of mo < e > ‘Cloudy, occasional drizzle, showers snd . | | | high at Ch’toyn 60 and 5 . “Covers Prince Edirs Island Like The Dew” a Ge \, SATURDAY, JULY 25, 1959. 14 PAGES 7 CR oa “s 43 gus ; , , 6600S gus | Zt zt goo’ ont ; ‘i tl 7 & we nnnen | - ~ + ’ ~ Africa Trit Alberton South Boat rica Irip eee te Swindle axen carly riday Swindle ee ee : ms : : Two ( it ion of = CORNER BROOK (CP)—More Létiont and Cecil Hutt, are ex-| a fishing boat during a closed sea-— Se S-Newleundland workers pected to ' several charges | son, failing to obey fishery pairol ; a headed after figuring in a sea and shore| boat when ordered to heave to, me who thought they were fight with four fisheries patrol of- seonoouretiag Sheet | with im : for profitable employment in ficers, one of whom suffered an| tention to ram a boat and South Africa may find they were injured hand. failing to have name and number victims of a swindle. Tumaiies eaheek Manese Ml-| og Ghete eent contrary a0 the . RCMP said they arrested two Kay and three other officers| fishing act. es men in connection with the em- wm@arted a running chase of the or Ployment deal Friday near Port Hutt boat outside the harbour S aux Basques, Nfld. Both men when they spotted the brothers J “s were armed. It was not immedia- With crates of lobsters and a trap, oH tely known if charges were laid. | ¢ See ee | Police said the men arrived illegal trap—the here July 13 and set up recruit-| season is closed now—were spot- }ing offices in the basement of a a lll tementsas local inn. They claimed to be rep- | Set. MocKny sat might by e ae resentatives of the British South telephone. afl | ; * African Construction and De- aaa re started thr . : velopment Company of Johannes- uf ow- ; es | burg, a Montreal was oe ot Snes one See es ae ae cit e hod . speedy patrol craft gave se Scout eon = = aoe firm. oA oa followed the Hutt — te: tingent at oe ak odd scout ee a P ; “ ‘ 1 e wharf where upwa F 4 - — the fae would sar Sen turty people had gatheréd. in- ee Sard to South Africa where they would|- cluding some children. = —_—_‘| adjusting to the clishate FIRE CLAIMS FOUR LIVES - [get a bonus of $1,000 if This-was sbout two o'clock in a ! mapet-on Go Sh Sd maa Se moreiag, Wormaits oni) OC" cid the best. “particularly rs t us i . e. ‘ 1 e . Firemen and citizens collect at; lives. At right ladder is rais€d) Wellesley and Kitchener, i8 miles| They were told tr, tion ee ante Tian teen Ue oat” te Maen. Conall ‘the rear of a New Hamburg, Ont.,| over frame shed as \smoke pou costs would be ~| Was met with a barcage of rocks ) Hepaburg, Ont. nee POUTS | east were called in to fight the paid to Montres! ae Serta from the wharf when they at-|€roup during the first few dave business and residential block to| from rear windows of three-story ork for medical tests. THE FARMER of the futurejstan’s University. Agriculture {the centre. The afternoon session tempted to put ashor of the jamboree ; battle a fire that claimed four| building. Firemen from Baden, | $150,000 blaze. (CP Wirephote)| Each man was required to pay a a” talk 7 Dr. |Minister Eugene Cullen - sensgg a eideems to potato market- |” Priday after saunas ts at| “There is not a bit of shade $40 to pay his way back from » , at a dinner |Premier Matheson is shown ing lems. : ‘ is ha : Montreal in the event he could|™eeting last night at St. Da s seen bain . touch penta Pegg hare So egrated Headquarters |s Used =.=: \ : | See SS: ‘ s. . by radio. ' said scout r wee A momter of mee senng ool VJ | Tt M k T When four of the policemen ar-|<g bit low’ at the start, “what | . re etn. oie. Nt unTafr arKeTin QOL | sre ite iaterng tent come into| wit their bedding goting 5 . a struction firm. Later the same; Pn the Hutt boat in tow, & was! _1 smog HELP o Direct Anti-Submarine Action = 2==2=2s2: For P Soe Peco such company listed in Montreal. ' ; ‘ eames iors 1S SUGGEST FOr POTATOCS | Pe arie tecte tole ot ee ee oe oe By DAL WARRINGTON Before then both djis another st meeting the aanagion Hey Degg aryah amyl omeasta tae ae ne Bee f teues so. tent now'we con : navy andjis another step in ing men who by that time had) ‘ - - se . ‘or our 80 we - Canadian Press Staff Writer RCAF had separate operations) submarine threat to North Amer- checked out of the hotel without A volantary marketing pool oo Dunstan's University some i Co-operative Asgocia- a eee sleep comfortable and stay dry.” Halifax (CP) — A new in-|rooms. They worked under joint | ica. paying the bill. ’ volving investment of $100 ghare — bas oF ee Ses Weed ve tes man a ‘I can sey this will be en e» fegrated headquarters here dif-| command in anti-sub manoeuvres; Reporters saw maps. showing} Police said the men had col- capital per member was suggest- a marketing system. Members (Continued i an Tae an en ee ee = perience our bors will never for ects navy and air force anti-sub-| but consultation was mostly by, that enemy submarines armed|lected about $400 from prospect-| ed yesterday as a means of sav- in addition to invésting $100 in the ; fenders "were night get,” he added. Marine operations on Canada’s ‘ with intermediate range atomic] ive employees. Most of the 147.re-| ing Prince Edward Island's sag-| scheme would-be required to sign The a ws — east coast. Rear Admiral Hugh F. Pullen,| missiles could blast any part ofjeruits were to pay their $40) ging potato industry. — a three year contract requiring WESTERN TOUR ENDS of extremes,” Boyaner epid. “The $ ‘The combined gperations cen-| of Oakville, Ont., the navy’s At-| Canada and the United States. Thursday or Friday. |” At a “Country Caucus” héid a | them-to sell. their total production people are extremely ® friendly, fe was tye won but /lantic coast flag oficer, heads the | ° through the pool. ' ; end oT courtesas.| The ‘was revealed it been in| combined command as Canadian) e ; The ould att to % « country itself is extremely beout- seston swe Say £° "liars Coamaree 2" Federal Prison Pl d EYESS==| Thousands Wilt |*s:--<-2=- Y quarters, staféd by navy and air| | a n ne a pga oh = : ; Earlier Gen. D. oa ne Job oficers, has tremendous advan-| — Geuhd be tives @ Yeuseusllie ad- ada, director of -~ —_ Li tages. ' ‘ . * * * vance at the time of sale and u ’ n Ss ‘ agg See = elaren about the is ; would receive the balance of the’ . Seen ik | NOT PART OF TREND = « O é p g M e d saiikes pte at tae ood at Gn Tt uee Tt health and safety of the scouts. ely “However, I don’t think this is) \_ r rl ni I In Ca . | three month period. - TORONTO . of a trend to total integra-| 3 ee j ar ; ba. : ; (CP) — Avro Air- a. te oid. a. OTTAWA (CP)—Justice Minis-,in New Brunswick. It also wouldjof a slsasheskiesi plan for vtake tenn tee oo f ee ree et ae aM a aes ae ae ~ Royal Tour : lan for sueh a marketing awe an s crowd , police , = En- toms and traditions and if we were one service there would still have to be_sea and air branches.” withheld pending ratifica- ee be membership.’ \ Algerian modore W. I. Cl nts of' North Devon, N.B., chief of the RCAF Maritime Command. “Chief of staff is the navy’s Commodore Patrick D. Budge, a. native of Dover, Eng. His deputy is RCAF, Group Captain Ralph A. Gordon of Bobcaygeon, Ont. The new operations centre will direct anti-submarine action only. | Other functidns of both forces, in- cluding air defence and training, | are controlled elsewhere. Group Capt. Gordon told news- paper men who visited the head- | quarters that the amalgamation} Revolt Is Big Operation ALGIERS, Algeria (Reuters)— \The biggest military operation in the 4%-year Algerian revolt con- tinued Friday as 20,000 French troops moved in on rebel bastions fn the forest-covered heights of the Kabylie Mountains. -- Gen; ~ Maurice —Chatie;—com-| mander of French forces in Al- geria, took personal eommand of the attacking troops. They were after some 6,000; rebels hidden amid the rocky "ra-| ‘yines and the vast oak forests of! the Akfadou range, which rises-up to. heights of 4,500 feet. The assault began two days ago with a three-pronged attack. NO BIG BATTLE YET Reports reaching here Friday) live, has: been the main source of recruits for the rebel bands since the revolt against! French rule broke out-isi’ November, 1954. The rebel commander, Mo- hamed ou el Hadj, successor to the redoubtable ‘‘Colonel” Ami- Touche, killed in battle la& April, controls scores of roving ‘hands who have hidden arms stores, “‘Stest camps” and training cen- tres in the forests, military sour- ces Say. | WHERE-TO-FIND-IT Announcements, notices 13 Births, deaths, etc 2, 13 Classified section 2, 13 | Finance, markets 13 Charlottetown news .\.... 5 | said first contacts were made; Comics, features with rebels bands but no full- TONED ie. si ccevedee. t scale battle has yet started. Island news ..:.,....... > ‘The barren Hodna region long) | si Aerie : has served the rebels as a supply route for arms and men to the Late reports from Guardian news bureaus in Summer- Kabylie range from the Aures mountains. ee The wild and over - popula side, Montague, Alberton aud Souris, and from special cer- respondents now appear on | the Island News Pace. j “Each service has its own cus-| The new headquarters is sity | uated in the Halifax naval dock-| ae Deputy commander is Air Com-— lings, a railway siding, | institution ter Fulton Friday announced that the_govermment has decided to buy “the minehead property at Springhill, N.S., for the site of a new federal prison. “The new institution will be of the minimum security type,” he said, similar to those under de- velopment at Valleyfield, Que., and William Head on Vancouver Island. The minehead pre y , situ- ated on 25 acres of land owned by the Dominion Steel and Coal Company, comprises three build- water, sewage and power facilities: Two -of the buildings, after al- teration, would provide tempor- ary dormitory and administrative accommodatiom The third is a modern machine shop which will be the basis of the industrial and vocational training program the is to follow. Reconstruction of existing fa- cilities would begin as soon as Possible and it was hopedto thave the industrial and vocation- al program in operation early ‘next year. RECOMMENDS PLAN Acquisition of the land was rec- ommended by the correctional planning committee of the justice department, headed by Allen J. MacLeod. The prison will be constructed over the coal mine in which 75 men died’ last year as a result of a cave-in. The mine was sub- sequently closed down. Mr. Fulton said the new insti-|~ tution will relieve congestion at Dorchester Penitentiary, nearby Public Works Tug Is Built ST. CATHARINES: (CP)—A 22- ton tug will be launched today in P Dalhousie harbor — four miles from Belmar Welding Lim- it here where it was built. The vessel’ was the first to be constructed by Belmar. It was transported to the lakeshore on a huge trailer Tue FP: 2 e Ecward I a s will te f the 4)- 20 he > pos- tez c work ouch @ ac 1 0 f provide for the expected increase) all\prisoners sentenced to a year) in penitentiary population result-|or more to serve the time in fed-| study made by a special com- Ying from future implementation! eral institutions. cal oar = —e Pare sland de- | ‘sy as cist: JVA at Charlottetown, F. B. Conrad, right retires to-|administrator, pr ‘et administrator of |Conrad with a sct of fravef ng %f foves boi & Kei‘a luz7eze on b<‘talf of the staff at EE Te one mitte of the P. E. Isiand _ Potato ye ~r NE ES : f * DISTRICT ADMINISTRATOR RETIRES presented Mr. |Armouries. The bear‘if? boude’ Cr asp = ed £. >: ¢1 be} scheme came as a result of a jin degree heat took—no-visibie+ ‘l were crammed into a two-mile- Proves Hoax: the streets wilted Friday, but Queen Elizabeth went through the last full day of her western tour with a decidely fresh appearance about her. Seldom on the Canadian visit has she appeared so fit. The miles of driving through the city streets toll. She and Prince Philip made seven stops during the 11-hour visit to-Winnipeg, where they' ar- rived, at mid-morning after a 15- minute stop at Portage la Prairie. HUGE CROWDS : Police Chief Robert Taft esti- mated nearly 200.000 persons saw the Queen and her husband dur- ing the day and 95,000 of these long area of downtown Winnipeg. The program ranged from an ancient rent-paying ceremony in Assiniboine Park to a command performance by the Royal Win- Ripeg Ballet in Winnipeg Arena. For the daytime activities, the Queen wore a dress and coat in oyster-white silk, large straw hat in caramel and trimmed with white, and caramel accessories. She changed to an evening dress of jade green and ‘turquoise blue flowered taffeta with full- gathered back for an informal dinner at Government House and the trip to the ballet. . Kidnap Yarn CHICAGO (AP) — Jacqueline Gay - Hart, 21-year-old blonde heiress, admitted Friday night, her father ‘said, that her story of being kidnapped by two men at the Newark N.J., airport and re- leased in Chicago was ,a hoax. At a press conference in the Federal Bureau of Investigation Office here, the father, Raiph A. Hart, of Short Hills, N.J., read this . statement: “As You know. my daughter is presently under sedation due to sheer exhaustion. : “Before she received such treatment from competent medi- cal authority, she ,advised me hat there was no abde 1 and rceived from W. J. Keswick, gov- “white gaping Russians and Amer- hard time but didn’t- get com- pletely out of hand, the Queen re ernor of the Hudson's Bay Com- pany, two elk heads and two black beaver skine. These were the traditional rent stipulated in the charter granted and the tribute must be paid any time a reigning monarch visited Rupertsiand. The only -other time the cere- mony has been performed was in 1939 on the visit of the Queen’s father. After the ballet, they returned to the train Today the trgin is to be broken up as the royal counle continued the remainder of their visit by plane and car. Friday they fly’ to Sudbury, Ont., for a brief visit, then go on 4o Governor - General Massey's summer residence at Port Hope. trading into Hudson Bay in| 1670 day night, Aug. 1, with departure by plane from Halifax. A tour official said here Friday will leave the Nova Scotian Hotel in Halifax at 10:30 p.m. ADT. The party will board a plane at 11:% p.m. for takeoff 10 minutes later. Increase Seen In Polio Cases OTTAWA (‘CP)-—-Health ‘Mints ister Monteith said Friday the latest paralytic polio figures—62 cases so far this year compared with 41 by this time last year— demonstraté the need for whole hearted public co-operation in the Ont., for a weekend rest. country’s immunization program, In Hot Due: By JOHN SCALI MOSCOW (AP)—Richard Nixon and Nikita Khrushchev clashed Friday in a hot duel of words feans looked on at the United States exhibition here. The U.S. vice-president said the premier filibustered like a senator. Khrushchev accused Nixon. of threatening him. eg It was the most astounding pub- lic exchange between such world figures that reporters in- Moscow ever have been able to Isiten in on. FIERY ISSUES ( Words and tempers exploded on such issues as Geneva con- ference and A ane in inter- national relations, At times Nixon And Nikita Clash Of Woras’ Nixon formally opened the fale Friday night. There. were such remarke ae these: »~ Khrushchev: giants. If you we will ‘answer threat threat.” — Nixon: “The moment we. place either one of these powerful na- “We: toe are want ‘to: threaten with tions, through the ultimatum, in a position where it has no choice but accept dictation or fight, thea you are playing with the most de- structive ver in the world.” WAR AND PEACE ; Khrushchev: “The ‘one who ts for putting an end to bases on foreign lands 's for peace. The one who is against this is for war.” Khrushchev grew red of face and waggied a finger under Nixon's nose : The unexpecied debaie erupted thet s>e docs not remember what as ‘oe ‘wo tovred the grounds of Nixon: - “I don’t believe the cause of peace is helped by your reiterating . that: you have more strength than’we have, be Kabylie country, where* 900,000! - if ths DVYA s\\f by Miss Mar- | Moslems and 990 Furopeans| | the exhibition a few hours before| cause that isa threat, too.” +pulling dredges and scows. Johnston, teft,"assistant district ‘a party held last. evening at the ljorie B. Stewart. vcal on, —_ v