a | TELEPHONE 8506 Buyer meets seller with Guardian Want _A*s. Dial 8506 ask for classified ad taker, for quick results, ‘ town 55 and 75, . “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” ; VOL. LXXII NO. 221 cones oe tet Clase tad ae CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, ‘TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1959 14 PAGES ee FIVE CENTS 2” Motorcycle policemen sur- Pounded Nikita Khruschev’s au- Correspondent Explains Pearkes ‘Blimp’ Remarks OTTAWA (CP)—Charles Lynch, Parliamentary press gallery cor- respondént for the Southam Newspapers, said Monday an “‘in- eomplete’’ Canadian Press report -gave a mistaken impression of -femarks he made about Defence Minister Pearkes. CP, im a- Sunday report from Atherley, Ont., quoted Mr. Lynch as saying to the annual confer- “ence of Ontario Young Profres- sive Conservatives that the min- In a statement Monday Mr. _Lynch said that, to the best of his. recollection, what -he said! ‘was “that every time I sat down to write a story about defence, it seemed to'come out that George Pearkes was an ass.” “T said he had many things him — externally, he ap- pears' to have the personaty of a Colonel Blimp, to think like Colonel Blimp to talk like him, and look like him. In addition, he g@ppears to be too old for the job. COPS PROTECT KHRUSHCHEV OTHER CIRCUMSTANCES “But there were other circum-| tomobile as the Soviet Premier rode from Benn Station to the Waldrof Hotel in New York. stances that led me to refrain from blaming all the inadequa- cies of our defence policy on Mr. Pearkes, who has a good mind, handles himself well in the House fof Commons) and in talking to the press and who, despite the ex- ternal evidence, is not in fact al . > .aian Press Staff Writer LONDON CP)—Canada is to ask Britain and other -sterling area countries to sweep away re- maining dollar import restric- tions as a part of a program to expand Commonwealth trade. The demand is to be made by Finance . Minister Fleming some time during the two-day confer- ence .of the Commonwealth eco- nomic consultative council start- ing today. British sources say, however, that Britain likely will adopt a wait-and-see attitude, deferring any decision until after the forth- coming general election. the Canadian government feels the dollar import relaxations’ an- nounced by Britain last May did not go far enough. This scene was along Sth Street. (AP Wirephoto) mier Khrushchev said Russia is scrapping 90 per cent of its cruisers and is concentrat- ing on submarines, torpedo boats and mine sweepers. _ Khrushchev reported this as he aboard the U.S. Coast Guard cut-| ter Resham during the start of his morning visit. In gay good humor, he said at one time ‘‘we now are catching herring with our submarines.” Cruisers being scrapped, he said, blimp at all” Mr. Lynch said the only re porter present was a Toronto Globe and Mail correspondent and that his story “included some qualifying statements of mine which were not picked up by Canadian Press." Execution Of Officers Stifs Demonstration By FAROUK NASSAR DAMASCUS Syria (AP)—Radio Damascus said Monday the ex- ecution of 13 Iraqi army officers at Baghdad Sunday touched off a demonstration against Premier Abdel Karim Kassem’s govern- ment. It said huge crowds protested the shootings as a massacre and feelings against the Kassem re gime were heated to the point of CNR Cuts Train Fares tes Level 0 Gas Rou MONTREAL’*— Canadian Na- tional Railways, in one of the big- gest gambles in its passenger traffic history is about to launch an all-out assault on the huge im ter-city autotravel market, us ing off-season reduced prices and all-inclusive packages as the am- munition. By offering revolutionary price plans with a double appeal —eco- momy and Gonvenience — Cana- dian National is betting that a sizeable portion of the long-dis- tance auto travelling public can | be persuaded to leave their cars| PACKAGE FARE rb aot Effective October ! rail coach | fares for groups of two.or more persons, on all Canadian lines, are being sliced to ‘“‘gas-routes”’ levels. In addition, convenient package fares for individuals or groups, scluding all rail expens- es— right down to tips — are being offered for. all clases of travel on Transcontinental lines. The two plans offer major sav- 4» The precedent-shaking ‘project was sparked by an intensive mar- ket survey of Canadian travel habits and attitudes conducted over the past year by Canadian National Railways’ market re- ‘search office. The survey confirm- ed that the railways’ top competi- tion in passenger traffic was the private automobile. Of the Can- adian travel market which amounts to about 35 million trips a year of 100 miles or more, the automobile has captured 75 per- cent, predominantly in groups. About 11 percent of such trips} are made by rail, the remainder | by bus or plane. The survey indicated that eco- nomy fares and the inclusion of transportation, meals, berths, and tips in a single package price would be the best ways of win- ming passengers to the railways. The two new plans .are tailored to the expressed wishes of travel- ling Canadians and provide just | about the ultimate for an increas\ ingly cost-conscious public. Both plans may also be used in junction with the “Go now — % | adults travelling together, to over con- | quiring meal sefvice pays seven pay Lpercent. later” plan recently inaugurated by CNR. This is how they will work: 1. Group economy fares: avail- able for groups of two or more — not confined to the same fam- ily — going and returning to gether, round-trip coach class only. The fares are good anywhere in Canada where the normal round-trip coach fare is five dol- lars or more (1.E., between points at least_7142 miles apart). Under this plan the savings range up from 17 percent for each of two 26 percent for each of three adults, and over 37 percent for each of four of more adults in a group. 60-DAY LIMIT The plan has a 60-day limit and includes stop-over priviléges and the normal free baggage allow- ance. 2. Allinclusive package plan: covers transportation, meals, sleeping accommodation and tips. It applies to travel on Trans-Con- tinental trains. Al igélusive fares have a 60- day lififf*’’good for ‘continuous passage. Where stop-overs are de- sired a combination of fares over stop-ovg points will apply. Individuals’; may use the all- inclusive plan for one-way or round-tripetravel, in first, tourist, or coach class. Children between the ages of five and 12 pay % percent of the adult package fare and children under five requir- ing meal service pay seven per- cent of the adult fare. RETURN TRIPS Groups may take the all-inclus- ive plan for return trips only, for groups of two or more going and returniong together, in all classes of travel. Savings are similar to those for the group economy fares the reduction being based on the individual round-trip package price. Children between the ages of five and 12 pay 40 per cent of the individual ftound-trip package price ,and a child under five re- * per cent ready to be-—commis- sioned into the Soviet navy. Khrushchev showed a bit of temper when. a® Soviet reporter understood him to say Russia is building the biggest navy in the world. “I did not say that,” he snap Per <<“tin 1% <= 969 ihc ot eo - ae 9S Zr <0 a sau mo goo” - v -aVE OANCIA Ae = ci ces Red China ; ‘ SUMMERSIDE BUREAU | OF THE GUARDIAN A bitter battle which at one stage threatened to split the coun- cil wide open, raged here last night when the town council held its September meeting. The trouble-causing issue was. whe- ther churches, church halls and St. Mary's Convent should be taken out of the general—service rate class for electricity and put on a domestic rate basis. Russian Cruisers Will Be Scrapped SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Pre-! Monday | sailed—down San Francisco Bay | include some that are 957 Prince Asked To Open Road OTTAWA (CP)—Prince Philip has told Mayor George Nelms in a letter that ‘if it is possible” explosion. Arab nationalists in Baghdad were reported to have kept their shops and business places closed in ‘‘mourning over a new group of martyrs.” There was no confirmation in dispatches from Baghdad. The story released through Ir- aqi cénsorship was: that specta- tors, cheered when firing squads felled the 13 and hangmen exe cuted four civilians as enemies of | the government. : Radio Damascus {s the Syrian} voice of the United Arab Repub- lic. The U.A.R. has been feuding with Iraq since Kassem’s troops crushed a nationalist revolt in Mosul last March. REGISTRATION IS 85 TO 90 P.C. the opening of the Queensway, a $31,000,000 cross-town highway. The letter, the contents which were revealed Monday by Mr. Nelms, was in reply to an invitation sent the prince “after highway during his July 1 ‘Visit to the capital accompanying Queen Elizabeth on her Canadian tour. Hospital Insurance Plan Covers Most Islanders © Between 85 and 90 percent of | people “whose income varies the Island’s population are regis- | greatly both to amount and reg- tered under the hospital insurance | erence ete ee ene plan, Dr. Lemuel E. Prowse, told |% the Rotary Club at its noon lum cheon yesterday. | Employee groups cover some} 35,000. Collector groups 28,500 and pay-direct applicants 29,000 the doctor revealed. y This totals 92,500 or some 92.5 percent of the province’s popula- tion but’ Dr. Prowse expla‘med there may be some duplication im the regjstration and “I have quoted you the lower figure just to be sure.” Employee groups and collector groups are registered onaa manda- tory basis. The employée group covers the group where-a sal- ary deduction is made, regularly because their income is spread regularly through the year, he The collector group has a wide variety of payments. Some are on an annual basis, some semi- annually and some on a quarter- ly basis. The classification is made for those who receive most of their income once or twice & year, it was explained. The pay-direct group WHERE-TO-FIND-IT Announcements, notices . 13 Births, deaths, etc., .. 2, 13 Classified section .... 13, 14 Comics, features .......- 11 Charlottetown news ...... 5 Editorials ihesic ce Finance, markets ........ 13 Island MEWS .....20-000- 2,3 GE 5 i indice craces 8, 9 Women’s page ........- 6,7 Late reports from Guardian news bureaus in Summer- side, Montague, Alberton and Souris, and from special cor- ents now appear on the ‘Island News Page. The first art gallery in the Atlantic provinces, the $3,000,- 000 Beaverbrook Aft Gallery in Fredericton was given.to the | HALIFAX (CP)—Nearly 1,000 he will be in Ottawa in 1962 for |telephone call during the noon jlunch period. Students still in } |elass rooms left, the building# or- of | derly when a_ fire bell fe A | boys’ gym class had-to go. home he expressed keen interest in the | It was an old battleground for ped. “If I said that {it would sound like some sort of threat.” Well, why isn’t Russia building the biggest fleet in the world, a reporter asked “Tell us what the strength of your navy is_and-I'll tell you whether we are stronger — but you'll say we were bragging.” Later, Georgi Zhukov, Russia’s minister for cultural with foreign countries, told re porters the premier was not jok- ing about catching herring with submarines. Russia now is operating a sub- marine called the Silveranka| which—searches underneath the | sea for herring. Bomb Scare Hoax Repeats Students. at St. Patrick’s High School were ordered out of the school Monday while police inves- tigated their ninth bomb scare here in a week. Police received an anonomous the in their shorts, They were not |given time to don street clothes. Earlier Ronald Frank Riardan, 119, of Halifax pleaded guilty in | police court to a charge of public |mischief. He was remanded until i Thursday for sentencing. exchange | -rates which they had to overcome. ‘Life Learned council as.# was the third time | the issue was raised and the third | time Councillor Fred Arsenault | had seconded the motion made by Councillor Robert Dewar. | At the request of Mayor Currie | all councillors spoke to the ques- tion with—only Councillor ‘W.E. MacCausland opposing. Mayor Currie. himself strongly the motion and later in the midst of heated debate, stated flatly he had legal advice’ and if coun- iors persisted he would exercise favoring the resolution just. as flatly, told the Mayor if he did not want to take the responsibility to put somebody else in the chair. “We are not going to have a stumbling block here tonight,” he stated. The-mayor made no move and Councillor Dewar asked him if he refused to leave the chair. Mayor Currie said he did refuse to leave as “T am against break- ing our regulations and putting future councils on the spot.’’ He suggested giving the chiurches | and other institutions mentioned a | grant but pleaded with council | councillor here will regret it’’. TOO MANY RATES_ He-had earlier pointed out that three years ag council had found itself faced with a multiplicity of Councillors generally opposed the use of “demand” meters for the institutions and mention was made of -one church holding a tea and. its electricity bill was over sixty dollams for the one night. ‘ Councillor Ernest Morrison said he had been in the plant on Sun- @ay nighis amd found mp great demand for energy. He thought this was becapse most people were in church and not using elec- (Continued on page 3 Col. 2) - Red's Family not to upset the rates ‘or every || ld oil So ee cl That’s a 16-inch cucumber 23-month-old Karen Stewart is holding so proudly. I grew The cream of the Island's Juni- or Holsteins are Massachuessetts: this week, along with other Maritime Hols‘éins, SAN FRANCISCO (AP)—Amer- jican officials traveling with So- viet Premier Khrushchev think they finally have his complicated family relationships figured out. They say Khrushchev and Nina, his present wife, have been married since the 1920s instead of about 1933 as had been reported. And far from being childless as indicated until recently, she and Khrushchev actually have three children. The are Rada, about blonde wife of Alexei Adzhubei, editor of the Soviet newspaper Iz- vestia: a son, Sergei, 24, and a 21-year-old daughter, Yelena, who is ~w—-Moscow studying law at Moscow University. The two other Khrushchev chil- dren, by his first wife who died, are Julia, in her 40s, wife of the | ularity."” They are on a quarterly (Continued on page 3 Col. 2) | people of New Brunswick by Lord Beaverbrook, Canadian- born English punlisher. Here Lord Beaverbrook looks a BEAVERBROOK’ ty in the Second World Wr. — ERS ee dae * » S GALLERY GIFT Kreighoff’s “Merrymaking” {a Canadian section. He pur- the painting for $25,000;~ hi price ever paid for a 29, | |heifer that won the three-year Kiev Opera House director, and | é E ) Leonid, a pilot killed in combat|She is Diamond Hill Milady, ‘bred by Oswald J. Newson and LIE ONE RN eI PSNR ne Ne in an exposition against the best | Black and Whites in the Eastern | United States. Four animals are competing from this province. All of them were winners at the Provincial Exhibition here in August. Three of them were Junior champion- shin ribbon winners. F.L. Kismet Jr. and Abecweit |Adorn are representing the Bun- jbury Farm herd of the estate |J. Walter Jones. Kismet was junior champion male and Adorn was reserve junior champion female. Faleonwood Farm has Glengale ion female at the exhibition here in August, The other: Island exhibit is a lold dry class at the exhibition, SEE MY CUCUMBER up the fence in the garden of | back from a visit of grandfather her gramd-parents’ Mr. and ' and grandmother. Island Jr. Holsteins Show At Springfield n Springfield, | |Anthony Jane, the junior champ- | Re Reds Stress Lawful Rights , By JOSEPH MacSWEEN Canadian Press Staff Writer | UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (CP) *& The China question brought the United States and Russia into col- lision in the. United Nations Mon day, the U.S. denouncing the Pek- 4 ing governgent as an outlaw re- ~ | gime whose admission would de- 3 | base UN st dards. 3 The Soviet spokesman was care- _ |ful to echo the words of Premier Khrushchev: who demanded the ~ admittance of Communist China a | to the UN-—and the exclusion of Nationalist China--when he ad dressed the General Assembly ~ . | last Friday. "——~—~~ In Monday's assembly debate, Soviet deputy foreign minister | Vasily Kuznetsov quoted Khrush- | chev ‘and declared it was ‘intoler | able” that Red China, one of the _ | biggest powers in the world, had ee | year after year been deprived of = | its “lawful rights” im the UN. Walter Robertson, former 1S. | assistant state secretary, accused Peking of inflicting mass murder | | and slavery on its own people, He f | urged support of a U.S. proposal that the assembly shelve for an- other year the China membership issue. Said Robertson: UPHOLD STANDARDS “Shall we stand fast and re- tas Ll ards or shall we take the step— the truly irrevocable step—of de basing the standards of the UN Mrs. A.H. Stewart of George- (‘0 allow this or any other regime town. Karen is the daughter of to shoot its way into the UN Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Alister | Simply because its guns were powerful?” Stewart of Charlottetown, just . Steering a middie course, be- tween the two great-power anta- gonists .was Foreign Minister Frank Aiken of the Republic of Ireland, who called for a full- dress debate on the China ques tion but also urged that the UN condemn excesses br tha Peking government, Nationalist Chinese delegate ¥, F, Tsiang said the admission of the rival government would mean the General Assembly had acted to complete international commu- nism’s conquest of the mainland, ,Son_ of Kingston and owned now and to -implement the will of by Ceéil Stewart of Hampshire. Khrushchev who wanted to ‘bury (Continued on page 3 Col. 2) | the world.” APPEAL IS LIKELY Ath Queens Recount Gives Smith Margin An appeal to the Supreme , regularities” at some of the Court was regarded as likely | polls on election day, one of Mr. here last night following the re ee s legal advisors sug- sult yesterday of the recount in | } . : An appeal ean he made withia t "t Vistric j : he Fourth District of Queen's | 1o dave of volline das Provincial Election returns. ; It is understood the appeal Harold Smith, Liberal candi-| would be based on “alleged. it date, who was credited with @| regularities” at certain polls. 22-vote majority over his Pro- gressive Conservative opponent, Wellington MacNeill, on Declar- ation Day, saw his margin slic- | ed by eight votes in the recount to give him a majority of 14. The appeal may be made within 40 days of the holding of the poll The only changes recorded yesterday were in the Avondale and Caledonia polls. Each can- didate lost a vote. Smith drop Smith polled a total of 1042 votes | one at Avondale and ce and MacNeill a total of 1028. lone at Caledonia. The results at At the opening of the recount, | these polls now stand, Avondale] which had been adjourned from | Smith 70, MacNeill 47: Caledonia, last Wednesday in order to sum- | Smith 60 and MacNeill 55 mon four deputy returning offi-| Represefting Mr. MacNeill cers and one poll clerk to ap- were Charles R. McQuait, G.R. pear, Judge St® Clair Trainor| Foster and Jack MacEachern, ruled that he had no jurisdiction fall of Charlottetown. J.0.C, to summon witnesses in connec-'Campbell and J.P. Nicholson, tion with the recount. | Charlottetown and Bruce Judscn, The appeal, if it develops,|Alexander, represented Mr. would be based on “‘alleged ir-! Smith. 15 Candidates Named For Iwo Byeiections By THE CANADIAN PRESS tives held Grenville - Dun (das Five candidates were aie | Ont.) and Springfield ®Man.), ated Monday to contest two t—}won Montmagny Islet ‘Que.) 5 byelections for seats in the from the Liberals and lost To- Commons. e ronto Trinity to the Liberals. * The Progressive Conservatives, Liberals and the CCF will bid for ;, VACANT BY DEATH traditionally-Liberal Russell, tak-| In Russell, made vacant by the ing in part of Ottawa and some death March 24 of Liberal J, adjacent county. Omer Gour, these candidates The two larger parties will | files nomination papers make the fight in Hastings-Fron- | Conservative Wilbur T. (Wib) tenac, eastern Ontario riding | Nixon. 45, insurance and real es made vacant by the death March | ate agent and former halfback 17 ‘of external affairs minister Sidney Smith. Big Four Foothall League. He These fifth and sixth byelee-/ was unsuccessful in the general tions since the Conservatives| elections of 1957 and 1958 gained a record majority in the| Liberal Paul Tardif, 49, a store Canadian painting. Main: em- /general election of March 31, |. manager who is a city controller phasis in the gallery is on | 1958, will be the first tests of | and also deputy mayor of Ottawa. English and Canadian art. strength since December. Denis Kalman, 33, COF candb (CP Photo) In the first four, the Conserva- | date who is a real estate agent. + ok ~ quire conformity to UN stand. . ~ ses Standards Debased Bitter Battle Seen. | In S'side Council - x with Ottawa Rough Riders of the” —