~ ‘ WASHINGTON (AP)—The Su- preme Court Friday dashed gov- €rnment hopes for an early end to the. l06day sicel. strike by ‘agreeing to review a lowe: court’s. order that would send 500,000 steel workers back to the mills for 80 days. The actio. was a victory for the Steelworkers Union which challenged the ‘back-to-work or- @er on constitutional and other grounds. e it was a defeat for the justice department which had pressed the court to uphold the injunc- tien, issued by ay Pittsburgh dis- | trict judge on Oct. 21 under na- tional emergency machinery of _. the Taft-Hartley law. The injunc- tion. was upheld last Tuesday by an appeals court in Philadelphia, and the union carried its fight to _ the Supreme Court. Acting in a brief order, the high court cailed for oral argu ments next Tuesday. Meanwhile, GovtHopes Quashed Tor Early Strike nd As Order Reviewed * it kept in suspension the back-to- work order until it finally dis poses of the case. It directed fur- ther that all legal briefs be filed by noon Monday. if i STRIKE CONTINUES The outshot of the high court's ruling is that the steel strike—j which has made idle more than) 600,000 workers—will keep going iuto next week, at least until the | eee Court renders its decis-' n. i The court announced its inten- tion to review the. case after its members had discussed the issue | for 40 minutes behind closed! doors. There was nothing to in-| dicate the decision was other than | unanimous, ‘ i The union had filed its appeal about five hours earlier, urging the court to throw out the back- to-work order. The steel workers said the order involves grave con- stitutional questions. ‘GOLDY TAPE’ IN CITY Trading Stamps ~ Ruling Is Sought By DAL WARRINGTON Canadian Press Staff Writer HALAFAX (CP)—The Canadian! group memberships SHOWING the same _ ease, rhythm and dexterity that earn- ed her first place last year, Mrs. Mary Kelly of Charlotte- town last night scored 270 points pomts to win first place once claims several thousand mem-}| bers in Nova Scotia, including | of bodies Association of Consumers asked! such as the Women’s Institute, Attorney - General Richard A./ which represents about 6,000 Donahoe Friday for a ruling on| rural women whether trading stamps intro-; In Prince Edward Island, Hor, duced .in Nova Scotia this week! man’s Food Markets in Charlotte-| are legal. |town and Summerside announced Mrs. Gus Manolopoulis, CAC | 4 “‘goldy tape’’ premium plan by provincial president, said the as- Which colored cash register tapes sociation asked Mr. Donahoe to|™ay be collected and exchanged Island Fiddling Champ Hails From Bear River investigate a gold bond stamp/ ‘for “gifts.” plan launched Tuesday by 41! ~ ig the first.in this province. olman'’s announcement it’s something instead of R. H. Jardine. district super- 2othing.” visor for Dominion Stores Lim-’,. bade 2h ited, said he +7 'dba=: the provincial government made them illegal. He told a press conference that Dominion Stores will not usc} trading stamps in the Maritimes “in the Joreseeable future.’’ He eaid stamps raise food costs and Dominion aims to keep its prices as low as possible. IN QUEBEC STORES He admitted Dominion issues) stamps in its Quehee stores but he said, “we certainly wouldnt have them there # we hadn’t| been forced into it by our com-; petitors. | Dominion operates 37 super; markets in Nova Scotia. New! Brunswick and Prince Edward Island. _ Thomas G. MeCormatk. Dom- inion Stores president, has said is company cut prices in its Os- tario stores tp meet trading stamp competition. But Mr. Jar- | dine said he doesn't expect any drastic price changes in Nova |earlier this week he can sell > ER FOOD Frain FF Sobey, piient a theg23-unit Maritime food chain of Sobey’s Steres Limited, said at prices two per cent lower thaa stomes using the stamps. He said Sobey’s will not handle trading stamps until it is deter- mined they are legal and cus- tomers really want them. ” IGA stores give one gold bond stamp for each 10 cents worth a customer buys. The stamps are redeemable for ‘ gifts’’ ranging from electric shavers to sil-er- Ware. v said, | - JGA food markets. The scheme; “this is not something for noth- | ing: ee Peter Chaisson of Bear River won the 1959 obki-time fiddling championship in Charlottetown last night: Scoring 255 points, Mr. Chaisson fon out over Emmet #i:ghes of Dromore, Fraucis Mac- ‘~ynnon of Pisquid and William iFraser of Summerville. Three aiher contestants, all from Prince County failed to appear. } Mr. Hughes got the nod in a play-off for second place with Mr. MacKinnon. His score was 220 points. In the male step-dancing divis- m, Mervyn Robinson of Stanhope |retained the Island championship jhe won last year scoring 275 points to beat out Andrew Gallant of Charlottetown who scored 250 points amd Charles O'Brien of Preparation For War Seen Peace Blueprint Scotia “unless something devel-|, ops that we do not foresee at the|‘ In this article written ex- |yct there is hope and there is moment.” clusively for The Associated enterprise in Europe, and they Mrs. Manclopoulos said the Press, Dr. Edward Teller, di- are going forward more rapidly CAC first asked Mr. Donahoe for} a ruling on trading stamps more | fnan two years ago although no) Nova Scotia stores were using} them then. ~ GENERALLY ILLEGAL | She said Mr. Donahoe wrote in reply that “by and large the use| of trading stamps is illegal.’’ She suid he promised that if specific ~ @ases were drawn to his attention rector of the Lawrence Radia- tion Laboratory at Livermore, Calif., gives his views on the atom as a force for peace aad makes a startling proposal for the next generation. By EDWARD TELLER LIVERMORE, Calif. (AP)—In Livermore we are working on weapons with’ one very serious yurpose; that is. in order to be than other people in- the world. There is a firm determination this time to work together. The hatred that has divided Europe for centuries seems to have bees | wiped out as if by a miracle. This reconstruction and this spiritual revival is, to my mind, "a symbol of what one can get if | one buys time. It is a promise of a brighter future, It is a rebirth any ke would make every effort to) prepared and to stay prepared. | uf freedom and humanity for hua- see that the law is enforced. The CAC has asked its mem- ters not to patronize stores using the stamps. The organization | Nfld. Revises Ottawa Claim OTTAWA ‘CP)—The Newfound- land government has revised its statement of claim in its Excheq wer Court suit for damages against the federal government for its refusal last March to send RCMP reinforcements to the province, iit was learned Friday. The provincial action means the federal government automat- leally gets an extension of time in which to file its defence. The original Newfoundland ciaim. was filed with the Excheq- uer Court Oct. 2. The federal government then had four weeks in which to file its defence al- though it could have requested more tim®é had it found it neces- sary. i | The revised Newfoundland | statement was filed Wednesday. i We believe that as long as we are prepared for war—as long as we are prepared jdefensively and as long as we are prepared to strike back, as long as we are prepared wiih big weapons and with small weapons in @ flexible way, as long as this Is the case -we believe that there will not be war. I should mention a property ot the Russians which I respect. They are patient and they are taking the long view. ‘As long as they know that we are strong I believe and I hope there will be peace, To remain streng is not an easy thing because we are living in a fast-moving age, and what was impressive 15 years ago 1s inadequate today. People ask, and rightly, where will all this lead to? We arm and the Russians arm and in the end i‘ will end in havoc. I know this 18 in the minds of all people. CAN BUY ' TIME If we stay well prepared. we can buy one thing. We can buy trme. And whether it is worth while to buy time depends on the | dreds of millions. BIGGER CHALLENGE But I want to tell you about something even bigger, some- thing which as yet has not beea accomplished, which is more | challenging, more difficult and | more frightening. Let me’start with nuclear re actors. 2 Radioactivity in a concentrated form is harmful. It ig true that a peaceful reactor, if it should get out of control, could cause great damage in its immediate neigh- borhood, By hard work and by great good luck: we in this ,country have avoided major reat¢tor acci- dents. I think this record can be wnaintained. We cannot make energy cheap, like air and water. But the solu- tion of the problem of cheap energy is within our near grasp. WHERE-TO-FIND-IT Announcements, notices .. 17 Births, deaths, etc., °... 2, 17 Classified section ...... 16, 17 Comies, features .. «AS , however, meaning the federal | way you are going to use that|- Charlgttetown news ...... 5 government has another fou | time. E scevnec @ weeks from that date. I will star* out by reminding! Fi , markets ..,..... 9 . The revision in the province’s' you of one excellent way the} Island news jcssscto&.<3 statement of claim, adds to its| world has used this time which,| Sports ..... ...... ‘akdeene 7." earlier arguments the declaration|! claim, our preparedness, has} Women’s page .... ...... 6 that the Attorney-General of Can-|‘bought. ada—that is, federal Justice Min- At the end of the Second World ister Fulton — rejected the rein-| War Europe was destroyed. Now| side, Montague, Alberton and forcement request although he} ‘he ruins are cleared away. The| Souris, and from special cor- hed formed opinion that i/ people live better than they lived) respondents now appear os would have possible to pro-| before the war. These days ft! the Isiand News Page. wide them. | seems difficult to have hope) and in more in the provincial division step-dancing finals held in con- junction with the old-time fiddl- | ing finals at the Prince of Wales auditorium. The Alpha Y's Men’s Club of Charlottetown sponsored both events. ~ Covehead who scored 235 points. In the female section only four competitons showed up-Mrs. Mary (Continued on page 5 Col. 1) deck. Eact is capable of firing ef “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” CANADA,SATURDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1959 Canadian Destroyers To Cost $365,000,00 B y DAVE McINTOSH Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP)—The navy two weeks from now will take delivery of the last of 14 new destroyers which Canadian shipyards began building in 1950. : Total cost is estimated at about $365,000,000—all the bills aren’t in yet—or double the original esti- mate. The hulls alone cost an es- timated $260,740,000. Technological changes have come so swiftly since the first of the new destroyers was laid down that most of the original weap- ons, sonar and other gear have been changed in the intervening nine years. Destroyer construction is by no means ended. Canadian yards now are starting to build six more submarine killers. COMMISSION NOV, 14 Naval headquarters announced Friday that HMCS Chaudiere, curacy in any direction The mortar is controlled by electron‘c gear which locates and tracks the + pape and is fired automatiec- ally. The destroyers also carry hom. ing torpedoes which can change course to pursue enemy targets taking evasive action on or below the surface. One twin three-inch 70-calibre gun mounted for®ard and one twin three-inch 50 - calhbre gun mounted aft can be used for anti- aircraft fire or surface action, Potio Cases Decrease TRADE BOARD Protests have been for- warded to Mr. Hees by com- mon council, the local board of trade and the local empioy- ment committee. The trade board asked Mr. Hees in a letter for clarifica- tion of his policy. It said ~ statements from Quebec have indicated as much as 3,000, 000 tons of cargo would event- ually be diverted from Sain John and Halifax to Que- seventh and last of the Resti-|. gouche-class, destroyers, will be} OTTAWA (CP)—The incidence) commissioned Nov. 14 at Halifax| of paralytic polio in Canada last} Shipyards Limited. Seven de-| week continued the downward! stroyers of the St. Laurent class/ trend indicated two weeks ago by | were built first. The first of the the first major decline since. the} new class of six will be called) peak of the current outbreak was) the Mackenzie. reached in mid-September The Chaudiere’s commis:i The health department reported will come a week after that Friday that cases reported in the her sister ship, the Columbia, at! week ended Oct. 24 declined to Burrard Dry Dock Company Lim-|60 from 71 ‘the previous week ited, North Vancouver. Quebec, with more than 6 per Both ships will join the Halifax-| cent of all Canadian cases. had a based Fifth Canadian Escort)drop to 31 cases from 39 a week Squadron which comprises Resti-| earlier. gouche-class destroyers. Total paralytic cases now stand! All 14 destroyers have twojat 1,451 for tms year, compared mortar mountings in the after-jwith 218 on a comparable' date last year. There have been 130 deaths, against 21 to this date last year. three high - explosive projectiles! GOLF INSTEAD OF WAS © simultaneously and with great ac- | Le Sr ta . ‘| stance: Eisenhower Is Criticized As Allied Military Leader LONDON (AP)—A new book of wartime memoirs says Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower played golf instead of guiding allied ml- itary preparations at a crucial stage of the war in Europe. The book is based on the diar- ies of Field Marshal Viscount Al-' anbrooke, who as Sir Alan: Brooke was chairman ‘of the Brit- ish chiefs of Staff in the war. The second instalment of his} diaries and correspondence is in- corporated in Triumph in _ the West, which goes on sale here Monday. It was compiled by Sir Arthur Bryant from the private! papers of Alanbrooke, now living in retirement in the south of Eng- land. Serial rights in Canada are’ held by Maclean’s Magazine. In Washington, James Hagerty | White House press secretary, was/| asked for comment on Alap-| brooke’s statements. Hagerty’s re-| ply was: j “TI don’t even have a no com- ment.” RAPS EISENHOWER In the first instalment, Alan-, * brooke rapped Eisenhower as a) man whose strong point time leadership of then Prime| Minister Churchill. The new. instalment, from diary notations of Novem- ber-1944, said there Was ‘‘a very quoting | ‘ staff reported the German army|the time all along the front in- | in the West “no longer a co -hes-! stead of trati , ive force’ Alanbrooke wrote — er eee see jout blow in one sector. As a re- but the supreme commander fol-| sult the advance bogged down for | lowed the “civil war strategy’ | of having everybody attacking all the, winter, Alanbrooke says. bec. This would be a loss to Govt.Ends Mortgage Loans As Housing Fund Drained ¥ Works Minister. -Makes Decision By ALAN DONNELLY ' Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP) — The govern ment sees turned off the tap to : jamy further federal mortgage); <n icat i however. jloans this year after a ieee lace y saggy home ‘month rush by borrowers emp-jowners or limited dividend com \tied its housing loan fund | panies, cannot be accepted after | The decision, announced by | the close of business today.” Works Minister Wa'ker, means) a. caver . eel that individuals or builders seek- jnon oe te wae ; ing @ new mortgage in the next!» paiement to seek abana jtwo months er more must turn, nd nther private lend. (ands t lend fer house-building nks and oth sate lend Saat ae F to ba and er private esc | next year. The session is ex- ers. The flow of funds from this of funds from this pected te open in January. {source has heen sharply reduced : "Ser | Parliament last spring voted Housing Corporation will approve all eligible loan applications now - hand in its offices across Can- ada. But Mr Walker's statement $250,000,000 for this |made clear the government ex-| bringing total allocations te the |pects no serious effects on winter federal housing fund to $1,000,- ‘employment im the housing indus- 99.000. All of that now has try. jbeen invested—and all but $100, | “Canada’s housing construction 900,000 of it since September, iprogram this winter wiill again|!957. ° be at a very high level,” he said.| So far thie year $305.900.000 in i _ |federal lpans have been com ADD UNITS : Among other work, the housing amend, covering 28,551 units. O8 \industry would be building some Ricials ecid thet when oll cornu 20,000 housing units financed by Atlantic wage earners of (federal loans in the last three ~~ hol $15,000,000. months. wa eee rani a He said Centra! Mortgaze and 275 ano.000 =. me. 36.400 unit Pius Xit Wool Tapestry Is Presente OTTAWA (CP) — A hooked yool tapestry éf > lB be x0 by a Cape Breton | ‘woman. — LeFort, was presented 40° Vati Friday th thé apostolic ‘to C Archbishop Sebastiano Baggio said that Pope John XXHI “ap preciates fine art and will likely hang this in either his apartments—or—in the (Vatican» The 45-year-old Miss LeFort, ! whose works hang in the White House and Buckingham Palace, was offered $10,000 for the Pope Pius portrait by a United States ecnnoisseur. The 29-by-32-inch portrait was ooked in-11 days, and required some 200,000 stitches and about three-quarters of a mile: of wool obtained from sheep raisers in the area of Port Cross, N.S., | was; %& charm rather than military abil-| ~ ity. He also criticized the war-'| unsatisfactory state of affairs in| © France with no one running the | land battle.” ' “Eisenhower, though supposed) | to be doing ‘so, was on the golf | links at Rheims — entirely de- tached and taking practically no) © part Mi running the war brooke wrote. Matters got so bad, he added, that a deputation of Maj. - Gen. | Sir John Whitely, a senior British officer. on Eisenhower's | staff, and U.S. Lt.-Gen. Walter Bedell Smith and others decided to tackléd the supreme allied com- mander. They “went up to him to tell! him that he must get down to it and run the war,” Alanbrooke wrote. There is a contention that short- comings in American leadership threw away a chance to end the European war in 1944. POOR STRATEGIST ,” Alan-/ . | Alanbrooke puts much of the? picturing | blame on Eisenhower, him as a poor strategist. For in- “He straightaway wants to split his forces, sending an American contingent toward Nancy whilst the British Army Group moves along the coast. If the Germans were not as beat as they are this would be a fatal move... .” At the beginning af September, E 9 “F or Pope John XXIII, observing the first anniversary of his elec- Archille' Micheletti of Scotto Il Monte, the Italian village where the pontiff was born. } Micheletti was a schoolmate of | Roman Catholic church, the 77-year-old pope. In center | at the Vatican with knecling | is Msgr. Mario Bosio, also of the | OBSERVES ANNIVERSARY village. The pope villagers, including latives. re (AP Wirephote) |moment,”’ Green~<told his press in a heavy program deliberately designed te counter the economie slump. Mr. Walker forecast that 1 000 housing units will be jand 140.000 completed in | This would put housing | for the year second only jyear’s record level when jumits were started and |were completed. sis i z a 146,688 d lo Pope where Migs Lert has tived ad Wages Hiked. FIVE-YEAR FAM@- . For Nursing One of is children ofj 2 farm ‘votple, dhe fearneg sh aero . the age of 15 from her mother. OTTAWA (CP) — Wage The family has done hookwork! creases for all nurses in the fed- since its origin in Normandy. eral civil service, averaging $329 Miss LeFort. was ‘discovered’ < year, were announced Friday— five years ago. the first pay boost for goveri- Kenneth Hansford. a retire:|ment emplovees since Finance Toronto businessman who oper-| Minister Fleming announced re ates a gift shop at Margaree Har | jection of a general pay raise twe bor, N.S.. was dissatisfied wit) weeks ago. |kis sources of hookwork ano) The raises, effective from the ~ ;made a door-todoor search for start of this month, will go te contributors. |°,478 nurses in the veterans af- He found Miss LeFort and hay fairs and health departments. sponsored her since “I want to} An announcement by Mr. Flenr cee she receives the fame she/iag said the increase is “in recog- deserves,” he said nition of a special situation.” Green-DeGaulle Talk Is Of East-West Meet PARIS (CP)—Canadian FExter-|views differed om some issues, na] Affairs Minister Green and but it was “merely a matter Gen. de Gaulle Friday discussed of drawing different conclusions among other things an East-West|from events.” summit conference which Green Asked about France's intention said Canada would liké to see;te explode an atom bomb, which held “at the earliest possible mo |figured in Friday's talks, Green | ment.”* jsaid: “We ‘Canada) have taken Green told reporters at the Ca-\up the position in the United Na- nadian embascy after his private|tions that there should be ne talk with the French president | moré atomic tests.” that the two also discussed Soviet! On Algeria, he said: “We have Premier Nikita Khrushchev’s; been very favorably impressed “ming visit to France, the atom by General de Gaulle’s state Hbomb and the Algerian crisis jment of Sept 16 (‘in which he Fy Pierre Dupuy, Canadian am-|pledged self-determination for Al- bassador to France, was present zeria’.”’ wi . at the meeting in tha Elysee; Of de Grulle he said: “Gen. de Gau'le is a great man. I am very much impressed by him.” Green, on his first overseas visit since the First Werld War, emerged highly pleased He also saw Premier Michel Debre in a separate meeting Ss | L “Canada favors a stimmit con a ary ures ference at the earliest possible Psychiatrists STAND EXPLAINED Ha “The position of France has! been explained to me in a very logical and a very sincere way.|Canadian psychiatrists to work The talks have heen very heipfuljin the United States; informants and my visit has given me a} say, much better understanding of the The latest to go was Dr JE. French and the NATO attitude to! Gilbert, $11,500-a-vear consultant world sproblems.” in psychiatry for the federal He said it now seemed likely health department's mental that a Western summit meeting |health division. He left this week would take place Dec. 19 justifor a position in a mid-western after the NATO ministerial coun-! United States centre ci] meeting. Canada was pleased| Ax 9 consequence of the steady at this timing because it would) southward flow of Canadian psy« give the opportunity for the is-|chiatrists, provincial hea'th de sues at stake to be thoroughly re-| partments are finding ot harder viewed in the NATO counril be-jand harder to fill vital profes- forehand sional positions at mental institu. “We think the Western system jiions and psychjatrie wards if of consultation should be im |zeneral hospitals. proved and that there should be more detailed discussions in the} ONTARIO HIT NATO permanert council,”'.he' A report is circulating that said “|Ontario was especially hard-hit, Asked about the effect of his|losing more than 49 per cent of talks on Franco-Canadian rela- | its pravincial sychiatric staff conference Ry DON PEACOCK OTTAWA (CP)—Hicher salat ies are luring large numbers of tions, Green said: ‘Our relations|last year. It is rted planning jare very close and they could notjto recruit replacemegts in the jcome much. ,sloser. We regard) United Kingdom | France as one of ovr two mother} Some authorities doubt that this , countries and we can talk will prove a permanent solution jally and frankly as one of ‘the|to Ontario's problem, which is family.” ‘shared im one degree or another He said French and Canadianjby other provinces phe ag \