TTT >, ee TELEPHONE 8506 Buyer meets seller with Guardian Want Ads. Dial 8506 ask for classified ad taker, for quick results. VOL. LXXIF NO. 225 we “ amendments have been US. Missile = CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) gea @ camera-carrying nose cone! that may hold the first pictures of a complete hurricane. Caribou Wear Yellow Ribbons WINNIPEG (CP)—More than 100 caribou ‘now roaming north- ern Manitoba are wearing yellow ribbons in their right ears to help scientists track them. Attaching the ribbons was a major project for federal and pro- vincial game experts who had to . Catch 112 animals in the middle of a northern lake to tag them. However, they reported the haz- ardous job was a complete suc- cess. Miss Maple Left in world beauty competition didn’t at: tract Miss Irene Dobler, 21- old Hungarian artist. Irene won “the title—she is being crowned | in this picture—but she gave it up apparently at the wish of her boy friend. OTTAWA (CP) As cold | weather unemployment starts| again, a means of cutting down) the so-called hard core of Cana-| broached the idea to Labor Min-| day, dian jobles; is being plugged) ister Starr, since it might involve; Washington for talks with Pres- quietly by the head of Canada’s! unemployment insurance mission. Chairman J. G. Bisson’s pian| won't have a quick payoff, but in the long run it could have the) effect of fitting workers into jobs for which they ordinarily would not be qualified, thereby easing unemployment. Mr. Bisson has the simple idea that people drawing unemploy- ment insurance would be better off getting educated for new jobs instead of just sitting around and cashing weekly cheques. Many of these, workers can never go back to their old jobs. This is because automation or other factors may have erased} the jobs. eo GETS SUPPORT Why not, says Mr. Bisson, edu- cate them for new jobs while they are collecting unemployment in- surance benefits? Compulsion Is Eased In Hospital Insurance Some alleviation of the collec- tion of Hospital Insurance pre- miums from disignated collector groups has been authorized by the Island’s new Progressive- Conservative government. In a statement released to the press yesterday afternoon Pre- mier W. R. Shaw said that some made | to the present regulations. These | changes were designed to relieve ; the matter of compulsory deduc- tions in collector groups to some extent, Mr. Shaw added. “Where strong ' objection is taken to compulsory deductions, at certain organizational levels, a member may avoid such deduc- tions by a direct payment in ad- vance policy,”’ he said. SUCCESS NOTED The government had ascertain- ed that the plan was going for- ward in a very successful man- ner with a large percentage of insurable persons already _re- corded, the Premier added. The Premier also informed the press that the provincial secret- ary, Hon. J. David Stewart and the provincial treasurer, Hon. Melvin J. McQuaid this coming week would confer in Montreal with banking authorities and sec- urities oficials in connection with the financial afairs of the Pro- vnce. “These discussions, will pro- bably embrace plarts covering future action on fiscal maters, he said Premier Shaw also intimated certain changes would be forth- coming in the operation of the} department of agriculture which is also under his personal juris- diction. NEW APPROACH At a recent meeting of the en- tire staff the work of each ‘mem- ber was reviewed and discussed iand it was decided that from inow on a special effort will be made to carry the departmental services out to the farm people in all parts of the Province, he said. “This is the chief function of the department,”’ Mr. Shaw stat- ed. “In this connection all ex- tension personnel have been ask- ed to prepare for organizational work to contact our farm people in groups as well as on an. in- dividual basis.” WHERE-TO-FIND-IT Announcements, notices . 12 Births, deaths, etc., .. 2, 12 Classified section 10, 11, 12 Comics, features .......... 9 Charlottetown news ...... 5 ON rch cw beweecas 4 Finance, markets ........ 3 Island news ....... “cme MS 5.255 pds cekeeh yi 8 Women’s page 6,7 Late reports from Guardian mews bureaus in Summer- side, Montague, Alberton and Souris, and from special cor- respondents now appear on the Island News Page. (See Story On Page 5) Fails Again New Work Education Plugged For Winter === He has been looking for ideas along this line from his staff across the country, and also has | legislation. com- Continued on page 5 Col. 2 don, Bonn and Cairo. ~~ - wo Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” ie \TOWN, CANADA, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1959 Clear with little » in temperature, northwest winds 15. Lew-high at lottetown 45 and 65. . ~ 12 PAGES ee ee * yon PM Succumbs To Wounds COLOMBO, Ceylon (AP)— Prime Minister Solomon Bandar- anaike died today from bullet wounds inflicted Friday by an assassin clad in the robes of a Buddhist monk. The death announcement came after a report said the prime minister spent a restful night. Bandaranaike, 60, was struck by three .45-calibre bullets in the attack- at his private bungalow at Roomead Place, Colombo's|- most luxurious residential area. The bullets damaged the liver, spleen and one arm of the frail British-educated prime minister. After the shooting, Bandara- naike forgave his -attacker and appealed for compassion for ‘this foolish man.’ Bandaranaike then underwent | five hours of corrective surgery, but after the operation a medi- cal bulletin had reported him still gravely ill. ASSASSIN CAUGHT i The assassin was shot in one knee by a sentry and captured. Bandaranaike, a champion of Ceylonese independence from Britain, had led this island na- tion into the Asian neutral bloc. He took power in April 1956 on a wave of Sinhalese communalism, ee Buddhist revivalism and militant; hostility to western ways of liv- ing. “Want to know where I come from?’’ seems to be the question fired at the photograp- her by youthful 4-H Chb Direction of the government hanayake. The prime minister appointed him Thursday to take over during Bandaranaike’s ab- sence abroad. Governor - General Sir Oliver Goonetilleke proclaimed a state of emergency. He called for “absolute peace and calm” throughout this richly endowed Commonwealth land of 10,000,000. Army, navy and air force reserves were . mobilized and processions wer By MARVIN L. ARROWSMITH before Bandaranaike was to leave CAMP» DAVID, Md. (AP)—| for New York to address the! President Eisenhower and Pre-| Khrushchev flew to the mier United Nations General Assem- | iehtingueied exest of a Mary | land Mountain Friday night for a fast start on their crucial cold war talks. The president and the el leader, both in a jovial mood, blf. After a speech there Tues-| he was to have gone to |ident Eisenhower and on to Lon- ‘MOST SERIOUS CRISIS’ rived at Camp David at 6: 33 p.m. ADT by helicopter after a 35-minute flight from the White Coal Crisis Deepens NS. Premier Warns HALIFAX (CP) — The Nova Scotia coal industry, hounded by competition from other fuels, faces a crisis perhaps more seri- ous than any other. “The industry is apparently losing much of the Quebec market to natural gas,” said Premier Robert L. Stanfield in a statement Friday night. crisis facing our coal has deepened.” There was .«o note of optimism. The premier said, however, that) a conference of interested parties| will be held at a convenient date| “to discuss this emergency: In Sydney, Mines Minister E. A. Manson who was conferring with union and company officials, said the conference would be held Oct. 9. Mr. Manson described .the situ ation as “the most-severe crisis the industry has ever encoun- tered.” He said the Quebec Nat- ural Gas Company .was reaching “every major coal - burning in- dustry in western Quebec.” CHEAPER FUEL, Harold Gordon, chief of Dom- inion Steel~and Coal Corporation coal operations, said Quebec Na-] ‘ tural Gas ‘is offering its product at 30 cents a thousand cubic feet. This meant coal would have to be landed in Montreal at the ‘‘im- possible’ price of $8 a ton. The figure now is about $11. Mike Comments On Causeway OTTAWA CP)—The people of Prince Edward Island are in for a disappointment over promises of a causeway to link the island with the mainiand, Opposition Leader Pearson said. Friday. He was asked by delegates at the national convention of the Young Liberal Federation of Can- ada for his views on the promises by Rrogressive Conservatives in the recent P.E.I. election that the causeway will be built. “P.E.I. will be~ disillusioned about Conservative promises on that,"” Mr. Pearson said. The federal Conservatives had stg = be build it if elected but afier almost three years in power still were saying the matter had to be studied further. 7 “The| —s House grounds in Washington They went immediately to Eis enhower’s rustic lodge, named Aspen, and it was announced they would get down to brass- tacks talks around the dinner table this evening. Both Eisenhower and his guest chatted and jcked through an in- terpreter as photographers lodge. The coal chief, who has fought} Khrushchev, wearing a_ light to keep the tottering industry on! grey suit and his medals, was sound economic ground through/|first out of the b ~« limousine which brought them to the lodge | Continued on page 5 Col. 2 Peter, a Labrador Retriever, says goodbye to a. friend who is leaving Vancouver for other parts. The dog is owned by Stanley Park zoo curator Alan Best, and the deer is being snapped pictures in front of the) YOUTH CONCENTRATING a sets - up a map in conrection the Rural in case momber.. Mark Gallant as he with a display. at { Youth Fair. Just IN JOVIAL MOOD Crucial Cold War Talks Are At Mountain Retreat from a. nearby heliport. U. 8.) |marines were on sentury duty) throughout the mountain camp. OTHERS ARRIVE Camp David, named for the; president’s grandson, is a sched- uled mountaintop retreat 65 miles | north of Washington. A few minutes in advance of the Eisenhower - Khryshchev ar- rival, State Secretary Christian A. Herter: UN Ambassador Henry} |Cabot Lodge, and Andrei Gromyo Soviet foreign ‘minister, arrived | in another helicopter. | Eisenhower, Khrushchev, Gro- myko and Herter will live at the main lodge until the talks on -| world problems end at noon Sun- Other top officials, both Rus- will live in | day. sian and American, nearby guest cabins. Khrushchev. than will return ito Washington, hold a press con- \ference, make a radio-TV speech and then leave for home Sunday} | night _ Before Joining Eisenhower at BEST OF FRIENDS MUST PART moved to a park at North Battleford because he has out- grown the children’s zoo at SOURIS BUREAU | OF THE GUARDIAN | Bad weather which has pre vented inshore fishing has clos- ed the East Pack packing piant and put 75 people out of work. The plant which packs a var-! iety of fish closed this week for the season because of the lack of raw material Stormy. weather and high winds have prevented inshore’ fishermen from going out to the! fishing grounds for 13 straight | days. | One fisherman who managed! to get his boat outside North Lake said mackerel were run- ning in large schools but the | high winds prevented him stay- ing very long as he found it too difficult to handle his boat: and ‘fish at the same time in the heavy seas. | However other fish plants in there is any doubt, that ultra | fine print jutting into the Gulf p Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP) — Canada is discussing with several countries what further United Nations ac- tion might or eould be taken to ease the situation in Laos. Informants said Friday no def- inite plan on what form UN as- sistance might take has emerged is the spot--North Rustico. land will pot, least until the : ‘ \ Ow fact finail missimt ia Laos j ce. Camp David, Khrushchev at-!has made its teport to the Se- tended a Washington luncheon! eurity Council. Communist forces with Herter and promised to)have rebelled in the Indochina te aaa with | kingdom and Laos has charged boring Communist Nort “We will do all we can in om| vat Home with i talks with the president to the) advantage of both sides and at] «we orem almost a = our return we will strive to im-| ’ ed upon, prove relations,” he said. would be ready and willing to Herter told the Soviet leader in| Send solders to Laos, whether.as a toast: “We also hope’ you will| UN observers as.in the case .of take back with you a good im-! Lebanon last year or as a con- pression of the United States, its|tingent in a UN emergency force people and way of life.” |similar to the one sent to Egypt Govt. Seen Interyening ‘As Steel Talks Collapse. NEW YORK (AP) — Fruitless | strike collapsed Friday. The negotiations in the 74-day steel | onions heightened the pos- oot sibility of government interven- tion to open the mills. The striking United ‘Stee]work- ers Union said it saw no point in continuing the talks as long as the industry insists on work re- | gulating concessions. The union says these are aimed at “union busting.”’ “We are going home,” nounced union president David. 4 McDonald. “This farcical filibus- ter . . . has ended.” The union is ready to resume talks if it receives from the in- dustry ‘‘an honest offer worthy | of consideration by self-respect- ing steel workers,"” McDonald said. Asked if the union would re- sume talks if the government re- quests it, he replied: “We have never resisted a call of our government. But We see no sense in coming back to New | York City. The seat of the gov- ernment is in Washington. The seat of the Steel industry is in Pittsburgh.”’ More than 500,000 steelworkers, ‘| plus tens of thousands of work- ers in related industries, have been made idle since the strike began July 14, ' New Circulation ra The rate for six month three months. In the eight years material and equipme! Stanley Park. The parting gift. and the act of giving, was caught by an altert camerman. ° ‘change in rates. ; lander” Canada Ex ced by The Guardian effective Monday, tember '28. The new charge to subscribers re- ceiving The Guardian by mail is $11. per year, 75 Souris People Are Idle As Weather Stops Fishing Eastpack Plant Closes For Year Souris which depend on the catch of deep sea draggers for fillets and quick-freeze fish pro- ducts have been working over- time in the last week. ° One of the newest additions to the Souris dragger fleet, “‘Ice- docked this week with 75.000 pounds of hadddck. Cat- | ches of 50,000 pounds of cod and haddock have been landed by other draggers last week to keep the filleting and freezing plants working overtime. ° Spokesmen for the Eastpack company say that when the in- shore fishermen do get out to fish again, the fresh mackerel will be shipped by truck direct to American and Canadian mar- kets. The Eastpack cannery usually continued operations until the | first week in December in other years. Of Laos in 1956 sand still stationed there, An observer team is considered the more likely possibility rather than an emergency force equip- ped ‘with small arms. In any event, it is possible that Canada would be excluded from any such task because of its oe on the three - Pim | atioital imissica of is, "aneek withdra 14 montis ago when it that the political situation in Laos ° was stable. The other two members on the commission were India and Po- land. The commission was es tablished in 1954 after the Geneva conference of that year arranged truces in Laos, Viet Nam and Cambodia. The commission is still serving in Viet Nam and Cam bodia. In the UN General Assembly Thursday, External Affairs Mite ister Green asked: “‘Should the UN not now find a way to express its continuing interest in Laos?” He added: “‘Such an approach, if it were welcome to Laos, could make a most valuabie eontribu- tion to stability. We, for our part, have come to the view that some appropriate and continuing ex- pression of UN concern is desir able, not only in the interest of the people of Laos but also in the general interest of world peace and security.” Asked a press conference ta elaborate _this statement, Mr. Green said was thinking of action similar to but not identical with the UN force in Egypt. He said a UN ‘“‘presence”’ might be established in Laos in some what the same wax that this was done in Jordan last summer, ee Rail Traffic Seen Ending SAINT JOHN, N.B. (CP)—Dis- continuance of passenger rail service between Saint John. Bos- ‘ton and intermediate points in Maine appeared possible Friday. The Maine Central and the Bangor and Aroostook railroads are expected to seek permission from the Mainé public utilities commission this month to aban- don all passenger service in Maine. Approval of ‘the application would end the direct line pas senger link between Saint John and Maine points and thus the Saint John-Boston run. Freight traffic would not be aia GUARDIAN ANNOUNCES CHANGE IN MAIL RATE tes have been announ- Sep- s is $6 and $3.50 for ‘since the last change was made in basic circulation charges, total production costs havé more than doubled. The increases in payroll costs, as well as those for nt, have been ° parti- cularly heavy for morning newspapers such as The Guardian and have caused the present —_