; TELEPHONE 8506 , : Seinir snitn siuiee ‘Gilt Gest Went ' Ads. Dial 8506 ask for clausified ad taker, for quick results, nce Edward Island Like The Dew” WN, CANADA, een MARCH 14, 1959 VOL. LXXII NO. 62° — Smashes | Former Record *. = 7 ° F ‘ ° . Returns A new recerd pre was set Nerth. He wes purchased by the arm Dl I aurion tnhay a So Foetete Baler | Sette ee scsi Beef Sale at the Catiseum yester- | °°. Hereford went t 36% : Caution was the keynote of both piece of property would be avail- that Ottawa is expected to make day. The top peice of M2 cemts | cents and was bought by R.@. be government and opposition mem-|able for sale but neither the fa-|an announcement regarding ex- per pound wes pea’ by R-T. Hol-| Holman Limited. ke bers’ remarks as the Prince Ed-|ther or the son could avail them-|tended farm credit. He suggest- man Limited fer the S39 pound) The reserve champion Angus of ward Island Farm Establishment | selves of the opportunity of credit|ed that the House delay discuss- (AP}—Prime Minis| Hereford seer at wemt grand brought 40% cents for George ~ % bill was introduced to the Leg-|as provided under the act. jon on the bill until the visit of champion fer Rebert Sanderson of | Kelly of Morell. He was purchas- - islature by Agriculture Minister} ., ‘ Federal hl uni the vil ot Macanllan, ow beck, trem | Smmoion or Rutert Sunderses of ed by the Dominion Stores. Cullen yesterday. REMATURE week, : * Bonn Friday night with broad) day afterncen The sale was opened officially : TOPS IN NEWS REPORTING The Progressive Conservative} Frank Myers felt the act was Mr. Cullen said he. was inclin-i wi. Germans and Freach—| The previous recend price of by Hon. Eugene Cullen, minister members were unanimous that|premature in light of the fact! (Continued on Page 5 col. 2) oF $1.69 per pound was paid fer Dan-| Of agriculture. J.E. Mclnirye, | =~ the age limit of 35 should be rais- pout it so gugem ete.» Sunis gud champion |C_N.R, Moncton, N.B. was the . Halifax editorial etalf of; news team) ‘than an in-; worked at the pithead are shown | ed to 50 while the Minister sup- \ to summit tals with Russia ty) — aoe ‘et the show in| Sumouncer : _ he Canadian Press won the spot | dividual, has been given en award | here, in front of a map locating | ported by Premier Matheson and July, British sources reported. | 1. — - Win. | -'Bewe competition in the 1958 Na-| 1. i) wwA competitions were| {te scene of their story. Left to |Morley M.. Bell suggested that ar . PA ec Macmillan aopes next week to| __ | _ Others buyers this year inchxted | tional Newspaper Awards for right: Ian Donaldson, 23, Harry |the province “tread softly” for , win President Eisenhower's ex reserve grand champion | Canada Packers, Rendezvous coverage of Gro Syringhlll ming Surted 10 years age. The farve , 27, and Joe Dupuis, 29.|the first year with the _ possi- ‘ |dorsement of the plan for East-| See! © coms t Winsun | Restaurant, Swifts, Coop Super Gaaster. B ie the fret time a| members ofthe Halter staff who CE ad pa eh A West negotiations on German and| ‘9° Suuvtrn inte the rane for] lieeaiyn, Mew Ne as case 6 ee a S Is lr Vi other European Problems. auctioneer Clyde Craswelll te sell. | Phee:’Clyde River, Ivan Turner, lay or ieW | Essential features on the pre-| He was purchased by the Domin-| Winsioe, John Nicholson, Milltown ea juart rs ve gram, designed te achieve a set-| inn Stores Cress, Athol Cotton, Kensington, WANTS AGREEMENT tlement on the Berlin crisis and) The average price per pound| HS. McEwen, Sanderson’s Mar- Opposition Leader Bell said he| yw esn ae ed Gen. |at any time and ¥ the president | relaxation of the cold war. al| was 229, aime tenths of 2 com ket, St. Peter’s, H.S. McLeod, — . about the bill which he noted he|‘¢ United States deter- He told. senators under ques-|Allied governments daring mer-| 303 test year A total of $23-|Wishiman’s Soper Market Mor n tri e. istrict had worked so long to promote. | mine "0 g9 to war M necessary ltioning that the army is ready| mal diplomatic exchanges. 354.48 was veolieed fer the 9! :azue, Stewart and Beck, Monta- e He said “the matter is too im- Berka, was disclosed Fri-/t9 might now or at any time in| In Bonn, Chancellor Konrad] steers | gue, Bagnall Bros.. Hunter River. aw 0S ene ieee ee sums starute |nmited Wat. provided sir sad) Adenauer seid he and Mocnilize The reserve champion Short GRAND FALLS, Nfld. , over we wa ave| “The such an & sea lifts are gvailable from the|“achieved complete unity” im) bors steer brougit 42 cews fer | The central Newfoundland heed ty as cnere mt et nse mat ier Diefenbaker for an tmmediate |an sct that will benefit our|would deter the Soviets from hav-| air force and navy. their two days of talks. owner Alen Younker of Winsiee nce Keeps an a te 2 WA “a be commission enmand te le Ceenet in che cme nine. 2 Rae Geom. ot tte ——— se \ accompanied the hurricane. PLANES GROUNDED Winds reached gale force all over Newfoundland. Drifting snow blocked highways in’ west- ern sections. Plane traffic was . grounded. Earlier Friday winds miels an hour were recorded at a lightship off Halifax harbor. ‘Cross-liarbor ferry service was gine failure bucking the storm. In Manitoba WINNIPEG (CP) — Premier Duff Roblin and both opposition party leaders in -the Manitoba legislature Friday criticized the Newfoundland government for its actions in that province’s wood- Premier Roblin and former pre- mier D. L. Campbell, leader of tae Liberal - Progressive Opposi- tion, both said that Newfound- land legislation decertifying the International Woodworkers of America (CLC) as bargaining agent for the in New- foundland should be reviewed by the Supreme Court of Canada. CCF Leader Lioyd Stinson, who brought the question before the House, said the federal god ment should disallow the New. - Brief CS foundland legislation. Strike In In Police Skirmish’ OHSWEKEN, Ont. this Six Nations reserve com- munity near Brantford. The 20-minute early - morning scuffle marred a long -_standing alliance between the British and the Iroquois chiefs, whose ances- ters had fought beside British forces in the~ American revolu- tion and the war of 1812. The chiefs and their support- lors gethered in the longhouse, traditional seat of tribal govern ment on the 30,000-acre reserve, and appealed.to tne Russian ant- bassador in Ottawa for help. Reinforcements of 400 Indians were reported coming from a Six Nations reserve at Lewiston, N.Y., to help the rebel group. CHIEFS TAKE CONTROL Last week the chiefs declared themselves in control of the re- serve, proclaimed it a sovereign state and demanded recognition of the “Grand River country.” But resumption of powers they lost in 1924 was short-lived. Early | - Friday more than 50 RCMP of- ficérs raided the yellow - brick council house at this reserve community and ordered out 120 Indians who were listening to rock ‘n’ roll records. The chiefs moved into the council chambers last week when the 11 - man elected council B.C. Halts Govt Operations VICTORIA (CP) — The first {plo civil service strike in Canada’s history brought government operations to a ternporary, stand- still in British Columbia Friday. The strike lasted less than four hours. The pfovince’s more than 12,- 000 government employees trooped back to work before mid- day on orders from their associa- tion after Premier Bennett’s So- cial Credit government obtained a B.C. Supreme Court anti-picket- ing injunction. Ed O’Connor, general secretary ‘of the “B.C, Government Employ ees Association, the strike is postponed until a argument is “There is a point here as to whether the law of the land is ‘c epply equally to government em- ployees,” he said. “Either we have the legal right to strike and | ing place vickets like any other union organization in Canada, or we haven't.” The association called the strike to back up demands for this recognition from the provin- centres afound the association’: claim that it should, like other uniong,.have bargaining rights in wage negotiations. WELL BOOST WAGES The government announced earlier this week that it would pay a total of $3,000,000 in wage increases for the civil servants. But the association refused to call off the strike until it re ceived a written offer and until the government acted on a fe port by Prof. F. A. Carrothers of the University of B.C. on barbain- rights for civil servants. The strike bagan at 7 a.m. PST and before it was called off at 10:50 a.m. it had hit government- operated ferries and bridges, wel- fare offices, liquor outlets, regis- tration bureaus, highways and , |forestry projects, court houses .jand a host of other government services throughout the province, Only such essential services ‘as lift bridges, jails and mental in- stitutions were maintained. Attorney-General Robert Bon- ner, who announced that the gov- ernment had obtained the anti- picketing injunction, said: “This was not_a strike against the government. It was a strike against the public and the ex- ecutive of the association respor Sible must know how the people of BX. feel about it.” \ The slipped quietly out a back door waile a group of young braves ripped the front door off its hinges. The handful of ROMP officers stationed on the reserve didn’t interfere. Amd while the chiefs issued proclamations and set up their own police force, the RCMP Immigration Minister Ellen Fairclowgh, Canada’s first woman cabinet member, warned the chiefs to stop ‘molesting citizens.” “JUMP IN LAKE” But Chief Wallace (Mad Bear) Anderson, who now has returned to his home at Lewiston, told her to go “‘jump.in tne lake.” That seemed to do it. A few Indians suffered minor injuries during the struggle for possession of the council house. Four were arrested and charged with obstrucing police. Another 15 Indians were served summons on charges of imper- sonating peace officers. The Canadian government ab- olished the: ancestral group by order-in-council in 1924 and set up an elected council tb take care of tribal matters. Fish Tariff Seen Danger FREDERICTON (CP)—Ernest Richard (L—Cloucester) said in| the leislature budget debate Fri- day increased United States tar- iffs continued to pose a threat to New Brunswick fishing industry markets. : He said even a moderate in- crease against New Brunswick fish and fish products would prove disastrous to the whole in- dustry. The Liberal member urged the Progressive Conservative govern- ment to make “all possible rep- resentations to Ottawa to insure that Canadian trade policies to not endanger New Brunswick in- dustries. “We must export a major por- tion of our fish, lumber, base metals . . . br our whole economy will be come depressed,” Mr. Richard declared. “The United States is our prit- cipal market for all such ex-| §% ports,” he said, adding: “There are those in the United States who would have tariffs raised against our fish products.” PAPAL MESSAGE VATICAN CITY (Reuters)— Pope John will broadcast the| n first Easter message of his reign at 8 p.m. (3 p.m. AST) Holy: Sat- urday, March 2,\the Vatican said. < have | Alberta farming constituency Taylor said the a ready to use nuclear if it is to the West’s advantage— UP Train Crashes Into Restaurant OLYMPTA, Wash. (AP) — A string of runaway freight cars crashed threugh the Union Pact- fic -depot Friday night, crossed the main street and smashed into a restaurant, — At~least one person was dead and 17 were injured. Kenneth A. Dilley, 36, a tele- @rapher at the depot, apparently was at his post when killed. The runaway freight brushed aside two parked cars while cros- sing the street. At the scene, police and fir- men were digging through the rubble of the wrecked buildings, seeking more injured. The accident occurred at the dinner hour when the restaurant was. filled with patrons. Beef Show when they purchas- red Robert Sanderson’s grand chatuipion Hereford steer yes- terday for 100% cents per = 7 Labor Blamed For Costs Troubles In Agriculture | Conservative MP from an blamed labor Friday for agricul- ture’s economic troubles. ~Jack-H. “Horner, Acadia, said labor is always causing strikes “not caring who pays the cost” of higher wages. “In the end, it back to the primary he sakt as the Commons de- bated the ~ agriculture depart- ment’s spending estimates for 1958-59. Manufacturers also came in for criticism by Mr. Horner who said that tractor, makers, among Home Destroyed During Storm BATHURST, N.B. (CP) — The home of Antoine J. Boudreau at Laplante, a small: farming com- munity 15 miles northwest of here, burned Friday at the height of a raging snow storm that blocked of all roads in the area and knocked out communications. Mr. and Mrs. Boudreau, their three children and a nephew escaped but nothing in the house was saved. There was no insu- rance on the house or its con- tents. Cause of the fire was not voice) called for an import tariff on U.S. chickens and turkeys flooding the Quebec market and creating unrest and economic difficulties in Quebee agriculture. HANDOUTS NO SOLUTION Chesley W. Carter ‘L—Burie Burgeo) said price supports and deficiency payments. will not solve the country’s agri problems. Instead of cash or outs” capone ecg ety perme. way fo. Ranaeee qnpeste of immediately available. r ge" pound. "The care Lh te dae Mist, manager farm products. i ae f Phe li a il HH tye ie i Hh il | | | a | 1! Z f | | i : i wn 0 I Ht rae ich F he gerian caiienuiae aaa MR. K TO NORWAY accepted “an invitation to visit Norway in the second half of August, it was announced Friday Hi —— . Shadow precaution to identify ship: do not otherwise ientify th whether tae United would have any objection Soviet Union had its air- ft buzz American ships, White said he did not know. oh ? - Police he Is Shelved By Cabinet from Maritimes points, wae stopped at Moncton. Harold Winch (CCF—Vancou-— wer East) asked whether Justice Minister Fulton would agree to a request by President Claude Jo- doin of the Canadian Labor Con- gress for an_independent inquiry into ROMP actions. Mr. Fulton said he. had not seen Mr. Jodoin’s letter request- ing the investigation, but his of- fice had told him the letter con- tained no information to back up claims the RCMP had acted im- of such evidence I would not feel inclined to recommend to my col- leagues that such an inquiry be held. However . . . if factual in- formation is received that would warrant it, we would consider the