.. .; ssos with Guerr- idlanv Want Ads; Dial" 8506 ask for classified ad taker, for qulclr results. ' lo PAGES & Sewerage A Authorized By City Council a At the City gouncil meeting held yesterday afternoon considerable discussion centred Irollllt the Vital problem of the City Ind 5'15"!- ban areas including Parkdale and spring put, in regard to sewer- ,g.'.nd water services. As I re- suit the resolution was mtroduced by the Metrowmen Committtce comnrllins Dem! "8 yo! A.W. Gaudet and Councillor E.C. Johnston. --1-hag w,H, Crandall, profession- .1 engineer of Moncton, N.B.. be engaged immediately by til! Olly of Charlottetown to carry out a mpogrsphical water and sewer- ”. gunpy of the Clt of Charlotte- town and its subur an area. cluding the villages of Parkdala and Spring Park. and to prepare . W;-men report including com- parative estimates of costs of both separate and integrated Water Illll sewerage systems. and a. design for whichever may be agreed up- on, said survey to be commenced by October 15. 1956 and said re- port to be submitted to this Coun- cil no later than January 15. 1951. the laying of the necessary cul- vert to service the Deslirlssay Crescent Park and playground pro- posed by the Charlottetown Kins- men Club, together with the prov- ialan of the necessary fill thereof, tobeprocaedsdwithasthefirst item of capital expenditure in 1967. Colin. Jchnrtons gave a review of the expenditures of the various City departments and urged the heads of all committees to look in to their expenditures and to budget very carefully for the rertsalndc of the year. ' 9111111! the presentation of he report on the Police Dsputlnent by Coun. Gormley, Ilia .Worshlp in, expressed concern regarding the apparent increase in the number of small breaks during recent weeks. Conn. Gonnley said it was hardly possible for the night shift to be able to cover the city properly with lust one vehicle and suggested that they should also have a prowl car. roucs: nurncvl.-ms g Conn. MacDonald said he collid- not understand how two policeman suchawayastobe'ahlc,toprevust such breaks. He suggested that a shortage of manpower .might he a, contributing factor. thus making easy for such delinquents to carry on their operations. ' Repairs of a capital nature were authorised to be made to the sea- wal at Victoria Park continuing wcstwardly from the new con- crete structure started dllfllll the gimme, the distance act to exceed eel. ' The tflnder Kit Add. Whiilgrk was accep 01' E V?0V'llllI. Ind. to prisoners in police cells at a rate of 50 cents per meal. The City Clerk was authorised gin to call for tender to provide the Police Force with pea jackets and also to call for tenders to supply the police department with a pat- rol car, coach model. The final resolution granted a three months leave of absence to Counc. MacDonald emaciated Coun. O'Neill to act as chairman of the Public Property Commlttta during his absence. All councillors were present at the meeting which was presided with copies of same for the said vailagce of Parkdale and Spring mid mllhlv cover the city in over by Mayor Stewart. Park. at a cost notto exceed ten thousand dollars; Said report be sasisttheci Charlottetown and tissue of the residents of such subur- baaareaetoarrlve atthamost practical and fsasable solution to their common problems." of the laysrl until the g bgsgain approached IDNDON (Reuters -- Britain btainad and France Monday night began to draft a new approach to the Suez problem after reacting coldly to Egypt's call for an interna- tional conference on the subject. A spokesman for the British for- eign office said that Egyptts pro- posal for talks with a representa- tive iworld body on the future of ' the Suez Canal "does not appear to suggest any basis for negotia- tion." Unofficial comment in Paris was on the same lines. ? the-lth .t"lI-laid-"1 Th ti ff. dfrons feel that the is should so ahead cm: ,lil7,f,',,",':,';,”'.',, '3; ”u,,,,,,, WM 3" l"d'"hl9 Nations secretary-general land all governments of the world except In-ael. ruled out international control of the canal. DXDHNIXTITIP :- hm: &I:I!l”iltIllOs who w Cairoas the head-of a live-man '31,".-miulu to explain the plan. flaw chm, he.d.dby cu” blck in London Monday to MPG! tall . , mm ' W” ” "" c""”” "M lo"? arrival coincided with a "next-step” ccnf between near risaycrescent intoe ”"'" wmumd pug ad p1,,n.oud' . Prime Minister Eden of Britain ,m1mo.'Mghmdub'um. and Prllk Guy Mallet of paredtoapendtlte sumoftse thousand dollars. arr. Stewart mini"!- mgmmmgummm dispvutetothsUnitcdNa- . guy”;-g gnu-.,a.. ticns. the circumstances in which now exists and level off tbstluymlshtconslderit seem: ground. tcuaeforcesndthclra tudato Tbsclnbwollldtakesverfromlhi employment in! Eli?! Oi thettudplacetopmvj-.lamllrlchandlritish canalpilote. soapothssrssandlsseultas he Esyvtian proposal. rc- Dllnrmlndwhichwonidssnethelessed short-lrlmr Memiolhld sorth-west sectioi of the city. left Cairo. said the Egyptian gov- Thecouncilconcilrredandpase arnment believed solutions "by Thsimcthodsofpsaesful " Plan New Moves In Suez Crisis should be found to these use tlona: 1. Freedom and safety organ- ixation in the canal. 2. Development of the canal to meet future requirements of nav- igation. 3. Establishment of "just and equitable tolls and charges." it urged that "a negotiating body should be formed which would be representative of the different views held among states using the suns Canal and that dis- cussions should take place forth- with to settle the composition. venue and data of meeting of such a body." 3. tional waterway. The note said so far there been no, negotiations with -a statement reflecting N refusal to recognise the status the Menzies committee. ruled out p Otllerwilmhe salththeliwkilb priorucondltiohzsym the proposed -1leal.soseidthat!g'ypt.bcing ansamberoftheUnltsdNationl. wouldaotheadvsrse tor being referred to When asked by a reporter whether Egypt would accept a adverse UN ruling - Winnipeg jumped a few seconds A-:'A'.Covers 1'1-ilnee Like 7710 De w” 'arzl . WN. CANADA.' TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 11, 1955 Hard-Luck ' Diesel Has 2 Accidents POBTAGE la PRAIRIE. Man. (CP)-A flame-blackened diesel IDCWIDUVE. the hcadcnd section of the CPR's crack trans-cosi tluental. The Canadian. which col- lided with I scsoline truck at e lml cro-sins neu here Monday. was involved in a second collision about five hours later. . The damaaed diesel was being pushed into Winnipeg for repairs after it had smashed into the gas- ollne truck. killing the truck driver and injuring the woman locomotive crew. ""3 reports said tllc diesel apparently so: loose from the en- mier Slnallwood announced Mon- day night a Newfoundland gen- eral electlon will be hr-.ld'Tuesday day, Oct. 2. Nomination day will be Saturday. Sept. 22. He spoke over the first pro- hoolrup after returning by special plane from Corner Brook on the west coast of the island. Mr mallwood promised New- 9 Pushing it and rammed into . fcundlandcrs a 1956 election in a speech the rear of an east-bound freight train at Raeburh, 20 miles east of here. The caboose and two freight cars were derailed but no one was injured, In the first collision. William Roncylr. ii-year-old father of five, of St. Boniface, Man, was killed as the cab of his truck was shat- tered and the gasoline tank ex. ploded showering the diesel of The Canadian with burning gas- ollne. Engineer Joseph Alphonse Lan- gevin, 61. of Winnipeg ignored the flames to halt the train before lumping clear. Diesel helper John Fe.” and Rotllenberger. 31, of last December. Newfoundland will be the fifth province to hold a general elec- tion this ycar. New Brunswick. Quebec and katchcwan voted in June. British Columbia will do so Se 19 Neither of Newfoundlend's t'wc opposition parties - Progressive Conservatives nor CCF-have an- nounced their platforms for the election. only twice slrlce Confederation have more provincial elections been held in one year. In 1886, all seven provinces voted; in 1890. sis. Five provincial elections fell in 1878, 1908, 1912 and 1952. PC STATEMENT COMING before the train stopped. Both were picked up born the water- fllled ditch. Malcolm Hollett. leader of the Progressive Conservatives. said a policy statement would follow soon after the election date was announced. Present standing in the lines: is: Liberals 17; Progressive Gon- servatives four; CCF one; vacant six. Liberals emerged from the last election. Nov. 26. 1951, and lllblequeni by-elections with 28 out of 23 seats. Since 1951 one Progressive Con- servative and live Liberals have resigned and another Liberal. White Bay member Samuel Dro- ver, left the ranks to become the only CCF member. Frank Fogwlll. member for St. John's East, was the only Oppogl. tlon member to resign. Liberal resignations were Dr. H. L. Pot- tle (Carbonear-Bay De Verde), Morgan (Green Bay), Gordon Jane: (F030). and Max Button (Trinity south). NEW SYSTEM Newfoundland voters live in 1,300 communities scattered along 6.000 miles of coastline. Under the system used in previous elec- rlrru province to vote mus YEAR lid- Provincia 'ls Scheduled For Oct. . JOHN'S. Nfld. (CP)-Prc- lions. set forth in the Election Act of 1913, polling boses were sealed and brought to a central This resulted in delays of several weeks or more in getting the final count from isolated districts. Under a new act passed in 1955. returning officers at each poll in this election will wire or phone results to district officers as soon after polls close as possible. This may involve waking or rowing four or five miles to the nearest communications office. District officers will wire pro- greslve counts from polls to Nehemiah Short. chief electoral officer. The teletype in his office will begin chattering soon after the 12-hour polllng day closes at 8 p.m. "By midnight we will have per- haps t!) to 90 per cent of the count." he sayd. "Maybe even more."' Results of the last election were not complete until late December that year, and the Labrador poll- ing was deferred until the follow- ing summer. Under the House of Assembly I gle riding! besides the of 8 seats. lugs eparate district. Mary's. CANDIDATES tlon candidates named to Ad 0! 1932. 2'! membe s were Later I single Labrador riding was added to bring th etctal to point before votes were counted. 3. Labrador, like White Bay. has been split into north and south riding: under the new set passed in 1955. The act provides 34 sin- double riding of Harbor Main til I total Under the old act. St. John's East was divided into two double rid- . Now there are five single ridings, dividing the city into north. east. south, west and cen- tre. The Grand Falls constituency has been split to make Gander I Bell. Island. formerly included with Harbor Main has become a separate constitudncy. Placenta- St. Mary's on the south coast has become Placentia East and St. St. Georges-Port Au Port on the west coast has been split. Following is the list of opgog ! . present riding if'any in brackets: Progressive Conservatives: D.I. Harbor John's South; Opposition Leader (St. Wcst- St. Jolufa West; OCF: Island; W. J. Parsons. Burgeo La Polls; Stanley Atkins, Carbonearh Bay Dc Verde; Israel Goa. Han- bor Grace; Esau Thorns, Placen- tia East Austin Collett, Pacers- tia West: John Foley. St. Mary's: Lloyd Smith, Trinity North; Gil- bert Simms, W..itc Bay North; Sam Drover (White Bay Whlta Bay South. Michael Hawco will contest Bdl Island as an independent. A CPR spokesman said none of the passengers was injured. Fire raged through the first unit of the two-lmit diesel for two hours before it was extinguished Charged In Police Court Yesterday Charged with the possession of an offensive weapon. a local Chin- ese resident was I ded until this morning. by Magistrate K. M. Martin. The charge arose out of Democra PORTLASD. Me. (AP) Maine. long deemed a Ilepub llcaa fortress, Monday returned its Democratic governor to a second term. Gov. Edmund S. Muskie. 42, trounced GOP House speaker Willis A. Traftoa to become the first governor of his party to he Maine Re-elects ' tic Gov. re-elected in a presidential you -at least since the Civil War. In 468 of 080 precincts Muskie had 82,080 votes to Ts-aftoa's 86.067. Republicans re-elected Con- lrcssman Clfford G. Mcintirc is the third district and Hseir candidates were ahead h the first and second. Restaurant on Great George The accused. gem lfue. swarm ac tint ss'hnins. after ,1 monoiiidr) "L Prentiss-A F n-by W called for e mssttatiif provis- trial and -federal gcyernmaats; the l M” .”.u,h':. on an dock” Dominion coal board. manage- m-.. M mm” of wmuh ment and union to assess the conlltl l status of thh Nova Scotls coal in- dustry. delegates to the Nth .United Mina workers . , the meeting could seek improvements in coal min- ing operations which appear to have, gained a measure of stabil- ity in recent years. :. No stone mould be left unturned the premic said to give anybody interested an opportunity be ad- vance the industry which em- ploys about men. He suggested the conference re- "This is rather premature." he replied: tan View "general policy". not wage contract negotiations which were in the union-management field. INDUSTRY HELPED President Tom McLachlan of District 26 said Maritime miners had gone along with substandard wages and co-operated in la creased production during the in- dustry's most difficult period and now must share in improvements. "If markets are not available. the responsibility must be placed on the federal government" through the Dominion coal board he said. The board controls lub- ventions and importation of coal. Hicks Calls For Meeting, To locks sf. Nova pumm- suceeis lines past year, ML. "hut noteuoilllt" p Mayor I. G. G of ofilcially welcomed Nova Scotla Hanging Delayed FOt'-:l3ll't Time QUEBEC (CP -- Execution rt Ovila Boucher, convicted of the axe-slaying of an elderly Syrian merchant June 8, 1051, was post- poned Mondsy for the will time. The husky St. lialri-De-Levis blackunith was to be hanged Fri day. Because of an appeal from his third convictl now is pending before the Supreme Court of Can- ada he was granted a stay of execution to Oct. 3. Mr. Justice J. F. Gibaone of Quebec Superior Court ordered the execution at the request of Crown prosecutor Paul Miquelnn. Bouchcr was arrested a few days after the body of Georges Jariour was found in his dry goods shop adjoining his home. olicc alleged the motive of the He said representations to the board had been made by the tan crime was . robbery. STURGIS. M. (AP - Seven- Negce sutdents attended class at ends? White Students Staying Away From School In Race Quarrel -school and was told "they'll never shouted. gatliggem in there with our chil- dru Gen. Williams said he didn't know yet whether guardarnen would be sent to Clay. Ilrlicr. l-lackctt talked with lane of 'the crowd gathered at the road leading up to the Clay "Let them go to their own s&oIs," another said. "We're ovdaowded here as it is. ' Aa elderly man passed out a Uvtwrltten sheetmwhgltll he eel "lxylmna our at! Y." no datement reds:-ring to the lltll llsendment said ”when the that Qat secnd freedom I ehooeeeaeu associates. wcteti""” jnstiflll all peecefsi ,' t-hhdIedun.". tauslng assnehprcscrve rros-arenas oaajsaldihcrewoeldbs Saskatchewan. and all-s. Douglas are J t C l the erat.ionChamherattheProvlacial gains mainl- ulslled Vieltos-s'Book in the ConIad- W. Mathelon ( vlsirorsi nines-comm nos.r.c.nwsi-nrrunlsssrnuudlnsuniius-spit-on allycon- dascudtonrysstuday-oftbe-hie ltoricen PrcsnlarA. lierthevislterswese llcft).l:ar- son.AssistantD shownplacee valliurseu. lodintarestinthecity-alalthaeb jeccnt countryrsidc. Experimental arm, y Nichol- irectorottltsrrao MONTREAL (CP)-The power- ful Canadian Chamber of Com- merce proposed Monday that the CBC be placed under a separate regulatory body for radio and TV but ran into tough questioning before the royal co on on 2. A brief from the Quebec broadcasting. Federation of Home and School in " t"t' saidthereshouldbe 1. The Montreal branch of the Societe St. Jun Baptiste called for federal leglalathn enabling the provinces to set up radio and television networks, a field new strictly under federal jurisdiction. 3 the chambers spokesmen heavily on its contention that the CBC is in unfair competition with private stations and that the CBC board of governors is hamstrung in a "conflict of interests” between its own operations and those of pri- vste stations. The debate came on a chamber brief recommending that s separ- ate. iatoybodybesctupio govern Canadian broadcasting. including both the CBC and pri- vate radio stations. Commission chairman R. K. said h i s of inquiry from one want to 3- other. WRONG PRINCIPLE Chamber spokesmen epuld sep- no changs in the existing broad- cast situstion that might curtail the capscl'y of the CDC to carry out its responsibilities. I. The Quebec Women's lis- stitutas. consisting of English- spealdng rural organisations. said networks of private stations on both radio and TV should be encouraged. 4. A group of French-language writers - the Soclste Des Eeri- lire lift is set” ATOUGH oursrlomno av COMMISSION C. C. C. Wants Separate Control For Radio 8; TV "If there is this unfairness. 1 would have , 4 t something he show up sooner or later before us. we've been asking questions for three months. We've asked for an example. We-haven't had it yet." Mr. Macklaier told the com- missioners he had no partlclslg instances in mind but that chamt was talking about basic principles. - To complaints of the chamber spokesmen about private stations suffering through having to take CBC network programs willy - nllly. Mr. Fowler said: "If we have been having all this evil you're talking abau would 't. people be getting out or-ll? If the system ts so badastobeapttoieadtourr fairness, couldn't you point out some examples?" Mr. Maeklsler said he agrees with the idea that there must be . gnlatlcn of hroadcan "but we don't like the principle of having the CBC compete with those it -governs." . By and large, he said. the CDC board of I