TELEPHONE 8506 . Buyer meets seller with Guardian Want Ads. Dial 8506 ask for classified ad taker, for quick results, VOL. LXXII NO. 223 * “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” The memorial honors officers Maj.-Gen. Georgs Vanier per- ' formed his first official act as | and\men of the Royal Regiment Governor-General when he un- | of Canadian artillery who lost veiled this artillery memorial | their lives.in service. Here he on Major’s Hill Park at Ottawa. walks past the memorial with WN, CANADA, THURSDAY SEPTEMBER 24, 1959 - 22 PAGES : Cleully with a few showers, Southwest winds 20. Lew-high lottetown 53 and 65. ‘ THAN , FIVE CENTS A> Ie 9 J - .* Light In Sky Is Blinding | Short Time MONCTON (CP)—Two. Monc- ton .men, returning here from Fundy National Park in Albert County, reported they saw a pear - shaped object emitting a blinding light over the gounty Saturday night. Sam Doyle and William Ken | medy said they saw the object near Gowland Mountain at 38.10 p.m. “The light was so bright Sam had to put his arm over his eyes and stop the car,” said Kennedy. The object was visible for 15 to 20 seconds. . “Neither of us had ever seen anything like it, it was not like a shooting star or lightning or any- thing like that.” Its brightness lit a nearby field “as light as day.” Hit Argentina BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) — | Seattered bomb explosions hit | Brig. P.AS. Todd (left), honor- | Argentina Wednesday as @ strike ary Colonel Commandant of the by about 1,000,000 workers par- ae aiyzed industrial areas. e Tw " 9, ‘ | (CP From National Defence) 1,04 at Condohe Cit hada lar 2 Thousands Of Hungry Tuna Are Seen In Bay Of Fundy | WEDGEPORT, N.S. (CP) —The|have to go back to November appearance of thousands of hun-|0f 1949 to find a comparison.” gry tuna in the Bay of Fundy has | A record number of 1,760 bluefins started epeculstion that the an jwere landed here that year. pual International Tuna’ Cup THE BEST SPOT match, suspended this year. will Most of this year’s fish have be \resumed in. 1960. The tourna-|been caught off Cape St. Mary ment was cancelled this year about 30 miles north of Wedge- after a poor run in 1958 resulted port, the scene of the previous in not a single catch | tournaments. So far this year, 75 bluefin have| Fishermen claim that tuna been landed by rod and reel.|have been in the water around Most of these were caught in the the cape every August and Sept- jast 20 davs. Fishermen along the ember, they say the only reason goat say they haven't seen so more haven't been caught is that many tuna in 10, years. |nobody went. after them. Israel Pothier, secretary man-| The decision to renew the tour- ager of the Wedgeport. Tuna nament can only be made by the Guides Association, said, ‘You match board of directors, who °F |meet with provincial government officials in January. Fishing con- RI fF ( ditions would determine whether OTTAWA — (CP) — One man is in custody and police promise further arrests soon in a large- ecale car-theft operation broken, up last week with raids on two! barns near Ottawa where police) gay the vehicles were stripped down and reassembled as differ- ent cars. Grant Bradley. 40-year-old Ot ¢tawa car salesman, called in re- porters and photographers to wit- | ness his dramatic. surrender. to} police early Wednesday in an Ot- | tawa hotel room Arrhigned later in court, he was remanded without plea on $5.000 cash bail to Sept. 2% for the match would remain in Wedgeport, or be shifted to Cape St. Mary. Leading this year’s lucky ang- lers so far is John D. Giltach of North Hollywood, Calif., who landed eight during the last week. Julian Crandall of Ashaway, R1., a tuna match director, visited Cape St. Mary and,, “this was great sport . . . just like old times. I saw hundreds right in the surf.” When the directors meet, he added, ‘I will certainly vote for SEATTLE (AP) — A 14-year- hearing. He is charged with pos old cadet held for days in & oa bathroom ‘‘guardhouse’” on session of stelen car parts found » Vv | bread and water .. . guards in one of the barns “J went to Montreal Saturday for the football game.” \Bradley told reporters. ‘I heard I was} wanted. I came hack as fast as | with swagger sticks and doused him with cold water . . . striped convict ‘suits , . . hidden micro- I could—tI flew back. I am anxi-| phones. : ous to clear this up as soon as| These are things the King possible.”’ County (Seattle) presecutor’s office said~it discovered during an investigation of a suburban military academy. “T haven’t done anything to be afraid of,” said Thomas H. Hopkins, superintendent of Hop- kins Military Academy at near- by Redmond. Hopkins was arrested Mon- day on charges of third-degree assault and contributing to the delinquency % minors. His wife, Louise, School principal, also was charged with third- uean of Toronts Wednesday | degree assault. , a elected president as the Am Deputy prosecutor Charles erican Transit Association ende@| Smith said the assault charges its 78th annual meeting here. He| gtew out of the alleged mis- fs the first Canadian ever to head | treatment of John Goodwin of the group. | Seattle. He said the boy had 5 Police said Montreal police also | hold a warrant fer Bradley on a car theft charge. One of Brad- Wy's two lawyers said his client is to be taken to Montreal later this week for arraignment Canuck Heads Transit Group MINNEAPOLIS AP: — W.E.P. Military Academy Abuses Reported who struck the young prisoner | larrested two men carrying é@x* plosives in La ta, capital of Buenos Aires ce The 48-hour strike of inaa*trial workers, launched at midnight, was led by supporters of exiled dictator Juan Peron and Com-| munists. It is in protest against | a stiff government austerity pro-| gram that has caused wages to thaving the match another-year.” | trail rising costs. | Tuna angling started here in Strong police units patrolled ‘1935 when Michael rner of | Buenos Aires and guards were re- |New York, internationalfy known |inforced at government buildings | sportsman landed 21 tuna in Sol-jand military installatiops. No dier’s Rip, just off Wedgeport. troops were called out. ‘DEVELOPING QUICKER’ | God Helps Us More _ Nikita Says Inlowa By DOUGLAS B. CORNELL , Khrushchev's host was capital- | COON RAPIDS, lowa (AP)—/ ist farmer Roswell Bob Garst, Nikita ‘Khrushchev plowed his | who operates thousands of acres way afoot and by car Wednesday in this area of west-central Iowa. | through rich Iowa farmland and | Garst had met the premier pre- | concluded that in this part of the viously on two trips to Russia |world “God has helped you a ro invited Khrushchev to visit | : im. ¢ But the Soviet premier, an} (Continued on page 5 Col. 4) atheist who likes to dip into re- | 2 ¥g C¢€ — ligion now and then, added | through his interpreter: | “You must not think God is | helping only you. He’s helping us, ltoo . . . We. ‘are developing quicker, and therefore God is on | oar side. He helps the intelli gent.” ~- | been kept in a bathroom for | several days on bread and wa- ter as punishment for being absent without leave. Guards struck the prisoner | with swagger sticks and poured | on cold, water fo keep Goodwin | awake during the punishment, | Smith said. The boy wore a | eonvict’s suit of black and white | stripes, the deputy said. WHERE-TO-FIND-IT Announcements, notices 21 Births, deaths, etc., .. 2, 21 Classified section .... 20, 21 Comis, features ........ 19 Charlottetown news ...... 5 MARI io. os. i esesses ‘4 Finance, markets .... 14 Island news .......... 2 3 if Sports bi dvabibases 10, 11 | Women’s page & | Late reports fram Guardian news bureaus in Summer- side, Montague, .Alherton and Souris, and from special cor- respondents now appear os the Island News Page. Dr. G.R. Lindsey, director of the defence systems analysis | group of the Defence Research Board, im his spare time likes Bomb Blasts | | | not SCIENCE VERSU cre x \3 A romance between Princess Margaret, 29, and John Turner, As Big Aili » ve Nex = 2 ok & - "ROMANCE WITH MEG? papers. Clos? friends of 30-year-old Canadian lawyer, princess said “ignore it.” was hinted by British news- Permanent Aid Suggested | For 4 Atlantic. Provinées we TORONTO ‘CP)—The federal government should strive to make the four Atlantic provinces | Robfehaud said Wednesday. rather; He said money grants have than merely assisting them with) served only ‘to extenuate condi-;most efficient transportation fa-, MANY SCRAPPED \ HORSE, WAGON | economically self-reliant ACCOUNT PAID SAINT JOHN, N.B (CP) —Common council its horse and wagon mvsterv The problem came -to light weeks azo when council- approving dopartmenta! accounts, found they owed $78.75 for a horse and wagon that nobody seemed to know anything about Did we buy it? Why? F not What are we paying for? These a lors, ‘wére some of the questions ask- ed by councillors. Even the pur- chasing department = didn't know Council learned after investi gation the rig had been hired- purchased—to haul fertil- izer used in seeding 12:000 trees at the Spruce Lake watershed . a spadeful to each seedling Seems the price was reason- ab'e—and officials wanted to save the city some money. The account -was ordered paid. e has solved | “New Brunswick, subsidies, New Brunswick Lib-/lantic Canada to an economic par eral opposition Kader Louis J.'with the rest of the nation.” To this end he suggested the four provinces should have the ' tions and soothe our determina-|cilities possible; including the tion to get at the root of our | Chignecto Canal to open a water troubles."’ Since the Atlantic prov-|route between the Gulf of St. inces can't be cut off from the! Lawrence and the Bay of Fundy. other six they should be made a) NEED. CAUSEWAY “going concern” by time and ; money investments | A causeway to join Prince Ed- Mr_ Robichaud. speaking te the ward Island with New Brunswick Liberal Business Men's Club of jas another necessary project. It Toronto, said the Maritimes have | Would provide a high rate of em- 9.1 per cent of the nation's labor | Ployment during construction and force but produce only 5.9 per) help'to tide over the economy of cent ‘of the gross national prod-|the Maritimes. uet | Mr. Robichaud said special in Average per-capita Jarome in ‘ducements must be offered ta en- Nova Scotia,, courage the location of new Prince Edward Island and New-/| Manufacturing industries in the foundiand is only 65 per cent of | Maritimes. He also spoke in fa- that in the six other provinces,| Vor of a national monetary policy he said. |that would not impart hardship on one section of the nation ONE-FITH JOBLESS “Today's tight money policy ts Adding to their economic prob-! throttling small business in the lems said Mr. Robichaud, “last | seaside provinces while It merely winter when national unemploy-; holds the economy within reason- | ment stood at about nine per! able bounds in the rest of the cent of the labor force. it was & nation.” he said. - shocking 20 per cent in the At-/ — lantie provinces.” He said it would require a combination of “bold, imaginative and co-ordinated measures over a period of years to bring At- <—-_ te figure out odds for and a- gainst a baseball team scoring runs uniervarious circumstan- ces. The Toronto scientist, who Bre = S BASEBALL ODDS Resigns On By KEN KELLY Canadian Press Staff Writer. OTTAWA ‘CP’! — The govern- iment’s policy of dividing respon j sibility for civil defence among ithree departments has brought labout the resignation of the health department's top civil de- fence administrator j-Gen. George S._ Hatton, Canadian - born veteran of the | British army who headed federal civil defence until the new policy went into effect Sept. 1, said Wed- nesday he has resigned as de- Trading Blocs Are‘ Explored ee Ry DAVID OANCTIA Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON (CP) Common- wealth trade and finance minis- ters Wednesday had ‘candid, on trading blocs now shaping up in Europe, but failed to reach any agreement on possible future relations with them. Conference sources said there was an “undercurrent of anxi- ‘lety” as the ministers from Com- monwealth countries and British colonies studied reports’ on the British and French-led groupings. The topic proved to be the most contentious of the final session of analyzes statistics cathered | the Commonwealth economic con- mainly by his father, Col. Char- | sultative council, set up by the les. Lindsey, has published @ | Montreal conference a year ago paper on the subject, Ito keep members in ‘closer touch. ' Top Civil Defence Man frank and extremely useful” talks | “> People Die In Brazil ner Explodes Sixteen Passengers, 2 RIO DE. JANEIRO, Brazil —|members aboard at the time of | (Reuters) — Sixteen passengers | the crash and that all had been ;and a crew of four were killed killed: | Wednesday when a Brazilian ae-( The plane appeared to have ex- iliner exploded in the air after | aie cif from Sao Paulo. ploded in mid-air after catching The death toll was announced/fire folowing takeoff on a flight jin a communique issued by the\here. |Cicao Aerea S20 Pavlo Vasp| A helicopter owned by the air- Airline owners of the plane. Inne flewgpver the .crash scene | First reports said that there and repo bodies and wreck- | were 36 passengers and four crew' age strewn over a large area. i Defence Expense ReductionSought By DAVE McINTOSH submarine plane, the RCAF’s Canadian Press Staff Writer {Argus maritime reconnaissance | OTTAWA ‘CP) — The defence! plane and the CC-106 long-range devartment likely will be able to; transport. . ‘reduce defence spending again in} New planes on order are the the next fiscal year despite pur-| American Lockheed Starfighter chase of a new jet plane for the| for. the RCAF air division in /RCAF air division in Europe, of-| Europe and the American Grum- jficials estimated Wednesday |man Albatross for RCAF search | The cut may amount to roughly | 22d rescue. The former will cost $65,000,000. In the current fisea! | about ee Se oe oe year the reduction was about| ©?! yeat—by ave $72,000.000-—to $1,695,000,000 from | Some ee ee the letter a 1958-59 defence budget. of $1 eats : 767,000,000 The next fiscal year|. The Starfighter, Albatross, OC- starts April 1. 1960 | 106, Argus and Tracker programs To the consternation of the| cost: a total of about $105,- ; : 000,000 in the 1960-61 fiscal year armed forces, the reduction next) compared to some $194,000,000 in year likely will be made, as it re : : , the current fiscal year. was this year, through a smaller [procurement program for weap-| MISSILE PROGRAM ‘ons and equipment, This leaves expenditures on the | However, this is mainly be | gnti-aircraft missile system to be cause some major equipment pro- uilt in Canada at a total eost of grams now are comingjto an end. | $375,$00,000 of which Canada’s |share will be $125,000,000. The United States will pay the re maining two-thirds. Cost of this program—the Bo- | The Arrow jet interreptor pro | gram was cancelled this vear and) production of the CF-109 and mare missile, SAGE electronie Sabre jets. T-33 jet trainer. and control system and more radars |CC-109 medium transport have —was ealculated at only $10,000,- | ended. ,000 in 1959-40 and will likely Nearly at an end are produc- ametnat to less than $20,000,000 rtion-ofthe navy's Tracker anti-'mext year, ‘DEFEATED MCNAUGHTON Famed Vote Winner |s Apparent Suicide political history, was found dead Tuesday in a Toronto hospital. The former Progressive Con- servative MP for Grey North, un- iderdog conquerer of Gen. A. G. L. McNaughton when the gen- eral. was wartime Liberal de- fence minister, was said by det- ective Gordon Bacon to have been found hanging by his belt in a closet of Sunnybrook Hos- pital. . ’ Mr. Case, who would have been 62 Wednesday, had been admitted to the hospital July 29 for psychi- atric treatment, suffering from TORONTO (CP)—W. Garfield Case, winner of one of the most- inoted byelections in Canadian Principle puty civil defence co-ordinator | depression. “IT have resigned on a matter He made one half-way attempt of principles that involves civil) at the national leadership in 1948, defence policy,” he told- a re! announcing he would be a candi- perter. “I have given my minis- date at the convention which ter my reasons in writing but I' eventually chose George Drew. do not feel IT can discuss them) However, he withdrew before the publicly.” . ’ contest actually started luke ch PclicY ‘STUNNING DEFEAT | “Government sources said the! But his chief claim to political resignation is related to the new|fame was his stunning 1945 de- {CD poiicy under which the army | feat of Gen. McNaughton, former fand the emergency measures or-|Canadian army tommander ganization in the prime minis-|chosen by Prime Minister Mac- ter’s office were given the major|kenzie King as his defence min- lresponsibility for national survi- ister when Hon. J. L. Ralston val in the event of attack walked out of the cabinet during | The shift left the $9.500 post of the conscription crisis. ideputy civil defence co-ordinator iwith responsibility only for health e Gas Tax Hike * Is Predicted | and welfare measures and for the | Civil Defence College at nearby |Arnprior, Ont The army promoted Brig Ar ithur FE. Wrinch to’ the rank of | major-general Sept. 1 and placed ee him in charge of its CD role VANCOUVER ° CP Every- The co-ordinating role hitherto| body wants good roads but who's exercised by Gen. Hatton, also is; 8°28 to pay for them? performed now bv. Maj Gen A taxation expert Wednesday |Wrinch’s directorate of supvival forecast provincial gasoline and | operations : vehicle taxes wi'l increase in the | Gen. Hatton has been deputy di-| Mext decade and suggested that rector for the last tivo years,| Mumic!palities keep their fingers since the resignation of Maj.-Gen.| out of the pocketbooks of motor |F F. Worthington vehicle owners. ‘ FH. Finnis of Toronto, mun- icipal research associate of the Canadian Tax Foundation, said in the vast majority of cases the responsibility of collecting taxes from road users should be cen- tralized with. the provincial a army after graduating from the Royal Military College at Kings- ton, Ont... in 1917. He served in France and Belgium during the First World War and in Africa and northwest. Europe during the Second World War. \ | A native of Peterborough. Ont., Gen. Hatton joined the’ British ernment with the possible tion of, metropolitan areas. A Crewmen Perish