Buyer meets seller with Guardian Want Ads. Dial 8506 ask for classified ad taker, for quick results. FIRST SWIMMING LESSON Russel Finley, left, of Char- ed the rigid senior test. Here lottetown took his first swim: | he is talking to C. R. Blaggetock ming lesson when he was 67 centre. of Toronto. __natiémal years of age. This year he pass- | water safety director and |} Keith ee. ee eee AT 67 Lapp, provincial chairman of vices. (Story on page 5) U.S. Steel Strike fiienichian Upheld By Supreme Court PHILADELPHIA ‘AP)—A fed-,men back to work for the speci-! eral appeals court Tuesday up-|fied 80-day cooling-off period. held 2 to 1 a Taft-Hartlev 7 Tuesday's decision was hailed tion ordering 590,000 striking steel a Ce Me ee by government attorneys as a gia back to the mills for 8, rmajor victory in Eisenhower's ays. lefforts to end a strike now 105 But the special panel of three nA Judges of the U.S. Circuit Curt days old and seemingly a long; @dded a provision permitting the strike to continue for at least six ne days to give the union time tc ole eae camits appeal te ‘hertinite Lcsreit. steel mates “Supreme Court. Union lawyers said they would] take the case to the highest i probably on Monday. fact two steel firms have signed) way from settlement despite the | The other two judges who fig- ured in this climax to a day of| fast and dramatic developments in the steel situation were John Bigs Jr., the chief, and Herbert} Goodrich Judge Biggs. who wrote the ma- jority opinion, turned aside the, union charge that the injunction} “Covers. CHARLOTTETOWN, — Receiving Federal Park st ew sis seo «| Aid Is Probed serious considera- ‘tion from the provincial govern- ment at present fs the federal government's offer to make its winter work program applicable to work in provincial parks. The proposal to make the pro- '@ram now applicable to national a ks apply to provincially own- ones will also be construed to ~ to provinciaily operated picnic or campsites. Premier Walter Shaw said last night the proposal is being in- vestigated bv his government which is making an efort to de- ‘termine what phases of such a program can be undertaken in Prince Edward Island this win- ier, The offer of aid from the fed- penviso tat ha'f the foial pro- amounted to ey We coat leg feral. goyerpment carries the listative _action by we court, 6 a Breweries Fight stitutionality of | the injuncti ‘on, ob- tained under the provisions of a Taft - Hartley labor law. ne William H. Hastie, however, ject cost be for |ater charges. This is one of several matters | pertaining to finding winter em-j ployment fer seasonal workers of the province now being taken under advisement, the pre- | mier stated. mnt ieee Combines Charge province bldg. injunction was- not necessary the health and safety of the ae 3 try as pictured by President Eis-! rte = — A ee] ov 1 runsw ic rewery executive a ay & reasdes told ihe Ontario Sw) preme Court it could have been UNION PETITION just coincidence that a group of The decision of the ‘special’ breweries announced the same panel came upon the petition by price increases in beer in 1948) the United Steel Workers union und took similar action in 1951. to declare that the injunction was; Philip W. Oland, vice-president unconstitutional. ‘and managing-director of Moose-, The injunction was issued in| head Brewery Limited, Lancas-| Pittsburgh last Wednesday by|ier, N.B., was testifying at tne US. District Judge Herbert Sorg.| trial of Canadian Breweries Lim- Judge Sorg. following Eisenhow-| ited on a combines charge. er’s lead, held that the state of| Special Crown Prosecutor R. F. the nation justified sending the! Wilson referred to earlier evi- Nehru Asks Reds To Return Police NEW DE “LHI (Reuters)—India|Ladakh a Kashmir province disclosed Tuesday that it has|bordering Tibet. moved for the return of 10 border} A spokesman for India’s exter- police captured by Chinese Com- ral affairs ministry told corres- munist troops m frontier inci pondents the Chinese still are on dents lasi week. Indian territory in the area of tae The announcement came a few elash. hours aficr Communist China ae- i 7 ¢iared it had told New Delhi Sat-| jor nutty copes ree yon urday that the Peking goverM-| tittle effect in damping down In- ment was poeperre to hand over|gian anger. The independent the 10 prisoners and the bodies | jewspaper Tribuse declared edit- of nine other border Police slaiM|orjay that -India should “stop last Wednesday in a clash i®jsimping for na” by sponsor- ing a bid t aa th the Communist | regime into’ the United Nations. Steel "pea | Indian resentnient was stirred |further by the latest Chinese de- | mal of the Nekru government’s Ar e ‘Heaviest’ | statement that Chinese troops at- tacked the Indian police patroi NEW YORK (AP) — United States Steel Corporation Tuesday reported it lost more money m the three months ended Sept. 30 than in any three-month period in its history, Directors declared the regular quarterly dividend. Plants of the biggest American steel preducer were shut tight. by. the stee! strike for all but two wecks during the three-month period. ‘ The net loss for the third quarter of the year totalled $31,- ‘about 40 miles inside Indian ter- jritory, Peking said the Indians were trespassing in Tibet and fired first. The Chinese have said three Indian border police -were cap- tured in Ladakh Tuesday, with the other seven taken during the fight. One Indian is believed missing. A report from Kashmir said an |indian police party had reached the Hot Springs camping ground, zbout six miles west of the battle 135,135. That compared with a net}scene, to receive the prisoners income of $74,922,924. equal to! end the bodies as soon as the $1.27 a share, in the third quarter| Chinese announced the arrange- Jasi year. | ments. U.S. Steel's previous -record| Indian President Rajendra’ Pra- loss came in the third quarter of |sad told a state governors’ con- 1932. when it dipped ‘into the red | ference here that the New Delhi by $20.871,709. |eovernment is bound to respond Despite ihe loss announced to public opinion on the latest and Tuesday, directors declared the | usual dividend of 75 cents a share! Chinese. On the common stock, payable}; Any action, Prasad added, Dec. 10 to stockholders of record | must be cautious—but consistent earlier border troubles with thej Nov. 6 This is what has beem|with national self - respect and paid in ail recent quariers, security, - dence about the beer price boosts in letters sent by the breweres to the New Brunswick Liquor Con- irol Board. “Is it just a coincidence that the prices are the same?" He asked Mr. Oland. “It could be,”’ INCREASED COSTS Mr. Wilson said Canadian Lreweries (Quebec) Limited had notified the board Nov. 8, 1948 that the price of beer it supplied to the board would be increased cue to increased costs of produc- tion. Moosehead Brewery sent a let- ier lo the board Nov. 10 advising of a boost in prices. The first letter from a brewery advising the board of a price in- «rease in 1951 was dated April 1z. Mr. Wilson said Moosehead's letter containing an announce- ment of the same price boost was aiso dated April 12. Mr. Oland said the letter was written two days. after the fed- eral government had announced a higher sales tax. PRICE ANNOUNCEMENTS Documents submitted by the crown showed that National breweries Limited of Montreal, John Labatt ,Limited of London, Cnt., Molson’s Brewery Limited of Montreal, Red Ball Brewery Limited of Saint John, N. B., A. Keith and Son Limited of Halifax end Canadian Breweries (Que- bec) Limited and Moosehead Brewery Limited sent letters to the board in November, 1948, an- nouncing price increases ranging from six cents for one dozen small bottles to 21 cents for one dozen large bottles of beer. Other letters showed that Mol- £on’s, National, A. Keith, La- batt’s and Moosehead advised tne board in April, 1951, of another price increase—this time ranging from three cents for one dozen small and five cents for a dozen large. WHERE-TO-FIND-IT Announcements, notices .. 1 Births, deaths, etc., .... 2, 13 Classified section ...... 12, 13 Comics, features ........ Il Charlottetown news ...... 5 was the answer. Editorials sists 2 Finance, markets ........ 13 Island news ..... caoka : 6 _ Late reports from Guardian news bureaus in Summer- side, Montague, Alberton and Souris, and from special cor- respondents: now appear on the Island News Page. To Be Repaired Repairs to the roof of the Pro- vincial Building wi'l be started immediately by. workmen who have been busy erecting a steel i aging on the Richmond_street side of the -historic structure. |Getting the impressive staging jin place is Borden Myers, con- ' tractor. Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1959 CANADA, Reefer Is Forestalled Past action to relieve a threa- necessary handle the important Island Po- tato crop was taken yesterday by jer Walter Shaw. Alerted to a reported shortage vise night the premier stated | he felt certain this prompt act- ion would prevent any delay in land shippers. | Following record crops in the past two years, this season’s quantity has been estimated at approximately 20 per cent low- er than last year’s 10,000,000 bushels. However, there is a need for a continuing supply of refrigerator cars on hand a the action yesterday was taken by Premier Shaw to prevent the 'threatened shortage from be- coming acute. FLEET STREET LIKED CANUCK Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON fCP) boiled editors of Fleet Street shed a sentimental tear Tues- dav on hearing that Esmond Butler is heading back to Canada. . i us “He brought a t fresh ait to Buckingham, Palace and to Britain,” said” all be sorry to see him go.” Other Flee. Gireet men spoke highly of the .37-vear- old Canadian. who has served as the Queen’s assistan’. press secretary since March, 1958. Butler gods *s Ottava in mid-November as secrtcary to the new Governor-General, Maj.-Gen. George Vanier. Wil- liam Heseltine. at present a secretary to Prime Minister saving he has mixed emotions about the new appointment but the phrase would have suited the occasion. “I will be very, very sad indeed to leave the palace,” he told a reoorter. “I’ve been very happy here and I with more kindness. Members of the Royal Family have been most considerate on all occasions.” FIRST IN MARITIMES Provincial Dairy School ls Proposed By Premier ' A new dairy school for the|Island farmers in teaching them | leading to a'decision to establish to the sons and daughters of | benefit of Islanders will be opened here in connection with the Vocational School if plans now under consideration by the provincial government can be worked out in a_ saticfactory manner, Premier Waker’ R. Shaw said last night. Such a school would be the first established in the Maritimes | and sveculation has been heard that prospective students fmm the neghboring provinces might wish to enroll here rather than travel to Ontario. He added that it would be in addition to the forestry courses | he has under consideration for | the school. NEED IS FELT The need for such a dirs | school here has long been noted | by dairymen and government officials. At the present time there is no such institution in the Maritimes and the three sea- side provinces each -year have been sending students to Central | Canada schools for training. At the last annual meeting of the Dairymen’s Association here a proposal for such a school was introduced’ ‘by H.J. MacDonald, dairy division of the department of agriculture, and received the approval of the gathering. Such a school, operating on a provincial basis, would offer a three-months course in the tech- niques of manufacturing butter, cheese and ice cream. It would be particularly valu- able to employees of the various dairies in Prince Edward Island in offering them a _ specialized training in their work. Officials believe that such a course would also be invaluable the proper care of milk on the farm. One of the factors at tened serious shortage in vitally ator cars to) in the freight cars, the premier | immediately got in touch with | Canadian National Railway au-' thorities and received assurance | that a supply will be diverted here from Montreal starting a] cars being made available to Is-| CAR WRECKS Louise Waters, 13, and her sister Shirley, 9) by wrecked furniture left after sit surrounded a car crashed through the clap- | | Second~ World War, Premier LIVING ROOM board front wall of their home | and shattered furniture before in Hull, Que., Both girls were | sleeping in the living room when | the car burst through the wall the couch where Louise lay, burying her in debris (CP Phote) By JOSEPH MacSWEEN UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. , Western powers, (CP) | United States and Brifain and Bernard Drew, news editor of (East and West agreed Tuesday | ; including Canada, reached agree- the Sunday Express. ‘We'll [night on a United Nations resolu- | eaeuet in private sessions on the tion calling for complete world) >»esolution which will be placed disarmament under effective con- | before the UN General As |sembly’s 82 - member political Union and other | committee today. led by the hotooraphic Rockets = Prediced By Soviets (AP)—Goviet scien- said Tuesday llI’s| hidden side of the moon to Christ- | historic photographic mission to opher Columbus’ discovery of jthe far side of the moon heralds launching of photographic rockets to planets beyond. , The experts also talked of plansj S¢’* couldn't have been treated 7 or set!ing up huge satellites be-| — ‘lyond the reach of earth's grav- lity for scientific and i Russian astronomers compared such a school here if conditions| rally developed, chemically fixed j and teaching personnel permit, in past years. this pro- (Continued on page |the feat of photographing the America. As in Columbus’ time, one as- tronomer said, Lunik proved that scientists had suspected all along the. nature of the surface of the unseen side resembles the known part.” LONG STORIES The newspaper Pravda carried extensive accounts of the techni- cal operations of the 614-pound Lunik. One Pravda account said the rocket’s cameras were Switched on Oct. 7 for 40 minutes while they were between 37,284 and 43,- 498 miles from thes other.;side of the moon. It said two long lenses took a} series of varring exposures on 35-| millimetre film. The lenses, one of 200 metres focal distance, the! other 500, were set up for simul- taneous two-scale®photography. The films were then automati- and prepared for transmission by automatic machinery aboard the fiving laboratory. tae MR | | Coal erat yr nag Pr ean Re aE State Trooper Gene Meier ic lucky to be alive after an ava.’ lanche boxed_in the car in which he was driving at Franconia ~ TROOPER HAS NARROW ESCAPE car collapsed. The earth dis- turbance was caused by a wash out, (AP Wirephotes) Coupled with the need for fuller ' willing te take on the job. Notch. New trooper was watching the ava- lanche come down a mountain side when the road under hig Full World Disarmament — The hard-—;—— Asked In UN By East, West mediately but spokesmen said it does not give its blessing to any particular country’s disarmament pian, CONFERENCE SET All proposals. inclugling the one placed before {the neral As | sembly Sept. i8 by Premier Khrushchev and the one outlined | eign Secretary Lioyd, will submitted to a new 10-nation con- ference to begin in Geneva early next year. Those plans also will } be submitted to the 82-nation UN | disarmament commission Besides Russia, ee U.S., Brit- ain and Canada, sponsors include France, Italy and Brazil. A U.S. spokesman said many other na- tions are expected to become co- sponsors, including India. The main negotiation °> the he hind-the - scenes talks were Vas- ily V. Kuznetsov. Russia's deputy foreign minister who took the first initiative, and U.S. Ambhas-, sador Henry .Cabot Lodge. Charles S. A. Ritchie, Canada’s permanent ambassador to the UN, took part in talks among the Western countries which pro duced a revised draft for submis sion to the Russians Monday. BACKS KHRUSHCHEV Only a few hours before Kuz | netsov and Lodge reached agree- ment, the Russian delivered. a speech before the political com- mittee. calling on the UN to ap- total disarmament within four | years. By TOM MITCHELL Canadian Press Staff Writer MONTREAL ‘CP)—The woeath ‘erman, with headaches enough at jany time, is trying to beat a new crop that have arisen with the! speedup in air transport P. T. McTagzariCowan, direc- tor of Canada’s meteoro!ocical service, outlined some of the! problems and their possible solu coming to a stop inches from , Except for 1@cent deals with Terms were not disclosed im-| 14 PAGES . Soviet Budget Sets Record; Scientific Funds Increased Holdup Aims Pass American Production | By ®RESTON GROVER | MOSCOW (AP) — The Soviet government announced Tuesday a record hich budget for 1960 and ‘said defence spending will be frozen at this vear’s level. Funds for scientific development were increased 15.4 per cent. Total income projected for 1960 —the second year of a seven-year plan in which the Russians pro- pose to push their production ahead of that of the United States —is 772,100,000.000 rubles. Expecting to keep the book- keeping in black ink as the So- viet Union has done since the |Khrushchev’s government pro- | poses to spend 744,809,000,000 rub- les foreign visitors, the Russians re- gard the ruble as worth 25 cents and this official rate is considered reasonably accurate in the gov- ernment’s domestic dperations. DEFENCE EXPENDITURES Deputy Finance Minister Gar- buzov told the Supreme Soviet that defence expenditures are set at 96,100.000,000 rubles, the same , as in 1959. He said the 12.9 per cent of the national revenue to go to the armed forces compares . with 19.9 per cent in 1955. ‘ More than half of the U.S. bud- get goes for defence. That; how ever, represents less than 10 per cent of the total U.S. national in- come. the day before by British For- | prove Khrushchey's proposal for (At the official rate, the money openly earmarked for the Soviet jarmy, navy and air force totals | $24.025.000,000. Other forms of |civilian “appropriations and tan- |; not be-estimated.) The financia] planners of this space-pioneering nation budgeted | 32.600,000.000 rubles for scientifie |development, 15.4 per cent more than in the current year. = j}money also goes to the chemi industry, metallurgy, oil and gas, In the field of consumer goods | there will be an increase in in- jvestments next year ‘of 13.6 per | cent Defence Drop Is Questioned Ry DAVE McINTOSH OTTAWA (CP) — There is no real evidence yet that Russia is reducing defence expenditures as las a proportion of its total bud- _} get, informed sources here said Tuesday. In fact, the opposite {might be the case At the same time, however, So- viet Premier Khrushchev’s state- ments that Russia would like to cut defence spending* and in- crease non-military expendi tures tare accepted as genuine. Weatherman s Work Is Increased By Jets [ infor mation is the need for fast 2 ry of this data to the pilots. \A serious problem here is the limit- ation imposed by present com- | munication systems, the direc- tor said Aircrews are presented with a detailed weather report without laborious copying. military spending are hidden im. — tions Tuesday before delegates at the Air Industries and Transport Association annual convention Two factors plague the weath- ermen in the burcegning jet age) —need for fast relay of weather data for aircraft that are attain-| Eo ing greater ‘speeds at hicher al- titudes, and making this aul valid over a greater geocraphi- cal area. WINNIPEG (CP) — A call for Mr, McTagzart - Cowan said “responsive and responsible” Ca- present radio-wind finding cauin-| yadians to act as amateur radio ment in operation . in Canada| end television critics for the CBC works only to the 30.000 to 40.000-| hac drawn a weak response in foot level. This cannot suppl¥! creat /innipeg Finow is testing and developing equipment that will garner wind -|data up to 100,000 feet. JET STREAM DATA He noted that the upper air levels are those where the jet wind —.are found which can sharply help or hinder the com- mercial carrier. The need for fast. full information about this is great proper information for hich-fly- | ing jet aircraft and the service) ,.%¢ Plan proposed last July by | Kate. Aitken, a member of the | CBC board of directors, called: | for 2,500 Canadian citizens from varying walks of life to make monthly reports to the govern- ment-owned broadcasting corpor- ation on its radio and television streams—ribbons of high velocity) Prostams. A newspaper survey of mayors of municipalities in the greater Winnipeg area indicated only one -the Winnipeg suburb of Fort | Garry—easily found 15 persons