s ,enhower and de Gaulle Thursd | TELEPHONE 8506 Buyer meets seller with Guardian Want v A’s a . Dial 8506 ask for classified ad taser, tor quick results. & VOL. LXXII NO. 207 PRESIDENT. ENTERTAINS GUESTS A very animated President; left, and Prime Minister Harold; Mon last year criti- Eisenhower entertains his guests Serellieds itt; oopnie. semueadi ae wartime strategy. Ike at. his dinner in Winfield House,| by what Ike is saying. In back of Ww Londen. Sir Winston Churchill, sofa is Field Marshal Viscount his comrades of War II at the reunion. din- By RELMAN MORIN PARIS (AP) — Presidents Eis- sight wound up two days of ‘‘véry friendly” talks ranging frop’ sum- mit conference possibilitiés to the A eommunique 7 m meeting of French leaders Eis- | id his Weste ern Allies €e is assured if the West} remaifs firm in principle, flex- ible in tactics and patriotically de- yoted to the North Atlantc AL-| A Hance. '* ral Hatton will confer “Then there will be no, war,” Eisenhower said. Although the communique said enly that North Africa was dis-) White | eussed by the leaders, House press secretary James Ha-| gerty later disclosed they . had| taken up a new policy toward Al-| geria. Hagerty said de Gaulle is 6 disclose the policy after Eis- ;}enhower leaves France today. for a Scottish holiday. “Tt may be expected that Gen. de Gaulle will make a statement ‘on this subject,"’ Hagerty told re porjers He would give no date and ad- ded ‘it would be inappropriate for us to make any comment Rint il de Gaulle has made his | statement.”’ {BEFORE SEPT. 15.. i Informed soure es said the French president would make his announcement on the Algerian rebellion before the Sept. 15 opem ing of the UN General Assembly in New York. These Seme sources indicated de Gaulle Id outline a new approach. Hagerty parried ail questions a ees Stand Firm concerning details. would have something to say after de Gaulle makes his publie disclosure, Hagerty replied Eisenhower and de Gaulle agreed that a summit conference wus be useful in principle, but said one should be held “only when there is some possibility of definite accomplishment.” - Their - communique said they were in complete agreement on the question of Berlin. It also said they reaffirmed the importance they attach to the re- sumption of negotiations on gen- eral and controlled disarmament and to the problem of assistance to underdeveloped areas. EQUAL STATUS Another subject discussed was de Gaulle’s desire to give France a place equal to that of the United States and Britain in deal- ing with world strategy. On this point the communique said de Gaulle and Eisenhower “also examined the means of or- \ganizing better co-operation be ween the two countries in the world as a whole, especially through the expansion of consul- tations on all major problems, po- @\litical as well as-military.”’ There was no mention in the 4\communique of de Gaulle’s de- sire to have a voice in any pos- Glsible future decision to employ nuclear weapons anywhere in the world. Nor was there any indication that Eisenhower had promised to Fico - operate ‘more closely with ice. CHIEF VISITS PEL. Maj.-Gen. George S. Hatton, de puty civil ‘defence co-ordinate department of national health} and® welfare, arrived ig Cha! lottetown yesterday afternoon. He was met ai the aitport by Major- O.R Simons, provincial co-ordinator. This morning Gen- J « Premier A.W. Matheson, the Hon.: B. Earle MacDonald and rprobably some Progressive-Con- servative members-elect, He has now completed a tour of-the ci- | vil defence organization of the Maritime Provinces and ill with | o'clock this morning, France in developing nuclear weapons. U.S. Labor Bill MiPasses 95-2 - WASHINGTON (AP)—The Sen- ate Thursday night passed a com- promise bill aimed at ‘ ending racketeering in labor unions. The vote was 9% to 2. The compromise was sent. to the House of Representatives which plans to act on it today. President Eisenhower is consid- ered certain to sign the bill—the first major labor legislation in 12 years. In its final draft, the compro- mise came fairly close to the stringent form in which the origi- nal bill passed the House. MAIN PROVISIONS Its main provisions seek to safeguard. the rights of union members and protect union treas- uries from misuse by unscrupu- lous labor leaders. The bill also applies bans against such labor practices as secondary boycotts and restricts organizational pitketing. Leaders of organized labor, 'who attacked the original House Asked if the United States) os Se cal Increases OTTAWA (CP) — The Bank of Canada interest rate swung up- wards Thursday to 5.69 per cent from 5.56 last week with the sale of a lessthan-normal $100,000,000 aw government treasury Ss. The rise of 1 per cent in the ee ore iW Thursday $100,000,000 in bills were sold with an average yield of 5.64 per cent, with 5.33 per. cent last week. Police EAL (CP)—Police, act- on an: anonymous telephone call, Thursday recovered the $50,- 000 ‘worth of anti-polio Salk vac- cine’ stolen by three hooded ‘men Monday night from a University of Montreal laboratory. _ The vaccine was found in an unfurnished apartment on St. Hu- bert street, in east-central Mon- treal. The apartment had been rented the night the shipment was whisked from the Institute of Mi- crobiology and Hygiene in subur- ban Laval des Rapides. There were no immediate ar- a coseesuiilie CALL Assistant Director d Trot. tier of the Quebec Provincial Po lice said an anonymous telephone call came about 3:30 p.m. Thurs day. The caller gave the St. Hu- bert street address and the num- ber of the apartment. He said the vaccine would be found there. Trottier and Detective - Lieut. Albert Bisaillon went to the ad- dress. They found the apartment door open. No one was inside. Half the stolen vaccine—10,000 vials in all—was found in a re- frigerator. The rest was found in cartons, different from those im which the vials were packed when stolen. ~- Police said @ man they have a been - holding on suspicion had . ' ardiniw o Army was, called on to restore order Thursday after Communist- led mobs surged throughout the fourth straight day battle against the west state government. Prime ce Expect Arrests As Polio Vaccine Found nothing to do with the recovery of the vaccine. TEST VACCINE The vaccine has been returned to fhe institute and.is to be tested to see if it has deteriorated. At the time of the theft institute of- ficials said he vaccine should be kept in températures just above freezing or it would go bad in #& hours. a “Our men think they know who carried out the theft but we have to establish some proof in the case,” said provincial police Di- rector Hilaire Beauregard. “Only one person — a night watchman — saw the masked ryes at the laboratory. But on | is-going- on and we, hope to establish proof against some people. We have to estab- lish robbery with violence,” said Mr. Beauregard. Montreal Polio Rises 16 Cases MONTREAL (CP) — Sixteen new polio. cases were reported in Montreal hospitals Thursday, bringing the total to 619 for this year. Death toll at 32 was un- they are unists declare Co xting For propet distribution of ARMY MOVES IN After a day of shifting but ap- parently systematic attack by the mobs, the Indian Army moved if to restore and keep order Thurs- day night in. the industrial slyms of Howrah, across_the Hooghly River from Calcutta. Other Indian troops were a ready to take over completely if the Bengal state police forces fail to suppress the rioting. veloped at police installations on | both sides of the Hooghly. army moving. He said, “‘not yet,” but army officers were at police ‘headquarters making plans. RAIL SERVICE RESTORED Train services into Calcutta and Howrah were being late Thursday afternoon strators bad squatted on the tracks. Damage to the lines is expected to prevent the immediate restora- tion of all city transport services. changed from ‘Wednesday. MR. SHAW RELAXES AT HOME (Editor’s note: A Canadian Press staff writer ig on the Is- land covering the P.E.I. elec- tion and its aftermath. This is one of his reports.) By DON HOYT Canadian Press Staff Writer Walter R. Shaw, elected Tuesday at 71 to head the first Prince Ed- ward Island Conservative govern-3 ment in 25 years, worked long and hard to become premier of Canada’s smallest province. He feels a deep humility. “A ‘government’ should be humble,” he said at his attractive farm home in St. Cath- rine’s, about 15 miles from here. “There is no power in the hands of an individual or small group that is greater than the power in the hands of the com- mon people themselves,”’ he said. “There will never be a time when the humblest citizen of this country can’t come and taik to me.” a The: farm-handed agriculturist, who worked as deputy agriculture minister under provincial. Con- ervative and Liberal: govermr ments until his retirement a few years ago, led ‘PC candidates to their first victory here since 1931. They elected 22 members to = Liberals’ seven. One seat was a recoum. THE (SECRET * Hard work was the secret of the Conservative leader's cam- paign. “You can’t climb a ladder without exerting yourself,” he said. After his marriage in 1921 to the former Margaret MacKen- zie—a registered nurse he met while she was nursing his mother —he built his 10-room farm home and developed a 175-acre farm where there had been “just—an open field.” we raised 30-40 acres of grain, 10 acres of potatoes, bred registered’ Clydesdale horses and shorthorn| cattle, hogsand poultry,” he said- “Now I’m carrying on more or less of a grassland project. We take in cattle in the spring and bill as punitive, dislike the com- promise as well, It took all day and inte the prove’ the compromise, eve- | leave- by air for Ottawa at 11} ning for the Senate finally to ap, 71, sell them in the fall.” The Shaws spend the winter here. in doubt pending the outcome « : “When we were going properly, : Looking 20 years younger than he «témoed the Prince Ed- ‘oniinued.en page 2 Col. 4) For Assault Armed Red Mobs. Riot In Calcutta CALCUTTA (CP)—The tndien | y PROMOTED In Calcutta, a police official wes '' yal), asked about the possibility of th: | army headquarters. OTTAWA.—Brigadier Arther E. Wrinch. CBE, CD. Ottawa For the first time is this snq Hazelion, B.C., has been week's fighting, major battles de- | 5 omoted to the rank of Major. General effective ‘Sept. 1and jappointed Major-General ‘ Survi- it has been announced by In his new appointment Major- policy on national survival train- | Qloudy, showers, clearing in afternoons warmer; Low and high at Chariottetows 58-70, \ Island Like The Dew” - ; «IDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1959 ... 14 PAGES wor MORE FIVE CENTS * . g : ! | » i. ry : 8 Fy aE VA Defenders Set For Grim Battle By saee’ LANCASHIRE SAM NEUA, Laos ‘AP)—Com- munist rebels were reported massing 27 miles north of here Thursday, headquarters for northern Laos prepared grimly for a last-ditch defence. Army officers issued sub machine-guns and ammunition to gov: workers and school teach@f#: A handful of paratroop- ers were moved into the thin > aa lying defences. Communist advance units “‘are | probing our lines only 18 miles | away,” said Brig..Gen. Amkha Soukhaving.-commander of north- ern military headquarters. “They will attack’ within -10 days at the most,”’ he predicted. The general said the Laos reb- els and regulars from Communist North Viet Nam were gathering in the jungie-clad mountains 27 miles riorth of this town of 2,500 population. “ The general gave no figures. But earlier Defence Secretary Phoumi Nosavan said at least a battalion of Communist Viet- namese regulars were in the field ing, and for putting the army's; on the Sam Neua front. new responsibilities into effect. | The Laotian ae Se ® Takeover Dates SetAs Sept.15, 16 on Tuesday, he emerged from a_ cabinet meeting called to deal with rou- tine government matters. It was the first -government.. meeting held since August 13, he said. Premier-Elect Feels’ Deep! Humi lity’ i i i ; i i iaf g i f ¥ | it i rf 5 Rs B t : i g tL ; 5 | } i it i rE | 1H i ti i (AP) — OTTAWA (CP)—Continued im- provement in Canadian employ- ment was predicted Thursday by Labor Minister Starr in a Labor Day message. | During the past year, he said, the Canadian economy has reached a substantially improved position over that of a year ago. “Employment has expanded steadily,”” he added, “and by June had reached an all - time record level. < “This has resulted from a ‘| broadly-based expansion of busi- ness activity -which has de- veloped during the. past 12 months. WHERE-TO-FIND-IT Births, deaths, " ete., i, Classified section .... 12, 13 Comics, features. ...... il Charlottetown news ...... 5 Editorials Dc, chneeeeh 4. ° Church notices ecbises 8 Finance, markets ‘cies Island news, ...... cocece 8 ae pee or Neste ee Women’s page ........ & 7 mews bureaus in Summer- side, Montague, Alberton and Souris, and from special cor- nis now appear of the Island News Page. ;provinces of and this royal army+- | over the Cansaninaat Pathet Lao move- ment that controlled the northern r Neua and Phong Saiy until two years ago. Royal troops are being shoved back op a 35-mile front by the insurgent? who are bolstered by Vietnamese heavy artillery, the defence department said. Refugees and royal troops lead- ing prisoners tied together with thongs were trooping into Sam - Neua from the 8) villages re- |ported captured by the Reds along the Nam Ma River, 10° miles from the sorth Viet Nam frontier. : The rebel strength is estimated at about 3,500. Strength of the government forces in Sam Neva is-a military secret. . Despite the military er’s gloomy assessment, the town | of Sam Neua was@quiet. Resi- dents strolled in the streets, shopped and lounged in the shade, watching the troops mov- ing north. Even those issued guns showed no excitement. TROOPS MOVE NORTH Parachute froop units a camouflage uniforms marc north out of the town to Nong Khang at the western end of the defence line. The line stretches “Rt. : sistant bishop of Neuteeaitaall said the revised Common Book of LPrayer does not contain a special prayer for the governor-general and lieutenant-governors. Instead it has a prayer for the prime minister and provincial premiers, “I’m sure you'll agree the pre- mier of my — especially needs one,” he sa Steady Improvement — Seen In Employment “T have no doubt that this ew pansion will continue to affect fa- vorably the standard of living and employment prospects of Ca- nadian workers for some time te come.” STILL SOME PROBLEMS “While prosperity benefits most of us,” Mr. Starr said, ‘it does not automatically solve the seri- ous problems which several groups of workers face in secur- ing suitable employment. Among these are the physically handi- capped, the older worker. those laid off in cold weather from -seasonal industries atd those who suffer discrimination ‘ecause of their race, creed. color. or na tional origin. _Buoyen’ cmoloy ment conditions shou'd he'n ug meet these problems more effet tively and thus ca!! for a greater effort in solving them “Progress has been made dur- ing the past year in strengthen- jing our unemployment insurance program, in developing a still’ more effective winter employ- ment. program, in providing @ more aggressive placement serv- ice for jobless workers and-in in- troducing new labor legisiatioa covering vacations with pay for employees under federal jurisdic- tion “We in Canada can look back *these advances with satip faction but there is ao rodim fee