. Belaunde of Pera se | merety to ask thal France refrats cy eM ge ned a va omeamniees of the Afro- U b k ; resolvicg ue dead ck Asian ties ban warhead oe Sane noroken Co oan ee w™"| testing. nacear weapons, bute UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (CP)| The &-member political com-| Committee - UN general assembly ear geben ex a phaeal Spateclag” reme'e o> shed all records Tuesday i To ag a org Pe may oy ag lrg ' mesting ballots to fill a security| Sahara desert. FISHING TRADE i vacancy: but failee te} The Afro-asian group was re| The Canadian fisheries indus- K the deadiock between Tur [ported divided on whether to|try exports about~two-thirds by Bry ard Poland. seek UN censure of Franct, o:' value of its annual production. » -@ = s > Pd S ¥ =o c IMMEDIATE DELIVERY . e : No Delay! “ 4 e, e a } ®No Waiting! j e e bi Orders Accepted | : ; ‘InLarge And © = e.°@ Small Quantities! . | Charlottetown The Guardian - The Evening Patriot * Si ityea = e 4 Water three feet deep buries By, DON SCANDRETT Canadian Press Staff Writer MEADOW LAKE. Sask. :CP)— some of the unthreshed © fields. ‘ It laps at the doors of barns and farmhouses. It has turned the earth réads to mire. the fields to swamps. . There’i be no harvést this year, no feed for livestock during the winter, no money to plant next spring’s crop. “I wake up in a cold sweat at night wondering what*can happen next,” said Bill Larocque, 59, father of three. “My land is all swamp, ali my reserve hay ig under three feet of water.” ‘ Mr. Larocque, g district farmer for. 40 years, 300° acres of grain and 40 h of gatile. His immediate ‘problem..is*tack of winter feed for the cattle. Nor- mally, he grows his own fodder. WINTER CAME EARLY Wintef weather swirled into, the Meadow Lake region in early \Qc- tober as farmers prepared to harvest their best grain crop in 12 years. It left 30 inches of snow. Mild weather melted the snow CERTREL PRINTERY grain oI bl @ Quality Work @ Fast Delivery PHONE ~ 8506 ie ee ee ee ee ee ‘I sentative estimated Mr. Prairie Grain Fields Covered | With Water Layer 3 Feet Deep| to disperse the water. The result was disaster for this town of 4,000 and the 900 katchewan, but agriculture offi- cials agree the Meadow Lake re- gion in the northwest was hard- est hit. The wunseasongl snowstorms, that hit almost al} of the Prairies in:early October and continued in some areas as late as last week, brought disaster to many gain farmers. Northern Alberta was Saskatchewan, particularly — the northern sections of the province, was struck hardest. STILL IN FIELDS It has been estimated officially that 117,300,000. = s, of ;wheat remain unthreshed . Pyairie fields. More than 95,000,000 bush- els of vats, 60,000,000, bushels of barley a 10,000,000 ‘bushels of flax remain in the open. Here in the Meadow Lake re- gion 125°miles northwest of Prince Albert there are few sources of revenue aside from faming. Lumbering is the. only other industry. , Mr. Larocque has spent 10 years building his small! herd. Al- ready, three weeks after the snow, he has shipped a number of heifers to market because he can't feed them. “Isn't much use- erying.” said in an interview. ‘Guess we'll sell the cattle bit by bit.” He also has pigs, which he plans to kill for food when things really get tough. NOTHING SAVED “I've saved nothing,”” he ex- plained. “We'll live from day to day. There is nothing else we! can do.” The district agriculture repre- Laroc- que’s loss af $9,000. How To Hold FALSE TEETH ore Firmly in Place Do your false teeth annoy and em- barrass by slipping, dropping or wob- bling when you eat, laugh or talk? Just sprinkle a little FASTEETH on your plates. This alkaline (non-acid) powdey holds false teeth more firmly and more comfortably. No gummy, ‘Charlottetown gooey, pasty taste or feeling. Does not - sour. — tan odor’ (denture breath). today at eae ani ceameae é -young and old. VISIT TOYLAND TODAY! DON'T MISS OUR BIG STOREWIDE for GiRLS @ MODEL AND HOBBY SETS @ TRAINS Once again a ag to buy for Christmas, and once again Fire- stone Toyland has the largest display of new toys on Prince Ed- ward Island—visit us and you'll. agree—it is a wonderland for AND ACCESSORIES * oer seid @ MUSICAL TOYS @ WHEEL Goons “AND ACCESSORIES * CONSTRUCTION SETS * MECHANICAL TOYS @ DOLLS AND ACCESSORIES ® EDUCA TIONAL TOYS: e ASSORTED GAMES CONTIN UES ALL THIS WEEK! Compare the prices and the deal you get this week at Firestone as the big storewide sale con- tinues. It'll pay you to shop for your new TV, refrigerator, electric, oil, gas, coal and wood range, electric washers, vedios, etc., all at sale: prices. @ USE OUR LAYAWAY PLAN © WETAKETRADE-INS ® UPTO Two YEARS TO PAY - FIRESTONE HOME & AUTO CO. LTD. “24 Central St. 187 Great George.St. ~ Charlottetown Dial 5547 “he Summerside Dial 3200 farm families in the area. The snow buried 124,000 busliels of | grain worth $140, in Sas- hit and Manitoba hit harder, But he | and natyral drainage was unable}: Ma eee ee Che Guardian “Covers Prince Eduwind lslend Like ‘The Dew” | AY SECOND SECTION, Pilots Blamed For Jet Crash WASHINGTON (AP)—The civil aeronautics board said Tuesday inattention by the pilots probably caused a jot airliner, with 129 persons aboard, to plunge 5'2 miles while flying over the At-| § lantic near Newfoundiand last Feb. 3. The report said the plane ai- most turned upside down and f nearly tore apart. The pilot lev-| Has eled it off at about 6,000 feet over the water. “This acciden resulted from tne inattention of the co-pilot to the flight instruments during the captain's absence from the cockpit,’ the board said. . “During this period the auto- ;ilet disengaged for reasons un- known. “The co-pilot, unaware of this) aituation, permitted the aircraft to descend out of control) _. .” The Pan American World Air-|— ~ ways 707 jet was on.a night flight | from Paris and London to New York with 119 passengers and 10 crew members. | PAGE 13 Charlottetown, Thurs, Nov. 5, 1959. | year he says the yield would have, been nearer 60. iE Last year he bought good seed —wheat. oats, barley—and sowed | & ft. at about 2% bushels to the: a acre. It cost. $1 a bushel. | This year his seed is lying on ie the fields rotting. He can't af-- ford to buy more. ie The water rises to the floor of f Edward Carter's house. His 300 | ks acres of wheat are covered Bill Lesh. who had hoped for a) ae ty Last year his farm yielded 40 Pt .| bushels of barley an acre and this the biggest market of the indus- heen are expected to give up and big crop, had to kill most of his! | Piglets. JETS SACRIFICED It was a great vear for pigs—| 10 sows each had litters of 10. But the piglets have been de-} stroyed “I haven't sda food for my | family let alone the livestock,” said Mr. Lesh. One of Mr. Larocque’s neigh- bors, sold his dairy herd and nioved in into the town of Meadow Lake. But the town has been hit as hard as the farmers. who have had to cut town spending. At present. the tewn’s main! source of revenue_is the hunters who seek game in this area. But there is a limit to what a couple of andres hunters can buy. . When winter comes, many, small farmers hope to find work in the woods. The logging indus- try so far has not been affected |__But it will be The farmers-—are+ Saum said more and more farm-| peace pa ac a a gl General's office PAPER ‘ON STEEL STRIKE The United States steel strike | Attorney is wears on despite government | shown as- she arrived at a attempts to get the plants—roll- ing. Here Rose Kravitz of the f legal paper that have been handed around in the last few weeks. The scene is Washing- tos... (AP Wirephoto) steps of the Supreme Court to -deliver one of the many bits o of board}feave. The central is|here as there’s no fodder’ to dis- | lack of. fodder. | tribute.” “Down south they are able to| The next problem is money. |} get assistance with fodder. said’ There'll be little money in this Mr.-Larocque—“This-won t work area to start the 1960 crop. 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