cA eae oe Ate, eee eT ne __JELEPHONE 8506 Buyer meets seller with Guardian Want Ads. ‘Dial 8506 asic for classified ad taker, for quick results, a e “1 picture aioe | aca pte diver ‘Gus’ Gallant be- é assisted with his diving suit before going down to search bodies at Pinette yesterday. sw” se cay 1S eee Authorined as Second Class Mall by the Punt Gin Three Bodies Recovered Following Sunday Fatality Divers yesterday recovered the bodies’ of three young men who Were drowned late Sunday night!. when the car in which they were Riding plunged into tke Pinette River. They were Malcolm Camp- Detachment RCMP and Williann Compton, Beatons Mills —_ tied Cantelio. Members of the jury are: Wil- liam Bears, Montague, (Fore- man) Stewart Ross, Flat River; Edgar Munn, Belle River Ralph MacKenzie, Beatons Millis; Don- ald MacKenzie, Flat Rivet; El- liott Ross, Flat River; ‘and Rod- bell, 35, and Robert Knox, 29, both of Montague, and Alton Ross Can- telo, 34, of Pinette. The car crashed thrdugh the | guard rail of the old bridge. The! accident was seen by- Donald | Franklin MacLean, night watch- | man on the opposite end of the! ridge, who could do nothing to; stop the car. The bodies were rechvered yes-| ferday by divers Gu allant of Charlottetown and Albert Lejoie | both of whom are employed by the CNR at Borden. - Cpl. Don Wannamaker and Con- stable James Dunn’ of the \Monta- | gue RCMPdetachment are oa Charge of the investigation. FAMILY OF FIVE Campbell was married and the father of five children aged one | fo nine. He was a son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Campbell, Mon-;| tggue, and had been a crane op- erator with Wellner Constraction | Company. Robert Knox, not marriéd, was the son of Mr. and Mrs. William J. Knox, Montague. He had been employed for three years with acLean and Son, electrical con- tractors of Charlottetown. He has fhree® brothers and two sisters. Alton R. Cante!lo also was sin- gle. The son of Mr. Dan Cantello, Pinette, he has three sisters and “two brothers. Coroner Dr. L.E. Prowse. Char- | ‘fottetown, went to the scene of! the accident this morning. INQUEST ORDERED Follqwing the viewing of the femains by Dr. L. E. Prows e, | chief coroner for Prince Edward | Island, an inquest was ordered 4o-be held at ¢ p.m. on July 28th @ Charlottetown Two of the victims. Knox and | Gampbe!l] were identified by Cpl Wannamaker of the Montague erick MacKenzie, Pinette. Hospital Agreement To Be Signed Monaay The Prince Edward Island Hos- pital Insurance .agreement with the Federal government will be signed next Monday; July 20 ac- cording to Health Minister M. L. Bonnell who said that he and | Deputy Minister Dr. O. H. Curtis be leave for Ottawa this week- end. Dr. Bonnell revealed that the final details of the plan were ironed out about a Week ago and nothing remains now but the sig- natures of the parties represént- | ing 4he two governments. Health and Welfare Minister J. Waldo Monteith notified the Isl- and Health Minister by phone yesterday .to the effect that | Ottawa was ready to sign. Dr. Bonnell expressed satis-+ faction that the agreement was >eing signed so much in advance of the date on which the plan is paneee to go into éffect (Oct- + CREDIT IS GUESS He said a large portion of the) credit for bringing matters to a head, must go to the chairman and members of the Hospital In- surance Services Commission and the good co-operation received | from the Federal Department of | Health and Welfare. The Minister predicted that by | October 1, the plan Will be ready | to go into: effect smoothly and efficiently. He said ot was most gratifying to see how well the in- surance gcheme was being» re- ceived by the citizens ‘throughout the province. He said co-opera- tion to date “was practically 100 percent. The plan which will cost: famil- ies $4 per month and individuals! ‘2 per month will be compulsory 1 employee aid collector groups »signated by the Commission. A iirly large. percentage of the »pulation will be on a voluntary asis or what are termed “Pay airects”. ° The plan‘ covers complete ward | - are including medicines,: special | (Continued on page 3 col. 2) | -WHERE-TO-FIND-IT Announcements, petices tt Births, deaths, ete .. .. 2, 11.. Charlotietéwn news .... 5 | Classified section. .. 10, 11 Finance, markets ....... ll Comics, features .. —. .... 9 Editorials .......... ices ss Island news ......... ack Women’s page ......... 6,7 Late reports from Guardian mews bureaus in Summer- - side, Montague, Alberton and now appear on . _ | sands Royal Details Are Announced Bae Island Like The Dew™ \ ADA, TUESDAY; JULY 14, 1959 8 8§=—__ - SOCIAL STATUS IS ‘PRISONER’ SYDNEY, Austrilia (CP)— With an entry for a chess tournament, the promoter re- ceived the following note: “T sincerely hope that my \social status will not debar me from competing in your com- petition and even not from winning it.” Mrs. Hyndman. Enroute they The entry was from a pris- will visit the P. E. Island! ner in Broken Hill Jail. Frozen Food Plant at Sherwood He won one of the prizes— = @ brief stop at the! 4 traveller's chess set. home of Mr. and Mrs. — Piet, igen = : Royal Party return to the city at 2 p.m. for a chil- Bank Teller dren’s rally a Colis¢ium, , i Queen and i Price "wil, xe’ twe toate st Was ‘Fed Up harness horse racing. 5 “ An-afternoon tea oe a! SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP)—Pats on the back and promises of pro- motion weren't enough, 19-year- old Richard Boudreau said Mon- day in telling why he walked off his job as banker teller in Ot- - | tawa Friday with more than $70,- 000. “I was fed up,” Boudreau said. Boudreau and. Gerald William Leclerc, also 19, an apprentice aL te ond Mowe Page. | ? f; t i NEW YORK AAP} peace talls, revived by Pres Eisenhower, proved fruitless again Monday in efforts to avoid | inc momnne| TO Visit P.E.1. i s : | | electrician, were stopped Sunday at the Mexican border by a San Diego. police unit, whose partic- ular\ mission is to prevent unes- corted juveniles/ from crossing into Tijuana. The police found $71,529 in their baggage.» $73,264 MISSING 4 Jack Rooney, manager of ‘the ‘!Toronto . Dominion bank at Ot- tawa, said .a. $73.264 shortage was @isclosed when the vault wes opened today. 2 The money was not missed ui til the youths were arrested. panies have called a halt to eens. Wee sk eee Bee ache onion, angling in _| rupted diplomatic relations with Newfoundland. OTTAWA (CP) — The federal government Monday made a ma- jor move to patch up ite dis- Finance (Minister Fleming, ‘| will “get special consideration on federal-provincial financial ar- rangements beyond _ 1962. The Newfoundland administra- tion has been fuming at the fed- eral government since March, when Prime Minister Diefenbaker announced that his government will follow the terms. of financial aid proposed by a royal commis- sion but will cut off payments at March 31, 1962. It would regard tu died By Ottawa vatives against the Liberals aad CCF members. Newfoundland members voted on straight party lines, the Con- servatives for the resolution and the Liberals against. Mr. Fleming suggested to the House that the soothing clause in of Newfoundianders. PROVISIONS OF BILL “This bill,” he said, ‘“‘notes and $36, 500, 000Is Provided — In Special AidUp To 1962 view mot culy will the direum: stances of Newfoundland be taken into account. along with those ef iia coe eet an eae giving to Newfoundland an assume states -that in the course of = comprehensive (committee) . re-! the $36,500,000 paid as the final and irrevocable seitfement of the 1049 Confederation obligation. Newfoundland's premier has | called this a ‘eaeneel of the terms of union. SOOTHING STEP -In the Commons Monday, Mr. Fleming took a step towards smoothing the ruffled waters in introducing a -bill ‘authorizing the payments up to 1962. Kt is specified by the legisla- tion that the federal - provincial continuing committee on fiscal matters will take into —— any special circumstances relat- ing to the financial position of ‘Newfoundland after 1962 in a stady’the committee is to make ea fiscal matters 2 megs At benefit increases of inflation- aa cae Cooper said. French Group == /Spud Prices Jump Costs. OTTAWA (CP) — A sharp sea- sonal increase in potato prices provided part of the impetus be- MONCTON — A party of ©. hind an increase in consumer French - Canadian excursionists, | Price indices in most Canadian travelling by Canadian National | ities during May, the bureau of Raillways, arrives at Carapbell-' Statistics reported Monday. ton today to begin a two-weeks| The-bureau said fractional in- tour of the Maritimes. Making creases were reported in nine of La Liaison Francaise tour to the the 10 regional cities for which -|Maritimes are 38 persons from | it issues an index.Only. R.I. N.B. Montreal and seven from Levis, | John, N.B., remained unchanged. headed by Rt. Rev. P. E. Gos-|. Food indexes rose in all re- selin. The group will stop over) (‘gional cities except- Montreal. Be- at Bathurst, Moncton, Sackville,! sides potatoes, fresh vegetables Amherst, Truro, Kentville, Digby. and fruits, pork and lamb .were. Halifax and Charlottetown during their stay in the three’ were jower in most cities while; provinces will visit historic and ~— and coffee prices continued scenic points of interest. to decline. Quality, Integrity Stressed In Agricultural Marketing and_ generally higher. Egg prices| day by a motoréycie policeman generally. Mr. Fleming got first reading for his bili after a morning and afternoon of debate on a resolu- tion Ina preliminary to the measure. e resolution, the OTTAWA (CP)—Two city: po lice ‘inspectors leave here this morning for San Diego, Calif., to pick up two youths arrested Sun- border with $72,000 allegedly ' stolen Held San Diego on suspicion ; of gra largeny are Richard; Boudreau, 19, a teller at the oe onto-Dominion bank in downtown Ottawa, and Gerald Leclerc, aleo 19,- friends for the last 10 years. When arrested as they at- tempted to enter Mexico, youths dmitedrebting the bank It was not until shortly before | noon Monday, about 2 hours thorities were able te confirm that a large sum of money was’ missing. The time clock controll- ing the door of the bank vault! § vote House split 71 to”lon its pass- age, with the Progressive Conser- Freed Pri Is Shot To Death TORONTO (CP) —A Hungarian refugee, released two weeks aco from Kingston penitentiary under} rdyal amnesty commemorating\ the Queen's visit, was shot . to death in a stolen car early Mon- investigating a burglary. Laszlo Farkas, 20, hit in, the head by a obwilet which hyd ricocheted off a companion’s' jaw- bone, died in hospital three hours after the shooting at a midtown intersection. companion, Joseph Kubik, 20, a a former Kingston pris- oner, oie taken to hospital with a facial wound and possible broken w. His condition is not serious. e said Farkas was shot trend in farming, Dr. Walsh, tions, fully one half was. being ‘noted. Out of the 7,000 cases} produced by two producers. Mr. Gilbert paid eed) (Continued on nan 5 0. 1) marketed weekly through Nova | Scotia’s registered grading sta- Mase aake Gah. << Linas We chalioins Wb tocctodemied deputy minister of PE. Istand. ways and means of expending the | Scotia; Dr.~ Frank. MacKinnon, Maritime Agricultural ¢économy | chairman; R.D. Gilbert, deputy aré pictured here. They are left} minister of agriculture for New deputy minister to right, De. Wales eee, Gyey Brunswick. when Constable John Petty, pistol in hand, was forced to brake to | avoid hitting another motorcycle officer. The gun discharged as he economic developmen for Néw- foundiand, left, = S.C. Wright, jammed and the door had te be drilled open. isoner applied the hand brake. Kubik and two other men, Gyula Szi , 21, and. Joseph Horvath, 22, were later ee with breaking and entering and auto theft. - SPOT CAR Police said Constables Petty and John Norrie were chasing a convertible they believed might contain suspects who robbed a fur company of $2.000 worth of furs. When they spotted what looked like the wanted car stopped for a red light they closed in on their motorcycles and Petty fired & warning .shot in the air. The car shot into reverse and when the two officers almost col- lided Petty’s gun discharged a second time, the et hitting Kubik first and Farkas: Police said they Siaied “ fur pieces in the car. after the arrest, that bank au-° (Continued on page § col. ~ Ottawa Bank Thieves Arrested In California When authorities had completed their checks, they found that $73,- | 264 was missing. The youths’ adventure eame day at the United States-Mexico| aa end when their bags were checked at the Mexican border om an Ottawa bank. | following a whirlwind journey by car and-airplane across the United States. One of the pieces” ‘of baggage qos the — = Aid Needed For Pictou NEW GLASGOW (CP) -— Pree ident Allan Ferguson of Ferguson Industries Limited at nearby Pic- tou, said here Monday his tows wit never recover from lest week's $4,000.000 waterfront fire nnless the federal government re places the destroyed piers im- mediately. Mr. Fergueon said he had pre dicted 12 years ago that fire would strike the Pictou water- front. He described the creosoted timber pilings of a large govern ment.wharf and the freight shed on top of it as “bombs.” The fire last Monday af but wiped out the waterfront as wind- driven flames swept along a half- mile stretch of piers, and a sea-— wall. The main. shipbuilding yards of Ferguson Industries es- caped damage. Mr. Ferguson told a service club here that “Pictou needs help: Cut the red tape. There must be quick action. We can’t repair a whip because there are no piers.” He said a new wharf should be Causeway Is Hopetul The P. E. L causeway survey ig taking longer than was ale ticipated, Heath Macquarrie, M.P. for Queens, said last night. “The physical and tangible work has been done, but that is not the end of the research.” He said that mach remains to be done to work out the effect of the causeway from various aspects. “I have heard or seen nothing discouraging.” Mr. Macquarrie said that he asked a senior cabinet minister whether he expected to see the causeway built and was told that he did. Mr. Macquarrie returned te the province Friday night. aA h “The idea that it has been de elded that the new ferry- is not to be an icebreaker is wrong,’ said the member for Queens. “I think she will be an icebreaker, The decision will be made soon. I saw_a projected plan which could be proceeded with as an leebreaker or otherwise We (the P.E.I. members) _ insisted that she must. be in the water for 1961." Mr. Macquarrie expressed some reservations about the P.E.1 hospitalization plan, He thought. that it might encounter admin-’ The discussion took place at the night meeting of the Maritime branch of the Agricul- a tura Institute of Canada. \ ening. istrative trouble, that x might not prove to have efficient, work- able machinery He said that the coverage was, “not @ sure 4