Buyer meets seller A* TELEPHONE 8506 Dial 8306 ask for classified ad taser, for quick results, Nee with Guardian Want Che Guar VOL. LXXII NO. 224 “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” ova 16 PAGES NOT MORE FIVE CENTS As Big ee way, SEPTEMBER 25, 1959 .e sengersA Airliner Explodes reK Jones Has Jr. Champ At Springfield Show — BORDEAUX. France ‘CP: A illed 12 Persons Survive | Fatal French Crash i'moment &€ hit the ground. The A Prince Edwajd Island Hols- jot the twelve animals entered | tein, F.L. Kisypet Jr., won first! from the Maritime provinces.. | French DC-7 airliner bound for others were trapped imside as it | West Africa crashed, burned ana burst into flames. The aircraft blew up just after takeoff here had taken on a fuil load of fuel. Gordon MacMillan, left and Eugene Donahue of Cornwall were following in their father’s footsteps last night when they were named as National 4-H IN DADS’ FOOTSTEPS Club week delegates as a live- stock judging team from this province Twenty-nine years ago Premier J. Walter Shaw, cen- ‘tre, coached their fathers Gor- &.. don MacMillan and Joseph Donahue, who won the honor as a team in Boy and Girls Club work as it was then call- ed. (Story, pictures on page 3). Unemployment Ins. Move Rated ‘Most Controversial’ By JOHN LeBLANC Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP) — One of the most controverial pieces of labor legislation in many years goes into effect Sunday. It consists .of amendments to the Unemployment Insurance Act, boosting contributions into the recession-depleted insurance fund and raising the wage ceiling of eligibility for coverage, - Liberals and the fought it tooth and nail at the last session of Parliament, and kept up a near-filibuster for so long that its implementation was delayed for three months up to now. It also lacked the endorsation of the government’s unemploy- ment insurance advisory commit-|Khrushchev returned from his/on a wide assortment of cold war tee, an employee-employer group | flying tour across the United! problems ranging from disarma- of unpaid consultants. Despite criticism of various as- Sects of the legislation by labor and management groups and by opposition politicians before a House committee, it eventually was steamrollered through by the Progressive Conservative major- ity. ROUGH RIDE i But its ride was so long and rough that Labor Minister Starr had to ‘skip an international la- bor convention in Europe to pilot it safely through the Commons. | Main features of the measure are these: : 1. Contributions into the insur- ance fund by employers, employ- ees and the federal government are increased by an average of 3% per cent. 2. The_maximum period for drawing benefits while unem- ployed is extended from 36 to 52 | weeks. 3. The annual wage ceiling for | coverage is raised from $4,800 to $5,460, and two new classes for contributions and benefits are added around the top. | Hoisting the ceiling will bring about 80,000 more persons under | ‘Continued on Page 5, Col. 4) tor Importa | | By GARDNER L. BRIDGE | WASHINGTON (AP)—Nikita S. States Thursday to get down to | the real business of his American | trip. Young Liberal iMeet Opens OTTAWA —/ep) — The na- jtional convention of the Young | Liberal Federation of Canada ‘opens here today with the em- iphasis On organization of the federation and the Liberal party. | The federation executive met /Thursday to set up committees ‘and put finishing touches to the iconvention program which _in- cludes addresses by party leader Lester B, Pearson, New Bruns- wick Leader Louis Robichaud and British Columbia Leader Ray Perrault» Daily Traffic Toll Is Nine Fatalities By STEPHEN SCOTT Canadian Press. Staff Writer highway deaths in the first six months of this year was down 96 Khrushchev Returns nt lalks As Rocket Duds Again place in a large class of senior | : yearlings and emerged as junior! The Jones young heifer, Abeg- male champion yesterday at the | weit Adorn was second in her Eastern United States Exposition| class of junior yearlings. at West Springfield, Massachus-| - A Falconwood Farm heifer, | setts. Glengale Anthony Jane, was) Owned by the Estate of J.j third in her class of junior year-| Walter Jones he was also first|lings. A Dorchester penitentiary prize senior yearling and junior|farm heifer was second. champion at Charlottetown in; Harding ‘Brothers, -a New) August. _. |.Brunswick outfit, placed fourth The show is a tremendously | with their aged bull. large one with 337 Holsteins com-| Dickie Brothers of Truro were | peting. sixth with a senior heifer calf. | The The show is continuing. Yank Moon Try Fails. Island entry was part By HOWARD BENEDICT {when the moon will be at its clos- CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) /est point to the earth, about 221,- +A towering Atlas - Able moon/000 miles. rocket exploded during an engine} A spokesman for the National |test Thursday, postponing a U.S. | Aeronautics and Space Adminis- jeffort to even the moon score|tration said in Washington it, is with Russia and prompting a/unlikely another rocket can be study of other space _ shots! made ready in time for an Octo- planned this fall. }ber launching The 100-foot rocket, scheduled! The group announced that as a to carry a 375-pound satellite to| result of Thursday’s blowup, it late Thursday night. killing 48 of Cs FMAM the 60° persens—aboard. Twelve persons survived,-many of them badly injured. The plane carried 51 passengers and a crew of nine. Sekou Sissoko. “health minister of the Frenth Cameroons, was among the survivors. He was only slightly hurt : | Three children were among | those alive. An 18-months-old boy and a two-year-old girl, escaped with only shock and minor. injur- ies. Another boy, about 4, had a broken leg and burns. Names of survivors given by the airport officials appeared to be all French. The survivors appeared to have been thrown out of the plane the JJASOND TREND REVERSED The bureau. of statistics re- ports that were out of work and seeking jobs at Aug. 22, up 11,000 from 239,000 Canadians | The four-engined airliner, be- }longing to the privately-owned +Fransport Aecriens | Intercontinen- teaux line, was taking off on a | regular flight to Abidjan on the Ivory €oast and Bemako inthe Sudanese Republic of French Africa when it plunged about inte a pine forest two miles from the ‘end of the runway at Bordeaux- Merignac airport. Airport people said the plane apparently developed engine trouble and had difficulty lifting from the runway. In the airport lounge hystert cal _reftives and friends surged about, begging for information. \Some_prayed. Others broke guard rails at the field and ‘dashed for the wreck. ~ | the previous month. The in-” crease reversed a five-month trend in the unemployment pic- | ‘Espionage Recalled At Trial e Angle Of Wound | By JOHN B. DURANT HYANNIS, Mass. ter F. Munford, head of the (AP)—Wal- | Kitchen Knife |s Cause. n Abdomen County. District Attorney Ed- mund Dinis said the §9-year-old | Munford, elected to the reported a moon orbit early next month,| will make a plete study of| ike-closed U.S. Steel Corpora- - corpora’ presi- ;was destroyed when tons of ex-/| space ahes Somhadioie a <> : tion, - recovering from an ab- ee oe ae ao ae heen | ploding fuel Tipped through the this fa"! This would include WINTES THUR, Switzerland, Hume, questioned by the court|dominal woend which @ district gnger medical care) for fatigue ae ee a er wiages— [attempt to send & rocket toward) (Reuters) — An English murder|sbout his criminal record, first|attorney Thursday said Munford | sed nervous exhaustion, stages were not on the missile. | Earlier : aes Gee the | nem eared Serene : ce oe , ae a ieee ge pyr on - at ~_ a : —s | The U.S. air force announced/ entire American space program | Xe, Photographed a Jae) Soe Oe 5 SS. 2 ee ee? meen _ sli on the highly poli the explosion~ occurred during a} would come under scrutiny but military yeti for Poesy: 5 ae -_— the. or beng | static teSof the missite-and that|this later was toed own to in- aac fom ieteen Fecha, ie an TIDAL WAVE CREATED atest ’ ™ it is investigating the cause. A’ clude only the fa!l launchings. static firing checks all operating functions of the engines, includ-| THIRD FAILURE ing ignition, while the rocket is; The Atlas-Able was _the~third locked on its pad, |U.S. space vehicle to ‘fail during] Soviet Premier Nikita Khrush- MATCH SOVIET ; chev’s visit. | The United States was edunt-| Last week a Thor-Able fizzled ing on the Atlas-Able to match in an attempt to put a 365-pound the spectacular Soviet moon) navigation satellite into orbit and strike of Sept. 13. a Jupiter missile exploded shortly It was scheduled for launching] after it was launched with a during the period of Oct. “8-6, cargo of mice and frogs. told of working for an electronics firm in Montreal after passing a security screening. The espionage angle cropped up as ex-convict Donald Brian Hume, 39, went on trial here on charges of shooting a taxi driver to death in Zurich last Jan. while making a getaway from a bank robbery. He faces life im- ‘prisonment if convicted. This is a round of fntensive) jtalks with President Eisenhower |ment through the Berlin crisis to) fighting in Laos. The outcome of these secret discussions, starting late today at Eisenhower’s Maryland Mountain retreat, Camp David, and contin- uing through Sunday morning, is bound to affect the course of world events in the days and months ahead. j Khrushchev, wearing a light | grey suit and carrying a blue-| grey*felt hat, was more fhan an| hour behind schedule after a late} leave-taking in Pittsburgh, where} he spent one of the happier days| of his cross country tour. | NO SPEECH For once, being late, the So- viet premier made no speech on arriving at the airport. He walked directly to the bubbletop White House limousine waiting) for him. In contrast to the ceremonious welcome he received at the same airport 10 days ago on his arrival from Moscow, Khrushchev was greted more or less perfunctor- ily Thursday. Eisenhower |, sent. . undersecre- tary of state, Robert Murphy to welcome the Russian leader back to Washington. Only a few hundred persons were at the’ airport but several . VANCOUVER (CP) — A daily|compared with the same period | thousand were waiting in Lafay- last year but warned that it is|ette Park outside Blair House, lthe last six months of the year|the government's official guest average of nine Canadians die in traffic accidents and there are “snecial splurges of ‘hit&e homicide’ on holiday weekends. W.A. Bryce, general manager o the Canadian-highway safety conference, made this statement Thursday in a talk at a sympo- sium on safety education at the annual convention of the Cana- dian - Good Roads Association here. Such descriptions as ‘motor mania” and “m®orized mas- sacre” were given by speakers as they emphasized the need for increased safety on the highways with stress on the need for edu- cation of young drivers. DEATHS DOWN Mr. Bryce, whose conference was formed. recently the auspices of the Good Roads As gociation, said the mimber of under that are the most hazardous. Traffic accidents in Canada 'where damage exceeded $100 in- |ereased by 7,420 or 7.3 per cent in the first six months over the comparable period last year. His accident prevention sug- jgestions included: Greater |respect for law, co-operation with enforcement agencies; respect for the courts: improvements of courts; end education of the driver, pedestrian,, parent and child. ( | START YOUNG J. G. McQueen, executive sec- retary of the Canadian Automo- bile -Association, said training must start with the “ebullient, unpredictable five-year-olds who dart needlessly into the paths of ears.” residence. WHERE-TO-FIND-IT Announcements, notices . 15 Births, deaths, etc., .. 2, 15 Classified section .... 14, 15 Comics, features .... .B Church notices .......... 2 Charlottetown news ...... 5 , eres eee ra 4 Finance, markets +o Island news .......... 2 Ns cise bodvicdsaes 8 9 Women’s page ......... ee Late reports from Guardia: news bureaus in Summer- side, Montague, Alberion and Souris, and from special cor- respovdects now 2 rar on the Isinnd News Pe27e. | - LOVED HIM lens in Toronto. Police had a + C ” th d ba seace Singer Paul Anka croons Jo tra I 7 on the sat : a" ai Mapie Leal Gar- | of 6,00 ‘teenagers and | —w hod cort Au.a trom th: (eP wedge to es- Paste) to ferm a 2.250,000 Bus. Grain Is Spilled Into Lake PORT ARTHUR (CP)—One | ‘tion of a huge grain terminal col-| | lapsed here Wednesday night injured. : age | spilling thousands of bushels of The terminal, owned by United along the waterfront. No one was estimated igrain into Lake Superior and Grain Growers Ltd., had a capa- | second largest and second new- | est of 26 at the Lakehead. The 2,250,000 bushels of grain. Di i Nfld J. E. Brownlee of Calgary, es n . interview the annex was a com- ST. JOHN’S, Nfld. (CP) — An- plete loss and on the basis of Thursday, bringing the death tol] CSt $2,000,000 to replace. He said in the current epidemic in New- the company hoped to. salvage Dr. John Davies, chief medical) Earlier, police had officer, said a 20-year-old man loss at $10,000,000. Wednesday died Thursday morn-| investigat ad. lin the province since the epi-| Stain into the slip on the offshore demic started in July reached Side of the terminal knocking the John’s boy was admitted to hos-|arily at the height of the grain pital in serious condition. ' shipping season. played aavoe with small vessels | The district attorney said Mun- iford was carrying kitchen uten- i sils to the sink when the accident happened and suffered a wound two to three inches deep. - He said Mrs. Munford told him she entered the kitchen of their big summer home at Chatham, or Cape Cod. Wednesday and found her husband “bleeding about waist-high in the abdo- i'men.”’ “No one knows how # hap pened,’ Dinis said. “No one was present at the time.” | Dinis said he was informed | Munford was standing up and “didn’t realize what had hap- pened.” DISPLAY KNIFE Police showed reporters a knife with a five-inch blade as the in- strument that caused the injury. Ross Thatcher Leads Liberals REGINA (OP) W. Rose Thatcher. “once. a pillar im the CCF party, Thursday was elect- led leader of the Saskatchewan Liberal Party on the first ballot? Mr. Thatcher, 42, succeeds A, H. McDonald of Moosomin who “ resigned ‘the leadersh'» because of ill health but has said he will contest the next election, ex- pected in 1960, as a private mem- \ ber. causing a 12-foot tidal wave that; City of 7,500,000 bushels and is the Polio Victim annex that collapsed contained company president, said in an other ‘polio Victim: died here other recent construction would foundland to seven. |some of the grain. | admitted to hospital in St. John’s Cause of the collapse is being The number ‘of cases reported | The collapse dumped tons of 104 Thursday. A six-year-old St.| terminal out of operation tempor- JUST LIKE NICKEL ‘CUP-A-COFFEE’ OTTAWA When did you |last have a: five cent.cup of coffee? Sure, it used to seem a “permanent. institution” but by now it has almost vanished from memory. Soon: it will be just as hard level. In contrast, the number still sold at five..cents is ‘ess than 460,000 daily and shrinking rapidly. The strongest trend {fs to a | point between these extremes, to remember newspapers selling | with sales pavers at the aver- for five cents a copy,. according | age price. of Seven cents per copy accounting for about-750,000 daily. |COSTS REDOUBLE The five cent price for news- | papers became almost universal jin Canada by the mid-forties. | Since that time production costs, covering payrolls, equipment, material, newsgathering services. etc., have not only doubled but redoubled. There is almost complete a- greement'on the part of papers all cross Canada that this cir- cumstance has doomed the five |eent paper — that the day is near when there will be no such jthing as a five cent paper in | Canada, the United States or to students of late figures com- piled at this centre of Canadian statistical information. The rate at which papers sell- ing at a straight five cents per copy are vanishing from the Canadian scene indicates: they'll soon be as extinct as the dodo— or the five cent “cup-a-coffee”. NINE OUT 0 FTEN Each day in Canada more than 3,200,000 copies of Enclish langu- age newspapers are sold. Almost nine out of ten of these conies (more than 85.6 per cent) sell at some rate higher than a straight five cents. More papers in Canada are now sold at 10 cents per cony — “Isewhere in the world. an avera%e in excess of 1 9°9.990 The eorr-c-coast quality of daily — than at any other price .his tread is illustrated by the $ 5c Papers Almost Extinct fact that there is no paper is Newfoundiand for sale for less than seven cents, while the same thing in true of Vancopver Island. In Nova Scotia more than five times as many papers are sold at seven cents or more as are. sold at five cents. COMPLETE SOON | Saskatchewan, like Newfound- land has no five cert nearer and it is believed in Ottawa that every province ‘s ber swept along by the trend While some 25 ou‘ of Canada's 88 daily paners. published in English are still Ksted as soliing at five cents, most of those ere described as “very small,” with normal issues of eight pages. o 16 pages tabloid size. Even a- mong papers of this size, the move to higher prices has be come general., All the, signs indicate that the departure from the scene of five eent papers 1s to spend up. ie theearly future and soon wil | become complete in Canada.