TELEPHONE 8506 ' Buyer meets seller with Guardian Want flips @nmdinn ’ WEATHER Ad . Di 1 8506 k ' ° takser, fora guick rains“ Chasm“ ad 331“, m in porn : - : -hish st Charlottetown 60 and 70. ' y Aw _ “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” I l o A “‘14 PAGES WuwmhflIur-nmm ‘ i W 0...... CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27, 1958 will?” FIVE CENTS - i gfihglzmgarSWMkfi mg‘nhteonfnglbilae. blood donor team .Mfine pma'u' In‘bhe,e::ely#d:qem:n:he Red in Labrador, was reported to visiting Eldon arrived at the - cam} gossfia'm taken hm guns lobbed in 5,500 rounds m Red Artillery Barrage ls _. Aimed ' At Quemoy 'Field Flareup OfAAction Being , Watched Carefully By U. S. TOKYO (Am-Men and planes of the U.S. 5th Air Force guani- ing Japan, Korea and Okinawa are in “an increased state of alert” during the current For- mosa situation, an force spokesman said Tuesday. “During certain times, Former Orwell Man Is Killed ' A 63-year-old former resident of Orwell was killed last night when the car which he was re- portedly collided with a transfer- truck at Loughran’s Bridge at Orwell. A landing force of 1,600 US. Marines set sail from Singapore Monday. their destination undis- closed. The morning; noon and night bombardment of Quemoy and the 1th,. normal procedurefortheair force to be especially alert, to Angus Nicholson of Orwell and his sister Mrs. D. J. Gillis of Kinross, it was reported. He ‘ was leave for Labrador this He is survived by one other brother, Sandy Nicholson, of Ed- have been ernerglng' from a side . sceneoftheaccidentshortl‘ madleadmg‘ fmrnKmr'cossurto y when the Midde East crisis after it occurred but were too latetobeofanyhelptofihe fatally injured man. 7 m roan—m m walcraswdcornctoU.S.Nnvy’s broke out hot month. TAM, Eonnosa (AlP)-Oom~ slabmmhnNautilusns-shomoves arrival In New York Monday. pastlowerManbattanskylineon Picturewastakenby(A.PPhoto— W) John Rooney hum a helicopterinrainmatfellasdle Nautilus arrived. (AP Wirephoto) the TransCanada highway when his car became involved in a May Close Schools In L Arkansas f . 1m ROCK, Ark. (AP) -— I Governor Orval Faubus said ‘ Tuesday racial integrationnevu' , can be enforced constitutionally. nponaschool.Heaskedaspc- cial legislative session for audio:- close Arkansas schools ' to in all the city’s schools» if need be. barred. let/Alaskans Vote ; on Becoming I The 49th State J‘UINEAU, Alaska (AP) L 3 u "1.; hggood Tuesday on predictions E; of a record vote as the northern fturltory decided on whether It 3.. would become the 49th state. gfported at precincts B‘lmughout the territory, , eve-mug. :More than 35,000 ballots were to be cast on a referen- dum on which admission into 'union depends. Most observers forecast that Alaskans would ap- prove admission by margins of better-than2tol. A. ~ m. V Rural StUdents Get ‘ Increased ofa'ssistlancepayablletowardlhe districts who are attending GradesIXadeatcentralhigh schools. untimotstudcntstromoutslde Thisincreasedassistence will beparficularlvwelcome' atthis timeastuitionfees'hayetended torisesubstantiallywiththein— creasingoostofeducatrbu‘ . misconsideredtbntastlntlm leeshavelncreased,ltplacesa considulafiebmdenonpmenta andratepayersof the district whoarealreadyfacedwithfin- {mama-ultan ‘mtionthattheGovem- memdeemaditadvnsable' tain- weamolmtoftuitionac- ‘ ‘ ADJ-Ind m. . | .... w. MONTGOMERY, Ala. (OP) — Alaskans apparently were mak- Heavy early voting Was rc- in cities and election ottficials at outlying pre- fixed: predicted a rush in the case until the colmts halve fin- ished with it. But/he added that he hates to rating to tonne, and “l! I me cause to turn somebody loose, I always do it." ‘ , Wilson, 55, into die Sept. 5 for robflngaubZ-yem-oldwhite woman of $1.5 mics the State Supreme Court grunts hint-a new hearing on his appeal. I! the court refuses Wilson’s appeal...me still would have the authority to commute the death sentence to lifeimprison- meat. CAPITAL CRIME DEPOSIT BOX ROBBED deposit box. The blonde actress laid the money was in the box July 14. but when she opened it Monday the cash was gone. died Tuesday aged 85. A bedside when he died. When an Malcolm Sargent .hlldon’s Royal Festival Hall. Mid his country’s folk songs a irons personal style. Technically, his “was and hymns. GIVEN MANY HONORS fl honor—the Order of Merit. In 1953, he was chosen as one i the outstanding artists of the 9981‘ by the United States Arts Foundation, which described hlm '5 a figure whose best musu: “falls like a benediction on the “Ln LONDON (AP)—Movie actrex Diana Dors told police Tuesday £11,000 are missing from her safe The robbed woman, Estelle Barker, testified t h a 17 Wilson choked her and tried to rape her chamgedwllhrolbherywithvl- commuteadeathseu betore balding the money. He was‘ olence—a capital crime in this state. LONDON (Reuters) -- Ralph Vaughan Williams, one of the 30th century’s great symphonists and dean of British composers, He was taken ill suddenly Mon- ! day. His second wife, author U1'- 7 WM Forrester Wood, was at his One of the few composers who “Mined productive after the we of 80, he was present in April cou- dllcted his Ninth Symphony at A - ~ ‘ ‘. ‘ I led to‘ tradltlonallst he turn M P and Sir Charles Stanford. "Elizabethan past to shape his music was eh'lu‘llcterized by strong melodic invention, mastery of counter- Wibt and above all by his fond- ness for modal poly-phony arising lmm his interest in English folk During his life, the composer cOllected many honors. In 1935_ he "as given Britain's highest elvrl- Folsom. since office in Dean Of British Composers, Ralph Vaughan Williams Dies Another distinction be- stOWed upon him was the old medal of the Royal Philhar- 1929. The Royal Society of Arts awarded him the Albert Medal in 1955 for his “eminent services to music”—the first time the honor ever was accorded a musician. Born the son of a clergyman at Down Ampney in Gloucester- shi-re, Western England, Oct. 12, 1872, Vaughan Williams was ed- ucated at Cambridge Universrty and the Royal College of Music, where he studied under Hubert “FANTASIA” FIRST HIT His fier international success was Fantasia on a Theme by Tallis in 1910. It was followed by Sea Symphony. In 1914, be pro- duced his popular London Sym- hon . ~ ’ pIn y1951, his opera Pilgrims Pro ress, bu yan’gs book, was produced at Lon- don's Royal Opera House, Covent Garden. Among his other operas Were Riders to the Sea (1937, l..sed on the J. M. Synge drama; Hugh the Drover; and Slr John in Love (1929), after Shake- speare’s Merry Wives of Wind- 5 1‘. His first wife died in 1951. He age of 81. monic Society presented him. in sed on John Bun- r arried his second wife at the 1 'Out’ In Negro Death Case 1947, has commuted the ‘death sentence of 18, men and let 16 men and one women die lathe electricchair'. Of the 18 served. 16 were No- groes. Meanwhile in Accra, Ghana, Prime Nlrmnnah’s office said Ghana’s ambassador to the U.S.~ has been ordered to ascer- tain the tacos of the case. Mus. Klay Lines of Toronto telephoned the prime minister Friday, asking him to lead a worklwide protest against the death sentence. 500 SIGN PETITION‘ In Manchester. England, 500 persons signed a petition calling for the reprieve of Wilson. A youth congress in Copen~ hagen sent a protest letter to President Eisenhower and Fol- The affair also caught the at- tention of the Communist press. In Rome the Italian Commu- nist party newspaper l’Unita de- scribed the sentence as “a new unprecedented crime by Amer- ican s e g re g a- t ionists in Ala- barn-a.” In Prague, lrontpage stories of the case appeared Tuesday under headlines such as This is Amer— lca. 3-Ma«n ~'Copter Crew Escapes HALIFAX (OP) — Three naval crew members who leapt from their burning helicopter after crashing on nearby McNalb’s Is- land Tuesday were released from hospital a few hours later. Lt. J. E. McSweeney, Dart- mouth, N.s., Lt. D. G. Fraser, Inverness, N.S., and Leading Sea- man R. Blondin of Halifax re— ceived only minor injuries when their helicopter crashed and burned. The H0-4lS Sikorsky helicopter, part of the nayy’s PIS-50 anti-sub- marine squadron, burned within minutes of the crash. The men said they waited tor the rotor blades to stop turning and then jumped. They were picked up by another helicopter and taken to a navy hospital. FALL IS FATAL BlDIlN‘D RIVER, Ont. (GP) — Charles Purdy, 46, married and the father of five children, was killed Sunday when he fell down a shaft at the Panel uranium mine in the Elliot Lake district 50 miles north of here. His body is being sent to his home in Slhelburne, N.S., for burial. His wife and family had been living in SW. collision with the truck. The name of the operator of the truck was not available. heavily damaged. The car was reported to be It is understood an inquest wil TO MOUNT A., Mr. Angus r. Wan, who» moist shore batteries singled out Quernoy’l one-strap airfield as their target Tuesday mght' _ for a heavy mums. mat wound, up the Mill, straight day of bom- Canadian Army Has Set Up - Mr. Nicholson was returnmg' . ' be held, althoudl details from a Visit with his brother not available at press time. for three~ years has heal March manager of the Nahonal‘ Life, Aso WON forPrlnerd-W - . glednearthemalnlandwriha ' ward Island and'New Brumwick. land we Radium 1" W (If 43 MiG-176 and shot New Branch has been down two or them But Red Jets and warships stayed clear of the area, where the Nanonallsts? clalme'l' d air and sea victories Monday. we defence mlnistryin Taipei, where Nonouell' lot and US. serv- ice owners gathered for talks on the Formosa Strait unempsaid the ’baggedaNntronahst‘ 1‘ jetoverthe snaitoflfthccoast.'lherem noconfmmatlonf oftlllsfimmthe Nationah'st defence mlmstry' . The W. . i l l I i. of the office of alumni and public relations at Mount Allison Urdvul- city, Announcement of the move was made by president Dr. WT. Ros 11mm. The position is a new one,,tbe unrival- slty head said. Mr; Maclellan is I native of Glace Bay. His wife was the former Emily Hill of Truro. They have been residing at Sdnt John but have moved with Mr three children to Sackville. OIT'llAlWIA lch—mhe errny has set up a new branch to plan for its battlefield needs - atomic or conventional — in the years he- The new branch is called the directorate of combat develop ment and is headed by Col. Nor- man G. Wilson-Smith, D80, 41, of Winnipeg, director of infantry tor the last three years. Col. Wilson-Smith said Tuesday in an interview that the main job of his small stall—no more than May See Early Action ‘ In lrutking Dispute ‘ TheGovermnentilsemectedto takeswfiaction to elmnlat' ' e rutmve of trunking rateswhrch' hasbeenihprucfice despite thefulotthlat stlpllllat' ed ~. Reds have Mlhosed more than held More islands since Sat- mlg'stry‘ said tion. Mr. men, said the order sin-(31ml. had been, passed. with the mtentl' 'ou of helm the (melt- men earn—a living wage. He did not say for certain that ._ mom,” ‘cles'fmm crowded Taipel'to six—mumgammmm , stepswouldbetakeu'but it ‘n ' ‘ m maul area as a precaution ideals and then draw up plans ‘V IE“? ahead for tin Mat; W Mlm- “'9 10' abouthowthearmywilloperate mrawsfiatmmmm WWWMM IMO 4 a N, : Mlmm‘mrudommmfimbamaflm a contract and tandem submitted' in future ears. y would have to be gauged accord- ‘ commutation in madam aides. He will report directly. to Maj.~ whose which the Governm- out Plans defined by Col. Wilson- Smllth and his stadf will be “war- yestm'daythatthecodmactorsas WU Hon. J. George Mac-Kay said Wabathhereandanash— ington; ' and Palestine refugee mm agl-eedltopayforhannlillgdloneon jug] J Gen. Jean Victor Allard, vice- Government ' work, ‘y' ' . x ' ‘ - u, v driefoifthe‘general staff and one While it was not legislatedthat W lrlfiflwmm’ - African“ , o 9 fluctuating” minimall- retesetby Mew uni-5%“: 'Down Gaulle Col. W -' - Smiflt said . thst‘ . mm *m' a “he” 410.- .. . .. “ "i r . ' «any? .5 whit " . “ unee . P Wad ‘ liltjfi'fw ‘ ' ‘ J“ -. a ‘ V I -- f~ ' :- "- -~3-‘ . , $543093"? '—«A army will be mobility acti'afi - " a l have “t mm MHW‘W " i A V“ I 'V ' “file W M l m of 500 W New” ‘ . pr c y all contractms mu. mew to as“ I ought" annulled down From more firepower and better recon~ done so. “a . the Wk' er d. mam. erg, but on an m of beingwflchedclosely by U.S. au- lgamed,” that is, tested on paper 1' US. EYES SITUATION I and then in the field by um.“- Beslldes' the actual planning for has been rates. maligned the beg1.'m11'.ng one .mw-m WWW new battlefield conditions. the di. 'v I Parliament lines.asthe UN sec- " ‘ll'f'etarygjenenal was on plane than Rome. _ mellow ng was one-cl the W 2W The U.S. 71h Fleet, pledged to defend Formosa from invaslou' , hasheenplacedonthealert. So rectorate will be able to visual- ize future equipment needs. This is highly important be- cause the defence department nahmalfly tries to avoid a- situa- tion in which it orders a. new weapons system into production and then finds the equipment is obsolete by the time it reaches Daisy Makes Course Change MAME, Fla. (Mi-Emitters Daisy took its expected north- ward back away from the east- ern seaboard late Tuesday but forecasters said it was too early to say if the trend would con- tinue. Daisy’s direction change from northwest was noted more than 200 miles due east of Florida’s TRUCKERS COMPLAIN The Munster' ' of nglrwayls' was more than annoyed yesterday when a of truckmen “brought this matter to his atten- Killed When Car Forced Off Road TRU’RO NS. (OP) Ira thod ' , 65, of Parkdale, 30 miles from Lumenburg, N.S., was killed Tuesday when his car was ’ torced ofif the highway near here by a truck which police said did not stop. RCMP said Rhodenizer and an unidentified passenger were ap- proaching Truro when they were overtaken by a semi - trailer truck. In passing the truck struck At A, Glance By THE CANADIAN PIRESS.‘ Tuesday, Aug. 26, 1958 The Commons by‘a 1W1 vote gave final approralto a gov: ernment bill giving CBC broad cast regulating powers to a sep- arate body. Thelnlber' alsooposedfllebill while the our supported it. Inbem‘ lleaderPeal-sonsaid ulebillllealvestlleCBlCopen-to interference and that someprovlsl"onsalllowtoomucn calbinetdiscretionintheteuure of CBC executives. Revenue the car and threw it otf The passenger in the car was! taken to hospital here where a eration of revenue department Wednesday, Aug. 27, 1958 “The Conunons takes up consid- Minister Nowlan, turned down a Liberal suggestion for outright ban on altfiliation of Canadian stations with U5. net- works most serious such outbreak since Debnnm'sparflarnent-chosc Gen. Euad Chehab Julyal as"suc-' cessor to President Camille Cha- moun, whote retires Sept. ‘23. Abuiletearlier killed Amulet: Nturdllah, secretary of the Leb- anese industrialist Hewasshotdownuhestepped from his car near a_fr.iend’s of- fice. A year ago Narrrllah re- signed as secretary of the Maj- jada party, a group now aligned wlth the rebels against/Chat moun’s regime. .Hannnarskjoldis stoppinghere flor‘arliflllt’srestbelforegolngon to Jordan to tackle the job his mandate from the emergency UN General Assembly. There he will begin his shorts to find some arrangement whereby British troops can be withdrawn from Jordan and American torces from Lebanon and a start made on plans for ,guardimr - Japan and Korea and ‘ simply routine. . have the us. 5th Air Force naval» forces in Japan. US. offl- cials in Japan called {lich- alerts Them-year-olddeGmllehu been tam Name's Africa-n possum“ shoclastWednesday- tob‘ytowiliorhispro- ST. JOHN'S, NllId. (CH—Nine hundred men will be out of work today alter- they finish unloading a mall German hleoghter' . The Gellenmut' Sarton' was en route here last Thursday alter been unable to settle a dispute with the longdmr-emen’s protu- tive union. The 95m vessel ar- rived Tuesday. V The aasoolm 'on said no more ships would call here until the erght' moth disuse was settled. the federal labor department'had . WWW. \ Port Of St. Johnfs Will Be Closed To Ships Today 9 work for Western ‘Terminlals- . However, a union oilfian he said Corner- Brook 16% "will not hande deliberately do vented drips." ' Nomvnnrnnsmrs Anddi'vertéd dups‘ willnotbc handled at Port aux Basques, Cape Canaveral, site of the us. area - wide economic develop- There have been no develop- Wesbem terminal tor ONR slurs space missile test range. spokesman said injuries were not spending estimates. The Senate sits at 3 pm. EDT. merit. meats since last Thursday when industrial relations officer Wil- liam Taylor of the federal labor NO BAN ON U S. NETWORKS I CBC BillGoes To Senatem As the Liberal opposition -— which voted against the prin- ciple of the broadcasting Monday-went over the measure Tuesday with a fine toothwmb it proposed various changes in de- tails. Mr. Nowlan agreed in urin- cilple with most of these but declined to accept them as am‘ OTTAWA (CP)—The‘ Commons Tuesday night passed by a vote of- 124 to 31 a government bill establishing a regulatory board broadcasting and making some changes in the powers and over administration of the CBC. Only law. The bill was passed after two days of Liberal party criticisms attempts to change» the measure which up- position leader Pearson claims will leave the CBC open to pol- and unsuccessful itical interference. One change proposed by Mr. Pearson called for an outright ban on affiliation of Canadian ra- dio and television stations with American networks. The opposition leader said such a prohibition would not prevent a Canadian station from asso- ciating itself with an American network for certain specific pro- grams such as baseball‘s world serif 9. He proposed .an amendment to the government’s new broadens lug legislation, then under clause- by-clause study in the Commons, which would specify that Calla- d'lan stations could be members only of a Canadian network. the Liberals opposed the CCF - supported government measure which now goes to the Senate for approval before it re- ceives royal assent and becomes Revenue Minister Nowlan, while he said he saw no objection to the suggestion, declined to accept it on the ground that it might interfere with the broad- casting in Canada of such public service programs as a speech by the United States president or re- ports of U.S. election returns. SEES INTERFERENCE “Ari absolute prohibition such as the leader of the opposition suggests might interfere with that," he said. However, Mr. Pearson made clear in suggesting the ban that it would not apply to such pro- grams, but only to regular mem- bership in a US. network. Mr. Nowlarl said “I cannot believe that the board will be granting licences of that nature (to operate as part of American networks)—certainly not in the immediate future." PROPOSE CHANGES He preferred to let the board of broadcast governors - new regulatory body established by the legislation—set the conditions of network operations. No network could operate in t- any way, shape or form without the new board's approval, he said, adding that the 1legislation makes clear that a network op- erating in Canada must be Cana- endments. SWGPS. EASY LICENCE However, dianacontrolled. Lory.) Mr. Pearson commented this pointed up the tact that the Lib- erals were correct in their con- tention the bill should have gone to a committee for detailed study to iron out some of its kinks. This statement was unme- diately challenged by Mr. Now- lan who said a committee study would have served no purpose other than to raise questions for which there were as yet no an- Mr. Nowlan said many of the changes proposed by the opposi- tion could ‘be studied by a special committee at the next parlia- mentary session when the new board will have drawn up a new set of broadcasting regulations. Mr. Pearson ex- pressed d-oubt the new board will have had time to prepare the regulations by then. (The next session likely will open in Janu- Mr. Pearson said that under one section in the bill it would be possible for an immigrant to ob- tains broadcasting licence after only one year’s residence in Can- adl . . Not so, said Mr. Nowlan. The section was designed to ensure that if an immigrant has been in Canada six years and still has not taken out citizmdlip papers “he does not deserve a licence." The oppositidn leader said that might be the intent, but that was not how the section read. He was supportediu this view by J. W. Pickersgill ,(L —- Bonavista-Twil— lingate). Alter hurried consultation with Prime Minister Diefenbaker, Mr. Nowlan agrew to let the section stand for possible re - wording later. At the night sitting, however, the section was eliminated, leav- ing only Canadian citizens and companies controlled by Cana- dian-s eligible for licences. Mr. Pickersgill succeeded In having the government amend its bill to restore pretty much the present provisions regarding pol- itical broadcam. However, Mr. Nowlan said that the whole subject will be re- viewed at the next session by the Commons committee on priv- ileges and elections a department submitted a new set of proposals to the union. They have not been made public. Mr. Dream is expected to pre- sent the proposals to the union today or Thursday. NOT TOTAL SUCCESS Meanwhale,‘ a. boycott of ships by other Newfoundland port-s has not met with success. Botwood has “no interest what~ ever in the troubles of the St. John’s union . . ." and will and trains, spokesman said. 'llhe WWW said none of its 25 ships will canny h‘exgh‘ t defined for here. Unless‘ the assooualtl' 'on changes its mmd‘ or a settlemen' t is reached bellore too long, this city may soon be mt of flood and building supplies. St. John’s, like the rest of New- foundland, is healv'll' y dependent on the mainland for meats, eggs, most vegetables and fruit. w The dispute, a federal conciliation board tailed to settle, centres ammd Mani. nation at accept diverted height. So will TORONTO (OP) —- Ron W. Todgham, president of Chrysler of Canada, replied Tuesday to criticism that the automobile in- dustry is slumping because it doesn’t provide what the, public Wants. Mr. Todghalm told a directors’ luncheon at Automotive Day at the Canadian National there are people who will not venture an opinion on the most important world events but will readily ofifer “a profound opinion on any facet of the automobile industry. “In view of the vital role which levelled at us.” this industry plays In our na- tional economic life,” he said, “I have been somewhat shocked re. cently at the nature of some of the criticisms which have been Mr.ngharnsaidthelndustry the Waterfront. ' Says [Auto Companies Make Cars The Consumers Ask For the public wants cheap, stripped- down models. GUIDED BY BUYERS the have indicated by their buying habits over the years they want. activity of wagon manufacturers and bicycle shops." The Canadian automobile In- dustry is having a “good year" in 1958, he said, and it should become the fifth largest year- in the industry’s history. have produced an average 295,000 cars annually. This yea! production should approach on 310,000 mrk, three times flu has been accused of providing ex- numberpmducfihm. pensive, over- laden cars whrlcf ' He said the industry was offer- 5 ing to the public models which 3 l “Ifthiswerenottruetheeuto- mobile Would still he the sideline ' Since 19% Canadian tactoriec 1