a i) i fj i LEAN, MEATY, BONELESS EXCELLENT TO BOIL AND SERVE COLD. EXTRA SPECIAL COTTAGE 7. ae COTTAGE ROLL Ib. 59c 29¢ 2 for 35c ‘WAX PAPER FACE TISSUE—HANKIE SIZE SCOTTIES Wihowt obligation, | want @ free home demonstrofion of your BRAND MEW 1959 model portable stewing mochine. A Prov.. =a an as ws et PIR eS ll shed by Mrs. Coe Mill, 3s. Northern Couple Observe i Se ern P ; ° Dalziel - pianists; Mr. Walter accordion; Mr. Keith Wedding Anniversary [sas, sora: x-i":|Caters To munity , - oe : Jarvis Dalzell, violin. of friends and ;purse. A decorated cake was pre- Tom Henshaw, Associated |range of one mile and no official . home | sented their daughter, Sally| Press .newsfeatures writer, | licence, runs itself ne | Ann. ug ry STEEL PRODUCTION DOWN made an extensive jfor more than 22 of the ~— Mth wed-|telicttatione tad test eiaee oe si By HENSHAW Ne 'FRANSMISSION the future, Mr. Bean noted the| ‘eet Orofuction Jest weet Se) URANEUM CETY, Gack. (Ap)|AUROMATEC "HRANSMISSION sat-|ner takes tn choir nd church of-|tons drom 19,490 a week earlier, |way Ray Dudgton runs his radio|tuns, om (ie, taemitier_ nthe ganizations. He also spoke of Mr. |the bureau of statistios said. Al-/Shows, no one sits down to dash |= Soni int and Mrs, Rayner’s interest in all/though down slightly, the output | Of & nasty letter or All day long recorded music is ad. things good and the always hosp-|etill was sharply higher than the|*® emery telepbone call. | | Zt SOU te Smutter from disks eal on 56,764 tons turned out in the station to tell off Dudgeon to! his|Wiich have been .organized into face, For studio and transmitter|PTosrams the evening before. are within walking distance of| Tey follow each other automal- nate ge yy-1 ng Tle eye aoeahe 6 p.m. Dudgeon and his cratee Halie Benne satimeet, °°" | trom their jobs ia the mine. ‘They tle 2%-watter set up for the |Tead news, chat, play records or ‘entertainment of the 775 people|tapes provided at the cost of living on the townsite of Eldorado |freighting by the Canadian Mining and Refining, Lid. Broadcasting There are a number of such} ‘When tiny radio stations in the isolated | off the air communities of Canada’s vast| usually is Northland where atmospheric|shuts down and magnetic disturbances raise} What hob with radio reception ecm _ aan “IT'S AFAMILY AFFAIRi | OUR WONDERFUL STORE-WIDE SHOE SAVINGS ad ~. HURRICANES This is an exceptional buy in children’s quality overshoes. Heavy fleece lining, genuine shearling cuff. Brown only. Sizes 6 through to 3. ‘3.29 CHILD'S PULLONS Rubber or plastic in black or brown, — *1.99 Child’s sturdy brown oxfords BIG SELECTION OF SMART STYLES! @ Fine leathers, fabrics @ Complete range of @ Outstanding quality .- PRICES FROM— 2.69 - 6.95 TN ee SHOEING AT SALE PRICES! NJ Men’s ist quality rubber boots 4 29 Women’s plastic overshoes “ . - $ALE BEGINS WRIGHT SHOE C i E = : f : i g 4 : F E z 2 F L ! ! 5 f : 4 ? tit = & meeting of the Ladies Auxiliary of the Morell Braach of the Canadian Legion held at the Le gion home. The financial report was given by Mrs. James Blaxland and a letter of appreciation from Mar- ion Taylor was read for $25 the group donated to the Retarded Children's Associationn. The Secretary was requested to order berets and badges. Kt was decided to get a large wreath for Nov. 11 and ako, to }| sell poppies. Two hundred dol- lars was voted towards the cost of monument. Considerable discussion was held regarding the purchasing dishes. It was thought this hatter should be left until cup- boards were available. The president was requested to buy am electric kettle. Kk was were not conducting one. Program committee for three months in Mrs. Carl MacAdam and Mrs. Belonger. Members were requested to ‘bring a new member to the next meeting. Lunch committee ts Mrs. Ed- gar MacKinnon, Mrs. John Mac- Innis and Mrs. William McGrath. Mrs. John Rowell conducted an exercise whith was won by Mrs. J. B, McGrath. ; A “Tree Contest” was won by Amy Geldert. 2 Cuban Planes Go Into Action HAVANA (AP) — Cuban war- planes roared up Wednesday to battle a pair of intruder planes dropping anti-Castro leaflets on the capital. Apparently no air battle devel- oped but radio VOZ reported Wednesday night one person was killed and at least 10 persons were wounded by bombs that fell during confused air activity. The Cuban air force sent eight planes in pursuit of the leaflet droppers It was not immediately clear whether the small bombs were dropped by’ the intruders or feh from pursuing Castro planes as they cruised over Havana. Synchronized with the leaflet dropping, anti-Castro elements in Havana cruised the capital streets in sevéral automobiles, tessing out noise bombs. There were no reports of casu- alties from this activity. The planes were identified as a B-26 combat plane and a C-47 transport. The leaflets contained an open letter to the people .of Cuba signed \by Pedro. Diaz Lanz, for- mer chief of the Cuban air force. He quit his post and fled to the United States last spring, charg- ing that Prime Minister Castro’s government had been infiltrated by Communists. CENTRAL PRINTERY 2.99 | mea, OM, G12 hs ics cme GOAT OF MINOMO o.oocibcsisksiveissscme TR ia nao ! eee overshoes 3 99 an leather ballerinas 3.77 ee — black rubber 1 ae RN NAN ccs 52, iar ci ccepanece a POG EO ols ida ‘ DLO snc sictinenant a ee eel Lee SALE BEGINS — THURSDAY , THURSDAY ee QUEEN STREET _ 8306 9 A.M. 9521 9521 9 A.M. Charlottetown = w By FORBES RHUDE TORONTO (CP)—Freedom _to work regardless of an individu- al’s relation to any union, is ad- vocated in a statement adopted Monday by the policy committee of—the—Canadian- Chamber of Commerce. The statement—a long one cov- ering many phrases of employer- employee relations — said, m part: 1 individual should se free to choose and follow the vo- cation of his choice regardless of his membership or non-member- ship in a labor union or employ- er’s organization, or regardless of his non-payment of dues to an organization to which he does not belong.” Another recommendation urges that legislation be clarified or en- acted to provide that trade unions be made civilly responsible be- fore the courts for their actions. WORK OUT PROBLEMS The statement also eomments: “Good industrial relations eannot be achieved by legislation alone. Employers and employees should be left the. maximum frecdom te work out their common prob- lems without government inter- vention, unless public health and safety are endangered.” It supports the principles of eoi- lective bargaining. It asks for secret strike ballots properly su- pervised by independent parties; establishment of the period dur- ing which strike action can be taken after a strike vote is taken; provision for strike-settle- ment votes during the course of a strike; and provision for arbitra- tion of disputes which endanger the health or safety of the public. A Newfoundland proposal that the federal minister of labor be freed “of the responsibility for making policy decisions with re- gard to a purely legal matter for which the courts are established” was referred to the chamber’s executive council for study, OPENING DAY The labor-relations statement was one of a long list of matters approved by the policy commit- tee whose for initial ceremonies and a lunch- eon—occupied all of the opening day of the chamber’s three-day annual meeting. The committee's decisions are subject to final action at a plen- ary session Wednesday. How- CHILLIWACK, B. C. ‘CP)~— None of the 70 passengers real- ized the extent of danger Tues- day when a trans - continental train crashed into a dynamite- laden boxcar 15 miles west of here. Some of them even slept on when the Canadian National Rail- ways’ Continental ran through an open switch into the boxcar in what officials called “deliberate sabotage.”’ Four persons were slightly in- jured when the double-unit diesel locomotive, two express cars and a baggage car left the rails and ploughed about 100 feet across the gravel track bed: The engine glanced off the box- car, loaded with 100 cases of dy- namite. The second car of the passenger train struck the box- car and turned it over, ripping the wheels off. There was no ex- plosion. RCMP and CNR officials began an immediate investigation. E. A. Spearing of Montreal, the rail- way’s director of investigations, and superintendent T. E. Wood of Winnipeg were flying here to take charge. LUCKY NO FIRE A CNR official said the impact itself could not have exploded the dynamite, but “it could have ex- ploded if the car had caught fire.” The dynamite was owned by Passenger Train Hits plosives. CNR's statement on the crash Said\ there was strong evidence that the lock of the track switch had been broken. “Evidence of deliberate sabo- tage is supported by the fact that the boxcar contained dynamite,” it added. Chilliwack ig 60 miles east of Vancouver. Meanwhile, RCMP continued in- vestigations into the other acts of sabotage involving dynamite in the Nelson area. plagued in past years by bombings blamed on fanatical members of the Sons of Freedom Doukhobor sect. FIND DYNAMITE In Nelson itself, Mrs. Clare Turner found five sticks of dyna- mite on her back porch. An at- tached fuse had burned down al- most to a blasting cap before go ing out. Police carried away the explosives. The Turners live next door to magistrate William Evans, who has handled most court actions involviig Doukhobors in the area for several years. Earlier this year he released 77 Freedomite children from a government dor- mitory at nearby New Denver on the promise of their parents that they would go to school. A few hours after the dynamite was discovered at the Turner home, an explosion blew up part of the Canadian Pacific Railway the CNR and was being distri- buted to crews along the track. track at Thrums, 20 miles west of Nelson. FREDERICTON, N.B. — An exhibition of Maritime art will be opened at the Beaverbrook Art Gallery Wednesday, Oct. 28, and will continue each day for two vinces will be on display Judge of the exhibition will be Beaverbrook Gallery To See |Exhibition Of Maritime Art Prizes, as awarded by Jarvis, will be five im number - a first prize of $300; a second of $200; a third of $100; and fourth and fifth Places at $50 each. Lord Beaverbrook bas announc- ed one additional prize which should stimulate a good deal of interest - a public choice. Visit- ors to the Maritime Exhibition at the Beaverbrook Gallery will be asked to select their own favorite from the show and to cast 2 bal- lot accordingly. The wigner, bas- ed purely on pluratity of votes, Commerce Chamber Urges Individual Work Freedom ever, as it consists of 30 mem bers from all parts of Canada, and as all delegates can take part in the committee debates, its decisions are seldom over- ruled Another statement strongly sup- ported by Western delegates says that access to the courts by way of appeal from adminisrative boards and tribunals created by parliament should never be de nied. Cuban Rebel Surrenders CAMAGUEY, Cuba (AP)— Amid tumult in the streets around his provincial military headquart-. ers, Maj. Hubert Matos surrem aered quietly Wednesday for im vestigation on a charge of plot ting against Fidel Castro's gow ernment. Prime Minister Castro himself was in this city 300 miles east of Havana for the arrest. Between 4,000 and 5,000 workers and peas ants were mobilized by radio for an assault and milled about ex- pectantly. But the assault order never came. Army Commander Maj. Camile Cienfuegos, who flew with Casire from Havana, walked into the headquarters and came out un- epposed with Matos, a bearded associate of both in the revolu- tion that felled Fulgencio Batis-, ta’s dictatorship. Cienfuegos said Matos had planned a coup d'etat. Castro took to a radio-television network to accuse Matos of being vain and ungrateful. CHEER CASTRO Castro’s live audience — the workers and peasants summoned from benches \and fields—cheered as Castro tore into Matos’ reputa- tion. He said Matos had accused his government falsely of being Communist. But he implied the prisoner will not be held long. He said Matos can go where he wishes. He did not say when. Two factors stood out in the background: 1. Matos submitted his resigna- tion Monday when Maj. Raul Castro, 29-year-old = ni of the prime minister, was le min- istér of the Cuban “arméd forces, with complete control over tie army, navy and air, force. In- formed sources said the two have disagreed repeatedly. 2. Matos has been cool toward Castro’s controversial agrarian reform program, advocating a slowdown in its application. This brought him into conflict with €apt. Jorge Enrique Mendoza, who directs the program in this rich cattle-raising province. YORK Mrs. Fenton Court, Bedford, paid a short visit at the home of. Mrs. Gordon Crockett, York, recently. Miss Norma Gail Moore, Char- Icttetown, spent Sunday at the home of her grandparents, Mr and Mrs. Harry Lewis, York. Mr. and Mrs. Frankie Lewis and little daughter York, spent the weekend in Ellerslie at the home of .Mrs. Lewis’ parents, Mr and Mrs. Robert Millar. Miss Janice Craswell, Char- lottetown, was the guest of Miss Beverley Swan, York, over the weekend. Mr: and Mrs. Robert Cooper and little son Charlottetown, is spending ‘a’ holiday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Westely Cooper. Mr. and Mrs. David Simpson and daughter and his mother, Mrs. Simpson, Bayview, were guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs, Arthur Simpson, York. Miss Doris Jones, Quebec City, spent Thanksgiving will ceceive a prize af $300.