IELEPHONE 8506 Buyer meats seller with Glldldiwn YJf"v' Ads. Dial I506 ask for dual- "04 04 Milli. for quick results. 72 PAGES L J? Guardian l"Covers Prince Edward Island Like 11.. Dew" WN CANADA, wnowrsnsv. AUGUST 14., 1957 CHIEF JUSTICE Thane Campbell is seen officially open- ing the Provincial Exhibition yes- terday. Seated on the platform A. left to right are: Wing Com. rnander Alan G. MacMillan, aide to the Lieutenant Governor; Gov- ernor Prowse. Dr. .I.P. Lantz. President of the Exhibition; lI.J. Kennedy. General Manager of the Exhibition; Hon. Eugene Cul- Chief Juslice Campbell Opens Prov. Exhibition "The Provincial Exhibition has played a very important part in the agricultural educat- ion of the ple of Prince Ed- ward isi ." said Chief Justice Thane A. Campbell at the of ficiai opening of the Big Fair at 12:!) p.m. yesterday. Mr. Campbell noted that agri- cultural fairs in the early history of Europe have played a dis- tinct part in the entertainment nf the people but from a Can- adian point of view the em- phasls on education has always been greatly stressed. The Chief Justice felt that by combining Old Home Week with the agricultural show an oppor- Head Of Aconic Mining Bankrupt MONTREAL (CP) - General Manager C. J. Buter of Aconic Mining Corporation has filed ps- pcrs with the bankruptcy court. it was announced Tuesday.” H His assets.wera reported oto.ost”stt'-so at Acsnic at :21 a share and valued at s:.zss.oss. liis liabilities were declared at 32,012,415. His action follows lest Tues- dsyla dive in Aconic stock from 5ll.30 to It on the Toronto Stock Exchange. Mr. Butler attributed the stock plunge to short - position raids by non - shareholders. He denied a report that it was caused largely by forced liquidation of his per- sonal holdings of Aconic stock. The corporation was magnetic sands property is Natsshqusll. near Sept-lies, Que.. and also has a pilot titanium reduction plant near Montreal where test runs began in 155. it is negotiating with unidenti- fied American interests for sale of Aconic control. I specied Polio Su in Magdalena MONTREAL (CPI-An ll-yesr- old girl suspected of having polio flown Tuesday from her home in Griadstone. Msgdelaa Ia- iands. to Montreal's Derval Air- Dort. An smbule was at the airport to take her to Sta. Justina children's hospital for treatment. The mercy night, undertaken by a Dakota from RCA! ststloa. Greenwood. N.S., was piloted by F0 George Vlbittenebsw sf Ver- dun, Qua, The gitlls condition was de- tunity Wlg afforded visitors to see the products of the land and at the same time to renew many old friendships. "Perhaps one of the greatest attractions of Old Home Week is the horse racing and one of the reasons the races are such an attraction is because they are so unpre- dictable." added Mr. Campbell. WELCDMEI VISITORS Dr. J.P. Lents. president of the Exhibtlion Association pre- sided at the opening and wel- comed the many visitors to the Fair. He said the two main rea- sons for the exhibition were the p. ' of livestock in the Province and to provide enter- whn come to the island each summer. He reported that over 2.000 livestock exhibits were housed on the grounds the largest that the Exhibition has ever known. He made special ” of the fine h displayed in the Women's institute paviilloa. ad- lng that one Maneg who. be said. coped D efficiently with all the loans that have arisen. Lieutenant Governor Pmwse extended a hearty welcome to all visitors from outside the tainment for the many visitors el the Exhibition. He expressed the hope that the hospitality they would enjoy would prompt them to return to the Province each year. PRAISES EXHIBITS I-Ion. Eugene Cullen. Minister of Agriculture and Acting Pre- mier said. "I don't think we have to take our hats off to any other place in Canada when it comes to raising fine livestock. This has been proven on many occasions by the fine showing we have made both at the Mari- time and the Royal winter fairs and the recent showings of our swine at the Brandon exhibition has served to add to our laur- s." The Agriculture Minister said he was very proud of the mag- nificent display put on by the various Women's Institute Branches throughout the prov- ince. lic commended the man- agement oi the exhibition for their efforts which he said was a splendid contribution to the agricultural industry of the Previeso. -or ' ' Mayor J. David Stewart of Charlottetown said he was happy . to welcome the many visitors to the City during Old Home Week prob- and to congratulate the Exhibi- tion management for their wonderful organisational ability in providing what he termed one of the most outstandlng.shows Province who were attending in Canada. F-86 Jet Plows CiiA'I'l-IAM. N. I. (CI?) - An P-U Bshrs jet lowed across a private lawn ussday and into the Mlramlchl River seconds after taking off from the Chat- hsm RCA! station. The student pilot from North- ca Ontario was killed when a parachute sued to open at Iowsltltude as he bailed out from the automatic i ' seat. Next- ef-kin were to be informed and the name issued shortly. Ile plunged into a gravel pit sear Ilotel Dleu ilespitel. The air craft just missed hlttinl O house and bars owned 5! Maud In in a wall populated area m E if. It tore up a sec- tion of sidewalk. severed a tele- phone ple and trimmed several tree taps before sinking is the river. Traffic on the Chatham-New- cutie highway was interrupted for almost an hour to allow scribed as sptisfectory. WORKERS DIG IN MCA Aids Investigation issotmlm. Que. (CPi-.Mari- time C e n t llllvltlslossefil tstaseaaseue.f.t:eresagat: lwasCaaedaawsrstsir&- DJ :WD”"'g.h..'.':"4":-'u:I.. ...'.',"' '.'h."".:'3&':aw1-Oawsdllwhddlr -news-staeeeaty. sum DiVjX&& mwnunlh 35. ,,,-,,,,.,,, annausrrnslr --m ---l''' .--.-...''-''.....c'':'..-'...'?..':'-: ..'.'.-'..."'..:.."..(t.'.'.:.. """'T""""""susssssmuutespwtseta wesasasutss .- .vr.-ts... cieareace of debris. The crash oc- CRATER ii'il dig. rlii -iii;-9 l i 9!; u up... an an Across Lawn In Crash Near Chatliam Base curred less than a mile from the RCA!" airstrip. Thepisnswasthsiialrdofits type to crash near the station within a week. The other two pilots were injured. A few hours before Tuesday's fatal accident another jet trainer was forced to make a belly landing when the wheel carriage jammed. Little damage was reported is the latter incident. IXICUTI FOIMQ LIADII VIENNA (Rsutersi - A death matence passed two months s'gs on Mihai! Fransia Kiaa. I. or effenceg against the Communists in Hisnpry la I910 now has been carried out. Budapest radio ro- pnrted Tuesday. Kiss had bees living under an assumed name. He was accused of slayings which occurrwd after the over- throw ot the short-lived Commu- nist regime of llll. OISIVI :2 it .' I I: len. Minister of Agriculture and acting Premier; and J.D. Stew- art. Mayor of Charlottetown. Oman War About Over MANAMA, Bahreln tCPt-Brlt- sin wrote off the Oman war Tues- day as virtually over. Scarlet banners of the sultan Muscat and Oman were raised over two more towns, Tanuf and Bakhla. Both capltulated without resistance. The rebellion of Imam Gahleb bin All ebbed Iurtner with the ad- vance of the sultan's loyal troops and their British allies. WEATHER Clearwitlsafew eloudyiniervtllafl Iiltlawarsners lightwesterly winds. Low and high at Clftown 45 and 70. Seek To Head Off Labor Riots In Polish City LODZ, Poland (Reuters) Strong police and militia squads Tuesday surrounded two street- car t e r m i it al s where striking workers have holed up. and pe- trolled the streets to choke off the threat of another serious is- bor uprising. Ten thousand transport workers went on strike Monday to protest low wages. There were signs offl- cials feared the strike could turn into full-scale labor riots as hap- pened a year ago at Poznan. The city-second largest in P0- land-was quiet after police used gas to break up a large crowd of demonstrators "onday night. Several persons were re- ported injured. a break in the dispute. The strik- ers rejected a small wage in- crease offered them, and said they will stay out until their de- mands are met. INTEREST OF THE ENEMY l City authorities circulated leaf- lets saying the strike is serving the interests of Poland's enemies. Sir Bernard Burrows. the Brit- ish polltical resident in Bahren described the uprising as "vir- tually over." He told reporters that most villagers who backed the imam of 0man's aim to set up an independent ” e have surrendered and welcomed the forces of sultan Said bin Talmur or fled into the hills. Burrows said the sultan is not worried about the Arab League's appeal for a United Nations ss- curity council ting on Oman. considering the operation an in- ternal affair In which he had asked British intervention Britain and the sultan's Arsban Penin- sula realm are allied by treaty. WITBBIAI TIOOPI I In Iondoa. the foreign office gave assurances Britain will with- draw troops as soon as possible. as the rebel forces were driven from other stmngpoints into the craggy hills of the sultanate. signs of a split in the rebel forces were seen by British offi- cera in the offer of surrender Monday of the son of the most important supporter of the rebel chief. sultan ben Suleiman sent a note to the sultan's forces saying he renounced all allegiance to his lather. Suleiman bin liimyar. PM Name: Press Officer OTTAWA (GP) - Appointment of James R. Nelson. 35. of To- ronto ss press officer to Prime min stsr Dietenbaker was announced Tuesday by the prime ' ' 's office. The appointment is effective Aug. 31. Mr. Nelson now is on the Ottawa staff of British United Press and is president of the par- liainentary press lallery. Mr. Nelson joined BUP in- lontreal In I944 as a radio newsi writer. He joined the Ottawa: staff is ms and has also served as news editor. bureau manager and central division manage of the news agency in Toronto and Montreal. Only one fort. Jabrin. continuedl to fly the white flag up the imam- The transport workers at pres- ent are paid an average of two Zlotys and 80 Growly an hour (less than the price of a pack of clgarctsi. The rate of the Zloty was fixed by the government in February at 24 to the U.S. dollar. l According to official figures the , wage scale ranges from 750 to 1.- l00 Zlotys a month. depending on length of service. No Decision On Inquiry WINNIPEG (CPl - Transport lilaistas-Jlsss said have hasday night no decision has bed made whether or not a public inquiry I will be held into a Maritime Cen- tral Airways plane crash which killed 19 persons. The MCA DC-4 crashed 150 miles west of Quebec Sunday kill- ing all aboard. Mr. Hees said in an interview: ”0ur men were on the scene are investigating." and if it deems a public inquiry is the thing to do. . .one certainly will be held. "I have no information on their report and I only know what I have read in reports about the crash." The transport minister. return- ing from a west coast tour, ar- rived from Edmonton and was to leave for Ottawa today. yria Claims US Backed Plot DAMASCUS (AP Syria charged today the United States backed a plot to overthrow Pres- ident Shukri I(uwatly'a govern- ment. It said the U.S. was will- ing to give between ssoo,ooo.ooo and M00.000.0fIl in aid if a new government would make peace with Israel. The U.S. embassy hcre label- led the charge "a complete fa- brication." An official Syrian statement said the U.S. sent its "number one expert on coups d'etat" to mastermind the conspiracy. It identified him as Hswsrd Stone and said he "u... similar plots In Sudan and Iran and was behind the American coup dletat in Guatemala in I955." (In 1955, Guamlemalais Com- munist - led government was lab dig for the fuselage. The equipment would be ob- tained from Quebec City contrac- tors and would laclads a winch- ii 2 5 thrown out by Carlos Castillo Ar- Oommnnlst lillrdi. The U.S. Embassy here said lines is a member of its political , '5? 'il.':5 ii: But there was no indication of V Proudly displaying the prize winning cake baked by herl mother, Mrs. Sterling Yeo of i e ' ' i '- 3 l p.- 2 A PRIZE WINNING CAKE Sheila Yeo (centrei. while de-yRiver. Mrs. Yeo has the envi- vouring the cake with avid eycai able record of having won first are her brother Lorne (left! and prize with her delicious cakes for Union Road. Queens County, islsylvia Stevenson (right of North the last three successive years. Charges Planning - BERLIN flicuteral - Russian l Communist chief Nikita Khrush- chev Tuesday accused West GET- of preparing West Germans for' : from Russia of thousands of Ger-l mans he knows are dead. A He was addressing a mass rally, in East Berlin's Marx - Engels Square at the climax of a week-( I long tour of Communist East Ger- many. I(hrushchev's s p e e c h before 111,000 chanting and applauding: onlookers in the flag - draped square was considered the most bitter he has yet made against Adenaucr. I Adeneuers' "inhuman" repatri- ation claim "ls playing with the feelings of mothers and fathers who lost their sons in the war."? Khrushchev said. l I The Soviet p a rii y leaders lspeech came soon after he, De- , Prints Minister Ansstas ' Milnoysn and s I0-strong Russian government and party delegation 'signed a join. declaration with l their East German counterparts. The declaration a n n o u n c e it there was "complete unanimity". between the two governments on the international situation. It I called for an all-Europe collcvivc security system and urged arms. reductions . It also claimed there has been? a further reduction of interns-l West War tional tension in the last few months. Khrushchev accused Adenauer Ihomy me, me "uh um um man Chancellor Konrad Adcnaucr of cold-bloodedly Elfin! Open human wounds when the German "when their "Don is nmshedl war by demanding the return. statesman claimed thousands of Germans are still in Russia. Khrushchev claimed Adensuer had made the repatriation de mands to sow hatred and prepare the German people psychologic- ally for war. Khrushchev accused the West of ”srmlng and working out plans for an aggressive war" against the Soviet bloc. The Soviet delegation will leave Berlin by train today for an East German airport to fly home. Tuesday's declaration said East and West Germany have to agree on a common policy for: l. A ban on the stationing or manufacturing of any kind of atomic bomb or weapon on Ger- man territory and the banning of all atomic war propaganda. 2. Withdrawal of both German states from either NATO or its eastern counterpart, the Warsaw Pact abolition of conscription and agreement on limitation of armed forces. 8. A joint or separate approach to the United States. Russia, Bri- tain snd France. calling on them to effect most rapidly the with- drawal hy stages of their troops. IIONN. Germany (Rcutersl - continued on page 3, Cal. 0 Record Rain in Manitoba BOISSEVAIN. Man. (CF) - Three days of record rainfall has flooded this souuhweste as Manl- tobs community and devasted farms in a Gm-square-mile sur- nding area. The weather office at Winnipeg said the 10.51 inches that fell on Boissevain between Sunday night and Tuesday morning exceeds the greatest monthly total of any sta- tion in the southeastern Prairies District agricultural representa- tive Glen Arno said Tuesday crops in 25 square mile ares sunounding White Water Lake. five miles west of here, are a complete loss. Damage to cereal crops alone will nan to 3400.000. in Boissevsin itself. a town nfi I60 population, I2 families were' evacuated from homes in low-iy-l ing areas. The community is IT miles south of Brandon. WARNS RUSSIANS OF FLU MOSCOW (Reuters! - Profes- sor N. V. Sergeyev. Soviet virus diseases specialist. warned Tues- day of the possibility of a severe outbreak of Asiatic influenza this autumn and winter in Russia. Sergeyev mentioned recent out- breaks in Tashkent. Ssmarkand and other cities. QUEEN MOTHER LOSI-is FISH. CAITIINESS. Scotland (Reu-I mnlwumn Mother Elizabclh,; vacationing here. went fishing Monday. She hooked one fish. lost it, and didn't have another bite for the rest of the day. PRICE 5: Atlantic Provinces Win Delay In Telegram Boost Hearing ls Deferred To Sept. 3 By JOHN beBLANC Caadisn Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CF) - Atlantic pro- vinces governments Tuesday won a dc-ferment in the railway com- panics' attempt to revise the do- mestic telegraph rate structure, and at the same time the com- panics were denied temporary rate increases. The board of transport com- missionc-rs. at the end of a one- day hearing. deferred further sessions on the application until Sept. ii. The railways wanted pro- posed new rates to begin taking effect Sept. 1. The changes. estimated by the railways to yield them an addi- tional 32,160,000 a year. are being fought by the four eastern pro- vluces. upon which they would hear most heavily. This is be- cause the charges sffectlng these provinces are lower than the rest of Canada generally. and the rail- ways want to equalise tolls across the country. PREPARE CASE The Maritime; transportation commission, representing the At- iantlc governments, called for adjourn m e n t of the hearings after completion of the compa- nies' evidence Tuesday. to obtain time to prepare a case oppogln. the changes. It was the only body appearing against the proposed revision. The railway companies first ob- jected to the adjournment and then said that. if one were to be granted, they should be per- mitted interim hoists final disposition of the applia- IOI1. They proposed that this take one of two forms: I. A boost - of unspecified amount-in ratss trader the 30- sent structure. 2. Pu 'sslon to put into effect Sept. I the screened "stage one" of their proposal. This would involve increases averaging 12 per cent for the At; iantlc area and about 1! per cent for Canada generally. Their over - all plan involves putting the changes into effect for the scabos -1 provinces in three stages over two years. to lessen the immediate impact in the East. Eventually. the Atlan- tic increases would be about I per cent. against 15 per cent gen- eraliy. TIME NEEDED Maritime: counsel Frank D. Smith of Halifax. calling for do ferment of the hearings. said the proposed rates would hear "inset grievously” on the seaboard area and more time was needed to study the proposals. They constituted the first change in the principle of tele- graph rates in many years and would cost the Atlantic provinces about 5730.000 a year. he said. The proposed rates are based on s t r sight airline mileage. whereas railway witnesses said the existing system is a haphaan ard one that just grew up. The new arrangement is based largely on one in effect in the United States for about seven years. Railway cxpcrts said the prtr posalg would eliminate anomalies and inequalities in the existing system. RICII SOURCE Exps-rig say as per cent of the world's output of diamonds come from the Kiebrley region in south Africa. i