hangs from the neck of her fath-| er, George Roath (left) of Los Angeles eustody. She shouted “No, no, | father’s temporary period of custody had expired. Ai right, | after a judge ordered she is in tears as her mother, | custody. her returned to her mother’s now Mrs. Verna J. Tatum, pulls'ed in | her from the courtroom, The) HIMALAYAN AREAS OCCUPIED _ India Braces For Battle 6 es zt zt Se ccm ee DRAMA Nine-yearolki Karen Roath rio,” as the judge pointed out the| court decision was because Roath said the girl re- fused to return to her mother’s 954. (AP Wirephote) “Covers ‘Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” re CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, SATURDAY, AUGUST 29, 1959 18 PAGES wor MORE FIVE CENTS _ ‘man ado > rN0 - 1 $08 waver wen guavas giv ’ S ove [0 16 Miles Of Capital By BRUCE RUSSELL VIENTIANE, Laos (Reuters)— Laos was reported quiet Friday after Communist rebels made a& hit-and-run attack during Thurs- f day night on a small army post 16 miles east of this capital city. No casualties were reported on either side. The rebels used rifles and hand grenades but melted into the sur- rounding forest when government reinforcements arrived. The attack was the latest in a series of small incidents reported in Vientiane province in the last 10 days. It was the closest pene- tration yet to the capital of this southeast Asian Kingdom. The rebels apparently have es- tablished a full-scale military ¢ cupation of the 50 - mile Modag Son Valley, stretching down from the ill - fated French fortress of Dien Bien Phu into Sam Neua province. RED ASSISTANCE Laos has charged the rebels are being helped by Communist China and Communist North Viet Nam. Throughout the rest of the coufitry, the rebels’ main aim ap- rs to be to move in highly |\trained propaganda groups, threaten local village chiefs and The parents were divore- iset up clandestine organizations, Nuclear Ban Will Be Kept, Say Soviets MOSCOW (AP)—The Soviet Ue ion will mot resume nuclear weap- ons tests # the Western powers do not, the official news agency Tass said tonight. The United States announced Wednesday it was extending a a GEN. VANIER COMES HOME | Maj.Gen. George P and diplomat said he had ne land philanthropist, JAS STYLE LEADER LONDON (‘(AP)—As a clothes horse, the Dike of Windsor is slipping, the fashion magazine Man About Town observed Fri- day. He used to be a leader of men’s fashion, said: the mag- azine which once a year nom- inates 11 men as the world’s best dressed. This year it also chose “the unbest.”’ and the Duke of Wind- sor is in this classificatian, to- gether with Prime Minister Macmillan. “The duke seems to have turned his Sack on the interests he once held in style,” said John Taylor, editor “Take his overcoats—far too long, and shoulders and lapels are tooheavy._His_trousers— quite indeterminate in style Maybe it's the influence of the | weetern hemisphere. Pity!” The prime minister, who once got onto the best<iressed list. is in the “unbest” classification this year “The sheulders are the focal point of style. and they have been the worst features of prime minister's dress re cently,” sant -Taytor—“The cal- lars are always so crumpled and the tie is carelessly knot- ted.” Beaverbrook lls On N.B. Visit FREDERICTON (CP) — Lord Beaverbrook, British publisher- returned to By DON PEACOCK |. Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP) — The Borden energy. commission Friday recom- merccd the federal ‘government give the international oi! industry | about 18 months to find room in’ North American markets for Ca- |nadan criide or face possible im- port restrictions. On that -basis, it turned down proposals for any government ac-| tion at present designed to bring! about construction of an oil pipe line to Montreal from Alberta. | The commission, in its final re-| port following a study ‘hat be} gan with the commission's crea tion inthe fall of -1957.—-broadiy., recommended policies that would | in effect establish a continertal | oil industry using steady supplies of both Canadian and United States production rather than any action to secure Canada’s mark- ets solely for Canadian producers. ‘CLOSE SCRUTINY But it urged thatthe gov | ment keep a close eye on the jn- dustry’s action during the next \8 months, with..a view to taking steps to open the Montreal market to western producers if neces- re Commission chairman Henry) Borden. a Toronto lawyer and president of Brazilian Traction, Light and Power Corporation, suggested at a press conference that in effect the report tells the Congress Leader | Canadian oil industry to get cracking in its search for mark ets. This might obviate the need for government action. By following commission gestions, tiie report seys, the industry should by the end of | 1950 be ab.e to achieve a produc- tion level. of about 700,000 barrels per day, compared with about 479,000 barrels daily during 1958. ‘Continued On Page 5 Col. 2) No Effect Seen On Maritimes OTTAWA (CP) — The Bordea commission’s second report of the Canadian oil industry says there is no present prospect of any crude oil import restrictions ever affecting supplies in the Maritimes. The report notes that Halifax jas one refinery and another is being built at Saint John, N.B. “We do not suggest that these refineries could operate on Cana dian crude oil transported by pipeline and we do not consider that, under existing conditions, steps should be taken to substi- tute the use of Canadian crude oil for foreign crude in the Marl times refineries,” it says. eee ee TS ee ee iam ie of tests from Oct. 31) Vanier, | tis adopted province Friday nizht | ‘As Chinese Cross: Border to ‘ee end of the year. Britain|7!, returned to Canada Wednes-|immediate plans. He said the * said Thursday it was making a oe eee ee finer Ivernia to} vice-regal appointment is a grea a, extension € pernor Viu- nor. WATSON SIMS trated in Octaber, 1957. earmarks aboot $2,030.00, ml" : “4 * bi iant Soot. | ‘ef ; ‘ Sent ase va tnael “Bon caret; neve In aren! SOF tne ane Tae Yan annie Si | 8 Hie oe SW anes PTS ser ra braced Friday aight for military thet, regardless of New Delhi pre- spends about $60,000,000. And In-| Tue Soviet government has re- munist Chinese troops that Prime Minister Nehru said have occu- pied two Himalayan frontier ar- eas. “There is no alternative but to defend our borders,’’ Nehru told Parliament. He announced Indian troop movements, but made it clear that ‘he hopes the issue can be settled by negotiation. This was the situation as he outlined it: . Several hundred Communist Chinese troops attacked a border post this week, routed the defend- ers and seized sections of India’s northeast frontier agency south of Tibet. That is the area where the Dalai Lama, Tibet's god - king, crossed into exile in India after} the Tibetan uprising against Com- munist rule last spring. Three Indian frontier patrolmen are missing. The Indian army has been ord-| ered to take direct control. of the} 35,000-square-mile agency. It was! previously patrolled only by a} semi-military organization called! the Assam Rifles. Reinforcements} will oo as needed. ‘ A thousand miles to the north- west, the Communist Chinese pre- sumably are holding Indian terri- tory in, the Ladakh section of Kashmir’ that they first pene- President Rejaxes At Castle By JOHN HEFFERNAN ; BALMORAL, Scotland (Reut- ers)—-President Eisenhower took time off Friday from his rounds of talks with Western European leaders to relax with the Royal Family on their estate here in the Scottish highlands: The president flew from Lon- don and spent the afterioon chat- ting with the Queen as they drove through the wooded valley and heather - blanketed hills of the 24.000-acre royal vacation home. Eisenhower lunched with the Royal Family in the dining room of the castle itself and they had tea together later in the after- noon outside Glas Allt, a summer house built by Queen Victoria on the shores of Loch Muich. The president also drove with4 tHe Queen to visit Queen Mother Elizabeth at Birkhhall, her private residence on the estate. The Queen Mother rejoined the party Friday night for dinner at the castle. Princess Margaret accom- panied her sister, to the castle gates where a large crowd of local residents, tourists, reporters amd photographers had gathered. ‘ ‘ . Mewo ministers ranged over almost dealt thad ‘“‘opened the way to talks on tests, Chinese maps have long shown as Chinese. While declaring India’s inten- tion to defend itself, Nehru said “we should not become alarmist or panicky or take any wrong ac- tions.” The armed forces of India, whose policy of non-alignment has made it a leader of the Asian neutralist bloc, are no match for the 3,000000man army of Red China. f Indian officials decline to say how many men they have in uni- form, considering it a military secret. But defence budgets give a clue to the relative standing of the two Asian giants. With manpower cheap and plentiful, Communist China op dia’s chief military watch has centred not on the north but on its borders with Pakistan, a rival claimant to Kashmir. Nehru has spurned military alliances. The Chinese were reported to have flowed across the frontier tiny that it is not even shown on most Indian government maps. It is a mile or so from the border. Nehru said the Chinese started their strikes there Tuesday, firing On an outpost. He said the Com- munists returned Wednesday, op- ened fire again and practically en- circled the post. About 38 border patrolmen were routed. Two Internal Ills Flare Up By TOM MITCHELL Canadian Press Staff Writer QUEBEC ‘CP) — Two old in ternal squabbles have been flar- ing up hotter than ever in the 100,000 - member Canadian and Catholic Confederation of Labor. They could make the union’s Sept. 13-20 annual convention here a lively. affair. President Roger Mathieu has: heen largely responsible for re-! viving the issues of possible af- filiation with the Canadian Labor Congress and elimination of the — “Catholic” from the union title. t In speeches to locals this sum- mer. he has hammered on the necessity of the title change if the union is to grow in member- In CCL ship and ; Although Mr. Mathieu has sald little about OL affiliation, op- ponents of the title change usu- ally link the issues together. This summer they have. argued loudly against the president’s views. Mr.’ Mathieu's argument is that avoidance of direct reference to the social doctrine of the Roman Catholic church better enables the CCOL to recruit non - Catholic members. However the CCCL | would continue to abide by church doctrines. Mr. Mathieu's speeches drew fire from some church authori- ties. Five former COOL chaplains 54° | free of this pledge.” plosions “fn the Soviet Union if! the Western powers do not resume the tests of atomic and weapons. “Only in the case of resump- tion of nuclear weapons tests by them will the Soviet Union be Polio Is Seen’ Getting Worse QUEBEC ‘CP) — Dr. Berch- mans Paquet, city medical of- will get worse before it gets bet- ter. Announcing that there are # cases in city hospitals — all but three from outside the city — Dr. | ports,) ficer, says the polio situation here| eader Forecasts Sure Victory Tuesday (Editor's note: A staff writer for The Canadian Press is on the Island covering the pro- vincial election campaign for papers all across the cougtry. The following is one of his re- the federal government in seeking help and gave scant thanks for the assistance given the province. STILL HAS CLAIMS | “We believe that this province still has claims om the federal government which we feel we can | promote with cdnsiderable suc-| cess.” | While the island Conservatives were stressing the need for close co-operation beiween the provin- cial and central government, _ By DON HOYT Canadian Press Staff Writer Walter R. Shaw predicted Friday that his Progressive Conservative party will win a people's victory at the polls Tuesday and end 25 years of Liberal rule in Prince Paquet said: “We expect this situation to con- tinue until the end of September and it is going to: become more serious before we can see any improvement. I don't expect to have an epidemic in Quebec . . . but I expect an increase in cases jbefore the cool weather sets in at the end of September’ Nothing that the clinie at city hall had to close this week when it ran out of Salk anti - volio vaccine, Dr. Paquet ‘said there is little hope for a new>supply until “about Sept. 15.” SET BACK OPENING The .Roman Catholic schoct board has delayed school open- ing until Sept. 14 in hopes of until the worst of the polio season is over. Original opening date was Sept. 2 Dr: Paquet said the opening next week of the provincial ex- hibition poses a crowd problem issued a joint statement protest-| but there is nothing his depart- ing his suggestion. \ ment can do. Herter, Lloyd Clear Route For Eisenhower, Macmillan \LONDON (Reuters)—U.S, State Secretary Christian Herter and Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd of Britain cleared the way Fri- day for talks on major issues be- tween President Eisenhower and Prime Minister Macmillan. Herter and Lioyd held morn wig and afternoon talks at the for- eign office, then got together again Friday night over dinner for informal exchanges. Conference : sources said the the entire field of international problems, from renewed Commu- nist activity in Laos to routine matters that could have been with through diplomatic channels if they had not met, A spokesman said the meeting major issues” between Macmil- lan and Eisenhower at Chequers, the British prime minister’s coun- s try residence, during the week- end. Herter and Lioyd opened their talks with a broad review of in- Wheat Crop Is Well Up OTTAWA (CP) — A 1959 Cana- dian wheat crop. of 405,013,000 bushels, up nine per cent from last year, was forecast Friday by the bureau of statistics. Such a crop, the largest since 1956, would be 17 per cent below the 10-year 1949-58 average of 490,400,000 bushels. The bureau's forecast is based on crop conditions at Aug. 15 when a wheat yield of 17.6 bush- els an acre was indicated, down slightly trom 17.8 last year. térnational developmetis smce the last time they met—on the last day of the adjourned Big “Four foreign ministers conference Geneva Aug. 5. The developments included the situation in the Indochinese king- dom of Laos. Both the United States and Britain have ex- pressed deep concern over the pro-Communist uprising, which the Laotian government charges is sponsored by npéigtboring North Viet Nam. The two minigters also re. viewed the progress of the East- West conference banning ouclear tests and the por sibility of reviving negotiations for disarmament. A British spokesman said there was no discussion of an outbreak or fighting between Indian and Chinese troops, in New keeping children out of crowds) in Geneva on) Edward Island: : “I’ve no doubt that on Sept. 1 ithe Conservative party will com: back with a substantial majority lof seats,” he said in an interview. “It will be the people's choice .. . the people are thinking about the issues as citizens rather than Progressive Conservatives or Lib erals.” The vigorous 71-year-old leader | is making the most determined bid by Conservatives in recent is- land political history to eject the Liberal -government first elected in 1935 and in: power since ower of primary importance” in the campaign, Mr. Shaw said. SYR EO POD i MANY TURN OUT He has criss-crossed the prov- ince, talking to thousands at party rallies. “Our meetings are. tremend- | ous,” he said. “The halls are crowded to the doors hy people of both political complexions and all seem enthustiastic about our platform.” Asked about the Conservative slogan calling for a “united team” with PCs in power in Ot- tawa and Prince Edward Island, Mr. Shaw said the advantages of keeping the island in line with a “generous federal administra- tion were obvious. ; “We should be able to make a | presentation of the claims of this | province to Ottawa from a Com servative government; who will press the claims vigerously and courteously * The Liberal government shqwed hostility to - | WHERE-TO-FIND-IT | Announcements, notices _ 17 | Births, deaths, etc., *, Classified section 46, 17 Comics, features 13 Charlottetown news ...... 5 eI ice tisi 4 Finance, markets .,.... 12 Island news %&: he Se Sareea & 9 Women's page 6. 7 Late reports from Guardian news bureaus in Summer- side, Montague, Alberton and Souris, and from special. cor- respondents now appear op the Island News Page. Medical Association who attend- ed a medical ball at tne Char- Delhi by Prime Nera. _ y A OS SORE REPO es GR TS for a fourto-six-week visit. He ar- rived from Montreal in the priv- ate plane of New Brimewick in- dustrialist K. C. Irving. The 30 - year - old peer was srecied—at—the—airport_by—Pre-|__WINNIPEG (CP) — Claude Jo- mier Flemming, Chief Justice J.| 9", president of the Canadian B. McNair, Mayor William T. Walker, government officials, members of the clergy and other organizations and officials of Lord Baaverbrook Squadron air cadet corps. His itinerary has not been re- leased. He intends to take the Fred- ericton air cadets for a day's outing to his boyhood town of Newcastle. N.B, on the Mirami- chi River Sept. 5. Negro Singer Is Arrested MERIDIAN, Miss. (AP) —Po- ‘local issues—chiefly agriculture, |lice arrested Negro rock ‘n’ roll education, the interste of the fish-| singer Charles (Chuck) Berry Fri- ermen, and transportation—were |day on disorderly conduct charges after a teen - age white girl ac- lensed him of trying to make a Continued On Page 5 Col. 4) ‘date with her at a dance. Nixes Affiliation |Labor Congress, said Friday the jCLe should abstain froni any! form of political affiliation. | The speech by the head of the /1,100,000 - member congress was his most positive pronouncement lso far on the subject of a new | foundations of the socialist group and big labor. { jointly organized by the two groups that fhe congress should | thave nothing to do directly with a political party. “There seems to be some mis- understandinz of the position of | the CLC itself,” Mr. Jodoin said. “I suggest.that the Canadian La- bor Congress is a central labor body composed of many unions, some of which will obvious'y | want to exercise their democra-| tic right to abstain from any form of political action. SHOULD ABSTAIN ‘This is a right we intend to protect fd because-of this it ear “{EDICAL MEN GATHER Among members of the P.E.7. {lef to right, Dr. J.H. Maloney,,Kirk Lyons, Leamington, Ont., president of the P.E.1. Medical! deputy president of the Cana-| lottetowa Hotel last evening were | Association; Mrs. Maloney; Dr. | dian Medical Association, Mrs. | - < proposed party, but he said he. did believe quite proper that we as a com gress should abstain from any form of politica] affiliation.” Mr. Jodoin did not say what kind of help he thinks the CLCL should give the new a new party is a good idea be- cause neither the .Liberals nor political organization built on the | Conservatives effectively promote labor’s aims. “As a cemtral labor body, we He told a “new party seminar” j|have certain: principles and pok icies,”” he said. “The closer the new party follows these princk ples and policies — and I sim cerely hope it will be formed— the better we feel it will be for the people of Canada.” But he added, the CLC will “ak ways reserve its democratic right % vim 4 g.0 ear ig International Oil Industry Faces Import Restrictions [UKE supine | Alberta To Montreal Pipeline Turned Down to criticize in a constructive way” - any political party or govern- mnt.” : In a speech to one of the sem inar sessions, David Lewis of Tor- jonto, national COF president, at tempted to clear up possible dif- ferences between the labor and farm aims ef CCF voters. Lyons; Dr. Thomas i vice president of the PEL Meat cal Association and Mre. Lai law.