TELEPHONE 8506 Buyer meets seller Ads. Dial 8506 ask for C1 taker, for quick results, with Guardian Want assified ad hr Guardian "Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” \ ,2” Cloudy with widely Q WEATHER -4-at scattered showers: not much change in temperature; Low- high at Charlottetown 54 and 65. EPXGES *-- ‘°i’.".’:.i.§’.§:‘:.i.,““.*;i.i’.’."‘° CHARLOTTETO N0, M0,, /7 WN, CANADA MONDAY, JUNE 23, 1958 THAN FIVE CENTS \ Following registration of the delegates to the Maritime Pro- vince Board of Trade annual meeting which begins in Char- lotetown today, the President, Mr. Ernest D. Reid held a re- ception last night at the Char- lottetown Hotel. Seen at the re- BEIIRUFI‘, Lebanon (Reuters)- The shadowy figure of Lebanon’: army chief emerged as a decid- ing finctor Sunday in the civil war ' now entering its sixth week. Gen. Fuad Clhehab, army chief of staff, so far has resisted all pressure tor a full-scale offensive against the sebels. some quas-tens claim an offensive could end the revolt in 24 h-ours. The Cnristi.-an general also has resisted p r e s s u r e to replace Presitenrt Camille Chamoun a-s a compromise leader until pres- idential elections next month. There has been no mention of Ohehab in print here for nearly a week with the exception of a brief statement saying “the gen- eral remains the symbol of Leb- anese unity.” The main point of the statement was to deny ro- mons he had resigned. GENERAL SOUGHT Renewed efforts were under way this weekend for the general to play a more positive role and end the crisis, which is costing mated $1,000,000 a day. Meanwhile, the United Na- tions observer mission said it ex- pects to place a watchdog team in the strategic Bekaa borler area today. ’ Col. Maurice Brown, New Zea- land senior officer with the mis- sion, said some opposition lead- ing to put teams on the borders too soon. But Brown denied pub- lished reports the observers had the national economy an esti- ers had advised against attempt- S M. P. B. or T. Nissnno HERE ception are (left o right) Mrs. Reid, Mr. T. Renouf, New- foundland Mrs. Renouf a-nd Mr. Reid. Business sessions this H_I0TI1i‘nlE will include the pre- sidents report, greetings from the Junior Chamber of Com- merce in Canada by John ing to the Bekata area, near the Syrian border on the North. He also denied reports the re- bels had fired on UN forces in the Bekana valley Saturday. His men heard some shooting in the area, he said. WANTXSTOHELP Hussein Oweini, a leader here in the opposition nationalfront revolting against pro - western Presidre-nt Cliamoun, told a re- / Ward. Moncton; executive sec-‘Commission. F. R. Rand_ Sack- 1‘€ta*1lY'S ,«I‘e'p01rt by A. T. Par- vil1e;.report on APEC by Dr. kes; financial report by ‘A. I. Frank MacKinnon. At a lun- Banrow. CA; a report from D. cheon meeting today with Rot- L. lvllonrell, of the Canadian Chamber Cormnerce. Mblntreal; report. general manager ary, the guest speaker will be of Gordon L. Colp-itts. producing advisor of Imperial Oil Co. Ltd.. of the Maritime Transportaion Toronto. See Lebanon Army Chief Big Factor In Civil War porter -the opposition is anxious to co-operate with the UN group. He said the advice to observers to turn back from the Bekaa val- ley Saturday had been a purely local decision to protect UN per- sonnel. The government is known to want a guard force to seal off its borders and prevent the U.AR— Syria. and Egy-pt—drom continu- ing its alleged help to Chamoun-’s opponents. '1‘-UlNlIIS, Tunisia (ii/euters)—tA.n Algerian -rebel government in exile soon will be proclaimed, a spokesman for the main Moslem insurgent group said here Satur- day. The independent Algerian gov- ernment probably will take part in the “Consultative Assembly for North Africa” which was an- nounced after a f-our-diary meet- ing here among Algerian rebels and representatives of the Tunis- ian and Moroccan governments; A Tunisian government spokes- man said the conference was “a step toward the formation of a United Arab Maghreb (the pro- jected federation of Tunisia, Mo- rocco and an independent Al- eria).” Should the rebels push France from the remainder of its North Aflicau holdings and the “Magh- been prevented forcibly from go- MEMBERS OF the Murplrly lamily at last nights reunion in Charlottetown were: Left, MYS- Annie Hughes, Springfield. P» E- Returning to the Province ‘filer a forty-six year absence. '1‘- George Murphy, 72, of Cal- gary. Alberta, met with his bro- lsher William, 59, of 14 Spring heel. and his sisters at a fam- Iam s home. 10 “Hills in the happy occas- ’1_were Mae. Mrs. Wilbert “hill and Mrs. Annie Hughes of Family Members Re-Unilecl In Ch’lown After 46 Years ‘_Y rgunion held last night at Wilw re " concept be realized, the new 1.; W. W. Hughes, Charlotte- town; Mus. Wilbert Clahill-1,~ 8160 of Sprinlglfleld; Mrs. Nell Sulli- saplringfield, and Mrs. Nell Sul- livan of Howston, Texas. Mrs. Sullivan and George have not seen one another since 1906, the year of Mrs. Sullivan's mar- “fillet” learning‘ the tailoring trade here, George left the pro- vince in 1912, a Year after W11‘ Ham, and joined him in Calgary, where he continued with tailor- Repori Algerian Government In Exile Is Planned Soon state would bring together 22,000,- 000 people in an area of more than 1,000,000» square miles. Golfer Struck By Lightning, Is Recovering PORTLAND, Me. (AP) —— A golfer was struck by lightning Sunday and is expected to re- cover. y Harlow C. Slkillins. 55. Port- land, was reported in satisfactory condition. “Anyone struck by a bolt like that who lives is a very lucky fellow,” an attending doctor said. Skillins was struck during a five - minute thunder shower which passed over Portland. N. B. MAN DROWNED CAMPBELLTON, N. B. (CP)— Warren Smith, 23, drowned in Wilson's Lake eight miles north of here Saturday when the small boat from which he was fishing capsized. A companion, Maurice Merker, swam ashore altlter un- successful attempts to save Expect Up To $200 Million In Oak Islancl Money Pit Smith. lNTEG‘RATI‘ON SU‘SP.E-NDl.ED Hungarians Demonstrate In Ottawa And New York OTTAWIA (OP) — Hungarian demonstrators splattered the So- viet Embassy with blood-red ink Sunday night. They were protesting the execu- tions of former prime minis- ter Im-re Nagy and four others, all connected with the 1956 Hun- garian uprising. Three bottles flew from the centre of the parade of some 320 Blungarian refugees as they slowly passed the sombre grey embassy building singing the Hungarian national anthem. One bottle left a large red blotch on the front steps, a sec- ond hit the grey-stone wall be- side the main entrance, the third splattered against the wall of the top third storey. Blinds of the embassy all were drawn. LED BY MONK The demonstrators, led by a Roman C a t h oil c Franciscan monk, otherwise were orderly. Some 175 were on foot, walking abreast. The rest were in 42 cars, one black limousine in front and the rest, carrying mainly women and children, behind the marin- ers. One of the many placards the marchers carried read: “What Nagy and Malater died for will live.” NEW YORK (AP) —- some 350 screaming Hungarian refugees trampled several policemen Sun- day while smashing windows of the Park Avenue headquarters of the Soviet delegation to the United Nations. Nine demonstrators were a« - rested after seven policemen, in- cluding a deputy chief inspector, were injured. Three deminstrat-' ors were arrested Saturday after a less violent outbreak at the So- viet building. The demonstrators, including hysterically sobbing women car- rying anti - Communist placards, were protesting the Red execu- tion of H u n g a r 1 a n revolution leaders. ’ Orderly picket lines had been marching in front of the Soviet; headquarters when the demon- strators suddenly exploded big firecrackers, smashed one win- dow with a rock and the other with a placard pole. ON CUE Police believed the pickets’ out- burst came on a prearranged signal. But Dr. Bela Fabian, cha-irma-n of the Federation of Former Hun- Hammarskj Solution W CAIRO (‘Reutens)—lDag Ham- marskjold opened talks with President Nasser of the United Arab Republic Sunday night on crucial Middle East problems. The United Nations secretary- general conferred with Foreign Minister F-alwzy for 75 minutes before his talk with Nasser. Fawzy and presidential assistant A15? Sabry were present at the Nasser talks. Nasser is the key man behind many of the issues confronting the United Nations secretary- general during his current Middle East peace mission. ._Iiam-marskjold also will confer with Lt.-Gen. E. L. M. Burns of Canada, commander of the UN emergency force policing the Gaza Strip. The secretary - general was Little Rock Gels Respite LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP)—[ “In the public interest, including‘- the interest‘ of both Negro and White students,” U.S. District Judge Harry J. Lernley Saturday granted Little Rock Central High School a‘ breathing spell from racial integration. The Arkansas jurist granted a school board request for a 21/2- year suspension of ‘its gradual plan tor public school desegrega- tion. .Under Leml-ey's ruling, the Texas; and George s. Murphy. C-alsary. Al- berta. van of Houston. ' mg, retiring only a few years a . gill the meantime William had gone to Montana, where, later, he was drafted in the American Army. Following discharge he ret-urfned to this province, and for the post nineteen years has operated a ghocery Sime- Mrs. Sullivan and George ar- rived home to attend, with other members of the family, the or- dination of their nephew, Rev. Clifford Murphy, the son of ll/irs. Murphy and the late Learning Murphy. Mr. Murphy returns this morn- ing by plane to his home in Cal- gar)’- seven Negro students still enrol- led at the end of the last school year would be barred from the 2,000-pupil high school this Sep- tember. In New York, spokesmen for the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People said an ap will be filed promptly. Governor Orv-al Faulbus, whose state national guardsmen last September turned away Negroes seeking to enrol in Central, com- Founcl Guilty In Murder Case BA1RlR;BNlG’1‘lON, N.S. (OP)- Aubrey Eugene Blades. 17. W35 comricted here Saturday of the March murder of a New Mi-nas, N.S. salesman. The jury deliber- ated 50 minutes. Chief Justice J. L. Iisley of the Nova Scotia Supreme Court did not pass sent-encie on Blades. 0119 of two Shelburne, N.S. Yffllths charged in the slaying of WIN-‘9<1 Crouse, 25. The second youth, Robert Bou- dreau, 16, goes on trial today. Blades’ sentence is expected to be passed at the end of the sec- ond trial. mented-: community would do well to age- cept toda-y’s ruling, which will do much to re-establish the normal and friendly relations which pre- vailed here before. . .This is not a final settlement of this prob- lem, but it can prove a peaceful interlude." The school board last Feb 28 asked federal district court to suspend integration until mid- term 1961 on grounds that in- cidents and tensions resulting from the presence of the Negro “The Negro citizens of thel students had adversely affected the educational process. Lemley said the granting of the board’s petition did/ not con- stitute : yielding to unlawful force or violence, but was simply an exercise of discretion and good judgment so as to allow a breathing spell in Little Rock and preserve educational standards. His decision was another chap- ter in the Little Rock crisis that began last September when, on the eve of the first year of in- tegration, Faubus surrounded the school with national guardsmen. SYDNEY (OP) Six Cape Breton coal mines will be idle today as the Dominion Steel and Coal Corporation begins a stag- gered series of summer shut- downs aimed at eliminating sur- pluses. About 9,000 miners working in eight Cape Breton col-lieries will receive no pay cheques for five weeks of the closed-mine period—— ending in late September. Two weeks of suspended pro- duction, from Aug. 4-18, are an- nual paid vacation periods for Fosco miners. Plan Probe Of Deepest Hole -TOKYO (Reuters) — French deep-sea explorers during the weekend completed preparatory dives for their descent into the world's deepest known ocean hole. The hole, known as the “Japan Deep,” is estimated to have a maximum depth of 33.800 feet—- more than six miles. It is about 600 miles long .and 62 miles wide, lying to the east of the Japanese mainland. A group of Japanese scientists will join the French seamen aboard the Bathyscaphe for the dive into ocean depths never previously explored. The Japanese hope the deep will prove suitable for dumping radioactive waste material. They say it could be used as a dump- ing ground provided the waters there remain perfectly still. Six Cape Breton Mines Idle Today The company has been unable to find markets for a large part in Cape Breton. There will be two shutdowns of the Mainland Cumberland Railway and Coal Company’s No. 2 mine at Springhiil, N.S., be- sides the holiday period. There will be no production during the weeks beginning Aug. 18 and Sept. 8. The work schedule at Acadia Coal Company holdings in Pictou County will be‘ reduced to four days a week from five. Both. are Dosco subsidiaries. The mnies that close today will shut down again the weeks start- ing July 14, Aug. 4, l1 and 18, Sept. 18 and 22. Another Cape Breton mine closes June 30, and another will lie idle the weeks of June 30, July 14, Aug. 4, 11, and 18, Sept. 1 and 15. A two -‘day meeting of the ‘United Mine Worker's (Ind.) dis trict 26 executive begins Friday. Chinese Stage Artillery Duel TAIPEI, Formosa (AP)-— Chiang Kai - shek’s Nationalist troops on a tiny Matsu island fought a 101/i-hour artillery duel with Red Chinese forces on the heaviest battle in months. The artillery barrage opened up at 1 am. after Nationalist warships attacked and sank two Communist patrol boats off the of 1,400,000 tons of coal piled high ‘ mainland Sunday. It was the. garian Political Prisoners, said it started when two women pickets were struck by objects thrown from a second-floor window of the Soviet building. Dr. Fabian said one of the women struck was Mrs. Leslie Toth, whose husband was ex- ecuted in Hungary in 1952 after having been tried with Joseph Cardinal Mi-ndzenty, the Roman Catholic prelate who was im- prisoned Deputy Chief Inspector Anthony 0’Conn-ell was struck on the right side of the face by a rock he said was thrown by a woman. He refused medical aid. Other po- hcemen were kicked and sluggtd. old Seeking ith Nasser scheduled to return today to Bei- rut. capital of strife-torn Leba- non. Since leaving New York last Wednesday Iialmmarsk-j-old has held a series of talks with British Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd, Lebanese President Camille Cha- moun and Israeli Premier David Ben-Gurion. He has remained tightlipped about the meetings. A visit to Jerusalem failed to settle the nagging dispute be- tween Jordan and Israel over Mount Scopus. REV. G. HOWARD Christie. interim chairman of the new congregation of Park Royal had the honour of laying in the corner stone of the church which was dedicated “To the Glory of God” Park Royal United Church was filled to capacity for three services of worship yesterday and a large number of people joined in the opening ceremonies by means of a public address system installed outside the building. In addition, a large number of people gathered at 10 a. m. for the corner stone laying which preceeded the actual dedication of the church. Not only was it a historic moment in the life of the com- munity of Parkdale, Central Royalty and East Royalty; it was a historic occasion in the life of the United Church in Prince Edward Island. This is the first new pastoral Charge to be for- med in the Province since the [United Church came into being in Canada in 1925. The corner stone was laid by Rev. J. M. Sheen, chairman of the Prince Edward Island Pres- Matsus, the Nationalists said. bytery, Rev. H. E. D. A5lllf0I‘d, Partner In Search Looks For Hoard Of Ancient Incas TARZWELL, Ont. (C1P) — Vic Harman, 40 - year - old motel owner, says he and his brother may find $200,000,000 in buried treasure hidden in the fabulous “money pit” of Oak Island, N.S., by mid-July. 1V.llI‘. Harman said that he will leave his business in this Village, 75 miles southeast of Timmins, and j-oin his 41-year-old brother William on the island next week for what he believes is the final phase of a two-month search. The business man, who spent years drilling for gold in various parts of Canada, said he has dreamed of solving the 163-year old mystery of the money pit since he read of it in a magazine 10 years ago. Mr. Harman said that he and his brother are two members of a three-man private company that may expand to a public com- pany they have difficulty in locating the legendary gold and jewels‘ sought by other treasure hunters for more than 100 years. OBTAINED RIGHTS The Harm-ans obtained the rights to drill on Oak Island from the owner, Mel Chappell of Syd- ney, N.S., last fall, and can re- main on the island indefinitely. Hiring a $10,000 diesel diamond drill, they set to work May 1, and since then have reached down 212 feet, 18 feet of which is bedrock. Mr. Harman thinks the treas- ure, thought to have been cached in a stone vault, is at the 148 or 150-f-oot level. The operation that begins next week and will carry on for 10 hours a clay, is to probe diagon- Sunday June 22, 1958. Participat- ing clergy, Rev. J. M. Sheen (left) chairman of the Prince Edward Island Presbytery and Rev. H. E. D. Ashford, general secretary of the Missionary and secretary of the Missionary and 1VI'-aintenance Department of the United Church, a former pastor of Trinity Church in Charlotte- town talcing part was Rev. Thomas Wilson, retired FROM HEAD OFFICE Dr. Ashford whose depart- ment has the oversight of the erection of new churches said it was a‘ happy occasion for him, nothing that of all the churches had the privilege of being pre- area was first talked of. the worship which was conduct ed by Rev. W. S. Godfrey, D.D. the Maritimes. opened throughout Canada, he sent for very few. Ilt is signifi- cant to note that it was during Dr. Ashford’s ministry at Trinity that a new congregation in this At the afternoon service de- ally for the vault. He discounts theories that the treasure is the loot of pirate cap- tains Kidd or Bl-ueébeard. Nor does he believe that he will find the missing crown jewels of France. INCA GOLD? “There's no doubt in my mind that the Incas of South America buried on Oak Island what. they could salvage of their gold and valuables after the raids of the Spanish in the 1600s.” he said. Mr. Harman said his crew has found traces of man-made planks, coco-fibre anti ship’s caulking that could have been used to con- struct the tidal water trap that has filled in previous excavations at the pit. Two technicians are helping the Harman expedition. Brother Wil- liam, who worked with the On- tario Northland Railway, quit his job to spend all his time on the island. ‘l They made their first attempt at getting the rights to drill two years ago, but they were then held by Texas oilm-an George Green, who gave up and went home after drilling 181 feet. COLLECTED DATA For the last three years the brothers have collected news- paper clippings, charts, books and anything that held a metition of the money pit to prepare them- selves for the hunt. The secret of the small island. 50 miles south of Halifax, has baffled the world since 1795, when two boys found a crude block and tackle on a tree and traces of a pit in the ground. Maintenance Department of the Church observed the stone lay- ing. Later Rev. Mr. Christie re- ceived the silver engraved trowel from architect Keith Pick- ard memento of the occasion. Crowds ‘Throng Opening Of New Park Royal Church I Last evening the sermon and greeting were brought by Rev. A. Frank lVLacLean, minister of Trinity Church under whose planning a- great deal of the work was consummated in re- (Continued on page 2 col. 3) Sees Germany United Soon HINMEIIJN, Germany (AP) - Otto Strasser, one - time Hitler crony and now leader of an ob- scure German political party, tion within the next two years. candidates. predicted Sunday East and West Germany will unite in a federa- Svtrasser said he would approve dication of the memorial giftslsuch 3 m91"r‘-’e1‘- H19 added hi! to the chumh was a feature of German Social Union party will . wait. until the election of a na- , tional assembly for a reunited Secretary of Home Missions for Germany before putting up any