TELEPHONE 8506 Buyer meets seller with Guardian Want Ads...Bial 8506 ask for classified ad taker, for quick results, . PADRE IS INDUCTED mony on Sunday during which _| Flight Lieutenant R.M. Bartlett was inducted to the chaplaincy service of the Royal Canadian, - Air Force. F /L Bartlett recent- ly arrived from Hamilton, Ont., to take up his first RCAF ap- pointment as Protestant chap- lain at station Summerside. The Padre and Mrs. Bartlett, daugh- ter, Marilyn, and sons Paul and George have taken up re Sis den gi’ sh ts Ea Mae acknowledge in the Royal Ganadian Air These words spoken by Group Captain F.W. MacLean, CD,DD (left) director of religious ad- ministration (Protestant). For the RCAF, concluded the cere- Deputy Agric. Minister Gets Third Extension By ROY LaBERGE had taken him from his native Canadian Press Staff Writer |Parrsboro, to Swift Current, Sask. OTTAWA (CP)—Dr. J. Gordon! The son of a farmer-fisherman, Taggart, a native of Parrgboro,/he served his apprenticeship on N.S., who has held several of Can-|farms at River Hebert and Truro ada’s top agricultural posts, says/in Nova Scotia. he has no regrets over the pass-| After graduation from the ing of. the so-called “good old/Guelph, Ont., agricultural college, days” of farming. he was an agricultural represen- Dr. Taggart, who Monday cele-|tative in Ontario for two years brated his 67th birthday, has been and then joined the staff of the granted a third one-year exten- | Alberta Provincial School of Agri- gion as deputy minister of agri-| culture for eight years, eulture. Federal civil servants normally retire at 65, He said in an interview he’s convinced mechanization has brought farmers a better life, though still not an easy life in comparison to other occupations. | He also believes farm boys and girls should be given the same choice of occupation as city youngsters. In fact, such choice “4s essential for economic pro- gress.” HALIFAX (CP)—Spanish fish- ing methods cannot be used eco- DEPUTY SINCE 1949 nomically in the grounds where} Dr. Taggart has been federal;Nova Scotia trawlers normally deputy agriculture minister since|operate, fisheries scientist W._R. 1949. He came to Ottawa in 1944| Martin said here Monday. as the wartime prices and trade Dr. Martin, head of groundfish board’s food administtator. HeTeseatch at the federal biological | has also been chairman of the| Station in St. Andrews, N.B., said | meat board and of the agricul-|the Spanish pait- ror method i - ght adaptable smaller tural = support board. | aremeere in the Gulf of St. Law- The busy, matter-of-fact ad-'rence. But for Nova Scotia boats ministrator came here well equip-| trawling rough bottom grounds it} ped by an agricultural career that | would not be economic. Rebels In Algeria. Want To Negotiate tee Tunisia ‘Reuters)—Al-;made in an announcement read - ia’s rebel leaders said Mon-|here by Ferhat Abbas, premier day they were ready to negotiate|of the insurgent “Algerian provi- with France on a cease-fire and) sional government.”’ f-<determination. The announcement’ said the But they added _ conditions|jeagers of the five-year national- viewed as tantamount to a re-|ict rebellion in France’s North! jection of other points in Presi-| African territory were ready to| dent Charles de Gaulle’s new Al-|pegin negotiations with the Paris | gerian policy. government on the political’ and| (In, Paris, de Gaulle. and Pre military conditions of an Alger- mier Michel Dewre met to dis-|jan éease-fire and on the condi- _ cuss the rebel statement about an|tions and guarantees of the ap- - hour after it was released. iplication of self-determination. (There was no immediate ott" De Gaulle’s 16 plan oro cial comment on the French cap- |mised a ballot er the restora- ital, but first unofficial reactio was that the conditions laid down| ‘0 of peace in which the Alger- by the insurgents were those that} ian people would decide whether the French government had al-| |they wished to sever or retain ways rejected. their link with France. The plan (Some observers, however, said ©™Visaged that the Sahara region there was a difference of tone in| is er euuig Mtk cite the statement from the one in| Soaid cay Fenech. ions— which was rejected, cutrighi, de Gaulle’s “peace of the brave” of-| It offered Algerians three | i fer a year ago.) choices—full independence, inte gration with France or. self-gov- ACCEPT TALKS ernment in association with The rebel reply to de Gaulle’s| France within four years of the’ plan announced 12 days ago waslend of the revolt. | | ish ‘s Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1959 12 PAGES Mac's Moscow Vist. (Summit Meet Is Seen Near ls Seen Paving Way or Ike-Nikita Talks -LONDON (Reuters) — | Minister Macmillan aseaer oe re peated his claim that his “ice- breaking’ trip to Moscow early this year paved the way for last Gents & Eisenhower - Khrushchev talks and the prospect of a sym- mit conference. The prime minister was mak- ing a campaign speech for the represented by Labor. Macmillan told a crowd of 1,- 000: “We have heard today of a very important piece of news— a successful negotiations taken a further point forward between i of America and FAIR QUESTION “TI would only. ask you this ques- tion, and I think it is a fair one. Do you think Mr. Khrushchev and President Eisenhower would have promoting and discuss- ing together at Camp David last week if I had not decided to break the ice and go to Mos- cow?” To cheers from the operrair| meeting, Macmillan claimed the Labor Party is deeply divided on foreign affairs and asked: ‘‘How can they negotiate for our ‘coun try.” Labor Party leader Hugh Gait- Success Of Talks Hailed In Europe By ARTHUR GAVSHON_~. LONDON (AP)—With an air of relief, Europe hailed the outcome of President Eisenhower's talks with Nikita Khrushchev as “‘suc- cessful’’ Monday. There was gen- eral expectation there will be a suramit meeting before Christ- mas. Statesmen and newspapers de-|_ “ " “" tected historic significance in the Camp David declaration by the! American and Soviet leaders! that: — questions should yt settled not by the application of but by peaceful means dees negotiation.”’ To diplomats that looked like a definite agreement by the might-| iest powers in the world no’ paegE gatnn good ce Rar eve H-bomb age. BRITISH ACCLAIM Even before reading a detailed| pal control over the operation and | account of the top-level Ameri-| can-Soviet exchanges, Prime) Minister Macmillan jumped into acclaim them as Successful.’ Spanish Trawl Style Said Not Economical Dr. Martin, one of four Cana- dian fisheries experts watching} Spanish operations on the Grand) Banks last week, said pair-traw!-| ing utilizes two trawlers dragging| a large net between them. The most impressive feature of! pair-trawling was that the net} had a mouth four times as wide} as that of the largest Canadian! otter trawls, he said. While, fish-| ing in 180 feet of water, each! \towing cable-was 4,200 feet long, | ‘Canadian trawlers would not use! much more than 600 feet of cable at such depths. The catch per tow was about 6,000 pounds of fish, mainly cod. Pair \trawlers make about two) trips a year from Spain ‘between) early spring and late autumn. Smaller boats land their catches at St. Pierre et Miquelon for shipment to Spain. “They must take their ships close enough together on rough seas to throw lines from one to another,’ he said. “Our skippers with us agreed that was first- class seamsnship.”’ (E. M. Gorman, Prince ward Island Deputy Minister ef Fisheries, was on the survey trip. He said -that further study would be needed before a decis- ion could be made on the Span- method, so far as Island |trawlers are concerned.) WHERE-TO-FIND-IT Announcements, notices .. 11 Births, deaths, etc. ...... 2, 11 Classified section ...... 10, ily Comics, features .......... a? Charlottetown news ...... 5 WS io cid. cc ddesian, © Finance, markets ewan es 11 Island news .........- 2 3 OE 6 i icdue cack cdbbane o> ie 7 Women’s page ............. 6 Late reports from Guardian news bureaus in Summer- side, Montague, Alberton and Souris, and from special cor- respondents now appear on Prime |skell, campaigning in England, told an election meet- ing at Darlington Labor is best fitted to represent Britain in ne- gotiations ahead, and added:, “We now have reached a stage in the great world issues where there is a change which has not occurred for some time of get- ting somewhere ‘near a_ settle ,|ment of the differences between | the great blocs that divide the wesla” SAME PROGRESS Commenting on the Camp David talks, Gaitskell «said: ‘So far so good. We did not expect negotiations at this stage. We hoped only for a better atmos- phere. Though at times this seemed a Jittle doubtful, in the end it appears to have been achieved.” Gaitskel] urged that @ summit conferenceabe held ‘‘very soon”’ —before Eisenhower's spring visit to Russia. He said the West must go into it with concrete, practical pro-|, posals on three immediate issues —a temporary agreement on Ber- lin, the banning of nuclear tests and the establishment of a zone lof controlled disarmament in central Europe. At the same-time, he said, the West should accept in principle Soviet Premier Khrushchev’s plans for scrapping all arms. Locked in an electoral battle for power, Macmillan also claimed personal credit for blazing the trail toward East - West under- standings. Macmillan’s challenger for power, Labor Parity chief Hugh Gaitskell, also hailed the Camp David exchanges—for achieving “a better atmosphere.” ! OTTAWA (CP)—Some 300 serv-| ice station operators Monday ‘aia plans to push for stiffer munict-|j {building of stations in Ontario. At the annual meeting here of} the Ontario Retail Gasoline and Automotive Association, they control bylaw passed by their lo- cal municipal councils. The bylaw is part of a brief, drafted by the association, that calls umrestricted and unregu-| lated operation of stations public nuisance . , . detrimental | to the general health, welfare} and safety of the people of the | area.’ «Dies At 59 Equipment and operations |must be regulated to resolve the , conflict that now existed between station operations and the ‘‘quiet, peaceful enjoyment of adjacent lresidential or commer.cia) areas.” |LIMIT AREA The bylaw would forbid erec- tion of a new service station, within 500 yards of an existing | school “‘or other such ‘institution | where large numbers of pedes- trians congregate.”’ It also calls for a maximum 10,000-gallon storage capacity at any one station and no more than four single pumps or two double pumps, Steel Chiel HYANNIS, Mass. ‘(AP)—Walter F. Munford, president of US. Steel Corporation shut down by the industry - wide strike, died Monday in Cape Cod Hospital of complications which followed a stroke. He was 59. Munford, who took over the presidency of the vast steel con- cern May 5 at a reported salary of $250,000 a year, had been under a physician's ‘care for the last few. weeks for nervous exhaus- tion and fatigue. He was admitted to hospital last Wednesday suffering from an abdominal knife wound. Hos- pital administrator Gerard Quel- lette .said Munford apparently wounded himself while doctors were arranging to go to Boston with him for further treatment. Tae Munfords had been staying 2! their 12-toom Cape Cod sum-| the Island News Page. mer cot tage at Chatham, Service Station Men Seek Stiffer Control As Berlin Threat Removed = Quick Steel Settlement Is Goal Of Eisenhower By NORMAN WALKER WASHINGTON (AP)-— Presi- dent Eisenhower, calling the con- tinuing steel strike intolerable, Monday summoned industry and union leaders to the White House about Earlier, Wednesday. He planned to ap-| the deadlock. e al personally fo site ‘oak: Sey er 8 oer OF exmaer CHANCES The administration He earlier told his press con- ferefice he was “getting sick and tired of the apparent impasse.” He said emphatically the walk- out, which began 76 days ago, must not continue. Then Eisenhower put in tele- | plione calls for Roger M. Blough, board chairman -of US. Steel Corporation, and David J. Me ‘Donald, president of the striking steelworkers union. : | of the growing steel shortage,| He arranged for them to come| name a fact-finding panel to re-| to separate White House meet-| port to him on the issues without for _a_ settlement short of invok- ing the Taft-Hartley labor law's emergency provisions. But if Eisenhower's personal appeal for a negotiated settle- ment fails to bear fruit, he prob- | ably will have no other recourse. In involking the Taft-Hartley law, ings with their respective in-|making any recommendations dustry and union allies Wednes-| and then obtain an 8-day halt day. \ ito the strike by court injunction. Administration hesitancy in in- UNION TO COME woking this procedure was be- In New York, a spokesman for) lieved rooted in~past experience McDonald said the steelworkers | that a union’s ‘members may chief would be on haad, as Eisen-} work through the 80-day injunc-| hower requested. Leaders of| tion period and then resume the union and management groups were asked to pass on the presi- dential bid to others on | sides. The industry also announced, through a spokesman for Blough, that it was accepting Eisenhow- er’s summons, which it referred to as an invitation. The stated purpose of the meet- ings will be to “‘urge both se to resume free collective bargain-| ing with a view to settlement of the dispute in the interest of the nation.” The union walked out of bar} gaining sessions last Friday say ing farther talks: were useless. out. By VINCENT BUIST MOSCOW (Reuters) — Nikita Khrushchev Monday himself well satisfied with his two weeks in the United States! and with the “wisdom, one and valor’ df President Eisen-| hower. But the Soviet premier warned} there is a long and hard road ahead to complete settlement of all problems. This summation of his Ameri- can trip was made in a 56-min- ute speech to 15,000 cheering Muscovites at the local sports palace soon after his 1042-hour flight from Washington. A buoyant Khrushchev drove straight from the airport to the| The brief says traffic problems jarising from congestion of serv- ice stations—sometimes four on one corner—are a hazard to mo-| torists and a nuisance to police | departments. Erection of service stations re- duces property values in adja- were urged to try to get a draft) cent residential areas, it adds. | mass tally, where he said to sus-| duction.” Cael SiS ae “i ant ie mae "Sr icctan President Eisenhower of the boarding the bes ot ear which bes United S:-t: ‘a Kh 4 i Wesiond | shcheyv of Russia are seen | me¢.ing at Ca mp David, Te The White House statement}; Wednesday’s conferences) > made clear Eisenhower doesn’t} *~ intend to haggle over the issues.) | he had said he wasn't) going to try to assess blame for} obviously | | wants to exhaust every chance) : the president would declare! a national emergency by reason} pronounced | SECRETARY Rev. R. Fred Bullen, minis- ter of Park Bauptist Church in Brantford, Ont., has been named Secretary-treasurer of the Bap- | 'barriers to a summit meeting. | tist Federation of Canada, ef- | fective Jan. 1, 1960. Mr. Buller was born in Plymouth, England in 1916 and came to Brantford as a boy with his parents. ‘A zraduate of McMaster Univer- sity in Hamilton, Ont., in divin- ity and social sciences, he. work- ed in the ministry at several Ontario communities and lectur- ed at McMaster for 12 yee. . walkout when that period runsi-He-has been at Park Baptis | since 1950. (CP Phoke) “W ISDOM; COURAGE, VALOR’ Khrushchev Is Satisfied; Eisenhower Is Praised tained applause: “T must state from this lofty forum before Muscovites, before all my people, government and party that the president of the [Paper Price To Be 7 Cents SAINT JOHN, N.B, (CP)—The Telegraph « Journal announced Monday that effective next Mon- day the daily morning newspaper | will sell for seven cents per copy, up two cents from the present price ‘‘because of the greatly in- | creased costs of newspaper aid | \4 on \ } Wes Pat SM IMPORTANT MEETING AHEAD two leaders of twa of the wer'd's ost po ‘uw! nations rpached an “accérd'’-im their delibera- fiona (AP Wi ) Barriers § hattered By Ike-Nikita Talks By HAROLD MORRISON Canadian Press Staff Writer WASHINGTON (CP) Russia has removed its threat to West | Beriin and President Eisenhower Monday indicated the way is open to an early East-West sum-} mit conference. In an obviously happy frame of mind—though suffering from a_ cold that had been hanging on isolving the Berlin issue, | Berlin time, -was that there be no un necessary or undue delay in re- though Eisenhower said ncgotiafions on “will probably take some time,” And so, the president said, a “beginning’’ had been made in melting the cold war. His atten- tions now were directed from a- foreign to a domestic crisis— for three weeks—Eisenhower told solving the steel. strike. a press conference his weekend} Eisenhower was “sick and talks with Soviet Premier|tired” of the deadlocked negoti- Khrushchev removed many of the ations, He threatened government j action if management and labor the president will getin didn’t settle their differences touch with his allies to decide Promptly. |where: and when formal East-| As for his cold, he had tried all West negotiations on Berlin and); ‘kinds of remedies. If he could get other issues are to be resumed,|away for five days in the dry Meanwhile there would be no 'desert” somewhere, a am going iSoviet time limit in respecting | quickly.” ; Western rights in Berlin. no So-| Eisenhower's trouble with had | viet demand that Western troops|colds\ may have been a reason. | be removed within a fixed time.|for postponement of his Russian Eisenhower said Khrushchev in/tour ‘from this fall until next- Now fact stated he never had intended | to deliver an ultimatum on West’ Berlin. ; | The only Seviet request, at this > > « United States of America, Dwight Eisephower, has displayed states- manlike wisdom, eourage and va-' lor in his approach to the inter- national situation.” IKE VISIT DATE Khrushchev told the rally that Eisenhower's exchange visit to Moscow will be at the end of May or the beginning of June. At the airport, Khrushchev summed up his 13-day trip in one word—“‘okay.”’ ‘statement insisting spring. |AVOID WINTER— Khrushchev said the delav was decided after the Soviet leader conferred with Eisenhower's grandchildren, who wanted te come along on the trip. But Eis- enhower said he himself was the first to. suggest the springtime because of early Russian winters and because of heavy presiden- tial engagements this fall. Eisenhower set off a diplomatie furore by telling reporters he could not guarantee any settle ment would uphold the previous vows tp protect .the freedom af West Berliners and te guard Allied rights. Within minutes, however, the Whiie House issued a special this answer “did not mean that the freedom of the people of West Berlin was going to be abandoned or that Allied rights were going te be abandoned by any unilateral ac- tion.” The president said all he was trying to say by his reply was that he could not at this stage “give in detail the ultimate solu- (Continued on page 2, :eol. 2) tion of the Berlin question.” | | grounds that a company of which ' ernment. ‘eral leader Sunday Speaker MONTREAL (CP)—Hon. Maur- ice Tellier, speaker of the Legis- lative Assembly, Monday brushed aside demands by Liberal Leader |Jean Lesage that he resign on he is a director has been doing business with the provincial gov- “As usual, Mr. Lesage is in- accurate and erratic.” said Mr. Tellier when asked to comment on statements made by. the Lib- at ]'Sssomp- Replies m4 To Jean Lesage pany had received from the Que bec government various contracts and orders for a total of $102,833. EXCLUSIVE AGENCY : “Mr. Tellier said that when La Salle Equipment. was forméd the assets it purchased included an exclusive agency for a power shovel manufactured in the United States La Sale Equipment, he said, has not sold a_ single power shovel to the Quebee govern- ment. All ft did sell the govern tion, Que. Mr. Tellier is in Hotel Dieu Hospital here. He recently | underwent an operation for a kid- ney ailment and is due to un- |dergo a second operation today. | 'He spoke to newspaper men through his bedside telephone. Mr. Lesage said in his speech that Mr, Tellier is a director of La Salle Equipment Company, a machinery-selling firm incorpor- ated in 1952. He said Mr. Tellier’s son Bernard and Aime Lacroix, officers of the company. A quick \look at the public ac- counts, said Mr. Lesage, showed that La Salle Equipment Com- Gracie Winds Are Perilous CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP)—In- creasing winds and rain squalls both of Montreal, are the other}, ment were spare parts for shove els purchased before La Salle | Equipment was established. no place else the government could have pur- chased the spare parts, he said, because La Salle Equipment held an exclusive franchise for them, Mr. Tellier said ‘‘l-am not the head of the La Salle Equipment Company as Mr. Lesage ime plied.” : “Tt am simply a director-share- older.” He denied Mr. Lesage's charge that he had violated legislature law by being director of a com- pany doing business with the government. Mr. Tellier said the law deals with cabinet minisiers, and the speaker of the Legista- tive Assembly does net hold the rank ‘of cabinet minister. Tough BoX'2 Theré was lashed the South Carolina- Georgia coastline Monday night as hurricane Gracie continued her steady course landward. Her gale-force winds were offshore. With her howling: winds of 125 miles an hour expected to churn up high tidés and waves of dangerous proportions, residents along the coast from Savannah, Ga., to the Myrtle Beach-George- town, S.C., area were ordered evacuated. The full force of the storm was expected this morn- ing. There was particular danger to island residents and those in low level areas and the weather bur- eau advised thom to evacuate before escape routes were eut off, ‘ . Seen For Seat CHESTER. NS Lihberale and Conservatives are puiticg everything they have irto a ficht ( n for control of the Lunenurz Best seat in an Oct. 14 bye'ect on te fill a Nova Scotia lecis'a‘ice va- cancy left by the res‘gnat'en of @ Conservative cabinet nrnister ~ A pair of popular politicians are the’ major participant »:—havd- ware merchant Maurice Zinck foe the PCs and Christmas ttee ex. porter Kirk Hennigar for the Libe erals. Mr. Zinck has been a meme | ber of the municipal counci! since 1953, and is municipal warden, hae is