Direcidien By * bane CITY NEWS PAGE TELEPHONE 8506 — ASK FOR NEWS DESK Eighteen of the 19 of the Canada Council will visit Prince Edward ‘Island next will hold_ their fax on Monday and Tuesday and will arrive -here by _ chartered plane early Wednesday morning. Their host for the visit is Dr. Frank MacKinnon, principal of Prince of Wales College and the Island member to the council. The distinguished party headed PLACED BY JUDGE : Vaudeville Act Said Popular ‘CLASS OF HEREFORDS BEING MacRae Herds Dominate a former minister of national defence, will total about 40 per- sons including, the council and wives of the members. The Guardian, Charlottetown, Fri, Aug. 14, 1959 Canada Council Will Visit Island trip is Major Generel G P. the University ef British Colum- bia; Dr. W. A. Macintosh, pre- sident of Queen's University and Mrs. Angus L. ‘MacDonald of Nova Scotia. The only member of the couns- cil who will not be making the Vanier, who has been designated as Canada’s next Governor-Gen- eral. General Vanier and his wife are vacationing in England. The itinerary of the visit here included a gathering at the Con- a late morning coffee party spon- sored by the P. E. I. Art Society at the home of Mr. and Mrs. D. “Among those included in th group will be Very Rev. George Henri Levesque, vice-chairman, Quebec City; Leonard W. Brock- ington, Sir Ernest * Ayrshire Class Thursda Roars eine ue ‘ : coming from the Coliseum this week are sure signs that Ladd A.B. and Fred: ing a good second im one class. Lyon is on stage with his vaude- T. MacRae, Union Road. The Raedale : herd topped the ville act. The junior champion and re-| junior yearling female class with | One of the funniest audience serve followed the same pattern| ¢wo top placings. But A. MacRae) participation turns to be seen “¢rai Rovalty and Union Road had | the major share of top prizes and’ iE. P. Taylor of Toronto: Dr. | Norman MacKenzie, president of fax by plane at midnight. Macmillan, M. Gass of Inkerman; a motor- | | Cade tour of points of interest on }P. E. 1; a reception at Govern-| 'ment House and a dinner at the home of Dr. and Mrs. Frank Mac- Kinnon. . The group will return te Hali- ; i ” Atom Bomb Blasts Planted Seeds Of Social And Economic Reforms appear. Citizens and officials alike can only hope at present that the government will step forward) with funds to support families of sick workers who are the sole But such proposals raise fam- iar dilemmas, one of choosing only those who really need the aid. . RANKING EFFECTS The provision of free medical about 62 miles—of the bomb or who into the ci two 2 ‘ nk sel “ESE ri ; : M ut i : | 2 £ t é j 5 & E 5 af is £ | : E ‘| | I y Ey F : & F 5 7 § oF | i L | 4 F { z ; f re i | ! , &, E § 8 & g Hot Weather Ripens Crops OTTAWA (‘CP) — Hot, dry weather over most of the Prairies has ripened crops prematurely over wide areas, resulting in a the bureau of Wednesday..------ Many districts have started harvesting, particularly in the southern parts, and harvest oper- ations should be in full swing over most of the Prairies shortly. statistics reported deterioration in crop pro-vects. | 4 unemployéd, but this includes housewives. and students. Naga- saki has perhaps less unemploy- ment, offering more industrial Fall-out from nuclear bomb tests adds to the concern over radiation, and an end to bomb testing is sought in Japan. EAT POLISHED WHITE RICE Dr. Yasushi Nishiwaki, bio- Physicist of Osaka City Univer- sity School of Medicine, finds that which tends to concentrate radio- active strontium-90 from fall-out. Rice husks contain about 90 per cent of the strontium, so people are advised to eat polished white rice. In Japan, milk contains less strontium-90 than in North Amer- ica, probably because cows here Graze over much smaller areas of land. Also, children drink le «milk per capita. There is strong and genuine de- sire for peace in both bombed Says Gov. Sato: ‘There ts a strong desire to forget the past, look to the future, and build a City of peace.” brown rice is one Japancse food’ 8 P.E.I. Marksmen care for A - bomb Survivors | Rain would help lates - led championship ribbons m the) with the A. MacRae and Son Ayrshire class when the maies,! entry Fairvue Burton being and Son had top placings in the here in too long a time, Ladd) junior calf, senior calf and sen- carries the vast crowd along on} 5 yearling classes. | champion and Raedale Landlord | A MacRae and Sons had the young stock and dry cow classes | were completed Thursday eT m reserve. The milk classes, senior and bull classes thou | junior calf, gh with firsts in| reserve champion in Fairvue yearling, and Bright Lady and Fairvue Pauline. The Raedale herd was tops in| junior champion female and the | his own infectious good humor. The act, when he finally gets *Irene’ into it, is more than rib- tickling. It is absolutely hjilari- ous and leaves his viewers both weak and watery-eyed. If Ladd ward Island today. One of the nicer things about the act is that he carries his con- sistent good humor off stage with him. He and Mrs. Lyon and their attractive children, are as plea- got paid in laughs he would be! the wealthiest man on Prince Ed- | Qualify For Final CONNAUGHT RANGES—Eight Following were Lt. R.E.Jen- Prince Edward Island riflemen kins and Lt. A.K. Mutch with 2 _,, 143; Lt. GJ. Rogers and Sgt. qualified Thursday for the final! 7b Susick 147s. Tor. B.C. stage of the Governor-General’s! Rarwise and Capt. Roy McCabe | match to be fired on Saturday. 14l's and Li. P.T. Hooper 138, | ‘The qualifying round consisted Leading the P-E.I. team in the of ten shots at each of the 200, 300, Aggregate are: Lt’s Jenkins and and 600 yard ranges. It was shoe | Rogers. with 590. followed by grand female championships and é senior group classes will be .| mature males. f | They also took the junior get-ol- ’ ed today. ya daidnant A. MacRae and Sons had first sire and junior herd classes. ‘A MacRae and Son's Royal Fair) and second placings in the junior; =D. Fred MacRae had the top winner, Woodland’s Royal Burton | yearling. __ | cow in the two-year old dry class. end went senior and grand cham-| Keith Boswell and Son, Victoria) A, MacRae and Sons had the pion. The reserve senior and re- had strong entries for several top two in the three-year-old serve grand was the Raedale herd good -— See ake sae ae — took oe . ; | ‘ ‘2 , entry Raedale Lindy. He is owned and Son 9 ee ee te te mater Guernsey Prizes Are Well Divided Prize money and championr- | ship ribbons were pretty well | divided in the Guernsey ring at} the Provincial Exhibition on Thursday. ie Male classes. junior ’ and junior groups were comp?et- ed. The senior classes wili be) completed today, senior and grand cham- ship ribbons went to Daniel Mackheez View Rex’s Duke. The reserve senior ribbon went ‘to J. Eric| Hurray with Patosie Golden | Master and the reserve grand to Owen Younker and Son Kingston with their junior cham- pion, Kingstonview Laddie The reserve junior ribbon was taken by Harold Palmer and Sons of Kensington with Tanery Hill 90 Per Cent immunized Over 9 percent of the school population of Prince Edward Is- land has been immunized against polio, Dr. B.D. Howatt, assistant deputy minister, said yesterday morning. The number of pre- schoolers treated was more ~ ficult to determine, but it was eS- timated that the percentage would be over 60. Figures for the Island's adult population are not available. Dr. Howatt was commenting om a despatch stating the Nova Scotia Health Department report- ed less than one-third of that pro-) ince’s population has been fully immunized against polio. New Entries } Thors Raymond. The Palmer entries took the junior and senior heifer calf classes. Ernest F. Coles of Milton went females | to the top in the junior yearling House committee bills class. John Docherty of Winsloe took | the senior yearling class with Waterlily Lassie. It was Palmer all the way in class. Maiden Hill Shirley was the champion and Maiden Hill} Royal took the reserve ribbon. | The Coles father and son com- of ‘pination went to the top in both | the junior herd and junior get | of sire classes. | Keir Jones = Harrington was second in the junior yearling fe-. male class and Wendal Sentner \of New Wiltshire was second in the senior female class. Harrison Green and Sons, Kingston were second in the junior yearling male. 1 Labor ‘Continued from page 1) ground approach to the problem. That left only the formality of a vote on final passage. Demo- cratic strategists conceded they had little hope of upsetting the Eisenhower-backed bill. Its de feat would leave no labor legis- ation before the House. However, there was some ques- tion as to what will happen to this bill once it gets into conference with the Senate. Last April, the Senate passed a labor control bill that stops well short of some. of the stringent provisions in the Landrum-Griffin version. PROTECT RIGHTS Both the committee bill and the | 3.52 per cent last Dec. 10. Twice sant a family as anyone could meet. ure. He carried his fight to the | prince Edward Island and would nation via radio and television. | jike nothing better than to pur- calling the coalition bill a g00d | chase one of the smaller Islands start toward real labor reform | here for a summer home. They Eisenhower said neither the would make a happy addition to ' Senate bill nor the House com-/| the population mittee bill killed Thursday ‘will eee rere | really do the job—to curb the | the chartered banks dropped by abuses the American people want | ¢969 000.000 to $2.930.000.000 at to see corrected.” He demanded stiff bans on sec- ondary boycotts and blackmail | Aug. 12 from the holdings a year ago and were down by $94,000,000 ip the week picketing. saying the Senate and = This was done against a back- fell short ground of relatively-stable money in this . supply. The money supply in- On the same night, AFL-CIO creased only by $30,000,000 be- president: George Meany went 00 tween July 29 and Aug. § when the air and attacked the Lan- it stood at $13.403,000,000 drum-Griffin bill which he com-/ Although this was up sharply n of Milton with Valley /the junior female championship tended would harm legitimate UN- | ¢rom the level of a year ago, it jhad eased tly upward l#rom the $12.000.000.000 level of last October after a big expan- sion at that time in the money yn slign ions. Canada Bank supply (Continued from page 1) A rapid increase in the money these sales were made ‘at sacMi-) supply might have forestalled the fice prices.” interest rate and other financial ‘Naturally there is a limit tO moves of recent weeks. The fact 9, ' . , such a procedure, he said. '¢he supply remained fairly stable The rise of .43 per cent in wae is taken as an indication that the las central. bank’s rate from central bank is attempting to week's 5.98 was the greatest | avoid an increase that might be since it climbed .45 per cent © infjationary last year it dropped by a greater lest your & drepoed ty 2 erveiss| Dual Purpose |amother time by -44 per cent. (Continued from page 1) | caNKED TO YIELD | Dixon, the senior calf to Mr. The bank rate is linked to the Jewel! and the junior yearling | average yield for 91-day treasury first position to Mr. MacPhee. | bills which the government sells | Mr. Barrett's entry won the sen- weekl rough aled-bid tend- | ior yearling class. ers Sea vied for these; Alton Younker won the junior | bills Thursday was 6.16 per cent calf competition In the female and the bank rate is fixed at one- “48s. with Mr. Hurry taking the _.}senior section. The junior year- — of one per cent above ling i oat oak ek a The jfact that the government | 4 t the nod - han taal Sdn + to pay @ stead- ing the on the senior sec ' j tion. hily-rising rate to dispose - - Keith Barrett's Oceanbrae Lily $115,000.000 weekly issue “| was the junior champion female day bills ie an indicator that’ with S$ Wood and Son’s Lime- chartered banks and financial wooq Norma Jean the reserve fhouses have decreasing amounts jynior champion. of cash to employ for a short; Mr. Jewell’s entry won. the period. two-year-old female in’ milk Mr. They are delighted with} |and Son with Keith Barrett get-' Landrum - Griffin version were| This in turn is considered by class, and Barrett’s entry patterned after the Senate biil.| some to indicate that demands | won the dry class in the same Both contained clauses intended for loans in an expanding econ- division. Mr. Wood won’ both) under difficult conditions. | Sgt. M.P. Susick 587, A.K. Mutch, rankles with many survivors of bombings in other cities, who suffered badly, but receive no similar relief Job-support bene- fits just for A-+omb survivors would smack of more favoritism in their eyes. In_ most_cases, doctors cannot tell whether an individual becom- ing ill now has illness due to de- layed radiation effects, or nat- ural causes and natural aging. But as survivars of the bomb, they get free care. How many people are sick and unable to afford time in hospitals is not known. Offieials and doc- Sgt. P.J. Lanrigan topped the and Lt. Mary MacLennan 580 Island contingent with 144 out of Tpr. R.C. arwsse 579 and Sgt a possible 150 points. ' PJ. Landrigan 577. 92 Arrests Made In July Resulting In 89 Convictions | A total of 92 arrests were made , during the month of July, result- | ing in 89 convictions. Chief C_W. MacArthur stated in presen‘ing his monthly report at the August meeting of the City Council. | .Of this total number of con- victions 67 were for bemg drunk | and incapable, two for drunk driv- ing and four for driving while impaired. During the month of August a y complaints received and ed. The Police Chief also ei that during the month under re- | View conditions have been very good. A great deal of time was spent in preparation for the visit of Her Majesty, Queen Elizabeth and her husband, the Duke .of Edinburgh. Ncthing unusual oc- curred to mar this visit. tors call it a serious problem but accurate statistics are lacking Governor Katsuya Sato of Nagasaki prefecture estimates there were 140.000 survivors. of whom 82,000 have registered so far. In Hiroshima, 79.400 had registered as of last March. with thousands more presumably not yet on the rolls. Some didn't register because they didn't want to be classified 2s survivors, for fear of pre- judices about Marriage or jobs which that might entail, Sato thinks. Others may not yet have heard of the medical care pro- gram. Still others have no phys- ical complaints. Survivors are defined as those who were within 10,000 meters— total of $335.50 was collected. This includes $450 in fines for driving while impaired; $160 {mn parking | meter violations: $60 for other | | vfolations: $36 for dog licenses; | $56 for bicycle licenses; $18 for parking meter permits and $51 for meter rentals. Other duties carried out by police included 58 prisoners escorted from police court to jail: 26 prisoners escorted from jail to police court; three prisoners and others escorted to Riverside Hospital; 60 motor vehicle acci-| dents investigated; 248 private) yards inspected and 297 telephorie OLD TIMERS BY REGULAR FRIDAY NIGHT DANCE _AT THE ROLLAWAY CLUB TONIGHT Dancing from 10 till 1 BOTH MODERN AND OLD TIMERS - MODERN BY THE BLUE CATS ADM. G. WEATHERBIF 60c Shale Banks Yield Fossils | KAMLOOPS, B.C. ‘CP)—Shale- | banks near here have yielded a | collection of anima! and plant fos- PARK DRIVE-IN Brackley Pt. Read. as much as 30,000,000 years old.! Seven scientists, on their way! to a convention of the Interna-| tional Congress of Botanists in| 4 Montreal late this month, recov-' ered the specimens near Tran-| quille, 10 miles southwest of here. The scientists are among 35 currently touring different areas of the prpvince to gather archae ological and hotanical data. A RA Faring Well Lowell Wyand and Sons, Hun- members, to ban to protect the rights of union omy have been rising. The char-| ends of thes three year-old class, | ‘blackmail"’ | tered banks, as their deposits in-| and the milk section in the four-| year-old. Mr. Hurry’s entry was/ ULTRA SONIC ter River, Everett Holmes and, picketing and to require union fi-/ ereased,~were slating away more given the nod as the best «four-| WATCH REPAIRS Son, Clyde River, and MacKin- ley Brothers of North River were all prime contenders in several of ‘the Hereford classes judged at the Jones Livestock Pavilion earlier this week. The Wyands won the male Junior yearling class and were) second in the senior yearling fe- male and the two-year-old fe- male classes. Everett Holmes and Son were third in the two r-old female class, while} nancial reporting. money in their cash reserves as | lof organizational picketing. ban i year-old in the’dry section. But the Landrum-Griffin bill | required by the Bank Act. would go much farther in a | Chartered bank loaps rose) Mr. MachPee won the milk end ber of respects. Among other! sharply’ to $5,058,000,000 at Aug..,0f the aged class, with the dry| prize going to Mr. Hurry. Mr. Barrett had the best junior herd in the show and Mr. Wood the best junior get of sire. : The judge, W.H. Black of Mof- fatt, Ontario said that the show put on by the Island Dual Purpose breeders was “excellent.” ; 5, up $879,000,000 over a year ago and $19,000,000 over the previous week. The ratio of their cash re things, it would forbid most forms | all secondary boycotts and all forms of ‘hot cargo” agree-| serves to deposits was 7.9 per ments, and provide criminal per | cent just .1 per cent below the alties for union officials who vio-| Bank Act req u ir ement of an ‘ate members’ ‘rights. eight-per-cent ratio. Months of lobbying by both un- ; FOR FASTER SERVICE HAVE YOUR WATCH CLEANED THE MODERN WAY AT COME AS YOU ARE — BOX OFFICE O ADMISSION 70¢ SHOW STARTS AT DUSK CHILDREN UNDER 12 FREE MacKinley Bros. were second in ion and management representa- To meet the demand for loans, COMING SUND the three-year-old male class. j This was the first year Holmes) or MacKinley entries appeared! at the big mid-summer show. The Wvands showed last ye for the first time. | tives—on opposite sides of the is sue—preceded House action. IKE CARRIES THE BALL Last Thursday, Eisenhower put | the chartered banks sold off some | of their government securities, in- | cluding Canadg Savings Bonds) and previously - purchased trea- HEAR THE the full weight of his prestige be-{ sury bills. = hind the Landrum-Griffin. meas-| Government securities held by | LOCAL BRIEFS | » DIES IN OHIO The death occurred in Fostoria City Hospital, Ohio, yesterday of Lillian Eddings beloved wife of Willard Reid, formerly of Rollo} Bay West in this province. She | had been unwell for several years. The funeral will be held) Saturday from St. John's Evan- gelical Church, New Riegel, Ohio. Mr. Reid is a son of Mr.) and Mrs. Edwin Reid, Rollo Bay } Notice of Redemption “PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND HOSPITAL, SERIES A” (dated Ist June, 1946) “PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND HOSPITAL, SERIES B” (dated Ist October, 1947) Notice is hereby given that all outstanding bonds, Series A. will be redeemed at par on. December 1, 1959, and all out- standing bonds, Series B, will be redeemed at par on October 1, 1959, all on presentation at any main branch of The Royal Bank of Canada at Montreal, Saint John, Halifax and Char- lottetown. Any shareholders who desire earlier redemption will receive the principal and accrued interest to date of re demption on presentation at any time. BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF-TRUSTEES. J- Andrew Likely, end a brother of E.D. Reid, Char- lettetowa, ‘ L Secretary-Treasurer. Hon. Eugene Cullen ON CFCY RADIO _ Friday Aug. 14, 1959 9.15 to 9.30 P.M. AST a ™ Bob OPE BOX OFFICE OPENS AT 12:05 A.M. Spa TVISTAVISION and TECHNICOLOR® ” ‘HEPBURN VIEW THEATRE 10 miles from Ch'town sils which scientists say may be) SHOWING TONIGHT AND SATURDAY , eee 120 MPH ON A ROAD BUILT FOR AN OX.CARTS THERE'S A GUN AT YOUR RIBS. AND NOP ENOUGH GAS TO MAKE THE NEXT. CHECKPOINT NK ORGANIZATION PRESENTATION crops but most of the Prairie crop is past the stage where rain would benefit it. The bureau's report. based on Ppondents during the last 24 hours, showed a varied picture over the rest of the country. In the Mari- times, wet weather delayed hay- ing in Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island but New Bruns- wick has completed haying. Grain crops are promising. Dry weather in Quebec speeded the hay harvest. The crop was gormal and of excelient. quality. In Ontaric. the wheat harvest is well advanced but the yield seeded fields are yielding better than late-seeded. Warmer weather over most of British Columbia hastened crop maturity. FLOODED WINNIPEG Manitoba's Red River flood of 1950 submerged 600 square miles, including parts of Winnipeg. kk kekw*t *€ ADULT SHOWING AT 2:30 — 7 — 9 xk«wwnw*t *# kk kk ¢UN FOR THE FAMILY AT THE=> 3 MILES FROM CITY ON ROUTE 2 4 BOX OFFICE OPENS 7:30 SHOW AT DUSK information from field corres-{' will be below normal. Early-} if you want goodness in your muffin We have the best and we're not bluffin. SPECIAL BLUEBERRY PATTIES 30e DOZ. ASSORTED PIES, PASTRIES CAKES and SQUARES HOME MADE BREAD llama lata) Diel 8432 ‘eR e£eY oT Toe TO-DAY AND SAT. All the sultry drama of Tennessee Williams? Pulitzer Prize Winning Play . is now on the screen! ia METROCOLOR * AN AVON PRODUCTION FTE. HM MH KH * K¥ HY EXTRA COLOR CARTOON COMEDY — BRING THE KIDDIES | PENS AT 7:30 AY MIDNIGHT THUNDERING ACROS S THE Ug | THE SAVAGE SAGA OF ~~ the story, + of the famed big game hunter... and the woman he chaHenge a jungle- continent fort ee ITI ““ODONGO" Oe Oe en oe Katharine ee tm JON Petticoat COMING SAT. eo Be es ni AND MON. FASTEST GUN ALIVE "ts kkk kk KK OK 4 earmer alin MAO NAAT ph aay eT GCE. : 1 ‘- aa: Aas ROME or