Buyer meets seller Ads. TELEPHONE 8506 With Guardian Want Dial 8506 ask for classif' taker, for quick results. led ad Eire Economist 1 “Covers Prince Edward Island Like‘ The Dew” northwest winds 15. lottetown 45 and 65. WEATHER Clear with a few cloudy intervals, cool, Low-high at Char. 12f “mm n “ma Class Mall by u]. p u _ , r Department: om- °" °“‘ CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA FRIDAY, JULY 18, 1958 Will“ FIVE CENTS A A 16-year-old Lachine, Que, girl was saved from drowning in ~an unsupervised area of Stan- hope Beach yesterday afternoon by lifeguard John who mile away. The near drowning took place at the same spot , where a double fatality occured one year ago. , ‘ Patricia Madmen. With'her ’ rmym of Murray River, got into diffi- iculties when she found herself depth in heavy seas. 0n the shore James Burden of ‘Charlottetown, uncle of Patricia, noticed her plight and along with ‘ J. MacDonald of the Income v. Depastment, Charlottetown ed to the rescue. The latter almost overcome in his ef-' \ ,Els and was barely able to _;roach land. . ’ » Mr. Burden JV'hile unable to -. Lining his neice to shore, kept her 'afloat until the lifeguard arriv- ' ed. P. D. MacIntyre, father of g the girl and a nonwhnmer cal- = led encouragement from the ,I shore. The Martin girl reached ' shore by her own efforts. . A res'uscltator was required to , restore Miss MacIutyre who was * inter taken to hospital for ex- ,« amination. Latest reports indic- Ite that both girls.are seeming, ly unharmed by their experience. John Fielding who effected the swimming rescue is a son of Col- ‘ onel~P. S. Fielding and Mrs. f Fielding of Charlottetown. He ’ has been active in life saving ; Work for several years but quali fled as a lifeguard only about ‘ three weeks ago. Last night Mr. Macintyre, father of Patricia was most Pro- fuse in his thanks to life guard 3' Fielding and to Mr. Burden and ‘ Mr. MacDonald. He said, all three acted very courageously and rlscked their lives to effect the rescue“ s K . 7 ~ I ,‘yi‘ rPoEolo MOP. s 4 O Assnstance For Potato Growers O'I'I‘AWA, (Special) -— Federal i assistance for the potato growers 7? 0f Prince Edward Island has I ‘been urged in recent discussions , ,by Island MP’s and the Govern i ment. John A. MacDonald (Kings) , and Heath Macquarrie (Queens) joined with Fisheries Minister_J. Angus MacLean in a meeting Wlmh « Hon. Gordon Churchill, act-ing Agriculture Minister, concern- ! mg the assistance program for f; P-E-L potato growers. : Mr- MacDonald and Mr. Mac- “ quarPie spent last weekend in the Province where they made an on‘t'he-Spot survey of the situa- ' » tion. Also in the Island is Dr. ‘Orville Phillips, MP tor Prince. 0 O , Nfld. Mmlster Vacations Here Newfoundland’s Minister of La- , 01‘. Hox. CH. Ballam accom‘ r. Denied by Mrs. Ballam is pre- senin spending a week’s hoh- ' days in the Province, guest of r the Charlottetown Hotel. Mr. Ballam recently attended a meet- " ing of Provincial Labor Minis- ‘ tet‘s in Ottawa and while there was invited by Hon. B. Earle ,MacDonald to spend a holiday . here instead of a planned stop- , Over in the state of Maine. The 3 Newfoundland Minister and hlS “ wife are reported to be well ' Pleased with their change m /‘ plans. ‘ 4 was summoned lrom his post a- a BATI'LE STATION FOR u.’s.7 MARINES ‘ With U.S. Marines now activ- ely exchanging gunfire with Le ‘ I pause rebels, this picture shows i one of the battle stations ‘they have established .on the water- trontfollowing the troop landing y local lifeguard North's Ru’m ls Stronger O'l‘llAWA (GP) — Northern Ai- fairs Minister Alvin Hamilton has the Yukon and Northwest Terri- tories get a more potent than those in other parts of Can- ada. « In the Commons Wednesday, he was asked by H. W. )Hemidige (QCF — Kootenay West) whether he could verify a long - standing rumor that liquor in the Terri- tories had a higher alcholic con- tent than elsewhere in Canada. confirmed that rum‘drinkers in on Tuesday. Mounting antagon- ism to U.S. forces is reported from Lebanon. ‘ O Cancel Ian Hos . m , I Final Curlesy ' By SYLVIA HACK Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON (GP) —— A Canadian debutante in a fetching red silk dress curtsied gracefully before the Queen Mother Thursday, end- ing a royal ceremony believed to date back to the reign of the first Queen Elizabeth. \The honor of being the very last debutante in the final royal debutante season fell to blonde. 20 - year - old Sandra Seagram, whose mother and grandmother had! been presented » in earlier wash the gold and white ball— mm at Buckingham Palace ‘ r Mm*_wmmg—im orients»!!! Canadian” "tables presented" to some 200 other Commonwealth girls. The Queen Mother was sub- stituting the Queen, who is recovering item» an attack of acute sinusitis. Last week an alumst equal num- ~ ,ber of Canadians were presented to the‘ Queen Mother. Thursday’s presentation party marks the end of royal debutantesm Buckingham Palace announced last November that this would be the last year in which presentation parties would be held. In future, socially prominent young ladies will be in- vited only to the mass garden parties held each summer on the palace lawns. ' BUSES TAKE MMLIONS OTTAWA (CP)—lR;ural and in- ter-city bus lines carried 4,712,800 passengers in May, down firom 4,994,100 a year earlier, the bur- eau of statistics reported Thurs- day. Regular service fell to 4,516,- 400 from 4,659,100 while chartered service showed a marked de-. crease to 196,500 from 334,910. 11qu Mother and the Duke ' ofEdinbuz-gh along with , Marines In Clash E BlEllRUT (GM—American Mar- ines sw ung in action here Thursday in a bri but bloodless sniping exchange with Lebanese rebels. The Marines opened fire after snipers had been shooting at them for several hours, an American said. The sniping stopped immed- lately. The clash at the Beirut airport was the first military action by the marines since they landed Tuesday to support the regime of President C a mill e Chamoun. erican spokesmen said. The sniping was a blunt indica- tion of the growing discontent among the Moslem population at U.S. intervention in the revolt- torn Middle East country. Saeib Salem, the rebel leader in Beirut, ordered his followers Wed- nesday to concentrate their oppo- sition against the Marines. GRAB TWO MARINES Two marines were kidnapped by‘ insurgents during the day but were released unharmed several "hours The rebels were re: ported to limit-shed their arms?” was grumbling among the legislators. = Almost two-thirds of the entireparliament was re- ported opposed to the landings. Some pro-Western deputies com- plained that the marines had in- firinged‘ upon the independence and sovereignty of Lebanon. Speaker Adel Osseyran said he expects to call a special session of Parliament to consider the complaints. The normally pro~Western Os- seyan said he had cabled a pro- marskjold. The protest was read to the Security Council in New York by the delegate of the United Arab Republic. MPs min IN DARK Apparently Chamoun figured he could count on his majority in parliament for support on theis- O the floreign "allairs committee, said only 26 out of the 66 mem- moun’s decision to call for U.S. helm ' Engaged There were no marines hurt, Amr test to President Eisenhower and UN SecretaryaGeneraI Dag H‘am~ sue. Emile Bustani, member of bers of parliament support-ed Cha- "U.K.MOVESSUPPORTED. L g 1 x ‘ 3 “Canada Troops Ready * If’Call Comes-FromUN All/[MAN (OPP-«Britain sent 2,- 000 paratroopers to Jordan Thurs- day to help young King Hussein face up to new threats to his throne. Britain thus joined the United States in a nullitary build- up in the smouldering Middle East. King Hussein asked tor the Brit- ish help, charging President Nas- ser’s United Arab Republic had plotted to overthrow him Thurs- day. He feared a pro-Nasser coup such as the one that killed his cousin King Faisal in Iraq Mon- day. ‘ The Soviet Union massed land, sea and air forces along its south- ern tnontiers and announced man. oeuvres will start today in areas bordering Turkey and Iran. ‘ U.S. Navy jet fighters made a lownaltitude demonstration flight over Jordan in connection with the British landing. Landing Links US in Massive Mili ary BuildUp There were more than 8,000 U.S. and troops in Lebanon Jordan and Turkey. _ U.S. SHIPS IN AREA ' - The United States sent two air craft carriers, a heavy cruiser and 16 destroyers into Lebanese waters. The French cruiser de Grasse anchored off Beirut. The Royal Navy ,sent the 43,0004ton aircraft carrier Eagle into the eastern Mediterranean. Prime‘ Minister Macmillan told Parliament ‘th at paratroopers were flown from Cyprus to Jor- dan at King Hussein’s request to head off a plot against his gov- ernment. Macmillan said the plot was hatched by-Nasser’s republic of Egypt and Syria. He said Syrian troops were, seen marching to. ward Jordan's frontiers. COMPLAI‘N To U.N. Jordan. complained to the ‘3 B last By ‘ YD McDONALD Canadian Press Staff Writer UtNflfl‘ED NATIONS, N.Y. (OP) Russia called Thursday on the United Nations to act~“fontlhrwit 1" to aclueve the withdrawal of Brit- ish and American tomes now in the Middle East. An emergency session of the UN General As- sembly is expected as a result. VOTE AVOI’DED BY LLOYD MCDONALD Canadian Press Staff Writer UNITED NATIONS, N- Y., —(C‘P)-- The United Nations Security Councllhtaced with a deadlock over,the Middle East crisis, staved off a showdown vote by adjoining at 11:25 pm. ADT Thursday night until this morning. Soviet delegate Arkady’ Sobolev accused Britain and the U.S. of having taken “mobilization meas- ures” and said the British and American troops now in Leba-m‘m WHERE DO YOU THINK IAM? and Jordan were poised for an invasion of the Syrian territory of the United Arab Republic. The Security Council was ex- pected to vote Thursday night on rivalling U.S. and Soviet motions. The American motion called for action by the UN to back up the American intervention in Leb- anon. The Russians called, on the other hand, for an withdrawal of American troops and late Thursday amended this to include the British forces which landed in Jordan this morning. Following Sdbolev’s speech to egations called for the floor, indi- cating that the Voting would be delayed. A FAIRY TALE The Russian delegate dismissed as a “fairy talc” the British and American contentions that their troops are in Jordan and Lebanon ’ to protect these pro-Western Arab states against aggreSSio-n by Pres- ident Nasser’s United Arab Rt- public. Anticipating a veto by Britain and the U.S. of the Russian mo- tion, Solbolev said he would call in such a case for an emergency as- sembly session. In the General As- sembly the big-power veto does the council a number of other del- - Western Moves I _) ha I . not moved and a two-thirds ma- jority of the 81 UN «weather is is sulficient to» pass any motion. Henry Cabot Lodge of the U.S. stating that he feltthio the grav- est- hour of his 51/: years as chief American delegate, said that if the UN were to condone “such aggressive subversion" as was be- ing threatened by the U.A.R., the result could well be the breaking up of the world body. As an example of the extrem- ities posed by the UAR. nation- alist policies, he alleged that Leb- anon’s President Camille Cham- oun was marked tor actual execu- tion should the U.A.R. take over in Lebanon as Iraq had been taken over earlier this week. “In promoting this rose show”, said Hon. Eugene Cullen, Minster of Agriculture, “the Parkdale Women’s Institute has made life a little more beau- tiful, and a little sweeter for all of us. ._ Mr. Cullen was at the offical open’mg of the Is- land's first Provincal Rose Show held last evening in the awaomen’s Institute Hall in Park'- he. ‘He said that when an archi- tect creates a beautiful build- ing, he is contributing to the ‘benifit _of mankind and when a person creates a toy which will give a child endless plea- ’sure, he is contributing toward his fellow man, but when one grows a rose which is more beautiful, he is contributing to the betterment of the citizens. “We need things of beauty to things in life".rhe added. PEACE ROSE Named “Queen” of the roses exhibited at yesterday’a show was the “Peace Rose” entered by Mrs. Everett Howatt of Is Cancelle AMHERST (CP) —- The Mari- time Stock Breeders Association announced here Thursday that the Maritime Winter Fair will not be held this year because of a fire that destroyed several of its buildings earlier this month. Association president F. George MacLeod said the stock breed- ers, sponsors of the annual show favored cancelling this year’s fair scheduled Nov. 1-8. A meet- Maritime Winter Fair For Year. ing of association officials, town council and government repre— sentatives voted to engage an architect to design a new build- ing lay-out. It was indicated that the Bailey Arena, home of the Amherst Ramblers hockey team would be rebuilt this Winter. Town councillor E.J. Anderson estimated it would cost $500,000 to replace the buildings. overcome the more depressing ; Britain United Nations that the UAR. was ulterior-ing in Jordan’s inter- nal affairs. Macmillan said Hussein also had asked the United States for troops. The United States ,an- nounced its support of British in- tervention in Jordan but officials said Washian decided against sending U.S.. lorces to Jordan now.’ , British government sources said the paratroopers flew over Israel to Amman, Jordan, with permis- sion of Prime Minister Ben-Gur- ion. Jordon Army 'Loyol To King’ LONDON (Reuters) — Gen. Sir John Glubb, who commanded Jor- dan’s Aralb legion for I? years, said 'Iluirsday night he believes the Jordanian army still is"‘fair1y' loyal” to King Hussein» _ ' Attempts by Arab nationalist "logo for young otficers, with se- cret imapaganda" did not seem to . Lubbfl'icmll televisth ‘ “(93“ But he declared that the West was rapidly losing the hiendship of the Arabworld because West— . em nations did not realize the im- ' portance of propaganda. “Colonel Nasser and the Rus- sian: have a regular technique for disseminating ideas . . .. to stir up mistrust and hatred between the Arab countries and the West,” he said. . The general, who was retired by King Hussein two years ago, said the Arab nations-were in “an awkward dilemma." IS NEW U.S. ENVOY ST. JOHN’S, Nfld. (CH—Will— iam H. Christensen has taken over his new post as consul gen- eral of the United States in New- foundland. Mr; Christensen was deputy chief of mission at the U.S. Embassy in Luxembourg. He began his career in Winnipeg. Parkldale _'Women For Holding RoSe Tryon. “White Knight" exhibited by F. W. Tidmarsh was judged the best white rose shown in ,the exhibition. .Judges of the various entries were/ Gordon C. Warren of the, I, last evening for Mrs, Everett festival Canadian foreign policy,” \ 'Stand Revealed; ‘ WASHING-TON (CP)—Canada's External Alfairs Minister Smith indicated Thursday Canada is pre- pared to provide troops for a United Nations military force to stabilize the turbulent Middle East. g Flying in from Ottawa for top- level talks on Middle East devel- opments, he told reporters Can- ada, “if requested, could makes contribution” of troops to protect the threatened Arab states oi Leh- anon and Jordan. ’ . But the question of a Canadian troop contribution’ has ‘not yet come up,” he said. Smith said that Canada is supporting the U.S. proposal for a UN police force for Lebanon. . At the same time, he declared Canadian support for Britain's military intervention in Jordan. Here to consult with‘British For- eign Secretary Lloyd and U.S. State secretary Dulles. Smith told reporters he had come “to assess the present and see if we can tore- cast the tuture." Heplanued to see Lloyd Thursday night and to meet with Dulles today. , He described the situation in‘the Middle East, where U.S." Marines moved into Lebanon Tuesday and British paratroops landed in Jor-‘ dan Thursday,- a-s “grave and ser- ious” andssdded: “WehhopeJor, W' For Queens Talks At Mount A. O'l'l‘AWA— Health mum, ' Conservative MP for Queens, P. E.I., was the final speaker at the United Nations Seminar re- cently held at Mount Allison University. Macquarrie, a former university professor, who has previously lectured at Mount Allison, s’poke on “The development and purpose of He has been a member of the Cana~ dian delegation to the United Nations. At the conclusion of his and dress, an interesting question and discussion period was held. Mr. Macqual'rie was introduced by Professor Cunning- ham, Director of the UN School. Praised... Show Expermental ‘David Schurman, Clmrlotte-town, and Robert Sn-azelle of the Cotton Memorial Nursey. . other speakers at the ofificial (Continued on page 2 Col. 6) at the Island’s first AtParIeyI‘nUS.‘ in“... __ British intervention in Jordan Thursday, he said, had been dis- cussed by the Can-a‘dian cabinet in Ottawa that morning and Canada support it as a temporary mili: tary action taken pending steps by the United Nations to stabilize tho situation in the Middle East. Dulles and Lloyd went to the White House for talks with Presi- ‘dent Eisenhower after reli’iewing developments marked by contin— ued Kreinlin hints that Rituals might stage some . The most critical problem fac- ing them was what if anything to do about revolt-torn Iraq where an army coup last Monday over- turned the pro - Western gown- ment of King Faisal. Jordan's youthfiul King Hussein was reported willing to move his 'Arab legion tomes into Iraq in a bold move to revei‘se the revolt provided he got British-Am can backing. v Lloyd and Dulles were under- stood to be cautiously weighing the potential impact of such a move, especially'in view of Bus- sia’s and Egypt's support tor the Iraq rebels. , Photog'ra pher’s . mama —— Defence Min- ister Peal-m “the Comoros: «“at no tints" were press photographers locked in a mess ‘aboamd EMICS Crescent dun ing Tuesday’s fleet review by film“ “W” °" "W" Peaches was replying to Frank (00F — Sheena), who asked for an investigation into repprts'that 13 news photos. raphens' were locked in a. mess aboard the Crescent tom- 3% hours. The account given the Commons by Mr. Pearkes dirfered in some points from press reports. Clumac Ge‘l’s Job At Summerside OTTAWA, (Special) -—"A con- tract for $95,900 has been award- ed by the Federal Government to CAMAC Construction Co, of Charlottetown. , for‘improvemeuts to the RCAF Station at Summer- . The work to be undertaken will involve site grading soil stabiliza— tion an dconstruction of storm drainage ditches. The contract was let by defence construction (1951) limited, I * crown-owned company. The improvements are part o! la hughe development program under way for sometime at the RCAF station; Several; projects now are being carried out. PATIENCE AND skill in the, entry the “Peace Rose" .wastthe Women's Institute Hall in are of rose cultivatibn paid off judged the “Queen” of the rose Parkdale- She is seen accepting er prize, a silver tray, from Mr. R.C. Parent, Euperintendent Howatt or Tryon, Mrs. Howatt’s Provincial Rose Show held in of the Exepnme' ntal Farm. _A \ K «A