“TELEPHONE 8506 - Buyer meets seller with Guardian Want Ads. Dial 8506 ask for classified ad | taker, for quick results. " MS tat “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” - You. LXxtt No. 250. *~ Auinocued sa Second Clans Mal oy the CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1959 Ps 14 PAGES atk nee “Queen's Scout Cértificat were: Wayne Douceite! oy {kt raids attributed to a former Es Pd RED TAPE DELAYS NURSES Twenty - four Australian nur ges who arrived in Vancouver last week said their passage to Canada was delayed a vear by immigration department red tape. Among newcomers were Judith Paterson-Barrie, 25, Pam Talbot, 24, and. Gloria Stuart %¢ 2A. Immigration authorities 1: faced (CP Pheto) ter denied they unneces- ‘Sany delays. es Are Presented To 20 Boys In a colorful ceremony at Gov- ernment House last night scouts received their Queen's | Scout Certificates from the hands | Kelly, Central Royalty Troop; commissioner, in his opening re- Burhoe, Charlottetown . Baptist; is made by Her Majesty in_ per- Troop. son or by her\ representative,” Michael Campbell: Dennis Stated R.C. Parent, provincial of His Honor Lieutenant Governor | Emerson Ferrish 1st Summerside Marks. F. Walter Hyndman, patron of the Troop; Walter Arsenault; Charies| Prince Edward Island Provincial | Council of the Boy Scouts As- sciation. Those — receiving certificates. Gillian; Leo Peters of the Redeemer Troop; Male ell, Basilica: Ralpn’ Beaton; James Stavert, Zion Troop; David Large, Trinity Troop; Robert Burns; Gordon MacKay; MeNeil, Parkdaige Troop: Holy | an Mitch-} Fitzgerald; Herbert ~Murphy, Georgetown Troop; Ingham Ram- say: Arthur Williams, St. Elea- nor’s Troop; and William Prowse, who received the coveted tificates. IMPORTANT AWARD i Chester S+. James Troop were the others Scouts cer-| | “Ceremonie ‘jin flights from obscure bases in eam Renata RT wwe NS Kaiser Steel Ends Strike ‘Castro Drops | In Helicopter HAVANA (AP)—Premier Fidel Castro, armed with a Bélgian éutomatic rifle, dropped dramati- cally by helicopter Monday amid swarms of Cubans he rallied for a widely publicized anti - U.S. demonstration. The many thousands sum- troned for a display of solidar- ity in his cause cheered as he was set down outside the presi- dential palace. Castro charges Cuba is being By Separa vee subjected to aggression from the United States. A chief irritating fictor has been anti-Castro leaf.| _A5 WORK on the Trém-Can- ada Highway passes $500,000,000 in value, a western group con- tinues to seek support for an al- ‘ernate route which would run through the Prairie Provinces ‘arther to the north. The Trans- Canada Highway System Associ- ation ‘Yellowhead Route) has been stumping for 15 years for chief of his own Cuban air force Florida. A As the rally got under way here, a federal judge in Florida ceclined to issue a warrant for| the arrest of Maj. Pedro Diaz ly-assisted road at Portage la Prairie, Man. It would rejoin the TransCanada Highway at Kamloops, B.C. Advocates o% the alternate route contend the pre- sent Trans-Canada Highway serves only part of the west be- cause it passes through southern regions cf the Prairie Provinces This map shows that much of siiInvestigation has ‘ibegan last ‘jtravel agents’ convention devoted ‘|te a revival of Cuba's once-lucra- iliive ich as this."’ he Lanz, the ex-air force chief, for extradition to Cuba. ADMITS RAIDS The US. Federal Bureau of reported Diaz Lanz admitted leading the cyr- rent wave of leaflet raids. key Wednesday during a tourist business, As the bearded revolutionary iweader arrived at the palace in | bis helicopter, a thunderous roar j wen ip trom the thousands packed. into the plaza fronting | the paiace into the city provinces | People swarmed jfrom neighboring hear Castro | ficials discuss Cuban demands | that the United*States prevent janti-Castro Cubans in Florida \from sending planes over Cuba t» drop arms and gftigovern- a” ment leaflets. | Premier Has New Assistant The appointment of Wendell Mackay, a. former teacher at | With little more than one con- Prince of Wales College to the post of executive assistant to Premier Walter R. Shaw has been announced. Mr. MacKay is a native of Stanley Bridge and a graduate of Mount Allison University. He has taken over his new duties in the office of the Premier. continued, ‘‘Are carried on across Canada.” His Honor the Lieutenant Gov- the \ the | ernor in a brief address to reminded them of Scout Law and how adherence to the same wouldemake them good citizens. : He recalled his own scouting “The award. of/ the Queen's! days back in 1913 and the forma- Weapons Talks Loom With W.Germans, U.K OTTAWA (CP) — Weaplps standardization will be discuss® by Canada, Britain and West Ger- many in two separaie meetings here this week. A German air force team of about 20 will arrive here today and Wednesday for week-long) technical talks with the RCAF) and defence production depart- ment on a standardization pro- gram for the American Lockheed Starfizhter jet plane. Both Can- ada and West Germany will build! the plane under licence. On Thursday and British army delegation wil! dis- cuss with the Canadian army a standardization scheme govern- ing production of new vehicles for the two armies. This meeting will deal specifically with the Cana- dian Bobeat, an amphibious arm- ored personnel carrier, and sim- flar British developments. Weapons standardization {n the North Atlantic Treaty Organiza- tion has always been’a policy of the Canadian government but re- Tenders Called For New Ferry | OTTAWA (CP) — Tenders for, the construction of a new car ferry to operate between Prince} Edward Island and Tormentine,| KB. have been called, a trans-} port department official said) Monday night— Estimated cost of the double ended, four-propeller ferry is $3,- 50.000. It will be an addition to the fleet of thr ferries — the} abccweit. the Prince Edward Is land ferry and the Seotia H~— mow serving the island, Friday a! ' | | sults have heen few and far be- tween. The RCAF-Luftwaffe meeting is believed the first such example of co-operation between Cana- dian and German military forces which have fought each twice in the last 45 years. The talks were arranged here last month by Defence Minister Pearkes and West German De- fence Minister Franz Josef Strauss. A German naval team {fs also to visit Canada for talks with the Canadian navy on methods of propulsion for destroyers. No date for this meeting has yet been fixed. The Luftwaffe headed by Brig-Gen. Johannes Steinhoff, chief of operations for the German air force. Afr Vice-Marshal J. A. Eas- ton, chief of RCAF technical services. will be chairman of the talks which will deal with such matters as quality control and acceptance, logistics testing of the starfighter. WHERE-TO-FIND-IT Announcements, notices .. 13 Births, deaths, etc., .... 2, 13 Classified section ...... 12, 13 Comics, features ........ ll Charlottetown news ...... 5 I as ecb kc 4 Finance, markets ...... . Hela@G ROWS 2.65. oe 0c % 38 Sports sit ibabwewes cscs ae Women’s page ..... ; 6,7 Late reports from Guardian news bureaus in Summer- side, Montague, Alberton and Souris, and from special cor- respondents now appcar on the Island News Page. team will- be and flight) | London newspaper. | | Michael Scout Certificate is regarded as! tion of the first troop in 1903 at John so important that the presentation! St.. Peters Cathedral by Harold Morris. Scouting was then on’) about a year-old. His Honor told the scouts as the years roll-on they woud more and more come to apprec- jate the long hours of instruction that t received from their scoutmasters. | He urged them to keep up their mterest. DUTY TO COUNTRY In closing he quoted (Conaued on Page 9 fOP IS LONELY FOR THOMSON LONDON (CP)—Roy Thom- son says it’s sometimes pretty lencly at the top. “J admit it, I’m frequently 'onely,” he says in an_ inter- view published Monday by a “Maybe other people get more out of life than I do. * “A successful person is not always to be\envied. He's to be pitied, too. Pitied!”’ Thomson, who recently added Lord Kemsley’s newspaper and publishing empire to his inter- ests in Canada, the United States and Scotland, is the first man to be interviewed for a Daily Mail series on million- aires and men of power. The Canadian-born magnate gives reporter Robert Muller these other sidelights: On money — “Some people talk as if there was something wrong with making money, but is there? Isn’t money the meas- ure of your success. . . You gotta go on, Where do you stop? I don’t know. I never stop.” On ulcers—‘‘You may not be- Heve this, but I don’t have worries. If-a dozen of my pa- pers failed tomorrow, Td still be all right. Nothing can hap- pen to put me back on the breadline. I've got an equable temperament.” . On balance sheets — “I just love reading balance sheets. I'd sooner take a halance sheet home to read than a book.” from the ' ; and other Cubs “ mile Trans - Canada Highway— and other Cuban Of iho. passed the half-billion doliar | i ticipating i AESTHETIC DEVELOPMENT Provincial Awards Made By Beautification Society Since its inception in 1946 they the route for which the western group seeks recognition already a route which would branch nérth from the present federal- 4500-Mie Trans-Cana is in existence. The big gap is a 275-mile stretch between Jas- per and Kamloops which is only a trail. The Yellowead group is also seeking a branch highway from Jasper to Prince Rupert, B.C. A paved ighway exists be- tween Prince George nd Prince Rupert but the Jasper-Prince George stretch of more than 200 miles is little more than a path. (CP Newsmap) da Road Passes Half-Billion Doilar Mark By JACK BEST Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA ‘(CP —Canada's long, long ‘trail a-winding the 4,500- {provinces — Saskatchewan, Al- berta, Manitoba and Prince Fd-! ward Island have completed their sections or have on!v tiny gaps to {ili in. Al) the others with: mark. . and possibly British Columbia are expected to finish, by the end of next year, though in Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and On- tario the route wii! not be en- Continued on Page 5 Col 2) i exception of Newfoundland The value of work approved stands at $523,000.000, said an of- ficial of the federa! works depart-; OTTAWA SPEAKERS administcring the federa!) government's participation in the mammoth 10-year project. The federal - pwevincial cost- sharing. agreement expires Dec. 31, 1960. Unless some provision is made in the meantime, the prov- inces will have to do without fed- eral highway assistance after that date. ment, struction season remainng, a ross-Canada survey_by The Ca- E Sea rece aon thet all par-| Federal civil ‘servants in the| eee “ ; province will hold a public mee-.- | ae om aed ae ing in Charlottetown on Novem- | re ber 17th to inform civil — ser- ivants and the public of al! apects jof the wage issue with the gov- four |ernment, it was announced last | g left z up. FOUR FINISHED The survey shows are that il Servants Plan Public Meeting Here. night by Roland W. Betton of Summerside following a meeting here. It was stated that the meeting is being called because ‘the de- | pressed wages in this area make the civil servants a (preferred lic’’. Mr. Betton said that the meet- ing could be addressed by speak- ers from Ottawa who “are well informed on the subject”. He stressed that it was not an in- dignation meeting but that it was merely to give information. He emphasized also that the local group did not support the “unofficial drastic measures sug- gested in some other areas.”’ A joint action committee nay During the dinner the follow-{|Class A- Mr. and Mrs. Sterling Rural Beautification Society had ing 1959 winners were presented} Miller, Kelvin Grove: Mr. and contributed in a truly wonderful | with prizes by representatives | Mrs. Errol Stetson, O’Leary (1 way to the aesthetic life of the and 2 Prince): Mr. and -Mrs. Prowince, Premier -Whlter R. Shaw said last night. Speaking briefly during the Society's 14th annual dinner last night, Mr. Shaw said that crea- tion of natural beauty as en- couraged and promoted by the Is'and group had a very benefic- ial effect on the citizens as a whole and the children of the Province in particular. | PROMISED SUPPORT The Premier stated that he was extremely. interested in the entire movement and promised the society his port. He paid tribute to the chair- man, Lt.-Col, E. W. Johnstone of Burlington, Robert Cotton of Charlottetown and Robert Sna- zelie of Southport, all of whom he said had contributed in a par- ticular way to the beautification of their native Province. In addition to the Premier and Colonel Johnstone, the following were seated at the head table: Hon. J. Philip Matheson, minis- ter of public works and highways, and Mrs. Matheson; John A. Mac- donald, MP: Hon. J. David Ste- wart, provincial secretary; Mrs. Shaw: Mrs. Johnstone and Hon, dustry and natural and minister of fisheries. At the conclusion of the prize presentations, a series of color- ed slides depicting winning homes, gardens and schools, was shown with Gordon Warren commemator. In his opening remarks the president paid tribute to his executive committee, the judzes, and all others who had worked so hard to make the 1959 con- tesis a success. Held in the Charlottetown Hotel, the dinner meeting attrac- ted a very large representation of: interes‘ed persots from parts of the Island, | continued sup- | | ' Leo. F. Rossiter, minister of in-| resources | | | | of silverware on bebalt of Ee of the donor organizations: CLASS. WINNERS Farm Home James Rodd, Harrington; Mr. and Mrs. Willard Prowse, Brack- (Continued on page 5 Col. 3) Improvement, S.S, CARSON ptesents a chest Donald Compton of Bangor, wi ton’s of Canada to Mr. acd Mr-. | ed last night comprises Leo Ber- rigan and Henry Murnaghan of Charlottetown and Robert Adams land Mr. Betton of Summerside. | Mr. Betton presided in his cap-| producers of the lacity as provincial representa- | tive. te Settlement inst Break Is Seen-- In Soiid Steel Front PITTSBURGH (AP! Kaiser | cuit court of appeals in Phila- Steel Corporation Monday aban-|delphia said it wilf rule today doned the industry's entrenched| whether the 500,000 striking steel bargaining position in the 104-day| workers must return to their jobs steel strike and negotiated a sen-|for 80 days under a Taft-Hartley jarate agreement with the United | injunction. | Steelworkers Union The government obtained the It was the first break in the/injunction in U.S. district court heretofore solid industry front.| here last week, contending the Kaiser is the ninth largest U.S.| strike posed a threat to the eco- steel produce nomic health and safety of the The agreement was reached in country. Washing‘on during meetings of| The union questioned legality of Kaiser Steel officials and USW the injunction and won an indef- leaders |inite postponement of its enforce- David J. McDonald, union pres- met from the appellate court. ident, said the settlement was-on| Whatever the ruling, it is ex- the basis of a 20-month contract pected to be appealed to the Su- providing improved wages and! preme Court—by the union if the injunction is upheld, by the gov- group in the minds of the pub-| insurance and pension benefits | 10 CENT ROOST The contract, in effect until June 30, 1961, provides an addi-| tional 10 cents an hour in fringe) benefits the first year i For the remainder of the con! Mract, the workers will zet an- other 12'2-cent package that in- cludes a seven - cents - an - hour wage increase. Work rules—one of the big ob- stacles to an industry-wide settle- ment—will be worked out by a committee The agreement also sets up a company - union committee to study means to ‘‘ensure a proper share of the fruits of the com- pany’s progress.”” Spokesmen for both Kaiser and the union said this could not be called a profit- sharing plan Both McDonald and Kaiser de- had been among a group of the 12 largest steel producers carry- ing the negotiations bail for all 96 firms made idle by the strike Top-level. peace talks between the union and the industry's reg- after McDonald went to Washing: | ; ton to confer with Kaiser try negotiator and vice-president of US. Steel, said no further | meetings are scheduled | RULING TODAY | Meanwhile, the US. third cir- seribed the pact as non-inflation-| R. Conrad Cooper, chief indus- | ernment if it is thrown out. ary. { Es PRAISE KAISER - McDonald praifed the firm's 4 board syiir er Edgar Fi/1O BE INSTALLED Kaiser, as demonstrating ‘“‘real! s ; csichiceet beara” "| «Ti» Seta of Bev. op The California-based company ehh » Paul's Anglican: Church, as Venerable Archdeacon of Prince Edward Island is scheduled to be conducted Thursday night in St. Paul's church, it was learned last night from Rev. Canon E. M, ular four-man bargaining team . z hed been echeduled liere Mon-| Melons, D-D. Rev. Conse Eiaes day, but they were called off suffered a fainting spell dur bn y , ~~, ing the church service on Sun- day morning. It wasa ttributed to the heat and two attending physicians affirmed that his heart condition was not invol- ved although a paver publish- ed outside of Charlottetown said that the Canon had a heart attack. Spud Producers Told To Organize | le “Set wp one over-all orcanization; keting Board, Promotional Com which will represent the po’ato|mittee and other subsidiaries re- from this organization the produ- cers will appoint their cwn Mar- prov.nce andlauired to carry on the affairs of ” the industry,” was the advice given to the Potato Producers | Association by Walter R. Shaw, 'premier and minister of agricul- *% beautification society's com- petition. Mr. Caron is morager of the Charlottetown store, » ture, at the annual meeting held at Prince of Wales College last ment " Approximately sixty members attended the meeting presided over by Chairman Colin Mac- Phail, Meadowbank, who.welcém- ed Premier Shaw ard paid ti bute:to his work in the past while Deputy Minister of Agriculture. MANY GROUPS Premier Shaw remarked that at the present time there are a ccn siderable number of farmer or- ganizations and that it was some- what difficult to know whieh ené represented the pecple. “It wes near time,” he said, “that the industry found out where it fits in all these organizations.” He explained that some yéars age one organizaiion ex -ted tnuat represented the indw:try and col- lected the revenue needed to carry on the werk. Since tacn many organizations have cox. into being with many differences of opinion. “If this is the organization that represents the people,’ he Gcciar- ed, ‘then let us develop it.” ‘We want the acivice and d “ec- tion of -suca an orgarization t:2t gets together and 1epresens ie opinions of the proc:ctss cf t:e provine:” the said, and when ts iakes place we can give you evt~y support.” “This organization must come from you"’, he maintained, ‘‘and you should handle your own bus- | iness”’. a | Premier Shaw said that mar- | keting practices of even five “years ago were not acceptable today and that a great deal more care must be taken to ensure quality and establish attractive. package marketing. The present Marketing Board (Continued on page 5 Col. 4) | be