TELEPHONE 8506 Buyer meets seller with Guardian Want Ads. Dial 8506 ask for class' ' taker, for quick results. med ad Seconduanllanbyhp Ramona“ mom“ 'CHARlO'ITErOWN SAllOR AT THE uruu Smertraining of new entry Newfoundland to British Cblum' HMCS Sault Ste. Marie’s wheel i, en of me naval reserve is bia, spend two weeks on, the is 06 Bill MacDonald, 24 Alex- - fun Wing at we Great Lakes Great Lakes in HMS ships, Sault ander Drive, Charlottetown, a . . . - Ste. Marie and Portage of the naval reservist from S . .. 1; Centre, Hammon. “nt- Eleventh E SC on Squadron, Queen Charlotte. P0 James Mac- r‘o. The young- sailors, repre- where receive iifitial.:sea Bianca-of the coastal smart sup- Fing naval divisions from training. Standings “hick,” r . ' ; Mechanical “Clam Digger Has Counterpar’r‘ In; P:E.|.; Dr. Kask said there already have been some successful ‘ex- periments with the mechanical digger in the Maritimes. . ‘G. R. Clark, deputy minister of fisheries, also told the committee that tenders have been called for an East Coast natural vessel to re- a OTTAWA (OH—IA mechanical man, said the mechanical digger .... digger being developed by will‘be able to harvest clam beds 1 Research Board is not exposed by tides. It also :vly rendytor commercial use, would be less destructive than . Commons fisheries committee the present hand-digging method Was inf Tuesday. which inevitably kills a large Dr. J. L. Kask, board chair- number of young clams. - r no FOR AGRICULTURE OTTAWA (CP) — The federal tavern-moot hopes to bring for- ward “in the not too distant fu- ture” a national system of crop insurance, Agriculture Minister Eavkness to‘d the Commons Tues- day. . ."Crop insurance is _a matter thilt must be brought forward,” he said, adding it is one of the is Steps that must be taken to lssist agriculture. ' The government had been mak- lug an extensive study of crop in- lm‘ance for some time ‘ and ‘.‘I hope to introduce legislation in a mat regard in the not too distant n “ Mr. Harlmess said one problem it that not all provinces are m- ,rh‘eSiEd in crop insurance. Some interested, o t h e r s were yhtkewarm” and others not in- lmsted at all. ‘ The difficulty, then, was to Whig about a scheme that ibMaiI Thief Gets 4-Year Sentence PORT HOOD, N.s. (CM—«Rus- ‘9‘11 Ross, l2ayear-old former rail- Way mail clerk, was sentenced to “r years in Donohestecr peniren- “l'l'y Tuesday for the armed rob- bery of the onn's Halifax-Sydney eImpress last April. He pleaded Wilty. County Court Judge Alex Mac- Ki1111011 sentenced Ross to an ad- Iiitrional two years on afcharge of escanning from jail. The sentences m run concurrently. ROss, of Florence, N.S., entered e express mail car at Port ’Hawkesbury early April 17. He 1 ‘0de two mail clerks ruin a ‘ M0501 at gunpoint and Jumr‘rrd 00’: the moving train with an “sortment of loot that lnclulc‘d 10.000 in stamps and a narcotics ' cut. ‘ Crop Insurance ‘ ; Scheme Planned thought applicable across the country would not involve the provinces too greatly. a The variations in climate con- ditions across the country pre- sented another “extremely diffi- cult” problem. However, Mr. Harkness ex- pressed confidence the difficul- ties would be ironed out soon. The minister’s plans were dis- closed in reply to Liberal—CC}? opposition demands for an exten- sion of the Prairie Farm Assist- ance Act to all parts of the country. Mr. Harkness said this could not be done because PF‘AA was tundamentally a drought - relief measure. The answer was crop insurancer _ _ Th e opposition suggestions came up as the Commons passed a ' preliminary resolution paving the way for introduction amendments reducing the mini- mum limits for stricken Prairie are-as qualifying for Prairie farm assistance. Earlier, the Commons gave fi- nal approval to changes in the plan begun last fall of cash 'ad- vances on farm '- stored Prauie grain. The changes would remove the present bar to farmers who de- liver malting barley from getting an advance on farm - stored wheat. Deliveries of seed'grai-n would not be counted against a cash advance. A farmer unable to repay a previous advance through no fault of his own could receive a turther advance on hlS . W cm . likISE BOMPENSATION ' The House also passed With little discussion a resolution pre- liminary to introduction a lull raising federal compensetmn pay- ments fo r livestock ‘ordered slaughtered as a prevention mea- sure against con-tagious diseases. place the sol-um Cygnus, a war- time Bangor mineswecsper ex- pensiveto maintain. r s‘ Fisheries research—with partic- ular emphasis on the East Coast’s ground: fish population—emu .be carried out y the recently- la-unohed 0am on, built at a cost of $1,750,000. Dr. Kask said the Cameron also will carry out experiments on and fish at sea. A clam digger similar in type to that described by Dr. Kask was built here last winter, Mr. E.M. German provincial deputy minister of fisheries said last night. Construction of the experimen- tal machine was carried out at the Provincial Vocational School he added. Due to the fact that the en- gineering team now conducting the preliminary survey for the Northumberland Causeway need- ed an extra boat, it was decided to shelve this project until next summer Mr. Gorman stated. However, federal plans called for'a conti-nuance'here this fall of clam-Mgging experiments be- gun last year he observed. ho innermost “Covers Prince Edward Island 'Like The Dew” CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA WEDNESDAY, JULY 23, 1958 By LLOYD MoDOINALD Canadian Press Staff Writer UNlT-El) NATIONS; N.Y. (CP) —«Anfiter a week of fruitless. de- bate on the East situation, ,the United Nations Secmity Coun- cil adjourned indefinitely late Tuesday and left the problem up to a summit conference. The council sa-Ved lane, how- ever, by avoiding—over Russian objection—a call tor an emer- gency session of the UN General Assembly which would take the matter out of the council’s hands. And S-ecretaryJGeneral Dag Ham- marskjold indicated that he would go ahead with UN intervention of forts in Lebanon meanwhile. The summit conference, called by Russia’s Premier. Khrushchev late last week is still up in the air as to time, location and-who shall attend. There is still the: prospect that it will be held in the Security Council; The 10 other members voted against Russia on the adjourn- ment motion by the July council OTTAWA (Special)- - A- federal health grant totalling $h11,7$0 has been approved by the Gov- ernment toward cost of construc- tion'of a new nurses' residence for the Charlottetown Hospital. This was announced here Tues- day by Fisheries Minister Angus Machean, Heath Macquarrie (PC, Queens) and JOhn A. MacDonald (PC, Kings) after being informed of the grant by Health Minister J .W. Monteith. V l . Hospital construction grants are paid in quarterly install- ments, depending on progress of construction. Work on the new nurses quar- ters commenced July 4. The tar- get date for completion of the project is Sept. 1, 1959. Contract for the construction of the four-storey L~shaped struco ture estimated to cost better than $700,000 [was awarded last June to M.F. Schurman Co. Ltd. an Island construction firm. Planned to meet the building regulations specified by the Na- tional Health Grants Administra- tion, the structure will be of brick and steel on a cement foundation and will be fire-resistant through- out. When completed the residence will provide home-like accomodla- tion for upwards of 125 student nurses plus several class rooms and a large basement laundry, Double bedrooms are arranged in suites of three each contain- ing plenty of wardrobe space and a bathroom. On each of the three bed-room floors there is a lounge room and a kitchenette. Included in the school unit is a large demonstration room' which provide the preclinical stu- dents with an area in which to practice the Art of Nursing. A recreation room overlooking Oharlot-tetown’s Harbor, lobby, OTTAWA (CP) Appraisal procedures for the Canadian farm loan board are under study by the board’s chief appraiser, the Commons agriculture com- mittee was told Tuesday. Gage W. Montgomery (PC- VictoriaaCarleton) told the com- mittee there had been some crit- icism in New Brunswick because appraisals of properties of ap- plicants for farm loans had seemed to be unrealistic. F. L. Chester, chairman of the board, said the chief appraiser had been in Nev Brunswick for some time making a survey. The committee was dealing with a bill to increase the capital stock of the board to $6,000,000 from $4,000,000. The board can make loans up to 20 times its capital stock. The present max— imum. $80.000.000 is not sufficient Farm Loan Board Is Getting More Money to maintain the increased rate of loans. Finance Minister Fleming told the committee at the present rate of lending the maximum outstand- ing loans would'reach the limit by mid-August. The proposed increase in cap- ital stock would increase the maximum to $120,000,000. GETS U. OF 0. POST OTTAWA CP Very Rev. Henri Fracis Legare, 40, has been appointed rector of the Uni- versity of Ottawa, it was an- nounced Tuesday. He succeeds Very Rev. Rodrigue Normandin, 52, rector since 1952, who be- comes assistant provincial of St. Joseph province of the Roman Catholic Order of Oblates of Mary Immaculate with headquarters at Montreal president, Alfonso Araujo of Co- lombia. On such procedural mat- ters there is no big-(power veto, such as Russia had cast only a few minutes before on a Jap- anese compromise proposal call- ing for extension of the UN’s present observer role in the Mid- dle East. External Affairs Smith of Canada appeared pleased with the outcome as he prepared to return to Ottawa. On Monday he strongly urged in the council that the summit idea inside the UN lramework be given immediate serious consideration by all con- cerned. BITTER ATTACK Soviet delegate Arlrady Sobolev made a bitter attack on the coun- cil president for moving the ad- journment “while events mean- while are following their fatal course.” He did not think an 1 emergency session of the assem- bly, which he has been advocat- ing all along, would prejudice the summit conference called by his OttawaApprovcs Grant For Nurses Residence ~ on? 153'- , t ‘ lntuunation desk and conversa~ tion room are all conveniently arranged on the first floor. Cmnmuflcation with the main hospital buildings will be effedzed by! means of an underground tun- n . "Meg’ Dedicates National Park ‘ By NAT COLE Canadian Press staff Writer FORT LANGLEY, B.C. (0P)— Prlncess Margaret, cool in a light-blue dress despite 80degree heat and dust dedicated a nae tional historic park on the site of British Columbia’s first 'cap- ital Tuesday. The sunny skies under which she made a short speech, open- ing reconstructed Fort Langley, were a far cry from the cold and wet November day. 100 years ago when the Crown colony of B.C. was established on the same site. The princess said she was “so. very pleased to be at this cer- ‘ lemony which has such particular historical significance.” . “I have been told the back ground of this magnificent work of reconstruction. I am sure it will continue to be a source of pride to both British Columbians and visitors to the province. “It is most fitting that the re- opening of this fort has been chosen as one of the major pro- jects in British Columbia’s cen- tennial year." . CHIFFON DRESS The princess, wearing a pale blue chiffon dress with white polka dots, a close fitting hat of matching blue material, white gloves and open white sandals, watched while, members of the Royal1 Engineers and Royal Cana- dian Engineers gave a dem- onstration of the changing if the guard ceremony of 100 years ago and today. 'Slave Ma rkeis' Said In Canada LIVERPOOL, England (Reu- ters) — Three emigrants - two Scotsman and an Irishman—re- turned to Britain Tuesday with bitter stories about life in Can- ada. All three stowed away aboard the Canadian Pacific liner Em- press of Britain when it sailed from Montreal July 15. Edward Kyle. 28 — year - old painter and decorator of Jed- burgh, Romburghshire, who emi- g-rated to Canada in April, 1957, said in 15 months in Canada he had only 10 weeks’ work at his trade. He told reporters he slept in parks during his last three weeks in Canada. “You want to see the queues at the labor exchanges," said Kyle. “They call them slave mar- kets over there." U N Security CounciILeaves Problem Up To ConferenCe own government head. This sum- mit call should not be used by the UN as an excuse to quit work. He also opposed suspension of debate here in view of the elec- tion to be held in Lebanon in the next few days. He could not en- visage such a vote “in the pres- ence of foreign tmops”——referring to those sent in last week by the United States to bolster President Camille Chamoun. The election would in effect “he held at the point of a gun—or of the atomic weapons the United States has in the area.” “The world is waiting for the withdrawal of these U.S. forces which the council could have accomplished,” he said in refer- ence to the Soviet mot-ion voted down in the council last week. He blamed the U.S. and Britain for the council’s failure to adopt the withdrawal demand. Solbolev made a last attempt this afternoon to bning about an American withdrawal when he in- troduced amendments to the Jap- anese motion which would add a call tor the U.S. troops to get out. The council voted 8 to 1 with two abstentions to knock this out, and Sobolev promptly vetoed the unamended resolution when it came up for ballot. The vote was .10 to 1 with no albstentions. Nasser Makes O Fiery Speech OAllRlO (Am—President Nasser declared in a fiery speech Tues- day night American forces in Lebanon and British troops in Jordan “will be defeated" and all Arab countries will win their freedom. Nasser spoke to a crowd of Egyptians estimated at 250,000 as- sembled to mark the sixth anni- versary of the Egyptian revolu- tion. , Seated behind him were six members of the new Iraqi re- gime. The Iraqi radio was hooked with Syrian and Egyptian net- works for the speech. - Nasser‘ turned on King Hussein of Jordan and predicted his over- throwal.‘ Hussein “sulbjugated and be- tnayed his people and opened the doors to imperialist occupiers” by asking for British assistance Nas- ser charged. a?» M.F.‘S VISIT PLAN’E PLANT Officials of'Avro Aircraft Lim- parliament who are on the Com- ited, Malton Airport, Ontario ex- mons commitee on finance. Left plain the Avro Arrow production V holding a summit conferencé'but B Powers In Accord 'On Terms _ WAsnnNGnoN (AFN—President Eisenhower bowed to British pres sure Tuesday and agreed to ac. cept a summit meeting of the United Nations Security Council on the Middle East crisis. This could set the stage for 5' Middle EaSi Al—A-GIq-nce - " By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Washington -— President Eisen- hower told ‘Soviet Premier Khrushchev to complain to the UN Security Council if he be- lieves British-U.S. military moves endanger world peace. Eisen- hower said the United States would answer in the UN, but avoided promising that he per- sonally would attend a summit- levdl council meeting. \ Iondon—Prime Minister Mac— millan suggested to the Soviet Union that government heads of the big powers hold a summit meeting in the Paris-«Premier de Gaulle- said France is ready trials about WEATHER Sunny and warmer, light wlnds increas., ing to westerly 15. Low-high at Chars lottetown 55 and 80. U.S. BOWS TO u. K. ON PARLEY _ ‘ NikitaGivenChallenge ’ To Face ToFace Meet NOT MORE THAN FIVE CENTS HAROLD MACMILLAN - A CHALLENGE TO NIKITA Way Open For Talks Under U.N. ’ LONDON (Am—Prime Minis- ter Macmillan today challenged Nikita Khrushchev to meet him- “lface to face" in New York to discuss the Middle East crisis before the United Nations Secur- ity Council. . Macmillan's invitation to the Soviet premier opened the way for ,UN summit talks despite President Eisenhower’s apparent hesitation and the outright objec- tions of French Premier de Gaulle, who called for a top level conference 'in a more serene atmosphere. West amt first said the present UN atmosphere is not serene enough for a summit meeting within the organization. United Nations—Security Coun- cil adjourned indefinitely and left the problem of the Middle East situation up to a summit confer- ence. Council avoided calling a General Assembly session. ‘ Moscow Prerrrier Khrush- chev warned United States and Britain rising tide of Arab nation- alism can crush them if they do not withdraw troops. CairoaPresident Nass’er told cheering Egyptians U.S. forces in Lebanon and British troops in Jordan will be defeated and all Arab nations will win freedom. Beirut—Carrier Corregidlor fer- ried helicopters and liaison planes to American forces in Lebanon. A rebel leader predicted U.S.. ma- rines and parachute troops will pull out soon. His. reasoning was that the forces landed because of the Iraqi crisis, and withdrawal and Jordan. and Jordan. . Khrushchev said, exuberantly, Red Warns MOSCOW (AP) —‘Sovlet Pre- mier Khrushchev warned the United. States and Britain Tues- in tide of Arab mtionalisndtfliey did troops out of "(the United States and Brit- ain,” Khrushchev said in a free». swinging mach at the Polish Em~ bassy, “must show wisdom and understanding of the times and pull their troops out of Lebanon “The ice of,the ages is moving, it up and (blushing everything in its path,\ all the mlonial and imperialist policies of “Let the imperialist beware," The prime minister's sugges- tion was that the heads of gov- ernment should represent their nations at a special sedu-rity coun- cil meeting. ‘ ~ “It would not be the intention of Her Majesty's government that any resolutions should be put for- ward” .unlesstheyaroseoutof previous agreement,” Macmillan wrote the Russian leader in a let- ter dated Tuesday and released tor Mention early today. normron SPIRIT “\In oflrer,words, the object‘ would be to agree: mentaraflxerthan to register dill ferences by votes. I hope that this spirit will prevail." Macmillan wrote In reply to Khmashchev’s-r letter of July 19 Proposinglflat the heads of gov- ernment of'the Soviet Union, Brit- and India ,meet in Geneva Tues- ain, France, the United States day with Dag flamerskjold, UN secretary-general. ' The British leader said: "I was glad to see that in your message you referred, w-it-h marked disapproval, to the idea at ‘circumventlng the United Na- ons.’ I Anew theywwldbe waving his arms LONG-RANGE VIEWPOINT can now be expected because that crisis has about passed. “it to right K.H. More (RC-Regina City Chester Carter (Lib. Burln- to a group of visiting members of Bungee) W-C G. Waterman, OTTAWA (or) ._ Long-(range future of the Nova Scotia coal AF detachment commander at Avro; J .C. Pallet (P.C. Peel) and Guest Hanke, quality control; and production manager at Avro. Future Of NovaScoiia Coal Industry Said ’Quite Rosy’ industry was described Tuesday as “quite rosy" by W. E. Uren, chairman of tho Dominion Coal Board. He told the Commons resources committee that he considers pros- pects to be “very bright” for the sale of Nova Scotia coal over a. long period of time. The commit-tee spent 21/; hours discussing the Maritime coal in- dustry before approving the coal board’s 1958-59; mending program \ of $10,760,645. This is an increase of $1,689,900 over the last fiscal year. Mr. Uren said East Coast coal mines should b’e able to increase the efificiency of their operations with a continuance of mechania- tion. About two-thirds of the plan- ned mechaniation program for Nova Scotia mines had been com- pleted. However, he said increased man - day production achieved through mechaniation had not been reflected in lower produc- tion costs at the pithead. “We can’t fathom it.” he said. Production costs had gone up month by month and now were considerably higher than a year a . BOOSTS COSTS He said increased costs of materials had helped to boost costs of, production Operation costs, even with mechaniation, rose firom $9.96 a ton in' 1965 to $9.98 in 1956. Robert Muir (PG-Cape Breton North and Victoria) said recent layoffs in Nova Scotia mines fol- lowed a statement by an official of the Dominion Steel and Coal Corporation that there would be no layoffs. Mr. Uren said the board never subscribed to the opinion that there would be no layoffs. It was aware that layotfs would take place. He said that since the purchase of Dosco by the A. V. Roe Com- pany, Dosco was making an “ag- gressive” attempt to solve its problems. The company was more interested in selling coal, (CP Wirephoto) especially in Ontario. ‘4