. Fess ce ie Lael | ; (AP) — A big @ransatiantiec jet airliner part af ite landing gear as it was tak- Airport Sat- After’ circling the anxious hours, the the plane and its 113 oc- with delicate preci- runway coated with used in fighting pilot, Capt. Edward Som- the swept - wing to a stop without trou- ble although the damaged gear buckled slightly and a meta! strut g@craped the runway, sending up ghowers of dangerous sparks. Today all but eight of the 102 were aboard a Pan American World Airways sister ghip, also piloted by Capt. Som- mers, as they continued to Lon- don. THREE INJURED Three passengers suffered @ight injuries sliding-down es- eape chutes immediately after the crippled plane stopped. No one else was burt. Capt."Sommers said after the Tanding he was apprehensive, about the thousands of sightseers| en the field and about the chance fhe plane might slew around and atch fire from the sparks. Meamwhile, federal government agencies began an investigation into the cause of the mishap. Two| men saw something fall from the! undercarriage of the four-engined / _ “Covers Prince Edward Island Like CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, JULY, 18, 1959. ee A REAR-END collision involv-|ly ahead, and i in turn was] the read of the car where the port that a “bump” in the harbor of Saint John, N.B., might be caused by a sunken pilot . boat, Ttansport Minister Hees said Sat- urday in the Commons. He was answering a question from Augustin Brassard (L—La- pointe), who referred to a report in the Saint Joke Times-Globe of July 4. The pilot boat ‘sank in 1957 with the loss of seven lives. None of plane, one of the largest com- mercial jets in service. Hot WaterlsUsed To Subdue Bandit ECLECTK, Ala. (AP)—A Fast-| thinking banker tricked .a ‘holdup | man into a coffee break Satur-| day, then in a savage battle | sealded him with hot water, | elubbed him into subiiission,’ shot him and killed his companion. The two bandits had kidnapped | Electic’s police chief and forced eashier-manager Carl Ray Bar- he said yes, I knew what I was) 4,.the Quebec had nine fatal- the bodies have been recovered. Barker’s break came when Bray forced the kidnapped police | officer to go with him to find ad- hesive tape to bind the hostages. Hayward was left at the house to guard the banker and his fam- | ily. “T asked him if he'd like a cup of coffee,”’ Barker related. ‘‘When| a broken right arm, torn muscles and various cuts} ’wrist was allowed to go home after treatment, Mrs. Lafferty and daughter Beatrice were -un- injured. The Chevrolet is owned by Mrs. James F. MacDonald of Bristol. The Construction truck is owned ‘by County Construction Company | ada and driven by Martin MacDonald 36% Elm Avenue, who had_ the vehicle parked in front of his Weekend Toll Is 43 Deaths By THE CANADIAN PRESS . Traffic..accidents and deaths by drowning combited ‘to push the weekend fatality count across Canada up to at least 43 deaths by late Sunday ight. : A total of 20 persone had died in traffic accidents and 18 by drowning., Four .deaths in other accidents: and one fire victim completed. the count. Ontario was far ahead of any other province with 19 deaths. British. Columbia reported six ker to open the bank of Eclectic. | going to do. I boiled a pot of wa-| -4;,.. Then they held the banker, his pregnant wife and smal! daughter | and the police chief captive in] the Barker home about an hour) while waiting for a time lock. to open the bank vault. es In the storybook drama that fol- lowed Barker, 31, subdued Wil- | liam D. Hayward, 2%, with hot} ‘water andthe butt of the ban-. dit’s gun, then killed_James Franklin Bray, 25, with two blasts from a 16-gauge shotgun. Mrs. Barker and her three- year - old- daughter and police| chief Maxie Taunton escaped un-! ‘Barmed. The banker was out 07} the hand in the awe, with | Hayward ter and brought my wife and the | |holdup man each a cup. “When the—man—held-__out—his+ cup for me to pour, I| threw the | whole potful of steaming, scald-| ing water in his face. Then I | grabbed his gun and tried to shoot him. But it wouldn’t work so I beat him on the head with! ba Barker loaded the shotgun. When Bray and the police chief returned tothe house, the bank manager fired pointblank at. the holdup man as he walked through the front door. The first charge struck Bray in the chest and as he spun around, Barker shot him | again im the back. WHERE-TO-FIND-IT Announcements, notices .. 11 Births, deaths, ete .. .. 2, 11.. Charlottetown news ... 5 Classified section .. .. 10, 11 Comics; features ....._.-.. 9 Editorials .......... siqee S Island news ............ 2,3 DOORS oy vicki ccdesceegecess. 8 Women’s page .......... 6,7 Late reports from Guardian mews bureaus in Summer- side, Montague, Alberton and Souris, and from special cor- respondents now appear on the Island News Page. ie ing three vehicles is shown in the| pushed into the sedan which was|‘Tuck plowed into it. At lower top pieture. The truck at rear hit| parked ahead of it-Shown lower the back of the truck. immediate-tleft Je the damage suffered by |tree Two Girls Sent To Hospital In Three-Vehicle Collision right is shown the front_end of the oe See ae Sens Ges 2 residence. The other a owned by Arthur The Clinton vehicle and. MacDonald vehicle were very ex- tensivély damaged. Lome Clinton is being held by Police and is schediled to appear on Clg Felice Ouurt this morning. The Dew” 12. PAGES - The negotiations foundered on the industry's position “that it could grant no new wage or labor cost increase unless the union Cooper said any pay or other concessions that were not balanced by cost savings would be inflationary. The union refused to yield any of. the work practice changes dought-by the companies It said this would be “‘a backward sept” eliminating gains won “in” earlier years. ‘ “ MeDonald denied that existing “Surely i must be clear to everyone at this point,” Mc Donald said, “that the industry |' does not want to negotiate and Seek or aes nee ae aS: agreed to contract changes to/ ment. ‘Watch Dog é Are Studied By ELTON C. #AY . WASHINGTON (AP) — The ATLANTIC = REGION : | ee Advanced Research Some # agricultural techni- cians from the four Atlantic pro- vinces will meet today in Char- ottetown to start a two-and-a-half- day convention of the Atlantic Provinces Regional Convention of They will discuss the latest de- velopments in the field of scien- tifie agriculture and during their stay will visit several parts of the province. The discussions will come under three groups: soils and crops; animal husbandry, and horticul- ture and biology. The ‘retiring president, Dr. Fred Hockey of Kentville will preside at the open- ing but will be succeeded by the president-elect, George B. White- side of Charlottetown, at later sessions. A feature of this morning‘s pro- gram will be the presentati6n of awards to public school students who participated in the AIC con- test’ conducted last winter. This evening at Birch Court, a panél discussion with the four provincial. deputy ministers of agriculture participating will be chaired by Dr..Frank MacKinnon, Murder Hunt Is Continued RED DEER, Alta. (CP)—Terri- fied residents of central Alberta, Agricu‘tural Institute Start Sessions Here president of APEC. They will! discuss extension of markets in| In Honduras Satellites By Yanks TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras President Ramon Villeda Mor- ales. There were reports that 25! persons had been killed er wounded. daylight -when- WAITERS PACK {TRAYS IN RACE LONDON (Reuters) — Sixty waiters carrying trays laden one ashtray and one pack of cigarets, scurried through ‘the natrow streets of Soho Sun- day. The race was ‘one of the opening features of the. week- long fair held in Soho, Lon- don’s cosmopolitan nightclub and restaurant area. The winning waiter, Orhan Sev, a Turkish*Cypriot em- ployed in an Italian réstaur- ant, had his bottle of. wine poured over his head by un- successful - rivais. “2 cal St Pinette. MONTAGUE — Two ¢ persons are presumed t have a which| last night when the car in which they were driving went over the) causeway leading to the Pinette Bridge. Efforts wre made to locate the car and the bodies last night a RCMP but were unsuccessful. Kt was decided to wait until to recover the vehicle: The identity of the two persons believed in the car when it crashed through the guard rail into the Pinette River was not known last night. The accident is reported to have happened last night about 11.30 o'clock. F LONDON (CP) — Canadian de- bate of the pros and cons of the Royal Tour finds an echo today in British publications. Richard Fry of the Manchester Guardian, writing from Winnipeg, discusses the tour against the background of controversial state- ments by telewsion commentator Police headquarters. The city’s two radio stattons broadcast calls for ‘‘students,! workers, professiionals and farm- ers to. come to the defence of the government.” There was no immediate offi- cialword as to the identity of the Atlantic Region. the Agricultural Institute of Can- ee gg maa ape tanga iad rising. “pect Robert Raymond Cook, be- many of them armed,” kept on the alert Sunday as ‘the hunt continued for mass - murder sus- lieved to be in the Nevis district 30 miles east of here. He es- caped from a mental hospital about midnight Friday. RCMP carried out one of the: largest manhuntg im the history of the proviice, By ALAN HARVEY. . Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON Thomson, on the verge of the/ ahead satisfactorily.” biggest newspaper deal . he has CALGARY DUST BLINDS QUEEN Stampede track chyplewagon races. Oy Y trom | ening — Mayor oo Mackay of + Calgary. | —with—champagne,—one—giass._—_ | Air Of Cautious: Optimism Pervac es Big Four Cam Steel Talks Fail; — By HERB ALTSCHULL GENEVA (AP) — The Western Powers were reported Sunday might to be secking a 2'2 - year truce in Berlin that would include jan ironclad agreement recogniz- j ing the right of the Western Big 'Three ‘to maintain’ and supply i troops in that city. At the same time; a high- rank- ing Soviet official suggested a stopzap Berlin settlement that would keep things pretty much as they are in Berlifi for the next 18 months. se The two reports indicated that the Soviet Union and the United i States; Britain and France are moving toward some kind of ar- rangement that would put the Berlin crisis on ice for a time. (CP)—Bustling Roy Kemsley newspapers are going The differences appeared to be} narrowing to one of time. _ Aa air of cautious optimism) (Continukd on page & Col. 7) Truce On Berlin— - Seen Probable “nar FIVE CENTS prevailed in the Western eamp on the eve of round two of the Geneva foreign ministers confer- ence. All three Western ministers expressed hopes for a limited * The general feeling was that 4 the meeting would las) two te _ three weeks and would énd in an. agreement to carry the Berlin and German problems to a sum-: mit conference in September. The Western ministers’ sights were set considerably lower than when round one began two months ago. At that time the Western Big Three spoke hope- fully of a general settlement wrapping up all the cold war is- sues dividing East and West ie Germany. But six weeks of frustrating | wrangling. with the Soviet Union's eis QueenAndPrince Rest In Seclusion By DAVE McINTOSH i Press Staff Writer KAMLOOPS, B.C. (CP) — The informal day at a moun- tain retreat 50 miles southeast of | in a 45-day tour of Canada. Canadians Are Loyal But Also Independent Toronto. He says the point is not whether anybody was amazed or hurt by the “assertions L. these young ladies—not wit aid from others’? — but ane they reflect objective truth. Fry says he put the question te “everybody I met” and his con- Joyce -Davidson and magazine clusion ig that Canada is loyal Er+F | Ahad « 5M rf & TF By writer June Callwood, both .of| (Continued on page 5 Cal. 7) Thomson's Biggest Transaction The firing wes centred around |. May Be Kemsley Chain Purchase ever undertaken, said Saturday negotiations with the board of Thomson declined to go beyond tie eunieuiinstiail hittin ty he Kimsley group disclosing for the first time that negotiations are js Progress, and that details ‘ will 3 probably be made known next , Thursday. OWNS .28. PAPERS With. his usual expansiveness, . the 65-year-old Canadian pub lisher did acknowledge that #€ the deal does go +hrough as ex- pected: 1, It will be “outstandingly the biggest"...transaction in a lkife- time largely devoted bo buying papers, He already owns 28 pa- pers in Canada and the United States, as well as having exten- sive publishing: and television interests in Scotland. 2. Acquisition of all or a sub stantial part- of the Kemsley pa- pers, if completed, will make him one of the big four of British pub- lishing. He said the: other. three > 5 are Lord Beaverbrook. Viscount ° nt ene 7 Re Ths Rothermere and Cecil Harms- » worth King. i 3. If all the Kemsley papera are acquired—and Thomson was careful not té6 commit himself on the point —. total circulation of Thomson papers ‘in Britain would be around the 6,500,000 mark. This would include The Scotsman, Published in Edinburgh, one other $cottish daily, and a group of weeklies centred .on Inverness, Scotland LARGES PRINTING PLANT The Kemsley empire includes three national Sunday newspapers a large number of provincial pub- Hications and printing concerns. Thomson said the Kemsley print- ing: plant at Manchester is the largest in the world, : There has heen speculation here that_Viscount Kemsley. one of . three brothers from Wales whe attained prominertce jin British publishing, will retain’ his finan- cial interest-in The Sunday Times a@ paper said to be dear to his ” ena, (Continued on page § eal. @ peep ediiedne