see how either the Council or the Legis- lature could take their authority from them. 70 YEAR RECORD Mr. Bevan said, “For almost 70 years the users of sewage and water facilities in the City of Charlottetown have experienced practically no stoppage of ser- vice.” The system, he said, _is in the best of financial standing. He felt the people of Charlottetown should look into this matter. “They would see that this branch of the City is not only paying its way but is a great asset to the city’)! In regard to criticism voiced at the Council meeting which intim- ated that the Water Commission was not in favour of expansion, we have no alternative but to Some 700 Island teachers will converge on Charlottetown this morning for the annual meeting of the Prince Edward Island Teachers’ Federation to be held for the next three days at Prince of Wales College. Miss Mabel Matheson of Charlottetown will preside. Island teachers have been meeting in such gatherings for well over 70 years. The first such meeting of which there is any record was one which includ- ed the teachers from Charlotte- town schools in the year 1880. The minutes show that the meet- ing was held at Prince Street School. SHARE IDEAS It gives teachers an opportunity to ear first hand the latest trends in education and a chance to share problems and experien- ces through the many study groups which dot the agenda. Following registration this morning Miss Matheson will present her a nual report. May- or E.C. Johns one will extend a welcome on behalf of the citi- zens of Charlottetown. This will be followed by an address by H. ROY BEVAN supply the necessary services since the area in question would then become a part of the City”. Another matter referred to by the Commission Chairman was the statement that the Commis- sion had never attended any meetings of the Metropolitan Committee. Mr. Bevan said the Commission had been invited to attend only one meeting at which Mr. Crandall was present. They attended this meeting in a body. He said he had never seen any of the members of the Council at any of the Commission’s meet- Large Attendance Expected At Teachers’ Meeting, Today Keir Clark. Study periods in the afternoon will be led by Forbes Elliot of Saint John, N.B., who will dis- cuss, “Classroom Management". Dr .J.A. Tuck will speak on ed- ucational psychology. Professor Bruce Hodgins will deal with His- tory and Dr.. Brendon O’Grady will lead the discussions on Eng- lish. NATIONAL PRESIDENT On Wednesday it is expected the convention will have the pri- vilege of hearing the National President of the Canadian Teach- ers’ Federation, George Roberts from Oshawa, Ontario. At 6:30 the teachers will attend a Ban- quet to be held at the Charlotte- town Hotel where Mr. Roberts is to be the guest speaker. A soc- ial evening will be held a)t.8:30 at Queen Charlotte High. ‘ Thursday morning, Dr. L.W. Shaw, deputy minister and di- rector of Education for the Prov- ince will address the teachers. This will be followed by five min- ute talks on nine different topics. This constitutes a departure from the regular agenda of teachers’ conventions and is being looked forward to with great anticipa- the Minister of Education, Hon. tion. The 1958 Dairy School at the Ontario A_;:ric1.11h_11'a1 College DE- partmcnt of Dairy Science end- ed its three months session re- cently with a banquet, attended ‘by the students, College faculty, and officials of the Dairy Branch (of the Ontario Department of A’.-" riculture. Speaker at the Banquet was Padre W.A. Young of the O.A.C. who addressed the class on “Workmen, or Craftsmen, Wh;icl1'.”‘ Outstanding students of the School were recognized by awards, and ‘_‘.1‘lZCS ] BUTTERMAKER AWARD D.R. Larkin of New Glasgow. P.E.I. (right) is seen receiving an award in huttcrmaking from J.C. Palmer of Guelph («lc-ft), Butter lil.’5‘,)€ClOJ', Diary Branch. Ontario Department of Agricul- Lure. WaterCommissionCh'man Surprised At Council Move ings and he stated that on no oc- casion had the City requested any service from the Commission in which the latter did not fully co- operate. WHAT ALTERNATIVES? “What benefits does the Coun- cil propose to give the citizens which the Commission is not al- relady giving?”, Mr. Bevan ask- e . - Char1ottetown’.s water supply comes from driven wells and is contained in a covered concrete reservoir. The average daily con- sumption is 1% million gallons. It supplies about 3,550 domestic outlets and 125 metered indus- trial services. A survey shows that a large majority of Maritime cities, the size of Charlottetown have a .water commission setup similar to here, it was stated. ing were Chairman Bevan, and Commissioner E. E. Clawson. Also present in an advisory cap- aoity were S. S. Matheson, waterworks engineer and F. A. Vanlderstine, secretary of the Commission. The third member of the Commission, Wilfred Mc- Kenna is absent from the Pro- Vince. Oil Fire Rages In 'l‘.AY'LOIR», B.C. (CP.)—Fire, fol- lowing at least five exsplosrions, was reported raging out of con- -trol Monday night at Pacific Pet-roleums Limited installation in this town about 350 miles northwest of Edmonton. Flames were shooting four hundred feet into the air. The fire was said to have started among small storage tanks and was spreading to nearby larger ones. There w-as no immediate report of injuries. The flames were said to be so intense they could be felt ‘/4 of a mile a.way. other detail-s were not imme- diately availiaible. Flood Outlook Said Improving In California SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Clearing weather Monday re- lieved dangers of worse floods in the San Joaquin and Sacra- mento River delta region of California. . r The. weather bureau said “scarce statements” about flood hazards were not justified. Taking a careful look at the tremendous snowpack in the Sierra, the bureau decided there was little likelihood of warm rains washing torrents of melted snow water down into the valleys in the next five days. The in- terval should enable swollen streams to subside. SEAL PUPS CHASE _ KEEPER NEW YORK (.CPi _ Six glum seal pups, a gift from the Canadian government, made a pugnacious debut Sunday at the Coney Island aquarium. - Put on display after arriv- ing from the Marine Biologi- cal Laboratory on Magdelan Island in the St. Lawrence River, the pups played and romped deceptively at first. When a keeper entered the seal reservation the pups drove him out. Another atten- dant entered. He was forced to flee, leaving part of his rain coat behind as a tribute to the pups’ sharp teeth. Assistant director Carleton Ray. intrigued by the be- havior, entered the reserva- tion to examine them at close hand. The pups started for him and he quickly re- treated, scaling a fence to do so “T think," he said. after- wards. “they'll get friendly when they get to know us better." Present for yesterday's meet- ‘ BC Town’ OTTAWA (CP) Canadian consumer likely will pay a cent or two more a pound for butter, as a result of a six-cents increase in the federal floor price an- nounced Monday. However, an increase in the floor price for hogs will not mean righer consumer prices because market prices now are about $5 a hundredweigh-t more than the new floor of $25. Agriculture Minister Harkness also announced the establish- ment of a floor price-for wool. "But this new floor will be main- tained through deficiency pay- ments from the federal treasury and therefore may not materially affect the consumer price. NEW SUPPORTS The new price supports based on the price paid the producer ef- fective for 12 months: from 58 cents, of first grade butter delivered at Montreal, ef- fective May 1. ‘ Hogs: $25 a hundredweight, up -from $23, for grade A hogs de- livered at Montreal, effective last April 1. Wool: 60 cents a pound for 58-60’s, half blood staple, free on board at Toronto. Diliferentials for other markets will be announced later. ' The government will buy any amounts of butter and hogs that do not finda market price equal to or higher than the floor. PAY DIFFERENCE However, -for wool tre govern- ment will pay the difiference be- tween the floor and the lower market price. i ...It is. the fi.rst-.tis.ms th,a¢...,the federal go'vernm" flltakiéii steps to make such deficiency payments. One federal official said payments to wool producers may run to $500,000 a year. The government the floor prices on the recom- mendation of the Agricultural Stabilization Board, sent up re- cently under legislation adopted at the last Session of Parliament. It also announced minimum floor prices for six key com- modities, as required by the new Agricultural Stabilization Act which supplants the old Agricul- tural Prices Support Act. Butter: 68 cents a pound, up grading Western range choice established FIVE CENTS Consumers Likely To Pay Slightly More For Butter The minimum prices are 80 per cent of tre average price in the last 10 years, but the effec- tive f1oor—-avs is the case for but- ter and hogs — may be higher than the minimum. The min- imum prices serve as a base for setting effective floors. PRICES ABOVE FLOOR An official of the board said the floor for hogs will not af- fect consumer prices because market prices already are higher than the floor. ~Ivn Toronto Mon- day, grade A hogs carcasses were about $30 a hundredweight. However, consumers likely will pay a cent or two more for but- ter as a result of the higher floor price. The market price of butter now is about 623/4 cents a pound, higher than the present 58-cent floor but lower than the 64-cent floor effective May 1. The 80-per-cent minimum floor for six key commodities, with the 10-year price average in brackets, are: Good steers, $17.50 a hundred- weight at Toronto ($21.80); grade A dressed hog carcasses, $23.75 a hundrediweight at Toronto ($29.70); first grade butter, 48 cents a pound at Montreal (60 cents) first grade cheddar cheese, 25 cents a. pound in On- tario .(31 cents); grade A large eggs, 42 cents a dozen at Mont- real (52 cents); and good lambs, $19.55 a hundredweight at Tor- onto, ($24.45). MARKET PRICES Monday's market prices were good steers $23.50-$24.50 at Tor- onto; grade A hog-s, about $30 at Toronto; butter 631/2 cents at ‘Montreal cheddar cheese 34-341/2 cents at Stratford and 33%- 3.;4,1-16 at Kingston: grade A 'la.nge eggs,’ 45‘ cents at Montreal and good lambs, $24-$24.50 at Toronto. Effective floor prices for steers, lambs, eggs and cheese likely will be announced later, Mr. Harkness said; The three- man Agricultural Stabilization Boa-rd a-nd its nine-member ad- visory committee is expec-ted.to meet later this month to con- sider further floor prices. It also will establish minimurn floor prices for non - prairie wheat, oats and barley at a min- imum of 80 per cent of the 10- year average. ” TOKYO (Reuters)—'Dhe last 10 Japanese war criminals con- victed of major responsibility for launching the attack on the United States base of Pearl Har- bor in 1941 were freed uncondi- tionally Monday. The Japanese toreigh ministry announced the -release of the 10 “class A" war criminals, al- ready on parole from Sugamo Prison in Tokyo, following agree- ments with wantime Allied pow- ers. Those freed were Sadao Araki, Shunroku Hata, Naoki Hoshino, Okinori Kaya, Koichi Kido, {aka- sumi Oka, Hiroshi Oshima, Ken- ryo Sato, Shigetaro Shimada and Teiichi Suzuki. Araki, Hata and Sa.to were generals; Shiada and Oka were admirals. Kido was lord keeper of the privy seal and one of Em- .peror Hirohito’s closest advisers. GOVERNMENT PLANNERS Hoshi-no and Suzuki both pre- sided over the government plan- ning board before and during the Second World War. Kaya was wartime finance minister and ambassador to Nazi Ger- many. A total of seven major Jap- anese war criminals were hnaged out of 25 tried by the In- tern-ationai Military Tribunal af- ter the war. - All 10 major war criminals re- leased Monday were sentenced to life imprisonment. They were found guilty of conspiracy to Wage aggressive war for the purpose of securing military, naval, political and economic domination in Southeast Asia and the Pacific. Reduction of their sentences -followed -a request for clemency made 'by_J<apanese Premier No- busuke Klshi when he visited the United States last year. 23 FOUND GUILTY All but two of the 25 defendants tried after the war were found. -guilty of -major war crimes. The two received lighter sentervzv-. A total of five class-A crun- Last1O Jap War Criminals Freed inal-s have died since sentence- was passed and the rest since have been freed. Governments consulted on Monday's action include the United States, Britain, Canada. France, The Netherlands, Aus- tralia, New Zealand, Pakistan and the Philippines. The Soviet Union, China and India were represented on the in- ‘ternation-al military tribunal but they did not sign the 1951 San Francisco peace treaty which formally ended the war with Japan. Under article 11 of the peace treaty, Japan accepted the Judg- ments of the international mil- itary tribunal and other Allied war crimes courts both within and outside Japan. British PM To Visit Ottawa OTTAWA (CP)—Prime Minis- ter Macmillan of Britain will come to Ottawa in the second week of June. ' Prime Minister Diefenbaker’s »o-ffice announced Monday that Mr. Macmillan has accepted an invitation to come to Ottawa af- ter a visit in Washington.While here he will stay at Government House. Mr. Macmillna is going to Washington after delivering a speech at De Bauw University at Greencastie, lnd., June 8. In Ot- tawa, he may address both Houses of Parliament if it is in session, as was clones about two years ago when former prime minister Sir Anthony Eden was here. _ Government sources said there is no plan for a visit of Pres- ident Eisenhower in Ottawa at the same time. A.\'Cll£.’\"l' CITY Munich in West Germany gr. v ,from the \'ilia:(‘: at llzinichrin, -first mcnI.ion.(:ci ill the year 1102.