Ads. Dial taker, for ‘ ‘VOL. LXXII NO. 237 TELEPHONE 8506 Buyer meets seller with Guardian Want $506 ask for classified ad SPECIAL DIRECTOR’ - Retarded Children Care PlannedIn NewProgram Of Treatment, Faci lities classifying the three groups Dr. Beck describes the educable _@s of becoming independent produc- POTATO CROP Is DOWN IN U.S. production an estimated 59,168 hundred- weight compared to 65,645,000 @ year ago. The central area’s crop is estimated at 41,543,000 hun- dredweight as compared to 42,696,000 last yean, The western estimate is for @ production of 66,514,000 hun- dredweight compared to 68,- 004,000 a year ago Li The taal of 6,546,000 hun dredweight with, 257,876,000 Gntveanaiet a year ago. those retarded who are capable | annual work habits. As adults their men- tal age will not exceed that of tion is of such severe degree that ee. 8 Ee ae ONE—ROOM SCHOOL The report also notes that chil- dren im the one room school ex- perience less stress than-those in graded schools. Because of this it suggests more individual teach- ing of the retarded child in the one room school; increased train- ing of teachers at normal school level in problems of retardation; counselling of teachers by pro- staff; and a home teach- ing program. Special classes for the trainable retarded are approved but it is noted that Charlottetown: is the only location in the province wi sufficient population to demand a permanent class. Dr. Beck states it has been sug- gested that such classes be set up in other areas to serve twr or three communities on a rotat- ing basis with a mobile teacher. He also notes the necessity of paying such teachers out of pro- vincial funds. A program of home teachers (Continued on Page 2 Col. 4) Winners Are Chosen In Rural Beautification FM Modulation Trial Is Authorized On CBC | By BERNARD DUFRESNE Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP) — An 18month @xperiment in frequency modula- tion radio was authorized Friday by the board of broadcast gov- ernors. The experiment, involving net- work FM broadcasting, will link up CBC FM stations in Montrel, Ottawa and Toronto. Program- ming of quality music will be broadcast on the new network, which was proposed by the CBC last July. The board of broadcast gover- Mors deferred a decision until Friday to study the question of FM broadcasting. It asked the, ’ CBC to report on its operations at the end of the experimental E period when the board will re- view its policy. The board also recommended the*licensing of a new private television station in Grand Falls, fid., linked to CJON - TV St. John’s, Nfid., and of new private radio stations in Joliette and board’s recommendation izes the advantages of an integrated service for New- foundland and that the private station proposed to give more local service in Grand Falls than would have been provided by the The Joliette station, 1,000 watts at 1350, would be linked, part- Nikita Favors Paper Diapers LONDON (AP) — Premier Khrushchev believes paper diap- ers are best for little Russians. “They are much more practic- able and cheaper,” he said in a i? Khrushchev was speaking in Bratsk, Siberia and his point was fo show the advantages that would follow full exploitation of the region's tmber reserves He suggestedthSt tablecloths even bedsheets could well, be} from paper, ss. | P ~ i time, for simultaneous broadcast- ing with CJSO Sorel, Que, The Pointe Claire outlet, sought by Gerald Duffy, would operate at 1,000 watts at 1470 on the dial. In approving Mr. Duffy’s appli-| cation, the board rejected a bid! by George S. Mooney for a 5,- 600-watt station in another Mont- ceives a-chest of silverware, don- ated by Island Ferilizers Incor- porated, ani $75.00. by .| HOME IMPROVEMENT In the contest for the greatest farm home improvement among contestants of the second year, the winners were as follows: Prince County — Chest of silver, donated by R.T. Holman, Liéd., and $50.00 - John A. Johnson and Son, Margate. Queens County — Chest of <«il- ver, donated by Imperial Oil Ltd., and $60.00 - Mrs. John Jones, Harrington Kings County — Chest of silver, by MacDonald-Rowe Woodworking Co. Ltd-, and $50.00- Walter Dixon, East Baltic. basis, en ee Competi- in Prince County H. Webb, Howlan, with Counties the winners of rize of $50.00 in Queens eek Cornwall and first prize award were Leard, Peakes Station. te etter iT a egnk i iF : -& i ‘ e A e ri Monday being Thanks- giving Day the next edition of the Guardian will be on Tuesday October 13th. real suburb, Dorval, Que. Bat Paul Gallant, of Souris, the new president of the P ward Island.Fisherics’ Fed tka Beet on eniy mers Mate 9 “Covers Prince. ve-! right acknowledged . Friday that *iants on the television quiz show ate, ee 3 Canadians Elected In U.K. By ALAN HARVEY Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON (OP) — Three Cana- ian - born candidates, all Com servatives, coasted home with comfortable majorities in the British election. E.H.C. (Ted) Leather, defend- ing‘ the seat of Somerset North. increased his majority to 6,783 from 4,313. Leather one of the original members of the 1st Cana- dian Parachute Battalion, was born in Toronto and grew up in Hamilton. Sir Beverley Baxter, also form- : tly of Toronto, had nearly 2,000 votes shaved off his majority in| | Southgate, a London constituency, but still had a 15,613 edge. AITKEN RETURNS The third Conservative, Bill Aitken, also dropped a little of his comfortable majority in Bury St. Edmunds. Aitken, a nephew of Lord Beaverbrook, was edu- cated in Toronto. Mrs. Verdun Perl, a Liberal candidate -born in Natal, B. C., was less fortunate and wound up bottom, of the poll in Abingdon. Berkshire. Mrs. Perl once played the violin in the Vancouver Sym- phony Orchestra. One result involving a Cana- dian-born candidate is expected! | to be known today. Robert Mc-} Gowan, 33-year-old professor ° of! Philosophy at Edinburgh Univer- sity, ran for Labor against Lib- eral leader Jo Grimond in Ork- ney and Shetland, a remote Scot- tish constituency McGowan, from Saint John and Fredericton, came to Brit- ain six years ago. { Trickery Bared In Quiz Shows WASHINGTON (AP)—Dan Enx-/ he helped decide which contest- Tic Tac Dough would be supplied with questions and answers in advance. Testifying before ‘congressional | investigators, Enright, former) co-owner of the show, corrobor- ated much of the program-rig- ging story previously told by Howard D. Felsher, who until last week produced the top-rated) Tic Tac Dough program. Felsher also said he tried to persuade contestants to lie to a grand jury. When Enright was .| asked if he thought this was pro- per the witness said he did not try to halt it. = condoned the practice , by my silence,” Enright said. ‘Please try to understand the terror and panie that besieged us those days.” Press@d for details on quiz show rigging, Enright called it‘a practice in effect “many, many | years." He insisted, however, that} many shows are not rigged or fixed. | government has under active con- ‘FISHERIES FEDERATION MEETS Leo Rossiter; provincial min- ister of fisheries prior to last nizht’s dinner at the annual meceiing of the organization. } left of. picture. R. T. Hager, Vancouver, president of the >t Island Like The Dew” A, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1959 “4 Plowman Is Third Ch ship Match CARL WILLIS, THE PRIDE OF ISLAND PLOWMEN 10 Peonie Die In Wall Of Flames As Big Tank Truck Crashes Into Bus NORTH BRUNSWICK, N. J.\a bus loaded with college girls atjand nine of the students and a (AP)—A big tank truck ‘tore into‘a rainswept crossroads Friday By DON PEACOCK Canadian Press Staff Writer (CP)—The Canadian Big Butter Shipment May Be Sent To U.K. sideration urgent requests from British butter dealers that some of Canada’s surplus butter be sold over there. But at the moment informed sources say it would be unwise ™.to make any bets on what the final decision will be. Should it be in favor of sending |butter to Britain, however, the y#\amount likely would run from | 10,000,000 to 20,000,000 pounds. Possibly the main considera? S tion now in the government's imind is the effect such a sale would have in Canada. The National Dairy council ‘wants butter prices reduced. | MIGHT SWITCH To do this the government could switch its support policy for butter to a deficiency payment, instead of buying it as it does now at a floor price of 64 cents a pound. The government would have w sell the butter it paid 64 cents a pound for at something like 50 cents a pound. Recent London — for butter from Poland, vew Zealand. Denmark, The Netherlands and Australia, ranged from 44 to 53 cents. The Canadian Association of Consumers, for one, takes strong cbjection to any such action. Comments Isabel Atkinson of Ot- tawa. association national presi- dent: “We are still opposed to poli- cies that involye the disposal any- where abroad at prices below that charged Canadian consum- ers. We feel the surplus is the re- sult of a price support that is un- duly high. The consumer suffers at both (tax-paying and butter- buying) ends.” MUST LOSE The government currently has on its hands about 100,000,000 pounds of butter. It can’t sell it at home because this would’ dis- ptinciple, under the present cir- cumstances it might be all right. Drought in Europe has caused a butter shortage in Britain. ics Canadian 14 PAGES Plowmen Place Second, Third ARMOY, Northern Ireland (CP Canadians Charles Bonney and} Carl Willis finished second and> fourth. third respectively world plowing contest, won by William Lawrence McMillan of Northern Ireland. Bonney is from Princeton, Ont., Willis from Cornwall, P.E.I.° McMillan, a 31-year-old County Northern Ireland’s Jack Barr, Friday in the} ; younger brother of three - times world champion Hugh Barr, was Barr’s chances of bringing the trophy back to the family mantle- piece. may have been seriously affected by a complaint lodged by a Norwegian steward claim- ing illegal assistance on the field, Completing the sweep for the * |Down farmer, brought’ Northern| Commonwealth, Engiand’s J. H. | |Ireland its fourth world plowing | Nott took fifth ‘place. Next in or- title in the seven-year history of | der were Nico Barendregt. of the * |the contest and captured the cov- | Netherlands, | | eted Golden Plow trophy. Edgar Davies -of England and Cornelius Vogelaar ot the Netherlands. Ed professor died in a wall of flames caused by the crash. The bus was one of two headed back to Trenton State College after a students’ outing to a play an New York. The collision trapped the screaming students. Girls tum- bled out of the bus, their dresses and hair aflame. Some panicked. | The driver had to throw some out on the road. Eleven girls and the driver of | the truck were injured. The truck, an empty paint and oil delivery vehicle, ignited from the burning gasoline spewed across the road and flames 20 to 30 feet high, swept the chartered bus. HAD SEEN J.B. Among the charred remains of theatre ,programs and _ ticket stubs from the Broadway play J.B., firemen found 10 bodies. One of them was. that of Prof. Ernest Sixta, the president of the faculty association. “Don't panic, don’t panic,” the history professor had called out. But, said bus driver Carmen Nini, 40, ‘“‘the kids got panicky and jammed up at the front door.”’ Forty girls, the professor and driver were on the ill-fated bus and 44 on the bus ahead. The truck plowed into the rear of the bus at about ‘35 miles an hour. The bus was knocked into the other lane and its.gas tank exploded. “It was e. big inferno,” said one fireman. “It looked like a 500- pound bomb had hit the bus.” Nini told how he had to shove panic-stricken girls out. of the flaming bus: “I opened the door and shoved Ike Moves ToEnd Yank Steel Strike By NORMAN WALKER WASHINGTON (AP)—With un- ion and industry hopelessly dead- jocked, President Eisenhower 2 | Friday set_in motion legal ma- = jchinery to temporarily end the §. | steel strike in the United States, ‘4 |now 87 days old. “If permitted to continue, this strike would imperil the national health and safety,” Eisenhower said. “The national interest dematids an immediate resumption of pro- duction in this vital industry.’ The president named a three- man fact - finding panel and in- —s it to report to him by 16. WEEK TO GO Since Eisenhower must have this report before he can seek a strike-ending court injunction un- der the Taft-Hartley labor law, the walkout may last at least an- other week and perhaps several days longer. The court order would send the | steel workers baek to work for 80 days. Unless a_ settlement is} reached during this “‘cooling off’ period, there is nothing to keep the strike from resuming—unless the government takes action. It was the second time this week that Eisenhower had in- |voked the Taft - Hartley law’s emergency provisions to halt a strike he said endangered the na- tional health and safety. He acted learlier to stop the along the U.S, eastern and -gulf coasts. The three named tothe steel inquiry panel are George W. Taylor, Philadelphia; John Perk- ins, Newark, Del., president of the University of Delaware, and Paul N. Lehoczky, Columbus, Ohio, chairman of industrial e- gineering at Ohio State Univer sity. Taylor and Lehoczky are sea- soned labor arbitrators: Perkins is an expert in political science, With a week to work, it was expected the panel may try to achieve a voluntary settlement while at the same time amassing data required for their report te Eisenhower. -~ The president said he was in- voking the Taft-Harley law in the steel strike with profound regret that the industry and striking steel workers hadn't been able te solve the dispute on their own, But both sides; Eisenhower said, have told him they saw noe hope for an early voluntary set- tlement. Nova Scotia Miners By DAL WARRINGTON Canadian Press Staff Writer HALIFAX (CP)—Nova Scotia! miners got-more bad news Fri day. Premier Stanfield told an emer- proposes to close three more col- kets. diggimg,coal it can’t sell, its min- ing eperations will be bankrupt! in a year or so. However, the premier said his! the mines only as a last resort. federal royal commission reports | on the industry. Mr. Stanfield will lead another a pack of them as hard as I could and they sprawled out. “Then I picked a couple of them off the floor of the bus,énd shoved them out into the Bos “T had to shove some kids out of the emergency door. When they were out, I jumped out of the emergency door my- self.” WHERE-TO-FIND-IT Births, deaths, etc., .... 2, 13 Classified section ...... 12, 13 Comics, features ..... séeng ae Charlottetown news ...... 5 eee gS, cusewasiec : Finance, markets . shacbidss 13 Island news ........-- 3 DONOR iio ccicdcccceses 8,9 Women’s page ......--.. 6,7 Conference By ROY LABERGE Canadian Press Staff Writer SUDBURY, Ont. (CP) — Some 1,300 Roman Catholics began the annual Catholie Social Life con- ference Friday night, a serious study of their church’s social teachings that continues until late Sunday night. The family is the theme of this year’s oer. of clergy and laity from all 10 provinces. The bishops, priests, brothers, nuns and lay delegates present will try to find ways of promoting Chris- tian ideals of family life in today’s living conditions. Keynote sermon was to be given by Archbishop J. Gerald Berry of Halifax, one of 19 bish- ops here, at the formal opening in the Sudbury arena. It was to fellow a pontifical low mats cele- brated by James Cardinal Mc- Guigan, archbishop of Toronto, government will accept closure of| President, Get More Bad News delegation ‘to Ottawa to seelt |more help from the federal gove ernment toward this end. He said Nova Scotia wil contribute its share of whatever aid may be needed. gency coal conference that Dom-| William Marsh, district 26 pres inion Steel and Coal Corporation ident of United Mine Workers — (Ind.), said: {lf three mines are lieries because of dwindling mar- | closed you'll see industrial war fare the like of which has never Dosco President Albert Fairley! . Jr. said unless the company stops, been seen in Cape Bretn.” Tae |miners had subsidized the in- ldustry for years with oub-stand= ard wages. Steve Dolhanty, UMW § vwice- said 3,000 miners would be put out of work and up Every effort would be made to| ‘to 15,000 people left without a keep all mines working until a| livelihood. Mr. Fairley said Dosco lost | $1,800,000 on its coal operations last year. Catholics Social Life ls Opened Lay people dominate the com ference numerically, outnumber: ing clergy about four to one, but the major speeches are to be de livered by bishops or priests. However, organizers plan te give everyone \a chance to par ticipate fully, After each main speech is delivered in plenary ses- sions at Marymount College. the audience members will. break up into small groups, discuss the speech and return to the mais session with recommendations. Conference organizers say full participation is important, for the annual conference is basically an adult education program aimed at giving Catholics a clearer under- standing of their church's social teachings as applied to current problems. From the discussions will com@ + ioe Meese to the Can» dian hierarchy.