— ee oe bh Ggin de tReet ea SR ee ee ee : . eee ee Buyer meota salar with Guardian Want m( @ te @ me hy _ as. Din $506 “ask for classified ad ~ WY fie = Re ’ Rie ake ; 3 | | . “Covers Prince Pimant Island Like The Dew” f : : - 4 { 12 ‘PAGES : a | _ CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, FRIDAY, JULY 3, 1959 NIXON WITH QUEEN RM was during the Royal visit to Cornwall and vicinity that this and American photo was taken of Her Majesty vice-president Richard Nixon as they drove te along the route in an open auto- mobile. (CP Photo) | Three Arrests Announced ale ‘Biggest’ Bond Burglary _ GOHICAGO (AP)—The Federal _ Bureau of Investigation an- mounced Thursday night the ar- tember and October, 1958. Rabin also was charged, Auer- bach said, with fraud: by wire in nents at 8 Chicdgs-bank in Sap- loot totalled nearly sip.000.e00. | He gave the breakdown as $3,- 500,000 in bonds, $6,000,000 in| stock certificates, which were all 4 Choseii*'s. |—Crawford ee ee da and Stephen MacLeod froth ~ Boa- ghaw received the support of a largely attended nominating con- Jot first Queene at Breadalbane last night. _ Sinclair, a son of the late Sen- ator John E. Sinclair, won the The first vote taken for Mr. Sinclair and Mr. Large ended in a tie. Each received @ votes. Mr. Sinclair immediately moved Mr. Large’s unanimous nomina- |tion, noting that Mr. Large was the sitting member and should have the preference. : Big 4 Games - To Be Seen TORONTO (CP) — The CBC Thursday announced # will tele- cast 21 Big Four and seven West- ern Interprovincial Football Un= fon games during the 1959 sea- son, plus playoff contests and the Grey Cup finals Nov. 16. Big Four games will be avail- jable from the Lakehead to St. | John’s, Nfld.,; over both English | and French networks. Western games will be seen by fans from Winnipeg to the Pacific. This represents an increased and game over the 1958 season when six regular schedule WIFU games were telecast. Last year 21 Big Four games were viewed only in {cates and Quebec over both | four the English and French networks. _ > Iwo gee, nie ae oa coverage in the West of only one | possile x % > —— F, & Ep, seS : * Queens: in turn moved the unanimous nomination of Mr. Sinclair. It was finally agreed that a second ballot would be ‘taken and~on MacLeod are farniers. The for- ‘mer is 4 years of age. The lat- Crapaud and seconded by Ches- ter Stordy, Crapaud. Mr. Sin- clair’s nomination was moved by Reginald Smith, Emerald and seconded by Bert Trowsdale, Crapaud. Stephen MacLeod’s nomination was moved by John Rogerson, Crapaud and second- ed by Louis Welsh, Hope River. Premier Matheson allowed the Lelectors—a_tlittle pesk election curtain when he said two policies of the Liberal plat- form would be possible establish- ment of potato processing on the Island and expansion of trade in the Carribean area. Coldest June> Is Recorded HALIFAX (CP)—wNova Scotians sloshed through the coldest June since 1905 this year. Weather records show the av- erage temperature was five the province. The sun broke through only 3% per cent of the time. The average rain- fall in the province was 6.36 inches, highest since 1967. June 3 was the hottest ‘day. Feu panr ery Reasyepnty heacenoir points lower than the hottest dey in May. The month's lowest ‘This year the Atlantic province? | will also get the Big Four games, Shihan wae lane's elles tamper atures dropped to 40. ‘CONTENT CRITICIZED» - (Continnued on} Page 5, Col. 1) « points below normal throughout |~ - ~, Montreal’s one-year-old ~~ Per} Frajkor finds that t cold Water is i "By JAMES M. LONG eve of the resumption of \the Ge-| DUKE AND CAR BEAT. FREIGHT -LONDON, Ont. (CP)—A six- WATER GOES BOTH WAYS. Full Effort Urged In Peace Parleys VATICAN CITY (AP)—On the | Thursday to the leaders of the coolingon—a—hot—day when it.is taken internally and externally. (CP Wiréphote) ‘neva talks, the —Pope-—appealed : ,| world’s rival power to “try every approach” teward achieving peace, ~ ' The alternative, said the pontiff would be war in which terrible nuclear weapons would destroy | victor and vanquished alike. ceptors 1 Delance Budget | ‘Debate " OTTAWA (CP)—Defence Min- ister-Pearkes said Thursday con-! sideration is being given to pro- viding facilities to enable United States interceptors to operate | Started’ connaissance.: Mr. Pearson said strike attack would pe an “onerous and honor-— able” task for.the RCAF in Eur- Opposition Leader Pearson said the government should insist that these bases be located as far ‘north as possible so that any air ‘Mr. Pearkes spoke for an hour and Mr. Pearson for two hots in starting a Commons debate on the government's 1959-60 defence get: of “$1,695,000,000. MAJOR ANNOUNCEMENT Thé minister had one major an- nouncement, which waseyeccived in absolute silence by the Com- monhs: The American Lockheed F-104G supersonic plane wilt be ithe RCAF .air division in Eur- | ope eg Mr. PRearkes gave no further details but it is expected the ba- sie price for some 200 lanes will be about $250,000.00; exclud- ing costly spare parts. The big question as far as Can- ada is concerned—who will build ‘the plane? has yet™to be re- Solved. A contract is expected to be let by September “to Canadair Limited, Montreal, or A. V. Roe (Canada) Limited, Malton, Ont. The F-104 will replace the Sabre jet interceptor used. in eight of the 12 squadrons in the air division. It will be employed in .a strike - issance role. The four overseas squadrons of built under licence in Canada for | But he added that the govera- ment should re - equip the nine CF-100 squadrons in Canada. Oth- - nomination for cou over Frederick A. Large, °Q.C., who| ‘* #51. Mr. Large’s nomination | battle would not be’ fought. erwise the only. effective inter- moved by Frank MacDonald, | ie ‘ought , over represented the district for eight | 735 cepelated Canadian targets: -Septora im Canada would be Am- “Mr. Pearkes said that by the early -1960s Jong - range ballistic missiles will have replaeed _manned bombers as the primary means of delivering hydrogen bombs on North America. Island Lady 7 To Be Judge ANTIGONISH. N.S.— (CP) — The Highland Games Society an- nounced Thyrsday that Maj.€. 1 N. MacLeod of St. Francis Xavier University here will be one ef four judges officiating at the Highland games this summer. * Major MacLeod, a member ef the university’s department ef Celtic studies, will judge profess- jonal piping and band concerts. He will be assisted in the band events by. Major Robson, station. ed with the First Batallion Black © Watch, at Camp Gagetown, N.B. Duncan MacIntyre of Amherst, will judge amateur piping eom- petitions. . Mrs. Gordon Lawson ef Sum Canadian CF-100 jets will main ee HOCKEY GAME PAYS (BC Program Costs peat, 2 P.E.I. wil judge dene. I t ; } | | i - ¢ i . t a earring = _ fest of three men in connection (Last May 14, Attorney-General Kelso Roberts of Ontario said an insurance company in an under- seley Barracks here) Thursday. €hugging along like the Toonerville Trolley, the diesel The Brockville burglary was accomplished by a smooth team head of the Roman Oatholie Church has issued since his cor- the of e thanipledging more than $140,000 nterru “8,500,000 in Gentian handere Ades te Hig epee gh Switz-|Tecovered,. $15,000 -cash and- $25,- oh es train a ‘di _ The appeal and the warning ee % termed the world’s | eriand. 000 worth of jewelry. . eta os =o oo i wol. (Were contained im the first en- om cyclical letter that the 77-year-old IS ose urs ay os bonds were ‘stolen May 3, of safecrackers. The Jim Coleman show broad _ 1958 from the Brockville Truft ae ern Company, Buoctilie The three men — named in @ Buppressed federal grand jury in- _ volved in dispésing of the loot. the FBI said. Atrested were Sam Maanarino, ~. 8, New Kensington, Pa.; Nor- man Rothman, 44, Surfside, Fia., and William Rabin, 52, of Chi- €ago. . Mannarino and Rothman were _ seized in their homes. Rabin, who Was free on’ $5,000 bond on an ier federal warrant charging with receiving $98,000 in stolen Cangdian bonds, was ar- , Fested in Miami, / SPECIFIC CHARGES - Richard PD. -Auerbach, head of the FBI in Chicago, said Man- narino and Rothman were charged with aiding-and abetting dian government bearer bonds; elry. - of Brockville in his annual report last Jan. 28 estimated the. stolen By ED SIMON LONDON (CP) — Britain’s na- tional newspapers, shrunken to The FBI said the loot included: $3,500,000 in Cana- Canadian registered bonds; $15,- $5,000 000~to "$10,000,000 worth of June te ee ee registered bonds; $15+ 000 at sues and $40,000 in jew- (Police chief Wilmot F. Young world deal bought back $1,409,787 of the stolen bonds at 10 conte on the dollar.) ° ‘Auerbach said three other men were arrested in Miami and .Bos- tom in connection with the burg- lary earlier in the investigation. He identified them ag Edward Browder Jr., Miami; Bernard Ezhaya, Boston, and Francisco Welcome Is Torrid Says British Press Ferrara, Miami Beach. | In Politica By ALAN DONNELLY Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP)—Revenue Min- ister Nowlan said Thursday he made no “representations” to the CBC for removal of the contro- versial Preview\Commentary ra- dio program. _ He told thé Commons broad- casting committee that he, and perhaps some of his cabinet col- leagues, had criticized the pro gram of political comment, But Mr. Nowlan stated flatly he - torrid welcome in Canada. | “Ordeal in the heat for the Queen” reads the headtine in The! never gave acting CBC President E. L. Bushnell ‘any “suggestion what I thought he should do.’ | And he ‘“‘absolutély’’ never: told ; Mr. Bushnell he would be Ba if |" Nowlan Denies Part | Pressure Mr. Nowlan said a CBC prod- ucer, in the face of the immigia- tion department refusal to adrfit the-man, planned to bring him to New York and “pipe” the pro- gram into Canada. . \ The minister said it was a case of the CB€ producer “defying the government and involving the taxpayer in heavy expense.” He had asked, Mr. Bushnell to give the case careful consideration, and the program was cancelled. engine: began hooting when the duke’s car and escorting ROMP motorcycles were about 300- yards from the crossing. The red flashers blinked, the signal bells rang and the train engineer tooted. But the six-car motorcade drove blithly along. It appeared to be almost a race to see who would get there first—the (duke or the diesel. The duke made it, _ by” about 100 yards. Some of the crowd cheered. -—But—the_train didn't give an inch and just as it reached the level-crossing the last two cars aNhalt. in the motorcade screeched to | E their way to agreement, =, jonation eight months ago. The letter to bishops and priests was dated on the feast day of ‘Saints. Peter and Paul, June 29,/ and released- for publication to-| | day. ‘an INVITATION ~ It urged the press, movies and television not to bear false wit- ness. And it “‘gently invited” the divided Christian faiths to re unite in the Roman Catholie Church. The, Pope himself said the en- feyclical’ dealt principally - with “truth, unity and peace.”’ Some of its most solemn ‘admonitions were. for the world’s leader to see co OTTAWA (CP) — Seabiion: taxpayers paid $36,089 to wateh | |the unsponsored hour - long CBC Folio production Master of San- tiage on the CBC television net- work March 3. This was disclosed Thursday in a document tabled in the Com- mons broadcasting committee by the publicly - owned corporation showing a sampling of the cost of live, sponsored and ufspon-- sored téevision programs and amounts paid by sponsors. The document was produced -after the committee by. a vote of 18 to 4 stood by an earlier re- quest that the details of sponsor paymetis be made public. The CBC_and some committee mem- bers ‘had argued that to divulge the~information would prejudice CBC's bargaining position with sponsors. Z A total of % programs are listed in the document;-57 on the cast March 6 netted the corpora- tion a profit of $1,905. The pre gram, sponsored - by--- Tucketts Limited, ‘cost $1,168 te produce and the sponsor paid $3,073. It cost the CBC $859 to broad- cast the five-minute. Weekend in - \ ‘Sports on. March 1 and 7. Thé sponsor, Niagara Finance and Bristol Meyers, paid $3,026. giv- ing the corporation a profit ef $2,167. _Cost ‘to the taxpayer of other- well - known unsponsored -,pre- grams broadcast in the first week of March: Junior Magazine dite: 911, 370; Citizen’s Forum half - hour, $2,755; News Magazine half-hour, $1,651; Fighting Words half-hour, $3,057; CBC National News seven programs, $2,945; This Week 2” minutes, $1,600; Howdy Doody three half - hour programs, $16,- 178; Viewpoint three seven-min- Rabin in a scheme to dispose of : , He © the bonds. s a half -their size in an effort to. con- | Timés, telling of the Royal Visit} i. commentary were not éan- ‘Rabin was charged in the sec-|serve their strikebound ink sup-|' Toronto. The Daily Mail says] pajjeq French - language television net-|ute programs $2.47; Press Con- ond indictment with pledging| ply, still find-space to tell their| it was 95 in the shade. The Daily | wyesTIGATION ENDS work and 38 on the Eagish lan-|ference half - hour, $1,807; readers the Queen’ is getting a/Herald avoids figures and simply, ‘Tne evidence of Mr. Nowlan, guage. Close-Up half-hour, $8,761. MOST COSTLY < Cost in the week of popular more than $138,000 in Canadian union chiefs Thursday night in a bid to stave off the threatened closure of most big British: na- tional newspapers ONE, Mon- day. Air Codehe. Labor Minister Iries tribution -throughout the country, grew out of a walkout by 2,500 ink manufacturing workers four days ago. This followed a stop- page by 20,000 men at 1,100 smaller provincial papers and 4,- 000 printing firms two weeks ear- lier. Leaders of the Trades Union Congress gave the Labor. Minis- describes the heat as ‘“‘blister- ing.” The Herald’s reporter, Peter Moorhead, gives an equally blistering account of the Queen’s mentioned her arrival ‘‘a few short hours ago” and said the Queen -had seen “some of the ambitious plans for the develop- ment of Toronto’’ when she had| been in the city 90 minutes and had only attended a children’s re- ception. , “It was obvious that the Queen had/not been able to ‘read her who reports to Parliament for the ‘i publicly - ownéd corporation, ap- parently brought to an end after two days the. committee’s inquiry inte allegations that “clandestine he relayed to Mr. Buslinell some representations -by Immigration Minister Fairclough, Tie ‘CBC cancelled a proposed program in which it was planned to°interview a European who had been refused entry to Canada. b WHERE-TO-FIND-IT . The corporation made a profit | on only 17 of the 40 spohsored re on the English - language painedh. 1 cost $28.221 to. produce. of which $14,818 was paid by Gen- eral Motors-and $13,408 by the taxpayers. The-unsponsored Frénch - lan- guage network program. Musique | Sacree 6n March 27° was pro- | duced at a-cost of $24,971. Next most expensive program was Showtime, produced for Canadian General Electric “March 1 at a sponsored programs to CBC; with ishare paid by sponsor in brack- oe. Of the 17; only four | ets: : Music-Hall $18,767 ($6,084): I Famille Plouffe $10,502 ($6,423); Railway Unions: Await Decision OTTAWA (CP) — Leaders of the 40,000-strong Canadian Broth- erhood of Railway, Transport and General Workers “CLC) will de- cide ‘next week whether the um t j : Go To S side 4ter. a “peace plan” for ending the prepared address beforehand,” ces 1 printing dispute. It was said t©| <3. Moorhead, adding that the ae re 7 | leost of $24,768, with $10,217 paid|ion should pull out of the non HALIFAX’ — (CP) — A group call for the appointment of an in- Queen and Prince Philip prom-| - Charlottetown news «...: 5 - | by the sponsor and $14,551 by the| operdfing rail unions’ joint nego- of 194 Newfoundland army|dependent referee to look for &\itiy cave orders that “such mis-| Church notices .......-..-- 3 - | taxpayer. tiating team. cadets will arrive for summer basis for negotiation between takes must not be repeated.” Classified section .... 10, 11 The 15-minute King Whyte pro-| The decision will:be made at a camp training at ‘Camp Alder-}™ and the unions. = ——=—_Comies,_features sass paner 9 '| duction broadcast March 7 and | five-day national policy meeting shets.N.S. today. They will join} MacLeod agreed to consider Wateiidls s,s scisscaseaes. 4 sponsoréd by Whitehall Pharma-|in Toronto of joint protee- adets from the other. Maritime| the plan, which was not officially Interest Rate Finance, markets . sh ae ‘}eal netted the CBC a profit of | tive committee’ of the brother- Provinces in various training | discloséd. : Island news ....:......- gh || $1,296. The sponsor paid $2,449 | hood, Canada’s largest national ; programs. . Sports op ecccecee : and production costs were $1,213. | union. CNR officials here said a spec-} STRIKE MAY SPREAD? Has Dropped Woman's | page Ce 6, 7 Jad pres PAYS ° The 250 delegates: will represent A National League ~ hockey | railWay and rail hotel employees jal train Sunday would take 52 to the Maritime Sea Cadets : ’ long, ig teported to be, worried |, OTTAWA (CP) — The Bank of . a fox 's_Point Edward base, near long, ip 3 spread of the strike; |Canada interest. rate this week ee aos jee Kalian Prince Emmanual, 22, blood while skindiving at San, navy Dr.. R. Kirkpatitick;> whe | was produced for Imperial Qil at | \ Maritime Air Cadets: will at-/|menacing the jobs of thousands /declined to 5.26 per -cent from respondents now appear on (in. undershirt) after treatment} Diego, California. At Prince’s|said Prince was “lucky to be) a cost of $3,944. The sponsor paid | Sessions, most of Which will be tend camp at Summerside, P. E.|of otter workers_in the affiliated |5.26- ‘as: -ve re cenifal beatt| - the Island News Page. m navy ression chamber! right is f-iend; Jacques Piccard, | alive” . $8,244, giving the OBC a profit a closed to the press, open Moo groupe a reported Touriday. Bi, (rear) for air bubbles forced intol@Wviss scientist. Between them isi j (AP Wirephote) ' $4,300. ._ '@ay and conclude Friday. a 7 i ” 4 2 > ’ : : ? f oe “< The TUC, to which the 10 un- lons involved in the dispute be- Late reports from Guardian news bureaus in Summer- ITALIAN PRINCE IS. LUCKY eee broadcast from Toronto March 7 from Newfoundland to British Ce- lumbia. en map ae ante ne speech Monday night when she litical influence’ brought - about arrived in the Ontario capital. He oe cancellation of ee Eeeaveah: Cross Canada Hit Parade’ on|P.M. Party three days or. says it “Brought, hoots of derisive It went back on the air this week March 2 cost $30,132 to produce. | ($1,990); Front Page Challenge laughter from a shirt - sleeved) 442. 37 resignations by top CBC Imperial Tobacco and Texaco | $9,251 ($6,629); One of a Kind + crowd of 5,000.” employees. paid $9,678 as sponsors of the | $9.962 ($6,700); Music Makers '5@ Fg Sag ahi atataad ee Although Mr. Nowlan denied he half-hour program and the tax- —— (op); The eee ieee (Reuters) — The threat against the large best yet,”’ is criticized by Moore- - 3 as ed Zane | perhe. eee lind program Gen- down $8,795 ($6663); Juliette $6.- : Minister Ian MacLtod met with dailies, published here for dis-|head because of its timing. It ’ eral Motors Presents on ‘March |975 ($6,738). of |