ISIAND NEWS PAGE ml? i Western And Central Districts .TO Return The Guardian. Charlottetown, Mon. Oct. 26, 1964. 31 t Japanese Premier Quitting; Power Struggle Expected TOKYO (AP) -— Premier Hayato lkeda. who touchcd off Japan's business boom when he took power four years ago. an- nounced Sunday he is reSIgn- HALIFAX rCP) — The reper- ory company of Neptune Thea -. ire here wrll tour the Maritimes. ‘Wlth two productions followmg ;the last performance of then i1964 summer season. it was an- ‘ nounced here. l I T111? players and stage crew H «wl a'e Shakes a ' “ - ponsibtiity of the prime min- .th Night" andpcxfns still”. istership. I have decided to 1“Come Blow Your Horn" to 15 resign the post of Prime Mia- icommunities in Nova Scotia ister and party leeSldenl- iNew Brunswick and Prince Ed: “I have made this decisxon to ‘ or. , ing because of ill health. He Ls suffering from a throat tum- or which doctors say could be- come cancerous unless proper- ly treated. I ' announcement . likely to set off a scramble for power among leaders of his Liberal-Democratic party, Chief contestants are Eisaku Sato. brother of former premier No- busuke Kishi; former foreign minister Ainichiro Fujiyama and Ichiro Kono, state minis- ter in meda’s cabinet and an Ikeda supporter, ‘ - Democratic party leaders said they would 0 s maily accept Ikeda's resigna- tion at a party meeting Tues- day. The next step would be to elect a successor to Ikeda as party president. The winner automatically would become premier since the Liberal-Dem- ocrats control the Diet parlia- ment. DEMAND RESIGNATION position parties, the Socialists and the Democratic Socialists, demanded that the cabinet re- relieve the people of any worry which results from both the present domestic and interna- tional situations." ' Cmclr. Crabb‘ Said Alive In Russia LONDON (Reuters) —— Cmdr. Buster Crabb. the British frog- man who disappeared sensation- ally eight years ago while mak- ing a dive near a Soviet war- ship tied up in England. is alive in Russia. it is claimed. The newspaper News of the e. World quotes his ex-finance Mrs. Pat Rose, 40. who was en- gaged to the Second World War hero in 1948. as saying a man with a foreign accent had made being alive in Russm. Crabb vanished after diving ward Island. Twenty-seven per- I iormances are scheduled. i In Nova Scotia. the company ; will play in Bridgetown. Nov. 2; 1Cornwallis, Nov. 3; Yarmouth Nov. 4: Wolfviile, Nov. 5: Anti- gonish. Nov 6-7; Truro, Nov. 9: Amherst. Nov. 11; New Glas- gow, Nov. 20-21; Sydney, Nov pig-26; and New Waterford. Nov. in New Brunswick. perform- ance dates Will be Sackville. ‘Nov. 10; Fredericton. Nov. 12- 1|life-liartland. Nov. 14; and iMoncton. Nov. 16-17. .; The company will perform at the Fathers of Confederation lMemorial Theatre in Charlotte- 1 town. Nov. 18-19. lRussian-s Still [In Moon Race l l l i MOSCOW (AW—Soviet piane' contact with her several times! designer Artem I. Mikoyan indi-‘ and had told her about Crabb i cated Sunday the Russians are3 ystili in He race to the moon—l idespite remarks to the con-‘ 1 CANADIAN IS TOP RIDER wears a blue and gold sash. symbolic of being the top rid- James Day of the Canadian Equestrian team. poses with his horse, Comet, after win- . t 1 ning Saturday night's interna- tional jumping event at Pennsylvania National Horse Show in Harrisburg. I However, the two major op- m-Ea.’ the.s°"iet “Hist-‘1' Ol'dzho- i irary by Soviet leaders. . A A A A . A u “A: A A ‘ A “a nlkldze in Portsmouth harbor; The brother of former Soviet' three-man spaceship. MikoyanlWe are confident of this. Con- > FAMOUS ran 4 on England‘s south coast in ' president Anasias l. Mikoyan. said; .mmation of this may be seen BRANDED INSPECTED ‘ the earth‘s nearest I ‘Sunrise . I 1 April. 1953. hinted at the possible shift in ‘ Mrs. Rose is quoted as tellinngoviet policy toward moon ex- n idhb : S T E A K S the News of the World: "1 be- ? ploration in an article published . e ° or" Ex-premier Khrushchev often ‘ i iieve I shall hear soon tiiat he‘by the newspaper .\105kovskaya;”‘ey “’1” be sowed by n‘a“"stat d th S .- t U - v . not 2 K GOOD OR‘ has left Russia and that I mustl Pravda (Moscow Pravda). Arid one would like to believe _e e one .mon \ ab 4. A MONEY: go to a place in France where: Discussing the achievements that the first man on the nloonjraCIng the An‘encans ‘0 the 0 BACK [can meet him." ’ will be our Soviet cosmonaut. moo ” . sign along with ikeda and that the Diet be dissolved for new parliamentary elections. Ieda, 64. entered the Na- tional Cancer Clinic Sept. 9. Ikeda's decision was based on a report from his doctors that he must remain in the hospital until mid-November and then take a rest of two to three “Whatever secrets surround.lin the flight Of the Spaceship vvvvvvvvvvv the Soviet Union‘s recent [1. . A A A A---AA- Prize'winners in the 19th annual competition of the Prince Edward Rural Beauti- fication contest. included the above. The -top photograph shows St. Teresa's Church. .; I . UTIFICATIO'NEST sponsored by the trustees of St. Cuthbert‘s Church, Peake's Station. and winner in the rural improvement competition. The bottom photograph shows the home of "In view of the heavy res- Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Kennedy. Mount Herbert, first prize winner in competition for greatest farm home improve- ment among second year con- testants. with judging on a provincial basis. TROUBLE HINTED No SettlementReachecl . In S'sicleWharf Strike SUMMERSIDE BUREAU OF HE GUARDIAN ; row morning". Mr. some type of settlement tomor- Ellis said No agreement has been reach-i last. night, so that the ships can act between striking stevedoresi be Worked and be on their way. and stevedoring fn'ms one of the two firms involved, told The Guardian last night. The wildcat strike broke Sat.- urday morning with two ships in port. the Jennie Porr out of Hamburg. Germany. with a car- go of fertilizer for Canada Pack- e Ltd.. and the Cornelia B-IV. which is slated to take on a con- signment of potatoes. me 75 workers went on strike demanding more wages and some privileges. A spokes- man for the strikers said they were asking for rates of $6. hour for stevedores working the fertilizer ship and $1.75 for the potato ships. Up until Saturday the stevedmcs were being paid $1.25 per hour. The strikers were also asking for a coffee break during the we here,1 Thane Ellis of Thane Ellis Ltd.,.day morning Mr. lmented "it's just too bad they rking day. i“We'li have to try to come to‘. After he strike broke Saturo Ellis com- lthe strikers) are so disorganiz- ed and don't have a leader. They could have approached us ear- lier before we chartered the ships at a low rate". “If we could have expected this a while ago", he continued. “we could have done something about it. but now we have all the ships chartered". The second firm involved in the strike is Coastal Stevedoring td. ere were rumors circulat- ing last night that the firms had hired men from other areas to work the ships and ere was a possibility of trouble on the wharf area this morning. T'ie spokesman for the strikers said Saturday that the stevedor- ing firms had sent down were- housemen to work the ships at- Turbo Jet II Wins Man O' War Race NEW YORK (APi—Enqicn- bred Turbo Jet 11 spoiled the highly regarded Gun Bow' grass course debut Saturday with a thrilling three-quarto. length victory in the $111300 an 0’ War race at Aqueduct Gun Bow never was worse than second In the I’l'a-mlic rlce. Turbo Jet. a proven um course performer from Jon Vic Shane's Barclay Stable of Phli adelphin; oved to the front u quarter mie from home and Gun Bow had no answer to the challenge. Gun Bow. owned by the Geri. ney Farm and winner of eight "lines on dirt tracks this year, lat/ed runner-up honors by 2% leflll‘hl over the fast ciosino Knilhtiy M s n n e r. only three-remote in the field of nine. For his sixth victory in ii film in the US. after two suc- Nului campaigns in England Turbo Jot mood $72,670. WINS I! 11 - to - to svorttc. caught Mu, nmu O M Chitin. Going Abroad. and went on to win the $126.- 100 Hawthorne Gold Cup by 2‘: lengths Saturday. Pin Oak Stable's intercepted also closed well to finish sec- ond. a half - length clear 0' Olden Times. The Gold Cup victory was worth $77,100. At Laurel. Md. Mrs. Wallace Gilroy‘s Marshua edged Wheat- ley Stable's Queen Empress. the 2-to-5 favorite, in the 1 1-16 mile run in the 396.090 Selima Stakes. Marshus had to 11111 the fast- est Seiims—i.“ lots—to wtn by a neck. The winner earned 859.208 and increased her win- nings for the season to $131.- 633. GLIDE!!! COMPETE SOUTH CERNEY, En land iCPi—(‘aplain of Britain's glid- ing team for next years world championships 11M“; Sou our the 16th pole event. ter the strike had been announc-l ed Saturday morning but that: these workmen had joined the other strikers. l The spokesman also stated Saturday that no work would be done on the ships until the two parties had come to a settlement. d that no one would be al- lowed to work the ships u n t it B 5 an agreement was reached. CNR SERVICES Continued from page 1 basis of mileage. It would mean crews affected would complete their required monthly mileage in fewer working days. THE E AINS COMBINED T n - owned railway combined the three daily west- -mound Transcontinental passen- ger trains and the three east. bound into one each way start ing Sunday night. Montrea passengers were routed via T01 onto as the Ottawa - Capreol service was rerouted. Freight services were delayed. e wor - schedule changes. put into effect with the chang- to standard time from daylight time overnight Saturday and Sunday. stretch the single-crew runs between Homepayne and Armstrong north of Lake Sun; rior and between Biggar. Sask., and Edmonton in the West. Instead of changing crews at Nakina, the new work schedule calls for an unbroken run be- tween Hornepayne and Arm strong, a distance of 244 miles Previously, one crew worked the 132.mile Hornepayne-Nakina run and another the llZ-miie Nakina-Armstrong run. est, the change means a crew works 266 mile... between Biggar and Edmonton instead of changing at Wain. wright, 126 miles east of Ed- m Crews involved are members of the 20.000-strong BrotherhOod of Railroad Trainmen (CLC) the 8,900-member Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers (1nd.) and the MOO-member Brother- od of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen (CLC) 5" O {If you’ve got impd’rtanfi things to protect, use a; Toronto-Dominion Safety Deposit Box. It costs just $5 a year at The Bank, where pggpb] make the differences, TORONTO-DOMINION m Where people make the difl'um J. P. COOKE, Manager—Queen & Kent Ste. You get better traction because the engine is in the rear with its weight over the drive wheels. POPE MOTORS, BOX 937 W. R. JENKINS LTD. St. Peter's load. Parks-i. — on loss—Tel: 4-6563 SUMMERSIDE TEL. 6-3117 as m a?