i Carmel exhibition was officially Maxims of a More Man It takes two to make a quarrel. 16 PAGES 7719 Guardian CHARI.(YI'l'E'P()WN. CANADA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29. 1955 Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew PRICE So IDSEES -TAXRENTAI. NOT NECESSARY Egmonl Bay, Mont Carmel Fair Opened By Premier The 1055 Egmont Bay and Mont opened yesterday afternoon by Premier A- W. Matheson who ex- pressed the hope that this year's exhibition would be a most success- ful one. He said that all those who were connected with this great an- nual show were deserving of cred- it. that they are doing a great job. He said that while the weathcr was not all that could be desired. the officials should not be discouraged but look forward to a better day next year. Marred by cold winds and scattered showers throughout the day. the exhibition was. never- theless. fairly well attended and in . most cases the exhibits were, in the opinion of the judges. up to the usual standard. Hon. Eugene Cullen. Minister of - Agriculture. in his remarks said that the idea of an exhibition was to improve the quality of the pro- ducts produced in the community and that if it does not do so then it is of no benefit. It was I matter of great encouragement to I young man to bring I product to the ex- ” hibition and carry home a red ribbon. WORI) FOR FISHERIES The hope that I display of the products connected with the fish- ing industry would be included in the shows of the future at Mont Carmel -- Egmont Bay was ex. pressed by "Mr. J. Watson Mac- Naught. the parliamentary assist- ant to the Minister of Fisheries. Mr. MacNaught said that he noted there were many present from the community who derived their live- lihood from fishing and if in future Coming E vents . 1 Ilorsc races at Hazelbrook. Oct. Bingo night. "Dance h Mtlivisw lell every riday. Hope River Thursday Dance -Lower Montague I'e'll every Friday nidst. Dance in Emerald Ilsll Ids Friday has been cancelled. . Play in Staohope lovohand Hall nan:-oiled. See "Call of the Forest" south Rusticn l-lall. Tonight EU. Pantry sale lamp .5, , Ulvde River L.O.B.A. 33,"! p.m. llescrve Thanksgiving D 0c. tuber 10th for Hot chicken lbyinngp. south Rustico Hall. Pantry Sale in (10-09 Store, Sou. "M Faturday. Oct. nut s p.ln. in aid of Lttlo Pond W.I. (Iarnlval in the Lowgr Mon. laiziie Hall, October 0 nd 7. Fun for everyone. lieguiur dance at the Castle. Dunstnffnage, ovary ppm” night Dancing fmm 9,3; . 1 lm. Sslllllfrgalnoes Cove Hall . e . , . ved 5.30. P "P", at mllclnl eVe1'y Thursday night. Rustico Ball. Music by e MacKenzie'I Orchestra. Notice- mm Io:-"5; .f..."””.uu 'i?i2'.: 82'.” i.l'2...'i'.'”””"”'d ""-- "W Dr Enl the Music by A ' '. : chestre. I mnuh"d' or The Jamboree wbiui wu pug. Poned from Sept, 3",, r. to be geld Oct 1 in Garry Valley all. Eaniscliffe W. I. mince Cardigan Legion ll. """d-v- Sept. 2. woomn Orchestra. P. A. c". teen service. ill” be human fowl manom- ;l':Hfrovn i to 7 p.nI. and Tuesday H " Pick up and y at the rms. Paying highest market prices. A. P. Gallant. munco, of more ideal weather- fications of N r. Admiring the fine exhibit at the exhibition he felt that the results would be most beneficial. Both the Hon. Mr. Matheson and Mr. MacNaught suggested that the directors give consideration to the idea of holding their exhibition earlier in order to take advantage A review of the various classi- exhibits yesterday showed that the number this year was considerably lower than other years. The sheep exhibit. however. did show well filled classes. Ex- hibits of sheep have always been outstanding at this show. Commenting on the placings Mr. Robert Samson of Moncton who did the judging said that the Ox- ford and Shropshire classes were outstanding. The top group he said Rush Anti-Typhoid ' Serum To Bnrbndoes TORONTO. (C?)-The Canad- ian Red Cross society announced antytyphoid serum from Canada was flown to Barbados demic. received from the battered this ricane. The shipment. centimetres. was 10.000 (Continued on page 15. col. 3) puichased by the society. Wednes- day to avert a threatened epi- An urgent call for serum was director of medical services of the island. a colony in the British West Indies week by a hur- cubic prepared by Connaught Medical Laboratories at the University of Toronto and Both girls are students It Mis- STUDENTS ADMIRE FINE EXHIBITS ofiCeclIe Arscnnult of Egmnnt Bay.iatiending the yearly agricultural pumpkins It the Abrams Village exhibition yesterday Ire Camille Doucette (left) of Mont Carmel and couche Convent. but never miss lexhibltion near their homes. (Photo by Wottoni Approve Release Of German Prisoners MOSCOW. (AP)-The nestiay'adopled a decree releas ing 8.877 German war prisoners. The decree declared the presi- dlum found it impossible to re- lease 749 other Germans be- cause of the "special gravity” of their offenses against the Sov- iet people. QUEBEC (CP)-Vivacious Lou- ise Samson. 21-year-old grand- daughter of Prime Minister St. Laurent, will be married Saturday to I young Quebec lawyer. To one wedding guest, at least. it may seem as if time has been turned back 14 years. It was on Oct. 1. I831 that Mr. St. Laurent gave away his daugh- ter Marthe in marriage to Dr. Mathieu Samson. then a fledgling practitioner. Saturday. the eldest Louise. a pcrt. shapely bruncttc. wants the wedding to be given of as little publicity as possible. But "Grand-Papa" will be there and already some 20 Quebec police- men have been assigned to keep things rolling smoothly near the Church of Notre Dame do Chcmin in u pertown. LIV IN NOIIANDA The groom-elect is Yvan Mig- nault, a 25-year-old law graduate of Laval University. After marriage he will set up practice in Norandn, One. where the couple plans to buy I house- "Wa had planned to start out in an apartment but my grandmother (Mrs. St. Laurent) told us we should get a house and settle down." Louise said in an inter- view. vice." aft Co.. ..'" '"”'....; IoaiIi.Q etde weotnstrlkc tnlyllfu pq.'IIe.yIre Granddaughter Of Prime Minister Weds Saturday child of that union will be mar-i ed the y "80 we followed her ad-.IllC'I'y ll OITAWA. (CP)- Defence of- dis to the navy were flcilh W esday voiced concern scheduled for May next year. strike at de They will replace the Avengers It To- now in use aboard the ...'-321..-new in ........ nouns no no as i"n."iii'ii'8'u"'Li-'.'3e'ii'": lMi-nisfer Of Fisheries In . VANCOUVER. iCPl- l3'islici'-. ies Minister James Sinclair. not-' yet recovered from severe in-l juries suffered in a fail in Rus..ia1 early in August. is in hospital here with jaundice. Alistair Fraser. assistant to the present. too. but like our honey- moon plans. it's still a secret." The couple met It I students' party in Quebec Coliscurn whe'n Louise was l7. She was taking a domestic science course at Laval. She received her engagement ring last month and the wedding was originally scheduled for next June. But when Mignault decided to go to Noranda. plans were rushed for the October date. ALMOST 200 GUESTS Louise said some people have asked whether her grandfather will give her away "Its Daddy who will do that.” she said. "He (Prime Minister St. Laurcntl wont be there as prime mnistor. he'll be there as grand- father . . . of course that's pretty important too-" Louisefs interests lie mainly in dancing and the theatre. but be- cause of her close association with lihc St. Laurent family she is also lwell-versed in world affairs She acompanicd ilir. St. Laurent on election campaigns in I94." and 1953. Only close friends of both i'am- ilics have been invited to the wed- ding but the guest list runs to al- most 200. Rev. Georges-Henri Levesque. superior of the Dominican nion- ncarby Montmorency dium of the Supreme Sovietplifeebiigi tcdcral minister. night. that a preliminary diag- nosis of jauiiilice no-atlc Sunday night by a family friend and said Tuesday physician has been confirmed. Thc fricnd. Dr. l A. Mc- Laughlin. orricrcd Mr. Sinclair to hospital minutes before he was to have left for Ottawa liy train. BACK BROKEN Examination here showed Mr. Sinclair suffered I broken verte- bra in the small of the bacl'., a broken left leg, is bad cut on the right leg and minor internal in- juries when a scaffold on which he was standing collapsed at Petropavlovsk. about 1.500 miles northeast of Jvladivostrtk. on Aug. 4. Mr. Fraser said the minister had not been told by the Russians of the fractured vertebra. Reptn-ters asked the cxecutive assistant whether the 16 Russian doctors who treated Mr. Sin- clair had detected the fracture. "I think they knew about this. because their prescription for care was the same as it is here. They advised plenty of rest and medical care." He added: "it is the opinion of the con- suitants that no permanent after- effects are likely. Medical ad- vice is that Mr. Sinclair be k t at rest for several weeks. X-rays of the left leg show satisfactory progress in healing. Doctors here say it will not be necessary for the minister to be placed in a cast for the hack in- jury. Mr. Fraser said. OTTAWA (CPieSalc-s of fluid milk climbed in Canada during July and the first seven months of tho! year from the correspond- ing periods last year. Milk sales climbed three per cent in .iuly to 360374.000 pounds but cream sales dropped two per cent in the same month to 72.t'i43.000 pounds. the bur- anrl former dcan of social sciences "She is going to give us I nice It Laval University. will officiate. Defence Dept. Concerned By Aircraft Plant Strike originally aircraft carrier Magnificent. TRAINING IN U. I. Officials here said first deliv- eIu of statistics reported Wc(lnes- day. be possible to train an entire squadron there before the new lanes are delivered to the san- gr . he navy has two anti-submarine squadrons. The Smtlneia are for use in the new air- craft carrier Bonaventure. now under construction It Belfastsnd II nhutlkd for delivery late next IN l!'I I" ........"a.'.'..-.i.-'.. OTTAWA, (CP)e Former pre- mier John B. McNai.r of New Brunswick today was appointed chief justice of New Brunswick and head of the N. B. Appeal Court. Justice fMinister Garson an- nounced that the former Liberal party leader. who headed the N. B. government from 1940 to 1952. succeeds Chief Justice Charles D. Richards. who is retiring. The appointment becomes effective Oct. 1 . Mr .McNair rctircd from polit- ics after the i952 defeat of his Hon. .l.B. .McNair Made Chief Justice For N.B. government by the Progressive Conservatives and was appointed a puisne judge of the New Brunswick court July 28. ' The new chief justice will be succeeded in his old post by Judge F. G. Bridges of the N. B Supreme Court Queen's bench division. County couft Judge Charles J. Jones of the N. B. counties of Carleton. Charlotte. Victoria and llliadawaska is elevated to the Queen's bench division. The county judgcship will be filled by -D liaymond Bishop. a lawyer lfrom Woodstock. N. B. S'side Meeting Asks For Egg, Poultry That the P. E. 1. Egg Station Operators Poultry Products Im- provement Association recom- pmend to the Provincial Depart- ment of Agriculture that an egg and poultry field man be ap- pointed tn assist in the improve- ment of thexquality of eggs. was unanimously passed at the asso- I ciation's semi-annual meeting held last evening at Howardls - Restaurant. Summersidc East. I Mr. .1. Watson MacNaugiit. M. P.. parliamentary assistant to the Minister of Fisheries and Minister of Agriculture were pm. sent at the largely attended meet- ing presided over by the press. dent. Mr. Urban McQuaid. Char- lotteiown. A lengthy discussion centered around the problems of egg qual- ity improvement and marketing and many suggestions were Dill forth including the appointment of extra inspectors andfor more frequent inspections; educating the producers in the raising and marketing of eggs through prop- er feeding and care. and the ap- pointment of a field man on which a motion was passed that a recommendation to this effect he made immediately to the De- partment of Agriculture. The discussion revealed that there is not sufficient unifor- mity in egg grading and consc- quently many producers are tak- ing thcir product to the less strict grading stations where their eggs are graded higher. During this discussion Mr. F M. Nash. senior district poultry inspect ed ral Department -' women-'-we Hon. Eugene Cullen. provincial w 'i 'd M Fie. an .of Agriculture answered many queries relating to egg grading problems. Other speakers included Mr. Lincoln Dewar. secretary of the P. E. I. Federation of Agricult- ure and Mr. A. Levasseur. iti- spector. Federal Department of Agriculture, Ottawa. Last year's executive and dir et-tors were reelected and are as follows: Urban McQu.aid. Cliarloiictovin. president; Rod McNevin. Summerside. vice- prcsident; E. J. MacDougall Ver- non Bridge. secretary-treasurer; . S. MacLean. Kensington. Keith Pratt. Bloomfield. Mont McEwen. New London, Leo Ros- siter. Morcil. Stewart McEwcn. St. Peter's. Ralph Judge. Mon- tague. ;S'side Man Heads P.E.I. Optometrists Raymond Grant of Summerside was elected President of the P.E. Island Optnmetrical Society at their annual meeting held yester- day at the office of G.F. Hutche- son and Son. Charlottetown. There was a representative number of members present frmn various lpnrta of the province? Routine -business was conducted previous to the election of officers. 'other officers el ted were B.H. Hunter. psummersi (2, Vice President and .F. G. Hutcheson. Charlottetown. isecy-Treas. M. ..m.....-,. -qyv,v:n1f?yff3lWpi!"FT3i1F.:7”7M”A:v,k;llWtt3 p . . . Egypt Says Arms Deal I: Own Business UNITED NATIONS. N.Y.. (AP) - Egptian Foreign Minister Mahmoud Fawzi Wednesday chai- lenged the right of any country to tell his government where and how it should buy arms for its defence. In a statement issued at the UN. be said: It is our indisputable right and our inescapable duty to get. from wherever we can. our de- fence requirements." Egyptian Premier Gamal Ab- del Nasser disclosed Tiicsrlay that Egypt has made a deal to trade cotton to Czechoslovakia for arms. Fawzl's statement did not spe- cifically mention the joint ap- peal issued Tuesday by U S. State Secretary Dulles and For eign Secretary Macmillan nf flri taln for all countries to avoid an arms race in the Middle East Kidngpi-;dD Be-hv Bov ls Returned SAN FRANCISCO, (AF: -- A childless housewife who ”just had to have a baby" remorseiul- ly surrendered Robert Marcus to I priest in Stockton. Calif, early Wednesday nine days after the newborn boy was kidnapped in San Francisco. Recovery of the healthy baby. now 11 days old. ended a countri- wide hunt. Dr. Sanford Marcus. 34. and his wife, Hanna. Z9. sped in a po- lice car the R2 miles to Stock- ton from San Francisco in 75 minutes for a joyful reunion with their son. Frightened by the earlier ques- tioning of a sharp-eyed deputy sheriff. Mrs. Betty Jean Benedic- to. 27, plump and blonde. decided to give up the baby she had so carefully tended while police and the BI hunted him from Cali- forn to New York. TELEPIIONED FATHER Police were closing in on Mrs. Benedfcto when she telephoned the anxious Dr. Marcus. told him The infant was safe and that sihc was leaving it at St. Mary's Ro- man Catholic church in Stockton. Mrs. Benedicto. tearfully re- pentant. was taken away to be booked for return to San Fran- cisco. v PEARSON to MS ii time that an RCA? aircraft has visited Russia in over ten years. The night will visit such large Two RCA! radio operators who will fly the Hon. Lester B. Pear- son to Moscow on Join Septem- ber. -check their radio equip- ment before setiing out on the SM!) mile. six week flight. standing is FIO D. Henry of Col Montreal. watching W0 Doug Bentley of Charlottetown. P.l.I.. centres as: Paris. Brussels. Berlin. Moscow. Stalingrad. len- Ingrad. Singapore. Calcutta and ho om . rvo Bentley who joined the ICAF in 1951 had previously cbleck radio fscttitles an the served as I radio officer with the route. Department of Transport. since When the C5 aircraft lands In joining 412 squadron he has Iliwlwllllark tlnhtstbwlthousandsofinills both overseas and in North America. Like the other crew members he is eagerly awaiting the opportun- ity to visit Russia. one of the fcw countries he has not already seen. As radio officer he will be re- Iponslble for all rldio communi- cations between the aircraft and the various night centres in the more than ten countries the air- craft will fly over. -National Defence Photo. (By Harold Morrison, Can Wednesday federal tax objec This statement made to that the government is ect taxing field. The cabinet is believed to havel gone over the plan as mapped out by its advisers anti our-cp'ie(l many of its general ideas. Discus- sion of details will (.'(lllilnil(! to- day. Mr. St. Lament said the cabinet will go back into Nfsslfln in the morning after two ses-, sinns Wednesday. PACTS MAY G0 ”What we are contemplating docs not necessarily need tax ren- tal agreemcnts.” he saiil in reply' to questions dealing with the pos-l sibie federal approach to the meeting viith premiers opening Monday. Under agrcem-ents will all pro- vinces except Quebec. the cunt. ral administration rents the dir-l ect tax field-personal and cor-l poration incomes--in return for annual payments. It rents the succession duties field from all; provinces except Ontario and! Quebec. The federal-provincial confer- ence next week is designed to find an alternative or extension to the current five-year agree- ments which expire in March.I I957. The pacts have been critic- ized by some provinces on the grounds that the federal rents paid are too low or that the agreements centralize too”much power in Ottawa. "We prefer to achieve our ob- jectives in a manner that will please everybody." Mr. St. Laur- ent said. EVEN OUT WEALTH Broadly speaking the federal objectives are to distribute Can- ada's wealth more evenly among the rich and poor provinces and at the same time safeguard fed- eral revenues to finance federal obligations under the constitution. "We can achieve the objec- tives withnut the agreements and without limiting the pmvi.nces' taxing powers.” t.he prime minis- ter added. But it may be he said. that the provinces may prefer some kind of agreements. Officials have said that under the new plan being considered. the central administration would allow the provinces on get I share of direct. taxes. OFFER GUARANTEE It would offer the provinces an OTTAWA, (CP)-Prime Minister St. long cabinet session appeared to he in considering pacts and allowing the provinces to get hack into the dir- Prime Minister Gives Opinion After Meeting adian Press Staff Writer) Laurent said tives can be achieved with- out tax rental agreements with the provinces. following a day- line with reports scruppiiig the tax reporters through make up the difference from "equalization" payments the central treasiiry. Mr Si Lziuri-ni indicated the federal gwernmcni will make no cut and-(lrlcd approach to the am "N15 with the premiers next Vl'i”'K From other sources it was le;-riicil the prime minister will wait to hear u'b'il each province may propose before the federal suggestions arc outlined. The premiers. after a week of secret negotiations with Mr. St Laurent and his advisers. than miwht recess for a month or so and return with their final RIISWGTS. 9:-re.m'er Leaves For Oiiciwa "It would be disastrous to do away with tax rental agreements at this time". said Premier Alex W. Matheson on the eve of his de- parture for Ottawa where he will attend the Dominion Provincial Conference to be held next week. The Premier intends to make the trip by motor and until the depart- ure of the other members of his Cabinet. Hon Eugene Cullen will be acting Premier for the next two days. Attending the Conference with the Premier will be Hon. B. Earle MacDonald. Provincial Secretary and Treasurer. Hon. Keir Clark. Minister of Education, Hon. Eu- gene Cullen. Minister of Agricul- ture. Mr. W. E. Massey. Deputy Provincial Secretary and Mr. Wil- liam Hughes. The Premier expressed satisfac- tion that the report that the Birds Eye Foods (Canada! Limited had been purchased by National Sea Products of Halifax. He said that since the new owners were chiefly a fish processing organization. there is every indication that the Island will benefit sooner under tho change of hands. exchange: A guarantee of min- collecting machinery in return for provincial agreements to keep their tax rates uniform and lim- it yields to, say. 10 per cent of federal income tax revenue. sev- en or eight per cent of federal corporation income collections and 50 per cent of federal succes- sion duties. The federal government then would reduce its levies by a sim- ilar amount io prevent an in- crease in payments by Canadian taxpayers. For all provinces cxccpt On- tario the yields from such dircct tax levies would he lowcr than those received from tax rentals The federal administration would Wm Wrecked Vv Hurricane MIAMI. (AP!--Uncounted dead and injured were ncsriay from the flnttcncrl tiny seaport of Xcalak as killer Hurri- cane Janct slrcslicd across Mox- ico's Yucatan peninsula is ncl moved back over open water still carrying winds of mo miles an hour. A tclcgraph operator reported that only one house was left standing in Xcalak. a town of 1.- mo in the southern part of Quin- tana Raa province. it is on the snutbern tip of Yucatan. Janet has killed hundreds in its week-long rampage over land and water in the Caribbean area -an estimated mo in Mexico alone. It swallowed up the only hurricane hunter plane that has ever failed to return from a storm-scouting mission. Scores of planes and ships have searched thousands of square miles in the Caribbean for the missing P-2V Neptune with "no results." The plane carried nine airmen and two Can- adian newspaper mcn. reporter Alfred 0. Tate and photographer Douglas Cronk. both of the Tor- onto Star. who were doing a feature story on hurricane hurl- ter planes ' FARMER KILLED 91'. PE1'l:R'S. N. S.. (CPL-EL not .1. Maclaeod. M-year-old farmer. was killed Tuesday when In ailing horse he was lending slipped and fell on him. imum revenues and federal tax-i rcportcri Wed- - TORONTO. !CPl - Minimum -and maximum temperatures: i Min Max Dawson Vancouver V-ictnria Edmonton Calgary Rcgina Winnipeg lTnronto Iottawa .. Montreal -Quebec .. Fredericton Saint John Moncton Halifax Charlottetown . Sydney" .. Yarmouth St. John's . . . . . . . . . . .. HALIFAX. tCPl-The weather office says skies will be gener- ally sunny. Northern Nova Scotia: Cloudy becoming sunny in the torenoon; warmer; winds wast l5 Low-high at New Glasgow 50 and 62. Prhce Edward Island and New Brunswick: Sunny with I few kciondy intervals: flue ebnng h i tnnper-more: west winds 15. Lew- illlgli nt Moncton and Chariottt town. :0 sad 0!. Fndericlon and 8&1 Jolie GI and Cl. Idmnlt Icon 40 and I2. Csmphellton I and I). Bay of Fimdy: Westerly winds ill: sunny; visibility lo mllelt warmer. High tide today It Charlottetown It 8:19 am. and Izll p.m.; I Rustico at 3:39 I m. and 4:16 p.n. Bummersivle tide eighteen tnlnub late than Charlottetown. sun rises It tzl I.nI. HI 1 at Izl p.rn. :f.:SS32SS28SE8&&S'8; 338833!-lEi3333G8GiS?3t