' ' 01‘ from the Administrator of Child AI’ Zoo Killed By Lion wA5HL\'G'i‘.0.\-' ZAP‘ ~—_A 2lT2~§barrier and go,‘ ‘M amid British Columbia’ girl African lion's cage. , visiting the 290 with he‘ ~d”*]'?d' The grandfather was in such 31 father was “med by 3 cage mn ‘ State 9‘ Shock that he was unable ' ‘killed F“day' . it“ ENC a coherent account o The non pulled the screaming what happened, and as far as pm gm through the bars of_ its cage, lice could determine there was despite the grandfather s frantic 1 only one other witnem efforts to save her, and tore her. EYEWITNEss ACCOUNT Wesley Dildy, 12, W1,” close to the Dl°°1fEt‘l . I h “ d I, . .t. th was The ' .3 gir, w‘ o as ecap-.visi mg a zoo with a group of wed, was Julia Ami_Vogt. She‘othcr_ school children, gave the M her five-year-old sister. Judy eyewitness a.ccoum, mm, had come. here with their The rest. of the C1355 was mother from Chilliwack, B.C., toidown the hill, he said. ‘I heard Visit their 8I‘a11df3th€T— Harry , a loud scream by the lion's cage. Jackson. , llran up_ to look and this little The grandfather took both girlsigirl was in front of the lion cage to the Washinglfln 7500- Apland the lion had caught her by way Julia Ann w .1 ii d e r ed the leg and was pulling. Waugh an opening in an outerl ‘A man grabbed her arms and PUBLIC AUCTION House and lot and household furniture 134 Dor- cliester Street on the premises, Thursday, May 22nd, at 1.00 pm. I have been ii*ist_i-ucted by the Executors of Ihe estate of Annie Clarkin to sell the above house and lot at the time and place aforesaid. and also the house- hold furniture including dining room set, parlor set (antique), kitchen tables and, chairs. For inspection of the premises apply at the office of J. Arthur McGui_gan, Currie Building, Charlotte- town. . W. H. Beaton, Auctioneer. *7 ANOTHER SERVICE -We have installed a special Naptha Gas Dispenser.» Fuel for Camp and Coleman Stoves, Tradesmen’s Torches, Lamps, etc., can now be quickly obtained along with all your Automotive needs Imperial Service Station ~ H. Roper, Lessee “Arthur W. Roper, Lessee I iSumm.e-rs--Cottage bpeciols C 199.95 1. 2fPc. .C1i_esteI'field Suitegsywivel Chair , 1, Oak Dining Room Table ' 19.95;- 1, 5.Pc. Dining Room Suite 29.95 1 5‘~Pc.‘Woode‘n‘ Kitchen Se 14.95 1. Used Ransetté ‘ ' ' ‘9-95 1. Girl’s Bicycle ' 29-95 1. Man’s Bicycle 24.95 1.. Chrome Table 12-95 l. Coleman Heater 69.95 . All available on Easy Terms from 50c ‘weekly I No Down Payment I New-Way -Furniture. Co.-Ltd - 161 Great George Street Phone 6211 VALUABLE PROPERTY Eon SALE Tenders will be received for the purchase of the property on the corner of Central and Market Street known as the old Nurses Home. This lot of land measures approximately l70 by 125 feet and its location is ideal for a, large variety of uses. The highest or any tendenwill not necessarily be iccepted. All tenders should be forwarded to.‘ The Manager ~ _ _ 9 Prince County Hospital P.O. Box No. 430 . Sumrnerside. P.E.I. ‘ TENDERS Sealed tenders, plainly marked on the outside “Tender for Nurses Residence” will be 1‘eCeiVed W the undersigned up to 3.00 p.m. (A.S.T.) Saturday May 31, 1958, for the construction ‘of a ‘Nurses Residence for the Charlottetown Hospital in Charlottetown. P.E.I. ' llélans & Specificaftionstglay girgygaéfiegnbfiafifgg era r on mm c un Ontracte S y the Charlottetown_Hos- Pilal. A deposit of $50.00 payable to the undersigned is required for each set of plans and specifications. This deposit is forfeited if the complete Plans and Specifications are not returned in g00d Order On Or be" f0I‘e~the fourteenth day after contract awaI‘d- . Plans and Specifications will be on View atTBulld- PPS Exchanges in Halifax and Moncton and at the Char- lottetown Hospital. » All tenders must be accompanied by 3 59€’u1'it-V ‘E’ Dosit equal to 10 per cent of the tendered P1109, ma ff Payable to the “Charlotteown Hospitalf. Such deposiu Shall indemnify the owner against loss in the event of Wlthdrawal of the successful. tenderer. The lowest or any tender not necessarily acifepted Edward T. Cosgrove, P c—o Cha.rlot‘r,-etown HOSDNR1. Charlottetown, PE-L EMPLOYERS CONTEST P1‘iZe -—- former Islander now residing 3*} NW3 . Scotia who wishes to return to P.E.I. and is desirol.15 Of Permanent employment. Said Islander in Iain twenties, senior matriculation, we” read. widely travelled. experience in office routine,- Olesale and ‘retail buying and selling anfl l’€r5°“' Sllpervision. High learning ability, work with hands, fielé pencil or people. Prefer position with outside 01' Work. Capable of high calibre ‘work in exchange a 6% ifhallenging position and adequate remuneration. allotietown or Summcrsidc. - ,C‘—‘-”lPsl mics Illi'IlliIP fllllllllf‘ HI’ ‘W‘1’I" '3-'-‘do Hi,” giqxlmfile salarv All ‘replies an.~:wcred and treated In “C . .. .. . lest confidence. l under tried lion wag, smmger. He kept pull- in: and got her body in the case with him. The man kept hitting the lion on the head trying to make him stop. ‘The lion st 3 r i e d walking around. inside with her in his mouth. lrle was growling. I ran away.‘ Keepers girl's body. Both the grandfather and the mother of the victim were placed a physician's care. The father, Ben Vogt, was reported back home in Cliilliwa-ck where he is 5! feed mill worker. “ The Vogi. girl was the second B.C. youngster to die within a month in an attack by 8 lion—-at- tacks that occurrred tliousards of miles apart. . A lioness on the loose from a private zoo broke the neck of eight-year-—old Maureen Vanstone May 4 near Nanaim-o. B.C., after she called to the animal when she sighted it from a roadside Pion No Probe Of Norman‘ Case 0T'.l‘AWA (CP)--The Canadian government has no inten»t.ion of appointing a royal commission to investigate the Norman case, Ex- ternal Affairs Minister Smith said ‘Friday in the Commons. He also said -there is no record to indicate that the Pkevious Lib- eral government intended before internal security subcommitte Heriberf. Norman’s death by suic- ide April 4, 1957, to establish a royal commission to inquire into the case. M'!'.,SI1'1li2i'l was replying to liar.- old Winch (CCF -- Vancouver East) who asked Thursd-ay whether there had ever been any proposal for appointment or a royal commission by the govern- ment. " Mr.» Winch had referred to Washington a c c o u n t s of the latest report of the Us. Senate internal security subcommittee again alleging that Norman was a Communist. Norman was Ca- nadian am.-bassador to Egypt at the time of his death. The subcommittee claimed that the" U.S. Central Intelligence Agency has a memorandum quot- ing Norman as saying that he feared he would be called before a royal commission and-might implicate 60 or 70 other persons. Disk Jockey S-"ays Not Guilty BOSTON-.(AP) —- Alan Freed. New York disk jockey, pleaded not guilty Friday to two indict- ments in connection with disturb- ances that followed his rock ‘ti’ roll show here May 3. Judge Lewis Globerg set ball at’ $3,000 and Freed’s lawyer, Paul T. Smith, was given three weeks to file special pleas. One indictment charges incit- ing to riot; the other, inciting unlawful destruction of real and personal property. Trouble followed the Freeri later recovered the CANADA SEALED TENDERS. ad dressed -to the undersigned and marked’ "Tender for additional Development. — Charlottetown" will be received up to 3.00 pm. (E.D.S.T.) Friday, June 6, 1958, for construction of a 7000’ x 200’ runway and related work at Charlottetown Alrpbrt, Char- lottetown, P.E.I ’ Plans, specifications, labour conditions, contract form. form of tender and return tender en- velope may be obtained on application to the Regional Con- struction Engineer, Depart- ment of Transport, PO. Box 42, Mbncton, N.B. upon re- ceipt of an accepted cheque made payable to the Receiver . General of Canada for the sum of $25.00. The deposit will be released on return of blueprints and specifications in good con- Tditton within one month . from date of recepton of tenders. If not returned within that per- feited. Additional i.nform.ation ‘required with regard to inter- pretation of plans and specifi- cations may be obtained from the aforementioned Regional (Ion- struction Engineer. Plans and specifications will also be on" display at the Build- ers Exchange Inc-.. 1526 Mark St., Montneal, ’-P.Q. and the Halifax Construction Associa- tion, P.0. Box 65, Halifax, N. S. . Each tender must be accom- panied by a security deposit equal to (al ten per cent (10%) of the tender price where the amount‘ of the tender does not exceed $250,000.00 or (bi $25,- 000.00 plus five per cent (5%) of the amount by which the amount of the tender price ex- ceeds $250,000.00. Where amount, of the tender exceeds $250,000.00, in the form of a certified cheque. payable to the Receiver General. of Can- ada . drawn on a bank incor- porated under the Bank Act or the Quebec Savings Bank Act, or bonds of the ‘Government of Canada or of the National Rail- ways as defined in the Can- adian National Railways Cap- ita], Revision Act, 1952, which security deposit. will be for- feited in the event of a tenderer refusing to enter into a contract on the basis of\ his tender if called upon to do so, or failing to satisfactorily complete such a contract. Cheques of unsuc- cessfiil tenderers will be re- turned. Kindly note frhal no tenders will be accepted by telegram. Any tender not accompanied by a security deposit as. des- cribed will not be considered. The Department «irw?-‘~ “oi hind itself to accept Ihe lowest or any lender. (f0LLlNS, Secretary. Department ’ of Transport. ‘Box 114 Guardian-Pat.ri0t.. to pull her AWa,">'- bu‘ tfiiei iod the deposit will. be for- the _ Ottawa, Ontario, May 14, 1958. I Found Tropical l I , Isle Rugged } VANC'€)‘UVE‘R (‘CPL---Lif~e on ii lglamorous tropical island turned out to be a rugged exp-erienice fol l}<ent Shelby, 23, of Long Beach, lcalif. § Shelby was winner of the tiny lisland of Yawalu, near Lautoka, ;Fiji. in a limerick contest spon- 1 sored by a U.S. film corporation, l In addition to life ownership oi ithc island, the prize included a = first-class return trip by the On- ent Steamship Line, a hut on the isle, an outboard motor and food and furniture for two weeks. So Shcl-by and his pal, Douglas llowiard, 27, tookflpossession of his island “paradise." DISENCHANTMENT However, said Shelby, he had not been informed there was no water on the island, there was no boat for the motor, and there was no return Orient liner for two months. . , At the end of two weeks their furniture was repossessed by the hotel on Fiji which had lent it, and they had to sell their our.- board for food. - “A tropical isle is wonderful," said Shelby. who arrived here Thiirsday on the Orient liner Or- Slwa. "if you have enough to eat." “There was nothing on our island but a mangrove swamp, and it was too rough to fish. When they took our beds away, we slept on palm branches.‘ “We tried to get back to Lau- toka in a canoe but it sanrk under us. We would have drowned if we hadn't been rescued by some Fijian fishermeri." FISH LANDINGS DOWN HALIFAX (C1P)——Fish land-lugs" in the Maritimes in April were of- ficially recorded aut 27,800,000 pounds, valued at $1,700,000, the fisheries department announced Friday. For the same month last year, the figures were 32,800,000 im-por-taut s p e. c i e s by volume landed during the month was cod. show in the Boston arena as 6.000 persons left the place. Police said more than 15 persons were as- saulted, robbed or beaten. None of the offenders was appre- hended. ' pounds and $1,900,000. The most’ Six Months For Break And Entry An 1.8-y-ear old resident of Bel- mont street was sentenced to six months in the Queen County Jail Wednesday morning when he ap- peared before Magistrate Gilbert A. Gaudet in County Magistrates Court. The accused pleaded guilty to a charge of break, entry and theft when he appeared in court on Monday. The cascwas remand- ed to yesterday for sienutenvce. Another youth, also appearing possessing stolen goods knowing that they were stolen. Tihe ac- cused. a Eus-ton street resident, pleaded not guilty to the charge and was remanded on a ball of $100 bond to Wednesday, 21st. A Douglas Street. man, charged with being. in possession of l number of pounds of butter. lard W residents of Winislioe and Char- on charges arising out of the, same incident, was charged withl May K and shnr.+.eni_ng, belonging to nir- erside Hospital. had his case ad.- jnurned iintil May 21st. for con- sider:-ii.ioti. The accused is the la . of nine inch appearing on charges aris- .ing out of the incident. Of that f total, six have been convicted of icharges ranging from theft to being in possession of stolen ‘, goods, while two others have had }their cases dismissed. Two cases appeaerd on th doc- ket for being in possession of ii- quor not purchased on their in- dividual pcrmits. The accused, lottetowri, were fined $20 and costs or 30 days. _ Similar fines were meted out “to residents of Mt. Edward Road, Newton, Sussex and North Ru-s- lien for having illegal possession ,of liquor. A Newton Cross man was fined $25 and costs or 30 days for havinz possession of liquor not purchased at a vcnders. A Green Street resident of the city was fined $60 and costs or 30 days when he pleaded guilty DIAL Special delivery service 1.111. to 9:00 a..'m. if missed. IF YOUR GUARDIAN IS LATE OR MISSED and 3. paper will be delivered right to your door. your paper 6561 nmilable between 8:30 is late -— or ED'5 173 Great George St. DIAL construction STRUCTU RE: One of many reinforced concrete barrackl. General Contractor: _B. Porinl 4| Sons Canada Ltd. STRUGTU RE: Mess Hall built of concrete masonry and stucco construction.——Genero.l Contractor! R. E. Stewart Construction Corp. STRUCTURE: Central Heating Plant. . General Contractor: Byers Construction Co. Ltd. For the Fastest Service in Town, Call Ed's Slogan: “To maintain the goodwill of those whom we serve ~— the goal for which we strive!” TAXI Charlottetown 6561 I With ‘BROWN and SHARPE complete selection of micrometers, gauges, calipers, etc. You get tools that are known everywhere for tbcét extreme accuracy and thorough reliability. At Fairbanks-Mcvrscyoa V get fast delivery of the tool. you need from complete stocks at 16 convenient bi-an"ches. Fol’ the tool and the that give you his more ~+ see Fairbanks-Moltse. "In St. John, NJ]. telephone (ix. 3-3291 or visit 53 Union IL". modern concrete Need MACAJI-IAINISTS’ _TOOI.$? machinists’ tools year get 1 E Report Progress On Park-Royal Church Building The Building Committee of the: Park-Royal United Church, Park-l; dale, held‘ their weekly ineetingl with Wiliam MacLeod as chair-‘ man. , Reports from various commit- tees vere received and the prog- ress on the building was brought up to date. Pews for the church are expected to arrive within the next week. The painting of the interior will be started im- mediatcly. All plans have been finalized for the church grounds the landscape committee report- ed and the spirefnr the church to an imparied driving charge. Two other men, residents of Charlottetown and Iris, were fin- ed $5 and costs or. five days when they pleaded guilty to driv- ing without an operator’s license. Cudmore & Rush Plumbing and Heating Always at your service. is Douglas‘ St,‘ Phone 9550 her of memorial gifts which have been offered by members of the -————--- community and other areas. I will be erected within a few days. ,; (“la rdian Page 1 George Ayers reported a hum-l _ Tuesday. M83’ 20- 19-*8 N.S. CRACKUP F'AT.H.\ HENDERSON, T e X., lAP)—-I HALIFAX (C‘P)—Ron-aid Mois- Police said Monday a dlivorcedl ner, 49, of Ches»ter,'N. S.. died in mother killed her two small: hospital here early M°"1d3.V fmm d-aughters. Mrs. Thelma Crelie, 3 injuries received la to ‘Sunday ,34, told offiiers she had been’ n‘ght in a th:ree~car collision at ‘ worrying over finances and fam- East Chester, 45 miles from here- ily troubles, arid decided the chil-l No other injuries were reported then would be better off dead. in the accidient. To THE ELECTORS or WARD 6--- We regret that the short time at our dis- posal will not permit us to contact: each elector individually. . We take this opporl;unit.y to solicit your sup- port and assure you that your vote in our favor on Wednesday, May 21st would be sincerely ap- preciated. I J. EDMOND ARSENAULT, ELMER MacR-AE. Your two big problems STREETS, WATER & SEWERAGE. I feel that my six years experience‘ in the City Council and my rebord there; especially as chairman of the Street Department for four years is something for you to consider when choosing a representative for your Ward. I ' You need a ‘strong voice tive who is free, fearless A Rancid record of Past Achiet“/lemcnts. I offer you my services with a. sincere promise no use my experience and ability in the best interests of Ward 6 in particular and the City in general if favored with your confidence on Election Day, Wednesday, May. 21st. Etrcrons CF WARD 5 P. -R. McCORMAC ' CANDIDATE FOR COUNCILLGR during the next few years are going be be I in the new City Council. You need a representa- and independent. You need a Councillor with a Yours truly, P. R. MocomAc. Aerial VIIVI of a caution of Camp Gnneiown. Qromocim NJ; .aw_r@iWlR'J mad: with IMARITIM Concr little I STRUCTURE: Gun Drill Maintenance Building. General Contractor: Atlas Construction Co. Ltd. STRUCTURE: Interior view of Gun Drill Maintenance Bldg. General Contractor! Atlas Construction Co. Ltd. me Cement LIMITED 236 ST. GEORGE ST- MONC1'ON, NEW BR.UNSW|CK——TEL., 2-233‘! SHIPPING PQINTST HALIFAX, N.S. CHATHAM. N.B. HAVELOCK, NJ. l TOP QUALITY CONCRETE STARTS WH EN YOU USE MARITIME CEMENT ‘ Supplied throughout Maritime Pravlneeu ~. V COMPANY CEMENT etc is one of the most versatile and economical of modern building materials. it permits greater flexibility of design...is adaptable to contemporary architecture ...durable...fire-pr0of...Iow initial cost...and icquircs naintcnance. For those reasons it was used for all major buildings at Camp Gagctown, Canada's largest military training establishment. _