TELEPHONE 8506 my“. meets seller with Guardian Want I I Dial 8506 ask for class’ ' m, for guick results. med ad c6 six scholarships igrade XII provin- were won by Harrington High r mend, fourth and m to Kensington. to astudent of and sixth prize of Notre Dame of Alberton — talents of grade it the leading stud- e XI exams last a , of Remington Thomas Hall. The lathe High School and Lorne Wag. resldts of the ,xg Provmcial Examinat- been released by the amt »Edwcation. E examination papers were mi peadunder the direction r. Atlantic Provinces Ex- Board. W Grade XII .stud- ' up awarded prizes provided Provincial Government mm highest in the Dame Academy prizes (first $25.00; ‘gthird $10.00), Provincial Gov- 1 .— _ of the North Pole. House annulment WWW voyage to Atlantic by these Sea, which lies _. .United‘ States and had , I " ed sea lane We use by nu- ICP) — Three miles, hours ‘ a“. watching their W,“ mole drown. mm Snead. mother or a“, , the story Frit- ' with the chil- ’ , Charles Wes- h" Weir. Russell, ' “rainy while tak- I ‘ - "$11ng in Ques- m this interior Cari- ' Gérautne, 7, melt, 10, went Wu were at the front What," said Mrs. ‘two men cast ,2. , I ’ mgr I . mitt, one of Child! w 1 ran 2 V» *8 steering mined the boat inI'hly, and the men were ‘ of them could swim billedochildren didn’t know : They could only Nor. to get dark, they to sleep huddled in t , ,1” . Geraldine turned of? Village. , Montague High school Montague, R. R. 2. Morell High School . Souris High School town. Stella Maris High School (North Rustico) ustus. ._ ‘SUI'VIVOI'; _ '17 - spleen ‘.E g‘ :I: swlfitly under. AnthofluduSecondClas-Mailbym.p - Department, omw. m on.“ fade XIIsList Headed By ‘$ington High SCHOoI ' 3. Joyce Bulger, Portage, RR. 1. Margaret Hume, Monta e. 2. Robert Stuart, Whim Rid, 3. Victor Bell, Montague. 1. June Dingwell, Midgell. 2. Ruth Compton, Bangor. 3. Beryl Robbins, Morell. 1. Eileen Grant, South Rustico 2. Betty Lou Hayter, George- '3. William Gillis, Souris 1. .Marie Mumaghan, Fort Aug-‘ 2. Edna Kelly. Fort Augustus. Two In Hospital . Following Crash Two men, Gordon Peterson of Wheatley River and Harold Stead of Hunter River, received severe injuries last night when a small British car in ‘which they were dnvmg is reported to Muesli- ed into truck. the rear of parked The injured men were taken to Report [South Minister Is Critically Ill "JOHANNESBIURG (Reuters) ~ (Reuters)—-The serious of Prime Minister Johannes Strid- dom mied a' 'feel- ing' Friday-that he mu ' Both gova and 099051. t‘ion newspapers said the ailing party leader withdraw from his responsibil;~ on a likely successoc. The 65-year-old leader, , we Mary humus lost at in the 1291?! ex- plosion, dried here Friday after a husband, Joseph ' linch, and 10 of men acumen among the explosion ‘VIIIC- Mrs. Mahar, a a long cdtyresldtent is survived by two ‘dtounhadtalcennhlrnforthe ‘aquomuntothechamberforu Glue outrun “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA SATURDAY, AUGUST 9, 1958 Grants To Trip ecI ° ~ Bieokdown’ On Ferry P. E. Island Major motor trouble was re- Wedasthecauseofabreakm the scheduled operation of the 081‘ fien'y -“P1ince Edward Is land" yesterday. 3. Mary Gallant, Hunter River. Summer-side High School 1. Ann Ronan, Summerside. 2. Hester MacPhee, Summer- side. ' . 3. Cecilia Darby, St. Eleanor’s Tignish High School tom Unofficial reports from Borden stated last evening that the ferry will leave for drydock today but railroad officials here stated that amnwasbingsenttoBorden last evening an effort to get the ferry ready for this morning’s run. ' Only one ferry, the “Abegweit” was running yesterday afternoon. Postpone APEC Annual Meeting (CM—The Atlantic Prom-noes Economic Council an- nounced Friday its annual meet- ing has been postponed until I Nov. 4~5. It‘wats originally sched- uled Sept. 22-23. APEC president Dr. Frank MacKinnon of‘_0harlottetown said September dates conflipted with increased activity planned by the ‘ council for September. ' Accident Victim Dies In Hospital Mrs. Harry MacEwen, 159 Prince Street and formerly of Bristol Lot 40 died last nightin‘ the Prince Edward Island Hos- pital where she was admitted last Wednesday nightfollowing a collision between her husband’s car and a truck owned by Doug- las Bros. and Jones. Charlotte- toWn. , , Dr. L. E. Browse, provincial coroner, last night said an» in- quest will be heldin the death (if the woman. 'A jury will be call- ed to meet thismm'ning at 11 sun. at the ~‘M-acLean Funeral Home. The occupants, of. the truck were Michael Doyle'and Blois MacPhail. Mrs. MacEwen was with her' husband who is a pati- ent at the P.E.I. Hospital suffer- ing from injuries received. ' R11 Doreen Harper,~ Tignish, R. 2. Stella Howard, Tignish. 3. Alice Collicutt, O’Leary, R. g. and Joan Gallant, Tignish, PASS LIST_ The pass list includes the names of those who'have attain- ed 75 per cent or more of the ag- gregate of mark-s in the required minimum of seven subjects; (Continued on gages Col. 2) the Prince Edward Island Hos pital by Andrews ambulance from Hunter River. The accident happened about 9.30 about midway betv'veen New Glasgow and Rustico.‘ . Dr. Ian MacMillan Was called to the scene and rendered emer- gency treatment before ordering the victims to the hospital. a Atrico’s Prime with a blood clot in the’lung, a satisfactory but his condi- tion remained unchanged, a, med- ical bulletin said Friday. , Deputy Premier Charles Sweat told Parliament. Thursday satu- An {atmosphere of ‘eXcitemen and gaiety marked the departure of a group of “La Liaison From liaise" fromthe port of Friday morning. As over 100‘Acaw them from Sourls and district cheered and called “ban voyage” to the departing ship “ss Magda! len” W'I‘ltiph is carrying the visitors, to various Aoadi-an ports in thé. Maritimes. The strains of “Fil as it .my' ‘p‘suna y M Asse worse. was ordered two weeks ago bylus doctors to ake ga oomplete‘rest. He harl‘been tor arrow weeksbeliore that. Members of=Par1lament spent -most of the day in the lobbies the attraction brought about by the premier’s illness. Bells had to be rung'to summon Halifax Woman SAINT JOHN, N13. (011)4Mrs. Eileen thtdker, 37, of Halifax wins killed Friday on lthe St. Stephen highWay when the. light Station Wm in which she was a passenger hit a bump and rolled into the ditch. * Her two daughters, Sylvia and Imelda, Were brought to hospital bill... A on the leadership of the Nationalist mo and a sun- ro thepr'emicrship would I)? made by the party parliamen- tary caucus, which. due to meet‘ in Capeto‘m. . .The Afrikaans-language news- paper DieBurger of Cape Prov- ince said ; flatly Strijdom wouldwneveragainbe able to Atomic S;qu Cros5'es _ cean “Under Ice - ; If she can roam under the polar ice, so, can the ballistic missile firing' ’ Polaris subrnaunes' now i .‘l 1. . . CREW HONORED The submarine’s shipper, Cmdr. R. Anderson, native of Bakerville, Tenn.,-neceived from Eisenhower the Legion of Merit. TothellB-m crewwentl» presidential unit citation. ; , The medal was pinned on the {flayearold skipper in the White Blouse announcement ceremny. The Nautilus, the world’s first nuclear—powered submarine left the Us. narual base at Pearl Har- bor, Hawaii, July 23'. She sailed unnoticed to the north, up past the Aleutian Hove Grim Time .' ’l'uther, Uncle. Lost can get very choppy there at night. “They drifted until daybreak and awoke to find the boat near shore. They all put on canvas life - preset-veins and waded to land. ' “Geraldine said she wanted to get home quickly. Allll‘sO‘f them were very frightened. They found a trail that led nowhere. They wandered for miles and miles, hours and hours. I “At first we thought they may have had to camp out because of boat trouble. ButaI decided at 8:30 am. Wednesday to go look- ing for them. FINDS LIFE BELTS “I got a hotel guest to take me up the shore in a boat. We found the boat and thelife preservers on shore—and knew someone was alive." Then the search began. By mid- morning, more than 40 men were combing the bushland. RCMP joined in and an aircraft was called. Twenty~seven hours later the children were found, huddled to- gether, 14 miles from Likely. A search is continuing for the bodies. I This community is about 250 ".12 boat. The wa\ter air mlles northeast of Vancouver. A ' " A IMPEDNIAII‘EIONIS, N.Y. (UP) —«A‘ plea by Secretary - General Dag Hammarskjold for a thor- ough study of the basic problems of the Middle East and the inter- ests of the Arab peoples was put before the Nations’ third emergency assembly session When it convened Friday. The extraordinary meeting then was adjourned until Wednesday here with undetemuned mimics. The drltver wiasretported to ‘be‘ James Henry Zwilcker, husband of the dead women. I The accident happened abou 17 miles mun StainPJohn at West Musquash. ' . “take up It's A "Boy But Bing Is Happy BIOIILYIWDOID (Am—“We were hoping for a girlsbut of course we’re very happy with the little fellow,” proud papa Crosby said Friday. His wife, actress Kathy Grant, gave birth to a seven-pound, nine- ouuce boy in a manual delivery at a Hollywood hospital. Both were reported doing The“ old greener has four sons by his first wife, Dixie Lee Crosby. She died of cancer ‘ in 1952. Cnoslay, 54, and the 24-year-old actress were married in Las Vegas, New, last October. Islands, through Bering Strait, be- tween Alaska and Siberia, headed up toward the rolling, grinding Fringe of pack ice inygthe Arctic— and then on under it. TOOK PHOTOGRAPHS Above Poi-rt Barrow, Alaska, the Nautilus tinned slightly east- Ward. For a few minutes on the rimming of Aug. 1, she surfaced through one of the Occasional openings in the ice field to make photograph-s. Then she slid be- neath the surface again to resume hm 2-,114-rrule journey under ice. Most of the time the polar ice above the vessel averaged about 12 feet in thickness. At some points, however, pressure ridges had thickened it to more than 50 feet. out of the polar sea, the Nautilus headed down be- tween Greenland and Iceland. There ‘a helicopter picked up the skipper to start him on a plane to Washington. ' Using an electronic fathometer, the Nautilus measured the water depth at the pole as 13,410 feet. Thiswas 1,927 feet deeper than estimates made previously from a position on top of thep ack ice. The submarine crossed the geo- graphical polar position—latitude 90'degrees, north—at 11:15 pm EDT last Sunday. ALWAYS ON LOSING 'EEND NEWARK, NJ. (Am—Alter he was robbed for the ninth time; Wear-old Gimble Hen-' slr witz decided to hide a base- ball bat under the counter at the all—night diner where he works. It would come in handy, he thought, if another robber - showed up. Friday a customer ordered a bowl of chicken noodle soup. Henslowitz served the man and went'to the back room to wash dishes. The customer vaulted over the counter, saw the bat. grabbed it and knocked out Henslowitz with a blow on the head. The rubber took $12.50 from the cash register and fled. the far -' re’atching Hammarskjo’ld proposals and for higher - level delegates to journey to UN head- quarters to take part in the de- bate; At Friday’s half-hour -meeting which fomnally brought all 81 UN member states together, the sec~ retairy-tgeneral’s t submission was regarded as an attempt to blue- print an agenda which the Secur- ity Council handed down to the assembly only in the vaguest terms. N0 DETAILED PLAN Hammarskjolld did not spell out a detailed plan fiorthe assembly: But he stressed that the UN’s present role in the immediately affected area of Lebanon “is re- lated to canditions Which may be temporary, and the time may not be distant when a change of those conditions w ould call for a change of approach." . 100 YEARS OLD LEIIICHEISTER, Eng. (Reuters) Rev.‘ Robert Henry Bagnall, old- est priest in the Church of Eng- land, Friday celebrated his 100th birthday. SEzEfK‘ SOLUTION TO STRIFE' EOKA, the Greek under- ground. AGreek was shot dead in the millage of Lefikiulco. Po- l'lce said he was the third EO-‘KA victim since the truce. EOKA marks for death Greeks on Cy- prus who work with the British or Turks. The meetings here are ’being held on the initiative of Macmil lan, who arrived here Thursday. 'He is due to go to Ankara—prob ably Saturday night—for talks with Turkish Prime Minister Ad‘ nan Menderes. The morning meeting between Macmillan and Karamanlis, at- tended also by Foot and Greek Foreign Minister Evangelos Av ero‘ff, was described as “explou atory.” Averofif said there was “a hull and sincere exchange of views.” Informed sources said the Greek and British leaders discussed the importance of Cyprus to Western strategy, especially in view of tension in the Mlddle East. 1: . ATHENS (Reuters) -— British, Greek and Cypriot leaders con- ferred long and hard Friday in a bid to turn up some kind of set- tlement for troubled Cyprus. British Prime Minister Macmil- lan and Greek Premier Con- stamine Karamanl-is met for 2% hours and conferred at another session at night. Between the premiers’ meet- lngs, the British governor of} Cy- prus, Sir Hugh Foot, talked for more than an hour with Arch- bishop Maharios, exiled leader of the Cyprus union—with-Greece movement. ' The meetings were staged ur- gently duriug a lull in fighting on Cyprus. Both Greek and Turk- ish Cypriot terrorist groups or- dered a truce early this week af- ter two months of inter - corm- munal strife took 152 lives. EOKA SHOOTS GREEKS The truce did not prevent new attacks on Greek Cypriots by t '1; to allow time for consideration of , ‘vrsrrons WAVE monument s. s. MAGDOLEN ~P.‘E.,I. Acodions Bid Adieu To Bi-Centenniol Visitors between ship and shore, of “we will return again”, Accompanied by Prof. J.H.. Blanchard of Char, WM, . the . who: were. tronsportbd from Charlottetgowu by bus, were greeted at dockside" by deputy Mayor Wendell Birt, Mr. Paul Gallant, Mr. Arthur Peters. and a water Cells were also heard. ‘ large group of citizens." of the tourwhich is mbl‘y Meets ug.13 ' , He made a specific refierence to Jordan, where British troops moved in following the July 14' Iraqi revolt but where the UN has no observer force like that still in Lebanon despite the Amer- ican troop intervention there which preceded therBritish move. into Jordan. Man. Killed ‘ By Lightning On 'Troctor AMHERST. —— (CP) — Lightn- ing from a violent electric storm swept across Northern Nova Scotia‘ and Eastern New Bruns- wick Friday 'killed one man, knocked out power services, burned a barn and damaged at least two other buildings. Andrew Richardson, 31, of Sackville, N. B., was killed in- stantly when lightning struck a tractor helwas operating in a hayfield at Bale Verte, N.B. Canada Electric Company Lim- ited- said dozens of transformers and fuses were burned out on its lines south of here and along the shore of the Northumberland Strait. A company spokesman said,the storm was the worst in ‘ ' total grant of $89,000 which Island - Incorporated In a Proposal made to the Prince Edward Island Federation of Mayors and Municipalities yes- terdtw, Premier A.W. ‘Matheson stepped up the present per cap- itc grant from $3.00 to $9.00 This means that the present municipalities are now getting Will increased to about $270,000, or triple the amount paid out to the towns of Summers’ide, Bor- den, Albee ton, Montague, Ken- -smgton,, Souris and Georgetotvn and the City of Charlottetown. . _The Premier said some as- sistance would also be forthcom- ing to the incorporated Villages of the Island. FEDERATION OFFICIALS The, Premier’s announcement followed\c- meeting of the Exec- utive Council held this week and hesaidwastheresultofameet- ing with Mayor,W.A. Currie, Sum- ' memlde, president of the Island ’ Federation of Mayors and Mun- icipalities and Mayor Bruce Yeo of _mntague, immediate past . t of the organization. ‘ Some months ago the Federa- tion met with Premier Matheson l I Plan sway ct ment of fisheries said Friday . with the wooden trap expmun‘ ent'next winter the Bay, of Fundy. AIummum‘ Traps I HALIFAX (CP)-_.- The depart - study of 3:13an lobster traps will be made next week Wren the Nomthumtberland Strait season opens. The department said 34 of the newtrapswillbesetinthestralt Sunday. They are both g compared. Results be studied by fidh— eries officials, who plan a 300— and Hon. B. Earle MacDonald to present a brief outlining the need of the. municipalities. , - that meeting-the Pre- mier said he asked the delegates» —ohould an increase in per capita grams be allowed—worm the mu- nicipalities be prepared to forgo any special concessions now en- toyed? No SPECIAL coucnssmhis “Almost‘ to a man the delega- I 'WEATHER Clearing in the morning; little change in per-attire southwest winds 15. Shifting to northwest 15. Low-high 65 and .77 NOT MORE THAN 1 unicipalities ‘ Promises Assistants“ The: FIVE CEN‘IS Villages agree to equal treatment for all—- I considered this reply fair." said Premier Mattheson. Confirming the Premier stated, ‘ The present offer is made upon condition that special privileges, if any, heretofore granted to any municipality be waived or with-1 drawn. It is the wish of the Gov- ernment that equal and equitable treatment be given to all.” The Premier made it clear that any grants common to all mu- nicipalities such as welfare, fire fighting etc. will remain the same. Only concessions not common to all municipalities be brought under review. No SERIOUS AMOUNT Questioned regarding the mean- lag of theterm “special coneese~ ions,” Mr, Matheson said he would be willing to discuss this matter with any particular mu- nicipality involved, but for the greasent would not elaborate fur- I'. ’ - It is understood that municipal- ities are presently allowed to re- :‘taiu all‘fiues levied in police court whether they apply to nicipal bylaws or to the provm cial statutes or the criminal code of Canada. .' Grants in lieu of corporation taxes and taxes on government- mu- real estate V come under the categorytt, _, v‘ conces- sions when. the matter em up for discussion; A rough estimate of Charlotte- town's gain Would be $108,000. On an 18,000 population basls, their present grant is54,000. At $9 a head this would juntp to $162,- . tion said there were no special concessions given to any town and if were were such, they would 000. It is not known what, if any. “special ncessions” Charlotte- town w have to give up. in P. I. Crontrocts and development projects Were smnmanv 'zed by contracts. All of which had earlier announced. awarded to Robert H. Rankin, Summerside. The 1 west of the ehmst' ingR of 7.7 miles of Gulf between Rustico Harbor nd Londoncamp grounds, in PEI N verts, the areain several years. n Cyp be held on the basis of Britain’s MAKAEIOS, FOOT CONFER Makarios, primate of the Greek Orthodox Church in Cyprus who was exiled in March, 1956, ac- cepted an invitation to meet Foot. They talked for 75 minutes at Makarios‘ hotel residence. The archbishop’s diplomatic adviser, English -, educated Zenon Ros- stides, was present. Both sides were tight-upped, but announced another meeting for Saturday morning. Foot said the conference was “usef -.” Greek church sources said Foot had insisted that all violence must cease to pave the way to a political settlement in Cyprus. He said the present truce should be extended to allow further ne- gottilations. British sources in Athens said the talks opened a “Supreme op- portunity” for reaching at least a provisional settlement. Karamanlis said before the talks he was “hopeful.” But he stipulated that the talks could not 200 by 39 feet. Completion date Oct. 1. 1958. ' / I‘LIS . “partnership” plan for Cyprus. OPPOSED BY TRIO assemblies. - Leaders of the 400,000-strong politically w i t h Greece. the British in April, 1955. plan and wants instead partiti of the island. The Turkish consulwgeneral lan. OTTAWA, (Special) —- con- tracts' totalling $674,753,, award- ed during July for construction Prince Edward Island, yesterday Public Works Greenin his reg- ular monthly contracts report. The sum involves tluee separate The most recent, announced late in July is for the construction of a new Federal building and Post Office at Port Borden. The contract, $19,327, was one-stodey' building,wi.ll be located on the south side of .- Borden Ave. and the Trans-Canada Highway, and racks. It will be' without base: meat, brick'faced with about 32, feet frontage on Borden’Ave. and a depth of 32 feet, Completion date, specified is February, 1959. A contract for $688,553,was award- ed to Morrison and McRae Ltd, of Summerside, for the rebuilding Road New tional Park. The project calls for the grading and paving of the road and installation of new cul- The third contract listed by Mr. Green totals $74,998 and is for im- provements to the Railway Wharf at Summerside. It was awarded to County Construction Co. Ltd, of Summerside. The project calls for the erection of an extension to the east shed. Its size will be The partnership plan—offered 'by Britain two months ago and promptly rejected by Greek, Tur- lsi-s‘h and Cypriot leaders—pro- vided for a threeaway Cyprus governing council with separate Greek and Turkish legislative Greek Cypriot community have campaigned for years to unite The Greek underground organization EOKA opened operations against The 100,000 Turkish Cypriot counmunity opposes the Greek Cyprus, Burhan Ishin, flew from Nicosia cto Ankara to be avail- able for weekend talks between the leaders and Macmil- * . By GEORGE McNEVJJN Canadian Press Staff writer ERIEDERIICTON (ClP) —.— Fog which otten spoils things for the southern New Brunswick port of Saint John may prove a blessing today and,.bring Princess Mar- garet on an unscheduled visit. Butt tor. the residents of Yar- mouth, NS, there may be dis- appointment- Royal tour officials Friday night were scanning weather re- ports and outlooks to decide whether or not a scheduled flight fromhue to Yarmouth, N.S. should'becancelled because of poor flying conditions. Trans - Canada Air Lines di- verted three flights scheduled for Yarmmtth Friday because of/fog. Fog and a sooroot ceiling were e'npected. here this morning. The royal plane is scheduled to leave for Yamnouth at noon ADT after the princess visits the army’s nearby Canrp Gagetown. POLISH BRASS The ‘St. Laurent class destroyer escdrt Assinitboine steamed into port at Saint John Friday. Sail- ors were busy polishing brass in case the princess’ travel plans change. - , . The destroyer carries ,200 of floors and men commanded by Cmdr. J. R. Coulter of" Ottawa and Victoria- The 45 - mile Bay of Fundy crossing takes the CPR ferry Princess Helene about three hours. The Assiniboine could make the crossing as fast or faster, a naval spokesman said. It would take the royal motor- cade a bout one hour under normal driving conditions to reach Saint John from Gagetown, _ 45 miles north. ' No artificial preparations were r being made Saint John or its » twin cityLancaster for a possible visit from royalty. The cities were bypassed by those making up the regal agenda and Fred- dericton was the only New Bruns- wick centre to be visited. The ‘ mayors said they had received no official word on the situation. ‘But flags and hunting were being dug out of cellars by store in of a. is Unemployment In ‘ U. S. Down to 5,294,000. as great as usual for July. on ployrment merce and in labor cent in April. F09. Mean. Revis keepers and business houses and WASHINGTON (AP) -— T he government reported Friday the number of unemployed Amer- icans dropped by 143,000 in July Unemployment normally drops 'more sharply at this time of year. Employment rose ‘by 198,000 to 65,179,000. The increase was not After taking seasonal factors into account, the rate of unem- increased. The com- departments said 7.3 per cent of the work force was jobless last month compared with 6.8 per cent in June. The peak recession rate was 7% per ion. In i cm... no employeeslwere WORM. late ,8 decorate the downtown ales." v . . LAST-MINUTE TOUGHES Meanwhil-"e in Yamoutbh, last»- minute touches Were put on prep- arations for the arrival of Print- cess Margaret by hopeful offl- cials. . - ‘Her itinerary before reaction} Diglby includes a greet-M by— Revenue Minister Nowlan’ -, a mo- torcade through Yamtoufll on the southwest coast of Nova Scotia. a helicopter ride to Church Point and a visit to St. Anne‘s Cohege in the Acadian heartland, of the province. SheisduelnDimyat 4:15 pm. AM. The princess and her personal household spent Friday quietly.‘ Most of the day the royal party rested at a summer cottage seven miles north of here. Her“ only scheduled appearance was at a harness racing meet here. Tour officials. said Margaret and her staff mostly. played records and talked at the secluded,cottage owned by local electrical contractor Stanley Cas- sidy seven miles north of hero on the St. John-River. They at. picnic lunches. RCMP ON GUARD ROMP guards patrolled. the grounds of‘the cottage keeping away newspaper men and the curious. The royal party was re- port-ed “fascinated” by Mary .'.ng1in of Saint John who caught a sevenipound saknon from a nearby stream. Miss Anglin and her father, Mr. Justice W. Arthur I.\An-glin of the New Brunswick Supreme Court were fishing near the Cassidy cottage — Journey’s End. . ‘ From the glossed-in sun porch of the cottage on a bluf‘, Mar- garet could get an excellent view of the river. The army announced a last—.- minute change in plans for the princess’ visit to Camp Gage. town. At her request, a mod; battle between infantry and armored units will be staged be- neath the mushroom cloud of a simulated atomic blast. Original plans called for a review of the troops ands tour of camp fac'ih ities. The princess :1 rriv e d here Thursday from Quebec. Nova Scotia is the last stop of her Canada-wide tour. She is sched- uled to leave by plane for home at 11:45 p.m. ADT Monday. Ferry And Pilot Boot Collide . SAINT JOHN, N.«B.(Cl3)—.Tho Canadian Pacific ferry Princess Helene and Saint John’s new pilot boat No. 6 collided off the harbor mouth Friday. No one was hurt and damage was superficial. Superintendent of Pilots John A. MacKinnon said the Princess Helene continued her regular trip across the Bay oi 3W b Digby. N3. y" r ‘l" ,1: ; , A“, colleague-alarm.