,——-— "TELEPHONE 8506 (Buyer meets seller with Guardiae Waut A*> Dial 8506 ask for classified ad + ee As Soom eet Island {$20,000 GiftTo Retarded Children Sssexee" | Island Goodbyes — s Way Island's Govt. Remembers awe Said To Visitors | | At -exactly-10-o’clock-yesterday +r Barnes said Thomas. 65 and | morning a sleek, blue and silver | minutes te chat with the As a memento of the , greeted her and Prince Philip on » Was walking along the plane thundered down the run-| party before boarding the visit to Prince Edward Istend, the “Premier A.W. Matheson who | the Point Road at the end of the | Santa Fe Railway tracks near | way at Chariottetown's civic air- for Nova Scotia and the final two Goverment wil make a, gift of |made the asnouncement last yWinsioe Road on Thursday. here Thursday night when a | port rose gracefully aloft ‘and $20,000 to the Retarded Children’s : : : : days evening following a meeting of his} Commenting on the Premier’s| local freight train approached. | streaking rapidly southward, dis- Both shook hands round be- Assoc'ation of the province to be | Cabinet said Her Majesty was| announcement, Mr. Roy Smaill-| The train's engineer W. U. | appeared quickly into the grayish | fore l.aving. all e |used for the furtherance of ae) very much impressed with the | man, president of the Prince| Gaylord blew his whistle, but to | overcast night : work being carried on by the As-/ turnout of retarded children who | Edward Island Retarded Child-| 00 avail. Thomas kept walking Aboard the twin-engined Heron warle dealer tas tie ae - - ren’s Association said the gift] on the tracks. were Her Majesty Queen Fliza-| an unscheduled appearance at the j TENSION AND FEAR was a “most pleasant surprise”, Gaylord said he sent his firee beth and His Royal door of Government House ip would be wonderful encourage-| man to the front end of the Prince Phili - |ment to those who have been! locomotive as he siowed the Prince Edwart Island which had working so hard to do something | machine. Just before the engine _ bezun 24 hours earlier when the | might have an opportunity to see en for the-retarded-children—of- the reached Thomas, the fireman | Queen and Her Consort docked at | her. province. inted. the Charlottetown reiway wharf Her appearance was greeted Peel The Premier said Her Majesty | ” i f His boot was right on target. | V4 over. with a thunderous ovation by the was pleased that the government} thomas tumb! over | Im th town of New Giasgow,| good-humored throng which broke had seen fit to make such a gift. ne Gand ; only a 20 te ths tak the Cedecden *;| Beels away ‘from the engine. | only @ 20 minute plane ride away, | the barriers in several places im side from | hundreds of Nova Scotias awaited | order to bet Association was most worthy of backs le Thomas was unie, | Her Majesty's arrival which was : get a etter look at their 3 support. ; delayed only 10 miffutes despite , 0 eopie Ussia In other provinces, the Premier the fact for conditions eld up the em were out again yes | Highness ; ip. The royal visit to order that the many hundreds | hh ag igang Pager eporeeeiemecrastes of the : for the government full half-hour. that had captured ali hearts dur By PRESTON GROVER Valdimir, Reese, Tula, | Her Majesty with a ain = ee the iia: CHEER ing their brief stay in Canada’s ; ™| MOSCOW (AP)—Richard Nixon |troma, Yarosiavi and Gudea form ‘of a scholarship. As the plane carring the Queen, Smallest Province. ie | Zoces tot the’ soussas’ ponpla to. |Sslonsh: 1250 mallee eat ehdae’ 12nd, be anid. “the poveramest So citing seta coeaenen |seuaed _pienaee ot On a ‘ an re e ies we Os- . : the drifting smoke. aftermath af Pr are bad 1 = |plying to Soviet charges that the cow. The others are from 100 {: 4&5 long recognized the voluntary, a 21-gun salute fired earlier operation they and the national fh] Cast Sates io to Manse for |750 miles Stam the Soviet cxpite eee eae eee ery detachment of the P.E.1 Reg, | group had received from the ; ras tennis on Sean of we re eee mean eae 0 e ee oo wader command of gp ag dete g side ident steps before the TV serving of financial assistance”. tone, tet filed" he’ termina a the Island section of the 1959 tour - i ian beaiay le ks wh be os ree oe Golng aah. KINGSTON, Ont, (CP) — Ad- | Tounds and spilled over on the ae So a . from a car to start the Maritime |plane yesterday morning. The igen aula <a dine woe ted by Health officials and it ts i eres ra © | cheer. _* Piiilip’s 45-day netion-wide vast.” Ma Attend. |, rich 2's completing at |bitlowing dress in the picture ts |iiiy Copia on hie return | “Jexpected thet a start will be| ment for prisoners ue for Te | Clustered together in the fore-|® tour official said yesterday. | ny Halifax today. Teng of thousands |in contrast to the more formal | pa, wpe. OM: que grou | made en its construction before |isase may have more rewonet | ground where they had remained e Maritime ‘visit which’ he com [tured. (CP Phata) | ‘he, Soviet : , fell A Diamond Col, | 22002 bidding the royal couple Coady Rites = Mxtine wet wu ste coe bret ee p intends fo make 1s chanced eden ar | “bom voyece” a tow mintes| PM Arrives y | Sized that he intends to make the . V. S. J. Richmond, warden of | garter aoe of his opportunity. J | Scra Collins Bay penitentiary, said) pia pa hme yee pablo: 5 \ ANTIGONISH, NS. (CP)— us "Wheo I speak I will discuss | ungie p Friday. ed tham t the airport: Liewer. (FOF ; 7 Close to 1,000 people attended the answer some of the questions | GAINFORD, Alta. (CP)—Cane- e He said the ads in the June , lout of Saecr Moses 3a. Condy; T got during the trip,” bs seid at Gian Nations! Reiiwaye Friday \[¢ § readi ieoue of the prison magazine had | ‘Wag feioioe Peers en] MALAFAX (OP)—Prime le | 4 founder of the Antigonish ; te ager “T wil ale. give ny launched en svenignrs ino te |S Pp ng Ro response, ‘but that was be-| Mathes Hon Ange Mechoss |ister Diefentaker and Goveraar erative movement, here : } impressions Soviet econ- | head-on collision Thursday n By JOHN HUDMAN cause no copies reached indus- and Mrs. MacLean, and Mayor | General Massey arrived here Fri- Miners, steelworkers, teachers, one ap ae ces ue ee cai ys ty oad peer gage LONDON (Reuters) — Jungle trial plants, He intends te rem-| Edwin C. Johnstone and Mrs. | day night to bid farewell to Queen eee religions and slesicuney , ' . oe we S wcamean oe al ie . and Communist robe} are meee want © oe aier WW, Raid, DOO. UD, ee Teet six-week =? Canada. pontifical requiem mass in St. By JACK BRAYLEY a sixfoot-10-inch scholarship win- | the tour was: Why does the U.S. juries requiring hospital attention hes spread to a sec concept in Canada.’ RB carried | provincial tour co-ordinator, Com-|from here tonight. Francis Xavier University) Canadian Press Staff Writer ner he was obviously headed for jencircle the Soviet Union jwith when the east-bound and west- province bordering on Communist | | two-page listing of prisoners| Mander John N. Kenny, CD, the| The prime ministers “plane chapel. More than 20 Roman! HALIFAX (OP)—The Queen's |‘ ‘higher’ education, and kidding | military bases? A favorite Nixon bound Super Continentals North Viet Nam, according © TS|4.. tor release in @9 dage, stat-| Sovernor’s aides, Major Roy/reached Shearwater Airport at ; Catholic clengy attended. fabulous luck with the weather |a newspaper editor with a ques- | reply was to request the e hecklers |crunched together. Most injuries | Ports received here Pridan, ing their qualifications, where MacGillivray, CD, It.-Cmdr./¢.49 pm. ADT, 1% hours after Dr. Coady, director emeritus of |held out long enough Friday for|tion as to why he \hasn’t been|to tune in on his TV speech | were superficial cuts, bumps and Authoritative quarters heTeliney prefer to work, and com-| Douglas Saunders, and Fiying | the Queen and prince flew im from the St. FX extension department |a three-stop circuit of Nova Scotia |“‘taken into the fold of Roy| But the speech will be televised | sprains. said the Royel Lactiae -vowitea (ments by penitentiany officials | Officer Ian Rankine, and other! swiney. Mr. Massey's plane end known as the father of co-|on this eve of her departure for |Thomson, owner of many papers | only in a narrow western belt of | G. Roger Graham, general su-|™ent may appeal to on the men. senior service officers and tour|;,nded 10 minutes behind Mr operatives in eastern Canada, | home after her 15,000-mile, 45-day jin Canada 4s well as the United | the Soviet Union. |perintendent of the CNR for Al-| Nations for help. Thirteen asked for jobs, citing officials oe Diefenbaker. ‘Both flew in trane died here Tuesday night at the | tour States and recent purchaser of a| TV COVERAGE AREA |berta, said in Edmenton there| The threeday warfare broke) tines as electrician, WP| BRIEF CHAT ‘ port department Viscounts age of 71 She visited the steel and coal | string of British newspaper prop-| The one-hour speech will- be will be a ‘full inquiry’ into the | ut ae pr rama cagirase 4 ed ist, farm worker, general la-| Apparently refreshed after a| Today the prime minister will The pallbearers were two fish- areas of Sydney and New Glas- | erties. beamed from Moscow to Kalinin, | accident. immediately borer, automotive parts distrib- good night's rest the Queen, cool,| preside at a special meeting ef i : : Nam of organizing the border | a co forme, 6 sed ove bole seen Ss |utor, tailor, garment pesser and little |the federal cabinet im Govere- old d-|IN GRIM SILENCE Te | "ae cnutr aka a sign of | " ‘ nist band stole through rain-swept Se Shwe ce ase =| 77 DoukhoborChildren [=sa==== PIess Arrangements Pers i i i i j | i his men captured. Phong Saly lies on the west of tert Sze Are Ordered Released E-ezi= AreCiticized|n Mall E2=S2= Fil Mail, says the press hed “an ex- By genet Gena yh RE |water and salt — and oath con- that they would send ats Sta chatbiee acne ot ee fae LONDON (OP) — Don Iddon, Canadian Press Staff W ; le undecided whether to sénd any : ef its federal members to par- ticipate in Newfoundland’s gen- eral election campaign. Carl. Hamilton, national CCF secretary, said Friday night the party has decided to back provin- cial candidates run by the New- foundiand Federation of Labor (OLC) as well as CCF candidates. | waiting in the streets. But it was Queen's weather all the way with 'the sun splashing through the | |murk every time she hove in sight. PRINCE IN HAPPY MOOD the prince was in an hn- ome jovial mood, _ shooting |, asides to the press party, telling Thousands Cheer ‘QueenAtSydney By HARRY CALNEK Canadian Press Staff Writer SYDNEY — (CP) — Cheering thousands, including several en- | jastic inmates of the county , welcomed Queen Elizabeth ot Prince Philip Friday to this | city in the highlands of cone The transport department plane carrying the Queen and her hus- - pand arrived here: from Trenton, N.S., at 1:50 p.m. ADT and was | met by provincial cabinet minis- ‘ters, Mayor Russel Urquhart of Sydney and other dignitaries They left about two hours later on an RCAF plane for Halifax, ~~ fast stop of the—45-day—tour At the airport, Prince Philip | presented the Duke of Edinburgh ship's bell to the eight-member Westmount ‘sea cadet rifle team which won the shooting trophy two years in a row. Individual plaques were given to each of the cadets. The 9.8 - mile drive here was aed st specie of from 40-miles en_hour where. the roads were Piped into the Norfolk Hotel, |the regal couple met 90 . guests |at a reception and the Queen ne- ceived a bouquet from Faith McDonaid, five-year-old daughter of Sydney alderman Bruce Me- Donald. ~ Harold Gordon, chief of..Dom- inion Steel and Coal Corporation | operations and Bill Marsh, pres- ident ‘of United Mine Workers | (Ind) District 26, were. recog- | nized ‘instantly by the prince. He met both last Oct. 31 in Spring- hill, N. S. when he visited the town during a mine disaster that killed 7% men. WHERE-TO-FIND-IT Ahnouncements, notices .. 11 Births, death etc., _.....-2, 11 Classified section ...... 10,11 Comics, featufes ........... 9 Finance, markets ........ i Charlottetown news ....- ; 5 NN Ss iss octeeess 4 Island news ........0+.. 2, 3 Sport .... sonia: @ Women’s page MOORES ay Late reports from Guardian NELSON, B.C. (CP)—Shawied | Sons of Freedom Doukhobor mothers sat in grim silence Fri- |day as a magistrate announced the release of 77 Freedomite cial government custody, in some | eo for five years. 'a flicker of a smile. nor a trace of isfaction was seen in-| the imipassi faces of mothers who for years had not seen their | children except under the shadow | of a wire fence surrounding a dormitory at New Denver, © miles from here. The parents, after much soul- searching and prayer, in’ effect | had buried their ancient religious fears to conform with modera | law. “Five years was {oo much, one wéman said in an interview ' later. ¥ ANNOUNCES RELEASE While some 6 Freedomites, j | good luck and happiness,*-Mag= mostly women dressed in shape- | less white or print dresses with |white shawls over’ their heads, | listened with no show of emotion, etipendiary Magistrate William Evans told them that the 77 child- ren would be released from the provincial dormitory. All but. two of the children | would be released at 1 p.m. Suft- day and special arrangements would be made for the other two. “The court wishes the parents istrate Evans said in the silent court. The dormitory was. established by the provincial government in 1953 to house children whose Freedomite parents did—net—send them to school according to the laws of the province. RCMP rounded up the children over a period of years. nected with Christs lest supper |children te publie school. china war five years ago. children who had been in provin- | | correspondent for The Daily/hausting and frustrating time’ ROYAL TOUR TRANSPORT AND ESCORT covering the Royal Tour of Can- Writing in World's Press News, Iddon says the tour itself ‘has done considerable good’ and that the Queen and Prince Philip “could hardly have worked harder, been more patient or more attractive in what were frequently boring and sometimes arduous circumstances.’ But “he is critical of the han- = \dling of press arrangements for 3 | coverage of the tour and of the accommodations offered report- (Continued on page 2 Col. 2) OTTAWA (CP) — Agriculture Minister Harkness Friday an- nounced a downward adjustment in government assistance ‘ on movement of Prairie feed grains to British Columbia and Eastern Quebec and the Maritimes. The rate of assistance on ship- ments to the Montreal freight rate zone, which includes On- tario, will remain the same. | “The new scale, approved by the cabinet Thursday, is designed to bring the assistance into line with lower rail freight rates which come into effect today. Despite the cut in direct as- sistance, the net cost of shipping grains from Calgary to Vancou- ver or from the Lakehead -to the -.| Maritimes will be about 4 cents per ton lower Forest Fire Seige Lifted ST. BERNARD des LACS, Que. (CP)—A siege of smoke and flame was lifted Friday from thie tiny lumbering village on the Gaspe Peninsula. But Friday the blaze turned . ite back on the settlement and he gan spreading to the southwest, cutting- a broad path of destrue- tion , through Gaspesia Park. Feed Grain Assistance Is Less To Maritimes ness said, Several weeks ago the zoverf- freight increase be reduced to 1@ ment ordered that a l7-per-cent per cent. The drop in direct assistance to grain shippers results from ite being based on the new, lower freight rates rather than on the rates that have been in effect © since Dec. 1. ‘ On shipments* to eastern Que- |bec and the Atlantic provinces j}having a rail freight rate from Fort William of 98 cents hun- dred-weight or higher, as sistance will be $7.10 a ton plus the excess of the freight rate over™that to Montreal. The cost of shipping a ton af grain from the Lakehead to Hal- ifax will be $21.80. compared with All week a fire raged in neigh- — tiear to five miles where people | pews bureaus in Summer- Royal. tour transport. =a a personnel. who flew thom; N.B., Hulgaard of Burnaby, B.C. FL E_ pyck, F-0 J._Dinley,, “The adjustments in_the irciaht | $23.29 under the old rate, but the ollin Grand Prairie, Alb. Si neel in from are LAC | assistance policy will keep: the [sitpper cwitt-have te pay only ted, At oné point, the Queen} E tague, Alberton and TRADITIONAL OATH escort are shown in this picture | here and took them yesterday to Collin on of mewn kneeling x eee to cheering prisoners, a on ae special cor- During the last. three das the | taken yesterday at the-Chairlotte-| ther next stop are mingled im erta. Ins ors oe fe. wr ~~ oor 7 Road? yao ak ciao woctere tod | 96.3. ‘t SC. ten wal = slinging to a re mesh fence parents of ‘he child-efi came be —town-airpor!. The Mounted Police the victu-e. Tc ><ys. on ‘ikes T., Nowe o John’s To | The eccert lias fol’'ow w-tsacd Pramas a EO seal ; } 4a Geclosing: the Cape ‘Breton a> Sanee tae eg * ‘lfore Magistrate Evens and too’ e:cort that.hand'-d the job im|are'Cpl. Muir of O' awa and Con- RCA" Per: are F-J, F. Kiag, and Prince Philip on the enlire ''e s*me re'atively uniform } + a onl Biss Si'e exercise yerd: ee ste | FL ‘Merrick,-¥-0-W--Mcintyre-+tour. buon, as in the past,” Mr. Harkin cost te the shipper. — traditronal—_oath—of—bread,, Ghasteliqtetsa-and RCAF ixans_{slabies Baskia of 4 . 7 a 7 7 : ae ‘ . -