Plan Chosen For City Hall WINNIPEG (CP)—A city hall calling for a stone office The airmen are not identified but the old Avro-Anson plane in the background needs no iden- tification to World War Two airmen nor to many Island OLD ANSONS ARE REMEMBERED citizens who saw the Ansons in Island skies during the years that the air training plan was operating from bases here. The picture is timely now because tomorrow marks the 20th anni- versary of the inception of the Commonwealth Air Training Plan. The airmen shown here were among the 30,000 naviga- tors trained under the scheme. (National Defence Photo) MUNICH, Germany (AP)—A ‘iministry of interior, the justice 3 |denied Wednesday night they had | dent. i| American - financed private sta- | There are about 100 American =it2 * “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1959 We ee ae ee ed Se ere es OT ee pee" 24 PAGES Plan For Sewage Disposal Accepted By By City Council Communist Poison Try ls Termed ‘Mystery’ report by Radio Free Europe Wednesday that Communist agents tried to poison all its em- ployees created a mystery. U.S. authorities, the Bavarian ministry, political’ and criminal police and state security officials The case was heard in a Ger- man labor court Wednesday. Hazelhoff maintained that sec- urity reasons had forced him to keep the stewards in the dark. | Radio Free Europe, an anti- Communist propaganda organiza- tion, operates from Munich un- der—special- permission fromthe West German government. BRIDGE CRASH CRASH TAKES LIFE 27 Captain Donald Smith of Borden was drowned last guard rail of the Dunk River bridge at Bedeque, plunging into 15 feet of water. The skipper of the Abeg- weit is known to have left Summerside last night short- ly before 10 o’clock and the mishap was discovered by a passing motorist a short time later. ~This is the 27th highway fatality in Prince Edward Is- land this year. been informed of such an inci- The European director of the tion, Erik Hazelhoff, insisted he notified U.S. and German author- ities after finding poisom in some} of the saJt shakers in the étation’s' cafeteria Nov. 21. Furthermore, Hazelhoff said the contenfs of the salt\shakers were examined by U.S. Army medical authorities and were found to con- tain lethal doses of atropine.| Canadian Press Staff Writer |gees and their families they! This is a derivative from the) TORONTO (CP) — Seventy Eu-| would-learn that Canada has the| deadly nightshade plant. |ropean refugees — 19 suffering) best equipment for TB treatment Most of the 1,200 employees of ithe station are refugees from European Iron Curtain countries. employees. Penniless, Ill Refugees Are Flown Into Canada By JOHN E. BIRD \from tuberculosis—arrived here! anywhere in the world. Wednesday by air from Rome. Most of them were penniless | but they carried a valuable they! never dreamed of owning — a Minister, said travel document entitling them Will be to get you well and re- ‘coames in the citizens’ petit- | lon submitted Monday night and | reiterated by representative To Break er-riding the adament stand spokesmen again last night, City Council last night approved con- struction of a sewer outfall lead- ing to North River. Mayor Edwin C. Johnstone_cast the deciding vote with Council- lors A. Walthen Gaudet, F. W. Boyles, A. J. Haslam and J. E. Arsenault voting for the re soulution and Councillors Gerald R. Foster and Elmer McRae were not present at the emergency CONCESSION GRANTED In. partial recognition of the claims advanced Monday even-| ing by the citizens of the North clough told the tubercular refu- MAIN AIM M. B. Dymond: Ontario health; “our main aim River area, Council agreed to in-/ , outfall at the end of York Lane, | and asked for an immediate de- sign for a chlorination plant “‘to improve sanitation and general conditions in the waters of the area under consideration.’’ County Construction’s tender of $55,341 was accepted subject } Mayor Casts Ballot — Deadlock cause of the urgency of getting the situation cleared up in ae to take advantage of the winter work assistance if possible. Also, he wished to have. Mr. Crandall present in order to personally re- port to the council. In proposing the amended re solution to Council, _ Councillor /Arsenailt, the chairman of Coun- cil’s Water and Sewerage com- mittee said that the addition of the barminutor would dispose of the solid refuse which to be ‘the chief objection of the citizens concerned. He gathered from the petition read at the regular monthly meet- ing Monday night that ¢contamin- ation as such was not an issue, | Councillor Arsenault added. SMALL COST | stall a barminutor on the main ser’ Bhar aoe ee of rss Barminutor and the proposed chlorination plant would be not more than two per cent of the entire project. Either or both would not im- | prove the treatment which was complete when sewage was’ dis- charged into a body of water cap- Og en Dagag tener tar es ee CLOSED CAFETERIA fo live in Canada and qualify unite you with your families.” | to the approval of the program as| able of accommodating it, but ad- ‘picked for Winnipeg Wednesday Hazelhoff—said—he—immediately+tater for citizenship. Federal Health Minister—Mon-| a winter_works project. If _not| ding one or-both to the system he _by_an_international—jury—ot—ex= closed the cafeteria. The station's} The sick were taken immedi-|teith said: “God bless you all.”"|done under this scheme, the job/ had recommended earlier might perts. - o 3 6 : 1tlately to the Mountain Sanitorium| N ore improve—the—situation—from—en—— Whether the building ever will} _ against Hazethoff for closing the|in Hamilton. and Toronto Hospital | Stretcher case. Most of the males} H. Crandall explained. : aesthetic standpoint. — a reality still is a ques- ” ° ‘ cafeteria without telling them/jn weston, .a~- Toronto suburb.| Will be able to work after a brief} Mayor Johnstone explained that! “Surface drainage of storm wa- ai ictor or ana a why. Families of the patients were| Period of treatment. he had called the meeting be-| ter was found impractical in other — . ee seen and : - taken to homes in areas reason- centres sae = "aaae cost of : peg won a ; ably close to the two hospitals. | main ; ning roads feclen inchatine $5,000 for bene| BY HAROLD MORRISON {mended that the downstream| 1. Canada is to get one-half of Mountie Chorus |" betore th ie Sotin | ere erase . design, including $5,000 for being ; = ; ‘)Pacific Airlines plane landed, Dr. | In response to further ‘ Canadian Press Staff Writer |benefits of the 1,225-mile wWest/all power generated on the U‘S. | Said Thrillin one of the six finalists among 91 ; a t Columbia River be shared side of the Columbia River $s Q IR. W. Wood of the federal health by Councillor Baker Mr Sumpetitorsand a $15,000 ad-| WASHINGTON (CP)—Qualified/coast Couns River be shar pon department discovered six - year- Crandall said that his firm had vance. The firm will receive six| authorities said the Canada-|™ 3 50-50 Dasis by the two coun-| 2. Canada is ta get a cash pay-| OTTAWA (CP) — A group ofjold Anna Maria Maticic had the considered ing the sewage per cent of the cost of the build-| United States International Joint |! ment from the U.S. for flood con-| real-life singing Mounties is thrill- poh om flow from the North River de- ing if it is erected. Comumiganion Ses ropee- This. basigg pronocal major}trol measures which would pre-| ing local teen-age \girls much as, The attractive Yugoslavian girl velopment into the outfalj recent- < ° Baad vs Canada’ —~.,was|vent flood damage on the U.S.|Neison Eddy thrilled their m7th-|and her family were detained ly completed throug, government hammered into a draft of pri- side ers in the motion picture Rose’ aboard the aircraft uni Ontavwi pond, but becapse of the capital ciples which the commission will! 3. Canada would not give up) Marie. | government health authorities tn- cost of $30,000 of the pumping shortly submit to the two central | the right to divert waters of the | The 16 - member. uniformed) vestigated. Peter Scully, %. of the former | RCMP, said last night that charg- station and force main required rian ne cae gage Blade ll jraelba Po ogee g Ragithicggr porta habe | opr Age ange harigaee mgt {tnd teal e at Morell Rear,|jes would be laid against Jot | * had been discarder for econ- basis of a joint power construc-| jects of her own, but she would making its first public appear-- MILD FORM Ge acl Hospital suf-| Scully this morning. | omic reasons. tion pact likely to be negotiated be morally bound not to divert) ance in a series of concerts be-| Dr. Wood said the gir! is suffer- _ ris fn + aaa the| He said that twe witnesses had Mr. Crandail said the final out- in the first three months of 1960,/ any waters that would interfere| gun last week at Ottawa high ing from a mild form of measies.|-°""% . roadie a all caii-| bees i but that their| {2 of the interceptor would be authorities said. with any joint agreement. schools. \She was released in the care of | S0mach cau wae . “= nat olor’ hat incoher-| @ 20 feet of water at low tide First project that may be con- |her parents, who are quartered] | bre bullet, ae .S : gg adhe oe “aidtienst to | @ am area where a large hole sidered for joint negotiations fs Vv ATI c AN CEREMONY in Toronto. ug re his a ent, were occurred in the river bottom. development of the Mica Creek | ‘ Anna Maria is the daughter of though ‘he ag as critical” Sgt. Major E. R. George and| INTERMITTENT FLOW Antonio and Maria Maticic. She “EDMONTON (CP) — Hospita! officials attributed| | fleath to cardio-renal disease. Mr. Bowlen was _ lieutenant- five-year term, which started in , was extended indefinitely \in . He had been a member of ” alberta legislature for 14 A state funeral is planned for Saturday. \ The service will be held in St. Joseph’s Roman Cath- olie Cathedral with Archbishop J. H. MacDonald of Edmonton presiding. Burial will be in the family plot in St. Joachim’s Cem- etery. _ Chief Justice C. J. Ford of the Court of Alberta will perform the duties of the lieuten- ernor. He has been acting in the capacity during the gover- nor's illness. A GREAT LOSS Prime Minister Diefenbaker-- described Mré Bowlen’s death as a great loss to Canada. Premier Manning of Alberta said “few men have won for themselves such universal .respect and affection as that in which Mr. Bowlen was held throughout the province and beyond.” Mr. Bowlen is survived by two! daughters, a brother and two sis- Straits Issue Is Not Studied ST. JOHN'S Nfid. (CP) — Re- potirces Minister Hamilton said Wednesday no survey has been made yet by his department to! fletermine whether it .would be beneficial to close the Straits of Belle Isle. He was commenting) on recent remarks on the subject! by a Montreal. shipping agency spokesman. Mr. Hamilton said the matter came up about two years ago when atomic energy officials cited such a project as a pos- sibility. He said the narrow 10- mile gap between Newfoundland | proper and Labrador could be closed by using atomic power but sueh an operation would haye in- ternational implications because atomic son also is dead. LT.-GOV. BOWLEN ters, Mrs. John Curley of Vernon} River, P.E.I., and Mrs. Harold, Wiliams of Richmond, Me. His wife, the former Caroline : Suive of Boston, died in 1956. A! Mr. Bowlen began his political career in 1930 when elected to the Alberfa legislature as a Lib- eral member for Calgary. He was elected again in 1935' and 1940 but was defeated in 1944 when he ran as an independent. He served two terms as Liberal house leader. BORN AT CARDIGAN Born at Cardigan, P.E.I., July 21, 1876, Mr. Bowlen travelled: to Boston when he was 15 to work as a stablehand and a street railway conductor. He saved $1,- 000 and returned to P.E.I to farm and sell farm machinery. In. 1902 Mr. Bowlen moved west to start a farm in Manitoba and later to homestead in Saskatch- ewan. His ranching career started there when he rounded up wild horses and drove them to the railhead at Winnipeg. Mr. Bowlen moved to ranching in Alberta and later built the 9-| Ranch into one of the largest ‘horse ranches in the west with 3,000 head of stock. With tractors starting to re- place the horse, Mr. Bowlen de- veloped ,yet another ranch into a secondlargest sheep ranch in the province. After his 1944 defeat at the -|polls, Mr. Bowlen sold his sheep) ranch and went into | hment. mouncement—following 13 separ- —the commission announced treached firm agreement on a storage dam about 90 miles up-| stream from, Revelstoke, B.C., providing about 11,000,000 acre- feet of water reservoir. Harnessing of the Columbia, originating in -British Columbia, has been the subject of various discussions for some 15 years. FIRM AGREEMENT Wednesday, in a 75-word an- ate meetings since last February it “final draft of principles to be) applied in the determination and appointment of benefits from co- operative development of the Co- jumbia.” The commission's recommend- ations, to be outlined in a 30-page document; is to be submitted to the two central governments shortly after all the fegal niceties of the. document have been cleared up. Officials said the proposals) would either state or imply: : ‘Plane Firms Plan Merger LONDON (Reuters)—Two big British aircraft firms, Hawker Siddeley and de Havilland, today announced plans to merge. A joint statement said the mer- ger will bring about “the most powerful organization of its type in the British Commonwealth.” The merger is to be carried out by an offer of Hawker shares to de Havilland shareholders. The de Havilland board of directors is — —— of the Both companies are deeply in- volved in the development, and production of guided weapons and have wide interests in Can- ada, Australia and, other coun- tries. WHERE-TO-FIND-IT Announcements, notices . 20 Births, deaths, etc., .. 2, 20 Classified section .... 20, 21 Comics, features ........ 22 Charlottetown news ...... 5 Wels fe hice § Finance, markets ........ 19 Island news ........- bac to Sports rine eS Women’s : ‘page| shail o> Wir 6,7 Late reports from Guardian news bureaus in Summer- side, Montague, Alberton and Souris, and from special eor- respondents now appear on the Island News Page. Advocacy By BERTRAND THIBAULT Canadian Press Staff Writer MONTREAL (CP)—One day in! 1663, the governor of New France, | accompanied by soldiers with shoot-to-kill Orders, bust into a humble house in Quebec's upper-| town and demanded to see the occupants. A few seconds later, a man wearing a dusty cassock and fin- gering a mustache of the type then in vogue appeared in a, door- way to a room where the furnish- ings consisted solely of a bed, a table and a chair. With bayonets at the ready, the soldiers advanced ‘menancingly towards the man. Then to the, astonishment of the ; governor | they snapped to attention andj respectfully saluted the 40-year- | advanced towards them. GOVERNOR DISAPPOINTED Sadly disappointed, the gov- ernor returned to the Chateau St. Louis, the soldiers returned to their barracks and the man they liad been ordered to shoot re- turned to his daily tasks. The man was Monsignor Fran- cois de Montmorency Laval, the first Roman Catholic Bishop of Quebec, whose beatification is ex- pected to be recommended today at a Vatican ceremony. The gov- ernor who ordered the shooting was Charles-Augustin de Saffray de Mesy, angered by the bishop's refusal to sanction the appoint- ment, of some of the governor's friends to coveted administrative posts. The incident was only one of many difficult moments experi- enced by Msgr. Laval in founding the Catholic hierarchy in Canada and administering a diocese that stretched from Quebec, to the Gulf of Mexico. elevated te, the ranks of the blessed in the Roman Catholic Church is expected to be made by a consistorial advocate during a public consistory in St. Peter’s Basilica. At the consistory the Pope will confer the red hat on newly-appointed cardinals. Born at Motigny - sur - Ayre, Beatification Of Laval | switch- yard operator | jana, Yugoslavia, iF old man who calmly and serenely The recommendation that he be |. Expected has two brothers, Antonio, an in- fant, and Rodolfo, 7, the iember'| iof the family with tuberculosis. | the 19 families on their trip from Rome, said other children aboard Mr railway in Ljubl- hopes to Maticic was a and by the hospital. Joe Sceully,_64- father of the | wounded man, is-in custody in ithe Georgetown jail but as yet pe charges have been laid. Although details at the mom- become a railroad worker in Can-| "mt are few, it appears that ada. |Scully was shot between 6:30 Dr. Wood, who accompanied and 9 a.m. Tuesday night and, remained without medical at- tention until police and teats the plane were examined but no! were notified yesterday. | Montmorency Laval was called |further trace of measles | upon to’ make difficult decisions | found. (Continued on page 3 col. 4) t ; - i William Wayward, retiring manager of the Bank of Nova ees France, im 1623, Franeois de “> PP eT oF eT aD was Inspector George A. Woodward, acting commanding officer of the Immigration Minister Fair- | Charlottetown detachment of the RETIRING MANAGER HONORED ceives @ camera from Clarence | Scotia im Charlottetown re | Mr. Hayward received the gift assistant’ manager. at’a dinner in his honor at the Queen Hotel last night. ; } | milk in this province is still ae ‘| secretary were asked to look into - Const. J. A. Cox, who arrested the elder Scully conducted an | investigation at the scene of the’ shooting and further aware will follow. \ ul ‘The discharge at the Ki Drive overflow would occur only during a period of heavy rain and it would contain only one part in (Continued on page 2 col. 2) Sale0f2% Jersey Milk |s Probed At Meeting The sale of 2 percent Jersey very live topic with Jersey men, Fred Kitson, president of the Prince Edward Island Jersey Cattle Club said last night fol- lowing the club’s annual meeting. Interested members of the club met at Hampshire early last year to discuss the sale of 2 per- cent milk buf no definite action was taken, although a commit- tee was named to enquire further into the possibilities. Mr. Kitson said last night that although no definite resolution was passed yesterday he and the the possibilities of putting the milk on the market here. dollars for each Jersey calf shown at an achievement day. The club will also pay a bonus of $20 to each club member who purchased a Jersey calf but the bonus will be paid in the year fol- The Jersey club members de- cided to discontinue completely all other bonusing. PREMIER BANNERS Premier breeders and exhibit- jon banners will be purchased te be presented to all persons. merit- ing them at the each major show in the province but the banners are to remain the property of the club. The secretary was asked to con- sult all the other breed organiza- tions in the province with the idea of having,a photographer em. ployed for the provincial exhibi- tion. They will also ask the €an- adian Jersey Journal to have one of .their staff present at the pro- vincial fair. A sire committee was asked to get in touch with department of agriculture people with the idea of procuring the best. Jersey semen available. The club also voted to ask the exhibition people to check the hog Clarke New Wiltsnire wee re-| registration numbers of cattle the night before the show, rather than at ringside. New Cardinals Seen Probable VATICAN CITY (AP) — Pope John, who has set aside a tradi- tion limiting the-College of Card- inals to 70, indicated Wednesday he may increase the college even more. the “We have reached 79," Pope said, speaking informally at a g audience. “In the fu- — will go ahead—we will The supreme ruler. of th® Re man Catholic Church noted that since the limit of 70 was set, the church has grows tremendous. '