avec canaries jn ee oe ee ¥, _ TELEPHONE 8506 with Guivdian ‘Want taker, for quiek results,. -~_ - ie yO ee ee ee ee VOL. LXXII NO. 139 a il a Sits « tour youre Gag erie Semin ane Ute eal Mitens ens n0vee tiny pheasants. Here the ed by Mr. and Mrs. F. T. Holborn ef Vancouver which bas brought owners recently with a family of ‘Holborn home. Pe ee ee dog nuzzies two of the small | orphans in the kitchen of the | Maritime Board Of Trade’ Has Annual In Saint John SAINT JOHN, N. B. (CP)—The from all parts of the Atlantic are expected. A highlight of the meeting, which concludes Tuesday, will be @ talk by Saint John industrial- K. C. Irving at a noon lunch- Accident Toll Mounts To 39 The survey is taken from 6 p.m. 4peal time Friday to midnight Sunday. The fatality total in- ' Glades deaths in traffic, boating Former sand Priest Is Dead ~DAMARISCOTTA. Me. (AP)— Rev. Archie D. Gillis, 44, pastor of New England’s oldest Roman Catholic Church, died Saturday night at his rectory. He had been suffering from a heart ailment for more than a year. Father Gillis’ body was found Sunday by a-custodian who be- concerned when the priest did not arrive at St. Patrick's Church at his customary time. Father Gillis was born in St. Peter's Bay, P.E.1., and studied for the priesthood at St. Duns- ton’s University, Charlotietowa, and the grand seminary at Mont- real. eon Tuesday. Other special guests will be A. C. Ashforth of Toronto, presi- dent of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce, who will address a luncheon today and Governor Cliston A. Clauson of Maine, who will address a formal dinner to- night. PANEL DISCUSSION Most of this morning’s session will be occupied by a panel dis- cussion on improved trade rela- tions among the Atlantic prov- inces, New England and The British West Indies Federation. . Panel members are chairman Harré I. Mathers of Halifax, MPBT Nova Scotia vice-presi- dent, W. A. Sammel Case, Saint John, Canadian Chamber of Com- merce first national vice - presi- dent, E. Spencer Miller, Port- land, Me., president of the Maine Central Railroad Company, H.D. Robertson, MPBT director and C. R. Stollmeyer, trade commis- sioner to Canada for The Wast Indies, British Guiana and British ,| Honduras. Tuesday, another panel discus- sion, on Atlantic provinces pro- gress, will have as panelists chairman William Hayward of Charlottetown, Bank of Nova Sco- tia manager; J. Eric Cormier, chairman William Hayward of Charlottetown, Bank of Nova Sco- tia manager; J. Eric Cormier, Moncton, Industrial Life Insur- ance Company district manager; Don Jamieson, St. John's, Nfid., CJON-TV vice-president; L. H. Manuel, Halifax, A. M. Bell and Company Limited general man- ager; Brig. Michael Wardell, Fredericton, publisher of The At- lantic Advocate. and Daily Gleaner. y (CP Photo) | ep A A » Prince Edward feland Like The Dew” : V caaaeaneak CANADA, MONDAY, JUNE 15, 1959 > 16 PAGES ’ — | SOE MRS FIVE CENTS OTTAWA (OP)— Time is run- ning out for the federal govern- MacMillan Is Hopeiul But, he said, unless Russia changes its attitude the situatron in Berlin “may still become dan- gerous.”’ Macmillan told a Conservative party rally the West is sill ry- ing to find some measure’ of agreement with Russia on the fu- ture of Berlin. * “We have to be. firm. We can- not abandon the people of West Berlin or weaken in any way our right to protect them. to be reasonable and try to work out new arrangements which will oe an improvement on the pres- ent situation. “At the same time we have to remember that unless the present Soviet attitude is considerably modified the Berlin situation may still become dangerous.” -|transport commissioners. There “On the other haind, we have li Rail Probe in 1948, it reported in 1051, and it was late that year before the leg- islation was passed.. | Just writing the report took around six months. - As a matter of fact, the legisia- tion is not yet fully implemented after more than seven years of steady work by the board of is still a year or more to go be- fore the board completes the enormous task of “equalizing” freight rates as between differ- ent regions. Indeed, in the light of the per- petually - changing transporta- tion picture, it is questionable whether it can be said the job will ever be completed on a per- manent basis. - All of which adds up to the fact that the new seven-man commis- sion headed by Hon. Charies P. McTague of Toronto will have to step lively to come up with any kind of a comprehensive answer to the questions facing it by next March. That is about when the govern. | ment hopes to get recommenda- tions that would enable it to re- lieve what is called the ‘‘discrim- inatory burden” of freight charges on the West and the At- > proent. Biggest Baby Is 16 Pounds | normal in size and is about five foot ten inches in height. LONDON PAPER IS ACCUSER ‘Disgraceful Campaign Charged To Wreck Royal Visit To Canada LONDON (Reuters)A London Sunday newspaper charges that there is a “disgraceful cam- paign” in Canada to wreck the forthcoming tour of the country on which the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh embark this week. The story in the mass-circula- tion newspaper The People says ‘it is time the mother country learned just how far open hostil- ity to the Royal Tour and even Torrential Rains Take Heavy Toll sons, all Chinese, who perished was found alive after being trapped for 12 hours. Waterfront roads were under two feet of water and nearly all the main traffic routes were af- fected by flooding, washouts and landslides. Swirling muddy wa ter, cascading down steep streets into the city, piled up boulders in main thoroughfares. WHERE-TO-FIND-IT Announcements, notices . 15 Births, deaths, etc., .... 2, 15 Charlottetown news ...... 5 Classified section . 14, 15 Comics, features ........ 13 Coming events .........: 15 I oy i cincoceneesa 4 Island news ..........:- 2,3 NN ois oss sasevens 8, 9 Woman’s page ............ 6 Late reports from Guardian news bureaus in Summer- to the Queen herself has gone in one of her own dominions.” “Some mnewspapers,”’ it says, “keep publishing letters com- plaining that there is constant ramming of the Royal Family down Canadian throats to work up an enthusiasm that does not exist. BRUTALLY CLEAR “To anyone reading certain Ca- nadian publications and the state- ments of a number of prominent Dominion personalities it seems brutally clear that there is some- thing like a conspiracy to present the Queen es a sort of unwanted mother-indaw barging in ona long-suffering relative." The paper adds that ‘‘the Cana- dian government itself and the Dominion’s more responsible newspapers are opposed to these side, Montague, Alberton and Souris, and from special cor- respondents now. appear on the Island News Page. board which is co-ordinating ceie- 'brations for the opening of the to have said: ‘The royal party should come when they are in- vited and not when it suits them.” THE HOSPALITY. afforded; opener to himself and Manufacturing Associa-| log recommendations into law. Set up|’ AMBASSADOR Lawyer Arnold Kingsley Gra- ham, Q.C., 59, of Toronto has beén named Canadian ambass- ador to Sweden. He succeeds Jean Chapdelaine whose new appoint- ment is yet to be announced. Mr. Graham has served since 1933 as MARRIAGE AGE 1S LOW IN U.S. WASHINGTON (AP)—Eight- teen was the favorite age for American girls getting married last year. Brides and bridegrooms in the United States are getting younger. all the time. In fact, the average U.S. marriage age today is probably “the lowest of any industrialized society,” says Robert C.Cook, president of the Population Relerentte Bureau. This private, non.- profit re- search organization, after por- ing over statistics for 1958, re- ported Sunday: “The average age of first- time marriages in the United States last year was 23 for men, 2) for women.:More girls mar-- ried at 18 than at any other age.”’ Looking back to the 1898 cen- sus—the first to include mar- riage .data—the bureau notes the average age of men marry- ing then was 26 and women 22. While the marriage age is de- clining, there seems to be a trend to make the minimum legal age higher. Five years ago, four states permitted girls to marry at the age of 12 if they had the consent of parent or guardian. In 1958, the lowest legal min- imum for girls to marry in any state was 14. Only two states—. Idaho and Missouri—permitted boys of 15 to marry. The bureau reported that about a quarter of all mar- riages last year were remar- riages. One of every 20 divorced women remarrying was a teen- ager. Canadian . tion delegates ‘‘tremendously im-| in transporiation and other mat- pressed” president W.H. | Si. Lawreuce Seaway,’ is reported Fwans| ters wee presented to the visit- Prince Edward Island wants a causeway across the nine miles of the Northumberland Stnait to New Brunswick and, in the mean- time, it wants another icebreaker ear ferry, Premier A. W. Mathe- son said Saturday in an address to visiting delegates of the Cana- dian Manufacturers Association. Mr. Matheson spoke at a lunch- eon given by the government to the visitors, who spent most of the day enjoying island scenery and hospitality. “I know a causeway is feas- ible,’ Premier Matheson said,” because I have talked with the people who have studied it. The sooner we get the report (from the federal government) on the causeway the better."’ He said he was disappointed to read that a planned new ship for the Borden-Cape Tormentine run | would not be an icebreaker. The premier’s comments were in line with those made by other island residents in conversation with delegates. TICKLISH PROBLEM They emphasized that present island transportation to the main- land not only is strained but in winter hangs by too narrow a} thread—one modern icebreaker and car ferry, the \begweit, as- sisted by the 44-year-old icebreak- ing car ferry Prince Edward Is- land. : One official commented: “If anything should happen to the Abegweit our situation would be bo peg and would affect- not only us, but the people who + ie iamtions Pee seater cy from other parts of Can- a don’t necessarily need a luxury-type ship like the Abeg- weit. It would be just a “flat top” —hbut it should be an icebreaker carrying both trains and motor cars.” The CMA delegates, making a Maritime tour following their an- nual meeting at St. Andrews, N.B., were met at Borden Satur- day morning by 35 private cars from Charlottetown, with Prem- ier Matheson driving one of them. They were taken to Summer- side, then through the national park along the island’s north shore beaches, including a visit) home at Cavendish. MILLION-ACRE FARM The island—known as Canada’s Million-Acre Farm and with an economy based upon products of the farm and the sea—sees grow- ing mainland population and new mining camps in northern Quebec and Labrador offering larger markets than ever before. It also sees new industries being established to procesc the products of farm and sea. And it sees adequate and mod- ern transportation as a must to handle the increased production. As part of the transportation picture the runways of the Char- and his fel-, at a luncheon given by the pro- of Island problems/ vince at moon on Saturday. Pic-| theson, W.H. tured here, left te right, ere| Whitelaw, wio said the visit Was an &¢' ors by Premier A.W. Mattieson' James Burden and 8.H. Burhoe v to the Anne of Green Gables| lottetown airport are being len- gthened to accommodate larger air freight transports. Premier Matheson commented that in the past the typical island farm had been one of 100 to 150 acres. Now, he added, there is a turn to both larger and smaller farms, with some running up to 1,500 acres, and with a place also for the small farm of 10, 20 or 30 acres. The stressed new pos- sibilities in small fruits, vege- tables, and fish. EYE OPENING TRIP W. H. Evans of Toronto—newly- elected president of the CMA— replying to the premier, said that what the delegates had seen was an “eyesppener,” particularly to those who had never been here before. He added: “It is no exag- Macquarie By ARTHUR EVERETT TALLAHASSEE, Fila. (AP)— Four white youths were convicted early Sunday in the rape of a 19- ihe OMA, “fransportation Needs Told To CMA Delegates Time Said Running Out For Canada Ice-Breaking Capacity Is Stressed For Ferry geration to say this is Canada’s garden province.”’ Mr. Evans presented a silver tray to the premier on behalf of the association. Lieutenant-Governor F. Waiter Hyndman attended the luncheon, E. P. Foley, Speaker of the legis- lature, was chairman. Island hospitality brought out something rare at manufacturers meetings—a robust sing-song, led by a violin and piano duo of Al McKearney ,and Al Blanched of Charlottetown. Following the luncheon the delegates visited the island’s leg- islative building, including the Confederation chamber, and then left for Moncton, from where most of them proceeded home. A group of about 17 went from Moncton to Newfoundland by air. Deiends Transportation Action JACKSON, Mich. (AP) — A teen-aged girl and her 12-year- ald brother were accused by po- lice Saturday of trying to kill Doreen Baker, 15, Baker, were held in a juvenile detention home. Officers quoted them as saying their parents one “too strict and were on Rapists Lives Spared By White Jury Panel year-old Negro college girl but a white male jury spared the lives of all. A majority vote for mercy by the 12 members of the jury en- sured that the defendants would not be the first white men ever sentenced to the state’s electric chair for the rape of a Negro. Instead, they face a maximum sentence of life iniprisonment but, at the discretion of the court, could conceivably get as little as a probationary sentence. NOT A SOUND There was not a sound in the packed courtroom as the jury’s separate verdicts for the four were read off by Judge W. May Walker. But a few moments later Mrs. Pearlie Collinsworth, wife of the eldest defendant and mother of his two children, screamed “‘O, Jesus” and broke into uncontrol- lable sobs. Other relatives among the white spectators wept at the ver- dict. The defendants seemed stunned but as they walked out of the courtroom one of them, David E, Beagles, 18, a high school senior, began to weep. : DESCRIBED AS MORON The other defendants, now held im the state penitentiary, are: Willion (Ted) Collinsworth, . 28, who has a son two years old and a daughter, one. A _ telephone company lineman, he is an i} literate and was described in psy- chiatric testimony during the tria) as a moron with the mentality of a nine-year-old child. ’ Patrick (Gene) Scarborough, m 20, whose mother was shot in a. bar room when he was seven years old and whose father com- mitted suicide in the same year, He is married but separated from manager of his wife and was on leave from the air force at.the time of the (Continued on page §& Col. ®