F E5‘. TELEPHONE 8506 Buyer meets seller Ads. Dial 8506 ask f taker, for quick results. ,.———:7 with Guardian Want or classified ad 16 P themed as Second Class Mall by the Post Officg ,.—_.—j Department. Ottaw; Lr’ hardtop "Coders Prince Eduzard Island Like The Dew” HONORED GUESTS AT AFIERNOON TEA Most Rev. 3.. H. Waterman, M. A., D.D., Lord Bishop of Nova Scotin (left) and Bi. Rev. OTPAWA (CP)——Th-e Canadian Teachers’ Federation said Wed- nesday there are no “insuperalble barriers” to greatly increased federal aid to the provinces and Canadian municipalities for ele- mentary and secondary educa- (ion. “Where the welfare of this country is at stake, Parliament: is supreme,” the federation said in a 10-page brief presented to Prime Diefenlbwker and his cabinet. The brief said much greater federal assistance for education is inevitable. Each year’s delay “in I nrocwun. . federal ‘ A . leaves us farther behind certain countries’ with whom we must wmpete for our very existence as a nation." The federation said provincial and municipal governments and Canadian citizens individually would welcome greater federal help on the _undierstandimg there would be no‘ interference by Ort- tatwa in provincial control of ed- ucution. ‘ The federation represents some 190,000 ‘teachers, except those in ‘the French Roman Catholic school: in Quebec. OFFER PLAN The bnetf proposed three basic _ plans to improve the calibre of teachers and give Canadian youth I better chance to receive an adequate education. ,, These included an extension of ‘j ; the federal-provincial tax-sharing arrangements act with federal . Kraut for education and a foun- c I -dation program establishing a basic standard of education be- ‘low which no province would be allowed to fall. S’Sicle'l Mayor VICTORIA (CP) — Mayor H.G.R. Mewus of St. John’s, Nlfld., Was elected president of the Canadian Federation of Mayors ljld-. Municipalities Wednesday night. succeeding Mayor Lloyd -laicilnson of Hamilton». :,.Eilec‘ted vice-presidents were Mayor Joseph Hampson, Moose Jaw. Sask.; Mayor W. T. Walker, Fredericton; Mayor w. A. Currie, Swnnnerside, P.E.I.; Mayor I.W. Akerlv. Dartmouth, NlS.; Mayor - M. Simpson, Arnprior, Ont; Mayor K. G. Van Belleghem, st. §°‘“5a-09. Man.; and Mayor Wil- liam H-awrelak, Edmonton. VI_crromA (CP) — Canada’s :m‘_“1€1Da1 leaders passed a reso- elitlon Wednesday asking the fed- ment to institute ‘;gR0NT0 <-01>) -— William . A ml’ LeGros, 45, who rose from 1uduSt“'_S‘b<_>y to g $25,000-a-year. nemenrialist within 20 years, was years fed Wednesday to two year hiss 3 day definite and one -fraud determinate for a bank of $80,250. 3 5“1‘Drise ending to a five- Il::"$;l case, LeGros changed med a tgppguilty atb at; un. J, ‘ earance e ore u.%‘:eR4“bert Forsyth. Early mman has been in jail ' “*3 Years arising out of ,,‘cs,,y’}}a'tter... directly or indi lug szmtthe Judge said in pass- bemper ence. I am going to justice with mercy.” gel H request of Crown coun- hvolgnry 31111. 28 other charges W. W. Davis, B.A, D.D. Goad- jutor Bishop (right) were hon- oured guests at “Afternoon Tea.” The federation said the federal government w o u l (1 make up amounts the provinces were un- able to raise to maintain a foun- dation program. Pending adoption of such a pro- gram, the federation said tem- porary measures should be taken by the federal government to as- sist teachers and enable children to receive a better education. These included extension of the present cut-off date for family al- Emergency Aid For Jobless In U.S. Planned WAISHIINIGTON (-Al’) — Pres- ident Eisenhower Wednesday signed a providing emerg- ency federal financing for adl'1- tional jobless relief payments -by the states. whether they will go along with advantage of it. In states participating, insured workers who have used up their additional weekly payments equal to 50 per cent of‘ the total bene- fits to which they were entitled states this will be 13 extra weelcs. Out of the more than 5,000,000 run through all jobless benefits they had coming and most pre- sumably are still unemployed. The size of unemployment pay- ments varies with the states but averages about $30 a week. On Executive; , Want Action For More Jobs measures to expedite solution of the unemployment problem. The resolution was put forward at the final session of the ann-a.ul conference of the Canadian Fed- eration of Mayors a-nd Municipal- lt said the proposed program of works as outlined by the fed- eral gov-ermnen-t will not take care of immediate needs, and unemployment benefits are being rapidly exhausted. The con~ferenc~e approved with- out debate a resolution asking the federal government to amend the , criminal code to clearly define the word obscene and_thus per- mit prosecution of pubhshers and producers of obscene literature and photographs and indecent spectacles. Toronto Inclusfria-list Pleads Guilty, Sente-ncecl For Fraud and uttering were dismissed. ‘Tm offering no evidence on these counts," MI‘. Bull said. Mr. Bull said all the charges arose out of the same ‘trans- actions at the Bank of Nova Scotia. About $50,000 of the total amount had been recovered. Lea;-0.5’ appearance followed a March trial which. ended 11] a hung jury. At that time, Mr. Bull said LeGros had obtained large loans from the bank, using stolen bonds and stock certificates as security. “There isn’t a cuter way I0 bury a stolen bond than to hypo- thecate it in a bank. pay the 111- terest and say, don t. C1119 the coupons,” Mr. Bull sald then- “That’s what he did with the * stolen bonds bonds, buried them." The states have an option the plan, and there is a question of how many can or will take ; benefits through prolonged unem- , ploylment will be able to draw = under their state laws. In most unemployed, nearly 1,000,000 have - at Government House yesterday for Clergy Delegates and invited guests of Lieutenant Governor - Teachers See No Barrier 1 ToFederaI School Aid lowances to age 18 from 16, an extensive f e d e r a1 program of scholarships and T ursarles and al- lowing ‘teachers to deduct from taxable income sums spentto im- prove their qualifications. IODE Officials TO Tour Nflcl. HALIFAX (OP)—— Mrs. A. K. Richlairdson of Toronto, national president of the Imperial Order Daughters of the Empire, and Mrs. G.D._ Leggett of Toronto, national organization secretary, leave Thursday for a week's tour of Newfoundland, it was an- nounced Wednesday. They are to visit chapters in St! John’s, Gender and Deer Lake before returning by air to Toronto. F. Walter Hyndman and Mm. Hyndmuan (centre). Moderator Is Named By A Presbyterians TORONTO (CP) — Rev. Dr. John 1VicNaJb of Toronto, who has served the Presbyterian Church in Canada as editor, aruthor, RCAF ch»asplai~n and minister, Wednesday night was elected: moderator. The 71-year-old ch-urcih leader was unanimously elected at the churclfs 8-tth general assembly. He was norninated by Principal J. Stanley Glen of Knox College, University of Toronto. Dr. Mcl\IaIb is retiring this year as editor of the Presbyter- ian Record, the monthly mag- azine of the - church. Since he took office in 1946 the cirncrulation has grown from 23,000 to 82,000, and the honour conferred on by this general assembly was work in this connection. Island M.‘P’s. On Committees OTTAWA, — (Special) ——Prince = Edward island’-s private M. P.’s have been selelcted to serve on J 10 parliamentary standing com- corrimittees were named Wednesday. Hon. Angus MacLean, Fisher- ies Minister, and senior MP for Queen’s, does not serve on com- mittees by nature of his position. but he can be called to appear before them. Heath Malcquarrle, junior MZP external affairs and privileges and elections committees. J. A. " Macdvonald, M. P., for Kings, CROSS LOCATES internation- al waters near the Grand Banks, southeast of Nova Scotia, where the U. S. Navy is keeping close watch on shipping. The State Department has notified Russia — in response to a Soviet com- plaint — that the U. S. Navy is checking ocean -approaches to the U. S. Moscow had protested that U. S. aircraft had buzzed Soviet fishing trawlers in the an-.a. The Russian vessels were said to be in waters which are not normally heavily fished. ' (AP Wirebhoto Map) PI-ones Ca me From Argenficl OTTAWA (CP)—— Defence Min- ister Pearkes indicated Wednes- day in the Commons that U.S. Air Force planes that swooped low over Russian trawlers on the Grand Banks ofif Newfoundland V came from the U.S. base at Ar- gentia, Nfld. Opposition L e a d e 1' Pearson asked whether the planes oper- ated from U.-S. bases on Cana- dian soil and whether Can-adilan planes also take part in such sur- veillance. Mr. Pearkes replied that U.S. aircraft from Argentia a 1 planes of the RCAF Maritime Air Com- mand both make routine patrols of the sea approaches to North America, and that this includes the Grand Banks area. He said the planes are not un- der the North American air de- fence—NORAD-command. The Soviet govern-mcnrt recently protested to the U.S. against what it described as low-level flights over Russian tralwlers on the banks. The U.»'S. government said the flights were part of normal patrols. _'I will serve on the ‘ Dr. Marine and Public Accounts and Affairs committees. O. H. Phillips, M. P. for Prince, is a member of the agri- culture and colonization, print- ing and railways, canals and telegraph lines committees. ALCOHOLICS INCREASING SARNIA, Ont. (CP) — Approx- imately $292,000,000 was spent on alcohol by the people of Ontario in 1957, Mrs. James Nelson of Meruriton, president of the Ontario Women’s Christian Temperance Union, said Tuesday. She told the 81st annual convention that each year between 4,000 and 5,000 alco- holics are added to the province's existing total of 80,000. Executive of the Charlottetown Yacht Club elected last night at the annual meeting include: FRONT--Arthur Wright, se_c}'e- tary; N.D. MacLean, retiring commodore; Robert Borden. partially in recognition of his Is ’ Hopel Support OTTAWA, (Specia1)— Agricul- ture minister Eugene Cullen, of Prince Edward Island, returns home Thursday confident the Federal Government will place potatoes under the Agriculture Prices Stabilization Act. Mr. Cullen, who headel a three- man delegation to Ottawa to make represenntationns to Federal officials regarding potatoes, said before he left here for Charlotte- CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1958 St. Peter's. Men ul Of Price hearing and I believe something will be done." Mr. Cullen was accompanied by W.A. MacLennan, chairman of the P.E.I. Potato Marketing Board, and R.L. Burge, a board member, and potato grower and dealer. The three conferred Tuesday and Wednesday with L.W. Pear- sall, chairman of the prices Stabilization Board and other town: “we received a very goodlgovernment officials. CanacIcI’s Aicl 0(1‘TAaW‘«A (CP) —- Canada's post - w-ar financial assistance abroad has’ passed $4,300,000,000, the external affairs department said Wednesday. More than half was in out- right grants, the remainder loan-s which have been partly repaid. The figure of $4,300,000,000 cov- ers the period up to March 31, 1958, and does not include more scores of millions of dollars ear- marked for foreign aid in the current fiscal year. It excludes contributions for membership assessments in in- ternational agencies " and pro- grams. Omitted, for instance, is an amount of $910,000 for Can- ada's contribution to the United Nations Emergency Force in Egypt for the 1957 and 1958 ca- lendar "years. - Biggest single amount—$1,567,- 000,000 — represents military aid for Canada's European partners in the North Atlantic Alliance. This figure. lncludcx expenditures on rnilitary equipment shipped to Europe, tlletraining of European air crew in this country and Can- ada’s sh ea orrfon-ttioouncf src ada’s share for construction of air-fields, communications, oil pipelines and the like in Europe. Largest single loan, $1,185,000,- 000, went to the United Kingdom aroon after -the Second World ar. 0 -th e r reconstruction loans TUNIS (Reuters) -— The rebel Front Wednesday night described Gen. de Gaulle’s speech in Al- Algerian N a tio n a 1 Liberation giers as “no basis whatsoever for a reconciliation." The authoritative sources said the gener-a1’s speech did not in any way recognize the principle of independence for which A1- gerians» had been fighting. “He wants to make us all Frenchmen,” the sources said, “instead of recognizing fu_l1y that not only are we Algeria-ns, but we wish to be free Algerians.” ALGIERS (AP)—-Premier de Gaulle proclaimed Wednesday that all Frenchmen, including the mixed population of Algeria, will decide their own future at the polls within three months. Cheered wildly by a crowd of 100,000, he called for swift politi- YACHT CLUB lcommodore; Don Martin vice- Kean, D.W. Smith, W.H. Mc-lso successful last year. An In- crease in membership is expect- ed this year, and a number of new boats will be operating from commodore. 1 ‘ BACK ROW--Directors E.G., MacLeod, J.F. (Plum) MacDon- Abroad Has Passecl The Four Billion Mark were made to Belgium, Na- tionalist China, Czechoslovakia, France, The Netherlands, Indo- nesia, Norway and Russia. The Soviet Union is among countries which have fully repaid loans.- Most recent rec«onsfruct.ion loan —$1,000,000—was for a Canadian hand in clearance of the Suez Canal after the 1956 military in- tervention in Egypt by Israel, Britain and France. It was made to the UN and has not been re- paid. Dusf Storms In Australia. ADELAIDE, Azustralia (Reu- ters)—The whole of South Aust- ralia State 380,000 square miles — was covered Wednesday by a thick pall of dust reported by airline pilots to have reached a. height of 6,000 feet. The massive cloud. arose ms wi-nds of 50 miles an hour whip- ped up the topsoil from a large part of the states farmlandls, where farmers had taken advant- a-geofunseasonablywaxrm weather to work their land. ‘ Three airports were forced to close and drivers had to slow their cars to a walking pace. Dockers working in the open at Port Adelaide were given goggles tic protect their eyes from the -ust. Rebels Cool To DeGau|Ie Speech calintegration ofAl.geria’s French and North African peoples to keep the vast territory French. There are about 1,000,- 000 people of French origin and 9,000,000 native North Africans in Algeria. “We are all French citizens starting today, with only one legislative assembly,” he said. it was a day of emotional binges. . Bands played, Flags waved. Medals glitt-ered. Troops paraded and thousands sang La Marseil- laice. Tears flowed freely. Hard facts of the. long Algerian nationalzist rebellion were shunted ‘to the background. The general, impeccable in a plain, sand - colored uniform, spoke of the French day of de- MR. FINN pany arrived in Charlottetown Alan J. O'Brien of Boston- an option to buy, , , The plant has Mr. Irving Usen, president of Usen Fisheries Limited, Boston, accompanied by _Mr. Barnie F-inn, vice-president of the Com- yesterday. Today they will pro- ceed to Souri-s where they will inspect the fish plant being op- er ed by them. The manager of th plant on the Island is Mr. Usen Fisheries Limited last winter acquired the former Grif- fin Fish filleting plant and fish meal plant from the Provincial Government. They are operat- ing on a year to year lease with been in Venera- tlon for some time and the Bos- lzona-ilirrn intends to.-continue a year round’ operation employing WEATHER ,, Overcast clearing this. mer; light winds. Low-high at Charlotte- town 40 and 65. NOT MORE THAN Seriously MR. USEN S. Fish Plant Arrive about 75 people. ,Mr. Usen has spent his life- time In the fish processing bus- iness. His firm operates two plants In Newfoundland, one plant In Portland, Me., two plants in Gloucester, Mass. They have six trawlers operating out of Boston each with a carrying capacity of 300,000 lbs. They buy fish from Denmark, Iceland, Germany and Great Britain. Mr. Usen sees a great poten- tial In‘ the fisheries of Prince Ed- ward Island. He and Mr. Finn will be on the Island until Fri- day. morning; War- FIVE CENTS Iniurecl In Auto» Accident J. Car Out Of Control, Hits Culvert Two young men from St. Pet- ers, Reginald MacKinnon, 21, and Frank Milligan of about the same age are -in critical condi- tion in the Charlottetown Hos- pital following an accident in which their car went out of con- trol. at St. Peters yesterday even- ing about 6.15. Police report that the car own- ed by MacKinn<on, a 54 Ford, ap- parently went out of control at a‘ curve near‘ the Railway water tank. Road markings would in- dicvaie that the machine struck a culvert and turned turtle be- fore striking a second culvert about 70 yards distant. They were travelling in. an easterly direction at the time of the ac- ciden-t. Milligan, it is reported was pinned under the vehicle and Ma-cKinnon was found in the wreckage of the automobile when help first arrived. injured men were given omen John A. MacLel=an of St. rushed to hospital. Both young men are engaged in fishing lobsters off the north shore of the Island. Reginald MacKinn-on is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ma-cKinnon. Frank Milligian‘ is the son of Mr. and Mrs; William Milligan. Both are unmarried. Parliament .Al A Glance ‘Hearing Opens In -Eclmu-ndsfon - 250 Delegates At Hospital Ass’n Meeting Meetings of the Nova Scotia, New Bnun-swvicli and Prince Ed- ward island sections Wednesday took up the first day of the Mari- time Hospital Associ-ation's an- nual convention. More than 250 delegate-s from hospitals in the four Atlantic provinces were welcomed by the association presi-dveni, Dr. H. F. MacKa.y of New Glasgow, N.S. About 100 others. representing auxiliaries, will arrive today. In the afternoon Dr. MacKay also opened the annual exhibition of the Maritime Hospital Ex- hibitors’ Association. Business sessions and the an- nual dinuer tonifght will make Thursday the busiest d-ay of the three-day convention. The Nova Scotia and Prince .Edward Island sectional meet- ings were held under chairman- ship of the provincial presidents, E. 0. Dodge, Truro, and Leo MacDonald, Ohawlottetown. MAIL CLERK SENTENCED V MONCTON. - (CP) -_- Rail- way mail clerk Douglas Mans- field C-awley of Lewisville, N.B., was sentenced to one year in county jail Wednesday when a cision from a balcony of the gov- ernment house. ELECTS OFFICERS Laine, H.H. Love. The retiring commodore, N.D. Macnean was thanked for his l l County Court jury convicted him of unlawful possession of mail. K ‘ald, A.B. Andrew, H. R. M3ac- contribution to making the club the club. -«I. sr. ANDREWS, N.B. (or) - E " K. Richardson of Toronto Murder Case EDMUNDSTON, N. B. (CP) - Five hours of testimony Wednes- day provided no link between John Jacob Vollmaln-n, Jr., 20 and the death of Gaetane Bouchalrd, 16. The Madaivveska, Me., youth is changed with murdering the Edmundston high school girl. Crown counsel Albany M. Robi- chaud, who called eight witnesses. after the preliminary hearing opened, con-cen-trated on details of the girl's death. Her mutilat- ed body was found May 14 in a gravel pit less than two miles from her home. A pathologist, Dr. David F. Brunsdon of Fredericton, testifi- ed death resulted from a lmife wound that penetrated the heart He said four wounds in the neck and five in the chest were pro- bably caused by a knife with a four-inch blade. ’ “The girl had not been sexual- ly assaulted," he added. When the hearing opened, County Magistrate A. M. Cham- berl-and ordered reporters not to report “any oral or written state- ments that could have been made by the accused.” Wednesdays testimony made no reference to Vollmrann. _ The slight dark-haired youth, who was to have married a Madawaska girl May 17, had a haggard expression but showed no other sign of nervousness. He was dressed neatly in a plain brown suit, white shirt and brown tie. HALIFAX, — (CP) -— Mrs. A. was re.-elected national president of the Imperial Order Daughters of the Empire on the closing day of the annual meeting here Wed- nesday. Mrs. W. R. Walton, Jr., of Tor- onto was returned as first vice- president and Mrs. Peter L. Rob- inson of Toronto as second vice- president. Vice-presidents from Provin- ces with provincial executives are: Mrs. Richard Palmer, Fred- ericton; Mrs. H. J. Mather, Win- nipeg; Mrs. E. O. Du Vernet, Vancouver; Mrs. C. H. J. Bur- ,Thursday, June 5, 1958 ‘ The Commons meets at 3230 ,c_; p.m. ADT, to consider private 1 By THE CANADIAN PRESS Wednesday, June 4, 1958 t-ration in-Jun-e and July. to answer alleg-atlonls them on security grounds. budget he said is in prospect, and claimed Canadians are losing their old qualities of thrift. members’ proposals. The Senate sits at 4 p.m. IODE Wants Registration Of, Canadians HALIFAX (CP)-The Imperial Order Daughter of the Empire decided Wednesday to ask the Federal Government to “insti- tute without delay” a system of registration for all Canadian resi- dents between 16 and 70. Canadians are becoming "morn conscious of the need for prepar- edness in the event of a national emergency,” the resolution said, and a record of the place of re- sidence, occupation and age of in- dividuals would be valuable in such a case. No record of persons other than those receiving family allowan- ces and old age pensions existed at the moment. Mrs W.R. Walton of Toronto introduced the resoultion. Toronto Woman Is Re-Namecl National Presiclenl OI IODE p rows, Regina; Miss H. Jeanne Knapman, Hamilton; Mrs. Tho- ma-s Bishop, Calgary; Mrs. G. ._D. Anderson, Halifax, and Mrs. J. R. Beveridge, Montreal. ‘ National standard bearer is Mrs. Roy C. Weaver, Regina. The 1959 national meeting is to be in Regina. Other vice - presidents: Mrs. of Toronto, and Mrs. Spragge, Aushburn, Ont. J. H. G. Chant of Toronto Hug-h Allward, Mrs. C. F. Brown Mrs. 0. M. Martin, Mrs. B. B.§ Osler, Mrs. R. M. W-alkey, allgtion to intensify and G. Mrs. W. B. Sowrey and Mrs.l elected secretary and assistant secretary and Mrs. J. Neil Gor- don of Toronto treasurer. Organizing secretary is Mrs. G. H. Leggett, education secret- ary and assistant Mrs. D.W.,tMc-« Gibbon and Mrs. F. W. Newton. . all of Toronto. War memorial secretary and assistant are Mrs. Arthur Jewitt, Lennoxville, Que., and Mrs. G. Graham Sinclair of «,5 Toronto. “Echoes" secretary is Mrs. 0. Douglas Little, Toronto, ser- vices secretary and Mrs. R. C. Latimer and Mrs. A. W. Linington, both of Tor- onto. ‘ Mrs. Richardson said she was ~ pleased with the “interesting and delightful annual meeting” ‘I in Nova Scotia. Members werq entertained at Government House as guests of Nova Scotia’s Lieutenant-Governor E. C. Plow, I and were given tours to Peggy’: Cove fishing village, the Hahfax Citadel and the Nova Scotia Museum. Delegates approved a resolu- continua lsup-port of the national associa- ltion of consumers, which had “amply demonstrated” its use- were 1 fulness in the last 10 years. The gency treatment for shock by ,Dr. ‘' ;Peters who ordered both of them The Commons voted the goy— 1, ernment» $624,593,000 in interim money supyplyto cover ndmlnls- Justice Minister Fulton 111- i di-cavted government eamcployecl , likely will be granted a chance against ’ Senator A. B. Baird (L-New- foundland) criticized the deficit ;'. assistant» “