'l'El.El'I'lONE 8505 Buyer meets seller with Guava dian Want Ads. Dial 8506 '8vnny.sdoudingcvvarhQd id ask for clnssifiodnd taker. for . f;;'j3:;':”'c"L,'"b"”"l "Mg V quick results. Z! 4 . ud ”. -.. ,, . ' "Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” I is races , i CANADA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 4. 1956 A WAS SUPPOSED TO WITHSTAND ATOMIC SHOCK 6. Men Killed,.15 Iniure in Collapse Of Building New Traffic Supervisor For C N T In Maritimes MONCTON- The appolntmentj. of Walter A. Brundage as traffic fl ' supervisor of the Canadian Nation- 1 al Telegraphs for the Maritime Provinces was announced Wed- nesdsy by Nugh A. Marquis, super- l g intendent of the ompany. He suc- ceeds James F. Lounder, who has iv been appointed plant supervisor l at St. John's Newfoundland. Mr. '6-undage, formerly repeat- er atendant manager at Middle-p . ton.g .S., is a native of Oak Point, l - N.B. He Joined C.N.T. as route; side at Saint John in 1928 and t ' served as rnorse operator at Dig- by. Charlottetown. Kcntville B10111?-l ton and Edmunston and as repeat-l er attendant at New Carlisle prior; to taking special training at Kings- ton. 0nt.. in 1939. ' He returned to Monctnn as night! plant chief later in that year and went to eyalifax in 1942 as plant chief. it became night chief op- erator there in 1945, night autom- atic supervisor in 1053 and day PRICE 5.3.? i l TOVSELI. 600 CARS OF POTATOES gN.B. Dealer Completes Big Deal With Venezuelans HARTLAND. N.B. (CP)-Cour pletion of "one of the biggest po- tato deals in the history of New welt Th, price w” M. u. Bruuwick" was atinounced Wed- nounced. Mr. McCain said that ar- negdgy by none;-t Mg-cginr 3 dj.l rangemenis havenstartad for W!- ” ., d th , t rector of the McCain Produce The cggtracl fouowgd due”. Company of East Florencevllle. mm by omcm. 0, " .u-p,u1. He said the transaction involves shipment of more than 000 car- loads of seed potatoes to Van- tural bank in Venezuela with rep- resentatives of the potato industryl in Maine and New Brunswick. (It was learned unofficially last night that a portion of the Newl Brunswick dealer's shipment willl ' ' t upwards of I00 carlom-is of Prince Edward Island Sebago Seed.) . Four Others Are Trapped In Basement JACKSON, Mich. (AP)-A storey office building being " structed to withstand the thick an atomic blast collapsed W W and injuring 15 others. ' At least four other workmen; were trapped beneath tons of stee and concrete which slammer through foot-thick floors into tlu basement. . The hidden of the building (A ., way without warning as a ll structlon gang was pouring - crete on the fourth floor of l i n.,....v,.....- v.....,. .w..-......L..,...,,,.,,,,..,g,. Oldest Man REV. DONALD A. CAMPBELL leaves For Home MODERATOR NEW YORK (AP)-Javier Per. eira, the little Indian who may be Rev. Donald A Campbell. pastor the world's oldest man, left Wed- 0' 51- Andrews P'e5by'e"a" nesday for his native Colombia. Church. Montague has been elect- Ag he left, he took 3 parting kick ed Moderator of the Presbyterian at news photographers. his pet Church in "39 Mmllm” P'”Vl"”e' peeve, at a meeting oi the Maritime Perelra was brought here two SW04 held at Plc"”"' N' 5' wag” .30 to u-y to determine 1; week. Rev. Mr. Campbell for sea he is 167 years old. as some 9" 3793” ministered.” the Ne people claim. New York hospital I-""40" charge l”. P""” Edwud "pen; on old ,5, enmgned mm Island before coming to Montagi: and said there is no exact way to 79"" 3'93” "3”- H" is Hie 5”" fix his age. But they said he might ME and M"- 10"" '”""” C"'"P' be over 150' bell. Charlottetown and Heather- Last week at a press conference. d3le' P' E" 1' the four-toot-four Pereira, rwho weighs 82 pounds. " irked "at photographers and their flash bulbs.- He slugged a newspaper re- porter. Wednesday. at Idlewild Airport. the flash bulbs again irritated him. He growled and rushed at the photogra t n, kicking at them until they gave ground. 32,000,000 structure. The is - - its shell nearly completed, was r be the general offices for the - - a Power Company. Company officials said it w designed to be as nearly imp .. nable against atomic explosions possible. The fourth floor buckled and lapsed, sending masses of concr and steel girders crashing throu,-4 the lower floors to the basemen ROBERT C. MACDONALD REGINALD ll. MCKENNA Two St. Dunstan's Students Are Awarded Scholarships Robert C. MacDonald, tweniy- l the Sophomore year of the Facul-. one year old son of Mrs. Annie, W 05 ANS. He received ill! ealflll ; Flu" chief in the h"”V'mC y"" Synod To Meet In City Next Year PICTOU. N.S. (CP)-The Mari- time synod of the Presbyterian Church in Canada heard reports from its committee: Wednesday STANLEY WILLIS OF CORNWALIJ island Plowmen To Compete In Dominion Ch'ship Match. 1 Prince Edward island's champ- ion plowman. Stanley Willis of Cornwall leaves this morning for Brooklyn. Ontario where he will compete in the Dominion Plowing finals to be 'held there. Brooklyn is about so miles north-west of Toronto. Accompanying Mr. Willis and a contender in the finals will be Garth Clay of Dnndas who was this year's -runner-up for-the O Yugoslavia ,And Russia its , nod -. BELGRADE (AP) -- Yugosls iucugocid indicated Wednes- day Yugoslavia and the soviet lla- lon will deadlocked on their major differences after the current talks between President Tito and Soviet leaders at Yalta. No one wanted to comment of- flclally. But good sources pri- vately reported difficulties in the soviet-Yugoslav lallts. Than sources say the Russian leaders are unwilling to continue the "dc lion" policy in satellite countries. Yugoslavia in reported insisting-on continued da- stalinlsatioo as a condition for re- ertsblishment of Communist party relations between Yugoslavia and the satellite countries. Has Sympathy For lshkov or-rsws (CP)-Fisheries Mis- lster llnclair Wednesday connois- orated with hie Russian counter- FI1. A. A. lsliknv, who ylsltsd Canada last month. lsbkov has been heavily critic fsed by the Ifoscow Literary aa- utle for filling market quotas by Itrlvplu fish prescns. at the as- psnsa of ilmn-s generations. lMr. Sinclair said in an inter- , . cw. "Ishhov impressed no and the Canldlathn . a . '3 I- wlves. torn between hope and ap- their prayer rnld-Atlantic where their Z-loot sailing host may still be drifting aimlessly. Planes are said to be ii searching for it.i hope at least." said Mrs. Violet Smith Wednesday. Her 31-year-old Canadian husband. Bert. built the wooden ship in his bacward in Toronto. small Laacashirs market town. the other wife. N-rel?-Old M"- Blinch; Battersby and her five year-o son. and wonder Island championship. The plowmen will have as their coach. Mr. Elliot Robertson of Chulottetown president of the Queens County Plowing Match Associsti . There will be a visitors match next Wed- nesday and the championships will be staged the following day. Mr. Willis competed in the Dominion finals In 1953 and placed fourth. This is Mr. Clay's first shot at the title. Oldest Air Service Marks Anniversary MONTIEAL (CP) - Canadals oldslfitlstnit sir Ietvlce"ls marking the Isl! anniversary of The Pioneer Service was founded F. ii. (Torn) Wheeler ol St. I i . One. and illl-fflwll from a single Curtis Jenny plans into a 10-aircraft company. At a ceremony Tuesday night Mr. Wheelsi-' was presented with a scroll by "his friends of the press" The presentation was made by Ron. J. A. D. Mccurdy. former lieutenant-governor of Nova Scotla and the first man to fly an aircraft in the Common- wealth. Report Groin Yields Good OTTAWA (CP)-Canada's huge grain crops have been hit by frost and rain but though quality has been . teed. yields remain vir- tually intact for most grains with the exception of flaxsced. In its t ' survey, the Bureau of Statislics' Wodneav day estimated the 1900 Canadian wheat crop at 511,514,000 bushels. haved just slightly , in the no iginal August ” mo! 512.250.- ooo. The drop was entirely log- into winter "Wheat. I!” lrh " e remained uacliaat t 00,000,000. However. frost caused some rc- ducllo T in aids. The latest estirnllo of 34,051.”) bush- els was down from the 37.299.000- bushel orlglnal forecast. PLAN CONFERENCE SAINT JOHN, N.B. (CPl-The fourth Atlantic provinces regional here Oct. 0-10 and about 100 dele- gates of the Jewish women's or- ganisation are expected. Special speaker will be Mrs. Milton 1". LONDON (CH 4 Two young pralsansion, wait for an answer-to Their hiuiiands ari missing in "I still have hope . I . son-lei And IN miles to the north. lnvn Russell. also wait a Two Young WivesStill Hope Husbands Are Sale On Ocean miles from Newfoundland Sept. 21. after a fierce Atlantic storm. -His message to the United States coast guard said the boat was "bobbing entity” in heavy seas. her tiller lashed taut. her lore- mast shattered. with no sign of fe aboard. "He didn't look in the cabin. did he?" asked Mrs. smith. who came to Britain in June to wait at her :annts' home in London for her- usband and his partner. Alan Battersby. an Englishman from Blackpool. she went to Canada tlifce yearl llo. "Maybe they were exhausted in the cabin. Or ilI." "We've never seen her 3 Bi? MW gt void Island Hadassali conference will be held ,4 as it continued its annual session here. A committee on meetings an- nounced that next year's synod will be held at Zion Church in Charlottetown. An invitation also: had been received from St. John's Nlld.. said no information was immedi- ately available on transportation costs. New Secretary Appointed For Dramci Festival .0 . ' vl -.. Wm .--. ' Ali 3 'Prlnoe Ed- " a.Festival As- sociation was held at the Rendez- vous last evening. The president, Mrs. Eddy Morrison, presided. A letter of resignation from the secretary. Miss Mary Morin. was accepted and Miss Dorothy Cullen was elected in her stead. Reports of the treasury shows that the Association is in good financial standing. It was suggest- that the membership drive sliouid be held over until January of the new year. it was also re- ported that many letters of thanks were received from scholarship winners of last year's festival. The Association asked Father Hammil, Mr. Kenneth Parker and Mr. Harry Morris to work on the rules and regulations for the com- ing spring festival. it was also ask- ed that all memberships be sent to Mrs. Frank Ross of Parkdale. The next meeting of the Associ- ation will be held in the latter part of November. YACHT FOR SALE LONDON ice --''A "wealthy Canadian" was reported Wednes- day inspecting the luxury yacht Bliemara owned by Sir Bernard and Lady Dot-ker. Sir Bernard former chairman and managing director of the Birmingham Small Arms Corporation. confirmed to reporters that the Ill)-ton yacht is for sale. but declined comment on published reports that a wealthy unidentified Canadian is thinking of buying. but committee members i MacDonald and the late Carl Mac-l Donald of Grand River. Prlncel Edward Island, was yesterday awarded the "Daniel Sophua Ed-- monds Memorial Scholarship at St. Dunstan's College. This Scholar- ship, awarded yesterday for the first time. is to be an annual aw-l ard. provided by a local alumnus. of St. 'Dunstan's and his son int memory of a fomier student, Daniel Sophus Edmonds. who dis-( tingulshcd himself as a teacher on Prince Edward Island during the late years of the nineteenth cen- tury. Mr. MacDonald. the first recip- lent. is an outstanding student in: a -so-m...-i.-.. -'-ll: see:-. Diefen OTTAWA, tspciall J. Angus Mat-Lean, Conservative M.P. for Queens. Wednesday picked John Diefenbaker. his colleague from Prince Albert. as the most likely man to succeed George Drew as National Leader of the Conservat- ive party. Mr. MacLcan reminded Th 2 Guardian's Ottawa wuespondent that candidates for the leadership had not as yet been nominated and that Mr. Diefcnbalrer had not de- finitely thrown his political hat in- to the national convention ring During the past two days., the Queens membc attended the caucus of Conservative membc a of the Commons and the meeting of the executive of the Progressive Conservative Association of Can- ada. He said he was quite satisfied with the choice of Ottawa as the locale for the leadership convent- ion in December. Aitii-nigh he had felt earlier that Winnipeg had been more likely to get the nod. Mr. MacLt-an had attended the Ottawa leadership convention of 1948 as a delegate and voiced satia- fartion that the convention head- quarters here had been greatly im- proved and expanded since that time. Today he talkedwiih a num” new in the baker' As ' ' Most Likely Successor of departmental officials on lers pertaining to his Pressure of business prevented him from visiting Uplands Alo a port where he took special execii tive training last winter. He left this afternoon for Charlottetown. schoolin and entered St. Dunstan's School in Grade X in Septembu lll 1954- "R 1952. The second day's awards was of Tracadie Cross, P wa awarded a su arr Bank of Canada. C Mr. McKcnna attended Tracadtsl ross School where he completed his Grade X in June of 1054. since September of that year he has been in student "at st. Dunstsa's and is year. of the Arts Course. mat constituency Says Egypt Hos Plan For The U.S. NEW YORK (APl-The New York Times says Egypt is re- ported ready American oil and shipping cerns take over supervision of de- velopment of the Suez Canal. to propose that con- A Times dispatch from Cairo re ports this as a high policy decl- slon Egypt's assurances that the canal would be maintained at the high- est level of efficiency. aimed at strengthening The Times says the plan is seen as an important bid by Nasser to take advantage of the U.S. gov- ernment's desire for a negotiated settlement of the canal dispute. WORLD GROUP The World Health Organisation of the United Nations has a total of ill members and it asssoclaha pt members. - at in yester- eglngia )1, mg. of the vestry of the Church of Kenna, nineteen year old sol d Mr. and Mrs. Peter B. Mclenna . E. 1.. who bstantial schol- ip provided by the Provincial g in Gr,-mu River school a He was appointed repeater attend- ant manager at Middleton, N.S., position he held at the time of his present appointment. Mr. 3- ndage was a member W.A. BBUNDAGE England at Dartmouth. N.S.. and -Middleton. He also was assistant jcub master of the Moncton Cub : Pack and Master of the Dartmouth and the Middleton Cub Packs. I NICOGIA. Cyprus (Harriers)- Tw aty-no British army reserv- ' ari under close atrial as a 1"&lllhillIl "hafdenif-on, the is- land on Monday night." an army spokesman said Jlednesday night. I All are non-cornmmlssioned of-l flcers and men who arrived here recently with a unit drafted to Cyprus because of the military - buildup caused by the Sues Canal . crigis l An army spokesman declined toj nswer questions on the nature of the incident but said: "There wasl a noisy dissident meeting. a noisy. outlet of feeling perhaps." An official statement said the men. from the Royal Army Serv- ice Corps, took part in a meeting on the roof of the hotel where they were bilieted in central Cyprus. 21 Soldiers In Cyprus Incident it was ex of evidence will be within than-.iiisss.:"ns' carats cypi-ion have been llatle. It is umiorstood no were involved in the disturbances. The soldiers were quartered at the Forest Park Hotel. 05 miles southwest of Nicosia. Reports have been widespread in recent weeks that reservists called back into service because of the Suez crisis are bored and discontented. Several thousand reservists were moved to Cyprus in the military preparations that marked Britain's initial reaction to Egypt's ngtion. alizstlon of the Suez July 28. War Minister Anthony Head has said there is no likelihood of their discharge until the canal dispute is resolved. Journal Editorial Draws Reply From Prime Minister OTTAWA ICP) - Prime Min- ister st. Laurent. in a letter to lie Ottawa Journal published Wednesday. criticized the news- Paper for an editorial Monday which commented on his o'fer of a public post to Hon. George Drew, retired Progressive Con- servative leader. Mr. St. l.aurent said the minor- ial was "very unfair" and "based on a statement of facts which is quite inaccurate." The Journal, in an editorial icired the prime minister for statements made to reporters on Thursday. SEVERAL POSSIIILITIES The Journal had reported Mr. St. Laurent as sayinz be had called Mr. Drew. in hospital in Toronto, and had spoken about: him continuing in public servlcel "in the Senate or some other suit- able position." in news report as” Mr. St. Laurent had been hked whether he had the lenaie in mind and that he had an- Irered: "Yes. the senate and. The earlier editorial had rrit-1"! Mr. NOW HA5 DILEMMA day replied: cussing publicly on offer oi a sea- ;atorship to Mr. Drew, just what was be discussing when to a dozen I Ilewis name and Mr. Drew's ill- nehs with a senate appointrnm and than wait on to add that tb Conservative party in the senate need:-d strengthening anyway?. . . way . . . MUST no own rumsmo At the press conference. report- ers plied mm with questions and even wanted to knot-v what he Ind been thinking about. "I answered. perhaps a his Sh-Willy. that l was responsible-tot the public for what I did as 3 pg. sult of my thinking but only to my own conscience for the think- iniz itself until it became trans- lated into facts and that I did not propose to allow them to suJrtlt- iblislsed with the lNl('l', l'I:PllPd "t? ”"""5"l'" '0' "W 39"" that its previous editorial is valid ”'”'”" Ind "blltd "Doll facts " "Your p a p P r rrported hath i-sn instances and those reports: Quebec lformrd no basis fur the asserti.ml0'"'”" that l have been dismissing Bub M"'""b3 icly an offer of I senatorshlp by Drew. I The Journal editorial Wedneb "if Vir. St. Laurent was not dia- revbrters he linked Mr. "He placed Mr. Drew unavoid- 400 feet. It was the short lag the L. Workers, caught with little or - warning. fell with the debris - were trapped on the ground -- siid the basement. The collapsed section of the shapedbullding measureu mo f I. The ions of debris carried n l pooled that a summary lMaritima Hogs .P. men from the third floor down basement. The weight of the falling ... creta snapped steel girders matehstich. Concrete pillars. a mood ilikdahtuaa over the w . nan. ' Gold-Rush” , Veteran Dias muvsou cm. rxr. (CF . When David Wesley (Bull) ' it lag the gold rush of the '90s ,- was "to make a quick stake a 3 get out." But he never did a, they buried Bull this week in -v 1 land he had grown to love. 1 Bul Ballentyne became one the Yukon's most colorful -- best-known figures. When he - -- at 83 the stake he never made 1 the gold rush had been repiaceoi l by a wealth of memories. one was of the time be packed a record B0-pound load over till ice-clad slopes of Chilkoot Put on a hot. - Born in Saint John. N.B.. in I , Mr. Ballentyna was I prolpectl? wood sawyer, garageman and f . ally fire chief here before he re tired all Irish-born wife Elisa died In lII7. He is survived BY son and two daughters. For In The lead la the recent Commercial Ll . stock Output Report. issued by th Canada Marketing Service. til percentage of Grade A -- less lows and stars. by provln - ,. are as follows:- Saskatchcw-.. Athena . All Canada . Consumers Ass'n.3- Elacts Officers OTTAWA lCPl -- Ihbll A . president of- laakatchewan CAC. succuda H. E. Vautalet of Montreal. Vauteist has served as CAC - i fell on electricians working in ; eiieand in their wooden for lentyna arrived in the Yukon . . dntforthethreeyaanandwu .ably in the pultlon where either, founder narrator of the (in the puhlic's view. he must sc- . L”'u,x..:i-ept a proffered seatorahip or H...” n N dim,-gzturnit down; face the dilenunasf Canada .g no""u.,eu1,acceptlng a post which he may nrpaenniaoonerhuiaeeu-o "0t"'”vI.m'M0'0'I'!i'c"-I W "Q admugy 3 it with seelllnll lndflflmt f .. . . giii . xligflag the Innate as well." sou A istuorut couucii -" !S:.':."'u'i.'i."'l..'... an ' condu- In J. 'il