TELEPHONE 8506 Buyer meets seler with Guardian Wantltls. DlIslS506oIhfeseIIIIi- fisdedlalienferquiekreeuh. Em wttttatcldlimtco "Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew" WEATHER Variable cloudiness and eeelenllght winds. Low and high at Charlottetown Wand 70. 72 racizs . WN CANADA. SATURDAY, AUGUST 10. 1957 PRICE 5: COLLAPSE D BLIMP LAS VEGAS. Nev.. - The tall section of a U.S.Navy blimp lk shown with atomic cloud in inn-liground. The unmanned sir-i lapsed from the shock wave from cu the blast. On the from ground zero when it col- eleventh in the AEC's current rrent series and was named ground at "Stokes" ,.i,,,. W" in umpo”,-y gm jleft are the remain; of the for- (AP Wirephoto from The Ne- fliuht in excess of five mileslward section. The test was the vada Test organisation) . . . . .. Hurricane Shows Signs Easing NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Hurri- cane Bertha - showing signs of losing some of its punch-boist- and hopes Friday that when it strikes the Louisiana and Tessa coasts it will be less deadly than Audrey. its slstu of six weeks ago. ' But, Bertha's 7tHnlle- an -hour; winds still pushed swelling tides across the Gulf of Mexico. pos- ing still-dangerous threats to an area where Audrey killed more than 500 persons and caused mil- lions of dollar. damage June 2'7. There apparently will be fewer, persons on whom the storm may wreak its fury when it reaches the Louisiana coast. Most coastal r e s i d e n ts. their stubborness washed away by Audrey's mur- derous tides. fled to highe: ground at first warning. The weather bureau posted hur- ricane warnings from Galveston. Texas. to Vermilion Bay. La., predicting tides two to five feet above the iionnal 12 inches. Thel storm had moved about 90 miles. in six hours. l Earlier. tides of five to six feet. 1 more than four feet above nor-l and Sabine Pass. Tex. Canada To Give l0 Warships To Turkish Navy OTTAWA (CP) - Canada will help bolster the navy of Turkey, one oi the two NATO members- the other is Norway-which has a common frontier with Russia. Defence '" ' Pearltcs an- nounced Friday that to Bangor clas coastal escort vessels, now in the mothbaii fleet at Sydney. N.S will be given to Turkey under Canada's mutual aid program. The Second World War escorts are valued at some tioo,oo,ooo. This is one-tenth of Canada's i057-50 mutual aid program. the scheme whereby this country helps to arm its NATO allies. "FROM ran H. s. Grade Provincial Results Are Announced The following results of then follows: Grade Xil Provincial Exsmin- ALBERTO. ".5. l. min have been released by the L ;.;dw,,,.d Mcmdum Alberto, 2. llcparlmeni of Education. gg Lon. plume,-' M59.-u,,. -all i!AhPel'ldiW9l: W1 (I1: '9: 3. Jean Oliver. Alberton. 3- "" "' ' "C ”" ” ' ' KENSINGTON u.s. lsntic Provinces Examining 1. ms cmmpiom Kemmmm. 1, B”a"" 1. Barbara Sincllar. Springfield. ""25 WINNERS 3. Jean Murray, Kensingion. 1- Tlie following Grade Xli stu- Kmxong ".5, rims are awarded prlzrl Pf? l. Elaine Nicholson. united by the Provincial Goveris- M”, 3,3. Bl1'Bdal- 3e STELLA MARIS Il.S. SUMMIIRSIDE lI.S. SOURIS ll.S. Daniel 0'Hanlcy. Monticello. Charles MscPhce. Little Har- f' Clara Stead. Annandale P.0. Rose Marie Doiron. South Rustico. Rose Marie Leclair. North Rustico. Arthur Gallant. Hunter River. mcnt for those standing highest in the province: l. iris Champion. Kcnslngton lxvnsington High School 3100.- tn: 1 Barbara Sinclair. Spring- fwld. Kenslngton High School, iST5.00t. .1 Leonard Praught. Richmond RR. Miscout-he High School. 530.001. ' 4 Agnes Arscnault. Mont Car- mi-i RR. 2.. Mlscouche Hl& Mhool 4:25.00). 7- Anne Glllis. St. Peter's Bay Nuirc Dame Academy 1825.00). in Gcriiid McCarthy. Tignlsb. 'l'i;iiislt High school 65.11)) Winncrs of prizes lfirst 325.0); sci-and Sl5.(ll: third 3l0.iIJl. I- uardi-d by the Provincial Gov- crnmehi to pupils standing high- est in each public school no 2. Genevieve Duffy. Kinkora. ll. Noreen Sherry isistcr Mary Wllliaml. Klnkora. MISCOUCIIE ll.S. i. Leonard Praught. Richmond RR 2. Agnes Arsenault, Mont Car- mel. R.R. 2. 8. Elayne Gallant. Miscouche. and Patricia Poirler. Mil- couche. MONTAGUI: n.s. . 1. Margaret Jean MacDonald. Brudenell 2. Donald Mat-Lsren. Montague. 3. George Johnston. Montague. Kit. 4. MORELL HS. 1. Anna Maria MacAdam. Mnrell I. Bernadette MacPhce. Cana- voy. I. Yvonne Eldershew. Morell. l. Thane Drummond. Freetown. 2. Barbara Vaughan. Bummer- side. 3. . mes Norton. Sumrnerslde. TIGNISH H.S. l. Gerald McCarthy. Tignlsh. 2. Melvin Doucette. Tignish. 3. Charles Broderlck.Tignish. The following names. listed by schools are arranged in three classes. Class 1 includes the Continued on page 5. Col. I MENNONITBS MIIT KARLSRUHE. Germany (AP) I -The sixth Mennonite world coa- fcrence began hen Friday with delegate; from is countries. is- lcludlng Canada. attending. Cos- fcrence officials said the Men- lnonite community throughout the iworld now numbers about 5&3 persons. since f--- ” of the North At- lantic Treaty Organization nearly seven years ago. Canada has given away more than 81.100.000.- worth of arms under mutual The ID escorts. which are fitted for mlneewseping. form part of a fleet of 17 of this type of warship now in reserve at Sydney. None has been built since I944 and the Royal Canadian Navy .now has only three or four of this class in commission. trial. were predicted for Galveston l lTwo Refugees Get 5-Year Terms For Spying On U.S. . t. TO OPEN EX Chief Justice Thane A. Camp- bell will officially open the Provincial Exhibition Tuesday yet l2:30 p.m. in the Jones Live- stock Pavilion. The official party will include His Honor Lieutenant Governor Kay. Minister of Highways to represent Premier Matheson; Hon. Eugene Cullen. Minister of Agriculture: His Worship Mayor J.D. Stewart and Dr. J.P. Lsntz. President of the Exhibition Association. DIG HEART WASHINGTON (Reuters)-Dr. Otto Dibelius. yr sident of the World Council of Churches and Lutheran Bishop of Berlin. Fri- day paid a 20-minute call on Pre- sident Eisenhower at the White House. The blah told reporters the president he a "big heart" for bones and eisurcti problems. KILLED AT IH BAGHDAD. Iraq tAPl-A 1&- year-old iarmer killed himself with a razor Friday because he could no longer lead a "full and healthy llfe," police reported. T.W.L. Prowse; Hon. J.G. Mac- 10"! ii-mil" inund- icooo QUALITY ROCK I i Premier Urges Co I l l The results of recent rock bor- quality of ruck so close to the -11185 in "'9 C3P9 T0l'mCmine,siti. of the proposed causcway.' area have prompted Premier A. the link between the provinces 'W. Matheson to write Federal could be constructed within the. Works Minister Howard original estimate of D 252:3. ".'f.i"..'i..'l!,'.? .1: . to determine how the rock will. He said the only thing rcquir-; lquired to bring it to the mange. mine whether the rock would 'for use in the proposed cause-lsiayg i0E9”'9" "' large enough 'w.y between New Bnmswickpsections toVwarrent quarrying. Ind pm”, Edward mind. The Premier expressed the be-1 --mi v--":5; i'?.2iJ';i..'.i'.i”..""?.f. grgiay :)h3'Dl"l”t'manldl9"ml::0"g':llthe part of the Federal Govern-i irubii: Whrkse.plll.yG. lilllllliite lwozld ;';:”'cal;'ri5”";'f! "W "i959 if" indicate that rock samples found; ,.” it szguld ii" out ma! th in eleven holes about one mile rock found dose 3 hand i "2 west of Bayfield. N.B. and less Bumble to wmmand the :ct.0i than two mu” from the prom" of the water then let us use lot" ed beginning of the causcway.lfor me mam ml and H .k are superior in quality to thoselfmm Wallace N S for lie e;::'F originally found in the expioral-Hm. of the causewaym um me! in his office yesterday after-' noon Mr. Matheson made com- parisons of samples t a k e n from the borlngs of last year' and that unearthed recently. He pointed out that results of labor- atory tests have not yet beeni made known. but the newly i found rock would appear to bet . .. I at new d-n-Irv n---- the. ..T.ile.IT.:i.l?.fZ ?:':"2::”i.”'.:?; ""”"”'i""d "E ii" "9" W States or uss issued b the pearance of the famous Wallacel Us D A wa; ljecelved by (Ml 5”” which W" "ud ta Mn" Potato .l3oard esterda y '''m" H" Pwvmchl Bl"-Idlngt inoon it estimaiias totaly roduc- The P”ml"' "id M W" hm tion lfor the 26 IAte Stalics at erested in only one thing. th at I 154'9o3'0m ML compared to ..'?:l:.:;:7'"::':...?. '23 .":?i,:26-;W-0:0:,::; I-st - cw Or IW'II0W- "W Total" U.s.s. moiictiisn ' is :9”! of trlhlromtlon wulb-leztimated at 2.'i4?97i.il00 cwt. - ,l43,7l6.0p0 in 1956) down 3.6 Mr. Matheson said thgt in hisl per cent. but estimates for East-l letter to the Federal Minister, he sits- nhnued Survey For Causeway Fill Asked about the economic feas- ibility of the causeway. Mr. Ma- theson said preliminary surveys have shown that the causeway is economically feasible. He maintained that the Feder- al Government today is able to. borrow money at about four per- Third Will Be Sentenced Next Month NEW YORK (AP!-Two Euro- pean refugees who found a haven in the United States each were sentenced Friday to 536 years in prism for spying on the U.5. for Russia. At the same time. Col. Rudolph lvanovich Abel. was held without bail in another federal court on an entirely different spy charge. lie was indicted Wednesday by I ,etsnd up under the explosion re-. ed to be done now was to deter- cent 50 that the two million in-, gmoklyn federal 8.-md jury .35 WW51 "WY WONG ha" 10 D I Y i faces a possible death sentence if on a 50 million dollar loan would not be greater than the millionl and three quarter annual deficitl for operating the present ferries at Borden plus the depreciation on the ships and port facilities. Premier Matheson recalled that at the l.ist meeting of At- lantic Provincesl Premiers held at Halifax. all four heads of gov- ernment were unanimous ln their opinion that a causeway 'con meeting the Provinces of Ne w Brunswick and Prince Edward island was vital to the economy Premier. lot the provinces as a whole. Potato Crop Estimated To Be Smaller Than in l956 em and Central late states are down about 13 per cent. The following is a comparative table of production estimates in thou- sand hundredweight, i956 pro- duction figure. followed by 1957 estimate: Maine . . . . . . . .. H.748 l5,8tll 58.350 36.210 II. Total 26 Fall 166.034 154.!!! Total U.S.A. 243.716 234.Vl4 would point out that the eleven holes bored are laid out in such a way as to include a large bodyt of rock. He felt that with a good That long term credit forl necessary capital investment be made available in Prince Ed- ward island at reasonable rates (three per cent or less) was one of the conclusions . ached in the summary of views presented at "Country Caucus" which con- cluded two days of meeting at St. Duristan's University yester- day. it was recommended that such credit he made available to farmers through a Provincial Fann Credit Act. The summary of the views of the two . day conference were presented by Mr. W.R. shew. in addition to I ommending a Provincial Farm Management Service to provide education on the proper use of land. the con- ! urged gr-cant particlp& tlon by the Provincial Govern- ment In Pmtrams of land sei- tiernent. agricultural economics 3 injured In Collision SYDNEY fCPl .. An RCMP xi-year-old native at South Bathnrsi. N.B., Thomas 'lCountry Caucus? Urges Long Term Credit Policy and marketing. Earlier in the day workshops considered such topics as farm credit. production and market- ing, the role of government. and tucstlon for rural living. A four . man team from Antigon- lsh. N.S.. also told of their search for a solution to similar yl biems. Among the spokesmen for the various workshops were Charles Mystery Polish LONDON (AP: -- The Royal Navy shadowed two Polish sub- marines moving down Britain's were doing or where they were heading. A naval spokesman said there was no confirmation of earlier Royal Navy Ships Shadow Submarines They were first sighted soon af- ter dawn about 10 miles off the coast of Aberdeenshlre, in north- east coast, but Friday night therei east Scotland. Most of the day still was no clue as to what they they kept a southward course roughly parallel to the coast. but Friday night they were steering out into the North Sea and were some 50 miles off Newcastle-upon convicted. Sent to prison in Manhattan federal court were Jacob Albam. 64, who came here from Lithu- ania. and Mrs. Myra Sobie. 52. born in Russia. The pair had pleaded guilty to reduced espionage charges. thus avoiding the possibility of the death sentence under the original indictment. Their co-operation with the gov- ernment in revealing secrets of the spy ring apparently led them to hope for greater leniency. The government also said neither of them was an important cog in a ring headed by Mrs. soblee' bus- band, Jack. He is to be sentenced Sept. 18. Mrs. Soble's lawyer, George Wolf, pleaded with Judge Richlltl H. Levet to free her on proba- tion for the sake of her 17-year- oid son Lawrence. D BOY "lie is an extraordinarily bright and good boy and loyal to our democratic principles... .if site i serves a prison sentence. he will be without a home and forced to live in Canada with a sister d Mrs. Sobie.".'DIe Soblee lived It! s time in Montreal and have rela tives there. Mrs. Soble's husband faces a maximum 10-year sentence when he comes before ti: court next month. He. too. has cooperated with the government in an at- tempt to win leniency. An obscure figure In New York's animal hair products in- dustry. Sobie headed a well-knit International spy ring from about 1944. it fed defence data to Rus- sian agents. Abel. 55, who appeared in court in Brooklyn. had no direct con- nection with the activities of the Sobel ring. He posed for nine years as a Brooklyn artist while. the government said, he collected atomic and military data for Yeo, L.P. Mscisaac. George LaBelie. Errol Laughlin and Rev. E.J. Roche. Chairman for, the session was Rev. T. R. Goudge. The conclusions and recom- mendation of "The Country Caucus" will be printed and dis- tributed in the near future. Rev. William Simpson, general chair- man of the conference. announe ed. No Delay In p Telegraph Fight OTTAWA (CF) - Governments 1 increases on this business. of the Atlantic provinces will fight lchanges in telegraph rates pro- posed by the railways but have been unable to get a postpone- mcnt of a board of transport com- missioncrs hearing for more time to prepare a case. The ho a rd has told the Mari- times transportation commission. acting for the four governments. that a scheduled Aug. is hearing in Ottawa will go on but that they . will be able then to argue for an immediate adjournment after pre- llln-iinary submissions have been filed ""n'"'”' 'v '” m' """Ti The commission will protest rumors that the crews might be preparing to seek asylum here. The submarines flew the ensign of Communist Poland. but the ad- I miralty said it believcd they are Russian-built craft of the later M class desi ned for coastal work transmission to Moscow. Abel was held without bail for a further hearing Tuesday to give Tyne. in northern England. Most of the day two British coastal mineswec rs ke t track of the Communigte subriiiarines. him "me to ilet I lawyer. Be The admiralty explained this was lac” "9 P”-”""lY M i” den because the submarines' ' t W""ll' i Cmlvcd 0" '11 ”l”"' and destination were unknown. "' "'9 arwkly" i"dl""'”"' ; The railways have told the iboard that for many years these irates have been kept generally lower than the rest of Canada for; "historical reasons." prcsumablyl linked to the same geographical is c to r that prompted federal freight assistance under the Mari- lme Freight Rates Act of 1927. Apart from the Meritlmes trans- portation commission. protests have reached the board from the Maritime Board of Trade and the Halifax and Moncton. N.B.. boards. They describe the Mari- timee increases as "unduly high" and as seriously affecting busi- 7'"”'”" '”P- P”"' W” "7 53" the changes on the ground-ad- l mitted by the railway cornpanls ness flrrns in the area. aey. The mishap occurred in a sub-. way leading to suburban Whitney Pier. where constable Brennan was iwveuigatisg a report thd! III Iill It M1 NIAGARA FALLS. Olt. iCPl MIRA! :35 iii: lliiz rtiiil - thQ heavily on the Maritlmes than any other part of Canada. The companies. whose system has been in effect tor moi-e tbn a half century. want to adopt a elnspllned plan in effect In th United States whereby all me- they would bcar motel LAWYERS CLASII A clash between lawyers for the Maritimes commission and the CPR has already occurred in tele grains received by the transport hoard ' CPR lawyer I. D. M. Spence of Montreal said that the MeritlrneI' attempt to get a postponement must be only for he purpose of delaying be companies. Marlttrnee counsel Frank D. Smith of Halifax retorted in at sages would be charged for on a I basis related directly to the air- .llne distance involved. i INCREASE REVENUE The new system. under which some rates would go up and some down, would have the net effect other wire that this was "an lin-t Yegosisvlfe President Tits. PRESIDENTIAL GREETINGS ' r-ait35v- Minn. president of Communist day Ho h sl I ten 1 If esutrlm. lerggneuaiegnest. no CbliNortaV'ietnsisi'nBelgrsdeItotipcaa0ommaebt . . 3:" TY”'-Lt , a:------- '-v- - .-.....-........- .-.. . . . - -vu-vsda3-hne- lg ; '3 1 3 ” .-.-.4.gL n . ,',,,-,,..- Li; "'t ' I. ,3, ...-.c..:.. .; "-2-m W --..-M M - - . - . ,. . v.-., .-.S.............. ......