“> CY NEWS PGE |Home Economics. Association Annual Meeting Held Tues. The members of the P.E.T. Home Economics Association held night at Sirians" Coheas The President, Mrs. L.E. Prowse, was chairman. the past two days. by Major J.G. Knowlton, CD, (left). Looking on are Sergeant C. Storey, EM, or- derly room sergeant of the unit by “a Signals Regi- the points of the inspection carried out during the i L } | Features Bridge Work | | z ne ie 4 Fr af mot 2 i i I Hi Ff oeet hi bye He iu i i g | i z= | ? i Fs. i RF a EF fi 35 i yt : a |: | R i z H tf 58 is ah i : i ii E a“ _ ‘4 Hagelin Rvs GE BRIEFS, IMPROVING The ion of T. A. (Gus) Keenan forrieffy of Murray River and now of Deep Brook, N.S., is reported improving. Mr. Keenan suffered four heart seizures im eight days and is a patient im Digby Hospital. ‘ He was visited by his daughter ww Mrs. Jack Cameron and som in-law over the weekend. VISITING CITY Mr. and Mrs. Mellish aa of | ifax paid a brief visit to Char- Daeows ove the weekend. Mr. Lane will be remembered by baseball fans of three decades as the “Iron Man of Base- pall” when he pitched for Springhill Fencebusters. While here Mr. and Mrs. Mellish pre- red their cottage at Rocky Point for summer occupancy. SHERRY FUNERAL—The fun- d of the late Mrs. James Sher. aes held on Tuesday morning "ae sme | Church have the contract for the sub- structure of the bridge. HF FEL : : a F “4 83 ig a° i z Hi bakishs te Le j ig ia 5S piel py i i Ei Geek PERE | z § agi : F a | | | t FA 7 i ; fF : 8 iF Sk F : § ? 5 FF h 8 ik t : | t i I 5 i ' eh j i ; rg FFs i i i F iF oad Feet r ate ra ey + F i RESa pile casi threaded. When the whole op-| PAGE 1 BREWERS By CARL MOLLINS LONDON (Reuters) — A $60,- 000,000 bid by a ship and shoe tycoon to take over a big beer enterprise had brewers frothing in anger and the London stock market staggering Tuesday. is sche- difficulties, have his equipment removed from Charlottetown before freezeup. hopes to Blind Council Conference Meeting In City This Week 5 y will taper slightly People Hold C met for their spring conference in Charlottetown on May 23rd and 24th. The theme of the conference was “Living Loyalties’ based on 2 Cor. 5: 14, 15. “For the love of Christ constraineth us; because we thus judge, that if one died for all, then we are all dead: And that he died for all, that they which live should not hence- forth live unto themselves, © but unto him which died for them, and rose again.” WELCOME After registration and billeting by Maude Kells, Marion Perry and Janet Mellish the young peo- ple enjoyed a sumptuous ban- quet, at which an address of wel- come was given by- John Owen, the president of the Charlotte- town young people. The reply was given by Margaret Jean Macdonald. The evening assembly was led by Adele Beck, chairman of the conference. A _ devotional and beautiful solo were presented by Carol Enman and Leona Weale respectively both of the Summer- side Young People. Merle Zim- merman led the group in. pray- Pe FROM INDIA The message was -brought by David Reese, missionary on fur- lough from Assam, India. He emphasized the fact that unity in the world is not possible rac- ially .or politically; neither is it possible by the combination of the best of the various world re- ligions, showing that there are some important principles in the various religions which are direct opposites; neither is it possible by union of denominations. It is only possible by individual loyalty to the word of God. The evening was brought to a close with a social hour led by Lee Kitchen and followed by lunch. BIBLE SCHOOL Sunday morning the young peo- ple gathered for Bible School and were-taught by Nelson Mer- ry of Greenmount. service was Weale of Summerside. Mr. Penny of the Murray Harbour young people brought the devotional and John Macdonald of the Mon- tague young people led in pray- The girls of the Montague young people rendered a beauti- ful messagé “in” song. Following this, the Lord's Supper was par- taken of Mr. Merry presented the morning message on being loyal to the Church,, emphasizing the joy that comes from faiithful- ness to and fellowship in the church. In the afternoon Donnie Steven- hrist Young er. | onference ous young people then led in) prayer. VARIED DRESS i Mrs. Reese and her three chil- dren showed the various types of dress of the regions in which they have worked and sang spir- itual songs in the languages of) those regions. Mrs. Reese also spoke of the oneness that is in Christ regardless of race and challenged the young people to “speak Jesus’’ by action as well as word wherever they may be. During a short business meet- ing the secretary, Alice Macdon- ald, read the minutes of the last conference, and .the nominating committee gave its report. OFFICERS The chairman for the next con- ference, to be held at Green- mount, the vice-chairman is Alice Macdonald of Montague. The secretary-treasurer is Leona Weale of Summerside. A represen- tative of each young people’s group was appointed for this year’s camp committee. The final service was led by Alice Macdonald and the devo- tional by Alan Hickon in which Mr. Nicholson read the Scripture, Donnie Sevenson led in prayer and Wellington Murray gave a thought concerning the control and! use of the tongue. This devo- tional was by the Fredericton and Breadalbane young people. | Kenneth Norris spoke on the loyalty to Christ pointing out that in Christ one is dead to the world and alive unto Christ; this requires both service and sacri- fice. The conference was brought to a close by a sing-song and time of fellowship at the home of Kath- ryn and Adele Beck. Vacationland ‘Continued from page 1) tionland does not handle railway iment. After the season's play, province, has commuted the death sentence of four convicted War criminals to prison terms ranging from 20 to 30 years. The tempo of executions has slowed -| 137,000; cars 39,908 and trucks the National President of the Council will attend This is the eleventh annual meeting of the Maritime Division and the first time it has been held in this city. Naturally the local organization, The Friend- ship Club of the Blind are going all outin their endeavor to make the convention a success. CRIBBAGE In connection with the meeting there will be a play-off for the purpose of deciding a winner in the National Oribbage . Tourna- particaped in by most. of the 69 clubs in the council. it was found that two players, Edgar Doucet of the Friendship Club of the Blind of Charlottetown and Delsin Len- eau of the Fraser Club of Halifax were tied for first place. The chairman of the Netional Recreation Committee decided they play a series of five games to decide a winner. This phay-off will take pace on Friday evening May 29th. at 8 p.m. at the Char- lottetown Hotel. COMMUTE SENTENCE HAVANA (AP)—A military ap- peals tribunal in Holguin, Oriente barring |ies ang taverns a cash deal and i tors. |growing empire, Sears Holding |company shares also jumped up- Financier Charles Clore Mon- day offered shareholders of the Watney - Mann firm of brewer- /@ modernization program over |the heads of their startled_direc- The 54 - year - old financier’s Limited, has interests in a flock of firms ranging from the Dolcis shoe store chain to shipbuilding and distributing Vauxhall auto- mobiles. | Clore offered shareholders £2 jfive shillings ($6.30) cash ‘for | three-quarters of their nominal |£1 ($2.80) shares. He promised they would retain one - quarter (of their stalc im the company. URGED NOT TO SELL The brewery’s directors urged shareholders not to sell. A Sears spokesman said Clore wants to modernize the pubs and do away with the present elass distinction: in tippling. Most British taverns now are partitioned in two or more bars, “public’’ and “saloon,” with sa- loon bars featuring higher prices and generally attracting bowler- drinkers. The Sears spokesman declared the British public is tired of standing up in smoky, smelly “‘barnlike premises” and is ready for drinking in ‘a comfortable lounge and bar.” Financial experts predicted a major battle, with other brewers jumping in to save Watney's go- ing to ‘“non-brewing interests.” SHARES SOAR Stock market dealers sent Wat- ney’s shares soaring and Clore ward. Each Watney share, which closed Monday night at £2 Il in recent weeks though some still are reported occasionally. ‘ average vehicles and 675 passen- gers, the car deck is at ground| level and the promenade deck has two large observation salons at either end of the ship. Crew quar- ters are amid-ships. Propulsion is ae deisel-engines of 2,360 hp . two fore and two aft. She’ operates in both directions. The ship can be brought through the St. Lawrence Seaway, | a greater market for her. the proper facilities vided, there is a corresponding | increase in traffic. TRAFFIC INCREASE To bear this out it is seen that from 1948 to 1958 the traffic be- tween Borden and Tormentine (with the coming of the Abegweit) increased from 28,000 per annum to 142,000. The largest increase in any one of the ten years was when the Abegweit was put on the run. The increase that year was 18,000 or over 40 percent. Mr. Scott's report predicts that with proper facilities, the traffic at Borden and Tormentine could easily reach the 300,000 mark. Premier Matheson also notes Islands showed 84,700 passengers, 23,328 cars and 6,437 trucks. Last year when the Lord Sd- ‘kirk was putyon the run the num- ber of ‘passengers ferried was 8,598. . Similarly it is seen that with the building of the MacDonald bridge in Halifax, the traffic in- the opening of which has created | | As suggested in the report, Pre-| mier Matheson agrees that when | are pro-| = that in 1948, the traffic at Wood} ; hatted rather than cloth-capped |. . ‘Brewers Are Frothing At Purchase Attempt shillings ninepence ($7.25), spir- alled to £3 10 shillings sixpence ($9.45). Soon after the stock market opening Tuesday, morning, more than £8,000,000 was added to the total value of Watney shares on the market. CBC Strike Threat Ends OTTAWA (GP) — Negotiations on a strike-threatened wage dis- pute betwen the CBC and the National Association of Broadcast Employees and Technicians (CLC) fell through here Tuesday. NABET announced its Cana- dian negotiating committee is asking international headquarters at Chicago to authorize-a strike of about 1,260 CBC personne! in 22 Canadian stations. The strike previously had been approved by a vote of Canadian personnel, according to a NABET announcement last week. .. “There must be a marked change in management's position before negotiations can be re sumed with any hope of settle- ment,” said a statement issued Tuesday by T. J. O'Sullivan of Toronto, chairman of the NABET negotiating committe. The committee started meetings with the CBC here Monday morn- ing. BIG EFFECT TO TV A strike of the NABET mem- bership could impair CBC tele- vision services heavily. It would have a lesser effect on CBC ra- dio. The NABET statement de- scribed the negotiations with the CBC as having ‘‘ended in failure.”’ It added: \ “Wage issues have been per- sistently confused by manage- ment propaganda to the effect that the parties are only two per-cent apart. Many different proposals have ben discussed, but all management offers for the past six months, although made in a variety of forms, have added up to a total which would barely cover the increase in the cost of living since the last contract be- came effective Aug. 1, 1956. “Management's: best offer in- GOLD MEDALLI Dr. Stephen Clair MacLeod of Bonshaw, wno graduated in Medi- cine from Dalhousie University, received the University medal emblematic of the highest stand. ing in his class; also the Vic- toria General Hospital award for volved increases which would average only six per cent over a 27 - month period. For\ many months past employes have had te absorb living costs at least | five per cent higher than in 1956. CANCELS PLAN MOSCOW (‘(AP)—Soviet Prem- ier Khrushchev won't be going to New York to open the Russian exhibition next month, his deputy Anastas I. Mikoyan said ‘Tues- day. It had been expected that the Soviet leader would ask to come to the United States for the opening while Vice - President Richard Nixon opened the U.S. exhibit in Moscow. “This is certainly a very fine regiment you have here,” Major of the Malloch Trophy, awarded annual ly to the best signals re- Pa OTTAWA (CP)—An American publication says Gen. Earle Part- ridge, American commander of North American Air Defence Command, has been prevented by the Canadian government from talking to the press in this coun- try. It also says the Canadian gov- ernment insisted that U.S. Air Force officers attached te the northern NORAD region at S. Hubert, Que., be listed as “‘liai- son officers’ and that they wear civilian clothes. a The monthly technical maga- zine data, published in Washing- ton, says ‘its information was “submitted” to it by a ranking officer in NORAD, a joint Can- ada-U.S. command. It did not say whether the officer was Ameri- can or Canadian. There was no immediate gov- ernment comment. NO PRESS CONFERENCES The magazine says: named as commander-in - chief, NORAD, he was held back from visiting Canada for some time by the Diefenbaker government, and when he was finally permitted to come in for purposes of protocol, paying respects visits, he was timed by the Canadians to arrive around 10 p.m., was told he could not be met by the press and that he would give no press con- ference. “This was in flaring contrast to the treatment accorded Ameri- cans like Eisenhower, Gruenther ANNOUNCE GRANTS tistic organizations were an- nounced today by the Canada search Council, Montreal cation of books. Ide Memorial prize, the Charies E. Frost Bursary, the C.V. Nosby Book prize, and the Phi, Rho sigma scholarship award. He plans to enter General prac- tice for a short period before taking up post graduate studies. Dr. MacLeod is a son of Mr creased from 2,300,000 in 1955 to 4,000,000 in 1958. Bonshaw. and Mrs. Stephen MacLeod ef KRM MER KR AKKERKE | ne wk weaekekeakekk ke & * son led im @ song service, vari- ADULT POLIO CLINIC For 3rd Inoculations at Fortune Bridge Hall Thursday, May 28th, 7 to 9:30 p.m. First Inoculations Will Be Given ~*~ EPR R RK KK KX Signals Unit Bids To Retain Trophy’ “When Gen. Partridge was rtridge’ Prevented’ From Meeting Press defending champion and won the his group's showing, but he would not venture a prediction as competition. “We are keeping our fingers crossed and hoping we can hang and Norstad who had similar re- in NATO. (President Eisenhower and Gen. Alfred Gruenther are former supreme allied command- ers in Europe; Gn. Lauris Nor- stad is the current commander). Gen. Partridge has never been permited Canada, only once, at NORAD headquar- ters, when government finally permitted a press trip into the U.S. for this purpose.” . Mayor Ralph Gilroy said Tues- have moved from here since an | October mine disaster that | brought closure of the town’s only industry. i ing,” the mayor said. “The peo- ple are getting a little impatient.” The $ Signals Regiment is the the regiment was pleased with to the outcome of this year’s on to it, "he said. “You must re- jobs ationships to Canadian elements “To this date (April, 1959),|°, °*_i2 - press conference in though he has been there several times. “He met the Canadian press necessities. About 809 miners were without work last November the cave-in that killed 75 men. rectional institution in the area and the provincial government is determining coal locations which may lead to independent mining operations. But few of the men Mayor Gilroy_said—inemploy- ment insurance of 160 persons ran out last week. A $2,000,000 disaster relief fund will be used in part to provide families who have lost their benefits with $25 ery’ credits and cash. Men with three or more children will get $30 a week. The fund has been used to pre- vide an income for families of men killed in the mine and te help keep others in food end left when Dominios Steel and Coal Corporation de- cided to close down subsidiary Cumberland Railway and Coal Company No. 2 mine after the Limelight Is Sought. | SPRINGHILL, N.S. (C P)— GUARDIAN - PATRIOT WANT AD Phone 8506 day no more than 7 families “As long as we can keep in the limelight I think we can keep go- OTTAWA (CP) — Grants total- | ling almost $55,000 to various ar- include. $15,000 | each to the Social Science Re- | and the | Humanities Research Council, | Toronto, $15,000 to aid in publi- | NOTICE Dr. Gencheff will not be available to his patients for three weeks due to a re- cent illness. BOX OFFICE NORTH RIVER w= x OPENS AT a = * = -7:30 P.M. */ * TO-DAY AND THUR. SHOW AT DUSK ‘A x ; -=—_— = wee ew ew ew eee ee lel ee ee XTONIGHT ALAN LADD * | * “The [UN INTESi? DOG-GONE ADVENTURE * “A FIGHTING LADD IS FIGHTING MAD IN y | 4 i * " NEW ACTION-CRAMMED NAVY HIT” ad | “ - “THE DEEP SIX” + a + (ly COMING THUR. AND FRI + + gol YOUR MOST WONDE o NTERTAINMENT DATE? ot MacMURR a | Hagen 7 "PAT aes ¢ Wear Put Singh ham see % 4 ae x wy S LEGEND BOONE 4 Shows 3:30 ne OO, cotta ‘ 6:55-9:00 <= DEAN JAGGER Adm. Mat. 25¢ & 50e Evening Child. 50¢ Adult 75c zkkKeueuwK KK KK MMMM MMMM