TELEPHONE 8506 ‘ WEATHER \ Bayer meets seller with Guardian Want Clear with fow clowily intervals, comtinas Ais. Dial 8506 ask for classified ad cool, westerly winds. Low-high at taker, for quick results, a 35 and 58, a “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” VOL. LXxll No.219 ccaated a Gromet Gam taal Ws Go SEPTEMBER 19, 1959 is PAGES Wor wont FIVE CENTS CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, SATURDAY, Hon Walter R. Shaw made his first official appearance as pre- Ultimatum Is To Hoffa SAN FRANCISCO (AP)—Labor Secretary James P. Mitchell dis- closed Friday he has directed Teamster president James R. Hoffa to report in 10 days what FIRST OFFICLAL APPEARANCE Canada’s Debt Jumps ~) |before a League of Nations com- * |mittee by Soviet Foreign Minis- ‘|ter Maxim Litvinoff back in the Charlottetown Hotel. Here Pre- mier Shaw and Mrs. Shaw chat wth LH. Shaw, Montreal, -| CARC president (centre). The new government took office | Wednesday. Pie ‘|disarmament proposal 9 ' aS “ 9 S AM “ , t\ 49? aw “a oo .* ta < te 4 * wy 2 . .sarmament Bid Said ‘Pie In Sky’ |Jected as too visionary for seri- Western observers also noted viewed_by UN disarmament’ ex-|that the Khrushchev proposal has perts Friday night as a pie-in-the- |familiar angles which made ear- sky project which even he camijier Soviet plans unacceptable. |TOO VAG ei In the eyes of the West, his proposals for international con- trol and inspection are too vague. They call for disarmament first and then creation of a control By MAX HARRELSON UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) Nikita Khrushchev’s new total was ers to accept. It was sensational in the re spect that it went far beyond the more modest bids in recent years for a simple reduction and regul- ation of armaments, but it was not new. A similar plan had been laid of violations back to the Secur- ity Council where the big power veto could block any findings of | guilt. : Western diplomats feel that the plan may have a strong popular appeal in some neutralist coun- tries, especially because of Khrushchev's stress on economic aid to underdeveloped countries to be financed out of the opro- posed arms savings. This is not a new idea either, but it has a lot of appeal among the smaller countries. One UN expert recalled that | Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko on more than one occasion had extolled the virtues of partial and limited disarma- ment measures, insisting that those who advocate sweeping steps don’t really want disarma- | ment. Canucks Win early 1930s, and had been re- Controversy = i aes Idea Is Denied VATICAN CITY (Reuters)— Vatican sources Friday night de- nied any conflict had arisen be- tween Pope John and high Amer- ican clergy over the merits of Soviet Premier Khrushchev’s visit to the United States. The sources were commenting on- left-wing newspaper reports here that high Catholic dignitar- ies had been irked by a papal speech Wednesday welcoming the Soviet-American “‘summit.”” Pope John, addressing a gen- eral audience at his summer res- idence at nearby Castel Gandolfo, + t Abolish By JOSEPH MacSWEEN chev proposed before the United Nations Friday that the world abolish all War weapons and sol- diers within four years and turn Khrushchev’s sweeping speech before the UN General Assembly | was vague in parts but he seemed to be saying that the human race | should wipe the slate clean and | start all over again — bereft of} war tools. | “The essence of our proposals’ is that over a period of four) years all states should effect com-| 'plete disarmament and should no’ longer have any means of wag- jing war,” said the visiting pre _ GEORGE SAVILLE Ball Point Pen Elects Saville A ballot marked with a ball) Gone would be armies, navies, point pen robbed Progressive| sir forces, nuclear weapons, mil- Conservative Leslie Hunter of 8 | itary rockets, leaving only dom- victory in yesterday's recount |estic police forces for keeping in- at Georgetown. The ballot must ternal order. - be marked with a pencil. Khrushchev did not spell out The final result gave Liberal | George E. Saville a victory by | | steps he hag taken to remov from office Teamster officials havirg criminal records. pe! sent Mitchell said in a speech to AFL-CIO convention he has similar messages to individual. of- ficials of other labor unions. He did not name them. ~- The secretary said he was act- ing under a provision of the labor control law passed by Con- gress and signed by President short-term debt owed in other countries increased sharply first half of the year to help Ti nance a huge $837,000,000 deficit on internationa exchange of goods and services. In Foreign Countries - By ALAN DONNELLY buy Canadian interests in several Canadian Press Staff Writer {firms in this country. : OTTAWA (CP) Canadian/ But this inflow of long - term | capital was $2,000,000 less than a year earlier. i ing he LIFT FOR PRESTIGE said Catholics should look upon |Eisenhower meeting “with tr terest’ and pray that they lead to “peace on earth to men of goodwik"’ and “bear earthly and social fruit for the human race.” Dory Ch’shi; LUNENBURG, N. § | fishermen tional double~do: xaos with an easy victory over an This current account deficit during January-June was more ‘than one-third larger than the $590,000,000 deficit a year earlier, the bureau of statistics reported Friday. It was the second high- est on record, topped only by a $970,000,000 deficit in the first half of 1957. Part of the deficit was fi nanced by a net inflow of $558,- Eisenhower this week. It bars from service as a union official anyone convicted of certain crimes or having been a commu- nist party member for five years after such conviction or member- ship. A number of Teamsters union officials have been disclosed in senate rackets committee testi- mony as having criminal records. /000,000 in long-term capital dur- SWIFT ENFORCEMENT ling the period. Included in this Mitchell sand that the labor de was a “substantial” capital in- partment and the department of flux during the second quarter to Yanks Finally Click As Vangu WASHINGTON (AP) — Amer-{ ica’s 100 - pound Vanguard—IIT| whizzed about the earth Friday} on a mission that might help plot; justice already are busy at steps | +r to make sure the provision is) : ewiftly enforced. i\ ° “I have made a special point i of calling the attention of Hoffa to this point,” Mitchell said. “T sent him a telegram to that effect only this morning. “My message to him concludes qith this: ‘“‘you will advise me within 10 days whether any Teamster official has been a member of the Communist party Magistrate States Former Stipendiary Magistrate | tion of stipendiary magistrate smissed. ' i or convicted of crime during the Gilbert A. Gaudet, Q.C., said last) for Queens and Kings. last five years.” | might that he was removed from Mitchell ‘said only a few unions| Office on p litical grounds. “‘I de- have been involved in corruption | fimitely didn’t resign, I was sim- disclosures. He said he does not! Ply Temoved on political grounds tend to use new union policing | without notice,’ he said. powers vested in him to conduct; Mr. Gaudet said that the an- any “witchhunt” among honest; nouncement appearing in The Pa- anions. But he said he had a! triot yesterday afternoon was the large and grave responsibility first ind'cation he had received which he intends to exercise. Railway Local No. 20 Quits Labor Council lof his dismissal from the posi-| “I feel that during the past 12, years I have carried cut my du-| ties fairly, impartially and with- | out regard to politics,’ Mr. Gau- det added. | Hon. R.R. Bell, Q.C.. the Pro-| vince’s new Attorney-General an-} nounced yesierday that Mr. Gau-| det’s position as migistrate would be filled by City lawyer James B. Johnston. At the same time Mr. Bel! an- nounced the appointment of Ger- ald R. Foster as Crown Prosecu- tor for both Queens and Kings Counties in succession to John P. Nicholson. Mr. Nicholson said yesterday that he had forwarded his re- signation to former Attormey- General A.W. Matheson within a week after the election and had Local 20 of the Canadian) ward Island had the best Trade Brotherhood of Railway, Trans-| Union Act of any Province in “= port and General Workers have Canada, He declared that the . neelled its membership in the | local government then in power harlottetown District Labor| had always given ‘fair consid- » Council. | eration of fair requests.” A union spokesman said yes- zs terday that the decision to pull| PRAISES MINISTERS the union out of the local Coun-| He recalled that the Minister cil was made at the September ‘Mr. MaclIsaac) understood the meeting. issue from both a management and labour viewpoint, and paid REASON tribute to B. Earle MacDonald, He said the action was taken the former Provincial Treasur- tn order to disassociate —local er, fot the work he had accom- 20 from an election day advert- | plished for labor during the 1959 isement which the union felt! session of the Legislature. might lead the public to believe| Next day, August 27, in a let- that labor in this locality favor-|ter apearing in the same col- ed a particular party prior to|umn, J.F. Hennéssey, president the election. ‘of local 20 asserted that the) The ad, signed by J.B, Brown, views expressed in MacLean’s president of the Charlottetown | letter were ‘not necessarily the District Labor Council, and Alex | views of the members of the MacLean, secretary of the same | local’. organization ¢said that the Coun Mr. MacLean had signed his cil endorsed the policies of the /letter as a Labour Representa- local Department of Labor andj|tive for the Canadian Brother- since been notified by Mr. Bell that it was accepted. Ian A. Mac- Leod of Charlottetown has also resigned as Kings County prosecu- tor. Mr. Bell .also announced that W. Chester S. MacDonald of Summerside would replace RS. | Hinton as Prince County magis-| trate. Another Summerside law- yer, George McMahon was nam- ed Crown Pye<ecutor. WHERE-TO-FIND-IT | Announcements, notices . 11 Births deaths, etc., .... 2, ll Classified section 10, 11 | Finance, markets ........ ll | Comics, features .......- Charlottetown news ...... ee ES ee marr erry: Island news .........++:- a3 © Women’s page e i 6, Late reports from Guardian news bureaus in Summer- caled on.all workers to “support ;hood of Railway, Transport and their friends’’. |General Workers | In a let‘er published in the; Neither Mr. MacLean or Mr. Guardian of August 26, Mr. Mac- | Brown were available for com- Teap asserted that Prince Ed-' ment last night, the Island News Page. side, Montague, Alberton and Souris, and from special cor- respondents now ‘appear on | | CLOUDY WEEK No estimate of the total in- | non-union group, g@ing on in one form or another American team from Gloucester. Mass. David Creaser, 25, and Cyril Earnst, 31, using a smooth and | steady stroke, led Robert Har-| rington, 25, and Charles Moon, 24,' Their time for the mile row was 8:8 25. ard Orbits a safe path for future space voy-| agers. The satellite, shaped like a big, ice cream cone, was launched} early Friday morning from Cape Canaveral, Fla., and promptly be- gan sending back loud, clear radio signals. The successful launching gave some lift to sagging U.S. prestige in space exploration. It also marked a cheerful end for the ill- starred series of Vanguard rock- ets, most of which flopped. Whizzing through space from 319 to 2,329 miles, the new satl- lite was only the third put up in 1l tries, by Vanguard scientists. But it brought to eight the num- ber of American satellites now) orbiting the earth, not including | the Pioneer IV space probe wheel- ing around the sun. | | The Vanguard success came at the end of a rather cloudy week | for: American spaceprestige. It, was a week that opened with the) Russian moon-strike. Then came two successive U.S. space fail-| ures. c The satellite was sent aloft at 2:20 a.m. ADT by a 72-foot Van- guard rocket weigh ng 22,600; © pounds and having a thrust of; | about 28,000 pounds at sea level. Two hours and %S minutes later, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration an- nounced the satellite was in or- bit. It consists of a 50-pound in- strument filled payload and the attached 50-potnd third-stage of the launching rocket. CBC Workers Get Pay Hike OTTAWA (CP) Raises for about 1,700 CBC employees not covered by union contracts is the first general pay ‘increase for this} ° group since 1957, a CBC spok man said Friday. The increases, varying in in- dividual cases and depending on such factors as when they last received a raise, go to employees ranging from secretarial help to second - line management level. creases was available. While there is no set pattern for general pay increases in the|' a spokesman said negotiations with unions are) Mrs. Mildred Mason, 20-year- print of Canada’s 1959 seaway all the time. @ampa as abe bandied mail (CP'— | mained unchanged. Two strong -: backed Lunenburg Hunter gained two in George- | The exhibition, which ope; the interna-|town East. Red House gave two here Friday and will tour N wing cham|more to Mr. pionship for Canada here Friday |iecs to Mr Hunter. | i } *|Harbor North; Mr. Hunter Jost tin cans, old cigar wrappers, flat STAMP MISPRINT old Winnipeg stenographer, was | the first person to spot the-mis-_ | margin of the returning officer's ballot. The vote ended in a tie with each man having 675, the same. number they had on elec- tion night. Sheriff Edwin Reid cast the deciding batlot for Mr. Saville, It was the second time he had cast the deciding vote lin a ten- . By OLI DAUM day period. Prior to that Mr.| Canadian Press Staff Writer Reid had not voted in a federali MONTREAL (CP) —-Evan H. contest in more than twenty-four | Turner, director of the Montreal years. Returning officers have no Museum of Fine Arts, said Fri- vote except In case of a tie. jday that art can be junk—and There were a number of chang-|the 100-vear-old cultural fnstitu- es although the final count re- tien currently has an exhibition ito prove it. i Saville and one America under the guise of ‘art | |and the fouhd object,” is a eol- Mr. Saville lost one In Murray ‘lection of discarded stove pipes, one in Gasperequx. jirons, automobile mufflers and Tension was running high asthe like. presiding Judge J.S. DesRoches| But it is the use to which these turned to the final ballot box.|bits of flotsam and jetsam are | to the finish line by eight lengths. |It was from Cambridge. Six bal- put that elevates them into the rut to make as that,” turning lhis index finger to an Epstein lots were rejected but the final | revered field of art. (Continued on Page 2 Col. 2) |! “The show will be a revelation | e ~ <a LOCATED verted on the misprinted stamps A syndicate in Mrs. Ma- | sams hae Tod letering a he | son's fice holds 27 cps, al sign The central desiga is - 9 mit condition. (CP Photo) | Collection Of Junk Is Touring As Art ment@fWeapons Proposed In Four Years precisely his proposal, for con-. eign mimsters stressed that the Canadian Seer . ae trols and inspection, features on!<peech was worthy of careful ee NS, Ws. Kt which the east and west have | Study - oe ua been at loggerheads in previous | Canada’s External Affairs M disarmament talks The absence/ister Howard Green said the long of such precise details led mary address contained, considerable delegates in the 82-member as-/ repetition of statements made by sembly to be wary. _ i Russia before but still deserved —“"pie in the skrras—a—phee Leareful consideration heard on severa! sides, but for-| Morrison's Son lsAppointedPeer By WALTER DAVIS LONDON (Reuters) — Herbert Morrison, a policeman’s son who worked his way up in the Labor | party to become one of Britain's leading cider statesmen, today joined the ranks of the titled [peerage The announcement that the |Queen will make him a baron for life comes at the moment of his final departure from the House of Commons, where he has heen-al member for 27 years. He first , was elected in 1933. Morrison's parliamentary ear- eer ended with the dissolution of Parliament Friday in preparation for the general election Oct. 8. Morrison, 71, is not running for re-election, THREE OTHERS HONORED Today's announcement from Buckingham Palace stated that te most viewers,” said Mr. Pur-| he and three other leading politi- setae ical, figures are heing named te - | o : ; the rage in honor of pliti- ‘This form of art ts relatively |} ben oulitle m . se — unknown in Canada.” - : The show, assembled by the American Federation of Arts, in- corporates for the most part work of North American and European ‘serious” ‘artists who wished to poke subtle fun at people who believe a thing is art enly when it is solemn. VALUED AT $10,000 i | A life peerage ‘as baroness) aiso is conferred on Dame Fior- erc® Gérthide Horsomigh. @ fore mer Cabinet minister in the pres- ent Conservative party adminis- tration. James Gray Stuart. , former state secretary for Scotland and Conservative party ehief in Seot- land, is made a viseount. A barony is conferred on Sir appreciation of this form of art— creating from abandoned man-;ing from generation made articles—is to realize that) tion as do most titles im thé aris- art is not just the expression of | tocracy. man’s serious emotions but of his humorous ones as well. Pointing to a life-size picador en a horse, built from rusty stove pipes, small coal shovels, sieves and scraps of leather, Mr. Tur- ner said: “That was just as dif- Charies MacAndrew, Al, deputy iSpeaker of the House ef Com mons. RECENT INNOVATION . Though political honors of this , kind are granted by the Queen, bronze. ‘It took just as much |they are designated by the gov- thought, imagination and skill.""| ernment. The so - called ‘life’ recent ’conovation amd apply only for the lifetime ef ' carmmmaratively Mr. Turner said the secret to the incumbent tather than pass- to genera- But all entitle the holder te a seat in the House of Lords. WHITE DAMP IS LETHAL Hope Is Abandoned For 45 Coal Miners A huge electrie exhaust fan —Forty - seven Scotfish miners | burst into flame, setting fire te trapped in a fire and gas - filled supporting girders and timbers cool pit were given up for dead and quickly filling the passage Friday night after an \8-hout res-/vays with smoke. The fire ate cue attempt. ik throuch support timbers, causing Toward midnight, an offteia’ of and earth falis the National Coal Board am-| Rescue workers hrought - the nounced: _ | body of one miner to the surface Altogether 47 men are miss-| about noon. Another was rescued ing in the colliery and are pre-| unconscious. sumed dead. There is practically no hope of survivors. An accumn- lation of gas has made it neces sary to withdraw the men en-! gaged in fightitke the underzround | fire.” 3 The official said rescue opera tions were being abandoned for a period of 12 hours to allow the; «HALIFAX (CP) mine to be flooded to put out the | underground fire. FIND CARBON MONOXIDE Long hours after the miners rock Bomb Scare Is Repeated ‘The eighth pomb scare in two days was in- vestigated by police Friday night shortly after an unidentified man was charged with public mischief in ection with oan 1 were trapped nearly a quar‘er of See "eins Sac Sean a mile underground, masked res- Ce a ade Ae tue workers detected a-larze con- | (Nd as’a result of the anony- centration of carben monoxide a HDs : 4 of: in tKe area potce Spokesman sat a 8 apartment unit in the south end This is the feared white damp that proves lethal in a matter of 825 Sfarched after. an occupant minutes. reportéd reeiving a phone call Even as rescue operations were | Warning that a bomb was in the halted temporarily, anxious re- | building. latives of the entombed miners’) The man charged by police ear- gathered at the pithead. jlier Friday was one of three men Mothers, daughters and wives and a woman picked up for ques- were there. Several were so over- | tioning in a police raid on a south come they were led away weep-jend home. The raid followed a ing by Salvation Army welfare | cali to police saying a bomb was workers. located in an office building. The miners were trapped Fri- | Those taken inte custody were day morning while riding on a) voung adults,” said Police Chief train 1,050 feet underground in| Verdun Mitehell. The mas the 50-year-old colliery, 10 miles; charged was expected to appear from Glasgow. in court Monday. . dt ace Is Pictured hchevs Speech ‘The picador, created by Jose de| ,ecrages, which Morrison and © Creeft in 1925, is valued at $10,-/ name Florence receive. are 8 000. a)