NEW ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH AT IONA Rev. Leonard McKenna stands man Catholic church at Iona. just inside the communion rail | Behind him is the plain, mod- of the recently completed Ro- Hillsboro Bridge Repairs Said 50 Per Cent Redecking of the 2,500-foot Hillsboro Bridge across the Char- _ jdottetown Harbor was slightly - more than half completed when work ceased Saturday evening, County Construction engineer Norman Stewart said last night. Mr. Stewart said that the new: deck was about four inches low- er than the old deck due to the fact that the department of high- ways had decided not to replace a double set of stringers on which the original deck rested. These timbers which ran on each side from end to end did not add to the strength or dura- bility of the structure but mere- ly serve to raise the deck to the fevel of the railroad rails which Mr. Stewart said. Their elimina. . tion therefore saved needless ex- pense. He added that with favorable Weather today one crew would commence replacing the 18-feot = “titnbers in the swing span and the other would concentrate on the south end. This was necessary due to a shortage of the shorter 15-foot lengths, he said. In a signed statement Satur- day, Hon. Philip Matheson, min- ister of highways, said ‘“Weak- ened members have been discov- ered during the current repair program, and it will therefore be mecessary to restrict traffic un- til this work has been complet- ed.”” Recently two of the iron beams Truck Upsets, None Injured The combined efforts of two tow trucks were required to right a big Max semi-trailer truck that overturned on the highway at Johnston’s River between 3.30 and 9.00 p.m. Saturday evening. Frank Murphy of Murphy Bros., Charlottetown, whose towing ma- chines completed iheir task around noon yesterday said he believed that a locked steering mechanism had been the cause of the spill. Owner-driver Norris Kitson and one other passenger riding in the turnip-laden vehicle. were unin- jured in the spectacular mishap. LOCAL BRIEFS Only three cases were dispos- ed of in Queen’s County magis- trate’s court Friday evening. A tesident ef Emerald was fined $10 and costs or five days for speed- ing, while.two other accused, one from French River and one from Brookvale were each fined five dollars and costs or five days after pleading guilty to driving motor vehicles with defective equipment. { MAKING RECOVERY David Cudmore, three-year old son of Dr. Paul Cudmore and Mrs. Cudmore, Charlottetown is making a ‘satisfactory recovery following surgery which was per- formed last Friday in The Hospit- al for Sick Children in Toronto. Dr. Cudmore, who was with his son in Toronto, returns to Char- lottetown. tonight. | WATTS FUNERAL — The fu- neral. for Mrs. Elizabeth Re- becah Watts, wife of the late Huestis Watts was held Friday, from Zion Presbyterian Church, Charlottetown. Services were conducted by Rev. Donald Campbell. Hymns sung during the servite were, “Rock of Ages,” and “‘Abide with Me.” Pallbear- ers were George Carson, Walter Glover, Stuart MacKinnon, Gor- don MacKinnon, William MacKin- non. Interment was in Highfield Cemetery. ern-style high altar surmounted ip/\the old structure were found to. placed. This led to a belief that others had probably been weak- ened and a survey was immed- the extent of the deterioration. The _ weight trucks will remain in effect inde- finitely. When temporary closing of the bridge during daytime hours in order to replace the decking and cross ties was announced recent- ly transportation and oil compan- ies announced changed hours of service to fit into the 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. closed bridge schedule. Foundation Company workmen were making excellent progress —. Complete iately undertaken to determine | restriction on over the old bridge is practically fi Work Advances On Bridge Piers pletely destroyed by fire last January 6. Fiery (Continued from Page 1) en private enterprise to develop | a sound organization of the econ- /omy. A planned economy was | needed to establish priorities for goods and services. “The challenge we have to Although neither the minister | Meet is not from the tories—I de- nor-his deputy, Gordon White, spise them. They are neither in- F : .* | telligent nor moral. Why on earth were available for comment this, we should have—an—inferiority | weekend, qualified spokesmen ex-| complex ‘about them I don't pressed the belief that the sea-| know. lson of heavy truck movement| Because there are no resolution } : and no vote at the end of the con- erence, it is difficult to assess They said vibration from heay-| the effect the post mortem will lily loaded trucks travelling over | have on Labor's future. jthe old bridge which has been in) GAITSKELL, BEVAN' STRONG | place for 55 years caused a speed| Gaitskell’s prestige probably jlimit of 15 miles to be placed om| was enhanced. With the notable |traffic-some months ago. Pound-| exception of the powerful Trans- ing of heavy trucks at high speed| port Workers Union headed by they stated, caused a breaking |eft-winger Frank Cousins, most ‘up of the deck planking. trade union leaders backed him in brief speeches. : At the same time it appears | that Bevan’s masterful oratorical by a statue depicting St. Mic- hael, patron of the church. The previous church was com- | |ended for this year. CITY -NEWS PAGE The Guardian, Charlottetown, Mon, Nov. $0, 1959. 5 Foolish Drivers Bane - ce Court A fine of $20 and costs or Southport resident convicted stop for a red traf- eR” Ei engi hi 22 ah f a x, z. R i i if i e persons charged with and incapable, all one was given a 3 oft g : ¢ g 7 # 10 days in jail was meted out to. p- ° Decision The appeal of Hugh Campbell, Tracadie was dismissed by the full bench of the Appeal Court, sitting in Charlottetown Friday. The judgment the appellant received in the lower court was confirmed. Campbell had originally been convicted by Magistrate Gilbert Gaudet, on the charge of valaw- ful possession of a quantity of wash suitable for manufacture of | spirits, for which he had been giv- ton six months in Queens County By: Appeal Court Upheld appealed the conviction and at a hearing before Mr. Justice George J. Tweedy the appeal was dis- a and the conviction up- A second appeal was then lod- ged, through his counsel Allison Gillis, and this was heard by the full bench. In the summations de- livered by each of the justices, |! Chief Justice Thane A. Camp- bell and Mr. Justice Tweedy up- held the previous ruling of Mr. Tweedy, while Mr. Justice Mark jail and a fime of 4500. In default | tional six months was imposed. of payment of the fine an addt- | The convicted man had theni R. McGuigan dissented and held that the judgment was wreng and that the appeal should be al- lowed. ‘Grammy Awards tine business was transacted dur- ing this meeting which was well - attended despite the bad weather vrevailing “ BUMPER HARVEST To Be Presented By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD (AP) — The in-| statuettes, golden replicas of old- | cant recording academy takes ajfashioned phonographs. Some of | step into the bigtime tonight with |the musical bits have been taped ‘an awards telecast featuring the because of performers who could | |best the disc industry can offer.|not be present tonight. lor New York to collect their | PEKING (Reuters) — Peasants in central China’s Honan prov- ince reaped a bumper harvest this year after a three - month battle against one of the worst ple’s Daily said Saturday. NEWSPAPER MAN DIES PORT COLBORNE (CP)— Harry J. Shore, 70, past presi- sentence, an- and costs or 10 days and the third was given a fine of $5- and costs or two M. O’Holloran of Greenfield en- | days “The Church and Credit Un- ions’”” will be the subject of an address delivered this evening by Donald Smith, assistant director of policyowner relations, CUNA Mutual Society, Hamilton, Ont. A prominent layman of the United Church, Mr. Smith will be the guest speaker at the an- nual meeting of Fellowship Credit Union at Trinity Church, Char- lottetown, this evening. Mr. Smith is .a member of the board of stewards, Centenary Church, Hamilton. He is chair- man of Hamilton Presbytery U. C. lay speakers’ committee and was recently appointed to a special committee of the board of men dealing with Christiarity and daily work. Well known throughout Prince Edward Island, Mr. Smith has done extensive work among most of the credit unions in the province. His visit to the Island today will mark the conclusion of a Maritime tour of eredit un: tons—in—tha area 7 CUNA Officials To Address Fellowship Credit Union DONALD SMITH | This is Grammy, newly-born | finst counsin to Oscar and Emmy. | Although the recording industry outdates movies and television, its members never got around to rewarding its best achievements until the spring of this year. Somewhat belatedly, the Acad- emy of Recording Arts and Sci- ences gave out its 1958.Grammies (named for gramophone) at a private affair. Now the 1959 awards are due and will get an NBC network spread in the Sunday at 8 spot. There's not as much hush-hush about the Grammies:as there is for the two elder award affairs. The reason is that the winners will be on hand to sing and play the numbers that got them the ‘dent of the Ontario provincial dailies and a former director of Thomson newspapers~ died Fri- day. He was~manager of The Evening Tribune from 1929 until Lower Trend ill health forced his retirement in Is Reported [i By THE CANADIAN PRESS i The increasing toll of highway || mast inexpensive traffic deaths contrasts with a lower trend of deaths per 100,000; salesman you can employ are: | i motor vehicles, it is shown in| statistics presented by the Cana-' GUARDIAN - PATRIOT Driving Week” Dec. 1 to 7. In 1936, the 1,316 :traffic deaths | were 106.1 per 100,000 vehicles. | The death total reached 2,086 in| big prize. Among them: Van Cli- burn, Kingston Trio, Bobby Darin, Shelley Berman, Duke FI- Zilington, Mormon Tabarnacle | choir, Ella Fitzgerald, Jonah | Jones quartet, Jimmy Driftwood, | Nat King Cole. 7|APPROPRIATE EMCEE Tying all this talent together will be emcee Meredith Willson, %iwho is not: sure why he was chosen. “I think they wanted someone who wouldn't. be funny, so they chose me,”’ he suggested. ' The choice of Willson is an-apt one. He received the first Grammy ever presented, for the | foriginal cast album of The Music 1946, which was 109.8 per 100,000! vehicles. The peak traffic death | total of 3,693 in 1957 was 83.8 per | 100,000 vehicles. On the same /| basis, the rate was down to 75/| in 1958. 5 SAINT ANDREW DINNER under the auspices of The Caledonian Club Of Prince Edward Island | dian Highway Safety Conference | WANT AD in connection with the 1959 “Safe- | Phone 8506 performance, while maintaining party unity, also strengthened his position. Nikita Attends | Hungary Parley steel debris left on the bottom | when the 160-ton casing at the | By ANTHONY PEARCE BUDAPEST (AP)—Soviet Pre-| Canuck Soldier Is Killed In Gaza UN headquarters in New York City. Latest reports said Tpr. Al- lan suffered wounds early Satur- day while on patrol and died en ‘He: said that most of the win- ners will be on hand in Hollywood in drilling the necessary grouting | north pier collapsed im a heavy| passages in the partially-com- tide several-weeks ago. : pleted south pier of the new Hills-| Forced to work in a prone posi- ‘boro Bridge it was learned re-jtion due to the force of the cur- mier Khrushchev arrived Sunday to attend the first full-scale con- gress of the Hungarian Commu- liably Saturday. It is hoped that by passing cement through tubes inserted in the drilled passages defective areas im the structure can be fill- ed satisfactorily. Meanwhile, company divers were working under difficulties in an attempt to clear away the “For more than 100 years, the Anglican Church has been active in promoting the welfare and hap- piness of the Eskimos in the Arc- tic,” Rt. Rev. D.B. Marsh, DD, the Bishop of the Arctic said as he preached at the 11 a.m. ser- vice in St. Paul’sAnglican Church on Sunday. “Several missions aTe respon- sible for an area greater than the Diocese of Nova Scotia,” he i out. Fanning out from the original post on Baffin Island, the Diocese of the Arctic swings in an arc across northern Canada enclos- ing a population of approximate- ly 9,000 of whom more than 30 per cent are Anglicans. Aklavik, the largest of the 15 districts serv- ed, in the census of 1951, made by the RCMP had a populaiion of 1,080. The development of symbols’ as +a written language has made pos- sible the printing and distribution TORONTO (CP) — Fullback Charlie. Shepard of Winnipeg Blue Bombers, a 210-pound, six- p with one of the greatest kicking performances in the history of the east-west football final. The 26-year-old import from North Texas State College and Pittsburgh Steelers scored 10 points. He crashed over for the winning touchdown from three yards out and kicked four sing- les in the fourth ‘quarter Bombers’ 21-7 victory over Hamilton Tiger-Cats. He did a tremendous punting job, with four quick-kicks par- ticularly rocking the Ticats back on their heels. His boom- ing spirals in all but the third quarter kept driving the east- ern champions back into their own end of the field and his quick-kicks each fime caught them by surprise. These sent Hamilton men racing back in foot-two-inch Texan, was ‘voted | the outstanding player in Satur- | ay’s Grey Cup game. He came | jrent and working by touch only lin the murky darkness, the div- lers, operating in half-hour shifts | succeeded in fixing a rigging with which the twisted remains of the casing will later be skid- ded into deeper water dnd thus j make room for new construction early next spring. Bishop Of Arctic Describes Area And Life In Northland of the New Testament among the Eskimos and the acceptance of Christianity as a way of life he said. New leaders are picked from natives who have already proven their worth among the people, the speaker added. ‘Eskimos don't cheat and don’t lie. They take their Christian ac- ceptance very seriously, refer- ring to a white man who cheats or lies as a “queer white man,” the speaker said. Questioned as to his “new life’’ and, any for- mer acceptéd habits a Christian Eskimo will say ‘As soon as I accepted Christ, evil had no pow- er over me,” the bishop declared. A most cordial welcome was extended Bishop Marsh by the Rector of St. Paul’s, Ven. Arch- deacon Ibbott. Bishop Marsh was also the preacher at the 5. p.m. service in St. Peter's Anglican Cathedral and at St. John’s Mil- tont at p.m. All. services ..were largely attended. FULLBACK CHARLIE SHEPARD, IS OUTSTANDING PLAYER © desperation to try to retrieve the bouncing ball. Shepard, key man in the Bombers’ block-busting back- field, also was the leading Win- nipeg ground-gainer, barrelling for 54 yards on 16 carries to round out a brilliant individual effort. He .was chosen top player by sports writers and broadcasters | | and beat out Winnipeg quarter- back Kenny Ploen and veteran middle guard Vince Scott of the Tiger for the award on the 3-2-1 poj voting basis. The Winnipeg backfielder will be | presented with a sports car by a British automobile company here today. Shepard, in his third year in Canadian football, kicked times for an average of 44 yards, four more than Cam Fraser’s average for Hamilton on 16 punts some short kicks when he Was rushed, had bad snaps to con- tend with or punted against the wind 17 | The Winnipeg punter. got off nist party since the 1956 anti-Sov- iet uprising. The congress opening today 1s scheduled to discuss the uprising, crushed by Soviet tanks. Khrush- chev is expected to make an im- portant speech some time before the sessions end Thursday. As Khrushchev, accompanied by his wife, Nina, appeared in the doorway of the TU-104 jet air- liner, a crowd of about 500 broke into enthusiastic applause. Khrushchev doffed. his hat and waved it. Janos Kadar, Commu- jnist party leader, stepped for- ward to greet Khrushchev. The Soviet leader embraced him and} | planted kisses on both cheeks. | There was no band and no guard of honor. Bat little Hungar- ian girls, dressed in the uniform jof youth pioneers, presented |Khrushchev and his wife with jbouquets of red roses. The |Khrushchevs then walked along- |side the crowd, followed by clap- ping and cheering. LEADERS ATTEND et 3 The Charlottetown Hotel tified the soldier as Tpr. Ronald | Hawthorne Allan of Halifax, a) member of the Royal Canadian Dragoons Reconnaissance Squad- | ron serving with the United Na-| tions Emergency Force. | Full. details of the encounter which led to his death were not available either in Ottawa or at’ STOVE FUEL OIL PETROLEUM PRODUCTS GRAFTON ST. EAST PHONE 6610 Albert L. Thomas | DAILY FROM 5 P.M. Rendezvous Restaurant Charlottetown OTTAWA (CP) — A Canadian |Tute to a UNEF hospital. NO DISHES | Tonight, Nov. 30th at 7 p.m. soldier was killed Saturday when| He was buried Sunday in the | TO WASH he was ambushed on the United |G4248 War Cemetery after a fu-/| | zs serve i! Nations patrolled Gaza strip be-| "eral service at the Protestant | |’ when you | Guest Speaker tween the hostile countries of Is-|Chapel at Rafah in the Gaza) | CHICKEN m me ROUGH oc. | The H Dr George Dewor jrael and the United Arab Repub- | Strip. : Se et aan I lie. ee ae s wife,. Mrs. Gail | PHONE 4935 r an, resides at Army. headquarters here iden- | vale Street, Halifax. o 8 FREE DELIVERY Rev. Donald will address THE HAGGIS Highland Dancing by Miss Marsha Wellner r—) Pipe Selection by Miss Brenda imu’ Make This A with a Gift from ‘BRACE McKAY LTD Summerside “Chairful Christmas” SHOPPING HOURS | Hungarian officials at the air- jnort included Premier Ferenc} Muennich, deputy party leader | Gyoergy Marosan and Foreign) | Minister Endre Sik. i The Khrushchev party then' drove away in a motorcade to) the government's guest house, a} hillside villa in the Buda section | of the Hungarian capital. Secur-| ity -precautions for the- Soviet: leader’s ‘visit were inconspicaous and relaxed, j The visit had been kept secret | locally. Neither newspapers nor Budapest radio had given the lo- cal population any indication that he was coming. No official an-| nouncement of any sort has el made. | iaasicde | MOSCOW (AP) — Premier Nik- | lita Khrushchev addressed a con- vention of builders of electric |power stations Saturday before | taking off for Budapest. Moscow | | Radio reported Khrushchev spoke | |for 1'2 hours and was applauded | | frequently but gave -no hint of) |what he said. | Khrushchev returned to Mos-' ;cow Friday from Gagra on the | Black Sea coast, where he~had| been resting for 10 days. | His visit to Budapest coinci ‘with the raising anew of the! | question of the 1956 Hungarian uvrising in the United Nations | General Assembly. Khrushchev | recently upbraided the» Western | powers for criticizing Soviet aid | said the Hungarian people were happy about the Russian gesture | and about their relationship with | the Soviet Union. CALIFORNIA DROUGHT | SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — For | the 7ist day in succession no rain fell on San Francisco Satur- day.. Churches asked San Fran- , ciscoans to pray for rain. 121 Grafton St. nae Ere “One thin dollar will until Christmas. We'll hide # for you ‘sil Christmas. , Happiness Is Our . Business LAYAWAY NOW hold any tem g Be wise, buy now... 3 3 JEWELLERS LTD Dial 4253 ER POLI For The Week Of Nov. 30 to Dec. 5 | Mon., Tues., Wed., Thurs. 8.30 a.m. to 5.30 p.m. Fri., Sat. (Night Shopping) 8.30 a.m. to 9.30 p.m. Future Night Openings Will Be Announced Later PROWSE BROS. LTD. es, The Store For The Whole Family . 98 Queen St. The Store For The Whole Family Dial 8583 oem KR KRM MEK KKK Ke KK Kw * The loving ie ~ what every man should know... next to you, she likes furs best! There are full length coats, x vefore! a ; , Danny jackets and stoles in mink, China mink, Russian Kol- insky, beaver, Persian lamb, grey Kidskin and muskrat ,all awaiting your discriminating selection! — ipfilts cheerfully EXCHANGED island -furriers Itd. 79 Grafton St. | Dial 6923 i < . laughing . . x The laughter...the loving...the happy living of a wonderful guy Kaye 4TO-DAY - TUES. - WED. JH 4K HK HHH HK KKK — ————— Sc se ~ FEATURE STARTS DAILY AT 3:30 —7—9 CAPITOL .*THIS IS A WONDERFUL PICTURE !* . upside-down living of the unpredictable guy who raised his daughter with jazz for a lullaby and his Five Pennies—Glenn Miller, Dorsey, Goodman and the rest—for baby-sitters! A wonderful human story, loaded with wonderful entertain ment—and Danny’s wonderful as never * *