TELEPHONE 8506 . Buyer meets seller with Guardian Want Ads.’ Dial 3506 ask for classified ad ae taker, for quick results. CANADA, MONDAY Starts Into By HAROLD K. MILKS MOSCOW (AP) — The Soviet | 2ews Union's cosmic rocket blazed air everdengthening trail into space Sunday night and_was reported gradually entering into orbit the sun, with its radio i TE a7E4 { ay by i ef i i i iF ‘fl ig , . Orb agency promised. Citizens, in their first enthu- siasm over a Soviet rocket being fired in the direction of the moon had dubbed it Lunik—a combina- tion of Sputnik and Luna for moon, They continued Sunday to be intensely incerested. GROUNDS GATHERED Sunday crowds gathered at Moscow’s planetarium and else- where to hear lectures on space exploration and to ask questions. Sunday newspapers were filled with comments on the perform- ance, its effect in building Soviet prestige and on predictions of new space ventures. The predictions contained noth- ing specific as to what will come next in the Soviet scientific pro- gram. Neither were there further details on the rocket itself, its launching site or its power. Alexander Topchiev, vice-pres- t Around Sun ; fescaece the official Soviet ident of the Academy of Sciences said the rocket will never fall back to earth. ' SYSTEMS INFERIOR . Rocket expert Viadimir Dob- ronravov said American scien- tists had been: unable to over- come the earth's gravity because not only their rocket engines but also. their control-systems were inferior. Astronomer Vasily Fesen- kov said one of the aims of Am- érican probes was to photograph the far side of the moon. He said makes possible in the future the televising of the back side of the moon. Moscow Radio’s announcement of the rocket’s passing the moon was first quoted as saying a tele- scope was aboard and would scan — This rn to be erron- By ROBERT ELPHICK MOSCOW (Reuters)—The first feeling of jubilation at the suc- cess of Russia’s cosmic rocket was giving way in Moscow Sun- day to a more sober political atessment of exactly what this means in terms of international prestige and authority. The central committee ef the Soviet Communist party, in a message of congratulations to all duce the rocket, has already said the achievement demonstrates to all humanity the creative genius of the Soviet people. Premier Khrushchev said he Sunday’s Moscow newspapers contained full and eee: — from such centres as N London, Paris and i! United States has nothing com- parable to the Russian rocket. PROMINENT POSITION President Ejisenhower’s mes- sage of congratulation was printed prominently at the top of By JOHN SCALI WASHINGTON (AP) — Anas- éas Ivanovich Mikoyan Sunday discovered for himself the world of the cellophane-wrapped break- fast doughnut. ‘ » He also learned that overnight ia “American motels don’t have to make their own beds. Kt happened during surprise vis- to a roadside restaurant in , NJ., and a motel in Without advance notice, the So- viet deputy premier decided to stop at these two places during his police-escorted limousine trip from New York to Washiltgton. He spied the dough us-<dtnsi He spied the doughnuts dis-* played on a metal rack on oge of ‘the restaurant counters. Seem- ingly amazed, he walked over to @xamine the display at close Tange. study v Ater some 30 seconds he turned. to leave, then looked sack again as if to impress the Doughnuts Take Eye Of Mikoyan sight on his mind. ~ Mikoyan glanced only briefly at a popcorn machine and a glass and chrome cigaret vending ma- chine as he made his way to a counter: stool. It was the dough- nuts that brought a.double take from the Kremlin’s No. 2 man. SCANS MENU As 2 policemen, government security agents, Soviet aides and reporters watched, he scanned the menu and whispered his order to Ambassador Mikhail Menshi- | Kov. Doughnuts? Nope. He ordered tomato juice; toast, marmalade and coffee? At the motel, about 30 miles from Baltimore, Sharpe D. Kar* per, the owner, dressed casu in a sports shirt, showed through three of the rooms. / Speaking through his interpre- ter, Mikoyan asked if the guests make up their beds. those whe have worked to pro>| =\Moscow Adds Up Rocket Prestige - a column in Pravda, the Soviet communist party newspaper. Prof. Anatoly Blagonravov, head of the technical science section of the Soviet Academy; youth newspaper Komsom- olskaya Pravda that it would be “incorrect to minimize and be derogatory about the work of and its problems seems to me to be erroneous. “In the Soviet Union, any cos- mic experiment is first and fore- most a scientific experiment. In the United States, it seems to me, there is a chase after the sensa- tional, ghia ow thew is oc- cupied by aims having nothing in common with science," .| PROPAGANDA POINTS Two main propaganda points which emerge from the Moscow to reach international agreement on the conquest of outer space before it is too late. In London, Prime Minister Mac-. millan sent an official message of congratulation to. Premier Khrushchev on the success of the rocket, and said British scientists “join me in congratulating their Soviet colleagues and all those concerned in this project.” Space scientists in Britain said Russia* had scored a bull’s eye in missing the moon by only 4,660 miles with the rocket. Elsewhere in the world, reac- ‘|tion ranged from cautious con- gratulation in Western countries to jubilation in the Communist. Prof. J. P. Baxter, chairman of Australia’s Atomic Energy Com- mission, said the billions of dol- lars being spent on space rocket projects would be almost entirely unproductive. SEES SMOKE SCREEN A lot of the talk about space travel and rockets- to the~ moon was a smoke screen to hide the fact that the purpose of the im- mense expenditure involved was really rhilitary, he added. In a primative reaction, thou: sands of frightened Africans throughout Natal swamped their employers with questions of “when are we going to die?” after hearing the news of. the launching, They believed the moon was “hanging in the sky” and would “Oh, no,” said Karper firmly. “My wife and I have servants.” fall to earth and kill everybody when hit by the rocket. New Generation Appears A By DOROTHY ROE H\ NEW YORK ‘AP)—A new gen- eration has taken over the list of the world’s best-dressed women, with the ‘elegant old guard re- tired to permangnt honors in a newly created fashion hall of fame. ’ Two New Yorkers are tied for first place in the annual list, is sued by the couture group of the best-dressed title were elevated to fashion’s hall of fame be- cause, the institute said, ‘‘their faultless taste in dress, with- out ostentation or extravagance, pla¢es them. above annual com- parison.” They are: The Duchess of Windsor, Mrs. William Paley of New York, Countess -Edward von Bismarck Jacques Balsan of Palm Beach, New York DreSs Institute and se-} Countess Edward von Bismarck lectei by written ballets of 2,500 | fashion .expert¢™hroughout the | world. They are Countess Rodolfo ‘ ry O’Connor, one of the O'Connor twins of New York tover-girl fame, and Mrs. Win- mton Guest, long noted for) her elegant restraint in dress. / Eight perennial holders’ of the . famous of Paris, Queen Elizabeth, Mme. Jacques Balsan of Palm Beach j;and New York (‘the former Con- suelo Vanderbilt) stage star Dunne, and actress Claudefte Col- bert : Others of the new and youthful 1959 best-dressed list arc: Mrs. Henry Ford 1! i /- Princess | Margaret, Countess Quintanilla | In Best Dressed Women of Madrid, Mme. Arturo Lopez- Willshaw of Paris, Mrs. William Randolph Hearst, Jr., Mrs: Rex Harrison -of ‘London (film star ‘Kay Kendall), Mrs. Thomas Ban croft Jr., of New York, Mrs. Nor- man K. Winston of New York, Mrs. Mel Ferrer (film star Aud- rey Hepburn), Mrs. Stanley Rum- bough Jr.. (Dina Merrill, actress of New York), Mrs. David K. Bruce (‘wife of the United States ambassador to. West Germany), afd Mrs. Bruno :Pagliai of Mex. ico ‘actress Merle Oberon). The new leaders of worhi fash- More than two-thirds are well be- low mildle age, the majority are American and most all are active | in svorts or other inter- € sem out of the old caiegory of “thothés horse.” ” case the successful Soviet launching] the pockmarks on the|*- told readers of the Moscow = roa nang agg tgs ~ <a bod in the legislative chamber to dis- Following tiermeeting Mr. Mac- HAVANA (AP) — Rebel leader Fidel Castro Sunday night called off the general strike that has paralyzed Cuba since his bearded rebels took over from Gulgencio Batista’s dictatorship. A broadcast by Havana Radio said Castro urged all workers to go back to their jobs. All stores a business establishments in this island nation, closed down since New Year’s Day, were told fo open their doors. Industries, transport and communications were told sume regular. work schedules“ Castro spoke from Camaguey province in central Cuba, Havana Radio said, The end of the general strike is expected to be a major move toward bringing the once-flourish- ing commerce and trade in Cuba —sometimes called ‘‘the pearl of the Antilles’—back to normal. Another move was an order from Castro’s men to disarm thousands of volunteers who have been prowling the streets of Ha- vana, guns at the ready. SECURITY STABILIZED? An end to the strike also indi- cated that rebel forces felt the security situation.in Havana had stabilized and there was no ser- ious danger from a eounter-re- volt. Things have still not calmed sufficiently, however, to permit regular airline travel in and out of Cuba. A spokesman for Pan American Airways, denying ‘an earlier report, said neither his line nor any other companyetas received permission from the pro- visional government to resume commercial flights. Conquering hero Fidel Castro kept the city waiting impatiently for his arrival. But with Cuba in _ “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” ‘Y 5, 1959 12 PAGES. Em x bl iis 2 Mr. Maclsaac said the talks highly successful. He asserted|were completely informal and a Maclsaac | that he personally had gained a | free 25 delegates, rep- | great deal of information regard- labour throughout the |ing labour problems and at the productive ideas aimed at better- meet with the minister sqme time he was given the op-|ing the conditions of the working free expression of opinion was enjoyed by ail. He said. many portunity of presenting hits de-|peoplé had been brought forth s views on various as-jat the meeting. Mr.’ MaclIsaac partment’ e- pects of labour - legisiction. of exercising personal power. Fulgencio Batista which reached a -climax with Batista’s flight New Year's morning was ad. vancing slowly at the head of a column of his bearded warriors, screaming crowds. The leader of the revolt against | troops who was elect sd to the Island leg- Castro Moves To Restore Normal Activities In Cuba He was in copies. 350 miles east of Ha- reported reviewing vi There was no official hint as to wher"Castro or Urrutia, whom pausing at each town to receive he boosted to office, would reach a hysterical welcome from! Havana. There were reports how- (Continued on page 2 col. 3) OTTAWA (CP)—U.S. State Sec- retary Dulles, fresh from a Ja- maican holiday, flies into Ottawa today to engage in new attempts by Canada and the United States to“reduce rifts and’ barriers be- tween these partners in the world’s biggest bilateral trade. Finance Minister Fleming, with some notable successes ‘under his belt as chairman of the Septem- ber Commonwealth trade confer- ence at Montreal, will preside at the high-level talks, spearhead- ing Canadian attempts to reduce American curbs on imports of oil, lead ami zinc. He and his colleagues, includ- ing Trade Minister Churchill, Agriculture Minister Harkness and External Affairs Minister Smith, likely will also seek as- surances that the U.S. will not attempt to invade traditional Canadian markets for wheat with ee. Canadian informants anticipate that Mr. Dulles, heading a five- the .plam of his hand, he was re- ported’ saying he has no intention man U.S. cabinet delegation, the biggest seen in Ptyawa in recent ‘MONTREAL (CP): — A CNR spokesman said one of the 13 per- sons taken to hospital following a train wreck Saturday 300 miles north of here was released Sun- day. ; The railway said Mrs. Denis Duquette of Bourlamaque was ,re- leased after spending the night in hospital in Val d'Or. Tweive persons stil] remain in hospital feri injuries ranging from head cuts -to leg, ck, stomach and head injuries. / » . The railway said at least 4 persons were injured—28 of them superficiglly—when, 13 ears of a CNR Derailment In: Quebec Injures Some 41 Passengers . Quebec City to Senneterre was derdiled. Many of the injured were treated by a medical.team flown to the derailment site. The injured all of Quebec prov- inte, -still in hospital were iden- tified as: Mrs. A. Legasse and Miss G. Levine, both of Malartic; Mrs. Emma Martel, Loretteville; Miss I. Baker, Mrs. E. Tannahill and Mrs. ‘Leopold Pepin; all of Nor- Robert ‘Tremblay. ,Clericy: Real Roy. and nine-month que; Mrs. a stepped-up American. giveaway | ‘anda, Mrs. M. Bourassa, ba-Tu-+ Dulles Visits Ottawa Today years, assurances that Canada’s tough new.anti-dimping Jaws will not be used to discrim- inate against shipments of Ameri- can textiles and other goods. AMERICAN GROU.’ Mr. Dulles and his group, to in- clude Agriculture Secretary Ben- son, Treasury Secretary Ander- son, Commerce Secretary Strauss and Interior Secretary Seaton, a scheduled to arrive at nearby Up- lands Airport at 4:45 p.m. EST. old Franc.ne. Langlois, Heva Mrs. L. Williams, Quebec City passenger twain heading from _4 and Mrs. Belanger. Tascheread. Cheerfny and waving revolu iUonary banners these girls ap- ~ Camaguey Sunday} HISTORY MAKING CONFERENCE HELD A history inshing wechend con. |lenne said the get-together was islature on a straight labour tic- ket, said he was hopeful that a would give management an op- portunity to air their views on {management-labour relations. Press Search Eer Kidnapped N.Y. Baby Girl NEW YORK (AP)—The . FBI and police Sugday intensified the search for a girl who was 2% thours old when she was kidnap- ped during Friday night from a Brooklyn hospital. 2 A woman who had been ‘seen. loitering about the hospital is being sought in the case. The clothing of the seven-pound infant was found Saturday after- noon by two boys playing in a vacant store three miles from St. Peter’s Hospital, where the child was snatched from its bassinet in the fourth-floor nursery. A floodlighted house-to-house search of the area failed to turn up urther cflues. The baby, second daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank D. Chionchio, was to have been baptized Lisa Rose. She was born at 9:17 p.m Friday. - * ‘A nurse on a routine nursery check discovered the Chionchio child was gone. KILLED ON HIGHWAY GOLD RIVER, N. Ss. (CP)— Able Seaman Hugh St. Clair Hamm, 22, was killed Saturday when he was struck by a car near his home here. He was @ crew member on the navy s de- stroyer-Ottawa. es = CHEERS FOR C Fidel i driving through Havana en plaud Castro's troopers WASHINGTON (AP) — Rus- sia’s Anastas I. Mikoyan arrived Sunday for what he called an American “‘holiday,’’ but quickly arranged to meet with State Sec- retary Dulles at noon Monday be- fore Dulles leaves for Ottawa. The 63-year-old first. deputy So- viet premier said he is ready and 4 willing to talk about ‘the Berlin crisis or any other East -- West problem during the two weeks he rexpects-to be inthe United States. Mikoyan, who ranks as No. 2 Kremlin leader; said he also hopes to meet with President - | Eisenhower. “We respect him in our coun- i try,’ Mikoyan said as he stepped | off a Scandinavian airliner in New '| York. “It would be a pleasure to see him.” 400 SECURITY GUARDS and government security agents guarded Mikoyan’s every step as he arrived at New York’s Idle- wild Airport early this morning. A dozen Hungarian refugee- freedom fighters, -waving anti- Communist placards, shouted “Communist dog’? and ‘‘mur- derér’’ as he left by police - es- corted limousine for Washington. The strict security precautions prevented any further demonstra- tions, and Mikoyan ignored the taunts. State department officiais said Eisenhower would be happy to meet with Mikoyan even though the visitor has not yet requested a White House appointment. Any Ejisenhower-Mikoyan talk, however, may be delayed unti the Soviet leader returns from a cross-country tour of about 10 days, during which he will visit several other American cities. JOVIAL MOOD In a jovial mood, Mikoyan New Year message of ‘“‘peace and ——. About 400 New York policemen | ‘ha brought what he called Russia’s| i ‘Holiday’ Hopes To See Eisenhower “My first message is to convey chev to the American people and their leaders,” he said. “We are fighting for peace and we hope the American people will make a contribution toward that end. “I wish you peace in the New Year and forever.’’ Mikoyan was accompanied by ambassador Mikhail Menshikov and five aides including his 29- year-old son, Sergo Anastasovich. __ Mikoyan’s expressed readiness to talk over foreign policy prob- lems did little to clear up the air of mystery about his visit. Few administration officials believe he has come only for a vacation as guest of Ambassador Menshikov. Most authorities strongly sus- pect his trip is a cold war man- oeuvre, perhaps linked to the Ber- lin crisis. Some believe Mikoyan sions to ease this deadlock. NO PROBLEMS On arriving in Washington, koyan, asked if he w: to | to U.S. officials about fessed to have no Jem on his mind. “If there is a meeting, probably will be a discussion various subjects.” He hailed Russia's launching a rocket moon but sidestepped about whether Russia data gained from it countries. He answered sian scientists already ing information as part of the nl Te ry j etal vith 3 sical Year explorations. HANGED IN CELL TORONTO (CP) — Police said self in his cell with the sleeve of his sweater. WASHINGTON (AP) — Deputy Premier Anastas I. Mikoyan of Russia went for a stroll Sunday and nearly became a traffic sta- tistic. He also had to duck site when high winds toppled a street light. and sprinkled\ him with’ fly ‘ling glass. But he threw personal safety to the considerable winds and pressed on for two hours and three miles. During his Sunday afternoon stroll, he managed to! Visit the Washington monument and express disappointment be- cause the elevator is under re- pair and he could not go to top. IGNORES RED LIGHTS Ignore a score of red lights be- ASTRO’S MEN | The streets of the Mikoyan Ignores Red Lights During Stroll In Washington tween the Soviet Embassy and the WashiriZton Monument. inquire about how one rents @ car. Spend, a half howr touring the Corcoran art gallery, where he pooh - poohed modern American paintings (“it looks like some- thing my grandchikiren might do’) but applauded some nudes by Jean Carot. Get himself photographed look- ing in a bookstore window under a big sign - advertising Doctor Zhivago. The controversial Nobel prize novel, by Soviet writer e|Boris Pasternak, is banned in Russia. Window-shop at delicatessens, book stores, haberdasheries and smart women's stores. rq city are) blocks established at\\ almost heavily guarded with road-|every § intersection, greetings from Premier Khrush- ° now-ended International Geophy- - Learn about parking meters and —