[ae eas - ¥ . _— By IAN MACDONALD Canadian Press Staff Writer CORNER BROOK, Nfid. (CP) —The Corner Brook District La- bor Council (CLC) ig expected to hold a mass meeti this week “to seek rank and file support for action against the Newfound- land government's recent anti- union legislation,” The government recently passed one law* decertifying two Newfoundiand locals of the In- ternational Woodworkers ol America. (‘CLC) and~ another which _Premier Smallwood said was designed to enable the gov- ernment to dissolve two locals of the International Teamsters Union. Also passed were laws prohibiting general strikes and secondary boycotting. The council which has 6.000 members—3,000 in Corner Brook —has given its support to the IWA which struck the Anglo Newfoundland Development Com. pany at Grand Falls Dec. 31 Since early January IWA loggers have also been leaving their jobs with Bowater’s Newfoundland Pulp and Paper Mills Limited here. IWA MEMBERSHIP CLAIMS The IWA. claims about 6,000 members in the Grand Falls area of central Newfoundland ana _n- other 5,000 in this western sec- tion of the province. A spokes- Garnhum,| man said about 1,200 A.N.D. log- CHILDREN PRESENT PLAY A capacity audience of approxi-; Classes of Mrs. K.S. Rogers and from left to right, Front Row, mately 350 witmessed ‘The| F.A. Large. The play was held| Beverley Mills, Judy Children From Galilee, a three! in the church yesterday as part/ Jan Robertson, Back Row, Gets+ gers 2nd 1,400 Bowater’s loggers | act play presented by the Trinity| of the observance of Palm Sun- rie Auld, Diane Peters, Leigha United Church Sunday School! day. The cast of characters were,, Jameson and Stanley Bryanton. em 6,101 Registered “CITY AND CENTRAL |For Emptoymen > . _In This Province GIFTS WITH MEANING—Sign-; DIES IN PINEHURST — Word OTTAWA, — (Special) — Alpi, ‘Me Union will make a stand nificant of the Easter season at) was received Sunday morning by | total of 6,101 persons were regis- ; the Bible House, Charlottetown’ James Williams of Charjottetown tered for employment at the Na- oP and Reneters hove en : : ;Mounced jointly that they will (opposite Eaton's). | that a former Freetown man,/tnonal Employment Service of-| never sign an agreement with the . Joseph A. Burns of Pinehurst,| fices at Charlottetown and Sum-| twa. AN : sapien oe gine AUCTION “45” Score Cards Massachussetts died Saturday in| merside. WA. A.N.D. bag since. signed -an for sale at Guardian - Patriot Central Printing. Lowell General hopsital at the! The announcement was made ™ | age of 86. He is survived by his|in Commons by Labor Minister Newfoundland Brotherhood of :,.| Wife the former Addie Williams of WE TREAT the sick well. Gig- | : : , : gey’s Pharmacy open 8.30 a.m. Graham's Road in this province, Michael Starr in reply to a ques-| "% Workers (Ind.) which tion by John A. Macdonald, rien on aoe |} Member for Kings. A.N.D. icials said Saturday to 8.00 p.m. oat a cone noe ia Picture. | The figures, 9 of Feb. 26, there were 1,200 men working in SHOES worn in Fashion show ” jwere the latest availanie. Onjthe woods and that three of their 9 per cent off at Le Page's. IF YOU DON’T know diamonds | that date there were 3,274 reg's-'four main woods divisions were it will pay you to know us. Let tered for employment at the operating at capacity. The fourth THE LADIE’S Auxiliary Main} r 90 years of selling experience Charlottetown office compared | Bishop's Falls, was to open to Brace Naval Veteran's Associa-|Plus our direct buying from | with 4,344 for the same month in'day. It will employ another 250 tion meeting, Monday, at 8 p.m./Antwerp, Belgium prove our) 1958, and 2,227 registered at | men, Max Lane, temporary pres- greater values. Taylor's Jewellers | Summerside, as against 3,167 re- ident of the NBWW said _ EASTER TEA and Bake Sale| Limited, Prince Edward Island's! gistered in 1958. 'TRY TO BEAT THAW gponsored by The Salvation Army | Leading Diamond Merchants. Home League &t The Salvation ~ Army Citadel, Tuesday, March 24- th, 1959. 3 p.m - 6 p.m. Admis | ie EASTER MONDAY Ball one Railway Whart lits woods haul before warm sion 50 cents. Lee ‘weather melts the snow and week from tonight at the Naval é wees s ar Barracks. Sponsored by the Men's Shed To Be Wired swells the streams for the drive Association of the P.E.I. Hospital. to the mill. Operations were held were receiving union welfare pay- ments. Many IWA pickets in central Newfoundland were reported to be employees of Bowater’s con- tractors, who the IWA said volun- teered for picket duty. Western Newfoundland is considered a stronghold and it was believed MEETING OF the Caledonia! Tickets available at H.M. Simp- gprawaA, — (Special) Ten. ~~’ the strike. ee Club, Monday evening, March 23 , son Limited—Henderson and Cud- gers have been called for wiring! : owever, Bow ater s officials at 7.30 in the Y.M.C.A. more’s — Giggey’s Pharmacy.| of the newly-replaced west shed [2'™ most of its wood hauling | . Pick yours up today. on the Railway Wharf at Char-|@S been completed. The union's | EASTER DIAMONDS See our lottetown. | next move is likely to come when new Advertisement elsewhere in| PRICE FUNERAL — The fun-| announcement of the ceiling ot the spring drive begins this paper. Pattersons Jewellers etal of the late Clarence Parker tenders was made joint!) by, President Peter Fudge of the 113 Kent (near Queen). Price was held from the MacLean} picheries Minister J. Angus Corner Brook Labor Council said Funeral Home yesterday after-| yacLean and. Heath Macquar-| in an interviéw Saturday that pro GIVE A ROSARY for Easter-| noon. The service was conducted Taylors Jewellers are showing a| by the Rev. H.L. Mitton. Inter- wide selection of Cross and) ment was in the People's Ceme- | Chains, Medals, Missals and Sta-| tery. The pallbearers were A.J.’ tues. Ideal gifts for Easter. Tay- Haslam, R.B. Nicholson, Albert lors Jewellers Limited. Phone L. Roop, Harold G. Rector, W.E. Ee MARY’S BEAUTY Salon. Dial, DEATHS in Paris compared with 84.000 in’ were asked to resign from the ph Mang py i meget 1924. The number, of opium ad-| union, he said a pol $5.00. 10214 Kent anaes | BUELL — At the Kings County dicts in the French capital now FORCES RESIGNATION? : . 2 *| Memorial Hospital, Montaguc,|is less than 100, most of them} Then when loggers applied for on March 20th, 1959, William| middle-aged doctors or mem-, welfare benefits they were told rie, member for Queens. ADDICTS DECREASE jvincial government welfare off ;cers are carrying on a ‘‘scanda | lous campaign” against the IWA PARIS Reuters Police! He said welfare officers were lecturers at the Pams headquar- ordered March 9 to. refuse we ters of Interpol, the International fare benefits to any member of Police Organization, said there! the decertified union. WA mem- now are only 200 cocaine addicts|bers wishing to receive benefits Hardy Building. WOMEN’S PROGRESSIVE Con-) : servative meeting at headquart. | neral service ers 168 Great George Street to! nizht at 8 o'clock. Guest speaker! Dr. L.G. Dewar. Everyone wel- come. ~ EASTER SPECIAL — F u!}! erystal stemware vale to 3.95) for only 1.00 each piece. Patter-| from Murray|terpol sources said. Harbour United Church, Sun-) day, March 22nd. Burial Murray Harbour cemetery. HUGHES — Suddenly at her home, 42 Cumberlaod Street,| j on March 20, 1959, Mrs. J. Ivan Hughes, nee Mary Con- way. Her remains were trans-! | woods. the Fudge termed Gere em oe in| son's, Kent Street. near Queen. ferred Saturday afiernoon from the Hennessey Funeral THE FIRST in a series of Pas-| Home to her late residence) sion Week services will be held | this evening at the First Bap- from where the funerai_ wiil be held this morning at 9.30 tist Church of Charlottetown at\ [to St. Dunstan's Basilica for 7.20. All welcome. Requiem High Mass at 9.45.! Interment will take place in’ GOOD FRIDAY Service 3-4 the Catholic cemetery. gan on Cures Poser, Taegan — A te PF , an eee a ospital, March 21, 1959, a Ministér- David L. MacKinnon, 222 Rich- . ; mond Street in his 72nd year. REMEMBER FINAL Week The remains are resting at} Skating at the Sports Arena the Cutcliffe Funeral Home; Skate tonigat 8 to 10 where the funeral service will} : be held today ‘Monday), ser- vice starting at 2.30 p.m. The interment will be in Highfield Cemetery. EASTER MONDAY Ball one . Week from tonight at Naval Bar- racks. Sponsored’ by the Men's ; Association of the P.E.I. Hos-| wacLEOD — At the Riverside pital. Tickets available at H.M.| Hospital on March 21, 1959, Simpson Limited—Henderson and’ ~ Samuel MacLeod, formeriy of Cudmore’s Giggey’s Pharmacy. Breadalbane, in his 63th vear. Pick yours up today. The remains are resting at the e ; Cutcliffe Funeral Home from DANCE, DANCE, Dance. Don't’ where the funeral wili be forget to pick up your tickets for, jeiq privately. Interment will the big Easter Ball—One week p@ in the People’s cemetery. from tonight Simpson's—Giggey’s Henderson and . Don’t; MaeKINNON — At the P.-E. Ts- delay—They have today. | land Hospital on Friday, March | 21, 1959, Neil J. MacKinnon of | New Haven. His remains were transferred from the MacLean Funeral Home yesterday afier- noon to his late residence from where the funeral will be held tomorrow (Tuesday), service commencing at 2 o'clock. In- terment will be in the Kingston cemetery. NEWS O”FICE BOMBED BEIRUT, Lebanon (Reuters)— iTwo bomb explosions Sunday damaged offices of the Lebanese Communist weekly newspaper Al Akhbar. No casualties were re- ported. PERSONALS Mrs. Anges Osborne, City. is a patient in.the Prince Edward) Island Hospital. Her many friends wish her a speedy reeovery. N. D. MacLEAN . FUNERAL “, DIRECTOR 15 King Square Charlottetown DIAL 5549 CHEKHOV’S WIDOW DIES LONDON ‘AP)--Olga Knipper- Chekhova, 99, widow of Russian dramatist Anton Chekhov, died in Moscow Sunday, Moscow Radio reported. Slte had been a lead- ing actress of the Moscow Arts Theater for 40. years. She mar-* Commanding Officer of the Royal’ lottetown. The change of com-) ried Chekhov in 1901. He died Canadian Dragoons, Lt. Col. John’ mand in’Canada’s NOTO tank re-’ three years later. S. Ussher of Toronto, to Lance giment a Germany, was marked’ agreement with the newly-formed | A.N.D. is working to complete | CHANGE OF COMMAND IN GERMANY A salute is returned by the new) Bearer, Sgt. John Binns of Ohar: }. Support For |WA In Nfld. To Be Sought At Meeting move an attempt by the govern- ment to first force loggers to re- sign from the IWA, and then go back to work. Welfare Minister S. J. Heffer- ton said in St. John’s Saturday that before a logger could re- ceive welfare payments it was jmecessary to establish whether he was unnecessary to pay. bene- fits if jobs were available, Mr. Hefferton said. : The [WA has not called a strike against Bowater's although Pre- mier Smallwood said in the legis- lature Friday that there was a strike. : The IWA field director Jeff Hail Sunday declined comment on whether union loggers in western | Newfoundland were on ‘sfrike ‘or jengaged in a sympathy walkout j with A.N.D. loggers. | ASK INVESTIGATION a The council also announced it jhas asked Canadian Labor Con- |gress president Claude Jodoin to | investigate the reason it was re- jferred to Halifax when it asked ; Lt.-Col. Jack Marshall for use of the Corner Brook Armories Sun- me ae a a Rg mi pe om - . x | | 2 The Guardian, Dewar Influence ; Is Acknowledged) WEATHER ‘be Pe Sed _ Lincoln Dewar, secretary of the; TORONTO (CP) — Tempera-| yery ok ther is f st. for Dairymen’s Association, Was pre-|tures issued by the weather) ay A atlap a -omng wa sented a plaque at the annual din-| office. F : ner of the Association, . citing Otte, Max.) Tree him for his work with the As-| nawson —15 4| Halifax and vicinity, northera - sociation during his two-year pre-| vancouver 39 45| Nova Scotia, Eastern Shere , “This week the militia com.| Sdential term and ten years as| victoria 35 4g| Prince Edward Island, New mander said & new ation is- secretary, and also commorating | pamonton 25 39| Brunswick, Nova Scotia South Merck 4 ro ane the work of his father, John A. Calgary 27 49| Shore except Yarmouth County: ae oe = > tae ¥| Dewar, who was on the director- Regina 33 .49| Sunny and very cold; northwest mand, Halifax, before permission | 8° % the New Perth Dairy when | winnipeg Be? hee oe 2 eer ee . oa Gan oat. it applied for its charter in 1892, | Toronto 4 29| evening. Low-high at Halifax and oa = siaeieae and who also served as president | 5) awa ail 14| Liverpool 8 and 25, New Glas- nodae she Pita “btaek enw, of the Sanomiatien for a ten year | yontreal 4 ——145|.g0w, Goshen and Charlottetown eral days delay which forced the| sented with a wrist Te | Quebec 7. Oh Se Ses ee epunell ‘te pieteend “dlaec fora ~ a wai Fredericton 35 21| and Saint John zero and 20 , Ed- nt_rally of 8,000 a presentation was made by Saint Jobo 34 49| Mundston and Campbellton 5 be- giant rally members." | Max Thompson, president of the low and S-above, Permission was expected: this| Association, and the address was| Moncton = + Yarmouth County,” Annapolis. week and a new meeting date| read by H.J. MacDoneld, pro-|Halifax 314g | Valley, Cape-Breton Island : would be set, vincial’ dairy ft. Sunny with a few cloudy inter- Lt.-Col. Marshall told The Cana: — | Sydney 2 ~— | vals; widely scattered snotwflut- dian Press that the regulation) ‘The grizzly bears of the Rocky| Yarmouth Sa = . ie nettle aig aa was always in effect. Mountains grow to as large as/|St. John’s tO ae Pn ¢ gg ystpalbise “There is no reason why the| 900 pounds weight. HALIFAX (CP)—The weather|# b highs at Yarmouth . a council could not have the armo- : : 25 Kentwillé-6end 20, Sydney 16 ries after making the’ proper ap- | di | Ly Cc d and 20. : g~e g - aon ed the build Loca Ra 10 € U on ucts Bay-of Dundy: Northwest winds a enter neal, ee . - {ie gros 0 eS Hd " >i i ‘ ir, he ‘sad, and each une | Exercise In Civil Defence arts eoeet Sie: ae we was are a receive per- : iles lowering in flurries to two mission from Halifax. The Keith Rogers Memorial| at Borden, Kensington, Morell, © much colder. “In this case, the application was received on Thursday and there wasn't enough time to re- ceive permission.” _Laymen Of Basilica Elect Officers Of Scout Group | J.E. Blanchard was appointed chairman of the Scout Group , Commiitee sponsored by the St. Dunstan's Basilica Laymen's As- | sociation,.at a meeting held iast night. Other officers include see jretary, Alphonsus McQuaid and | treasurer, Mrs. James Lawlor. Other members of the Com- | mittee are R. F. Murnaghan, A)- bert Burke. Robert Coffin, Jos- eph Foley and Earl Nicholson. | The meeting paid special com-| mendation to the ladies of the Womens Auxiliary for their work and interest on behalf of the’ Cubs and Scouts for the past! number of years. At the present time there are three Cub Packs and one Scout Troop, making up a membership of 120 boys. Dividends For From Billy Graham’s Crusade By GORDON A TAIT MELBOURNE ‘AP: — Evange- |.ist Billy Graham's crusade in | Australia is paying religious div- idends that will continue for years, local churchmen say. } They summed up the results of | Graham's 25 meetings in Mel- | bourne and two in Tasmania as Graham rested in Broadbeach, a Queensland. Gold Coast resort. | Doctors advised him to rest be- | cause of an eye ailment. ' ? Religious leaders estimate 725.- 000 went to hear Graham in Mel- bourne and 45,000 in Tasmania. e =~ a. A helped Millions more saw: him on tele- | POOPIE oh ch Jewish eu ee ee | journal praised Graham's charac. vision or heard him on radio. | bor aed sald he bat ; t Churchmen said the crusade has | poodness os tenet increased church attendance . ie aes hurch attendance iD| "where were aleo critics Most ae ' : of these were letter writers to Church committees also are happy about the financial side of the crusade. They nad fear they could not mee e expenses of £76,000 Australian ‘$170,240.) Their fears vanished when 140.. 000 persons turned up to hear Graham's final sermon in Mel- Years Forseen paid off the crusade’s expenses| but ight, several thousand pounds over to’ go toward Graham's “hour of decision’’ broadcasts in the United States. Graham called the final Mel- bourne turnout the greatest of his career. As for tae entire crusade, he said: “It is the largest four-week cru- sade we've ever had.” The praise that showered on Graham in Australia was not con- fined to Protestants. Several Ro- man Catholic priests called him jlocal newspapers. Some. ques- | tioned tae cost of the crusade. Graham had a ready answer for | mewspaper reporters. He said he had nothing to do with expenses | of the local crusade. As for his salary of $15,000 a year, he said | Radio Club conducted a Civil De- | fence communications exercise | yesterday afternon in which about twenty-five ‘‘Hams"’ participated throughout the province. Portable stations were set up Holy Week i Rites Opened By Pope John ROME (Reuters) — Pope John opened the rites of Holy Week in Rome Sunday when he blessed palms and attended mass in the Basilica of St. Paul. Sixteen Cardinals took part in the rite pontiff as he was borne into the basilica on his portable throne and the pontifical choir greeted him with the hymn Tu es ’etrus (thou art peter). memorating the palm _ branches with which the people of Jerusa- lem greeted Curist, he distributed them among the cardinals and members of his court. He then took part in the iitur- gical procession in the church. On Good Friday the Pope will visit the Basilica of the Holy Cross of Jerusalem and on Easter Sunday he will celebrate mass in St. Peter's Basilica before giving his apostolic benediction to Rome and the world from the church’s balcony. BURNS CAUSE DEATH KENTVILLE, N. 8. (CP) .— Paul K. Bragg, 5, of nearby Canning, died in hospital here Saturday from burns and shock resulting from a fire at his home Friday. RCMP said the boy’s pyjamas apparently be- many ministers in the United | bourne last Sunday. That not only States were paid more. New Organization Planned — By Universities, Colleges OTTAWA ‘CP versities and colleges are up a new organization called the J. Buell in- his 89th year. Fu-| bers of artistic , professions, In-| there were plenty of jobs in the | Canadian Universities Foundation Mr. administer the $25,000,000 in by the ceremonial “dipping of |) Rev. C. Cormier, St. Joseph's. )| sity, St. John's, Nfld.; Dr. Watson guns", two march pacts, and vievory rolls by a lone F86 air-| craft, © Canada’s unt-| grants paid by the federal gov- etling| ernment annually. The heads of 21 Canadian unl- versities will meet here today to elect the first board of directors of the new foundation, touching off a reorganization of the Na- tional Conference of Canatian Universities. The NCCU, which has been ad- | ministering the division of the! grants among Canadian universit- | ies, will turn this function over to, tise 2l-member foundation Over a period of months it will reorgan-| ize its other functions under ‘a! new name—the National Confer- | ence of Canadian Universities and Colleges. is | The new NCCUC will consist at first of 36 Canadian universities | and colleges, the National Re! search Council and the Canada| ouncil, Representation on the founda-| tion, apart from the five largest universities who have perma.ent seats, is by elections. Universities with enrolments of between 1,500 and 5,000 have elected six representatives to the foundation by mail ballot. Dr. C. B. Mackay will represent the! University of New Brunswick. Universities with enrolments of less than 1,500 lected nine mem- bers by mail ballot. They include | University, Moncton, N.B.; Dr, W T. R. Flemington, Mount Al- lison University, Sackville, N.B.: | Dr. R. Gushue, Memorial Univer. | Kirkconneli, Acadia University, Wolfville, N.6.; Dr. A. E. Kerr,’ Dalhousie University, Hal-' ifax; Rt. Rev. H. J Somers, St. | Francis Xavier; Antigonish, NS. | The chairman of the meeting. Monday will be Dr. Flemington | who will become chairman of the | new foundation. | SY | ; most inexpensive salesman you can employ ---4a GUARDIAN - PATRIOT WANT AD Phone 8506 jhave collapsed | came ignited while he was play- | ing with a cigaret lighter. There ' will be no inquest. ATLAS MOUNTAIN FLOODS COLOMB BECHAR, (Reuters) Algeria homes and more than 100 houses in this . Atlas Mountain town because of floods following heavy rain. Special ar- rangements were made for French troops to distribute food. wir- ing is inconvenient, costly and dangerous, Let us check your Housepower right away. FREE ESTIMATE CALL NOW PHONES 8543-8544 Inadequate electrical A large crowd acclaimed the. After blessing the palms, com. — More tnaan 600 per-, sons have been driven from their} PALMER ELECTRIC |, Montague and Queens Arms, | while stationary centres opereit- | ed from Cascumpec, St. Eleanors, | Summerside, Bedeque, North Rustico and East Point. The con- trol station was set up at Central Royalty Womens Institute Hall. Two mobile stations also took part in the exercise. Arrangements for operational quarters in some localities were ; made through the Red Cross Dis- | aster Services in the area. { The purpose of the exercise was | | to familiarize the operators with | operation at a normal modes of com-| the methods of time when | munication are no longer operat- | ing. | Debating Title Is Won By Dal OTTAWA (CP) Dalhousie University, Halifax, Saturday | night won the Canadian univer- |sity debating championship by |defeating Ontario Agricultural | College of Guelph, Ont., in finals ere. | Wendell Fulton and Norman | Reben, both second-year law stu- | dents, were presented the Lau- | rier-Macdonald Trophy by the sponsoring National Federation of Canadian University Students. Mr. Fulton became'the first | two-time winner in the competi- tion's five-year history. He was ;a member of’a team from | Mount Allison University, Sack- | ville, N.B., that won the. trophy three years ago. The defeated OAC team com- prised Gabe Eros and Horace | Corby-Samuels. Dalhousie defeated a Univer- | sity of Ottawa team in Friday night semi-finals. OAC was given | a bye when the fourth semi-final- | | IME VACATION | ! MA GUIDE FREE! | Tells all about Maine seacoast, | beaches, lakes, ee resorts, | picturesque towns. Plan your vaca- | tion in Maine. For FREE Guide. | 2 Write: Maine Vacation Service, 210 Gateway Cir., Portland, Me. | | § mame DEPARTHERT OF ECONOMIC DEV. list team from the University of | | Higa tide today at Charlotte town at 9.43 a.m. and 9.50 p.m. At Rustico at 4.42 a.m. and 5.0 p.m Summerside tide eighteen minutes later than Charlottetown. Sun rises today at 6.12.a.m. and sets at 6.28 p.m. Does BLADDER WEAKNESS MAKE YOU FEEL OLD TORONTO — Special: Thanks to new, scientific laboratory formulation, thou- sands of men and women now escape fee! old, tired, irritable and from sone seee and worrying about “Bladder Weakness"—too frequent, and itching urination, Wet- ting, Getting Up Nights—or Strong Cloudy Urine, due te common Kidney or Bladder Irritations, which often result {nm seCondary Backache, Headache. Rheu- matic Pains and Nervousness. In such cases New Improved usually ives quick, calming relief by combating tat. germs in acid urine; and by relaxing. Ca pain relief.. Over a billion C tablets used —proves safety and success for voung and old. Get boratory Tested and Certified CYSTEX at druggist tedav. See how much better vou feel tomorrow. For fast, efficient Radio and TV service . . Call BOWLAN’'S Radio and TV Repairs ert mea) 114 Powneal sa eae) k ‘THE BEST The service is prompt . . always! For Prompt Delivery Of COAL -- FUEL OIL Propane GAS DIAL 6553 _the products are’second te none. Take a load off your mind phone ARNFAST first, last and ARNFAST LIMITED Great George Street SERVICE AT ITS BEST QUALITY < - CHARLOTTETOWN W.R. JENKIN IT'S SOUND POLICY TO BUY YOUR ~USED VOLKSWAGEN from: An Authorized V. W. Dealer An unauthorized dealer doesn’t have to live up to the reputation we have gained as Volkswagen distributor for Prince Edward Island, You Can Be Sure That Our Special 60 Day Warranty on Used Volkswagens will be Honoured - 7 Provincial Distributor ‘ $ LTD. DIAL 6563 - 6564 satiate tit catia lll eee Nai