TELEPHONE 8506 Buyer meets seller with i Guardian Want Ads. Dial 8506 call for classi- Ihd 9" Mk". for quid: results. 14 PAGES mime Guardian "Cover Prince Edward Island Like The Dew" cHARLorr'rE'roWN CANADA, SATURDAY, JULY 6, 1957 Queen l1iza'beih.Iis Queen mother.l'lIttwaihwithanunir:l- QUEEN MOTHER DEPARTS entifled man to a plane at London. Env.. Airport. July 1 bound for Southern Rhodesia. Walking be- hind the Queen Mother are. l to r. l Prince Charles. Princess Margar- et. and Princess Anne. who a aw her off. (AP Wlrephota Island Hogs Bring Fancy Prices, Brandon Swine Sale BRANDON. Man. (Special! Almon Boswell, Dunataftnage and Stirling Willis, Kingston were the happiest men at the All-Canad- tan Swine Show and Jubilee Sale. which concluded in Brandon Fri- ds y. Mr. vIlllis' reserve grand cham- pion sow ped the sow sale at 3335 and r. Boswall's March hour at 3325 was the highest prio- ed young boar of the sale. The animal was sold to Ward Brothers in Manitoba who were later offer- ed 3500 for him. Mr. H. W. Clay. senior livestock fleldman for Prince Edward Is- land said the Island exhibit made a most favorable impression at the Swine Show which saw the best animals in the Dominion of Canada parade before the Judges. Mr. Clay states that the Island breeders could have sold many more breeding aged boars and have booked many orders for int- ure delivery. OTIII IALES Willis received 8175 for a year- ling boar. Boswsll sold an October sow for 3200. In the final day oi judtllll Mr. Bsowall won third. and fourth for January sows and tourth in March boars against no is each class. The Island entry of It animals was small comps ed to those of some of the other Provinces and considering the very keen compet- IIOBT IITTING WASHINGTON (AP)-The 11.8. Add (Dem. Mont.) gavellad the Iensta inso session and out again. The lzsscond interval was con- sumed by a clerk's reading an announcement that Mansfield had been appointed to , ” . l I "Fn.MoN BOSWELL island breeders produce the beat somebody's conscience we a relieved to the extent of 3440.00 when. on June llih he or she sent that amount to Morton Dew Ltd.. Charlottetown. explalnhlg that "overpayment is repayed in full." - "You'd almost have to see It to believe it." Mr. Dew told the Guardian yesterday as he related the receipt of a plain. unregister- ed letter containing the sum in fifty and twenty dollar bills. with the following message attached: "Enclosed money to Union in- surance Society of Canton l.td.. head office Toronto. Ontario. 1 Red Army Backs Ejection Oi Anti-Party Leaders In Kremlin ' Moscow (AP)-The Red Army. backing the election of four "anti party” leaders from top Kremlin posts. accused them Friday of treachery and threatening to un- dermine soviet military defences. This was the view of Red Star. by Nikifor r. Kalchenho. premier or Shepilov. There has been no official hint .V n of a trial or arrest. despl 9 re-' ports abroad that Molotov. Kann- nvlcll and llalenhov are under house detention. But at meetings - and rallies all over the Soviet Un- ioakthe tour were under heavy at- tac . Zhukov. newly elevated to full membership in the yraeaidium. said the anned forces will run: solidly around the arty and "hold loyally to the rnotgerisnd." BACK TO ITALIN aovich was assailed by th. Ukrainian republic. for sushi lag "grave and tioas" ii 2: ITIBIJNG WILLIS ltion their achievement is all the of Grade A carcasses but they more commendable. Not only can have demonstrated beyond a doubt that they can produce animals for carcass bacon hogs in Canada. Gseshow rinl 9'” ""k mm”! "It with an almost do per cent average. in the country- .-.-- 2.. S400 Conscience Money Received By Local Firm now know it should not have come. It is refunded. Overpay- ment is repayed in full." ' The letter was postmarked Charlottetown. and was anony- mous. Mr. Dew, who no longer repres- ents the Toronto conmrn, sent the 3440.00 to the Toronto Office. Nel- ther he hor the Company are ebb to trace the lndentity of the sender. SOUGHT RIFLE DATA DUSSELFORD. Germany (AP) -A Dutchman and three Germans 'were jailed Friday on charges of trying to obtain secret data on NATO's Belgian-made automatic rifle. The court ruled they had agreed to supply the East German Communist secret service blueprints of the rifle. with was not of the freakish type .-Hula andagroup Boston's Mayor Draws Blast In Visit To Rome ROME (Reuters! - Bot ton i Mayor John B. Hynes. who has: been principal guest of the eter-l nal city in a "Home salutes Bos-1 ton" friendship week. left here by air Friday night amid a blast of unfriendly newspaper criticism. Alleged hobnobblng with promi- nent Fascists and a farewell fire- works ,display which yvakened many persons at 2:00 a.m. mar- red the brotherly hands-across-the ocean atmosphere of the intercity friendship. "The delegation from the city of Boston will certainly leave behind an imperishablc memory of its visit." the pro-government news paper. ll -Messngero. commented ironically Friday. . accompanied-by ht wife of 83 representative Bostonians. expressed his "sincere pleasure" at his visit Just before taking off. A few hours earlier he issued a firm denial of press reports that he had dined with neo-Fascists. visited the neo-Fasclsts' headquar- ters to see an exhibition illustrat- ing the wartime Fascist ”counter- resistance" movement. and wit- nessed a neo-Fascist movie. Mayor I-Iynes added that during his eight-day visit he had ”shaken hands with thousands of people whose names and political opln ions were unknown to me. The photographs of me are so numeb our that I cannot possibly answer for their significance.” Not A Tornado Just A Storm TORONTO (CF)-weatherman W. E. Turnbull says he is certain that Wednesday night's storm which hilt part of Southern Ontario was not a tornado-lust a storm with high winds. In explaining the weather situa- tion during the last two days which caused severe damage is some areas. he said there were two reasons the storm was not a tornado. He said no one reported seeing a tornado cloud and the damage WEATHER Sunny with little change in tempera- ture; west winds 20. Law-high at ,' Charlottetown 55 and 75. Sun. Sunny. While official figures are not yet available in regard to the first season's catch of lobsters in Prince Edward island it is believ- ed that the total will be somewhat higher than last year. This was stated yesterday by Mr. l...J. Mur- phy. acting dlrector of Fisheries for he Province. The season for north shore around the east and south shares to Victoria started on May 1 and closed July 1. Particularly good catches were hauled in the western part of the Province and individual catches exceeding 22.000 lbs are recorded. Some of the fishermen ran between seven and ei-gh hundred raps. while some of the smaller fisher- men had as few as 250. GOOD WEATHER The weather was good except for the first two days and the loss of fishing gear was negligible. Fishermen averaged 22 days per month throughout the season. This is considered to be a good average for any year. Prices started good at 32 cis. per lb. and toward the end of the season exceeded 38 cts. per lb. Market lobsters brought even a higher price. The second lobster season comprising the area from Victoria. west to North Cape will Photo-Survey Plane Missing TRENTON. Ont. (CP) The RCAF said Friday night 12 twin- engined Dakota aircraft and more than 100 personnel have been des- patched to northwestern Quebec to hunt for a missing photo-survey plane with four men aboard. The Lockheed, owned by Kant- lng Aviatim of Toronto. vanished Wednesday lets than an hour after taking off from Great Whale River on Hudson Bay for a 500 - mile flight south to Val d'0r. Que. It was not reported missing officially until Thursday night when the air force began mobilizing a search team. The RCAF said the 12 Dakotas plus the personnel needed to fly and service them would begin op- erating out of Val d'Or. probably Friday night. Tow of the four men aboard have been identified. They are the pilot. John Haffey. 39. of Brooklin. 0nt.. and the flight en- gineer. John O'Neil of Oshawa. (At Toronto, William A. Dia- mond. assistant to the general manager of Kentlng. said one of the remaining two is believed to have been a member of the RCAF. The air force said it had heard the same report.) BUILT ALCAN HIGHWAY ATLANTA (AP! - Marion B. Finley. construction engineer in charge of building the Alcan high- way to Alaska. died of a heart at tack Thursday. cnnnnssrionvrsran VISALIA. Calif. IAP)-Kenneth McPhaill. 39. made a "fire- cracker" out of gun wder and a three-inch metal to Thursday. A ragment of It ripped a hole characteristic of tornadoes. through him. killing him as he rm after touciing it off. begin August 10th and continue until October 5. Mr. Murphy observed Ihat the supply of lobsters is not diminish- ing along the island Cuast which would bear out the wisdom of the the size limit of the fish. Poor Season 5 For western Newfoundland com- mercial fishermen. this season is shaping up as one of the most dis- mill in many years. has rejected a request to extend a lobster season cut short by un- usually severe ice conditionsa nd although cod are reported in abun- dance. few fishermen are making catches because of markets scarc- itics. So sharp has been the drop in catches. scores of men have aban- doned the fishcry and gone to work as loggers for Newfound- landis two paper companies-Bo water's NLWIOUIIdl3nd Pulp and Paper Mills Ltd. of Corner Brook. and the Anglo-Newfoundland De- VEl0Dment Company of Grand Falls. George's Bay are providing a lone bright spot. With a market ranging from 55 to 65 cents a pound. two-man crews are nciling said the fish weight between eight and 15 pounds. The federal fisheries department i PEI Lobster Catch Is Up In Both Quanliiy & Value . He said fishermen in general. are cooperating well with the authorities in the matter of shorl lobsters and the protection system and conservation methods employ ed by the Department have more , than proven their worth. hoping Up For Fishermen In Western. Nild. CORNER BROOK, Nfld. I(.'Pl---. llllsfllillelf. only small salmon -catches are being made. pW0lJl.D HURT FISHERY 4 Some herring were being netted and a small run of caplin was said to be. in progress north of Home Bay. Fishermen in trawler: ;said some cod and small - sized shnrc. Small amounts of halibut are also being caught in Port au Port Bay. 1 The fisheries department de- ycidcd against extending the lob- ;sicr season on the grounds that an extension would affect fishing ladvcrscly in years to comc. ! From Cape Gregory to Cape Ray. the season closed Friday. It ll5 scheduled to close July lo from iCane Gregory in Flowers Cove. Many lobster fishermen who set their traps soon after the season npcned April 20 lost them when plhe surf pushed late ice in shore. It was late May bcfore traps cnulti be placed safely in most areas. Port au Port fishermen 100 or more salmon daily. an ex-Iwcm ynong those hardest hit by i"f”'m'”y' l'.1m.l' End o"md' the ceptionally high average. Reports l the poor lobster season. it is esti- m"r"9"c" India” ' "amamm .matcri this year's catch was 200,- i000. pounds below that of last year. Finance Ministers Scheduled To Meet At Ottawa In Sept. LONDON (CF) - The Common-I wealth prime ministers formallyl closed their eighth post-war con-1 .lerence Friday night with a com- munique calling for ”constructive action" to strengthen the United Nations. ; Other matters mentioned in the .four-page document. marking the end of eight days of formal ses sions. included disarmament. nuc- lear energy. the Middle East, Ghana and Malaya. Friday night. Prime Minister Diefenbaker and other members of the Canadian delegation flew back to Ottawa, ready to go to, ,u'ork.on a plan for n full-scalel Commonwealth economic confer- yence. Iwonx our PLAN 'Diefenbaker told reporters a "particular plan” will be worked out in Ottawa within the next few weeks for submission to Common- wealth governments. This would be a "preliminary basis for dis- cussion" with the objective of ex- panding Commonwealth trade and investment. Diefenbsker was asked whether his visit to London has enhanced his hopes for increased Common- wealth trade. ”I'm not lcss hopeful." he par- ried. He said the British government received his proposals for a Com- monwealth trade conference "with interest." His refusal to go beyond that statement appeared to indi cate that some opposition to the Canadian plan may have emerged. REALIZE PROBLEM "The discussions that took place of the problem and the need for further consideration of that prob- lem." the Canadian prime minis- Record Atomic ATOMIC TE ST SITE. Nev. (AP)-The biggest. most dazzling atomic explosion ever fired in the United States shook the carih and emblazoned the skies Friday in a show of nuclear might. Marines entrenched 5,700 yards from ground zero came through unscathed and plunged through a vast cloud of dust into attack upon a mythical enemy. CANADIAN OBSEBVERS With the marines were 400 mil litary observers. including a group of Canadians here to lay the groundwork for Canadian troops to participate in manoeuvres at future blasts. Test director Dr. G M. Johnson said the shot's power was "well over” the yield of lllt' previous record blast set of in I955. Blast Starts Fire Five Miles From Site in Ihe Second World War- were rated at 20 kllotonse ach. The monstrous flareup domina- p the skeis over the western .half of the continent. An airline pilot 1.000 miles away. over the sen en route to Hawaii. said he iS&lW the flash plainly and could ihave seen it had he been another . 200 or 300 miles away. SAFE IF DUG IN Observers over a 500- mile ra- dius from the blast centre re- ported seelng the flare. Califor- nia communitles more than 300 miles away feltt he b0mb's shock lwave more than 20 minutes after !the blast. It rattled windows and doors but caused no damage. I The device was exploded from beneath a plastic. helium - yballoon at 1,500 feet. A platoon of marines leaped filled He declined In givc the kiloton f'''"" "M" '”'"-'h93 " "V9 fed rating of Friday's explosion but ltideep and 30 "I 35 l"'9h" Whkm 1," been pretty wen esmbnshedland advanced toward the blast unofficially that the previous re-15"? behind monilorins parties mm was something over 50 mo. iosiingt he degree of radioactiv- tons. ")9 A kiloiun is equal in the encrgyl 3”7--'- s 500- H"V9.V Tschflfllu pmduced hy explosion of Looojcxinininnder of the 4th Marine ion. of TNT, The only g(omiclCOTPS provisional atomic brigade bomb, 5," dropped in wg,-(3,-em I said the marines learned that if those which fell on the Japnneselihey are properly dug in they are cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki i safe. Holed; Awaits Powerful Tugs IIALIFAX will The thick-lrlmng lomicr Granby left the hulled. Si.000.000 hydrographiclsccne Friday after repeated at- vessel Baffin remained lodged omicmpts to haul 3.460-ton research a barnacled rock bed off Nnvalvessel from the sea-lashed. almost scotla's south coast Friday and invisible rocks. ”Supcrnumerary members". or Survey Ship ma. r;Q;B2Ti I firmed. were The reports. not officially con- sirengthened when two navy ships that had stood by Canada's ultra - modern ocean charting ship since Thursday. there were reports that she was, led. scientists. of the Baffin were rt ported returning here on the llGranby and Riverton. I The Baffin. with I IN - man crew. went aground Thursday In dense fog while mapping marine hazards in the area. The federal 1' . headed to base here. A message from the Baffin Frl- mines department. which operates day. picked up by a shore oper ,lhe vessel. said she was making a star. said she was lodged solidly-survey of the coast to align her on rocks. was holed. and the ships linetrumcnts for summer work in here could not budge her. Thelnortheni waters. message also was reported to, ., t.IV' said she was awsting mos-e.7o' ""33 ENAT powerful tugs., i she carries two helicopters. the Halifax waterfront sources latest radar and electronic Nil?- . quoted the message as saying thelmeni and six sounding bargea. on Baffin is "breached in deep tanks liter first season of ocean chartiq. la the bold." ' ATTEMPT SALVAGE Meanwhile. Foundation time officials here said they havel 3 i ail: hi I l ter said. in a general comment. baking back on the Iirsl conference of prime ministers he has attended. Dietenbaker said: "To me it has been a distinct revelation of the tremendous po- ientlallties inherent in a meeting such as this. where without organi- zation. without a constitution and without anything in the nature of s centralizing process. the repre- sentatives of free nations speak together in a manner that cannot be achieved by any other organi- zation. "i wouldn't have thought it pos- sible for there to be that degree of agreement in the larger issues that hold the Commonwealth together. The Joint communique an- nounced that Commonwealth fl- nance ministers will meet at Can- ada's invitation in Ottawa follow- ing the September conference of the World Bank in Washington. The communique said Britain is playing a leading role in Common- wealth economic development. and other members are making im- portani contributions. "But in view of the continued need for capital investment. it is encourage in- also important in PRICE Se suitable conditions." The condi- tions were not listed. STUDY ATOMIC ENERGY The prime ministers also ap- pealed for a disarmament agree- ment and expressed "grave con-4; cem" at the Hungarian tragedy of last fall. A conference of Common ' wealth experts was called for next year to study peaceful uses of atomic energy. in reply to questions. Diefen- baker said: He would view the European common market project with I ”benevolent eye" if agricultural products were exluded. ' He has heard no suggestion, and does not think there is any sug- gestion. that Canada should accept l. payment for wheat in sterling. al' suggested by a London newspaper. He thinks it would be I "won- derful thing" for Canada to have the Canadian Parliament opened in the ”tradiiional way" by the Queen of Canada. This strengtti- - ened the impression that the newi session of Parliament will be op- , ened in mid-October. to coincided with the Royal Parliament. instead 5'. of in September as Dielenbaker , originally indicated would be thug ; i case. OTTAWA NOT NEXT . He would like to see meetings oli Common w e a l t h premiers take '- place elsewhere than in London from "time to time." . But he indicated it is unllkelyilv that the next meeting will be in l Ottawa. , The 10 Commonwealth countrieslvg at the conference, representing ; 600,000.000 people. were Britain. Canada. Australia. New Zealand. 5 India. Pakistan. Ceylon. South Africa. Ghana and the Rhodesia- Nyasaland Federation. in the communique. the prime" 3 ministers also: ' l. Appealed for atleast a limited. disarmament agreement to reducei . "aus ' i and tensions F ugh-. out the world." i 2. Called a conference of Com- monwealth nuclcar scientists in Britain next year to collaborate all the peaceful uses of atomic an "Eye 3 2 8. Declared the entry of Ghana ' into the Commonwealth as its new- est member practical evidence of Britain's progress in fostering self-i a government in dependent territo- ries. , 4. xpressed "grave concern at V the tragic events in Hungary." APPROACHES SIMILAR. . The communique said the primd ministers discussed "all the international questions oi the day of common concern to them. did not mention specifically the private talks on the Kremlin heaval. ; Despite some differences of. viewpoint. there was a "broad similarity of approach and pill-i pose" at the conference. Prime Minister Kwame Nkns-. msh of Ghana said he hopes IO. , visit Communist China. India I . vestmeni from other sources in Pakistan in the near future. 2- Diver Searches QUIIIC (CF) A diver GUY IOUTIN AND Ill! FATHER But No Trace Oi Missing Boy Muddy River