TELEPHONE 8506 Buyer meets seller wi Dial 8506 ask taker, for quick results Ads. 3 Aim "Second Class Mall '10me THE large exhibit d quflts on display at the W0- m'lainstmitute Building yester- Quality Of Exhibits In The , VI. Building’ Said Superior [An-excellent display of cook- sewing, painting and other f',landicr_aft items is how'being , at the Women’s Insti~ ” lute Building on the Exhibition rounds. Officials feel that the smarter to any other; , the judges finish exam- I.‘ “ 'eich of the 1800 items on Q l Mty‘ of year's exhibits is , - lay, and wood turning items on n ' ‘oil,‘watel‘ c" and ltralpoint on fhe‘Fair Grounds: Ithose Viewing I the Exhibit. th Guardian Want for classified ad by IIIer 0mg. 0 Department. cow “7 day were (left) Mrs. Harold Lan- dry, Charlottetown, and Mrs. Tilmon Gallant,‘ Cape, Egmont. pastel paintings are the. subject of much comment among the large and appreciative audience. The delicate crafasmanship of Isle knitting, lacework/and petitpoint is also appreciated by‘ Of: particular interest to the men in the audience are the wood work exhibits; but the beautiful wood carving, wood in- display. are admired by all. who hurdle: "Covers Prince Edward ’Island Like 772a Dew” Jewel ‘ Thieves. Make Haul TORONTO (Cam-Two armed Elias Friedman of $115,000 in gems early Monday. Two hours later a third gunman staged a $13,000 bank robbery. mond robbery and detectives said it may have been the work of international jewel thieves. The gems, taken from Fried- " , man as he stepped olf an eleva- Announce Navy . ' s ' Appomlments OTTAWA (om—The am an- nounced the promotion 'Monday of two senior technical officers to the rankof commodore... They are: Commodore John Deane,~47, of Nelson, B.C., and Vancouver, who becomes cmnmodore super- Coast, and sup- enintendent, HlMC Dockyard, Es- quimalt, B.C., Aug. 18. e Commodore Hepbert G. Burch- efl, 45,10f‘Kemptville, Ont.,-and 6' y 011le of, techni- . Dockyard. Halifax. .- ' WARRINGTON Press Staff Wri-ter.. HALIFAX '(Cl’).—-Princess Mar- caret, after a 10,000-mile month- long tour of Canada, took off just before midnight ADT Monday min a big Bristol Britannia Miler. Her plane was sched- fled to fly non-stop to London Ill! shesbould reach her destina- tion in about 7% hours. Her tour had generally been favoured with bright sunshine but Vlded a‘heaxvy downpour that saw ‘ of summer-clad well- “Shers scurry for shelter along her final route to nearby Shear- W‘ater naval air station. Her BOAC airliner took off on the first flight from a 9,000-foot ~ I'mnway that was so new electric :If i by kerosene flares. Ea And‘this gave substance to her i» lama! message in which she "‘> [Woke wistftu of feeling like Cin— derelh, e ' an entrancmnent. . “the sad to come back _ ‘0 Canada—her “second home.” A loalningdwet naval band gave her a final and appropriate ser- ’ 9|! cf the heaviest horse judg- P‘S competitions to face a judge .3"? concluded yesterday at the .- at the Provincial Exhibi- ‘lmcmmds. when a total of 134 games were disposed off by We Walter R. Shaw. former , ty Minister of Agriculture, “My morning and afternoon s. ' ~\ P.E.I. walked off with a full of ribbons during the 11 showing. The Stewart ' horses picked up a total of st place ribbons; Ihcluded Prize list was Senior Cham- gyeais and over and Re- m: Grand Champion and Res- Durinz the Robert ' PE H L. i 1 a 2 m i § Illire, 55 i l‘ 35 “a morning showing S. Humphrey of Cavendish .I. took more than his shore of ‘h . The Humphrey owned “595 picked up six first place 115. two seconds and a third. in the prize list was , Dion Female and Reserve with his Pixie Girl getting the '0'! over H. R. Bevan’s Charlotte- horse, Scottish Light. In the mare and foal at foot Mali Maritime weather pro. ' enade, TheSkye Boart song. just I Concluding‘D‘ay/Of'l'our' I Was Hectic Fer Pr’inc eses ’ before her plane swept down the runway then circled the city and headed out over tbe.dark Atlan- tic. Her last day in Canada was hectic. She was on the go from 10 am. until almost midnight. She toured the cityunder a hot sun, planted one more tree, vis- ited‘ at war veterans’ hospital, watched a “ 'four-miledong civic parade, inspected another army regiment, spoke to the country on te‘evision and radio. attended a state dinner and kept smiling‘ Mangaret was lighted on her way; were not connected and:city’s Natal Day parade. Police - through it all. noon cnowns _ r” The biggest .crowds seen here‘ since V-E day thronged Halifax Common, where she reviewed the estimated the throng at 50,000 to 65,000. ; . At the Halifax .armories she spoke to the men of the Princess Louise’s F:usiliers..of .which :he was’just named colonel-m—chief. “I‘was delighted to accept this appointment,” she said, ‘fand (am. so glad to be able to see you on try. Whidh is so Sadly ending to- day.” / Crowds surrounded the stone building but they didvnot see the ceremony. Only invited guests werevadmitted. ' I, , Few of those inside heard what dress system wasn’t working. One soldier fainted and slumped to the floor as she approached to inspect them. Two provosts car- ried him off. SAYS FAREWELL broadcast from the main dining room of the Nova Scotian Hotel, converted to a TV studio for the- occasion. Bo t h Canadian and United States networks carried her eight-minute talk. shadow of Citadel Hill, the' city's best-known landmark. It took an hour and 15 minutes to pass. v She was Scheduled to stay for 46 minutes but stayed a full hour. Police stopped the prpcession to allow the princess and her party to leave. this my first visit to, your ’coun- class. the Hum rey's stable cap- tured first an second place rib- bons with Pixie Girl and Paglia, AFTERNOON RESULTS Section z—Filly or Gelding Born in 1956—1. Marilyn Clegg owned by Read Stevenson; .Rustico. P.E.I. 2. Norma Clegg, oWned by Percy Dickieson, New Glasgow, P_E,.I. 3. June Hal, Lester Ran- kin, Charlottetown, R.R: 5; 4. Hunter River Joy, Mrs. R.D. Mac- Holcl Funeral Of Bear’s Victim CALGARY (CPI—Funeral ser- vices were held Monday for Bar- bara Christine Coates. 7, mauled to death by a bear Friday in Jas- per National Park. The body is to be flown to Denver, Colo., home of Mr. and Mrs. Coates before they moved to Calgary. Mr. Coates is assistant sales manager of Pacific Petro- fWell Filled‘Clas's’es Mark , vExhibiiion Horse Judging I Fadyen, Hunter River; P.E.’I. 5. Hilda Clegg, Fred Kenny, Char- lottetown, R.R. 6, P.E.I. I Section 3—me or Gelding ln Harness ‘Born in ,1955—1. R.S_ Humphrey, Cavendish; 2.- I’m Harvester, Lester Rankin, Char- (Continued on page 2 col. 3) How IT’S DONE IN 'THE scum DAYTON, Ohio (AP) -— At Wright ~ Patterson air force base near here, they swear this happened: A newly - assigned colonel walked into his office and asked the pretty stenog- ralpher: “What is the normal complement of llnls office?" ‘,‘Why, colonel," exclaimed the girl, only a few months out of Jackson, Miss. "I reckon the most normal is: ‘Howdy, H o n e y pot, you’re cure lookin’ l u s c i o u 5 this morning! " leums Ltd. the princess said. The public ad. The princess made her farewell ‘ She saw the Natal Day parade frOm a reviewing stand in the tor in a downtolyn office building, had been brought here from Bel- gium three weeks ago. OVERSEAS CONTACTS, “Someone had to know this and it could be the work of a gang with contacts overseas." a detec- tive said. The diamonds—100 stones up to four carats -— were valued at $115,000 by customs and were worth more than $300,000 on the retail market. Friedman, owner and operator of the Ant-wepp Diva- mond Company, said they were not insured and the loss would wipe him out. Friedman picked up the gems from‘a bank vault where he had stored them on his return from Belgium. Two well—dressed men all the elevator in front of his eighthsfloor office. . They led him into the office and bound and gagged him, rip. ping the telephone off the wall before leaving with the diamonds in Fniedmanls briefcase. Fried- man :freed himself 20 minutes af- ter they led. EILLS BAG In the bank holdup, manager J. W. Johnson of the suburban Downsview branch of the Royal Bank of Canada Was marched from his office with a gun in his heel-rand fenced to fill a brown -~ ~ . , , a, - 111' the hobby. section, of g _ , cv armour: m; cage. j , , v; , 1. . A:m,r N - I, exchanges I ‘me peedw‘l‘ook. .- Whale”. Wim‘m‘k .itc'fimrithe stencil .‘ «can. . new..- WWme hand» “libs, his: . modem:an "i’ahds..s- ~1~ :fflfixcreoch washroom“ wast”? WW, .mfl-‘Vhfle femfly’the Wm’tmwtamim Atlantic",. . .tc . .. , " -. mute “‘1 co -iW°'l*“te‘~BuMina.‘is becoming. ‘ ' “a? can Seast' and supem‘nm‘. eat. Hill/[C He escaped in P stolen car la. ter found abandoned. Merrie- Dionne Wed Secretly Al] Montreal MONTREAL .(dPl—Mapie Di- onne, one of the four surviving quintuplets, was secretly married her‘e early Monday to Florent Houle', 33-year-old court clerk, it was disclosed ,Monday night. the only witnesses to the cere- mony in the ChaneI du Sacre Coeur in Notre Dame Roman Catholic church. George Rouse of nearby Pointe- =aux Trembles, Mr. Houle’s broth- chin-law, said he knew little about the.wedding. He said Mr. Houle telephoned him earlier and told him of the marriage. Then the newlyweds left for a honeymoon to an unu disclosed spot. “The ceremony was supposed to ’have been last Friday,’ Mr; Rouse said. “But somehow the news got around and Florent postponed it until today. He didn’t want it to be a circus. “My wife and I were invited. but we couldn‘t go today. We would have gone Friday." No Paper Tomorrow Tomorrow having been declared a civic holiday, the next edition of The Guardian will be Thurs- day, Aug. 14. To Mark 200 Years British . Rule Sunday A ceremony at Port La Joie. the ancient site of the French fort at Charlottetown harbour is scheduled to take place on Sun- day afternoon August 17th to commemorate the"200th anniver- sary of the landing there of Lord Rollo, to take over the Island from France. . The ceremony has been Initiat- ed by the Historic Society of P. E. Island and will be taken part in by Lieutenant-Gov,crnor F. Walter Hyndman, Chief Justice the Hon. Thane, A. Campbell. Premier Matheson. and Earle Taylor. President of the Society. A colorful contribution to the ceremony will be provided by naval and army personnel and Chief Sark of the Mic-Mac In- dians. The ceremony is scheduled to begin at 3:30, p.m. men roblbed. diamond merchant . It was Toronto's biggest dia- . The robbery occurred after - waved at gun at him ashe stepped ' bag with bills from two tellers'. Two altar boys were reported CHARIDTTETOWN, CANADA TUESDAY, AUGUST 12,1958 CampaignB _ e Withdrawal In M ies technician from’ Yarmouth nannnuarma (left), fisher- the ocean. quahaugs fished .off- ape car, Prince Edward ‘Is- , I ’ land yesterday. It is estimated N- 5-. mid Clifford Varin. 'Long that with good fishing grounds Island, It, Y., examine some of and proper knowhow 100 bushels OCEAN Q‘UAHAUGS SOUGHT ' »Experi-mental Work in’the fish- ing of ocean ,quahau‘gs is being carried on in the coastal areas of Prince Edwde Island and re- sults to date are most encourag- The equipment being used is forlfishi-ng-in. ,8-17 fathoms of water and should not be confused with the mechanical clam digger used here last year for digging bar clams in' waters two to six feet in depth. Here to .oversee the experi- ments and to collect data thereon is Dr. J. C. Medcof who is in charge of molluscan shell fish re- search, biological station at ‘St. Andrew's N. B." " U.S. EQUIPMENT- The eduipment being used has been made available through Clifford Varin of the Fire Inland Sea Clam Company Long Island. Mr. Varin is along with the equipment to instruct local fishv ermen in its use. The project is sponsored by the Industrial De- velopment Service carried out by the Fisheries Research Board, Federal Department of Fisheries. During the experiments which are presently being carried out four miles off Cape Bear, an at- tempt will be made to discover the potential of the quahaug in- dustry here;- Mr. Varin said he is convinced that ocean quahaugs are present in sufficient quantities to make the industry profitable. He said m. o Long Island but there is a high makes them’ unpalatable, This taste is absent in‘ quahaughs found in Island waters, he said. QUITE PALATABLE The American Fisherman said very few people have ever en- countered ocean quahaugs. He said the flavor is much the same as those found near the shore but - the texture of the deep sea var- iety is more tender. He said they ane'quite edible in a raw state. MruVarin estimated that apart from the boat it would take about $5,000 to equip a small sized dragger with the dredging equip- ment required to harvest the mollusks from the ocean floor. The dredge is towed along the bottom and to it is attached a manifold from which several jet streams of water are forced at 40 lbs. pressure at the rate of 750 gallons per minute. This extreme water pressure serves the purpose of keeping the ocean bottom is a state of suspen- sion so that the quahaugs. in a a Barn, Cement Plant Burned SUSSEX. NB, 'CPl « A born were destroyed by fire of uknown origin Saturday. Henry Fritz. owner of the two buildings, esti- mated damage at $20000. Loss included 10 calves. pigs, hens, geese. hay and machinery. quahaugs exist in the waters of. iodine content in them which‘ and cement plant at Millslrcaml sense, float into the cage or bucket of thedredge. When it is thought the dredge is='filled it hoisted to the debk of the ship. WILL TAKE TIME Neither Dr. Medcof or Mr. Varian pictured this phase of. the industry as starting overnight. They point out that first it must be proven that 'the shell fish can be found in sufficient quan- tities to supportthe industry and secondly markets must be found. However many advantages are seenin this industry. In the first place there are no closed Seasons Rt. Rev. James S. Thompson D.D. Moderator of the United Church of Canada will arrive on the Island Saturday to begin a ninekday tour of the Province. He will preach at Summersid'e, O’Leary, Oavendish, Bedeque, Montague and Charlottetown. On Monday next, he will ad- dress the' International Youth ,As- semny sponsored by the Atlantic Province Rotary Clubs at the ing day Dr. Thompson will ' ad- dress the Presbytery of Prince Edward Island meeting at Park Royal United Church. ‘ V The United Church:Presbytery [Will honour their Moderator at a 3 reception and luncheon to be held at the Charlottetown Hotel at noon Tuesday. During his visit here Dr. Thompson will make courtesy calls-on His Honour, the Lieutenant Governor, The Pre- mier of the Province and' upon the Mayor of Charlottetown. The Modei‘ator will be accom- l pani-ed by Mrs. Thompson on his Island visit. ' . strict activities. Charlottetown Hotel. The follow: of the shellfish can be \taken by one boat each day. Island on:- haugs are said to beef except- lional texture and flavor. Eishéries- Development .- so that only moving ice could re- . The second feature it produces a steady income. Mr. Varin said he could en- visage single catches of from 750 4,000 bushels a week. He said 600 bushelsis good operating in this business: , The experimental work started the28thofJulyand willcontinue until the 23th of this month. Dr. Medcof admits that they have merely scratched the surtace but believes t h a t considerable material has been or will be ac- cumulated for future research. United Church Moderator Will Make Nine-Day Visit £9- R’l‘. REV. 1.5. THOMPSON WASHINGTON (AP )—Scn‘a:tor Clinton B. Anderson. New Mex- ico Democrat, said Monday a re- port on atomic radiation from a United Nations scientific commit- tee destroys some pet theories of the‘Atomic Energy Commis- sion. . Anderson. senior senator on (Democratic t h e congressional ‘ atomic committee. said the UN report. “isn't a shocker but it's a very solemn warning to be careful with this new force." "I think this is a very fine doc- ument because it's called atten- tion to the holes in our own pro- gram and the things we aren‘t doing," Anderson said in an interview recorded for use over Says Radiation Repurt ‘VerySofemnWarnlng’ a New Orleans television station. The 15-nat-‘on UN committee said in a ee-kend report that even slow, slight increases in world radioactivity from nuclear weapons tests and other sources endanger mankind’s future health. SHOULD LIMIT TESTING Anderson said he and others have suggested “that what we should try to do is to linnt the amount of fission products put into the atmosphere each year by testing, to be sure that the amount put into the atmosphere isn’t greater than the amount that decays out of the atmo- . sphere." ' headquarters building, Asian and ' holding private discussion: lbe‘ V trip to New York to confer with ' the shutdown of Canada's largest steel-producing lplant. WEATHER Clear with a few cloudy intervals. 'K‘ little warmer. Westerly winds 15. Lowe . high at Ch’town 55 NOT MORE THAN uilcls Up For E a s; \ Backstage C ‘ By LLOYD McDONALD Canadian Press Staff Writer UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (CP) —- Backstage preparations. for Wednesday’s opening of debate in the United Nations emergency General Assembly on the Middle 'East are going ahead with sign-if- icant support ’ buildihg up in a campaign for a British-American troop withdrawal; ‘ . While an almost constant series of conferences were being held in Secretary-General Dag Ham: marskjold’s odfice atop the UN African delegations —— and prob- ably some neutrals .as well—were lieved to favor‘ Russia's con-ten- tion'that the British and United States troops must get out of Jor- dan and Lebanon as a necessary prelude to any kind of Middle East settlement. - ‘ The secretary-general was un- derstood to be elaborating in pri- vate on his outline given last Fri- day’s formal opening of the emer- gency assembly on a long-range blueprint‘for Middle East stabil- 1 y. - nonnnrs'on CALLS Significantly, one of his callers Monday was Canada’s ambas- sador to Washington, Norman Roberbon, who made a special the secretary -‘xeneral. Canada has been proposing normaliza- tion of Jordan and Lebanon, zlong the lines of the whim ibikfignng . are first step It " n intensified hi9 ‘ his Widen in neigh- slag in: v' ‘ their joint; d after -the._wdr under 'a plan whereby that state adjoining Ger‘ many would hate dorm be do- A ria‘ clared a neutral protection ofanyorallofhcfourbig TORONTO (CPL-«An 11mm bid' to head off a strike of 7.5)!) workers at the Hamilton plant of the Steel Company of Canada failed Monday. Union officials said the stnilce will go on as planned at 7 am. EDT today. ' Representatives of the com- pany and union met with Labor Minister Daley and the prov- ince’s chief conciliation officer, reaching Agreement to prevent Officials of the United Steel Workers of America .(OLC) is- sued a work-stoppage statement after the meeting. It said: “We are sorry a settlement could not be reached today. The shutdown arrangements which began today willbe in ef- fect by 7 am. We hope a settle- ment can be reached tomorrow.’-’ TALKS CONTINUE Mr. Daley said the talks had been adjourned until 10 am. but neither he nor company and union officials would comment whether any progress had been made in the dayjlonlg meeting. The labor minister, asked to elaborate on his decision to ad- journ until the morning, said: v 75. o onfere'nces Al The U.N.:Mar‘k Activities punters. Protection!!! this idea to the Middle East would be an ad: vantage in Jordan, in the general view, to cool ofif‘any new Israeli- .Arab outbreak on the eastern bor- der of the Jewiflustate. Butwith Lebanon’s tangled internal rel/alt situation, it is assmned there could be no such easy immediate Almost certainly the U-.s. wants to get its troopsout of Lebanon. but Washington contends that it must wait until the Lebanese government approves the ‘with- drawal. ' ‘ DEMANDS WITHDRAWAL Russia has wooed support from the African-Asian members of the UN in the coming debate by do“ Banding the/ withdrawal of both as a sign. that the two big West- em powers really the Arab [peoples to work out their own destinies. This separation of government and people in discussions involv- into the Middle East under re- quests from the. government: but with scone opposition. being, ex- pressed by clematis of the pop- ulations concerned. ~ One sure sign that‘Moscow been pressing this campaign is revealed by President, Nan United Arab mow. adveuo term peace plan. I > Inmanyllm mph. ‘sh diplol‘iit cup-gm of ' ' mm h each other; affairs. ' ’ “I've told you all Hm ls." (Emmy ofliieilale said M down operations taken ,during the day world close the plant with little inconvenience. The union has been seeking a as-cents-an-hourwagein- crease, contending its demand: are/ justified on the grounds of the British and American forces" ingthetwocountrieshuwen‘ Russia a certain advantage since 3 the us. and British forces mt reaction to Emma-shields m— ‘ fihua l . ._ 1 r l increased production by workers ‘ and higher company prices and profits, and that consumer spend- 1 Louis Fine, for six hours without :ing power is needed to stem the «business recession. The company, on the ,other hand, has offered some improve- ments on a group insurance plan, and has asked the union to ex- tend its present urn/tract two yeans. Employees under the con.- tract, which expired March 31, received an ayerage of $2.56 ‘an hour with a basic rate of $1.73%. COMPANY accnm' , A majority conciliation board reportsaid wages should not be increased at the present time. The company accepted thema- : jonity report but the union re- jected it. . ' Larry Salton, who headed the nine4man union delegation, said most of the plant had shut down during the day and all employees would stop work at the 7 am. deadline. ‘ HALIFAX (CP) -— A travel-1 weary Princess Margaret bidI farewell to Canada Monday night feeling “rather like Cinderalla must have felt as the first ter- rible note of midnight struck on. another entrancing occasion." But the big, glistening BOAC plane waiting to take her home to London was no pumpkin. It was due to take off at 11:45 pm. ADT, just before the stroke of midnight. In a farewell message over a Canada-US. television and radio hookup, she called Canada a sec- ond home and promised to re- turn. Text of the speech, a section of which was given in French, was released to the press in ad- vance of delivery. She said the people‘s kindness has been “truly inspiring and heartwarming and a constant accompaniment to my jour- ney. . ." “It has been my good fortune . to have seen for myself Princess culls 'Canadq‘chl’ Home, Promises To Return the people of Canada, and In much of the sources, both spirit- ual and material of Canadian vigor." “. . . I have glimpsed the im . . . the majestic grandeur of the mountains, the broad Prairie: and the fertile firmlandc further east." , v ‘ The northland offered “an-in- spiring challenge . to bill makers of Canada in every wall of life.” She-was impressed by the development in the arts “Sf splendidlyencouraged by the fee tivals which I attended. . u gress of this essential sideyof lift should match the industrial not log place so rapidly.” to saries are taking place—Britibl Columbia's centennial, Quebec'l across this vast land so many of I years of representative, MO” meut—' . , . . v- I l , mouse and varied countryside . Negotiations Fail; To'Heod- ' Off Hamilton Steel Strike .1) II V is so important that the ‘upro , scientific advance which is a]: 1 Th. Queen‘s sister was ham: ' come “when many anmver r 350th anniversary and the an f niversary in Nova Scotia of N ‘ l l . l