PAGE EIGHT THE EASTERN GUARDIAN T AGENTS:-MONTAGUE: Harold F. Landry, Mrs. Byron Stewart. AGENT GEORGETOWN: Weldon Lavers. The Guardian may be bought at Blue Dome ltestaurlnt. and Guardian Office; in Sourls: The Snack Bar. The Post. Office: ....'ltlNG'S MILL, Montague, Iuying legs, 10 feet 2 Inches long mly. .."DON'T FAIL to attend the ':l'edll Union Celebration at Morell. )ctobev' 14th. 8 P. M. Speakers and mlsical programme WNSTITIYTE concert. Yl-ois Fltealre, Montague, November liith, and 19th. Singing. dancing, instrumental selections and read- U127. ,'II:.'S. tmil:l1l'l The Lads mri Lassles Plpr Rfillfl will he at lion's Tlientrr Songs and dances, 'l(-lIf' of ranllv. Spnnsoled by the ,1 3.0.1”. Pl (H lwds for school )llZ6S and cnninlillllty welfare. .."l'L'G ARRIVES- The tug boat El-n Livot arrived ill Montague v-xtei-day from Bay Clialeur, N. B. i:fhll'nscnw's and dredging equip- Vic"! The drcdgze N1. 9 is exprcied fl nmve llFl'? shortly being towed m-r from Canipbellton, N. B.. by hp, tug boat Canso It, is under- ltond that the dredge will clear 'mr shcals in the river channel ullll ofiier work to be '11-11,: IS the first day of ,lve original Tlckall One Cent Sale I' the Xiabon DFUR Cc.. Mon- nzue. Ramr blades. shaving -it-.ln;.. lnlivul-. tooih pastes. -rmlll hrllslins, and various home cnicrlll-es arc anion: the hundreds 1., arlxcrtlscd it:-ms you save on -11. R:-sail fall One Cent. Sale. you ran hu,i' two for the price al onrv, pills one rcni. on W'rd- rwzclzli. Tllllrsrlmx Friday "lid QillllI'(I'rH, (Iiil0l'lEll' Hill in l7lh. Be there and save. Personals .'Goi'don MacNelll, fourth year student at PW.C.. spent the holi- rim" week-end at the home of his pnrerits. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur .KlacNelll, Montague .'Mrs. Lincoln MaoKonzie. Lo- gan. Ohio, is the guest of her bl-other-in-law. Mr. Malcolm Mac- Kenzle and Mrs. MacKenzie, Mont- ague. .'l-its many friends will regret 1., ll-3,;-n that Mr. William Dewialaj. the' Wilden:-'1, is a patient in King's County Hospital. 'Misg Audrey Macbean. Mon- tague. is e patient in the King's fiounty Hospital. Her many friends wish her at speedy rocovery. iitnclllli- Ll-:iiTllllls Are your leg pains like a knife drivinx through the flesh? Do they make it hard Inr ynl! to -traixlllen .Vr)ilf'lE1z?TIlf:l'l63nd5 rommnu-mi 'loliifi19i""'5 T',R4- f "Tr (1,...-k (clip: of IWIFIVITIX, stnhhlnlz 5d'rII'lC pain. You too. run get it-llct Vl')Lh T-R-L 0. (.53 51.33 ,-.i .1.-in cnuntrrs. 1-I33 the following places In Montague in Georgetown: fice of Dr. Maclntyre, Montague, Preston will he day, October iTlli, inclusive. .'lCLE("I"RI(? . and repair service in Remington. Schick and C. R. Buehner. Jr-wcllcr. fugue. AVERS, Sunbeam, Philips. Mon- ..flS ('0Nt'ALESClNG -- The many friends of Mr. Allie Murray, lvallcyifield. are pleased to hear that he is pmgressing favo'rab)y after undergoing an appendix op- eration in the King's County Hos- pltal. .."l'0 LOAD POTA'l'()I-IS - The M. V. Bellegrave arrived in port at Montague yesterday from St. Marys Town, Newfoundland. The ship will take on a cargo of po- tatoes and other produce for New- foundland ports. ..'TllANKSGIVING SERVICE - The largely attended Thanksgiving service in St, Andrews Prmbyterian Church. Mlontague, Sunday eve- ning, was conducled by ihe mili- lster, Rev. F. N. Young. The church was very effectively qec- orated with flowers and other tokens of A plentious harvest. The anthem, "We Praise Thee, O God". was sung by the choir and the hymns were "0 Worship The King", ”Sin-g To The Lord Of Harvut" and "Come, Ye Thank- ful People. Come." Mrs. A. 1'. Campbell presided at the organ. Annual Railway Continued from page 1 who were employed by the CPR. In contrast. CNR officials at Toronto report about 50 men are being hired in Toronto yards since some Ontario yardmen went on a five-day week Oct. 1. Others would be hired at Stratford and Belleville. In Alberta, the CNR said further layoffs can be expected if the de- cline in rallw':i,v traffic continues. All Alberta layoffs were reported to be temporary. Not Permanent W. E. Robinson, general marl- ager of the ONR's Atlantic region, said he hoped the 40 Moncton lay- offs will not he pel'manent.. He said those dismissed included 23 in the shops and 10 in the round- house. If traffic picked up the men could go back to work in De- camber. The CPR said the men at Me- Adam will probably be lehired for the winter shipping season. About 2,200 would get jobs then in var- ious New Brunswick centres. Only temporary workers were laid off at Charlottetown. Sixteen section men and 2!) in the CNR's bridge and building department were affected. FINAL T0-DAY SHORTS ' SHOWS 3:30 - 7 - 9 PRINCE EDWARD THURSDAY - FRIDAY - SATURDAY M.il.il"l?icI.4.-org-ii-)rL(f5i'f.',.;..I GUY A " A NEWS' NE BANCRDFI THE SMITH SHOR PETE T CARTOON -- FLYING HORSE SHOWS , ...'0FFlCE CLOSED-The 01-- llsland Man , Passes Away lln Winnipeg l l closed from Mr. William F. Steele, Montague.lm”l"3'I0'5l0P 3" the 59999 01 3" Snliirdaf. 00105" Will I0 S-"Hull-lof the sudden passing yestel'dxiy,”C'dem- H9 W” re-"la"d9d ""311 salesl Tina; GUARDIAN. CHA Rr.o'rrl:rowlsi IOCTOBER 14. 1953 Arraigned At ,Geo'town Yesterday 'Shel'man Raymond Sander- son, 19. of Midgcll, was alrestcd and arraigned yesterday afternoon at Georgetown, before Magistrate . 'Word has been received by,J- w- M”D0n9Id 0" I CIIHTBB 0f of his eldest brother. John Ai1dl-mv,MmId3y- Ocmb" mm- Steele in the Winnipeg hospital at Tllehfuge arose gut ;” 9" 3535' the age f -,2 lW.m.sA en w c occurre ale Mon liy The lat: Mr. Strclo was born inl ane""3”" whim 3 light Coupe driv- Gaspereaux the son of the latei:Pd&:v5;5t1ir' i'tA:cfe”n;Il I35 Mr. and Mrs. Do id St I. Fl-l . P9 V 1' C '1 989 3' lowing his emivnaeducaiieoih (ixejdlllvtlill by Sanderson. As a result graduated from the Charlottetown 0 He Mcidm" M15" Mcxemlai , 1, , wife of the rolipe's driver rc- B"5m,c5.5 C".”"4c' '”"' W” mokiccived serious chest injuries and up lzillronrlllig as a IPlPlZf8DII'Lq now a patient in the Km ,5 operator. He served on the Islalidlcoumv Howl”) M Mama ue Hgw for a few yeilrs at Vernon. Gcnlwze-I I 3 ' i .hllsbnnd re eived mi 0 ' ' i" town, Hunter River nnd 'M.lll'l'frl)'.h” hem C n r mjuues I0 . . . River. He went out West in l908.l -I-hr, where he became buoklzl.-riprr and in. 1,”, manager for the Bcuvt-r Lllnlberlig,.h,,,,.,,,, Company of Saskatoon. He wasl later tl'nil:fel'l'e(i lo Nofrr DRlll9l Dclourlles, Manitoba, oils-re he made his home Notification of his lllllcss was l'e- W 7 ",7 V , , celveci on M0ll(Ill)', and )'PSlfll(Ili,VilllErill5 that they could still draw I telegram fil'l'll'Fri wllli word nflfrom their 1953 allotments." his passing. Owing to illness he re-' New Brunswick and Nova Scotia liuciclcni u as Xiionlague fl.G.M.P. de- Flveml'rholIlnt:e.s Collillilled from page i tired two year: ago - iliave not asked for any federal He is survived by hi: lil(l0it,IiUIlllS yet, the general said, he- Elizabeth Pllrccll flulrm'l,v of cause they believe they should be Sydney, N. S. William F, Sfccle:filloued to raise their "matching" and Mary .1, Stevie. Montagllr-;lfunds iii any way they see fit. Hubert J, Steele, Brdfcrd N. S.,l The federal government reserves Margareti ltlis William Gl'i.suall.I, the right to approve or reject the Tantallon, N. S. ,l'atio of provincial and municipal contributions. Normally, this split is fairly even. He cited a typical C8581 "The province decides on a S30,- 000 civil defence project. We will pay sl5.000 and the remainder is usually shared by the province and Britain Plans New Pact In Montague Town Council Meeting ..'The regular monthly meeting of the Montague Town Council was held in the council room last evening wiiih Mayor Yco presiding. Present were Councillom Reynolds, Macaowan and Greene. Follow- the last meeting, the bills for the month were read and paged. A delegation from the fire depart- ment led by Fire Chief Doug Cof- fin presented a request for taking on three more men in the fire department-and equipping them with rubber clothing. AL9o to be added to the department was the need of more hose. axes and other equipment. It was moved that the fire chief be granted permission to Iadd more members to the depart- illicsilgaledi mcr.lt., and investigate the acquisi- tion of the required equipment. Reports were heard from the different committees, streets, lights, police, town building and sanita- tion. It was moved that Mr. Kenneth Clements be appointed as dog tax collector and to receive 35 per cent of the taxes which he collected. The collection of this tax has pm- vldecl some difficulty in the past and it was thought desirous to at- tempt a new method to have it collected. Considerable di in ensued ing the reading of the minutes of; Davies, Jr. in the background is Keith Sticklngs.- (Photo by David Few Deer Exist Island Very little has been heard of late relnrdlnlz the 'deer population In Prince Edward Island. That there are still some in existence is borne out by the above picture taken in the vicinity of Bunbury, The doe here here the number 139. It proved very tame as can be observed on the approach of Tom MAcDonnldI. - with reference to the additional coating of paving given to the streets which were paved last year, and it was agreed that I good job had been done, and that a new program would be under- taken next year to have other streets in the town paved if pos- sible. Following is discussion of several l Southern Asia defence, political the municipality concerned.” New Brunswick nnd Nova Scotia' iw ant to handle their own financial; ,arrangements without any federali By Arthur Gavshon "interference," he said. 1 LONDON, lAPl - Brllaln soon The case of Prince Edwardi will launch a. project for an Allied Island I5 dllfefent. the EEHETBII and economic said. Although the province has council in southern Asia. diplo- on paper a sum yearly quota in matlc officials reported Tuesday. lfcderal funds, it has decided thci They said the idea is to clrarlaniount is so small that it can be! the way for an eventual wideriraised locally without federal assit- Pacific alliance. bound by mlltual ance. plcdgvs of defence and ecollolnicl 80 Per Cent co-operation. Prime Ministcr derstood to be sponsoring Cilurclllll is un- Of the other five provinces, Bril- tileyi.-h Columbia-and Alberta have" project personally. At its core utilized their full quota of federal would be such Commonwealth funds. Saskatchewan and Manitoba countrias as India, Pakistan. Cay-have requested and received about lon, Australia and New Zcalalid.l80 per cent and Newfoundland Eventually the aim would be to about 40 prr cent, the general enrol the United Stairs. Frallccnsaid. possibly Japan and other coun- The annual quotas for the it) tries in the area. provinces. totalling sl,4-15,659, are: Although still in its formative Newfoundland 532,978; Prince Ed- and planning stage, the Foreign ward Island 87.874: Nova. Bcotln Office has been sounding out 365,696; New Brunswick 345,956; some counflies about the idea. ;Qllebecs 3433.081; Ontario 5492,0023; Spoke.-irnen of the foreigrn offlcelManltoha 533,367; Saskatchewan would say only discus-iloiis abouzlsecsaa; Alberta sa5,545: and Brit- this sort of thing are going on, but i lsh Columbia 51321513. EN C0l'llIdElilIal- l Gen. Worthington, commentingi ' ion the Ontario and Quebec conten-1, 595550” Sand El BEPPU Ill JR-iilon that all civil defence expen-1 nan is black and sulpliiircus. crcgllluii-es should be shouldered by dlifd lillh medical l7l'0l39iftl8-K. ,lhe federal government, said: i Rooponalblllty NT I "We feel there is a distinct re-l ISp()llSlblllI.y at each level of gov-I flernment. and with every commull-I , , ' g ,ity. The responsibility must entail " I1” 3 "0! WOPUI IIVIHK I a financial outlay as well." W In, H Mk" m" 5' WI" I;ll'"I Civil defense officials had agreed an a t t ' ' , . .- l.n...l.. to l.....';..'.'.?.l?...'Ii'v5'3?.?...'7:; "ml Swmd W0'ld,W" "P'9”e"" lhlpoiozdyourllvrr hilo in not nnwm. freely zin the United Kingdom showed .n , I I" . . . hi i g . v ;.'.iI.......L'll.'.'?".;J5”?.Ll...:3T,..3T.1i!i film WING 90 ”P9””l9" ” 3'".l”l allthefun nnd llparltle go out nl'Il(e.Tlinl'a ,when local communities are given when y0iIlll.nPr(I mild Kvrltle (inrterin lnttin y " high degree of responsibility for Liver? .1'v. .r. ,tbl '11 help ntimulnta A: an.-I-'".la'i'lt?.'I-el?ll..' 33.; l their own defence. your digestion atarta functioning prnperly jg and an feel that hnrpy ;t.y- .n- hero um! Tm murmge age for most KHK ll on t ever stay sun . A may: keep Carin.-r'I . A I L'"l' L""' W" "'l h"'d- l in old French Canada was about i 4 or l5. l .t9llP'lL9J;, WW4, . ,. B... i.l2;EL99-. ..... A. ..m THURSDAY - FRIDAY - SATURDAY ""sHbws"3&30 HORSE . . . ...WITN ORDERS Rex Allen in nltoml control: To GET Int nut runouca OM mar ouruw ILOOKADI AT ANY COST! ml Iuluu hour 00 ml novllt ....n SLIM PICKINS OIANV WIYHIIS mu mu: K. SERIAL - COMEDY .- suoajrs LAST SHOWING WEDNESDAY "IT HAPPENS EVERY THURSDAY" other l-olrespmldence matters, the meeting adjourned. Stresses Gravity - Continued from page I had a ived for the East Grafton street repair work and would be installed as soon as possible, Councillor T. Roy Cudmore did not believe that members of the Council should have to go around their various wards locating bad street conditions. He thought this should be done by city employees in their ordinary routine. Council- lor Storey agreed and said the members had to receive altogether too many trivial complaints that should bc attended in by the City Hall staff. Mr. M. A. Farrrrzr after present- ing lhe Police report stated that there was presently a great deal of minor vandalism in the city. Part of the cause was failure of victims to lay formal complaints, but hel thought it great deal was caused by lack of proper parental control. He did not like the idea of bring- ing youngsters into court, but if conditions continued he thought it might. become necessary to hire outside detectives to handle the matter Mayor J. D. Stewart sug- gested that the parents of children causillg damage be called into court. Police (lourt Revenue City Recorder K. M. Martin, K. 0, stated that the greater re- venue accruing to the Police Court came as a result of conviction: ullder the new Criminal Code provisions where those convicted .uf driving vehicles while their nbillty is impaired are "cheerful- ly" paying 5100 fines rather than spend seven days in jail. Several members agreed with Mr. 0'Gl-any that if some houses nre condemned as unfit for human habitation. as has bccn suggested as at health measure, the people now living in them would have no place else to go. The matter of having the War Memorial on Grafton street clean- ed came up for attention again with Councillor Elmer MacDonald expressing the belief that the work could be done by Bruce Stewart Company. It was decldedto investi- gate and attempt to have this done before November ii. at, the same time the annoyance of children running and -yelling during the ceremonies at the Monument. was discussed. Council- lor Farmer suggested that in fu- ture such children be taken to the Police Station and kept there dur- ing the services or until their par- ents called to get them. High School Financing The matter of the issuance nf bonds and the method to be used to finance payment of the new High School will come up for dis- cussion at the next meeting of the Council. At the present time the Mayor said the School Board was flmlncing the building through an overdraft. Mayor Stewart announced that he would be out of the city for several days starting this morning. He named Mr. Farmer as acting Mayor during his absence. The question of trees being cut or trimmed almost indiscriminately was debated at some length. Final- ly it was moved by councillor storey and seconded by Councillor Farmer that a "tree committee" be named to authorise the cutting. trimming or planting trees along the city: street: The proposed com- mittee In to include a member of the Town Planning Board, the Maritime Electric company, the Is- Loretta Young - John Forsythe spacial. MIDNIGHT snow TONIGHT AT 11:20 r. M. . ”TAlLSPlN”T Slrlrttcli ()l3AN(iI ill liilll Kidnap Killer Continued from page 1 Mrs. Heady would get off lightly. There are federal kidnapping char- ges, Missouri State kidnapping charges and murder charges in Kansas either filed or soon to be filed against both Mrs. Heady and Hall. A federal grand jury was sum- moned here to speed along an in- dlctment and trial. Mrs. Heady. in whose flower gar- den at St. Joseph, Mc., the boy's body was buried, said she put the finishing touches on the kidnap pllln. Hall said he had spent at least two years hatching his scheme. - Three Shots Why the kidnappers killed the little boy never has been revealed. The text of their confessions has not been released. Presumably, since only the two were involved, they felt they couldn't or didn't want to guard him during negotia- tions with the family. Little Bobby never had a chalice from the time Mrs. Heady posed as his aunt and whisked him away from the Nctre Dame de Slon School to I waiting grave. Hall shot film three times, mis- sing twice before the fatal shot. It was one of those bullets, imbedded in the floor mat of Mrs. I-laady's station wagon that finally brought 1 confession from them. Kidnap Claim: Then they set about collecting the ransom. It took six days of writing and phoning representa- tives of the family before the .3600.- 000 was tossed over a bridge to be picked up by Hall. Robert Lediter- man of Tulsa, Okla, 11 business associate of Gi-ecnlease, said tihc 85-pound money bundle had been thiowu out once before but the kidnappers couldn't find it and he had to go back and get it him- self. Alid at least. 15 different persons tried to muscle in on the money, Ledterman said They represented themselves as the kidnappers and demanded ransom of 55,000 to 3250.000. The demands totalled 31,500,000. The legal procedllre to try l-lall under the Llndlbergh law, and pos- sibly put him in the gas chamber grand jury lessened any clunbe of a legal slip-up. I The same was planned for Mrs. Heady as it became evident she had more than la. helper! part in carrying out the plot. William Roscnthal, Mrs. Headyb lawyer, has not indicated what defence he plans. Hall still has no lawyer. Angry Molls Continued from page 1 for the biggest mass demonstration so far against the Britlsh-Amerl- can decision to turn zone A of the free territory of Trieste over to Italy. "Give us rifles." the crowd cried. "We will beat up the Italian thieves. Down with Italy. Down with premier Fella, the dog. We want Tito to be consulted. We will- give our lives, but we will never give up an inch of Trieste." The demonstrations showed signs of increasing, rather than slacken- ing. after the disclosure of the Anglo-American decision last Thursday. President Tito has proclaimed publicly this country's determina- land Telephone Company and the Public Utility Board. It was also agreed to ask expert advice from the staff of the Experimental Farm. Another resolution proposed by- chairman of.the Tender Com- mittee, Mr. Elmer MacDonald, called for the acceptance of the tender of Mr. E. R. Ruthart for the new roofing job to be done on the city Hell. The amount of the tender was 32,720.50. was already in progress. Calling A . tlon to lend its anned forces into zone A if and when Italy moves OCCUPYIDK troops into the who. He has reinforced the 5,0000-man gar- rison in Yugoslav-occupied zone B of the strategic territory. Compromise But he has so called for a compromise to pevent the grave crisis from turning into a shooting conflict. Hi: foreign office here has demanded 1 four-power con- ference of the United States, Brit- ain, Italy and Yugoslavia to search for a solution of the dynamite laden problem. He and his top lieutenants were reported in hour-by-hour consulta- tions at his headquarters. Tito and his aides met shortly after the disclosure that U. S. state Secretary Dulles, British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden and French Foreign Minister George Bidault would meet in London Fri- day. with the question of the future of Trieste high on the agend: for the meeting, it waaccnsidered pos- sible here that Tito wu consider- ing the. advisability of -placing Yugoslavia! position before them by sending a representative from . this country. Russlln Notes A special edition of the news- paper Borba. voice of the ruling Communist Party here. editorially registered a protest against what it termed an attempt by "the his powers to impose their will against small countries." The British and American in- formation service: here remained open for business despite the It- mcsphere of tension. Russia's entry into the dispute in notes to the United States and Britain and in the United Nations touched offjmmediate specuzatfc. over its diplolrlatic-and possible mllltal'y--impllcatlonl. Iu poten- tial significance rested upon the fact Tito would find it hazardous to carry out his warning of mil- ltary action to bar Italian troops from Trieste unless he can dis- cover what Russia would do then. The island of Guam in the PA- cific was discovered of Magellan on his world exploration in 1521. Expect Britain To Renew Pressure For Top-Level Talks By STANLEY PRIDDLE LONDON, (Reuters)- Bl'lta.ln is expected to renew its pressure for top-level talks with Russia. when U. S. State Secretary John Foster Dulles comes hem this week to meet the British and French for- eign ministers. Prime Minister Churchill made clear in a speech Saturday he still favors a get-together with Pics- Ident Eisenhower and Premier Malenkov. , Russia has not yet agreed to thl offer of a meeting, but neithe- has she turned it down. The West Is due to make a new bid for tiht conference in it note which is beinl drafted in London this week. The talks will take place hen Friday and Saturday. 1 works fast to help gh smoother skin. . Boot nmartlng in 1 minutes. 2. Kit ny arms and put it often the real cause 0 skin disorders. . Bel I heal the skin. Money back unhu NI OD ntisnu you. Ask your dninlut tar NIXODEEM today. KILL ODORS and save up to 30? III In kitchens, cellars, clos- cu, living rooms, hath- mou-ls, nurseries. till: smelly odors from ixhl cabbage. on- ion, guilt. tobacco. TIIIICISWNII-IQIIIIIIQI WIZARD WICK neon For the next erators. IIONIT READ THIS UNLESS YOU REALLY WANT TO SAVE MONEY ten days we have extra special values on the famous International Harvester refrig- By putting one of our various models in your kitchen, you are not only going to save a valuable premium, but you will be proud of your purchase. BUY THE BEST BUY INTERNATIONAL IIARVESTER REFRIGERATION. ' MACLEOD and GREENE Montague, P. E. I. ANNUAL 5 voting delegates. THIRD QUEEN'S LIBERAL ASSOCIATION The annual meeting of the Third Queen's Liberal Association will be held in Mt. on Thursday, Oct. 15 at 8 p.m. Each poll is entitled I0 ROLAND McDONALD. MEETING Stewart Legion Hall President. The Bergman office Nance: - MONTAGUE O0-OPEBATIVE MEMBERS Including 'Saturday night to 10 p.m., to receive P33" ments on share capital in the Montague Co-operiiIlV9 Association. All those who made pledges are asked to please call and make payment. ' will be open all this week 44