Riggs at ragone ere editors ong tl apecie ate k | STR Storm - Brings Officer Resignation French-speaking Canadians cele- brating their defeat at the hands of English on the Plains of Abra- ham “is against common sense {{ Candidates Named By Nild. Labor Party By IAN MACDONALD Canadian Press Staff Writer ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP)—The Newfoundland Democratic Party, formed recently by the Newfound- jand Federation of Labor with a partial list of 11 candidates for the Aug. 20 provincial election. Ten candidates were named at morning press conference called by four members of the NEL’s political action committee. linternational Woodw orkers of America (CLC) organizer Jack McCool was named to contest St. tharbe later in the day. M. K. Pritchett, who operates a store at Little Brook, Nfid., was | the only candidate not directly connected with the labor move- ment. He will seek election in Bonavista North. Other candidates include NFL president Larry Daley, St. John’s Centre; provincial CCF leader Esau Thoms, Placenia East; Cyril Strong, West Newfoundland CLC representative; Burin, and IWA organizer M. C. (Hank) Skinner, Green Bay. __@PPOsE HANDLING \ The party said in its platform statement it would oppose the fed- eral government's handling of the Ginancial terms of Confederation. “This matter must be one for proper negotiation, not one-sided decisions by either the Newfound- land or the federal government.” Mr. Daley told reporters the party does not think the present Liberal administration has tack- led Term 29 negotiations “in the right manner.” “We realize you cannot call oep- ple names while negotiating terms. I’ve talked to people in various departments in Ottawa who are afraid to talk to (Pre- mier) Smallwood because he Tr embarass them the next iv. WHERE-TO-FIND-IT Announcements, notices 15 Births, death etc., 2, 15 Classified section 4, 15 Cemics, features ........ 13 Church notices ...... 3 Charlottetown news ...... 5 MONE fo k cence 4 Finance, markets . & Island news ............ 2,3 NONE oss cass i vem tecdd 10, 11 Women’s page ........ 6.7 council of the Quebec City Society reversed its earlier support for fits president's plans and an eerie it would in no way take any ceremony marking the Sept. 13, 1759 battle. The St. Jean-Baptiste Society, French-speaking est patriotic group, is organized amet eet . “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, FRIDAY, AUGUST 7, 1959. re lf st a it alti i 7 ri fee HUB : Hl ‘ eg vy ee Hp | first Teal Fast Diagnoses een By BILL RAWLINS KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Suppose a mysterious infection has you down and the doctor isn’t sure what's wrong. Maybe one of the wonder drugs will help. The doctor will take a newly developed testing kit in his own office to find out quickly just the wonder drug, or antibiotic, to get you back on your feet. Take another example: An epi- demic spreads through your child’s school and your doctor has never before come across anything like it. That testing kit again may show him which anti- biotic to use. In neither case will the kit show the doctor what is wrong, but both times it should show him what to do. Each test may take as little as 30 minutes, and the doctor will need no medical laboratory or trained technicians. SENSITIVITY TEST ‘The testing kit, called a sensi- tivity test, was developed by a young Knoxville bacteriologist. Sensitivity tests go, hand \- in- hand with antibiotics. This is be- New Labor Law Asked WASHINGTON (AP) — Presl- dent Eisenhower called Thursday night for new labor legislation “to protect the American people from the gangsters, racketters and other corrupt elements that have invaded the labor -manage- ment field.” With Antibiotics Test to the germs themselves. Municipal Affair Dent. Is Advocated By sha if i i lif i : # af il Hi 7 Meany called for passage of a rival bill which he said is aimed at getting nd of crooks, instead! ment issues each week by means of getting rid of unions.” Com: ‘ssion a F. COMMONS IS HOUSE CLEANED Parliament cleaned up its bus-| ed off for a rest. Now workmen chamber in preparation for next iness a few weeks ago and knock-'are cleaning up the commons — Mikely to gr eee OTTAWA (CP) — The continu- in a steady five-week Meany said Thursday night a labor bil!| rise—an upswing which has re- flected the relative tightness of D in-| money available for short-term flict grievous harm on ail unions” | lending. The bank rate is geared at one- quarter of one per cent above the average yield of 91 - day treasury bills which the govern- of sealed-bid tenders. This week the average yield—the effective i | MINISTER USES - '|PULPIT DUMMY SYDNEY, Australia (Reut- A ventri louist'’s " dumeng named Cedric will a sermon im a Methodist Church Sunday. The dummy will sit in the of Rev. Jack Leonard and ‘address a congregation suburban Lindfield ui 1 ventriloquist who has: peared on television, said the sermon will be in a question- and-answer form with him ’ asking serious questions and Cedric answering “‘some- cause bacteria builds up immuni- ties to penicillin, aureomycin and other antibiotics, just as your own system builds up immunities External affairs minister Green uses of atomic energy when they and the high commissioner for/ signed an agreement in Ottawa. Australia pledged their countries /Left to right are Fred T. Hom- te cooperation is the peaceful ex, first secretam at the Ano interest ‘rate—was 5.73 per cent. However, there were other bids which showed that at least some money was available for loan for 91 days for as little as 5.47 per cent. 6 This level of interest is the pro- duct of two main factors: A con- tinuing strong demand for loans in the present period of rapid economic expansion, and the cen- tral bank’s apparent desire to avoid an inflationary expansion in the supply of money in the eountry. MORE GENERAL LOANS Figures issued Thursday showed that the general loans by chartered banks had risen by $180,000,000 in the four weeks up to July 29. At that date they totalled $5,039,000,000 — some $820,000,000 than a r earlier. To meet this dema r loans the banks have had to off ATOM PACT WITH AUSTRALIA tralian high commission; Maj.- Gen. Sir Walter Cawthorn, high commissnoner; J. ¥. Gren- supply. July 1 and July @ the money supply changed relatively slightly,. increasing to $13,373,- 000,00 from $13,308,000,000. This is virtually unchanged from po level reached last October follow- president and general manager Revived Fire Poses Threat ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP) — The resources department Thursday had received no new word on a revived forest fire which last] % week forced 345 people to tempor, ary evacuate their homes at Baie] » Verte on the Burlington Penin- sula. General superintendent Hedley Baggs of Bowater’s Newfound- land Pulp and Paper Company woods division said the fires “pose a threat to fhe entire pen- insula, and to the“livelihood of everyone there.” “Unless we have rain and lots] of it the peninsula is likely to be- come one solid mass of flame.” Mr. Baggs is directing operations at Baie Verte. ‘ Canada Bank Interest Rate Soars To All Time i ill of the Toronto - Dominion Bank, ae since October “(Gomtinned Oh Page % Cal. 3) VANCOUVER (CP)—Two men died and six others were injured Thursday in a threealarm fire that swept through three tene- DR. J. 8S. BONNELL Talk On Forum ‘Halts Vacation Rev. Dr. John Sutherland Bon- ‘nell, Island-born pastor of New York’s Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church, interrupted his annual vacation here to return briefly to New York to take a promin- ent part in a forum at Madison Square Garden, July 28. The forum was sponsored by the leading life insurance imsti- tutes and conventions in the United States and was heard by a@ solidly packed Garden audi- ence. Also taking part with Dr. Bon- nell were such outstanding Uni- ted States personalities as Hon. Ivy Baker Priest, Treasurer of the United States; Dr. Detlev W. Bronk, president; Nationa! Acadamy of Sciences; Frederick R. Kappel, president, American Telephone and Telegraph Com- pany; and Holgar J. Johnson, president, Institute of Life In- “Staged on “Industry Day’’ dur- ing the huge life. insurance con- ee the Forum was design- surance to The Nation”’. on, treaties section, external af- the | fairs department; and Mr. Green. «CP Photo) Housing Plan Is Proposed _ \At Co-op Meet add greatly to the economic stability of the province as & whole. Reid Two Men Perish In 3-Alarm Fire ment buildings on the edge of Vancouver’s Chinatown. Fire department authorities de scribed as a “death trap” block in which the buildings were sit- i i 5 i Z ti 4 ; u ; ‘i EAitee tf ai ; 43 They were taken to hospital with cuts, bruises and shock suffered in escaping from the bui'dings. women with children, three burning buildings and two nearby houses that were endan- gered. The fire broke out shorily be fore 5 am. in a two- storey wooden building -housing a num- ber of suites and rooms. Flames quickiy spread to buildings ad- joining on either side. me Cost Of Sonic Boom Is Told OTTAWA ‘CP) — A Unitea States Air Force jet fighter caused upwards of $50.000 dam- age when it cracked the sound i over Uplands Airport Wednesday, it was authoritatively estimated Thursday: Scores of plate glass windows in the new $6,000,000 Ottawa Air shattered when the Lockheed F-104A broke through the sonic barrier as it made a oe pass over the airport. The plane—an early model of coming here from Westover Air . Bonnell, who is noted for Force Base, Mass., for a demon- stration Thursday. heduled an exterior largely of gisse, life insurance to will reaps Biggest) | the moral structure ef the Uni-cause of the supersonic blast anid tee donertraent ef transport.