Buyer meets seller with Guardian Want Ads. Dial 3506 ask for classified ad taker, for quick results. CARDINAL SPELLMAN IS AN EAGLE Francis Cardinal NEW YORK (CP)—The United States Congress has reaehed the put-up-or-shut-up stage in labor reform, an issue with bomb-like Political meaning. Jubilant Republicans contended Tuesday that through their efforts and those of President Ejisen- ower, the Democrat-ruled Con- gress is heading toward passage ef a strong labor control bill. A conference committee of the US. Senate and the House of Representatives started late Tues- day to try to reconcile ¢wo labor bills, one passed by the House Power Cut Has Ended NEW YORK (AP)—Power was restored to 500,000 New Yorkers Tuesday, after the worst break- down in the city’s history. More than 500 square blocks were blacked out for 13 hours. Little actual damage resulted from the breakdown. But coming as it did Monday on the most miserably hot and humid day of summer, it compounded the stifl- ing discomfort of milliogs: Darkened streets in West Side! slums and East Side luxury areas on either side of Central Park of- fered an in@iting lure to mischief makers and criminals. But police commissioner Stephen P. Ken- medy rushed 3,000 extra police- men to the scene and was able tg report that crime actually de- creased during the blackout. The power failure apparently was a cumulative thing. — For five straight days, New York had been sweltering. A¢ air conditioners and other electrical equipment were utilized against the heat, demands on Consoli- dated Edison Company's power fatilities mounted CABLES BURN OUT Monday, the city used more electricity at one time than it had ever used before. In mid-aft- ernoon seven cables from a main generating plant burned ‘out. Alaska Road ‘Is Headache DAWSON CREEK, B.C. (CP) Defence Minister Pearkes says his department is anxious to be rid of the responsibility of main- taining the 1.200-mile Canadian section of the Alaska Highway. “They can have it for the ask- ing, anyone who wants to pave ard maintain it,” he said before leaying on an inspection tour of} the highway Monday. Mr. Pearkes said the nighedy “hailt during © Second. World War as a defence measure. env has less significance from the de- fence standpynt. ‘ in ‘ ; ‘ i S & bs F 1 Speliman | Presentation is at the Order's waukee. assistant secretary (right) of New York is given ‘aj annual convention in Toronto, at-|the Order, and in centre is dele- plaque making him a member|tended by some 8,000 delegates.|gate Robert Cannon, of the Fraternal Order of Bante At At left is Robert Hanson of Mil- | Milwaukee. Yanks Labor Reform Issue _Seen Explosive Politically by the Se@hiaté earlier. eventually passed. George Meany president of the AFL-CIO, dis- agreed bitterly terming the House vote “a victory for anti- ciation of Manufacturers and the Chamber of Commerce.” ELECTION IS FACTOR With a presidential election coming next year, the labor bat- tle has been heating up through the month<. The politicians were faced with satisfying public de- Amand for labor reform without The main fight started nearly two years ago when Eisenhower mage eae of 18,000,000 un- ion m ° last Friday and the other passed | [demanded action | Eisenhower had appeared on gating committee headed by Sen- television to criticize the Sénate-| ator John L. McClellan passed bil] as ineffective and he| Ark.). spoke out strongly for the more!James Hoffa became the most restrictive bill which the House | spectacular figure im the commit- labor forces—the National ASSO- | pushed a reform bill through the! | again sidestep the issue at its cur-| r & “Covers. Prince. Edsbard Island Like The Dew” oY CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 19, 1959 Clear with few intervals, cooler, west winds 15. Low at. Charlotte- town 57 and 70, 14 PAGES wor mons FIVE CENTS Lady Grips Big Guard In London LONDON (AP)—A well-dressed young woman wrestled with a. British guardsman in a new flare- up outside Buckingham Palace ate bite reams A Keb de as woman ed a sentry. ‘I want to see the Queen,” she said. The guardsman stared over her head and didn’t say a word. “Let me pass,” she said, grab- ging his rifle and giving it a de- termined pull. The guardsman flexed his mus eles and got his rifle back. As the crowd gaped the woman, under 30 and carry- a shopping bag, grabbed the again. They stood there tug- at the weapon with the glow eri ng straight and never saying a word. Kt is a tradition that Her Maj- esty’s guards must keep everyone out without ever appearing to notice anyone's presence. A policeman broke it up. He gap tary aay appr tba geereg ing a break for the palace gates. | She was arrested, taken to a po-| lice station and later to a hospi- tal where she was kept under ob- servation — her identity undis- closed. Yank Women Are Criticized LONDON (Reuters)\—An irate on Englander took a potshot at American women Tuesday as he | defended a sentry outside Buck- ingham Palace who kicked a bothersome woman and was con- fined to barracks for his trouble. “IT am an A an of also of | ‘métican but American who realizes that American women tourists as well as American women in general need to be kicked not once but | often,”” declared Donald R. Hart, | Jr. of New Britain, Com. Hart made his acid ¢omments {if a letter to Member of Parlia- ment Marcus Lipton, who took up the case of the punished sen- try with the government. Hart enclosed a cheque for $1.40 for the sentry. to. ect union | abuses discovered by an investi- (Dem. Teamsters: union chief Caribbean Peace Meeting Hit Montana-Hardest HELENA, Moat. ‘AP)—Earth-! and other scenic attractions es- quakes rumbling across Western | caped damage. Canada and the United States; Death reports were fragmen- Monday night and Tuesday hitjtary.A—helicopter pilot told hardest in southwestern Montana.| sheriff Lloyd Brook at Virginia Unofficial reports: said 16 per-|City he had seen six bodies dur- sons were killed. | ing a trip over the area. Idaho A mountain slide into a river,| state police, in a broadcast heard creating a barrier 200 feet high|by the Montana civil defence which marooned 100 to 150 per-|headquarters, said there were sons in front of a leaking dam.jeight dead near Reynolds Pass, The quakes scattered tourists in| on the Idaho-Montana border. famed Yellowstone National Park} Richard D. Smiley, president of and led to the closing of Old radio station KXXL at Bozeman, spoke warning words to the | Faithful Inn. First reports in-|Mont., got into the areas as far dicated that Old Faithful geyser! (Continued on page 2 Col. 5) Big Business Blamed For Labor Legislation FOREST PARK. Pa AP)—! statement blasting the bill re- George Meany. AFL-CIO pres-| cently passed by the House. The ident, said Tuesday big business| council said it is designed by big is jamming through Congress leg-| business interests to weaken un- islation that will hamstring labor| ions rather than deal effectively unions and hurt the economy. | with labor corruption. “This is intended to kill organ- | | SAY ALL LABOR HURT ized labor,’ Meany said. “But| AarL-ClO leaders maintain that, we'll survive. We'll operate aS) instead of dealing with corruption, best we can for the workers’ wel-| the bills go much farther and at- fare and we'll continue’ to fight | |tempt to punish all organized la- corruption wherever we find it.”’| hor for the sins of a few unions. He said he hoped bills already; weany said this will hurt the passed by the House of Represen-| entire country beca it will tatives and Senate could be re-| cripple union bargaining power conciled to preserve pag det. | and adversely affect byth union rimental features of each. But r Ww, said he has little confidence that = ee ee wil) happen . ~ The AFL-CW council author- “I'm not optimistic: quite ob- ized Meany to make a new study viously. the anti-labor forces are|of jurisdictional problems | be- riding high.” | tween rival unions. He said con- The federation chief spoke to! siderable progress has been made ecutive counci] — the organiza-|with such disputes but there is reporters after the AFL-CIO ex: in creating machinery to deal | tion’s high command—issued a'still room for improvement. tee’s investigation. Senator John F. Kennedy (Dem. Mass.), a contender for FLAMES ARE 200 FEET HIGH the presidential no mination, Senate last year but it was stopped in the House. His revised bill again passed the Senate this year, after which it was attacked by Eisenhower in his speech over a@ nationwide network. PROMISES PASSAGE Conceivably, Congress could By ADREN COOPER KANSAS CITY, Kan. ‘AP)—A rent session but this is considered unlikely because of the forthcom- | ing elections. Senate Democratic | (Continued on page 2 Col. 4) ee from a burning filling sta-| ion, exploded and spewed a huge | Mrs. Howard Green look ov map during a‘moment of re ‘axation.in Mr, Green's‘office on arlianient Hill at Ottawa. Mrs. i . { i TRAVELLING AHEAD External Affairs Minister and jeer worfian had been restetetes ex a to her fr- iGreen, whose travelling as a car- ;{airs. About 100 firemen were injured, | six of them critically. At least 50; | were taken to hospital and doz- scene. Most of the injured firemen were standing in a four - lane er on a Conoco Oil Company sta- tion and nine storage tanks—four 25,000-gallon éapacity tanks in the rear and five smaller ones at one side. Suddenly a tank broke from its concrete foundation, overturned and sprayed a long sheet of flame across the boulevard and down a side street. SHOOTS IN 20-FOOT PATH | For a few seconds the fireball |obscured ithe firemen and it | seemed incredible that any one in that 20-foot-wide path of flame vould -trave survived. Fire chief Fryapcis Doherty of Kansas*City, Kan. four men killed, but could not be confirmed. Fire chief Edgard M. Grass of Kansas City, Mo., said two of his men were so badly burnedthat they were reported dead on arrival at a fiospital but later were ‘found to be alive. The fire was located on the Kansas side of the state line which bisects Kansas City, Mo., and Kansas City, Kan. The fire was put out about three hours after it started. “The tanks were ruptured and were hissing like jets.” said fire- man Lester Cecil. “TI on on WHERE-TO-FIND-IT Announcements, notices 13 Births, deaths. etc., 1 123 Classified section .... 12, 13 Comics, features ........ 10 Finance, markets 13 Charlottetown news ...... 5 MN eee sch ices 4 Island ‘news .....,...... $3 WO © 2, Vic cceeneods ae Women’s page ‘7 Laté reports from Guardian sews bureaus in| Summer- side, Montague, Alberton and “SS | Souris, and from special cor- annual holidays fer ' | gasoline storage tank, ignited by | were severely j boulevard, playing streams of wa-| | no ard to om vat att « 2 vod public works to foreivy n° (CP Photo) | @ resrondecerts new iaperar on the Is'and News Pace. ‘ | 0., iwia Polce Cie Exploding Gasoline Tank : Spews Flames Into Crowd !was a sheet of flame over me."’| his clothing burned off and severe His arms, legs, face and back) burns on his head. burned “The poor devil kept saying the: Lord’s Prayer all the way to the| FORM LINE FOR INJURED | hospital, then he ar for a It was like an \assembly line as/ wa ; priest,”” Rust said. physicians, fire department first} A Roman Catholic priest at the! aid crews and volunteers loaded| scene. Rev. James Brown. said the injured into ambulances. | he administered last rites to five Fireman Jimmy Tucker was) of the critically injured. | ens of others-were treated at the| treated for burns on face, arms| HELP FIGHTERS OUT and shoulders and was led away from .the scene, his shirt gone,| Close, 38, Kansas City Power and| shaking and incoherent. Light Company workmen, were Ambulance driver James Rust! sitting in a truck in the flaming said one of his passengers had| (Continued on page : 2 Col. 4) William Latham, 40, and John —er. wrt - last nicht at I t-C r F n heno: of t rv RB Avoul le ehane Commander, Wiliam R chard) Arthur Dalr yvmpie toe ‘ ’ ne aa ya 1. ps. ce T | weather bureau baid. INEW CABINET MEN COMING OTTAWA (CP) — New cab- inet appointments will be made Thursday, Prime Min- ister Diefenbaker said Tues- day. s Asked by a reporter whet- her the list of eabinet chan- ges would be long or short, he chuckled and.replied: ' “It will be short to some and lgng to others,” Big Step Seen In Atom’s Use WASHINGTON (AP) US. Navy scientists Tuesday claimed a-major step toward harnessing the H-bob reaction for peace- time power. But one of them said it would be 20 to 40 years before such power would be obtained on a practical, economic scale. The navy amplified on a re- port made Monday night by one of its scientists concerning some new developments in the field of controlled thermonuclear, or fu- a statement: “An important milestone has; been reached in the process of obtaining useful power from the almost unlimited supply of energy locked in the nuclei of deuterium, the ‘most abundant form of ‘heavy’ hydrogen. Deuteriumis available in all the waters of the world.” The statement was issued at a press conference held by Dr. Robert Page, director of re- search, Dr. C. V. Strain, super- intendent of the radiation divi- sion, and Dr.:W. R. Faust—all of the naval research laboratory. The scientists said they be. lieved experiments conducted by Dr. Alan Kolb of their laborator- ies have achieved the long-sought laboratory version of a controlled thermonuclear reaction. ‘Storm Edith Said Weaker SAN JUAN, " Reerte Rico (AP) Tropical storm Edith appeared to | be losing strength Tuesday night | its travels through island, ups southeast of Puerto Rico. | A te hurricane watch remained in effect for Puerto Rico, the Virgin! Islands and eastern Hispaniola bye was discontinued for the | Lesser Antilles, south and west of the Virgin Islands. The weather bureau at San Juan and air and surface craft |Teports indicated the season’s) | fifth tropical storm was 200 miles| east-southeast of Puerto Rico at) 6 p.m. EDT and moving west- northwest at’ 17 to 19 miles an ‘hour. “In passing through the island! | Edith appears to have weakened in intensity, and highest winds are now estimated to be about 4 to 45 miles an hour,”’ the aa Ak ta. DANCE FOR NAVAL OFFICERS ihe ball hands with Mr. MacArthur is Commancer A. G., Watson. RN (eit) whe commands’ HM &. ‘vy, Mrs. MacA = hy aiad ber busband, Ww aldk.ig sion-reaction, research. It said "er ‘Dr, Chile Rep SANTIAGO, Chile ended theit| ican foreign ministers ended theie| Caribbean peace conference Tues-| qday by signing a final act aimed| at starting tension-easing machin- ery in motion, Ofstage, Chile, the host nation, threw out a party of Cuban sold-| iers and reporters who landed in a Cuban air force transport unin- vited and without authorization as the advance guard for a profes- sed goodwill visit by Premier Fi- del Castro’s brother Raul. American nations and the United States in signing the act at the closing -session of the seven-day conference. Island Doctor ‘Dies In Calif. Word was received yesterday | |of the death of Dr. Ralph Cald- th Long Beach, California. Dr. | Calder who was forty years of age, was born in Charlotetown. | He was a son of Mrs. Marcus manager of the Canadian Nation- al Express here for some years before his death. Dr. Calder died Tuesday. His funeral is being held in Long Beach where interment is to take place. Red Athletes Refused Visas ROME (AP)—The Italian gov- ernment said Tuesday night it will not grant visas for athletes from Red China and North Korea to participate in next year's Olympic games. The communique said the deci- sion taken by the Italian govern-| ment was motivated not only by) the fact that Italy cannot grant | entry visas to official represent-| | atives of countries it does not rec- ognize, but also because neither Red China nor North Korea be- | long to the International Come , Committee. Cuba joined with 19 other Latin; Calder, 70 Rochford Street, and) the late Marcus Calder who was) Signs Tension-Easing | Pact Monday Earthquakes eis Cubans Who Land Uninvited Among the others was the Do minican:- Republic, whose general issimo Rafael L. Trujillo has beem accused by Castro of attempting to overthrow Cuba's revolutionary regime. : The expulsion of the Cubas | party—13 bearded soldiers equip- 'ped with pistols and machine | guns, 21 reporters and seven plane crew men — came before dawn. Two Chilean planes escorted them from Santiago, where they | had been held in the military area of the airport since their landing Monday, and sent fem on their way to Lima, Peru, where Cas- tro’s brother had stopped off. When Castro arrived late ia the afternoon Chilean authorities went aboard his plane and .ar- rested' three Cuban soldiers they said were carryiig guns. Castro himself was not bothered. Though the ministers agreed te give special temporary powers te jthe inter-American peace com- |mittee in an effort to curb fur- ther invasions by revolutionaries and their eS ae they called no names and slapped no aiehh. It was plain they were banking — on public opinion to bring moral | pressure to bear on those respom sible, at least until more positive |Mmeasures can -be taken at the Quito, inter-American conference in February. The peace committee has been jempowered to examine cases of |tension, keep watch over trouble spots and report to fhe Quito con- ference. The conference did not say what would happen # some country refused to admit such ia- vestigators. Oriental Disease Scare Reported | MONTREAL (OP) Armg headquarters here said Tuesday | five cases of Oriental skin dis- | ease known as Loa-Loa have beem reported in Farnham, 40 miles southeast of Montreal. Headquarters made the state ment following reports that the disease had been discovered ia - the army summer training camp ‘on the outskirts of Farnham. Bank Loans Rationed As Money Is Scarce By DON PEACOCK Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP) — Bank loans are being rationed across Can- ada because. there: isn’t enough money to go around. But. Finance | Minister Fleming exBressed ‘the! #| government | lowed.” hope Tuesday it’s only a ary situation. He gave no indication that the government plans at.y steps to al- leviate the present tight - money situation. It's all a matter of ‘money supply being unable te keep up with the demand ‘for credit, he told reporters on his way to a cabinet meeting. Although the chartered banks have applied “severe restric- tions” on credit, ‘‘as far as the is concerned, no policy is being fol | j tight-money The government had no power = to increase the. supply of. money. hands. with Mrs. Hyndman who is partly hidden in pict the Lieutenant-Gaovernor ig greeting Sicinng Gidug@sys. il ers. ‘CUTS ACROSS DOMINION That was solely in the hands of the Bank of Canada. As for rais- ing the present statutory limit te | Six per cent on the interest rate | the chartered banks may eharge | borrowers, no thought was being given to such action. It was ia the realm of Parliament’s pow- Meantime across Canada, bank eredit was being severely re- stricted and rationed out in at- tempts to satisfy legitimate loan requests, sfill pouring in regard- less of interest rates Banking officials in Montreal said the way loans are rationed out is up to the individual banks —in the last analvsis, the indi- vidual bank managers. + “We have to make the best judgment we can in a.very diffi- cult situation,”” said one top Can- adian banker The chartered bar's announced last week through the Canadian Bankers’ Association that, the money supply being he'd at a fairly steady level and the Bank of Canada interest rate rising to a record 6.41 per cen’. chartered banks would be forced to curtail loans RESTRICTING SINCE OCT. Whatever the government's pri- ivate attitude toward monetary policy, thé Bank of Canada evi- dently has been following a pol- icy of credit ypestrictions—as far as this is within its power—be ginning about last October. Since supply has riseg then the money by _ my ative fraction, t& about 5 403 000,000 from abou $13,000, 200. 000.