hh ne a gal cinsaified af “jat an average speed of 450 miles | “Phis was believed to be the *\ Edward Island Like The Dew” TOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, JULY 6, 1959. ‘12 PAGES glsr2cl S Ben Gurion. — ‘DONDON (Reuters) — ain’s newest and biggest sutinae’ : the turbo-prop Vickers Vanguard, flew from Gander, Nfid., to Wis- ley, Surrey, Sunday in 5% hours an hour, Vickers Armstrong an- nounced fastest transatlantic flight ever made by a propeller-driven air- craft. Vanguards go into service next year with British European Afr- ways. and Trans - Canada Air Lines. Joey Will Get More Money OTTAWA (CP)—Finance Min- CAR ACCIDENT IS NEAR TRYON Mr. and Mrs. Albert Martin,; from behind by a car driven by Helen Martin and Lea Martin, all} Warren Howatt of Tryon on a of Albany, were taken te the) curve on the Trans-Canada High- P.E.I. Hospital Saturday evening| way near Tryon aout 6°90 p.m: when the car in which they were| The Martin car (shown left) driving was ew struck! left the road and overturned in Liberals Bomb Government On Choosing Yank Fighter ‘City Airman Dies In Crash PERTH, Ont. (CP)—Two army reconnaissance fliers were killed - here Saturday when their Cessna L-19 aircraft failed to “pull out of a spin and crashed: before about 1,000 spectators at the third an- gual Perth air show. Killed were Lieut. Wallace H. Tylypow, 28, of Glasym, Man., the pilot, and his observer Sgt. Clareice Gala, also 3 o'char| Ry, DAVE MGINTOGH (F104 whlch-hd been town ty treetene, wi ore rte cave so atone oe | : wer i “cer. 4 . ; : Fame Recall + oa OTTAWA (CP) — The yea cord the fore olen te: altar ae Pase 5, Mow er government has announced that it} MRS. KEITH Rand, left; talks|P.E. Island about the plans for|ing here this week. Mrs. Rand,|Ben-Gurion’s Mapailed coliation : The two fliers were nearing the | bombed the government for 3% age plans to pay to the province ad-| 0 Mrs. Fred Gates, West Royalty!the FWIC Biennial Board meet-| the National president, is from| Ben-Gurion was expected to re- end of a flying performance de-|hours in the Commons por poatngigy sony Sr peer IPort Williams, Nova Scotia. Se ee ee gigned to demonstrate the ma-jon its choice of the American period ment elections noeuvrability of the aircraft when| Lockheed F-104G for use by the l on [ (fa ing ip 1962. MARS. KEITe RAND PRESIDES ____,, |vember, but which may be held _it crashed. Both men were killed| RCAF air division in Europe. However, Mr. Fleming said Sat- | sooner. i, " instantly. Paul Hellyer, former Liberal urday,any mention of the figure Ben - Gurion attended the wed- _ Observers said the pilot: ap-| associate defence minister;-:told 8 . is “speculation.” He would not| - ding of a minor official in his peared to put the aircraft into a| Defence Minister Pearkes: “You disclose any figure until the reso- office and then went to President , spin at a height ‘of about 1,500\are asking ut to buy a pig im a|- lution is brought before the Com- Thee Bon tts spt AE feet and to have been unable to| poke.” ero mone for debate, late Re seckieaten: Se aaa. regain control. | His. statement tame after Mr,, ey : . _ [next week or the week after. minutes with the president. - ____Debris_was scattered over a| Pearkes said under persistent op- c ait ie ‘ The total is on top of transi- The premier’s action followed So-yard area. position questioning that the a See Tames Seavey bas G00 wee by eked eee scot Ne es eae eee oe The Cessna L-19 is an army ob-| F-104G has not yet been flown. Canadian Press Staff Writer che an sed ee CE Comutere- rd a day for résignation. ef four servation plane used for artillery| The minister said the F-104G is| OTTAWA (CP)—A tough fight adian ee ake x oan inion she mount Se spotting. ea improved version of the |for control of canal labor on the | Teitway, Transport The reel cone ee oe) ee ess “Os ee = nipwed tesens of '-tmion Meet- | Sound, (home economics); ; include James a * In a- representation yote held | Newféundiand recommended ing ot the meal rose Women's | Mrs, Grant Floyd, WE | Napanee, NS. ond Mite eet; |meeting .with..the presktent and QUEBEC IS LAST Friday and Saturday, it was|yeat that grants of $8,000,000 a| Institutes of Canada begins at St. | (agriculture); Mrs. Mac- | Steeves, Surrey, N.B., both mem-|tld’ reporters he would remais learned Sunday, the brotherhood/year be paid after 1982, but the| Dunstan's this morning at nine| Lean, Eureka, N.S. (citizenship): | bers of the sub-executive; and|_‘Continued on page S col. @) smeared the hard-boiled Seafar-| government has’ rejected this. | o'clock. Delegates from~each of| Mrs. Grant LeBaron, North) Mrs. J.0. Decker, Pemberton, ers’ International Union, which : = . Canada’s 10 Provinces arrived in| Hatley, P. Q. (United Nations);|B.C.; Mrs. Gordon Johnston, rovinces F ave oined Ow wes tye mrs hw to we TAX SQUEEZE |tisgtcomlne.snree| sx A ‘Teor Pam |free Rez. nee tex ooenl gar People way workers. ere . ; , East, P.Q. Ri, ; Marian College. Harold Laird, Kensington, P.E.I.| Also registered are Mrs. Wil- Ge | Beane representa siaiee soon, on GETS KIDDIES Mrs. Keith Rand, Port wil-| ‘Federated News); Mrs. George| fred Bishop, Paradise, N.S.; Mrs. Are ‘mans , ‘ ‘ET. ering ,key canal workers from] LrruE ROCK. ‘Ark. (AP) | Dams: N-S.. national president of Wilson, St. Mary's, Ont. (public | M.N. MacGowan, Kilmuir, P.E.1.; ; : Montreal all the way up through| Now the kiddies are caught FWIC,'will preside. ). o Pearce ee ae ee SAARBRUECKEN, West Ger the waterway, the employees d@| in » tax squeeze During the sessions which wil| OTHERS: PRESENT ee te Clark, many (Reuters)—A million Saar cisively named the 40,000 mem- And it may be serious for Continue all week reports will be} Mrs. E.J. Roylance, Greenwood, — eens a : ~ Namey/ianders were set ‘Sunday night ie ; aes \ber brotherhood as the union t©| them. The miniature mecha give by the president, the national| B.C., first vice-president, and : for the final step in a four-year OTTAWA (CP)—All provinces ment takes up half the cost of re-) Newfoundland, $7,200,000; Nova represent them in. dealing with ad tr t the im... | secretary, Mrs. H.G. Taylor, Ot-| Mrs. T.H. Howes, Millet, Alberta, Additional counselors im at-| process of transferring their cit- flow are in the federal-provincial | lief for unemployed who can work} Scotia, -$300,000;—Prinee-Edward Canada’s St. Lawrence Seaway! ots - ar supermar- | tawa, amd the conveners of the| vice-president, are also among} tendance included Miss Helen|izenship and this rich industrial unemployment relief scheme,|but cannot qualify for unemploy- : -. | Authority.’ os stores faces | various standing committees: | the many Canadian delegates re-| MacKercher, director, — terri from France te West ST Meclics Gab last eubeestber. | ment ‘eeurence: Island, $200,000; New Brunswick, Out dia jcaataineus diatate © extinction under a new state | Mrs. R. Partington, Francois| gistered. services, Ontarto department of fery oF Health Minister Monteith an- $250,000; Ontario, $11,500,000; ee tax law. Lake, B.C. (cultural activities);| Other Board members present | aT! ; Mrs. Jack Neahiea, : Initially, the act provided that : vote, it was repofted, the The law levies a $250 an- Mrs tor the 1959 FWIC "s de.| At midnight, the 1,000-square- founced in the Commons Satur-| the federal,treasury bear half the| Manitoba, $3,100,000; Saskatche-| brotherhood got about 645 ballots. ‘| Mrs. Gordon MoPhatter, Owen Board meeting | women’s services. extension de-| mile Saar territory was due for SECON : nual fee against owners of all ze | partment, department of agricul : day that Quebec signed-up July 1} ost of relief for unemployed im| wan, $2,700,000; Alberta, $1,900,-/It needed half the total to win} Qi, operated amusement’ ée- ture, Manitoba: Miss Reta Under- formal economic integration inte for vod eae org ang excess of .45 per cent of a prov-|000; British Columbia, $12,800,- ig tee nee dae the ballot. | vices, W i hill, director of Women’s In- aoe o Pee after 15 years as . ince’s ulation. The present} gg ‘ e. scrap is just now c iL : ; , : = the cot of rele! for unemployed government amended this lat|°™ : inn Sse Ga. Latent previous dae] :Now, owners of coin - ope Noisy e come se Aen anu, “and ats| Tho Saar, long a subject at employables in each province. year to make it a straight fed- Number of recipients of assis-| velopment was that Brotherhood a iaaeaneiieie ae! a = Theresa Machend, women's ser.| strife between /rance and “Ger. Mr. Monteith and Welfare Min | ana) 50 per cent of provincial-ma-| ‘ance by provinces, including de-| President Bill Smith had flown t0| siner than on - eo ie ou vices branch, P.E. Isand depart-| many, was anfiexed by Frence-et— 1 ister Sauve of Quebec signed the| nicinal relief costs. pendents, during the year ended the West Coast to rope in support; puts wait kiddies! Here : ment of agriculture. the end of the Second World War. latest agreement, under the 1956) 1.5. 1 +) cach provinceto ar-| March 3I: for a strike of the National Asso-| 000. nein This time it’ y ica Oo S an JOINT SESSION ‘ In a referendum in 1955, the _ Federal Unemployment Assist-| a. Ponce ie at aie Newfoundland, 50,939; Nova|ciation of Marine Engineers] jo5, voile. with eae. _ The hostess group, the Women’s | Saarlanders voted for the returs B. ance Act. He gave no details of a soit te aasteel ae Scotia, 4,523; P.E.1., 1,183; New|(CLC), in which he claims the| 145 two merchants from Tex. Institutes of Prince Edawrd Isl-|of their homeland and allegiance = - ~ specific .greement with Que- Sa oe — on fea. |Drunswick, 4,829; Ontario, 61,405; |STU is acting as a strikebreaker | srikana They have chail By ARCH MacKENZIE city has planned a cyclone of a| ‘Continued\on page 5 col. 3) | to Germany. ; he agreemest, & was learned | eral ee ae jx thie Manitoba, 11,973; Saskatchewan,|by providing crews on shipS| the jaw in mena Canadian Press Staff Writer |welcome for the Queen ond we later, is the standard one between the federal government and the provinces. It took effect July 1. But Quebec, like the other sign- ing provinces, will be able to col- lect retroactively from the treas- ury on relief payments going back to July 1, 1958... No information was available here immediately on how much in payments might be involved. House members thumpeg-desks lustily as Mr. Monteith an- hounced that the Quebe¢ govern- ment—often .at odds with the fed- eral administration—finally had come into the fold on the unem- ployment measure. . ~ OTTAWA PAYS HALF Under the bill originally passed in the Lil administration and subseauently sweetened fi- “nancially by the - Conservative goverhment, the federal govern- Old Painting Proves Fake VATICAN CITY (Reuters) — ne of the best-known paintings | in the Vatican, the Mystic Wed ding of Saint Catherine, has been found to »e a fake, Vatican offi- cials said Saturday. The pain‘ing was regarded as one of the 17th - century Spanish painter Murillo’s. masterpieces. It was given to Pope Pius IX ‘in the), mid-19th century by Queen Chris- ‘ tina of Spain and had a place of honor in. the Vatican's’ »icture gallery where tens of thousands of pilgrims have admired -it. It was recently taken to the Vatican laboratories‘ for a -clean- ing to remove a yellowish taint. end of the last fiscal year, March 31, the central government laid out about $40,000,000 under the plan. The total figures by provinces: Christmas Tree _ Market Sighted ANTIGONISH, N.S.°(CP)—Nova italize on a new market for Christmas trees im Mexico, Wil- liam Cleary of seta Gar Boucher said Friday: Cleary is a major tree exporter. He was commenting on a re- port in Foreign Trade, a depaft- ment of trade and commerce pub- lication, which said Mexican im- porters are looking for more quo- tations from Canadian Christmas tree growers. |_. Mr. Cleary said under the Nova Scotia Small Tree Act the. prov- ince can only ship balsam fir. The greatest demand in Mexico is for Douglas Fir. He said. high freight rates would also adversely affect any plan to export Nova Scotia trees to Mex- ico. : WHERE-TO-FIND-IT Announcements, notices .. Ii Births, deaths, ete. Charlottetown news ... 5 Classified section ..... 10, 11 Comics, features.......----. 9 RN Bi cc iecxnedst)-®@ + land news ........++-- 2.3. Woman’s page .......+.-.. 6 Late reports from Guardian © news bureaus in Summer- 9,721; Ajberta, 9,882; B.C. 31,371. struck by the engineers. pe RE EL Scotia would not be able to cap-| =~ ee Se FR LOBSTERMAN BRINGS UP ‘ The bower anc) OEE ET EF IEESe CHICAGO (CP) — The windy 4 ‘MARCO POLO” During the cleaning,’ another| Souris, and frem special cer- ed clipper stiip, the “Marco Polo” |many pieces of ‘her wreckage|had carried his gear into. 10 fa- painting, only partially completed respondents now apvear op was brougzt as“ore at Stanley|have been preserved in Island|thoms and entangied it w: > the and showing a lanc:canve with fig-| “the Island News Page. B-“dge tas! wees. ‘“T=e—fastes: rar Thomas Gallant. s¢en/ old anchor. Rep-2sentetives ircm are, appeared underneath. sins ; ship in the world,” was wrecked | here with his S-year-old son, dis-|New Brunswick have been look- 4 <r j . sisi 2 Aen J 4 ‘ ; Prince Philip. Chicago was ssiaeasattaahe mg quiet Sunday, a lull in the big- = |gest Independence Day weekend atid cada ANCHOR r,of the fam-|near Cavendish in July 1983 and covered that the recent storm jing at the relic of the Saint John built ship with te object of hav- 1g it pl- im that ciy. in its history. But the final tails were being put to the 1¥ hour visit that starts at noon ADT today when the Queen ar- rives on the Lake Michigan waterfront. — . Officials said Sufday night they’ expect 1,500,000 persons will see her. Few Chicagoans appeared to think it paradoxical to celebrate good :riddance to British mon- archy July 4 cs then turn about Monday to put on what well may be the show of the Queen’s 45day tour. “Not many years ago it would have been unthinkable, —_ as well as practically, the royal yacht to show up we Grant Park,” observed the Chicago Sun- day Ttibune editorially. I noted however that times have changed and the Queen is a a monarch — “an. am- bassador of good will from our Briain.” in Canada and from Commons Sits On Saturday OTTAWA (CP)—About half the Commons’ membership of 263 MPs was present at the opening Saturday of ,the session’s first Saturday sitting. The sitting marked the start-ot | Tr a week sittings in drive to,end the session. There is spec- ulation that the session may end about July 18, All party leaders and 18 of 21 cabinet ministers were in their d in @ mariae museum | ~~ \aay. seats for the opening. There were house committee sittings to TORONTO” VOP)—A sas by Prince Philip about Ontario's liquor laws has stirred comment and criticism here despite as- surance from the man who re ported it that it was made miostly in fun. At London, Ont., Friday. the Prince asked Allen, Pro- gressive Conservative member of the Ontario legislature for Mid- diesex South, when “‘these obso- lete and ‘old - fashiened liquor laws” are going to be changed. The comment is reported to haye been prompted by an in- cident Thursday night at the Theatre. A bar held under a pri- vate. banquet licence was ordered closed at 11:30 p.m. shortening a cast reception which followed the |Toyal couple’s visit to the theatre, Neither the Queen nor the prince had been scheduled to attend the reception. In Stratford Saturday Mayor Robert E. Mountain recalled a conversation. with the prince Thursday during which: he told Philip that hotelman Conrad Hil- ton would not -be interested in Stratford “until our liquor laws were changed.” SPEAK TO FROST Both the Queen and the prince laughed; the mayor reported, with the prince saying \smilingly: Judy La Marsh of Niagar# Stratford Shakespearean Festival | “Tl speak to my fri Leslie Frost (Ontario ‘premier’ about | ) Nea By Liquor Comments - Ontario Liberal Association whe recently became involved in a party controversy when her com- ments about liquor were taken as official Libera! policy, said Satur. day she agrees with the prince. Mrs. I. H. Perigoe, head of the Women’s Christian Temperance laws are “plenty liberal.” W. H..Collings. chief commis- sioners of the Liquor Control Board of Ontario, said he wonders what experience Prince Philip has had to back up his criticism of the province's Nquor laws, SEIS oie 40 Rescued As Ship Burns CAMERON, La. (AP) — Most of a crew of about 40 aboard a burning cargo ship in the Gulf of Mexico were rescued Sunday. As the blaze on the Belgian motorship anvers spread beyond control, six crew members and about a dozen coast guardsmen remained aboard to fight the fire. Two lifeboats with about 35 men aboard were . towed into Cameron from the burning--ship, six miles offshore. : The ship’s fourth engineer, Frank Nagels, said two men Were slightly hurt. Nagels said there had heen no loss of life. Crew members in two lifeboats were Falis, Ont., vice-president ef the | picked up and brought te Cam- rr Union, said provincial drinking sascaceonansiesilnire so Mn aernetprge temes Si AO cai f,