_ TELEPHONE 8506 as ~ meets seller with Guardian Want hia Ads. Dia) 8506 ask for classified ad . taker, for quick results, + “Coors Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” CHARLOTTETOWN, ‘CANADA, TUESDAY, JANUARY 6, 1959 ig. . WEATHER Feng ano ny el weer extremely cold; westerly, nate ce te th Lewateh ooo it S ‘OUTSTANDING ISLANDER LEAVES TODAY Dr. Malcolm B. Docherty (left), chief of the Department of Surgical Pathology at ~ St. Mary’s Hospital, Minnesota, is shown above with Dr. Wen Mac- Donaid of Charlottetown. Dr. Docherty was expected to leave by plane today after; at- tending the funeral of his mot- al Mrs. John Docherty, Car- There Will Be Peace’ Mikoyan Says After Talk terview that he and Dulles dis- emerged from the conference in cussed “in general terms in a One of the Istand’s outstand- ing sons, Dr. Docherty. follow- ing his : graduation at Dalhousie University im 1934, attended the University of Minnesota as a fellow in surgery. In 1937 he re- ceived his master’s degree in surgical pathology from _ the University and 11 years later was appointed ychief of the Path- ological Department of St. to the East-West deadlock over Berlin, he went on: both Dulles and Ejisenhower— possibly both together — about preliminary way matters of com- Jan. 19 to 2, after he returns many _highways. Thousands of} Texas. consider that Moscow has given| area, where the thermometer| any. CASE mon interest, including Germany from . ag of major US. cent- motorists were slowed by blind. Heavy snow preceded_the surge|a_final_ answer to the German} read 15 degrees below zero. By Mr a eaid Mr. Fult Berlin, disarmament and trade.’’| TS Which is reported to include ing snow which cut visibility to|of Arctic air over much of the| Proposal of last Nov: 17 for set-|early morning the temperature ented : a in oes * Substantially the same report— _— Mae cate as Cleve- By PAUL FOSTER a gathering crowd, to the Crane |# few feet on some highw: ays. |mid-continent, contributing to a| ting up a four-power committee| was expected to fall to 25 or 30 a ‘t Sy aad ee coe from the American side — was| nd. Dettost, Chicago and Los) pRinGETOWN, Barbados (AP)|Hotel overlooking ‘the beach. | 200 CARS STOPPED ae ee et ee ee ee — a it given out later by the state de-|Andeles. He is scheduled to de-| a3. men and a woman who set| The Britons asked for fresh|~ 1.40, ET scone amuse ee press. officer, Lincoln i tw cog oo out on a transatlantic balloon] fruit and raw vegetables as their ped on eee ae agen of :: “Briefly ‘the US. government e. ah iemenes a ikov| tt reached their goal Monday—j first meal ashore in 24 days. | Bowmanville, @~miles east of ey ey Teer ( Oo st | IVI ng has charged three firms with PRESCRIBED AS “USEFUL” |drove up for the noon int-| 35 — sweden nh oe ae “7 feet in diameter, with aj Toronto. Three persons were| WESTVILLE, N. S., — (CP) oe ~ — aoe — Both sides described the dis hat 0 et iealis, capacity for 53,000 cubic feet of| Milled and four invaved Oe attock, | Monday that red a ectsies Comemar Went eussians as “useful” and dis- a dozen shouting Hungarian) "(,.1, Brathwaite, 62, and his| hydrogen. The gondola, 7% feet Ont! 2 eth Dede eae oe ° Electric Corporation and N, ohosed Mikoyan, second only to} 32-year-old son found ‘the four wide, was extensively equipped Trains from. Western Canada Comtois and Nova Scotia Pre- we V Phillips’ Gloeilampenfab- Premier Khrushchev in the So-| | b k Britons adrift and weary in the | against the possibility of a sea]. reported from one to four|mier Stanfield prospects for a 3 rieken. All three have subsidiar- voet ot ee mer ce reaker 15%-footdong gondola-lifeboat of|landing. The equipment included hours late Sunday. Some planes|new coal mine in Pictou County ie : : ies in Canada. General Electrie on im his two-week American | ae ae oo sions a pinback — out of Toronto's Malton airport| are “‘definitely brighter.” OTTAWA (OP) — Lower food|a record 139.9 and clothing rose and Westinghouse are American Piast ; 'Smas es Way a 9 ase fe He . prices in November eased the|by the same margin to a record| firms while Phillips is owned by ‘Both Mikoyan and the staie de- | - That meant fresh fruit, baths Tee —_ re er a ation = ee na rs aan come fae id the case pertment confirmed that Dulles| ‘T ¢ Montreal . and solid footing for Mrs. Rose- Se ee ees ; ad’ the| te sietlac to feat where the FON end the Soviet chieftain plan to! mary Mudie, 30, and her three from the all-time: high of 126.3 a| another record at 122 and the at where the Fo hes dake talks later } , 3, ws ee month, earlier, although other in-| yardstick for miscellaneous costs| Company of Canada was pre Mikoyan’s visit. today caught Dulles ailing from a virus infec- tion that forced him to cancel , Plans to fly to Ottawa for an in-’ ter - governmental conference on trade and economic matters.. | ‘Emerging from the meeting with ‘Dulles, Mikoyan_ made his brief statement and ~ then was | asked whether he had made any | new proposals to solve the crisis developing out of Soviet propos- ’ als that the occupying powers vacate Berlin and leave it an un- armed, defenceless city. Mikoyas grinned. “I think I MONTREAL (CP) — The ice breaker _d‘Iberville smashed her way. into Montreal East Monday and tied up to prepare for the final assault on a jumbled ice barrier that has trapped 13 ships in Montreal harbor. The final agsault may take two or three days, channel engineers said. ‘Weather conditions may force the d’Iberville to remain idle to- day. A low temperature of 25 be- low zero was forecast for over- night, which could cause heavy vapor over the harbor.” Kidnapped Baby Is Feared Dead NEW YORK (AP) —A cryptic note attached to a child's diaper aroused fears Monday for the safety of a new-born infant kid- napped Friday night from a Brooklyn hospital. christened Lisa Rose Chionchio. |} They sent out an alert for a heavy - set blonde wom#n seen) loitering about the hospital be-| fore the cmlhi disappeared from its bassinet in the maternity 32: thee Mary’s ‘which along with the Mayo Clinic is part of the gradu- ate school of the University of Minnesota. Dr. Docherty has returned to his native province almost year- ly for a visit to his old home and to visit his brother, Cyrus Docherty, who resides in Car- digan. Beef P «! Is Otte yee SSrediction By ARCH MacKENZIE Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP) — Little con- sirloin—is anticipated by govern- ment authorities. The reason lies in the expecta- tion that Canadian exports to the United States will continue at a booming clip, both to meet con- sumer demand and a herd re- building program south of the bordr. “The latest U.S. view is that beef prices should hold remark- ably steady for the next year and ‘that should apply to Canada as well,” one official said Monday. In general the U.S. was still not meeting its domestic de- mand. Canadian prices “might strengthen a little.” ;|zard with 50milean-hour winds men thronged outside the build- ing entrance. The pool was being emptied through a 3-foot pipe. In Ocean Off Barbados ee > oon | ‘stint tali'ad enh onal ween —or a total of 2% cents a pound. All 1958 shipments of livestock to the U.S. rose in comparison with 1957. Hogs totalled 6,272 as of Dec. 27 against :569 and sheep and lambs were 3,605 or_more n'59- than doube the 17,196 in 1957. Exports’ of dressed beef to a lcountries rose by 10 per cent to 53,989,768 pounds; dressed pork was up 70 per cent at 61,490,600 pounds and mutton and lamb up 113 per cent at 1,039,507 pounds. Bt THE CANADIAN PRESS Canada’s current frigid weather and snowswept highways have taken the lives of at least 14-per- sons. Four men died ip Alberta as a result of bitter | which moved down from the Arc. tie last week and which now cov- ers most of Canada and two- thirds of the United States. Ten died -in Ontario, scores were injured and property dam- age was high Sunday as-a_ biliz- e- maiie roads treacherous. _The weather office in Toronto said the.centre of the frigid air another 3% hours. -The blizzard in Ontario clogged 14 Deaths Attributed To Storms, Cold Wave were canceled but schedules re- turned to normal by mid-after- noon. Five inches of snow had fallen in the Hlifax area by mid-morn- ing Monday. Other areas of Nova Scotia got” more snow. Frigid Weather Hits ‘Eastern U.S. Seaboard (AP)—The worst (Arrives Urrutia In Havana: By WHLIAM L. RYAN “HAVANA, Cuba (AP)—Provi- sional President Manuel Urrutia arrived in Havana late Monday, raising the prospect that martial in Havana province and a prospective curfew for the cap- ital would be. lifted quickly. Urrutia landed at Havana’s In- ternational Airport after a flight from Camaguey province He arrived at the the height of a confused situation that had pitted Fidel Castro’s rebel forces against a group of young revolutionary zealots occupying the presidential palace. : ~Castro’s men so far wefe re- sorting to persuasion. Apparently they were meeting with success, 'for the splinter group of revolu- tionaries left the palace on orders from their leaders rather than embarrass Urrutia’s struggling 40 degrees in many ern states, from northwest Florida to the southern tip of companions after 24 days of aus- terity and tossing by wind and wave. Mrs. Mudie promptly sham- pooed her hair. : -“Can anyone lend me some hair clips? "’ she asked. STARTED DEC. 12 The balloonist? set out from the Canary Islands Dec. 12, charting: a 3,000-mile course to this island in the British West Indies. Radio signals from them were heard for several days, then no definite reports for 19 days. The Britons said they had cut the balloon from the gondola, but declined. to tell even their res- cuers other details of the decline and fall of their aerial expedition. “Sorry, chaps,-the story has been sold,” was the explanation. The London Daily Mail spon- sored thé expedition, intended to make—a scientific survey of At- lantic trade winds, and Daily Mail reporter Arthur Cook was here to sew up their account. Aside from Mrs. Mudie, who was co-pilot. and cook, the res- cued group was made up of her hushand; navigator Colin Mudie, aoe ae s pilot-captain, fe | Temperatures. fell.as much as areas of the Russia does the same—not to re- strict subjects for negotiation at In the second part of the note, West Germany saye it does not g oda-U. S. Cattiet By HAROLD MORRISON Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP)—Fipance Min- ister Fleming told reporters Mon- day: “I think we h a very strong case to present on oil.” He, made that comment at Up- lands Airport just before welcom- ing a United States cabinet dele- gation to open two days of talks on ways of strengthening Cana- dian and American economic re- lations. Specifically, Canada will be seeking elimination of American curbs on imports of Canadian‘ oil, along with assurances that Amer- ican anti-trust actions on elec- tronics will not interfere with Canadian sovereignty and that American wheat giveaways will not hurt Canadian competition in commercial markets. US. STATEMENT US. Treasury Secretary Rob- ert Anderson, who headed the American group of' three minis- ters, a number of deputies and other high-ranking officials, de- clined to discuss the oil situation on his arrival but said in a state. ment: > “We in the U.S. delegation are ter, brandishing low tempera- tures and gale-force winds, held dex c touched records. The,decline announced Monday by the bureau of statistics was the first after four consecutive monthly increases in living costs. The index is based on 1949 prices | cont equalling 100. Lower prices for oranges, eggs ami grapefruit contrbuted most heavily to the decline, offsetting higher prices for most items in the index including beef, fresh vegetables, rents, some clothing and house ownership costs. WAGE INDEX UP The index of average industrial wages and salaries at Nov. 1— latest date for which figures are available—was 165.2, based on 1949 equalling 100. This was up from 164.9 at.Oct. 11 and 161.2 at Dec. 1, 1957. ° The Dec. 1 price in- dex, although Falling one-tenth of a point in November, was still’ 3.1 points above the 123.1 recorded Dec. 1, 1957. The food sub-index dropped a full point to 122:3. THE GAINERS In contrast, the shelter sub-in- hit a high _ of 133.4—up three- tenths of a‘ point. Telephone rates in Ontario and Quebec and higher urban trans- Se fares in west Coast cities Fleming Hopes | For Success may continue to develop our com- mon interests and so add to the strength of the free world in the months and years ahead.” Both sides expressed regret at the absence of State . Secretary John Foster Dulles and Agricul- ture Secretary Ezra Benson, left behind in Washington because of illness. Mr. Dulles, who was to lead the American group, was ill with a virus infection. Mr. Ben son hal been hurt in a Christmas skating accident. They were rep- resented by their ‘deputies. SEEKS_DEFINITE RESULTS Mr. Fleming, who will preside at the talks opening officially at 9 p.m. Monday night, said Mr, Dulles’ absence was ‘“‘regretable but we plan to go ahead with the agenda as planned.” He had hopes the meeting would achieve “definite results.’’ Mr. Dulles, who telephoned Ex- Minister Smith informing him ‘ot his iliness, ex- pressed a hope he and Mr. Ben- son could attend a resumption of the meeting at an early occasion. Usually, these meetings of the joint Oanada-U.S. committee on trade amd economic affairs are 400,000 head set on Snow was reported from Vic- : said he believed the next session, cattle. Under these regulations,| . do; | Cod wave of the season gave the intensely aware of the great im- shingten, woul By GEORGE KITCHEN have said enough,” he added. [refugees paraded across the|any number in excess of that| "2 to Halifax. The Labrador| eastern United States seaboard a W. Germany utiise at tie wale a Weal lias ee ed ot ae WASHINGTON (CP) — Anas-| Later, appearing before tele-|street from the state department| amount encounters an additional | Cast. escaped the cold weather. | wintry cuffing Monday and locked Jeclose commercial relations be-| ule—because of Mr. Dulles’ ab- tas Mikoyan, the Soviet Union's Taine sommeces Oe the stole dol ieieg, suskind: Soames sy: eee ren. | meet ot ae comme Mp Sint a ele Pla tween our two nations. ‘senke at-this one. trouble-shooting deputy premier,| partment lobby, he was asked|blazoned with such slogans as DOWN DRAIN PIPE Atlentic ‘ele area of numbing cold e| n “We welcome this chance to ex-| Touching on the economic sit conferred with State Secretary| whether he felt his talk had im-| “remember worn, s THE COLD SPOTS Howling northwest winds up to Bases change information so that we/| uation generally, Mr. Anderson Duiles for 98 minutes Momlay on| proved Soviet - American rela-| member Korea” — “no Khrush-| NEW PLYMOUTH, (AP) + ~ 7 miles an hour powered the For Berlin told reporters: “The American East - West differences - a n d| tions, chev visit”—no loan”—‘‘Mikoyan| While swimming underwater in a emperatures ote polar invasion. ; eqrnonay 2.0.¢ 9 yar 7 te comiagl ,promptly declared his confidence | IMPROVED PROSPECTS go home.” masteleal Monday, 12-y | Cae eee points Sunday The winde, knocked airplanes N.B. Reports along very sa = that, Gowiet - American relations| - wy Asei that there are impreved| S0ret services agents hustiet} old ‘wa tucked rats} Bight and cari, Monday tectaded:} around in New York City, dis-| BONN (Reuters) — West Ger. Aaiced if inflation was s threst, ‘improve. - oved! with the short, pudgy Soviet] a 1004oot outlet pipe and flung| Gillam, Man., ; Prince] rupted ferry service and yent a|™any in a note Monday rejected] 15 Below Zero “There will be » prospects for peace,” he said. ; Albert, Sask., 49 below; Arvti- : Soviet proposals for a “‘free city” he replied that the U.S. appeared peace, the Asked if that eq| Mader through an estimated 100] out onto rocks at the sea’s edge. st Ont. 48 huge oak tree crashing down on a city to be heading for “stability, . stocky, black-moustached Soviet peinmnent, appts newspaper reporters and camera|She suffered cuts and bruises.| *70"8, OM, below. an elevated rapid-transit line. | Berlin but agreed—as long as} gaINT JOHN, — (CP) — Win- ; - Dulies’s office. dete a “It applies in,general to all was over the mid - Mississippi _ Strong wi a four-power conference on the Brunswick sures.” peng Cao ah a questions. I am an optimist . at : : Valley Monday amt was moving | wes ‘ele bee gaa eure German problem. sean night Bs Beat ABH an With Mr. Anderson were Com- ikoy, Russian _ambassador|¥¢ 24d @ useful exchange. I am 8 * slowly towards the sea. It said/Penncyivania’ piled up traffic The first part ‘of the note,|ous resorts of drifting snow and| merce Secretary Lewis Strauss im Washington, ian-ambascador| 57 smmbassador fn general, There|, the weather was expected tol blocking drifts four to six feet| hamied over in Moscow Monday,| snowflurries all major road| 204 Interior Secretary Fred Sea- meeting. will be peace. There will be in a 0 IS S W moderate Monday night in Brit-| deep. contains a lengthy and detailed] arteries in the province were|‘0%- They will meet with Mr. Speaking through an interpre-|P?©2°*. ish Columbia. The rest of Can-| The cold winds drove freezing |Teiection of Russia's proposals|open and wheeling was general- Fleming, Trade Minister Church ter, Mikoyan said in a brief in-j, He indicated he plans to see ada could expect the cold to last temperatures deep into the south-| 2nd arguments. considered good. il,-Agriculture Minister Harknes Mr. Smith and Justice Minister Fulton. vented by its American parent company to negotiate on the sale of trucks to Communist China be- cause the U.S. had a law pre venting its companies doing bus- iness with that country. Radio Is By VINCENT BUIST . MOSCOW (Reuters) Rus- sia’s cosmic rocket, its radio dead, Monday night was zoomihg toward the sun and the orbit it may follow for eternity. An announcement here said the radio,, which had been flashing back information since its launching Friday, fell silent Mon- day morning. “The program of tracking the rocket and the scientific research connectal with it have been thereby closed,"’ the announce- ment said. The announcement added that focuiai Rocket — Dead Tass said the rocket .was de. flected slightly by the. moon's gravity, when it passed by it at a distance of 4,660 miles Sinday morning. As for the radio going dead, Tass said that was as planned and that the radio equipment. had only been expected to function for 48 hours from launching. NEAR EARTH IN FIVE YEARS It will be five years before the rocket comes near the earth in its orbit, Tass said, aiding that even then it will be some 6,600,- 000 miles away. Concerning the information al- The diaper was found in a sub-| ward’ Arnold Eiloart, and Eiloart’s SMALL WO RLD "4 .| Sex gained one-tenth of a point to the rocket will become the first| ready received from the rocket ieee” Island. An ee —— 7“ Ml-year-old son, dane: radio nts Sid ihe ot ete: man«nade planet on Wednesday| Tass said: ’ : : were found in a th in the rator. = ots os ° “ 1 : “Please -return to St. -Peter’s | women’s washroom of the Coney — : ; Shy Former Oil Man or Thursday when it begins ~ Pi amcatonreging yet Hospital. Didn't want to hurt) Island subway station. The finder] FOUR HOURS OFF SHORE “4 i Sertew ee eres ‘the arth tion of interplaneta rockets gnyone. Everything is so hard. Mrs. Catherine Fimlay, called po-| The Brathwaites were fishing ' 1 Here Dies At 69 cere ne eee ee have been received a well as Tired. Sick. The ocean js so invit-| tice and was taken to the station four hours’ -journey off shore 7 - — important results in long-distance ing. Maybe now.] will find peace. “I tried to keep her ‘warm. Dear God forgive me.”’ St. Peter's is the hospital in hree miles from the hospital BF oo Ty where—theintant saturday allernoon—————t ror daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank D. Chionchio was kidnapped only Se for questioning further. . The infant's blanket and other | clothing were found discarded { The baby weighed seven ‘pounds at birth. She was described as ;when they sighted the gondola. The gondola, still heavily stocked with food and water, was anchor ‘ed off — = the bal- towed into h harbor iw another fish- ing boat. . ? , 7 ! <3 KENTVILLE, N. S., — (CP) — Walter Amy, 69, former Irv- ing Oil Company Limited dis- trict manager for Western Nova. Scotia, died here Monday fol- , |lowing an eight-month illness. a A. native of the Isle of Jersey, ¢ YEAR IS 447 DAYS The new planet's “year"—the time it takes it to complete its | swing around the sun—will be 447 _| been carried out.” days. . Tass News Agency maximum diameter of the said the cosmic. radio communications. A number of researches of great scientific value on the~ physical problems of cosmic space have It termed the rocket ‘a maj tic event of our era of Commu. 24 hours afte birth. healthy but in. need of special] Witnesses reported the hull had : ; he came to. the Maritimes when ; so 7 ; oe FRUSTRATED MOTHER feedings and care te te a indichtion it. THE CREW OF the balloon jnavigator;- Mrs. Rosemary) crews hidden behind) Mudie at|he ‘was’ 19 aad lived in Neweas- | focket's orbit .will be 214,250,000) nist construction which “— = Police believe a women with a|. The baby’: father i. a * tans. “The ‘Small World” which was|Mpdie, 30. his wife; Arnold Baw | left) is Eiloart’s son. Timothy, | tle, N.B., before joining the of |miles and that G2 hours after) epox pean cee aoa frustrated maternal complex took|old lawyer. The cw7'e as « d :~waat shaky >: cd up at sea Monday. From|pre “Hiloart. 51, skipper of the| 21, who handicd communications | company and going to Charlotte- | launching it had reached 371,000| and said sate ae ic Te _ the infant, who was to have been | other child, Gerardette, 1. las .) (oe ative, watched py left they “are: Colin Mudie, 32, ' craft. Fourth member of the’ equipment oa the fight. | town as a supervisor. miles, far beyond the —— aulis obtal published.