TELEPHONE 8506 Buyer meets seller with Guardian Want Ads. Dial 8506 ask for classi- fied ad taker, for quick results. Ellis Mttmidliiott "Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew" 12 PAGES CHARIDTTETOWN, CANADA MONDAY, JANUARY 28, 1957 MISSIONARY TO INDIA STARTS ON HER WAY Miss Vida Stewart. R-N.. B. TEL. port at 2 p.m. Saturday on the first is seen immediately prior to her lap of her passage by air to Cal- departure from Charlottetown Alr- cutta. India where she begins her work as a Christian missionary and nurse. Being sent out by Cen- tral Christian Church. she is pic- tured (above) with the minister (left) and elders of the congrega- tion. Guardlan Photo Sandys In Washington For Vital Defence WASHINGTON AP) - British Defence Minister Duncan Ssndys arrived Sunday for four days of talks which could change the nat- ure of U.S.-British military co- operation. The talks are expected to centre about guided missile supply and development. and could result in U.S. production of such weapons for Britain. which now is planning ures. a reduction in defence expendit- Sandys. the first high-ranking British official to visit Washlngto The talks are scheduled to begin today and continue through Tues- day. Sandy: then will fly to Ot- tawa and return to Washington for two more days of conversations beginning Thursday. He is slated to fly back to Lon- don on Saturday from New York. Sandys, who arrived in New York Saturday. was questioned further by newspaper men here about his mission. He declared emphatically: "This is not a beg- ging mission." Rather, he said. "it is aimed since the Suez invasion, was at seeing how we can best co- warmly greeted at National Alr- operate." port by U.S. Secretary of Defence Mr. Wilson and I "had some Charles Wilson. Air Force Secretary Donald A. Quarles also was on hand. as were British Ambassador Sir Harold Caccia. assistant secretary of state C. Burke Elbrick and British Em- bassy officials. Condition Of Mrs. Lobobe Said Fair TORONTO CP)-The condition efanaapectant ” lnhospital here with a heart ailment de- scribed as "blockage of a'lteart valve" Sunday was reported fair. Mrs. John Lebobe of Lennon Island Indian Reservation. P. E. I.. was oved to hospital here last week. Ho pltal authorities had not decld whether to op crate on the woman. Jolly good talks three years ago on joint research and development and I hope we can continue in the light of that happy ex- pericnce." The 1954 talks. he said, also concerned guided missiles. Firm Interested ST. JOHNS, Nfld. (CP)-Premier Srnallwood, ' king tanned and rested. arrived back in St. John's front a three-week Jamaica vaca- tion Saturday night and announcui that another American otppany is Interested in the iron ore of Lab- rador. He said he had discussions with the Colorado Iron and Fuel Co.. which needs l.000.tll0 tons of ore usually for a mill it plans to set up in the eastern United States. Mr. Smallwood said he referred the company to Canadian Javelin Ltd.. holder of a large mineral soncession in Southwestern Labra- or. The Premier said he left Jam- aica last weekend for New York, where he talked with John C. Doyle. president of Canadian Jave- lin. and was in contact with the Parsons Whltternore Co.. which is considering building a paper mul on Newfoundland: south coast. P” , of a third and fourth paper mill for Newfoundland Mr. Smallwood said. depend on the out- come of talks nowproceedlng In Milan. Italy. between the British Home Damaged By Snowplow LUNENBURG. N.S. tCP) - A lirect snowplow roared downhill backwards here Sunday and into the home of Mrs. Margaret Lohnes. shifting it off its foundation and d-moiishlng one corner. The plow operator said th e brakes falled- The hole in the house was said to be large enough to drive a car through. Town work- men tttltup ilywlth canvas. Mrs. Lohnes and other occupants of the house were unhurt. All were in bed at the time. Speculate Missing Plane May Be In Northumberland Strait chtrarit. Maltocit and his mtvnmcs. an tCP)- am Sunday night. e,.m:?":I,',.dil'.m',"smm can uomuoumgy Al (A2) ---A dead. h'm”"V"""'””” "hi" r,,A,:",'.:.,";'.3E""'k" gm was also iniured- PM second to blow up the nueshavebseaambushcd with Miami 1'. Babbitt Parlee and mwwhm Mm httteothgrcnr involved nrcrr hemeofRev.Martln LutherKiag guns. 31; Q1... ma . young twucunpcntoastaeeesndayncg.p..,g.,,,'1..,,,,,,..,,u waliatclriyaood ha. 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C"'" E'''''" """"' "I" "'"' ""' ct-esutn Budapest aqua minister and an ever nguggm. in it at "I"”"'5"”""”"f"'"""iI' n''''SP - '"'l'I!cIadasllIIi!.1'IdfwO ttlsfarnilyweteawsyoaryuth '3' liter: moved hliviillsail cuties. 13' -v,.,,,,g,, . 5 ""1"" '" :.".".:'...'”"t.......i":......"r?.'.-'-'- .-:----.--.m---.. ''''''.':.:..'':'.':';:-.E'''..':.:. "':"-"-"M -i -Gilli! OIHIII an ' asaatuaa iian.'-"em htnavcqnutntayu.cuo MKNUHUU. 1, 0; 1 T .e”u ::':.:""""""' 2:." ...'.t.."..:'-' """'........ - ' gm.-3:.nud3n . ....a .. .......: ....-..'".5'.:'.'...':'.:-'...''.: leads t at" i i :1. ram ms --' ""' ''..''''n :5... .,...'-'-"'...n'-5-'5 --- ---”""--'”""-3 D a 3 cmsarlsrteetlteanernuigagslgfreunsesmafie uht.!l'Itnh-.lIut&w"aclU uunchhnudnulalglihansocueauvde eventual uggggmg-ug Talks ITALKS WITH DULLES . Sandys said he also experts to ponfer with State Secretary Dui- es. Asked if the talks would go into the Middle East situation. he said it would be "very difficult to talk without going into that problem." In New York Saturday, Sandys said the friendship between the U.S. and Britain remains un- shakcn although the American at- tltude on Suez "did come as a -great shock." Sandys' party included Dr. Robert Cockhurn, controller of guided missiles; Sir Frederick Brundett, chairman of the defence research policy committee: Sir iltfciiard--Powell. pr: see- retary of the ' y of defence: L. .l. Dunn:-tt. deputy secretary of the ministry of supply and P. H. Dean, deputy undersecretary of state. Smallwood Says Another U. S. In Iron Ore Newfoundland Corp.. and an un- rnmed Italian company. From New York Mr. Smallwood went to Cleveland, Ohio. for talks with steel companies and then to Lansing. Mich. Then he visited Ottawa for talks with Immigration Minister Pickcrsgill. Newfound- land's Federal Cabinet up. tlvc. The Premier will remain in New- foundland until Next Wedncsday or Thursday when he returns to New York for a day's'unfinished busi- ness, than a day in Ottawa and finally Quebec City to attend an an- niversary party for Prime Minister St. Laurent. lie will return to New- foundland next weekend with Mr. Pkkerggill by private plane. Officer's Wife, Daughter Killed BRECKENRIDGE. Minn. (CPI A Canadian army officer and one of his sons were in critical condi- tion in hospital here Saturday as a result of a highway ” t which the officer's wife and young daughter were killed. Mrs. K. R. Mattocks. I. and her daughter Barbara Ann, about ll months. were killed in the colli- sion between two cars at I road Junction near ht-rc. Fled Prison 22 Years Ago; Must Serve Time Now MADISON. Wis. (AP) - A 54- year-old man who has "had a good llfe" since he fled a Wisconsin state prison 22 years ago to at- tend hls father's funeral must re- turn to Jail. George Dletsch. who found a new life and a new wife. also 'ill lave to stand trial and submit to sentence for the felony of es- cape before he can hope for clem- ency. But even if there is no clem- ency: "I'll only be three years older." Dletsch said cheerfully in Iowa. "And I think I'll be Just as good a man then as am now." Dietsch was unmasked after a Jan. 8 arrest for a traffic offence in Fort Dodge. own. dtfeluwumunad 355 for . ckleu TV . En, I4 l'6ll'tlll,8d..lt Independence. ffwa. Friday night after a routine check of finger- prints identifled him as the fugi- tive Dletsch. "I'm kind of glad it's over," Dietsch said. "But had a good life. didn't hurt anybody. didn't steal any. :-IIIIIR. Everything late. paid or .. At Waupun. warden John F. Burke said authorities are on their wahy to Des Moines to return Diet- sc . Burke said Diefsch would "lose all the good time he had stored up" during the nearly three years he served on two concurrent terms of 1-5 years for burglary. His first wife divorced him and has remarried. They had five children. Order Autopsy In Death Of Twins ENFIELD. N.S. fCP))An aut- Dhny is to be performed on four- rnonth-old twin boys found (load in their bed Sunday. The children, sons o' Mr. and Mrs. i-I.-trl Mac- were sleeping in a crib near their parents. VETERAN CABBIF. QUITS NORTH BAY. Ont. (CF: 7- Wil- liam Rathwell. 71, has retired after In years as a taxi driver. He started May it, 1914 with a model '1' Ford and has run thrmuzh at can and "millions and millions of miles." ANOTHER SIX IN.HOSPITAL WITH INJURIES Six Persons Lose Lives In N.B. Dwelling Fire Sunday Report U.S. Air Force Fails In Missile Attmpt WASHINGTON (AP) -- An air force attempt to launch a test version of its Thor ballistic mis- sile was reported Sunday to have ended in failure. with the multi- 'ton rocket in wreckage. The incident occurred at Pat- rick Air Force Base, FIa.. the missile test centre used by all the armed forces and from which weapons are fired out over the tion. The usual tight I ing all missile tel around the Thor tempt. Several persons who live near the guided missile firing range told reporters they saw a bright flash in the sky between 7:30 p.m. and I p. in. Friday. Two boys fishing 30 miles from the base said they not only saw the flash but heard noises that sounded like explosions. PE NTAGON SILENT A Pentagon spokesman was asked about reports that there may have been some injuries when the Thor launching went away. The reply to this was that "in the entire period covered by the tests at Patrick Air Force iBase there have been no casualt- es." Beyond that, the Pentagon re- fused to discuss the reports. However. from unofficial sources the story seemed to add up this way: The Thor. the design specifica- tions of which call for a 1.500-mile range. had been placed in position for firing some weeks ago. If ear- lier attempts at firing had been made. they obviously hadn't suc- ceeded. recy concern- waa thrown launching at- '- Finely. touched off. The huge tube of steel lifted slowly from the launching pad. " E T a short ” t into the air-and toppled back to crash and burn front the flames fed by the fuel tanks. War Veteran Dies At 99 SPRINGIIILL. N.8. (CP) - Ben- iamin Mnnseii. 99. one of the Com- monwealthis oldest war veterans. died Saturday. Born in Shrewsbury. Eng. he enlisted in the British army at 18 and served in India. Egypt and Afghanistan. He came to Spring- hlil in 1908. Until recently the snowy-haired veteran. was a familiar figure at the logal legion hall. where he went for a daily game of cards. Is Elevated To Domestic Prelate ANTIGONISH, N.S. lCP)word has been received from the Vati- can that Rev. Donald MacPhcrson of Antlgonlah has been elevated to Domestic Prelate with the title of Right Reverend Monsignor. Msgr. MacPhcreon was for many years parish priest at Port Hood. Nova scotla. RACIAL VIOLENCE nsnswso Atlantic in a southwesterly direc- in the focleti1doTor' ' i wisr An intended few minutes of listening to a radio in a'car, with the motor running, in a small garage, resulted in the death by carbon monoxide poisoning of Med- die Arsenauit, 34. of Wellington, whose body was found by his wife about 1:30 am. on Saturday morn- g. Mr. Arsenauit, whose house radio was not working, had gone out to his car, shortly after 8:30 p.m. to hear the weather forecast and news on his car radio. He had not returned when his wife retired and she assumed that after hearing the weather forecast. he had gone to a neighbors home to watch television. Mrs. Arsenault became alarmed when 'she awakened about 1:30 am. to find her husband had not returned. On investigation discov- ered him dead in the front seat of the car, with the motor and radio operating, and the closed garage filled with poison gas accumulated in the five hours in which the mo- tor was running. Mrs. A r s e n a u l t immediately aroused a neighbor. John Day, who notified other neighbors. Dr. Ray- mond Reld and members of the Summerside detachment R.C.M.P- Coroner Dr. W.E. Callaghan was notified and after hearing a report of the medical findings of Dr. Reid and police investigation by the R.C.M.P., decided that death was accident ' and an inquest was not necessary. Mr. Arsenauit, a civilian em- ployee at R.C.A.F. Station Sum- lneraide is a veteran of the Second World War and served overseas in ;ba.canadiaa.Army. la--ed tion to his wife. the former Mary lllen Gallant of the Brae. he is New Texas Tower Floated Saturday SOUTH PORTLAND. Me. (AP) The superstructure of the third Texas tower was floated into Port- land harbor Saturday. The 3.330 - ton platform was towed out of a construction basin at the Walsh-Portland division of Continental Coppc and Steel Co. The superstructure was moored to a pier outside the "sunken bathtub" construction basins to await fabrication of the three per- mam-nt legs which will attach the Ihr9C1IPCk platform to the ocean floor. The legs are expected to be ready in May. Walsh-Portland built the second Texas tower. now in service off Nantucket. Another stands on the Georges bank. Texas towers house radar installations and their opcrating crews. CROCODILE ATTACK l(0MA'l'l POR T. Transvaal (Reuters)-A I3-year-old African 1irl is in a hospital here with se- Vere injuries after a life-and-death battle with a crocodile. She was seized by the crocodile while she swam In the Komati River. She punched it in the throat and fought her way free but her arms and legs were severely torn. y Negro's Home Is Bombed Negroes must to follow ttnue icy of cxlence. .tha I yearold minister said. auae, 'our oppresenrs control the police. the National 0 rd even, and if guru-ameat In wile falls so far, city mam-ma: have re- fused offers of outside help is curbing violence. Negroes have sonteoftltelfegroaaatths corn ecenewerevIeInIyn- fired at Kinrabmnecould have eesu-oycdtnathooseandsaverd otherslfitladgoeeefhllhal two fuses. both of wife! appC- catlyttadbecalgatlaambaraal eat.0nefuehatl&uIwltB "...'.'.”'.':..'.:.."""'”......... ext-hh"reIndaet." "I.ctusnotgetourgnns."Is u-gm. "because that In! In soIvetheprotilenn.'I'ko4eu dfuQ.weuep&Ietcx icrmnelutseftbsaewleete eewulyeeountotarewia Maui" survived by four daughters and one son, the eldest being six years of age. A sixth child is expected in April- He is also survived by his par- ents. Mr. and Mrs. Arsenault of Wellington. and by the following brothers and sisters: Ivan and Wellington Man Killed By Carbon Monoxide Gas Rennie in liamilton. Ont.; Edgar in Summerside: Joe in Quebec Province; Evelyn. married in Moncton. Laura. married in Out- ario. The funeral service will. be held this morning at 9:00 o'clock from Wellington Chapel. In Shooti TRURO (CP) - Police appeared to be making slow progress Sun- day in their investigation of the fatal shooting of two friends near here early Friday. RCMP said little about the case but one orticial ' ”' f S nothing has been uncovered to link a third person with the shoot- ings. No arrests have been made. Stanley Marr. 21. Truro laborer. will be buried today. (Monday). He was found dead with three bullet wounds in his body in the school-yard at Cmwes Mills. five miles west of here. His friend Murray Otterson, 2). a woods worker of Crowes Mills, was pulled dead from Marr's burn- ing car at Debctt. 12 miles from Truro. Otterson had been shot once through the forehead. A .22-calibre rII'Ie was found in the car. Otierson is said to have borrowed the gun from a neighbor Heavy Drift Ice Off St. John's ST. JOHNS, Nfld. (CP)-Heavy northern drift ice appeared off St. John's Sunday for the first time this season. The ice has blocked in most com- munities along the northeast coast of Newfoundland and is stringing into Conception Bay. It threatens to block the tlI'ec- mile Conception Bay tickle between Portugal Cove. about I0 rules from St. John's, and Bell Island. Two years ago Bell Island was cut off from the rest of Newfoundland by the ice for several weeks at a time. A httrrl winter has brought the ire against the coast early this year. Most years the ice blockade does not reach this far south until early spring. Former Missionary Dies Ai Pictou PI('Tt)l7. NS. (CP) - Dr. Jem- ima .'iiacKcnzie. 85. who devoted her life to the mission fields of India and adopted 44 children in the nrorcss. died Sunday after a month's iilnc-s. Dr. Mackenzie gtaduated from Da lh nus ie University Medical School in Halifax, IQM. and went to India under the auspices of the Union wnmt-n's Missionary Soci- Qty of Non York. She served the orizanizaiion almost M years. In I92-t -he returned to India as is rcprc-at-nt.-itive of the United Church of Canada. She was re- sponsible for ll1f' building of at hospital at Faichpur and estab- llsiniz a dispensary a few miles away Twenty-tun nf Iu-r adopted Chil- dren are still Iixing. two of them In Canada in IN!) Dr Mat-Kenzie received an honorary L141 from Dalhousie University. It I953 she was awarded a fellowship of the Canadian ' ” 'S0ciet!- The Caribbean Federation Has Development Plan KINGS10N. Jamaica (Reuters) The standing committee of the Eitilh Caribbean Federation will The proposal was embodied in a memorandum approved by the committee Friday. f The niemorandum suggests that the federation as Britain to lend E Hubert Humphrey. neeota Democrat. John Foster DuiIee' usefulness may be bearing an end because that of what Humphrey called Con- Slow Progress ng Case the previous day. Police report signs of a struggle near where Marr's body was tound by school children. Inquests into both deaths will re- sume here Friday, I Oil Deliveries To Europe Are Slow WASHINGTON (AP)-The gov- ernment appealed Saturday for an increase in U. S. oil production and a slowdown on gasoline refin- ing to help meet "an especially critical period" in the European critical pert " in the European oil famine. West European nations cut off from much of their regular sup- ply sourccs by the Suez Canal closing are surely in need of fuel andh ” oils.the" ' de- partment said. but can get along on rationed gasoline. The statement was issued by Fliex E. Wormser. assistant sec- retary for mineral resources, whose office disclosed that emer- gency shipments to Europe had slumped to an ayerage of 2'lS.tlJtl barrels a day during the week ended Jan. 10. The daily target set when the , emergency program was started last November was from 03,000 to 500,000 barrels a day. Predicts Manitoba To Join Health Plan WINNIPEG CP) - The Free Press said Saturday it has a reli- able report that Manitoba will al- most certainly enter the proposed national health insurance plan if it is modified to meet the wishes of Ontario. The newspaper quoted "I source close to the Manitoba gov- ernment" as saying the Ontario plan has slight modifications of some importance compared with the more ambitious federal plan. Health Minister R. W. Bend said he had a confidential talk with Ontario officials. but he was unable to disclose the details of the Ontario proposals. WEATHER Cloudy with a few dear Intervals and widely scattered aaewflurrlee; milder. Low-high at Charioitetown I and 25. i All Twelve Lived In Tiny House BATI-IURST, N.B. (CP)-Flames starting from an overheated home- made stove quickly consumed a small house where 12 persbna were taken to hospital at Tracadie. The tragedy occurred near the settlement of Black Rock, eight miles from Grand Anse. a Glou- cester County Bay of Chaleur com- mupity N miles northeast of Bath- urs . The dead: Wilfred Savoie. 25: his wits, Jennlne. 23. his mother. Mrs. Moiae Savoie. 59; his two children. one-month-old Wilfred and two year-old Gladys; Marie Alexand- rine Savoie, 6. an adopted daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Molae Savole. Marie died in hospital. In hospital were Molse Savoie. 61, Francis Savoic, 22, a brother of Wilfred Savoic, Sr.: Mrs- Fran- cis Savole, 22; their year-old girl, Mable; Leonard Savoie, 24, brother of Wilfred, and Elizabeth Savole, 17, sister of Wilfred. R.C.M.P. Constable l(.E. Taylor of Caraquet said tin victims ages were only approximate as the sur- vivors, suffering severely from shock and multiple burns. could not be questioned by police for a week or 10 days. Hospital author ltlea reported their conditions fair. Investigation by Constable Tay- lor revealed than the tarpapeired shack. with paper also tacked on the inside walls, had a small attie over the single storey and was only 20 feet square. The destroyed structure con- tained a kitchen and two bedrooms with the home-made stove. fashioned from an oil drum and . resting lengthwise on a makeshift ' frame. situated near a -. door. 1. It was unknown whether oil or wood was used for fuel. Before an- tering hospital. leonard savoia told a neighbor that someone had stoked the stove about 4 a.m. The fire occurred between 6 and 7 a.m Police leaned that Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred Savole and their two children were in one bedroom. Neighbors said Mrs. Moiae Savole ' and Marie slept together in another The attic was vacant. With the nearest inhabited bottle , about 500 yards away. the flames spread to quickly for anyone to i save those trapped. The survlvorl. Q C some leaving bloody prints in now. i ' staggered to an unoccupied is house 100 yards from the burn- f- ing home. Residents of the area 3 then drove them to hospital. ' Leonard. awakened by heat. was the first to ace the fire. He helped out young Gladys but could not 1'9- enter the inferno. Overcrowding of the dwelling happened by chance. The Snvoia men had planned to stay there only temporarily and leave this (Monday) morning for work in nearby lumber woods. Coroner Marcella Theriault ten- tatlveiy decided an inquest would I l I HISTORIC WELL An ancient "holy well" at Bod- min is named after St. Guron. who founded a hermliage in the old Cornish town 1,500 years ago. he y but said a ruling would be made by Chief Coroner Norman Anderson at Fredericton. The victims. most burned be- ynnd recognition, will be buried this morning from the Roman Ca- tholic Church at Paquetvilie. U. 5. Senator Sees Possibility DulIes' Usefulness Nears End WASHINGTON AP - Senator leading Min- said Sunday affairs the present dilemma." a-itlciae Dulles for retlaraa a Dem. British-Preach troops in hg congreaeialnl tmthtcay hug for an investigation of the no . rctary's conduct of lorei action on the resolution. Kefauver said there must be I general review of the admin latratton's foreign policy action contributed to coathaeta but an- ht British newspapers The left - wing News I Dulles "Ilstory'aUf! In th Blot”