TELEPHONE 8506 cr meets seller With Guardian Want Ads. Dial 8506 ask for classified ad Pl ., t, \ Jewel! of North River is ' with grand champion ~ dual-purpose .Shorthorn Second Class Mail by hirer, for quick results. the Post Department. Ottawa om“ TOP DUAL PURPOSE SHORTI-IORN “Milady Snowdrop". Top female honours to the North River breeder were awarded by T. C. Elm @flfll’lfififl Amos of Guelph, Ontario judged the event. who. Jig Rail Union To Reiect reamed Thursday, will put their ! w Press Staff Writer ,Objectionsageinsttheboerdrec- (Cm-The biggest of before a meeting of all'ls unions involved in the in a $100,000,000-a- dispute at Montreal late next ' l- 6 fight mu rejectthe week. issue. federal conciliation ~ The ship constitutes close to one- " of the 36,mmem- quarter of, the 130,000 workers in Man Brotherhood of Canada’s largest labor-manage- inrr—rhe first win- ,.S. Marines sailed out n -,Thursdey -as troop u in Jordan heightened , .an imminent uprising “first King Hussein. ~500to 800 heavily-armed ‘ rushed into Am- . ' of Jordan, to help ' Arab Legion and po- 2 ' public holdings. . -‘.‘n —:l I«. Employees, it was neat scrap,was reportedauthor— Leaving Labanon But ' Mounting In Jordan rhinoswellasdremddle“ " ,‘ , one Egyptian press published reports of pledges of Arab solid- arity from such nations as pro- west Libya and Kuwait. ‘A Lebanese cabina minister Lebanon prefers that U.S. troops remain here for the time being and implied-that Lebanon does not now favor replacing U.S. troops with a UN foloe. Clovis Kbanen, information min- ister, told reporters: ' \ “th is up to usand you\(.the . United States) to decide on the withdrawal of troops. This de- pendsnotontheUNbut onLeb— anon and the United States. For the time being we prefer that ‘ "M Stewart of Dunstaffnage two top placings in the ,‘ and swine carcass show- .“ the Provincial Exhibi- Ail entries were judged at '1 Packers warehouse at toot of Grafton Street. In group class, William of. New London placed w: are the complete 0‘ these two classes: v‘ Lambs: 1. Allison Drmstaffnage; 2. S. C. r ' ‘cnd Son, Dunstaffnage; Thompson, Frenchfort; 4. ’ (@)—di‘lsheries Min- . . told the Columbus friendlies of squid and .3” being sent to New- “- uuicldy as possible m “fairy critical” shot-tr Mean said the federal «, " w sent two helicop~ , ms for squid” and is ~ "i come to areas where most urgently needed. ; _ " from Yarmouth, N.S., , kl” be delivered to bail de- ' Newmndland as soon as can be arranged. . r e pl y'i n g to W 3. Tucker (L—Trinity-~ ") said much concern ‘ r eXlil'essed about the bait e. More herring had been , f" bait than ever before "mes were ra i becom- ‘lhosiea. My. , ,1". “l 0856 the situation in- §usl>ension of sales of bait fishing vessels. In lot_iN’s.,,Nnu. (CP) ~ The - . Sheries departmenl is “this to prevent a short- '- u m, M‘ my.” ij5 In CarcaSsShow John Thompson, Frencbfont; 5 John Cairns, Dunstaffnage. Group (Hogs): 1. William Found; New London; 2. Sterling Willis, North River. _ Singles (Hogs): 1. Allison Stewart, Dunstaffnage; 2. Brent Cornwall; 4. Earl Boswell, Dun- staffnage; 5. Allison Coles, Mil- ton; 6. J. B. Stewart, Dunstaff- nage: 7. Borden Boswell, Dun. staffnage; 8. Rowell Boswell, Frenchfort; 9. Mary Boswell, Frenchfort; 10. William Found, New London. ageofsquid like the one first kept many Ne'wfoundl-anders from fisth last year. The department has chartered a vessel to purse-«seine the im- portant bait fish and has asked Newioundlanders in radio mes- sages to be on the lookout for schools of the tiny octopuslike creatures. ‘ H. R. Bradley. the depen- ment's chi-elf supervisor here, says if this unusual method fails prospects for a squid catch are very small. , Squid are normally jigged with line, hook and sinker but. they have appeared along the coast only in very small numbers this year.. They usually strike by the starting in July. To da'te‘it has been impossible to jig them. “If we can’t get squid we have to wait for the herring to strike,” a fisherman said. Last year the squid fishery was almost a total failure. Many sec tions of the province were with- out any bait at all CBIR'E, whose member" Coles, Milton; 3. Stanley Willis, " itatively‘as undecided whether or not to go along with the major- ity of the union group should the group next week accept the board report. one of the two signatories of the non-binding majority repurt of the threeuman board — which recommended considerably less than half of what the unions sought—was David Lewis; union nominee on the tribunal. ‘ The majority report, which is the report so far as the department of labor is con- cerned, also was Signed by Mr. Justice H. F. \ son of Regina, “ ' a trin- .' '1‘. ‘mebetlgr . , ended no. wage increases. . The unions had asked for in- creases amountingt to about 35 cents an hour. I BELIEVED' PALATABLE , Among labor obServerS, since the report was made public July 30, there, has been some beliei that. the madorlty report would be palatable to the unions, in view of the fact \that it was signed by Mr. Lewis, generally regarded as Canada’s top labor- empent’ lawyer- Sunp’nise developed Thursday at theknowledge that the Lewis- signed report would/be flatly re- pudiated by. the CBR'E. However, there has been no public indication from the main body of the 15 unions generally as to whether or not theywould “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” CHARIJOTTETOWN, CANADA Report Ist Hurricane Of Season MIAMI, Fl-a. (AP) — The sea- son’s first hurricane, with winds up to'145 miles an hour, was re. ported Thursday about 900 miles east of Martinique, French An- tilles. The Puerto Rico weather bu- reau said the hurricane, named Cleo, is moving' west northwest at about 17 miles an hour and has a well defined centre about 15 miles across. The hurricane was some 2,400 miles east southeast of Miami and was reported at about the same time the season’s second tropical storm, Becky, flattened out into an easterly wave of squalls. French Atomic Scientist Dies PARIS (Am—Frederic Joliot- Curie, French atomic scientist, died Thursday. , The 58-year-old Nobel Prize winner was talked to Paris from his home in Brittany three days ago suffering from a severe in- ternal hemorrhage. He ‘under- went surgery soon after entering the hospital. He had been in ill health since an attack of infectious hepatitis three years ago. ’ Joliot - Curie was dismissed from his post as French high commissioner for nuclear energy in 1950 because of his Commu- nist party connections. His family name was Joliot and he added Curie to this when he married Rene Curie, daughter of the discoverers of radium. Suspects In Shooting ' . Are Arrested MONTREAL (Gm—Provincial police in St. Jerome, 30 miles north of Montreal, Thursday nigh arrested a man and a woman wanted in connection with the shooting of two men in Montreal early Thursday. The woman was released, The man was held for furthér ques- tioning. Police said they were picked m as the woman! visited while the man outside. Two night club workers were wounded in a flurry of gunshots malfollowedaqunrrelonabusy downtown street early mumsday, only a few minutes after a po- shake hands. A man escaped from the scene with. a woman companion in a black cor._ Wounded were Jacques ,Ouirnet, 29, a night club doorman, and Gregoire Larocque, 32, a, waiter. RESUME AUTO rArnis ‘ DETROIT (AP) —— Negotiations to draft new auto industry wage contracts were resumed on a quiet note Thursday. Neither side had any public comment as rep- resentatives of the United Auto Workers Union and the Ford Mo- tor Company and Chrysler Cor- poration met in separate ses- Sions. swallow the board’s findings. MONTREAL, Marie Dionne, 24, who became the third of the flour surviving Dionne quintuplets to marry, is seen with her husband Florian Houle, 38, beside their car QUIENT AND l-IUBBY. I shortly before they set out on a honeymoon trip following their secret marriage in Montreal. A friend of the couple snapped the photo. (CP Wirephoto) a ‘ lineman had got the fighters to_ ‘ cial plane. FRIDAY, AUGUST 15, 1958 By LLOYD Menomer Canadian Press Staff Writer UNITED NATIONS, NY. (or) Jordan’s unexpected opposition to enlargement of the United Na- tions’ peace - keeping efforts in the Middle East upset at least temporarily late Thursday the relatively restrained atmosphere of the UN Assembly’s special ses- sion on that area’s problems. With President Eisenhower, Foreign Minister Gnomka and Foreign Secretary Lloyd having made formal public pro- nouncements at the emergency meeting on United States, Rus- sian and British policy in the current Middle East dispute, the way had appeared earlier to be clear for oflfist-avge negotiations among the interested powers at the foreign ministers’ level. Then at Thursday’s afternoon resumption of debate, Jordan’s Ambassador Abdel Monem Rifai. told the assembly flatly that his country rejects the idea of a UN observer group taking over there from the British forces which moved in following the Iraqi re-, volt a month ago Thursday. Under no circumstances, he told the assembly, would Jordon agree either to UN observer or military forces on its territory as a replacement for the protective British screen which moved into King Hussein’s realm three days after the overthrow in adjoining Iraq. “What Jordan needs and asks *B.B. Jones Charlottetown RR. 5 and Lewis Bros. of‘York shared honors in the Holstein judging which took place Wednesday at the Grounds. The Jones herd took five first placings and went on to take the Junior Reserve Female Champ- ionship, the Junior Reserve male Championship" the Senior Re- serve championship and the Re- serve male grand championship. Also capturing five first plac-, lugs the Lewis Bros. herd took the Senior male championship and the Grand male championship. The Jones entry captured four seconds, three thirds, five fourths and one fifth while the Lewis Bros. herd took five seconds, thirds. one" fourth and one OTHER EXHIBITOR Other top exhibitors were Cyril Jones, Charlottetown ~R.R. 1; who took four first placings; S.C. Stewart and Sons, Charlottetown for is material assistance to re- ity forces,” Rifai declared. EMBARRASSING SPOT titude was understood to have SHANNON, Ireland (AP) — A KLM spokesman said Thursday the Scar??? f.” it: "l-fated super- constella’irn which crashed into the Atl'rztic was delayed for more than two hours because of an erroneous radio report from Gander, Nfld.. airport. The spokesman said Gander re ported that radio contract had been made with the airliner. The spokesman gaVe this time- table at Greenwich Mean Time (six ‘wurs ahead of EDT): 3:05 a.m.——Pla-ne airborne after a 47—minute stop at Shannon. 3240 a.m.—Norma1 callback re- ceived at Shannon Ocean Control. 4:50 a.m.-—No report received at routine time when plane should have been in position 15 degrees west about 100 miles off Shannon. "Uncertainty" phase" of accident drill put into effect. 5:15 n.m.—Emergeucy proce- dure operated. 6:30 am. - Gander reported radio contact with the Super- Bunbury 8. York Herds‘ S‘ 'are‘HoIStein Honors placings and Oswald Newson and Son of Clyde River who took two firsts and Colby Lewis and son of Freetown who also took two first placings, Falconwmd Farm also took its Share of honors capturing three firsts,‘ one second, four thirds, three fourths and five fifths. Adding to his four first plac- ings Cyril Jones also captured the. Reserve Grand Female Champ-_ ionsh'lp and’ the Reserve Senior Female Championship. » Colby LeWis’s herd took the Senior Female Championship,, the Grand Female Championship and received the Roger’s Hardware Co. Ltd. trophy for showing the Senior Female Champion. The Bank of Nova Scotia Tro- phy was awarded to S.C. Stewart and Sons for showing the Junior Female Champion. The Junior Male Championship was won by Oswald Newson and Son, while the Junior Female Championship was awarded to S.C. Stewart and RR. 3, who took three first Sons. inforce its own army and secur- caused some embarrassment to Ithe British foreign secretary, ’who this morning had def-ended his country’s armed intervention in Jordan but offered withdrawal The Jordanian ‘delegate's at- terms under a mutually accept- able UN takeover. Says Erroneous Report Was Cause Of Delay InSearch Constellation and emergency pro- cedure was called off. 9:20 a.m.——The Gander mes- sage was cancelled after there was no further radio contact. 9:30 a.m.-Full emergency pro- cedure was reapplied. The spokesman said Shannon had repeater called “607 echo, 607 echo”--the plane’s call sign— in an effort to trace the aircraft and Gander probably mistook that for a call from the plane itself. « Parliament ' At A Glance Thursday, Aug. 14, 1958 . Northern Alf f a i r s Minister Hamilton said he is “ashamed” Canadian cabinet ministers have to obtain U.S. permission to visit the Canadian Arctic; Opposition Leader Pearson said action should be taken if things were being “improperly done” by the U.S. Senator Whiter A. Hayden (L—-‘ Ontario) criticised the govern- ment’s new Estates Tax Act. The Commons meets at 1'1 am. EDT to consid'ergovermnent spending estimates. The Senate meets at 3 pm. ‘ Report Fishing On Banks Poo-r SYDNEY fCP)-'—Sevenal Portu- guese‘fishiiflt’vessels called here Wednesiay and reported one of theworst listing seasons on the lien Coast banks. The trawler Adelia Maria, here ‘60 pick up bait, reported only, 1,000 quuinltals of fish on board. Her captain said usually she would have almost her full cargo of 7,000 qulnstals by this time. A quintet] is 112 pounds. PAKISTAN AGED 11 KARACHI (AP) —- Pakistan Thursday, celebrated the 11th an- niversary ofits independence. In 1947 the Indian subcontinent was partitioned into two independent states of India and Pakistan and Britain pulled out. SHANNON, Ireland (AP) — Sea and air searchers persisted through the night hours but found no survivors of the Dutch air- liner that crashed mysteriously into the Atlantic Thursday with 99 aboard. If all were killed—as appeared likely—it is the worst disaster ever involving a single cornmer- ‘ The KILM Super - Constellation plunged into the squallwlripped sea before Thursday’s dawn on a flight from Amsterdam to New York. - Searchers recovered eight bod- ‘ies and some partly inflated life rafts. Search flares lit the crash scene through the night. There was speculation whether stormy w e a t h e r or sabotage might have been involved. But a KLM spokesman said the $2,000,- 0(X) plane—a model which the air- line had used only three or four months—evidently was in one piece when it hit. “The wreckage was in a posi- tion consistent with the pilot stay- ing on course," he said. “So far as is known, the plane must have broken in pieces on impact. The bodies showed no Sign of injury." NO SIGNS OF LIFE At Aldergrove, Northern Ire~ land, crew members of the first RAF Shakleton search plane to sight the Super - Constellation's wreckage said they saw six bod- ‘FEAR All. 99 DEAD I Speculate ExploSion Was ~ Cause Of Airliner Crash ‘ ies,butnosignof life during an eight‘hour patrol. “The sea was calm at that time and there was about a square mile of wreckage,” said the plane’s Skipper, Flt. Lt. Keith McDonald. “It was an eerie scene lit by our flares . . . half-inflated dinghies, broken seats and one or two wheels floating." Initial hopes that some sur- vived faded during the night. However, harbor master Lt.- Cmdr. James Whyte said there are several uninhabited islands about 50 miles from where the plane went down and said “there is a remote possibility some might have reached them.” “I don’t think there are any survivors. but there is a slim chance," he said. Two French trawlers recovered five bodies and several literafts from waves pitching about the debris of the $2,000,000 airliner 130 miles off Ireland’s west coast. Other craft, surface and air, sped to join the search.- CONFUSION REIGNS There was confused and alarm- ing talk about the cause of the disaster, the first to hit a reg- ularly scheduled airline over the Atlantic itself since the war. Liam Malling, KLM station manager, said there was no ques- tion of the plane being over- loaded with its 91 passengers and eight crew members. vious it happened very quickly,” he said. “After all, four engines and four radioes do not cut out immediately.” Asked if there might have been sabotage, Melting said: ‘ “Your guess is as good as mine.” The deputy manager of Shan- non Airport also emphasized no distress messages had been re ceived. “W h a t happened, happened very quickly," he said. The giant plane, on an economy flight with seats for 95 passen- gers, was about'90 minutes out ‘of Shannon on a trip from Amster- dam to New. York when it went down before dawn. In normal conditions a plane could radio if it was in trouble. The plane had headed into an area where others subsequently ran into a terrific storm. The prospect that anyone had lived through the crash and then the buffet'rng at sea dwindled af- ter a few optimistic reports. A French trawler, the General 1e ‘Clerc, and three RAF search planes—first on the scenc--re- ported sighting what they be; lieved to be signs of life. But no survivors had been found alive when darkness fell. KLM ofifiiacialvs at Amszerdazm said there was little hope that any survived. A death toll of 99 would make this the worst disas- ter ever involving a single corn- “Whatever happened. It It ob mei'ciai plane. ’FfidayyAufljls, "1.58 ’ ~" ~~a WEATHER Sunny, clouding over in the afternoon; a‘ few showers be warm. Low-high at NOT MORE THAN Gov't Minister ‘Aslramed' Of Situation In The Arctic JordanOpposition Upsets Calm At Assembly SessiOn on this particular point but was marently referring to frequent reports than U.S. ciltizens in the Arctic regard the area coins. territory. The U.S. built 41*; controls the.DEW (Distant Warning) radar line in the Seymour Wood of Mt. Herbert ramped off with a large propor- tion of the prize money in the dual-purpose Shorthorn judging yesterday. T. C. AmOS of Guelph. Ontario, who judged the cattle said the animals would hold their place in any fair across Canada. The Mt. Herbert breeder had the grand champion male, the Senior champion male, and the junior champion male. To this array of championships he added twelve firsts. five seconds, four thirds and three fourths. Stanley Hurry of Winsloe took the grand reserve male and the reserve senior male. He also had the reserve grand female and the reserve female championship. His other winnings were four firsts, two econds, three thirds, two fourt and four fifths. Dan Jewell of North River Showed the grand champion fe- male and the senior champion ginning in the evening; Ch’town 55 and 75. \ FIVE CENTS. Confirms Permission From U.‘ ‘5. Is Needed For Travel OTTAWA (CP) —Northern Af- fairs Minister HamJlIto‘ I -' n said “My he is “ashamed” that Canadian cabinet mimsters‘ ' have to obtain United States permis- Eign to visit the Canadian’ ‘Arc- It was a matter of “naluo‘ nal chagrin.” he said in the Com- mons. that score Canadian oilfi- olals' have to wait “several months” for U.S. clearance be- fore going to the Arctic. “I am ashamed of the fact that through circumstances beyond the power of almost anyone here wehavehadtogiveall respon- sibility for the defence of our northern area to a friendly power, he said. “Employees of the Govern- ment of Canada and even minis Iters have to go thorium a. tor- mal procedure of getting permis- sron. \ “When Canadians have to wait several months to get perm‘Ssion togoanddotheirdutyintheir own country at the direction of their own minister- , I do not WET he to the House or the country tor saying that I am ashamed of the situation." . Leader Pearson ukedwbetlrerit was afiactthat Canadian' ministers and official' ' s have to wait Several months be- fore they can get access to estab- lishments on Canadian soil under control of the U.S. “Ministers have \very little trurble,” Mr. Hamilton said. FRIENDLY RESPONSE “I have taken' up his matter with our U.S. cdleaugues and have bad very friendly and fa- h‘tusudly the U.S. government commence -, ' .a limiter e -mmfi.¥b‘%e the edhcrent‘ ' ' and rsprd' movement of people in developmg' an area which is incompletely empty it is so easy to assume somean ' l Canadian Arctic. ‘ liberal government spokesmen two yea-rs ago pooh-‘poohed a Canadian Press report that Cana- dian cabinet ministers must ob- tained permission from the U.S. government to visit the Canadian Arctic. Mr. Hamilton said a “leading U.S. authority”—-lre did not iden- tify him—has held that the U.S. does not recognize ownership of Canadian Arctic islands unless they are occupied. URGES TAKE OVER Earlier in the debate on north- ern affairs department esti- mates, Mr. Pearson urged that Canada take over “at the earliest possible momen " control of U.S. defenceinstallations in the Cana- dian Arctic. ‘- He said he realizes the U.S. constructed the installations. such as the DEW line, with Clan- ada’s agreement and Canadian rights reserved. “But we should surely aim to take them over, insofar as they mntinue to be useful. attire ear- ' liest possible moment and put them under ,,_,control and, when it can be done, under civilian control." Mr. Pearson said at another point that “we must establish.» yond any doubt our claim to our Arctic territory." Mr. Pearson said (the voyages of two U.S. submarines under the polar ice “reinterces our feeling of regret” that Ell/hos Labrador. (tanner navel Arctic patrol ship tinned over to the transport de- partment tor icebrealring. has Mr. Hamilton said the U.S. sub. voyages mean that the water un- derneathx the polar m is tramc. ., Mr. Pearson also said cargo submarines might one day carry minerals and oil from- the Cann- dian Arctic to world markets. In Waahington a defence de- partment spokesman said he knows of no official Canadn‘ Tan comle having been made about the denial/of travel perm mission as described by Mr. He doclined comment on the Canadian minister’s speech. Herbert Breeder Leads In Dual-Purpose Shorthorns female. He took two firsts three seconds, three thirds two fourths and two fifths. ' Fred Hughes of Winsloe had the junior female champion and the reserve junior male champ- ion. Mr. Hughes had three firsts, five seconds, one third, three fourths, and two fifiths. . Keith Barrett of Misconche had the reserve junior female champ- ion. He had one first, one sec- ond, four thirds, three - and three fifths- ' . Keith Dixon of Clyde 'River. Loman Mac-Lean of 11, Lot 15; E. G. MacCallum of Brackley Point; Heber Myers Carleton and Waldron MacPheo ~of Bonshaw made good showing. and were in the money in sev- eral classes. The Canadian Bank of C merce prize for the Junior Chain- pion Female was won by Fred Hughes of Winsloe, R.R.1. OTTAWA (GP) Senator Chales G. Hawkins, 1 Nova Sco- tia hmberman who was sum- moned to the Senate eight years ago, died early Thursday, aged The Liberal senator’s death rP~ dimes strength in the loZ-memtber House to 75. Other seals are held by 17 Progressive Conservatives, two independents and one independent Liberal, and there now are seven vacancies-— two each in Nova Scotia and Que- bec, and one each in Alberta, Newtoundland and New Bruns wick. Senator Hawkins was sched- uled to speak in the Senate Thursday, when a senate finance committee report dealing with mortgage funds was to be up for narration. Senator Hawkins was chairman of the committee, which earlier this week made broad recommendations for low- cost housing in Canada. A native of Lawrencetown, N.S., and closely connected with the lumber business for years, Senator Hawkins also was a gov- Nova‘ Scotia Senator Hawkins Dies Unexpectedly In Ottawa College, ACTIVE MEMBER Once in the Senate he quickly became one of its most active members, both in debate and. in committee, where in questioning witnesses a nd in discussions among his colleagues he was ‘a forceful participant. A special in- terest was the Senate’s commit- tee on land use, whose meetings he regularly attended. All: work daily by 8 a. m., the senator had been busy both in committee and in the Senate chamber until the Upper House rose at 6 pm. Tuesday, when he said that he would move Thurs- day the adoption of his comm-lt- tee’s report on mortgage financ- ngurting the night he suffered a heart seizure in his Chateau Lain rier hotel room and was taken to the Ottawa Civic Hospital,‘ where at 5 son. Thursday he died. Survivors include his wife and two children, George Stew- art and Edith Peppamd Hawkins. The funeral and burial are to be at Millard m N.S., m mdeniNersitydKing’sday tar «cw... :; ._