Ads. TELEPHONE 8506 guyer meets seller with Guardian Dial 8506 ask for classified 3;; taker, for quick“ results. . who ‘ @umrlisu . WEATHER * Cloudy. clearing in the afternoon; cooler, . west winds 15. Low-high at Charlotte- , town 55 and 67. ll ~ “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” ' . , P Authorized as Second 013:; Mall by an pug om" r 4 I i4 been A omw- CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1958 “£33? FIVE GEMS 4 Cor , l can warns, Cornwall, last i lymr’s youfiful charmion, yester- dayiiterally ran alwaya‘glain with the senior plowing title at the an- heldin»Pownal.Hewound Ipwilhthetitleand the three lappiacingsforthe straing {mi-ow, best “Judges/D. M. Federal Depalttment of Agriculture, Fred- aiotou,‘N-._B., and Pea- fields of the Jones Farm ,1 thematolhwusheld. are judgedto have the. best Maullene Kltson, i A Glance ‘ y, Sept. 1, 1958 Cannons unanimously ap- $184,000,000 South 7 ,5 that the parliamentary ? procedure used for approval gave ; g’govemment a “blank che- ‘ The Cormnons gave air ‘ .Pf‘wai legislation..designed\to need of raihvay level crossings. ‘ ; may. sent: 2, 1958 _ _ _ The Commons meets at 11 am. 7 00de government 1egisla~ , llon. The. Senate meets at 3 pm. DELAYS TcA Munro (CM—A Trans-Catt~ Pal Air lines Viscount plane _ to land here Sunday on flight from Montreal to‘ Winni- "Defi hadto bypass Toronto air- “ WINDS 8 heavy storm and i; at Albany, N. Y. Winds up Hal ‘Irulcs an hour lashed To‘ 1 The plane took afif fen its'western 0 h1g3? is usually reluctant to e but this was not the Crux-land Exhibition A tall «null. crownandbest- > with the Cruservatives. did not compete in theplmvmg events, won the seunor Tractor Rocdeo, while Barry Wilson took the junior title. PREMIER PLEASE!) , . I Premier A. W.; Matheson told the large gathering “It is I won- CARL WILLIS (LEFTlAND WILLARD MacrHAIL ‘ ’_ I, nWa'll Man, Scores n. 9A1” Queens Plowing Match terested'in the land to see that young People are doing in ‘pllow- vmg.Iam$'meemwmey handle the power we have today. Those I watched are doing on ex- cellent job, and doling it care- fully.” . . The Premier nds‘folllomlng e demquportututyforlhosein NANA (GIN—Elbe 350ng- m‘ve midi-W MM? down a Why-anew liberals in the Commons public accounts committee to have new witnesses called ironiediately in connection with the planned $700,_—' 000 overhaulolf the national‘print- iug bureau's air lconditloning sys- tem. mum Bell (rc — clump. led Conservative opposition to the Lionel Chevrier L —- Montreal Laurierl. He charged that the {owner Liberal transport was opening “a new stalling technique” and launching ung‘fiuquisition" into a matter that had- no bearing on Parliamen ’s present bu- reau inquiry. Mr. Chevrier countered that it was 'Mr‘. 'Bell and David Walker ' (PC—Toronto Rosedale) Who had started .the “inquisition” when Senator Sarto IFournier, Mont- real’s mayor, into the on an issue that had nothing to do with the bureau’s controversial construction cost. This was a reference to evi- dence ,by Mali-Gen. H.‘A. Young, deputy minister of public works, who testified that Senator Four- nier had exerted pressure on him when he rejected a Montreal firm’s bid for‘the bureau’s mov- ing job. Senator Fourlnicr~ denied this. - MOTION DEFEATED M-r. Chevrier’s motion, to have Montreal architect Ernest Cor- mier step down temporarily from: the witness stand and have other officials give evidence; was de- feated 16—8. Harold Winch of Van- couver East, lone CCFer, sided ALWAYS AN INTERESTED AUDIENCE on Saturday. Many tried theiw‘ best to win a prize by foolmg thci finesse! who showed an uncanny (Continued on ‘ on. 4) Liberal (Plan Crushed- sAttemptedStalling ,Mr. Bell um if Mr. firmly I M'mylmiwlbe ing when the committee would be able to question him again. , Burt he suggested at the same time that Mr. Connier's remarks and criticism of the planned .air conditioning o verb 8: III (were "wholly improper.” .He was-talk— ing 'about “something be nothing about." _ The exchangebetween Mr. Bell, and Mr. Chevrier became aso heated at one point that Art Smith (PC—Calgary South) suggested they should step out in the cor- ridor and settle their dihferences there. . _ ' Mr. Cormier testified that orig .inally he had planned to install two air conditioning units in the printing bureau but was stopped on the barsisof economy. The one hostel) . h t in, ‘ rt from v fiction they hali'brought' the name of e p'“ a” a” 173. EQUIPMENT CRITICIZED His equipment had been criti- cized by Gen. Young but, he testi- fied, he had in fact consulted with both Canadian and American air conditioning firms before the in- stallation. ‘ . 'Now the works department was going ahead with in ta’llation of another unit. The department had kept him in the dark about plans, but 'he estimated from specifica~ tions that it would cost more than $700,000. The revisions, he added, would halve.to be extensive because the bureau’s boiler room floor was not currently strong enough to hold the new equipment. The bu- reau’s electrical circuits also would have to be revised. equipment costs, came to $207.- ' 1y to 2134355 a person’s cor- h‘m .. lid BRITISH DEFY 12-MILE BAN Iceland Says Royal, Navfi Battlés ; Rage Olf i .Quemoy _ TAlllPlElI, Formosa. sank 12 Communist high-speed damaged in the engagement, but was towed to safety. ‘ four nationalist .warships in four groups, they said. It be- and lasted until 2:09 arm. lnLAs'r norm Earlier the defence ministry said Nationalist guns on Quemoy had blasted a Communist flotilla near Redheld Amoy in a night bum-age Monday. ' The Communists carried artillery assault 'on the offshore .llsland-s into its llth consecutive Defence spokesmen said Quemoy was a target of 897 rounds andfilm were fired at Te: tan (Big Tan), .3 More islet 2% miles south of Army. The announcement on the shell- ing of the flotilla near Amo'y said three Chinese gunboats and eight jumps were sent to the bottom and live gunboats were been. on {Ea} I labor Day Was Running High: , .‘By' THE CANADIAN PRESS - Canada’s death toll in holiday accidents stood at 57 Monday as the Labor Day weekend rolled into its deadliest hours—the eve ring homeward - bound tratfifilc rush. ’ Traffic deaths had already ac- counted fior 40 lives at 5 pm. AIDT, a Canadian Press survey showed. There Were 11 dupwnings and six deaths in assorted other accidents. Despite cool and cloudy weather Ontario’s toll olf 21 lives had all- ready equalled the province's to- tal for the entire‘weekend a year ago; In Nova Scotia, Where three died accidentally last Labor Day weekendthe count had reached 10. . Sixydeaths were blended on a severe storm which swept parts of southern and central Ontario sunday with of up to 80 miles an hour and tor- rential rain. Three drownedwhen a sailboat was swamped,two men were killed when the storm smashed a plane and a little girl died in a highway crash blamed on the blinding downpour. DROWNI'NG TOLL DOWN The cool weather helped to ease the drowning toll much was ex- pected to be the lightest for a holiday weekend. this year. The total by provinces, with ‘ traffic deaths bracketed-2 Newfoundland 2 (2), Nova Sco. Ma 10 (7), Quebec 10 (8), Ontario 21 (14), Manitoba ‘2 (‘1), Alberta 6 (5), Colundaia 6 (3). Spdrls Ancl . Parades Mark Labor Day By THE CANADIAN PRESS ' Summer’s last holiday weekend brought a touch of autumn air to much of Canada but it failed to stem the rush of visitor traffic across the nation. ' Sports were the top attraction, vying with Labor Day parades in some centres for the attention of holidaying throngs. Almost every section of ‘the country had showers at some point in the day and cool air was general. abandoned the traditional Labor Day parade a crowd of 20.000 watched more than 1,500 march in the Canadian National Exhibi- tion’s colorful parade at Toronto. New Brunswick was shrouded in fog and dull, wet weather which can-celled several sports evens a:d sharply reduced high- rcct age. Of course—if he guessed wrong, the lady got a prize. way traffic. The rest of the Mari- times had similar conditions. (AM—The = Chinese nationalists said they' torpedo boat-s Monday in a battle off Quemoy. : Defence _ spokesmen ' said one" nationalis 'wnrsbip was , The clash occurred between ; and . “tens of torpedo boats” operating , gun at 5 minutes past midnight- Although many big cities have ' Hurricane” Ella qu‘ns . _ New Power . MllAIMlI, Ella. (AP) »— Hurricane Ella gained new strength Mon- day night and naked Cuba’s south- east coast with hurricane winds extending 20 miles all direc- tions from the centre. » mus. weather bureau at Miami said Ella, with peak winds of. 1316 miles an hour, was flail- Sautiaigb with 50-mile pales. Forecaster Gordon Dunn warned areas on Cuba’s south coast from Santiago westward to prepare for hurricane winds rough seas and high tides. Gales were expected to emf/em well in land in‘ . ‘ Santiago is about 550 miles souflreust of Miami, The advisory said Ella was expected to move West-West or nortlnwestward during the succeeding 12 hours, passingover north of Cape'Oruu into gulf of GuacanIaybo. Ellie’s force weakened while passing over western Haiti. but picked up new velocity as it darted Across the south Carib- '-bea~n toward southeastern Cuba. Party Leaders Pay Tribute .To Workers OTTAWA (OP) 1— Labor Day was observed in the Commons Monday asleadsers of all three parties paid tribute to Canada's workers, and their contributions to the country's development. Prime Minister Diefenlbaker, noting that Labor Day was first established in 1894, said every More in the country’s develop- ment was, due to work. ~ Opposition Leader Pearson said the best way to recognize labor “is to labor ourselves (in the Commons) as we are doing on this Labor Day.” . CCF Housc'Lead‘er Hazen Ar- ge said the, best tribute that can. be paid to labor is to guarentee it a high standard of living. ' been hauled into courts Monthly . . More and bigger ferries to accommodate the greatly- in- creased traffic to and'from the mainland, free books for the Province’s school children, early government action to assure Island workers a wage, and a strong recomé months, were all demanded in resolutions approved at ‘the 27th _ ndatipn that .P.E.L__pbservei 1 base, and” fast him?“ smug the mm W ’ wGIONNAmEs FOLLOWED THE MAS s STANDARDS AT NORTH nus‘rmo Command of the Cana- dian Legion held) yesterday at North Rustico. , other resolutions adopted, at the one-day meeting sought several amendments to legis- lation affecting servicemen particularly. These included a request that the. acreage re- quirements for veterans holding be , present three to whatever size lot constitutes the minimum l1. annual convention of the Pro- legal requirement“ in the com- I LONDON (CPL—Racial violence broke out in London Monday night tor the third night in a. row. Gangs of white youths stormed through Notting Hill the windows of Jamaicans homes. . The youths, mostly teen-lagers. defied heavy police patrols 'to race down a road where thereiis ,a large Negro colony. They smashed udndows with bottles and other missiles. Forty-one men and a girl had after a second weekend of race riots in two British cities; IF-ounteen white men, three Negro men and a white girl were arrested in. London and 24 white men in, Nottingham. Their charges ranged from using in- sults to attacking police. Rive white men who prowled Nottingham looking for Negroes to beat up were given three— month jail sentences in the Mid- land city. They were part of a mob that roamed a seedy section of Nottingham on Saturday'uivg-ht at the site of a white-Negro brawl the previous weekend. FOUGET AMONG SELVES When they found no West in,— dians, Africans or Indians to slug; they fought among themselves. Magistrate Arthur Tumey said the city’s Nbgro-«Asia-n population 42» Hduled Into Coun‘ Far . '- ‘R’ace Riots. In U.I<.._ciIies , “has got nothing to do with the case.” , Fifteen other' s were lined from £10 ($28), the equivalent of one week’s pay tor the overage‘in— dustrial worker, to £30 ($84). Three defendants were found in. recent and a lfi-ycar-olld youth was referred to juvenile court. The trials of others were post- poned until later in the week. Prosecutor R. 0.1{ickmen termed the Nothnghamutots h‘a very squalid spectacle of an ir- responsible Saturday night crowd, excited by drink and pub,- licity, behaving in I thoroughly bad manner.” .. 51., LegiOn Suggestions Cover Ferries,Books,WageSTime \ munity in which the applicant desires to locate. The Legion members also asked that the provisions of the Veteran‘s Land, Act be made applicable to members of the Canadian Merchant 'Marine; that War Veteran's Allowance .be. paid to those veterans of Wormflar ,_ ,..wbo_se.overseas . warden days firm: and; that the fede- ral government enact legisla- tion designed to bring about “fair 5 and just consideration and treatment” for veterans suffering mental disabilities, in particular, nervous disorders directly to World War Two. ( ,. The conyen ‘ also approved a resolution ' - by the Charlottetown branch which urges the Dominion and Provin- cial governments to assume, jointly the full responsibility for the training of the nations men- tally retarded children, esti- mated to be approximately 400,000. I CFFICERS ELECTED Comrade Major the Honorable F. Walter Hymlman, E.D.,' was .elected honorary ,president of the ,Provincial' mm for 1958-59. - '_ g ‘ Also named to t',«new pro- vincial executive were: J. J. MacIsaac, Borden, president; Frank Rush, Charlottetown, 1st. (Continued on page‘z Col. 6)‘ Queens Jr. Attends '. Conference In Mr. Health Marquam‘ I'e, M.’P. for Queens is now in Clam-ens, Switzerland, attendinga confer- ence of parliamentarians held at St. Georges School. In attendance from Canada also is Hon. Raul Martin. The conference, sponsor- ed by the American Friends Ser- vice is designed to bring together for affine and in. formal exchange of opinion, par- from‘various parts AUOKILANlD, NZ. (AP) — A French scientist-adventurer who believed prehistoric peoples - could have drifted 5,000 miles back and forth across the Pacific has paid with his life attempting to prove his theory. Eric de Bisschop, 66, was killed Sunday night when his raft broke up on a South Sea island reef after drifting from South Amer- 1ca. Thevgrey-halred explorer had escaped from several shipwrecks during a hazardous life searching the oceans for knowledge. “But he said he would rather die at sea,” his Wife, Constance, said in Honolulu. “He would hate to die and be buried under six feet of soil.” , 0N PBEDICTED PATH The French navy ministry re- FO'UR-‘MAN CREW SURVIVES ‘ . . Testing Sea Drift. Theory Costs Life Of Adventurer ported (Re Bi-sschop’s four-man crew survived the wreck at R‘aka- hunger in the northern Cook Is- la-nds. This was 1,200 miles be- yond his original goal of Tahiti but right on the path de Bisschop had predicted he would sail. . The crew was en route to Ta- hiti Monday aboard a mine- sweeper. carrying de Bis'schop’s body. Details of the wreck were not immediately, available. “Only God knows our destiny,” said do Bisschop wvhengfihe set out from Chile on Feb. 15. He and his crew sailed up the coast to Cal- lao, Peru, then headed out to sea on April 13 aboard his balsa wood raft, the Tahiti Nui III. Equipped with sails and meas- uring 20 by 30 feet, it was named for a ‘” raft t‘ia‘. drifted Inns: 0’ 9": “'L‘V fem Tahiti to c: ~"‘ of the Vworl’d representing dif- c up in a storm and sank 400 off Chile. FIRST SUCCESSFUL The first voyage proved the Polynesians could have drifted from the South Seas to South America. This was aimed at proving they could pick up cur- rents to take them back. De Bisschop’s theory is that the two ancient cultures—Polynesian and South American—could have maintained contact and perhaps conducted commerce over the ocean. - It goes one step beyond the idea first put forth and proved by Nor- wegian anthropologist Thor Hey- erdahl, who also sailed from Cal- lao and drifted across the Pacific aboard his raft Kon~Tiki in 1947. Heyerdlahl did not attempt to test miles lSou.h Amal'sa in 1057 but broke a twowway theory. Switzerland ferent political parties. Earlier Mr. Mcquapiie attended a meetmg‘ in London of the economic" couumttee‘ 'oftheNorth Atlantic Treaty Parliamentary Assocua‘ tion and was selected to serve on a five-member sub, com- of the group. Before going to themeehng' in Switzerland he visited a number of NATO coun- try capital/5,3 including Floris, Brussels Bonn. On these visits he with Canadian em- bassey and discussed current international questions with people; In Brussels he visited the and the Canadian Pavilion. Enroute to Clams-Mr. and Mrs. Macquarrie stopped off at Berne the capital city of the Swiss Confederacy, The Clarens parliamentariams’ conference concluded Aubust 31 and Mr. and Mrs. Macquarrie expect to return to Canada as soon as possible thereafter. Will Speed 'up 7 Elimination Of ' Level Crossings OTTAWA' (0P) —- The Com- moms Monday gave quick final approval to a bill designed to speed up elimination of railway level crossings and to provide for greater railway safety. The bill authoriz , a $5,000,000 railway grade cross a fund each year, from which the federal gov- ernment will pay up to 80 per cent of the construction costs .of eliminating level crossings. The railways will paythe rest. The bill provides that after the first three years, starting last Jan. 31, the federal contribution will be reduced to 60 per cent. .SAY GUNS MANNED .'were I . \ Blacked Trawler Al'l‘egst Fight ,At Sea Narrowly Avexrted By EDDY amour: REYKJAVIIK (AH—IA gudboal battle between and Ice new 12mite sum ‘ gban the lcelandic coast guard, met Iceland accused the of ‘ using armed force to prevent the arrest of a British fishing trawler violating the 12-mile ocean limit that went into effect Sunday mild- Bafore the limit was four miles. A coast guard statement, dis. lu-ilbuted by Iceland’s foreign min- listry,saldaseafigl1twnsaverted( only because the Icelandic gov- ernment had ordered its gunboatl to hold fire. Largo crowds gathered in front of the newspaper Momunbladid to read news bulletins about the in- cident at sea,'People shook their heads and muttered. A tough, de- termined and nationalistic people. the llcelanders do not like British ‘ around. And they don’t Brit- islh trawlers fishing in their waters. , ' TRADITIONAL rerun-r ‘ Brute-in, on the other its have a right to malwl off Iceland’s dish- rich shores and dial has (no legal out to establish a 13* 'mumrndoa not protect its fish , . grounds and fishing beds, its in- is st totally dependent on The British have otfered a corn- promise—to share their catcher with Iceland—and seek a settle- ment of the dispute in I special coutereuce of NonmAtllantic cm oil , Domenic, another timing w ti'on, potin a formal request to' the NATOwouucil in Paris tor I discmsion of this dispute. More possible trouble loomed. Belgian fishing ship owners asked their-govermnent for novel pro- of their tnanwlm within the 12-mile There was no indication, however, that any Bela Igloo trawlers are in this area. Iceland said the 'llhor sought to apprehend a British trawler dish: iug just after dawn inside the 12- mile limit but when the Thor went to go alongside the trawler, Hill/IE Palliser‘ sailed between them at full steam. The ilcelanders em- phasized that the fligate’s guns Thin' correspondent watched, Britain chullenge I‘Icelend from the cockpit of c single-engined plane. at . v We flew at dawn from Reykja- vik, heading northwestwaid to- ward the Arctic Circle over weird manic and glacier lands, The northern light was so clear that you could see for many miles in every direction. j ' _ North of us was the Roland Ocean and, 70 miles in the dis- tance, the Arctic Circle that shows on maps but hardly on the water ' ‘ The horizon was dotted with ships. » We burned the Icelandic gun- boat Albert. I-ts cannon the'bow was covered with green canvas. Ten minutes later we were over a convoy of British (crawlers whose captains and fishermen are also tough fellows. SIGHT HMS RUSSELL A Then we sighted HJMS Russell and beyond her, well into shore, the lcelandic gunboat Cdzi-un bob- bed leisurely up and down on the almost calm water. ’ The Russell and the Odinn' headed for each other, but in- stead of firing shots, the frigate: clashed a- morse signal to the Ice- landic' vessel. “Good morning." it said. Ibo Icelandic vessels carefully v noted the names of all the British trarwlers. Later it hopes to press damages against their owners. an informed source said. Icelandic coastguard-men said they counted 15 British trawler: but a British source said the total. was larger. PRODUCTION ORDERED U-P HON-G KONG (AP) — Commu- n-ist- China has demanded doubled steel production afl heavily ex- panded food output, Radio Pei, in reported Monday. ‘ The Royal Navy frigate Palliser ' I V . and the Thor, the biggest gunlboatt l, warships pushing their gunboats' ' hand, says ‘ ,3 ‘ A l .“5 l 1‘