O 9 I4 is T V ll; it"s Good ‘For island Jhe‘ Guardian {rt ’“"‘fi""""'von . Nofaor . —___ . NAVY LEAGUE ELECTS arr: A mailwood. (centre). as president of the gue of P.E.l. with the elec , n of officers at the League’ .annual meeting on board li MCS Queen Charlotte Jack ll look ov Navy D last night. Also newly elected members as the League’s offi- cers are, Ralph Carr, (left,) secretary - treasurer and Ivan Doherty, vice - president. Mr. Smallwood will represent the Island at the National Council meeting in St. John's, Nfld.. September 13 and 14. three men are from Charlotte- town. ECONOMY GETS SHOT IN ARM N 87 Per Cent Boost Seen |nWheatCropOver1 961 OTTAWA (CP)—'l‘imely rains have prod_uc better-them average Canadian wheat crop ' uah drought-ravaged harvest of last year. - . , The estimate. based on mid- August conditions and co lional on satisfactory weather in the nest of the growing and harvesting season, was made Friday by the Dominion Bureau of Statistics, which described the crop as the seventh-largest on record. Agriculture Minister Sticks It was hailed by Agriculture Minister Hamilton as a billion- dollar crop “which had relieved my worries over meeting mar- et commitmsn ." The sunshine wheat crop ‘WV? '»'3‘Z'. '.. Prairie farmers making ma- chinery an household puts chases that they had postponed an years. Of the total wheat crop. the bureau estimated the Prairies would produce 511,000,000 bush- 8' E To Predictions On Economy . 0'1‘TAWA (CP) —- Agriculture Minister Hamilton. buoyed by estimates of a vastly increased Canadian grain crop. said Fri- day he is not backing down one bit from his controversial state- ments in the immediate post- election period about Canada's economic he . On the CBC television pro- mm Newsmagasine of - minister nesday. June 20, the said "never have conditions looked ood." He added so g there was "no that any- auste program Rising from Canada's foreign txfilhanse troubles. I‘. .t0l|'s statements We hothr disputed at the time the three op- by the leaders of Dosrti who with him on the TV program. Since the austerity program was announced. opposition par- statements. N0 BACKING DOWN “I’m not backing down one- quarter from what I said on that V show,'.' Mr. Hamilton said Friday in commenting on the Dominion Bureau of Statistics’ forecast of 530,654,000-bushel Canadian wheat crop, up 07 per cent from last year's drought- reduced harvest. I said then about all indicators being good and there being no financial crisis has been borne out,” he said in an interview. "All cators. in- cluding trade figures which are up 12 per cent from last year, continue to . is no financial crisis in Canada but we do have this exchange problem." 0-! é said a good crop and high wheat exports w uld help eet this. “We'll be earning a lot of exchange dollars." Rumors Oi Invasion Spark Alert In Cuba feet the gr“ .. - ndl- tion'alonproda§t;“ "ho "said? with ties have harked back to those 3 els—up 97 per cent from last year. The over-all Canadian wheat crop of 530,654,000 bushels com- pares with last year's drought crop of 283,394,000—lowest since the -4“!!! (WEEK ESTIMATES 8? Estimated production of oats, barley and e also is up sharply from last yea with marked improvement in yields on the Prairies. At the start of the year, there w concern at the as much - drought conditions of 1961 might eat exports were to continue. maintaining high levels and there also was some worry about Canada being able to meet its overseas commit- m . In April, Mr. Hamilton made special appeal for “all - out production” by Prairie farmers. setting targets of 500,000, bushels for wheat, 350,000,000 for oats and 250.000,000_ for bar- ey. Friday’: estimates by the bur- eau were ,000,000 bushels above the target for wheat but 50,000,000 below for oats and al- most l00,000,000 below {or bar- le y. However, Mr. Hamilton said Friday he believes the bureau's initial estimates for wheat.snd oats may yet prove to be a bit on the low side. He said that with wheat ex- po running around 350,000,000 bushels a year and annual do- mestic consumption ave 150,000,000 bushels "we can sell all that the farmer has pro- duced." ' ' Sleeping Sickness Tol|_ Increases 8'1‘. PETERSBUBG, It'll. (AP) — The death count from lng sick- n-4 persona w have been admitted to hospital. Sleeping sickness —- known medically as oncephalittes -- is T speculation that there V 8f¥lI¢aie"!n:flie. @tm:c'diott 'l‘Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” ‘ Cubans Warned By Yanks WASHINGTON (AP) -- The White House announced Friday that two Cuban ships fired on a Unled States Navy plane * Thursday o v e r international waters. It said that hereafter such attacks will be met with “all means necessary" to as- sure protection. "All means necess " signi- fies that U.S. planes and naval vessels have been ordered to fire back if fired upon ire naval vessels Cuban," 15 miles north of the Cuban coast. The plane was not hit and none of its crew of three were u CHARLO'l'l‘E'l‘OWN, CANADA, sarunnav, saprnmaan 1, 1952. N03“-goal SEVEN cams Bill Of Rights Said 5 Landmark By KEITH KINCAID. HALIFAX (CP)-—Justice Min- ister Fleming Friday defended the Bill of Rights as a “land- mark in the march of liberties" and said he would be glad to hear any suggestions to im- prove it. The minister, here to attend closing sessions of the Canadian Bank Official Is Killed By Bandit HALIBURTON, Ont. (CP)— Bank manager Eric McConnell, about 45, was shot and killed Friday night by a gunman who entered the bank just after the ing the b 6 p.m. closing. McConnell's wife was waiting for him outside the Bank of Montreal branch. They were just about to start their holl- days. She ran into the bank and found her husband dead, shot twice in the stomach with a .25- calibre automatic. The gunman fled in a late- model car on highway 519. He evidently took no money, police said. ' Provincial police set up road- blocks on all highways leading from the holiday area abou miles north of Peterborough. Two buttons ripped from the bank manager’s shirt led to WI! I Bar Association, remarked at a press conference, however, that __ 1- he has received no spe- c1fic_tproposals for strengthen- 1 I'll O E . Mr. Fleming’s sta-tement was prompted by criticism of th bill expressed before the asso- ciation's civil liberties section earlier this week. By reason of his justice portfolio. he is hon- orary president of the associa- 5!- —a on. A paper read by lawyer Rich- ard S. Bowles of ' Winnipeg, which reported on cases involv- ' since it became law two years ago, said the bill has failed to become the super- statute the government hoped it would be. Mr. Fleming said criticisms he has heard so far have been mainly that it does not extend to the provincial field and that it was not written into he con- stitution. He described the bill as a jcodification of rights already in _lexistence. . NEED TESTING TIME .. A report of the civil liberties section presented to a plenary session Friday said a few more years of testing was necessary before specific recommenda- tions for strengthening the bill gcould be made. The general session rejected a number of resolutions brought before it by the criminal justice section. Among them was a recom- mendation that would extend the conditions under which a police officer or a citizen may 9 make arrests without a war- rant. _AIso rejected was a resolu- tion recommending it be made illegal to carry a folded weapon of less than 20 inches. Delegates felt this would un- fairly rule out small rifles used in-survival kits. The general session accepted a recommendation that would permit drivers who have lost -their licence through court con- _victions to continue driving peniiing the outcome of an ap- a e . Also accepted as a resolution that where possible only w- yers be appointed magistrates. The accepted resolutions will the forwarded to the justice de-. I partment. ‘ g‘... HEEADS PROBE Toronto accountant Kenneth Carter has been named chair- man of a royal commission in- to Canada's tax structure. He is serving his third term as president of the Canadian Wel- fare Council, is a past presi- dent of the Institute of Char- tered Accountants of Ontario and is a past chairman of the board of the Canadian Tax Foundation. (CP PHOTO) WEATHER ' Clear and warmer; light winds; Low.» high 55 and _73. Sunday; mostly sunny. 14 Psufi West Asks Special Talks On Nuclear Test Cutoff Russian Offers Consideration GENEVA‘ (Reuters) -- Thclihal the nuclear subcommittee west called on Russia Friday; should work through the recess. to agree to uhihterm ted mp: Kuznetsov said he _was not clear test-ban negotiallions to‘°nc°uraged by Deans stale‘ reach agreement by the end of 1 mem b°°a‘.'5° ‘t 5h9“’°d the Us.’ the yeah was standing by its old posi- The United States and Bm_ trons. They want their Vdraft ain want the disarmament con- "calms .l° ,a°°°m°d w1.th°"t ference’s three - power nuclear ' r°5°’V"‘m°“- ]‘“z"€‘5°" 53"‘- test-ban subcommittee to con-‘ The we-“CT” draft £01‘ 3 00111‘ ue to meet while the maihrplete ban provides for interna- conference is in recess from tionally supervised. nationally- seph 3 to Nov, 12_ ‘manned control posts on treaty Arthur Deah_ chief us. dis_}partners territories and a re- armament delegate. told the lfluced l“""b°" ‘’l ‘""‘“‘‘l °”'5“° conference that with “maxi-;‘"5Pe°“°“5- mum pressure" on the suhcom_ The partial ban. excludes un- mittee, agreement on a test ban ‘ d°r3"°.‘"‘d tests Wm‘ 9 aim Pf shoum be possible by No“ 1 removing the problem of on-site with treaty ratification by Jan. ”l5”e°“°“' 0" “’h’°h_ Ea5t‘w°5l5 1_ . idiffercnces appear insurmount- The agreement would be ei-53 ther on the basis of a comple : ban or a limited agreement ex-E halbrlieg lg: g h underground tests Ecanada Forced t e We t M d , h = - Y 5 °" W °rTo Sell Gold At the same time, both De l said. an; and British delegate Joseph? WASHINGTON (AP)-Canada Threat Grows ‘Oi Civil War sctiue ‘Red VenusShot Is Said Failure WASHINGTON (AP) In- rmed U.S. sources said Fri- day night the Soviet Union tried send a space vehicle to Venus last Saturday but failed. The sources, who asked not 3 or payload of the Russian shot now is in three pieces and orbiting the earth. The Soviets have nevi; an- nounced a space shot ad- vance, had never ad- mitted that any of their at- tempts have gone awry. a only Russian official announce- :1: proved at least partially sue- 0 Q as . The Russian attempt to put a space_ vehicle en route to Venus would have been similar to the U.S. Venus shot that now is in progress. The United States Mariner I! spacecraft has been hurtling to- ward Venu path for several the trip will take sev- eral months days—but ere was no official confir- mation, however. to be identified, said the rocket ty The formula agreement with Canada Packers for the pur- chase of the three top grades of beef cattle becomes effective immediately, it was learned yes- terday from chairman Daniel Gass, Cornwall of the beef pro- ducers’ committee named for the purpose. Other members are Lee P. Mclsaac, Mermaid and Edwin A. MacRae, West Royal- Mr. Gass said that arrange- ments are being made to have the expected prices for each Typhoon Hits Hong Kong HONG KONG (AP)-Typhoon W da hit this an overcrowded British colony F rid ay with winds of 70 miles an hour and gusts ranging up to 135 m.p.h. At 8 a. - east of liong Kong. The royal observatory reported the was being lashed by some of the worst winds near the ty- phoon centre. Schools, shops were closed and offices Danish Premier Resigns Position heart trouble, Friday handed in his resignation after two years in office. ter Jena Otto (Havana radio broadcasts u. g monitored In the Upped st-rm: r‘:.‘.l"°o‘t‘”u..'s-‘§.i.‘."°.'.n'"""""'..-ma with bands of counter - revoln- ‘yum’ Canada in U) Thant Election man, whose resignation came as no a . Kampmann’s doctor said the ex - premier needs a complete re As‘ soon as the resigns was announced. the Social Dem- ocratic .Party. dominant part- ner in Denmark's coalition gov- (Reuters)—r la The observatory warned of possible flooding low areas by high tides. .. Beef Purchase Formula Atrflnce week published each Monday formula is on the basis of dress- ed carcass weight for the Red, Blue and Standard brands, but it was explained that this w ill be transferred into the approxi- mate price per pound liveweight as cattlemen here are more ac- quainted with selling cattle on the live weight basis. The producers meeting h eld here in July agreed that the.pro- posed formula sales should be given a trial for a period of up to one year. The formula is based on the price paid at Winnipeg, plus the transportation cost to Halifax, less the transportation cost of beef from Charlottetown to Hall- fax. The net result is a price to the farmer here on a rail grade basis — hot dressed weight — almost identical with the cost of cold dressed meat in Winnipeg, it has been explained. in the press and by radio. The . ' “In Algeria ALGIERS (AP) — Mutinous guerrillas took up positions in Algiers harbor Friday to bar any effort by troops backing deputy Premier Ahmed n Bella to land from the sea. Units camouflaged unl- forms set up machine - guns near-‘the French adm i-ralty giers was placed on a state of e to protect the lives and property of French citizens in Godber rejected any uhpohced j, was so short of U.S. dollars be- moratorium on u h d E rgmuhd *, fore she obtained large - scale tests under a partial teshhahlloans last June that she was 1;;-eagy_ ‘forced to sell a huge block of "No matter what term is used i gold to the _U.S. treasury, it was a moratorium cannot be ac-llealfined Friday- ceped," Dean said. The U.S.l Figures P“ 1) “Sh 9'1 by U18 was proved wrong in proposing r treasury show that in the April- and accepting the 1958 morator-lJ""‘€ Pe1‘1°d- Canada Sold the ium—lt was broken a year ago , - 390-000-090 W"1"“1 Of Offi- by a massive series of Sovietlclal 110” h0ldm§5- 0119 Of the ¢esgs_ largest such transactions in ‘post-war years. PLEDGED CLEARLY 'le Canada has lost gold, Godber said Premier Khrush- ‘ so has the U.S. De spite the chev himself had said Russia $190,000,000 purchase from Can- would not be the first to resume nd in the fiscal _ clearly, but in the event, of ending last June 30. official U.S. whatwvalue was that assur- 1 gold hol ’ngs decreased over ance._ ithe year by $1.025,700.000, the §oviet‘ delegate Vassilyhxuz-‘ltreasury reported. no sov -—‘ ‘tvho this week men-- urope was the hig buyer of tinned Jan. 1 as a possible cut- U.S. gold, a trend that has wor- off date for testing—made no ried American authorities who immediate response to Friday’s are concerned over the sharp western proposal. But he prom- decline in American gold hold- ised to study the suggestionl ings. case the city is swept by vio- nce. Nine heavy F rench tanks rolled along the waterfront as thousands of Moslems spilled into the streets, screaming “down with civil warl" _ More than 20,000 Algerians turned up at a rally organized by labor unions to force the pol- iticians to seek a compromise. Farm trucks brought thousands of peasants from the areas sur- rounding Algiers. Throughout the city there wa_s shout: “Seven years of war is enough!" 2,000 To Flee From Volcano TOKYO (AP) — About 2,0lD Mlrs. JFK‘ Arrives , Home From Italy NEW YORK (AP)—Mrs. Jac- queline Kennedy and daughter Caroline arrived at Idlewild air- port late Friday after a 23-day vacation ln'Italy. inhabitants, mainly the aged, women and children, will evacuated today from Miyake- jima Island, 120 miles south of Tokyo, in the face of continuing earth tremors and volcanic threats. The island's volcano erupted with explosive violence Aug. 24, injuring 30 inhabitants, and earth tremors continue to jar the island. be excavation at the abbey, C. A. '7z-¢aice‘A»‘i.~z“:éjQ.t-s\’*~bXs‘-»-..,.- . -»- -r 9-» .'9::7»rs-at-3:’-or3€:“aisIsIsr‘=-‘W King ArthurTomb Reported Found LONDON (CP)—An archeolo-tor Cornish pagan prince who gist says he has f0|ll1d the Wm” l was an outstanding fighter and ’ —-h 1- - . ‘ . °* *_<"r.;:::ur.:.: “.:.‘:.:s.:::.,1e--er or Bl-hah,__amohg 9 wins of;the1r enemies. But as wander- Glastonbury Abbey in Somerset. ;iug minstrcls carried the tales ACCW ‘HE _ l»1'3dlll° iheiof his exploits to Brittany, a :3}? ilvfaghetglxgéfiiegglryhilgggl; whole cycle of. fantastic adven- from future generations until he ‘lures °°n°91'n"18 Arthur-. 311' should rise again to save the ;Launcclot and the other knights British nation as he saved_it]of the Round. Table. grew up. from Saxon invaders centuries‘ Radford said e tom will ago, ‘ _ e opened until digging After years of pamslakrngtcompleted in the surrounding ‘a e . Ralegh Radford, otli-‘year;-ol:ll= sar e o n . . _ 1V|o-lence Threots the tomb near the Lady Chaupel _ Close RC School 10 feet underground between two stone crosses. writings of William of ‘ BURAS_ La_ (A1->)_R I-ted bury» Whit died ‘Em’ “‘ the 12”‘ I threats of v i oi e n c e elggiday centuI'y- l d O r Lady of Good Har- Tht? 1'93‘ Amll" ‘"35 3 welsh l ho(l'seRom:n Catholic School. de- rsegregatcd two days ago. Less ghhan th{ceAhours_ later. the FBI _ e an o rnve 1g c‘. Ann°""°"“°“‘5» “°"°°*‘ “ T: h u r c n officials indicated 3l|’““- ‘l““'- ‘"3" ' 3 13 rclasses would resume Tuesday Clflslllfled - ~ - - -- 12 13 after the Labor Day weekend. Finance Markets ~ ---- -- 9 Five Negroes and as white chil- Comlc lcaillfel drcn attended the school Wed- Women’s pale ---- -- ncsday in the first Roman cny Que . Catholic school desegregation in Kin s County Louisiana. Attendance Thursday 8 ials . ..... .. [dwindled to 25 w ' ' _ pupi.. Prince County , The FBI said it. entered the , case "at. the specific request of gunllimenide ' _ . _ _ _ _ H the attorney-gener of the ’° """" " United States." British Appeal Court “‘“"“" naonva (CP)-Prime Minis-"uec:l:“d “"11; K"I.m"°::‘ - hill! in the abortive INT. hr mdahker ‘h:fl.i‘g thht pgfhhcknmp. e 0 ‘I . meg tion of United Nations acuna “W V‘ “mu 3.» Dawn,‘ N sec ,-1-h.,,g.,;.‘l‘n:‘ta.r:NationI.wouidtahaovsr m ‘elm. T“ . mu mm‘ n._ . - LONDON (AP)——'l‘hree appeal , appeal court judges read their ‘ release of"the ttonateonvention ‘of’ I court judges Friday upheld Il_‘l°°‘5‘°“' . , ollflus. Ivsatillfilh I Clubs here that Mr. fig had me Nafiv. I lovernment order for depofl" nomrlzsllsfrlils ddrnhihs :":)Ii1l0unc(:|’. W“ 9"‘ .\‘°‘“'',l' ’ u of Dr. Robert Soblen to the rved by l-ak' g Soblen‘. 1: so .r“''‘ “M '1'" “H” walk” lb h NOS. an st: the House oll‘ Lords. B:itaian's iiiziigiiii iii if y. E I.EAvs_s Shirley ‘rumor. as, who no A n Iiondonlltoman Catholic cos- of the lions at the Manchester. who one. has II!“ Python snake BECOME LION TAMER around her neck. Shirley said she had completed her novitia- to. but had to wait four years her final vows convent five run up wrmsm via cable from D) United States. crushing the con- et spy‘s fourth legal cted attempt to win freedom in Brit- ain. t The ball - jumping Soblen is now pinning his slim hope of escaping life imprisonment in the United States on a Home Secretary Brooke for mercy. Soblen sat with his be ad bowed and lips quivering as the highest legal authority, as they had once considered doing. ut F. Elwyn Jones. head of Soblen‘s legal team. told the court he was authorized by at- torney-General Sir John liobson to to say Soblen would Le given an opportunity to make repre- sentations to the home tary before being flown back to New York.