V Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dev. iiviaxirns of 3 More Man 'A danger foreseen is half H” hi to arm . Read by Everybody in ruin Founded 1872 r 0IIAnm'1'm'r0WN.oANAnA. FRIDAY. smmmm 17. 1954 pm?” -WV mm by A.) Rocky Point - Man Killed In Mm Cherry Valley Youth Wins W"”T”””'"'”"""Plowing Title Second Time . Point lost his life yesterday sve- nlng when the tractor he was Glen Morrissey of Cherry Valley, the college-boy plowman. returned to Dundas yesterday to win the Provin- P.E.I. wro- l driving along the Rocky Point fold upset. He was 47 years of age. He was proceeding from a cial Plowing Championship and become the first man to win the Island plowing crown on two occasions within re- 3 cent years. - . V. . The 19-year-old champion who is a son of Mr. and A ' Mrs. John E. Morrissey won the Provincial Championship in 1952 and was runner-up to Stanley Willis of Cornwall a neighbor's farm to his home when the accident occurred at about 6.30. He is survived by his wife. the former Thelma Smith, two sons. Sterling 16 and Winston 14 and a daughter Ethel. i Also surviving are his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Taylor. Nine Mile Creek and three brothers. Lee and Winston of Nine Mile lIOl' -to, 5-" (3. M Wl It Champion Pictured above. are the three contestants last night in the Provincial public speaking contest. Left to right. Harry Love, East Royalty; Miss Frances Colwill, Sherbrooke, the Bloomfield. Creek and Lorimer in the U.S.A. Engine Explodes. year ago. Douglas MacDonald oi Forrest Hill was right behind Morrisaey for runner-up honors. Another Forest Hill man, Claude Mstheson Ml ing Match at Dundas. He sat on up tractor only a few times and then- did a very limited amount of plow- winner; and Fenton Shaw, finished third. lng. MOIT1-5563! Felufday bf” 01" I. And it was evident yesterdaty field of fifteen contestants to winymnt the yollthfill piowman with the COVEW-d h0n0l" End 9”" Lhhthe natural flair for plowing. didn't right to represent Prince Edwardlneed too much practice. He pm. Island in the Dominion Plowing duced A nan pufect crown, . goody Match. which win be new in on- furrow and finish to gain the sp-! Photo by Margaret Mallett. Sherbrooke Girl Wins Provincial Plani Wrecked BASS RIVER, N.S., (OF)- A steam engine exploded in the Dominion Chair plant here Public Speaking Contest Last. Night Miss Frances Colwlll from the lsiierbrooka 4-H Club was the win- ner of the Provincial public speak- ing contest held last evening un- rirr the sponsorship of the Provin- cial Department of Agriculture. in- cluding the Women's Institute Branch. at the Prince of wales College Hall. Choosing as her subject "Agri- culture and its people." Miss Coi- will won the nod of the three gnrlges. Miss Mary Robin, Dr. George Fisher and Mr. Brendon 0'Grady. Coming second was a Bloomfield boy. Fenton Shaw who spoke on ”Grass Silage." He was rlosely followed by Harry Love of East Royalty. speaking on "Sev- enty-fivs years of agriculture in Canada." Miss Colwill and Fenton Shaw by placing first and,second respectively. have become eligible to compete at the Maritime Win- ter Fair in Amherst this fall. Mr. Morris Deacon. who presided for the occasion. expraued regret that. a large number of contestants Expect Murder Trial Verdict WELLAND. Ont. (CPl - Bruce Mscbesn. 23, on trial for his life on a murder charge arising from the canoe-upset drowning of his wife 13 months ago. said Thurs- day he threatened a girl acquain- more but denied causing his wlfets death. The good-looking office worker at a flour mill entered the witness box as the trial, which started four days ago, neared its end. The case is expected to go to the Jury in Ontario Supreme Court today. Coming Events "Dance at Gordon Lodge every Friday night. "Buying and cleaning timothy dnily. McGuigan dz Boyle. "Gowan Brae Dance. September 24th, instead of 17th. "Regular Dance. 1-1owe's I-Iall, tonight. Music by Doiron Bros. "Buying live capons. chickens. fowl. Tuesday 8 until 12. R. L. Dickleson. New Glasgow. "Pantry Sale at. Simpson-Sears Saturday, September lath. Kingston United W. M. B. "see three-sci play. Bouris. Fri- day. ..tember 17th. presented by south Rustico Dramatic Club. "Dance at Mt. Ryan Hall at Johnston's River every Friday. Burke's Orchestra. "Matheson and Oerver Quartet will sing at Han-lbrock Sunday nfiembon. "The Llguorlsn Teena Club 1- holding a cake and candy sale at S. A. McDonald's on Saturday September 18. 1:30 p.m. "We are buying Timothy Seed dolly at highest market prices. Boston and Macllse. Bhur-Gain Feed service. Winslos. Dial 0514. Dance in Mt. Stewart Memorial Hall. Saturday. September isth, from 9-12. Burke's Orchestra. Door prise. "Raymond Wadman and his Ausustina Cove Skylinera will be in Afton I-fall Monday. Sspt.,29 It 8:30 pm. Sponsored by Rice Point W. I. ' "Step dancing and ilddiers con- ic." in Emerald hall. Friday. Sep- lemher 17. Please send applica- llonl to Ivan Glow. Emerald. Dnnce.aftsr. "We have inclllfkl for an un- limited quantity of good quality irnln either mixed or straight. Contact us before selling. Beaton Ind Macltae. Winsloe. Dial 0510. "We have a ring side seat for 5”" when we show this outstand- lns icturo we have been waltlos . for rm nu a mi good rum -nu um um, don't miss this. in "I'M Square lung" at Moron Hall. "id-1 only. summon 17th. im- "1" admissions. arm time a oclog. ' rs had not presented themselves. He explained that such contests were started primarily for the -purpose of selecting competitors for the Amherst Fair. He expressed the hope that more speakers would compete next year. Mr. B. C. Wright, Deputy Min- ister of Agriculture, although ex- Contlnued on page 15 Col 7 Thursday, hurling hunks of steel through two floors oi the building and ripping a gaping hole in one wall. No estimate of damage was available immediately but the plant was forced to close. leav- ing 65 men without work. No one was injured. Company officials estimated repairs would take four or five weeks. rlmrnrs av PROVINCES UNDER FiSHERMEN'S INDEMNITY runs OTTAWA (SPECIAL) - Either Prince Edward Island fishermen re more highly skilled naviga- ors than those oi other provinces or they are more honest. This deduction arises from sta- tistics oi the Fisherman's Indemn- ity Fund in which six provinces participate. While claims for in- demnity under this fund have been accepted and paid in New- foundland. Nova Scotia. New Bruns- wick. Quebec and British Colum- bit. not a single claim for total loss or damage of a fishing vessel has been paid to any Prince Ed- ward Island fisherman from July 1958 to July 1954. Largest insurance payments were made in that period to fishermen oi British Columbia whose 10 claims were compensated by 322.413. Newfoundland came in second place with seven claims totalling 310,845. Certificates of eligibility to parti. clpate in the insurance plan of P-Ian-Apple Salvage Worl KENTVILLE. N. 8., (CP)-An- napolls valley apple growers set up a disaster committee Thursday to co-ordinate a huge salvage op- eration to save at least some oi the 53.000900 worth of apples blown from their trees by hur- rlcanc Edna. At Halifax. meanwhile. the pro- vlnclsl cabinet met an it was un- derstood a. decision was made to make an immediate request to the federal government for financial assistance. While canning plants opened up to take some of the windfalls, the army. navy and air force prepared to send 1,000 men from valley camps into the orchards to help with the salvage work. Mendes-France Agrees To Eden's Defence Alliance By cam. Main-MAN PARIS (AP)--Premier Mendes- Franee agreed Thursday to British Foreign secretary Eden's emer- gency plan ibr a seven-nation West European defence alliance. The new alliance would include Britain, France. a rearmed West Germany. Italy. Belgium. The Netherlands and the duchy oi Lux- embourg. There were also reports here it would be expanded to in- clude Norway and Dsmnsrk. Mendes-Pi-sncs said details are to be worked out at a conference in London beginning about Sept. 2'1. Canada and the United states are expected to attend the talks. Forest Fire Rages in Nfld. IT. JOHN'S Nfl.d.. (OP) - A forest fire burned out of con- trol Thursday night on Lab- radorls Hamilton river near Grand Falls. rm marina crew! from the RCA! and UIA! have gone to the scene from Goose Bay alr- port and planes are auemvtlns to determine the extent of the fire. Pow details were known here Thursday nlshl bl" 01'. ficials of the provincial minus and resources department hav- flown into the nren and are expected to file reports today. tho Fisherman's Indemnity Fund have been issued for '15 vessels in the Island province whose average is 51,000 aplese. Under the Federal Government: insurance plan for lobster traps. 49 P121. fishermen owning a total oi 16.669 traps are participating in the scheme. Indemnities rang- lhl from O1-15 to 04 are paid for iraps lost when the losses exceed 26 percent oi the total number of traps fished. B U. S. Ready To Restore German Sovereignty By IAN FRASER. P-ONN. Germany (Reuters)-w State Secretary Dulles discussed West German rearmament plans Thursday night with Chancellor Konrad Adenauer amid mounting indications the United States plans an early and unilateral restoration of sovereignty to the West German Republic. Dulles. anxious to get a re- armed West Germany into the Western defence system, arrived here from Washington Thursday afternoon and plunged almost im- mediaicly into talks with the Ger- man leader. In a brief airport statement he asserted that his sud- dsn visit here is aimed at "bring- ing German as an equal partner into the loo ety of the free.” Observers here saw Dulles' trip as an indication the United States is speeding up its program for making West Germany master oi its own house. PREPARED ACT ALONE There are many signs the sec- retary of state intends to notify Britain when he flies to London to- day that the United States is ready to declare West Germany a sover- eign state. Prime Minister Church- ill's government would be invited to take the same action. but the United States apparently is pre- pared to act alone. BOSTON. (AP)-A group oi New England electric companies Thurs- day announced formation of Yan- kee Atomic Electric Company.look- ing toward construction oi an atomic power plant in New Eng- land turning out electricity for home. industrial and commercial it Ff :::l...Pi BOSTON (A?)-There's oil in The frozen wastes around the meandering magnetic pols. I sci- sntiiic expedition reported Thurs- day efter its return from an ex- plorltory voyage of more than it.- 000 miles aboard the fishing ves- sel Monte Carlo. Heading the scientific staff was Rev. Daniel Linehan. director of the Boston College selsmograph station. who compiled records which may show the expedition was first to localize the pole, an area rather than a precise point on the globe. in the vicinity loothia peninsula, about l.l00 miles iroin the true North Polo. The magnetic pols. however. dots not occupy a stable position. That is why navigation charts show its rate of variation in relation to the pole at the top oi the earth. Capt. Wilbur Dow, Jr.. of Short Hills. N. J..'skipper of the 7R-foot former scallop dragger, Joined aw... Shown above is 20 year old Flor- ence Matheson of Albion Cross who won the ladies championship in the tractor classes at the Provin- cial Plowing Match at Dundas. (Earter's Film Lab.) RegidteTeTlTlTiu'se Fall Examinations The following Graduate Nurses have been succt-ssful' in the exam- inations for registration of Nurses in Prince Edward Island. The list is given in alphabrticai ardcr. Slu- dents whose names are followed by nn asterisk will be required l.n write supplementary r-x:iminationr.' Cairns, Chiriotte A.. Freetown Cairns, Gr-orgzina, Freetown Clark, Doris, Charlottetown Clark. Gwendolyn Alice, Char- lottetown Curran. Maureen. PPHKPS Dixon. Gladys, East Baltic 'Ellis, DOI'('9Yl. Souris Huestls, Betty, Charlottetown Jenkins. Dor , Winsloe Kelly. Joan M.. ,1-'ort Augustus LeClair, Mary A.. Charlottetown Mabnn, Barbara Ann. Montague Muir. Beatrice PL. Georgetown Morrison. Mary, Saint John. N. Sin. Morrissoy. Pauline. T-Inst Royalty McCarthy. Colleen. Tignish MacCormack. Anne, Souris East iMacDonald, Geraldine, Cardigan Maci-iarlane. Marion G., New. Glasgow. N. S. Maclsaar. Theresa. Rorkberra Macbeod. Louise. Uigg Oil-lalloran. Murillo. Greenfield Pendleton. Helen Ann. Kensing- l B l I ion Scales. Joan, Freetown Stewart, Fay, Montague Sister Mary Monica, Charlottetown Therlault, Helen T., Halifax. N. C.S.M., S. Toombs. Betty Lou. Kenslngton Seaway Tehders MONTREAL. (GP)-Lionel Chev- rler. president of the St. Lawrence S e a W a y Authory. announced Thursday night the first tenders for excavation of the st. Lawrence seaway will be called for Sept. 22. Mr. chevrier. in s statement iii- sued here on his return from Que- bec where he had talks with Pro- mier Duplessis. said the tenders will be for excavation of a senway channel on the south side oi the river between Victoria. and Jac- tario later this fall. The young plowman. who is s, Wales College, is undecided about, competing in the Dominion Chamu plonship. He believes that he would be forced to lose about twol weeks from college in order to compete in the event. He lost no time from his studies this fall tin preparing for the'Plow-L provai of judge W. W. Baird. The defending champion Stanley. second year student at Prince of.w-nus placed fourth and. young. lcolm MacRae. another teen-age powman from Cherry Valley was fifth. still another teenager in the person of Carl Willis, Cornwall. was sixth. Young Willis earned the distinction of plowing the Continued on page 6 Col 5 The bitter dispute over compul- sory marketing of potatoes' over- flowed yesterday into the Legisla- tive Chamber with the Provincial Cabinet busy from early morning until long past the supper hour with groups of all sides stating their cases. In the morning a large delega- tion of producers from Easternl. Kings attended maintaining they wanted a. continuance of the Pats- to Marketing Board. They were heard until the noon recess. Early in the afternoon a large representntion from the Potato Dealers Association from all sec- tions of the Province waited on the Government to discuss the proposed compulsoiw marketing pool for potatoes. They reviewed the situation from their point of view and one dealer pointed out that compulsion was not freedom of action but that his organization agreed that a voluntary pool for those who wanted it was perfectly satisfactory to everyone. He men- tioned the analogy to Europe where the people in losing their freedom in small things eventually lost it in big ones. Among the dealers present were Col. 0. E. Full. E. D. Reid, George Brookins. H. Willis, L. H. Poole. Lorne MacF'arlane, R. L. Burge. R. C. Macliean, W. N. Wilson. Fred Bingham. Claude Delaney. Preston Kennedy, Claude Mac- Neill. Arthur MacKa.V. James Mac- Neill and James MncDougall. POTATO BOARD CONTROVERSEY BEFORE THE PROVINCIAL CABINET l what could be done. Members pre- sent ior the meetinl included Messrs. chairman of the Potato Marketing Board; Richard MscPhee. New Haven; David Wright. Lower Mon-' taque: Donald Macuod. Victoria Cross: Irving 1-loss. Wilmot; and iAllie MacNeill. O'Leary. There was no comment from the Government after the various meetings. Released By Error. . . Lifer Surrenciers FORT WORTH, TeX.. (AP) - Donald Bouchillcn walked quietly into the county jail Thursday morning and gave himself up. Sentenced to serve the rest of his life in the Texas penitentiary. he was freed from prison 12 days ago by a mlxup in records there. Police throughout the country had been asked to watch for the 28-year-old Fort Wort man, con- victed hece last year as a habitual criminal. He was described as dangerous and was said to have revenge on a deputy sheriff and an assistant district attorney here who helped send him to prison. But his whole manner upon sur- rendering was friendly and he ra- peatediy denied making any threats. Last night when interviewed on the subject Col. Full stated the'. dealers feel the necessity for aj central organisation which will give leadership to promotion of the industry, the distribution of correct information and protection of the industry from disease and would be happy to financially sup- port such an institution, gowevern he said they are not pro ared to. accept the principle that the Prince Edward Island potato grower is in- capable of making up his mind as- to how and when to market his! products. He said the dealers feel the growers do not want a dictstori to do the job for them. The final delegation to meet with the Government on the mat- ter were the producer membersi of the Potato Marketing Board. It was their feeling as producers thatl the dealers had had control oi the situation for the past 40 years and now they wished to control it cues Cartier bridges in Montreal. I At Magnetic with Father Linehan in saying the magnetic pole had been located in a "relatively small trlnngle.' ' Approach of winter forced the expedition to retreat before it could complete observations. On several occasions the sturdy fishing veyel was caught in ice and once she was freed by Canada's now Arctic OTTAWA (OP) -Claims by a Boston group that they may have been first to reach the north mut- i 0 nstic pole were discounted here a ursday. British scientists did it more than I century ago. Official! of the Dominion observ- atory. commenting on a Boston news dispatch describing the claims of the amateur mariners, said the maknettc pole has been machepr on several occasions by observatory parties U. S. Claims Discounted At Ottawa themselves for one year to see patrol vessel Labrador. Fgu-ior Llnehan brushed aside any sug estlon the crew of 11 ever was in serious peril from the ice. The Monte Carlo has a round bot- tom, he said. and when the ice squeezed her. it simply "picked her up." Sometimes. he said. "the boys went over the side and chop- In isll. Commander James loss of England established the mag- netic pole's exact position. On his return to England in 1836. he learned that a mathematician named Barlow calculated its posi- tion, by mathematical formulas and the spot he picked tallied ex- actly with Roast In 1904. Roaid Amundsen used similar methods to those of Ross and located the pole. this time in oti5li3ToTiEE Probe Deaths OTTAWA (CF) - Police sought Thursday night to identify a woman whose trunk and legs were found floating in the Ottawa river. in Hull. across the river. police described as murder the fatal heat- ing early Thursday of fl 70-year- old man. Dr. W. D. Hay. of Kingston. Ont, Queen's University patholo- gist. conducted an autopsy on the woman's body here late Thursday. He said it may take some hours before it can be determined whether the woman was slain and dismembered or whether the body disintegrated from long submer- slnn. Meanwhile. in Hull. spector Max Lavigne. investigating 70-year-old Eugene Drouin's death said "We have a murder on our hands." North Pole i ped away the ice." Father Linehan pugsuerl reis- mograph work on Prince of wales island and at Emily bay. He found enough oil seeping from rocks at Prince of Wales and Edgoworth islands to smear the hands. he said, but no indications of uran- ium. Any oll found in the area would be the property of Canada. Dow. an admiralty lawyer in professional life. financed the ex- pedition. He described the mag- netic pole as an area where mag- netic. compasses "go crazy" and are of no use whatever. Bird and animal specimens were brought back for the museum of natural history in New York. Also aboard was one passenger not listed when the Monte Carlo sailed-a husky pup. gift of an Eskimo family the Monte Carlo transported from summer to win- ter quarters. Dow aireaiiy is making plans to s. new position due to the pole's movcmcnt. E tackle the northwest passage in 1950. D o n a l d A. Macoonaidl V... 'tractor plowing champion is s of his tractor a competitions got underway ye Progressive Conservatives Retain All Three Seals In Onia By THE CANADIAN PRESS Progressive Conservative gov- crnment candidates won all three Ontario provincial by - elections Thursday. incomplete returns in- dicntod larger majorities than the pnriy's candidates rolled up in winning the same seats in the 1951 provincial general election. James C. Auld. 33 - year - old Brockvilie w h o 1 e s a l 9. r. cap- tured Leeds in eastern Ontario in a two-way old-party fight with Mary Elizabeth Sheldon. a retired school teacher who ran for the Lib- erals. Mayor Gordon Law-rgnr of East- view. an Ottawa suburb. scored an emphatic victory against Liberal and CCF opponents in Russell where his party had only a 10-vote victory margin three years ago. The strong government trend ex- tended to Nipissing in northern On- tario where John M. Chaput won handily over Liberal. CCF and in- 1 Glen Morrissey. of Cherry'Valley, the 1954 Provincial few minutes before the championship 4-S hown above behind the wheel afternoon at Dundas. (Barter-is Film Lab.) sterday rio By-elections THE WOMAN WHO usao To Jump FROM MICE: Now OUMPS AT i x, CONcl..U?lON5 jlepondcnt candidates. :WlN CLEAN SWEEP ' The elections wore cnnicsirrl lngainst the background of On! tnriois highways investigation ini iwhich n legislature committee is investigating rnarl contracts and, administration. Charges of mal-I practice against contractors and? jliighvrays fit-partnient employccsl lare pending in the courts. i , The result give the Progrrsslvnl Cnnsrrvaiivcs TO of the 90 seal: ini lihc iogisiaiiirc. The Liberals hnvci FUN" me seven, CCF two, Liberal - Lahnilimnnrmn one. Labor-Progrr-ssivc one. Onia. Suribury for which no by-clcctioni thus been called. is vacant. : i The three victories give the Pro-i izrossive Conservatives a clean. sweep of all five by-elections licldt since the 1951 e l r c l ion. Thcvi vvroslerl Niagara Falls from Lihcrnis last fall and retained Simone East in a vote last Feb- i ruary. iliind Body In Labrador lake TORONTO (CPI Uniw-r.-my of Toronto seri'o'zlrn1 stud:-nt. has been found in an un- charted Labrador lakr. Mr. and Mia. Joseph zoloski of suburban York Township said they have received word that the body of their son. William. 22, was found Wednesday night. He was rcporird missing last Friday when an overturn:-d canoe was found in the lake. Zoloski was working with a gro- logical survey of Canada crew this slimmer. Hie companion, Dr. J. E Howell of Lambeth. Ont. still is missing and presumed dead. Survey officials believe the canoe was blown offshore and tipped by high winds ml-i The horir of at TORONTO (CP)-Minimum anh maximum temperatures: M in Max Dawson 32 45 Vancmivcr . 56 iii Victoria 31 M Edmonton . 43 44 Calgary .. 41 4i Regina 46 49 Winnipeg . SD 52 Toronto ,... . 5?: 6i Ottawa . 45 5' Montreal 49 54 Quebec . . fill 64 Saint John 42 U1 32 iii Halifax 47 57 Fredericton . . 33 37 Charlottetown . - 6! Sydney . . . . . .. . S2 3' Yarmnuth . 40 01 St. Johns . 3'7 ill HALIFAX (CF)-The Dominion lpiiblir u'r-nthcr office here says I lriisturbance moving eastward will bring rain into the southern Mari- timcs Friday. Pressure is high nvcr central Quebec and the iwnther is forecast to remain fine in the northern regions. Regional forecasts: Prince Edward island: clouding river Friday morning. occasional- rain by evening; cool. risk of "CID in valleys during the night: llglst lwindn Increasing in afternoon to 'east 15. Low-high at Charlottetown so and M. Eastern N. 3. counties: Over- cast. occasional rain belinnlng in the afternoon; frost in valleys dur- ing the night: light winds becom- ing northeast 15 during morning. Low-high at Moncton 37 and 62. High tide today at Charlottetown at i.li n. m. and 2.12 p.-in. Summerside tide eighteen min- utes later than Ohar..l.tetown. High tide today at the Natl: Shore at I35 a. In and I.” D. It. Sun rtsm today It 5.53 I. m. and sets at 8.21 p. in. (The time is Atlantis Standard)