i aL Hct ne HS , a * “09 w, The Guerdian. Charlottetown, Mon., a t Metis SY Rion OS oe id TS FOUR CON GRATULATIONS Tune 15, 1958 Eastern Tour Is Underway kines (CP)—The nine-day , Tepresented in the tour include the United States, n, Australia and New Zealand, France, Ger- India, The Netheriands, . Turkey, Yu- goslavia, Argentina, Belgium, Co- Brazil, Denmark, Norway anc The group will spend Tuesday Bagotville, Que., visiting the RCAF station there as well as} the Aluminum Company of Can- ada. .The June 17-19 itinerary for Nova Scotia includes a tour of will spend the day before retura- - jing to Ottawa by RCAF aircraft. DEVELOPMENT PLAN “iparing a 56,563,000.000 frane (about $1,000,000,000) plan for the development 6f the Belgian Congo during the next 10 years, kt was ‘ reported Saturday. The new plau i is expected to be presented to Parliament next month, i will ‘jinvolve the spending of over 6,- | 009,000,000 francs (about $120,- 000,000) more than the Congo's first 10-year phan, which expire this year. Ontario Liberal leader John Wintermeyer gets simultaneous kisses from his four children ‘at his Kitchener, Ont., home after receiving news of his re-election fo the provincial legislature. They are, clockwise from lower left: Sarah; Mary Ellen; Jamie and John Jr. Besides personal vic- Things Are tory in the provincial general Happening Travel Bureau States By HAROLD MORRISON Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP) — “Things are happening in Canada this year.” This is the sales pitch of the federal government’s travel bu- reau as it seeKs to redress a Ca- nadian playgrounds and cities. “We've got-history in the mak- ing in Canada this year and this should help bring more people Canada,” says Alan Field, travel bureau director. “The two big events are the official opening of the St. Lawrence Seaway and the Royal Tour.” ISSUE TOUR PAMPHLET To publicize these, the bureau has already distributed 100,000 copies of a Royal Tour pamphlet, with a portrait of the Queen on the cover and showing details of the cross-country itinerary. Now in the making is a bigger, More expensive pamphlet on the seaway inviting Americans to “see the St. Lawrence Seaway through Canada.’ About 100,000 of these also will be distributed In the U.S. “Inquisies received here are at a record high,’ Mr. Field said. “Reservations at hotels are piling up. This hot weather should bring more and more Americans up North.” c Nevertheless, among Canadian {officials there was no certainty that Canada wouldn't again show a tourist deficit in 1959. Despite the bigger attractions in Canada, a lot of Canadians were spending their, tourist dollars elsewhere, mainly in American shopping centres. DEFICIT INCREASED In 1958, foreign tourist spending toyin Canada eased to $352,000,000 from $363,000,000 in 1957. But Ca- nadian spending abroad rose to a record $544,000,00 from $525,00,- 000. Thus Canada’s deficit in tourist trade increased to $192,000,000 from $162,000,000. The main factor was the U.S. attraction. U.S. spending in Can- ada slipped to $309,000.000 from $325,000,000, but Canadian spend- ing in the U.S. increased to $411,- 000,000 from $403,000,000. And so in 1958 the Canadian deficit in tourist trade with the U.S. swelled to $102,000,000 from $78,000,000. The big attraction for Cana- dians, authorities said, appeared to be advertisements showing that certain brand-name goods were lower in cost in the U.S. than in Canada. , “Seme Canadians just can’t seem to resist a good bargain,” one official said. Atom Powered Merchantman To Be Launched Next Month | CAMDEN, N.J. ‘AP) — Next month the world’s first atomic- yet knows. This much is known: The Savannah will election Thursday, RAIL LINKS Mr. Winter- meyer heads a strengthened op-| The first transcontinental. rail- position in the new House. His|way in the United States was party doubled its legislature re-|completed in 1869, and in Can- presentation to 22 seats. ada in 1885. ——— 18-Foot Seagoing Steel Tank By IAN MACDONALD Two boatloads of reporters anu Canadian Press Staff Writer (photographers accompanied Dio- ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. ‘CP)—The | genes to where she was picked up unwieldy 18-foot steel tank Dio-| by the Portuguese trawler, bound genes in which three adventurers |from St. John’s to the Grand hope to drift to Europe was to be’ Banks. turned loose today about 100 Frang transferred to one of the miles off Newfoundland. “accompanying boats to take pic- Diogenes was towed out of f= tures of the departure. When he harbor here Saturday by a pilot reboarded Diogenes he was vio- boat, then taken .in tow by the lent seasick. graceful Portuguese trawler S, | Gabriel. In a radio message Sun-| ANOTHER BAD OMEN day night to another Portuguese} Another bad omen marked the trawler in port here, the S. Gab- departure. The nylon towline be- riel said she was still towing | teen Diogenes and the pilot boat Diogenes. They were then 8° oped twice during the shor. males out. ‘trip. The tank was bobbing like The message said two of the a cork in the heavy swell outside tank’s crew, skipper Richard the harbor and veteran seamen Melisch, and Robert Franz, were predicted an uncomfortable voy- suffering from seasickness Dun-| age. day. Albert Barth was apparently! ju outside the harbor the in good shape. He spent five! tank was passed by the sleek de- hours lashed to Diogenes’ tiller| J over escort Nootka, outbouna while nine-foot wave broke over | 44m si John's. The Nootka has him. The ordeal was apparently | 1 on patrolling Newfoundland wa- & penctice sapien. The mea'pan ters sifice an unidentified sub- to take turns at the helm. : P 7K ROLLIN marine was reported sighted — somes Bonavista Bay last month. Melisch recovered late Sunday. Gidsehanet: cee ‘onli te annile and went fishing in a dory with; | ; the Portuguese. The Diogenes | #lize on the ee .— was reported roiling badly in a| Stories and pictures : whe. 35-mile-an-hour wind. *| they reach Europe. AM are Euro- pean - born. but have become Diogenes has a small, square rie , sail but no engine. By catching Canadian citizens and make their “ homes in Montreal. ocean currents the adventurers | The consensus among exper- hope to reach Europe in 10 week About 200 people stood on the ienced seamen was that the Dio- dock Saturday as the strange| genes would never make i. Me- craft cast off under a leaden sky. | lisch, Barth and Franz were A crowd estimated at 1.000 linea | just as confident they would make Signal Hill mear the harbor | it. None bas any experience ™ mouth. ' sailing. Alberta's 4 Political Parties Make Big Play For Rural Vote powered merchant ship will slide ,into the Delaware River, launch- ing a new saga of the sea. Actually, marine histor¢ has been in the making for two years since atomic scientists and ship engineers conceived the NS (for nuclear ship) Savannah. Work on the $31,000,000 vessel began a year azo at the New York Ship- building Corporation here. More than 1,000 men are work- ing 6n the 595-foot Savannah. The vessel will start carrying paying passengers and cargo—it is hoped —early in 1961. By March, 1960, the sleek three- deck liner will get its first load of atomic fuel. This is figured to supply the 13,000-ton Savannah for 300,000 miles without refuel- ling SAY SHIP SAFE. Joseph C. Czudak, ship con- struction representative for the U. §S. maritime administration, and Harborough I. Lill, New - York ship project engineer, are keeping a close watch on the Savannah. Lill insists it will be a safe ship—safe for 60 passengers and the crew of 109 it will carry. Lill acknowledges the Savan nah won't be economically com- petitive with steamships because it is a test vessel. He says. how- ever, it is more important that it serve to “enlighten the public that nuclear powered ships are’ entirely dependable and safe and to win their acceptance in\ the world’s ports.” - The Savannah ‘“‘will be used as a ship,” Lill said, probably around July, 1960. Trials at sea will Be under careful supervision and over a long period. Where she'll go when States Marine Lines takes over its com- mercial operation in 1961 no one _ 4 roam the} world in an effort to demonstrate that commercial atomic energy is both safe and feasible. Rebel Group Surrenders MANAGUA, Nicaragua (AP)— Sixteen rebels who refused to surrender with 46 of their fellows last week finally handed over their arms to government troops of Gen. Anastasio Somoza Satar- day night. Somoza. brother of President Luis Somoza, said the surrender marked ‘the end of a would-be attempt by these nonsensical kids to emulate Fidel Castro.” He ‘also charged that Ouba ant Venezuela probably would help about 75 insurgents currently training in Honduras for another invasion attempt. ’ The latest batch of rebels to surrender, led by Pedro Joaquin Chamorro, was met by govern- ment troops in th Nicaragua. LENIENT WI REBELS The troops were lenient witn the rebels, consisting mostly o ' sons of well-to-do families, but “we will not play around with pod other invaders,” Somoza said. POPE TO TAKE REST VATICAN CITY (Reuters)— Pope John may take a few days rest at his summer palace at Cas-. tel Gandolfo after receiving French President Oharles de Gaulle later this month, it was | learned Saturday. This would be EDMONTON (CP) — Albert’s four major political parties are making a big pitch for the rural vote because the rural population holds the key to the outcome of Thursday's general election. Forty-nine of Alberta’s 65 con- stituencies lie outside the Edmon- ton and Calgary metropolitan areas where*more than 500,000 of the province’s 1,250,000 persons live. The rural riding have generally assured the Social Credit govern- ment of Premier E. C. Manning its majority in past years. The administartion bas been in power since 1935. Of the 61 seats in the last leg- islature ‘the government elected only six members in Calgary and Edmonton which had a total rep- resentation of 13. CITIES GET MORE Edmonton and Calgary ‘repre- by three seats—two more in Ed- monton which has nine seats and one in Calgary which’ now has seven. At the same time the new’ rutal riding of Dunvegan was formed in the Peace River district by cut- ting Peace River constituency, a Social Credit stronghold, in two. Party leaders have spent most of their times at rallies outside the cities. Filmed television ap- pearances and recorded radio broadcasts have been used exten- sively in the cities. Liberal Leader Grant Mac- Ewan, former dean of agriculture at two prairie universities, and lawyer W. J. C. Kirby, leader of the Progressive Conservatives, have appealed to the rural voters with promises of larger loans to sentation was increased this year | forts in the marketing ef farm produce. DECENTRALIZE INDUSTRY Mr. Kirby also promised a de- centralization of industry to give rural areas an economic uplift. The CCF party, under Floyd Johnson, has called for public de- velopment and distribution of ele trical power. The Social Credit. party, seek- ing its seventh consecutive mas- date, has based its appeal on the government's 24-hour record and its five - year development plan which includes homes, for the aged. A total of 216 candidates are running. More than 600,000 Albert- | ang are expected to be eligible to vote. In the 1955 election a record 589,409 persons were eligible. Standing at dissolution was: So- cial Credit 37, Liberal 15, Progres- sive Conservative 3; CCF 2, Lib- eral-Conservative 1, coalition 1, independent 1, independent Social Credit 1. Total 61. ADLAI WON’T RUN AGAIN WASHINGTON (AP)—Adiai. E. Stevenson said Saturday he is not a contender for a third Demo- cratic presidential nomination ia 1960 and ‘‘will not be nominated. But the former [Minois governor who was beaten by Presidem Eisenhower in 1952 and 1956, told a press conference: ‘I will help the Democratic party any way I can in 1960 because it is more important every day for the Dem- ocrats to win.” NUCLEAR PLANES Nuclear-powered aircraft of the future will journey round the 4 Towed From Harbor By Boat |- farmera assistarce with rural i= pontiff's first holiday since his acéession last November, eeictrification and increased ef- globe on less than a pound weight of uranium fuel. SAFETY-MASTER ' BRAKES The famous NASCAR triais proved Chevrolet's unbeatable safety! Greeved, bigger brake linings give you the best stepping power ta Chevrolet's field, even after repeated hard use! MAGIC-MIRROR FINISH You'll wonder hew any car priced se attractively can offer se much richness and comfort! Chevrolet interiors surround you with the relaxing elegance of soft, rich fabrics and cool, smooth vinyl. 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