I I TELEPHONE 8506 Buyer meets seller Want Ads. 12 PAGES THE NEW executive of the Prince Edward Island Federa- tion of Agriculture are pictured just after they were named last night. Front row, left to right, Move For Province-wide Potato Growers Group A move to set up a province wide potato farmers organiza- tion that would have the back- ing of all. or at least the great majority of growers was initiat- ed last night at the annual meet- ing of the Provincial, Federation of Agriculture. A report from a special committee under the chairmanship of Frank Jardine, Freetown suggested that other non—active potato organizations be asked to surrender their char- ter and the federation “urge and promote the amalgamation of existing organizations into one province-wide organzaton under ~ the name, constimfion“and"“h:?5I laws of the Potato Producers organzation, or as it may be seen fit to amend them”. The suggestion created _some spirited discussion and was fin- ally turned over to the executive for further study and .recom- mendation. It was suggested such an or- Dial 8506 ask for classi. 5“ ad take?» for quick results. with GE ardian Authorized as Second Class Mail by an Pg.‘ om, Departn ont Ottawa George Riley, Hamilton, 1st vice president; C. B. Waugh, Wilmot Valley, president; Kenneth Mac- Lean, Lot 16, 2nd vice presi- dent; J.L. Dewar, New Perth, ganization should be affiliated with the Federation as a mem- gested that this would very likely be possible. - MANY PROBLEMS This was one of the m-any pro- blems studied yesterday by the delegates to the Federation's an- nual meeting held in the Char-- lottetown Hotel during the after- noon and evening. C. B. Waugh, the president, was in the chair. «Hon. Eugene Cullen. Minister. of Agriculture, referred. to the in the number of ‘lesser decline. in the number of farms. This showed a tendency toward lar- ger farm operations. I ber organization and it was sug-- Eltc fiuurnliuu “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew" secretary. Standing, left to right, [George Shaw, Cape Wolfe; Rol- land MacDonald, Southport; Archie London; lottetown, the Picture is D. M. MacLean, DeGros Marsh. Dave Wright, Char- R.R. Missing from Johnstone, Burlington, past president; Ian Henderson, New Commons To Adiourn For Convenfion OTTAWA (CP)—Prime Minis- ation briefly by the indicated that ‘sir Diefenbaker Friday Sale "0- tice that the Commons will be 5”?‘ :’° ““d°"‘”°Vh*° 1):"? is1‘““ adjourned next Wednesday night eggs hendered to t e gricu tur- and. -mm-5day_ I al Prices Support Board. His notice of motion published When the surplus is taken off Friday gave no reasons for the the market he said, ' there adjournment, but it is in connec- . tion with the Liberal party lead- sh°uld_ be’ _” unpmvement 1'' ership covention here next Tues- ll‘; P"°_° P3? 1093111?’-M day, Wednesday and Tliursdavyéd arming S 8 8 Y c0m- The conven on program - petitive industry and the far- nesday night calls for_speeches mer s vulnerable to changes in by nominated leadership candi- 31‘-larketsfand pricis for his 1t3lro- dilutes, with wfindup pi-locfiledingus cers aces a eavier ou ay as election 0 a new e or, formaclijnery and o,ther,,equip- Discussing the egg price situ- CHARLOTTETOWN ‘CANADA, SATURDAY, JANUARY 11, 1958 Fire last night destroyed a wat' er-powered lumber mill at Bay View, near Stanley Bridge, the property of Rupert Simpson. Other nearby buildings, the pro- perty of W. A. Simpson, were saved by the combined efforts of the Rustico and Hunter Riv- er fire departments. The fire was discovered around 9:00 p.m. but was too far ad- vanced to be checked by the time the first fire department notified that they were laid off effective Monday. George R. Greenough, superin- tendent of the Island division said last night that he was unable to state how long the section em- ployees would be away from HALIFAX (CP)—They came on crutches, canes and in wheel- chairs Friday to pay final tribute to Walter Callow. The withered body of the man who fought blindness, pain and paralysis for his fellow cripples, was carried through the streets of Halifax escorted by soldiers. In cars watching the slow_ pro- cession were many of the inval- ids and cripples his determined succeed oppositlonleader St. Lou-mind-worlsal ' -But missingwas ment which means greater cred- it requirements. Mr. Waugh said yesterday in his presidents re-. port. rent, Thursday. , The Minister told the group they could play an important part by using their province-wide organization to keep the depart- ment informed of developments relating to agriculture. Report More Jobless Than At Any Time,Since Depression OTTAWA (CP) — More people are looking for jobs in Canada than at any time since the De- pression. Labor Minister Michael Starr told the Commons Friday that at Dec. 26 there were 698,153 per- sons regis-tered for work with the National Employment Service, al- most double the figure for mid- ,November. A nd government informants said unemployment is still on the rise and likely will continue that trend until March. While employment service reg- istrations are not an absolute gauge of unemployment, they are used as a basis for comparison with previous years, taking into account the fact that a percen- tage of applicants are looking for different jobs than those they al- ready hold. Mr. Starr's figure brought a prompt demand for government action from President Claude Jo- doin of the 1,000,000-member Ca- nadian Labor Congress. “We are sorry to see that these figures bear out what we have been saying,” the CLC chief said. NOT “CRY WOLF” “It now is obvious that predic- tions of a serious situation have not been simply cries of ‘wolf.’ It is also obvious that there is urgent need for action now and preventive measures to avoid such situations developing in the future." , The labor m.inister’s job regis- tration total is the biggest for any period since the National Em- ployment Service, created in 1940 legislation, star-ted functioning in 1941. While earlier statistics are not available. it would also beat any for the earlier wartime period. It probably was exceeded during the Depression, though no figures are recorded for that time. Closest post-war approach to it came at the high point of unem- ployment in mid-Ma-rch of the re- cession year of 1955, when the registrations with National Em- ployment Service rose to 632,914. At that time, Canada had a con- sidera-bly smaller labor force than now-—5.400.000 against about 6,000,000 now. Up until last month, the highest December figure on job seekers was 465,000, in 1954. In December 1956, the registrations totalled 387,327. DOUBLE IN SIX_ WEEKS In mid-November"-the last pre- vious time for which figures were available ——- the job registrations were 352,000, meaning they prac- tically doubled in less than six weeks. Says U. S. Needs I0-Year y Special Drive WASHINGTON (AP)—-The bal- ance of military power is shifting, In Missiles chinery and the goals it has set. He told the Senators, who are ,digg1ng into the reasons why the '°‘V‘"d ““_‘§‘a- Ne1_5°“ A: R°°“°',United States has fallen behind fcller lCSlllICd Friday. and the Russia in the missile and satay United States must make a 10- lite fields, that his panel feels the Year “sustained, major effort.” to United States would have the ca- Pull ahead. pacity to meet any Soviet military Roc cfeller headel a special 30-‘moves in the next year or two man study group which recom- but the situation after that would mcndcd last week that the US. depend on what steps the coun- SICD up us defence spending by $3.00().000.00() each year for the next several years. He was called before the Son ale preparedness subcommittee to expand on the study group's ideas of what needs to be done, PW Rockcfcllcr put it. to “assure our .<u1'\:\:iI.“ 0\'ERHAl'l. .\',ECESS.\RY Iiockcfcllcr said it \\&I.\ the try takes now to strengthen itself. ‘One recommendation of thel Rockefeller group was that the chairman of the joint chiefs of staff be made the principal mil- itary adviser to the president and the secretary of defence. N0 GENERAL STAFF Rockefeller said this would not set up a Prussian - type general staff or “a man on a white house" because the chief military I«IIl£1llll’ll(\ll.\ opinion of 1-mm‘ bl) ua- a(l\'!:Gl’ would still be under the tional leaders consulted in the civilian control of the president. study that there must ho a <li'a.<- his defence secretary and Con- llc overhaul of the defence ma- grass. He noted that in this Province the economc well being of the farmer is .tied in closely with that of the busnessman and the wage earner. However agricul- ture here must depend on finding an export market for most of its production. As an employer, he said, far- ming is giving way to manu- facturers but this is due in part at last to agriculture, be- cause farms are becomng in- creasingly more mechanized, he stated. NEED ORGANIZATION The president stressed the need ‘of a strong farm organiz- ation. Some of the the things were particularily necessary in- cluded provision of long term credit at low interest rates. OTTAWA (CP) -— Prime Minis- ter Diefenbaker Friday hinted that details of special assistance grants to the Atlantic provinces will be disclosed within a few days. He was replying in the Com- mons to J. W. Pickersgill (L- ’Bonavista-Twillingate) who asked whether the grants would be made for the current fiscal year. ending next March 31, or for the 1958-59 fiscal year. Mr. Diefenbaker replied that if Mr. Pickersgill would wait a few days “the answer to the question will not only be apparent but Hints Grants To Atlantic Provinces May Come Soon nounced the governmen-t’s inten- tion to make the grants during last November's federal - provin- cial conference on fiscal matters. WANTS YOUTH BACK BUDAPEST (AP) -— Hungary's Communist government has asked a United Nations agency to help it get back young people who fled the country after the failure of the 1956 revolt. Jozsef Karpati, head of the Hungarian Red Cross, said the Red regime handed over “full data" on 629 young Hungar- ians in Austria to Auguste Lindt, UN high commissioner for refu- complete." Education for rural living was The prime minister m-st an. stressed as necessary for the pre- servaton of the family farm, Children must be educated as well as parents and leaders in the community. Looking at the problems facing agriculture, Mr. Waugh re- minded the meeting that no- body is going to solve the far- mer‘s problem if he does not look after his own affairs. We live in changing times and we must keep abreast of conditions.” he admonished. IS RE-ELECTED Mr. Waugh was re-elected as president of the organization. Other officers and members of the executive are as follows: A. M. Johnstone, Burlington. past president; George Riley, Hamilton, lst vice president; Kenneth MacLean. Central Lot 16, 2nd vice-president; members of the executive George Shaw, Cape Wolfe; Ian Henderson, New London; D. M. MacLean, DeGros Marsh; Roland Mac- Complaints that carloads of feeder pigs are being imported into this province were made to the Prince Edward Island Fed- eration of Agriculture at its an- nual meeting yesterday in the Charlottetown Hotel. The com- plaint was voiced by David Wright, Charlottetown R.R. who was reporting to the Federation from the Swine Breeders Associ- ation. The ensuing discussion was participated in a number of Fed- eration directors including Max Thompson, Victoria and George MacPherson Jr. of Launching gees, who visited Budapest sec- Fire Destroys Bay View Mill I ow, wheelchair‘ arrived on the scene. It is un- derstood that most of the lum- ber in the vicinity of the fire was hauled to safety, but that the mill property was a total loss. \ It was not until after midnight that the nearby barns’ were considered safe from the fire. They are separated from the scene of the blaze by a single roadway. No estimate of damage incur- red was available at press time. Report 21 C.N.R. Section Men Are Laid Off In Province It was reported last night that twenty—one CNR section men were work. At press time it was not known whether this lay-off was general ‘ throughout the Maritimes or con- fined to the Island Division alone. One employee affected by the winter layoff was said to have had thirty-three years service with the local railroad. Military Funeral Yesterday At Halifax For Walter Callow coach he invented to transport in- valids. , About 350 people sat in St. An- drew’s United Church where the big oaken, flag-draped coffin was carrle by members of the Black Watc Highland Regiment. They heard Maj. James Miller, East- ern Army Command chaplain, speak of “this splendid contribu- ter to the welfare of man” and “the fertile mind of one who learned. to .SIlffe.l:.'_'..g--.«,~-,-... .,—,»_- The 62-year-old war veteran be- came paralyzed in 1930, 13 years after a Royal Flying Corps plane accident in Ontario. He spent the last 20 years helping soldiers, vet- erans and invalids. The greats of his dreams was the invention of the wheelchair coach. It became a reality in 1947. But he never saw one; he be- came blind about a year before the first coach reached Halifax. Knowing his frail body could not last too long, Mr. Callow built up an organization that could con- tinue after his death. Mounted Halifax police led the procession to the church. Behind them came a guard of honor from the Black Watch. The coffin was on an artillery gun carridge and behind that came more soldiers and police. The procession passed Camp Hill veteran’s hospital where Mr. Callow lay almost mo- tionless for nearly 20 years. The body will be taken to his birthplace near Parrsboro, N.S., retly last weekend. Waugh. The fear was expressed that the importation of the feeder took from Ontario might bring with it hog diseases that would ser- iously injure the swine industry in this province after it has earn- ed such a high rating across the country. Mr. Wright noted in his report that sales of registered swine are splendid. He himself had sold everything that he had available, he indicated. During the discussion it was stated that the feeder pigs from Ontario were being brought in Donald, So uthp ort; Dave and the Federation president C.B. Wright, Charlottetown R.R. today for burial. Importation Of Feeder ‘Pigs Draws Criticism t-ime last year than the same pigs could be purchased in the pro- vince. Asked about the ‘ Landrace swine, Mr. Wright said that thus far they were not making good grades. DAIRY OUTLOOK BETTER Reporting for the Dali-ymen's Association Max Thompson, Vic- toria said that the dairymen are in a much more favorable pos- ition now than they were a few years ago. The surplus butter situation was causing alarm then, but now the surplus has been re- here and sold cheaper at one (Continued on page 11 col. 6) The following are the officers of the County Federations: Queens County—Ian Henders- son, New London, President: Charles Jones, Pownal, 1st vice- president; Keith Kennedy, Charlottetown R.R. 2nd V1C8~ president; Mrs. Sterling Mac- Rac, Brookfield, secretary. Named to the Provincial board Ian lleiiderson, M!‘S- Charles MacKinnon, Uigg; Wallace Mal- lett, Union Road. Prince County-George Shaw, Cape Wolfe, president; Elmer Waugh, Wilmot Valley, lst vice- president; Angus Gillis, Grand River, 2nd vice-president; Mrs. Harold Linkletter, Linkletter Road, secretary. Representatives on the vincial board: George Shaw, defence department George Riley. Hamilton; CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) ons—the Atlas and the Navaho- blasted off in rapid succession. The Atlas made a fiery and thundering departure from its launching platform at 10:48 a.m., Mrs. IBeast” performed accurately Harold Linkletter. ,over a limited range. Kings Cou1ily—D. M. Mac-; At 2:38 p.m., the now-obsolete‘ Lean. DeGros Marsh, presidcnt|Navho roared skyward and fol-= George MacPherson J12, Laun- ching, lst vice-president: ‘Mrs. Webb Nicholson, Wliim Road. tions that 2nd vice-president: Mrs. D. Mel-15,000 miles from hre to the lish, Summerville, secretary- southern tip of Africa. treasurer. The Atlas. designed to carry :- Fired From Florida Base hydrogen warhead across the seas —A 22-day silence at the United at a speed of 10,000 miles an portant as the Navaho test might States missile test centre was hour, is the only U.S. interconti- be—was evidence of increasing shattered with a bang Friday nental ballistic missile that has U.S. capability to test-fire the when two intercontinental weap- been tested. Another, the Titan,,weapons it is striving to bring is not yet ready for firing. “0NLY" 1,000 M.P.H. Although it also has a 5,000-mile range, the Navaho is powered by an hour, which could make it an easy prey of faster-flying jet at- tack planes. The Atlas was the first missile reaches more than efforts to step up the firing pro- ground. gram and chew away at Russia’s lead in the field have been sty- mied by foul weather. a Two Long-Range Missiles pensioner and‘ a 12 - year - old night, less than two hours after James (Jim) Harris, and Patsy is the girl’s father, Thomas Ell- wood, an odd-jobs man. Both are charged with contributing to the Venezuelan President Forms New Cabinet CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) — President Marcos Perez Jiminez formed a new cabinet Friday and ousted the -unpopular heads of his interior ministry and security police in an effort to save his regime. He apparently resolved the most serious crisis since he be- came president in 1952. The crisis has been mounting since he put down a military revolt New Year's Day. Thrown out of office and re- ported en route to exile were In- terior Minister Laureano Vallen- illa Lanz and the security police chief, Pedro~Estrada. The interior minister had been criticized as the author of the for- mula to have Perez Jiminez re- turned to the presidency for a new five-year term at the Yes.-on no plebiscite last Dec. 15. The president had no pallot opposition. Estrada was perhaps more hated by political party leaders- than Perez Jiminez himself. They accused Estrada of torturing poli- tical prisoners. among them lead- ing members of the armed forces arrested on conspiracy charges on the eve of the revolt. He also incurred the wrath of Roman Catholics by arresting five priests the day after, 24 Bluebloods Appear In Court LONDON (AP) —— Twenty-four embarrassed bluebloods appeared in court Friday after an early. morning gambling raid on the Mayfair apartment of Lady Mary Osborne. It was London's biggest society raid in years. Among those arrested were: Ifret.tv,I-adv Nancy Jane ' cote - Druinmonwd - . oushbv. 23. daughter of the Earl of Ancaster and a train bearer to the Queen at her Coronation; Lord Willoughby de Eresby, 21; Lady Mary Grace'Osborne, 54, and William James Cavendish- Bentinck, son of a former Brit- ish ambassador to Poland. Lady Mary was charged with keeping a common gaming house at her apartment, in one of Lon- don’s smartest residential dis- tricts. Lady Nancy Jane. Lord Will- oughby and Cavendish - Bentinck were'acc_used of being found on the premises of a gambling house. Lady Mary's son, 31 - year - old John Aspinwall, was charged with being concernid in keeping a_gambling house. I-Iis beautiful wife, Jayne, a former model, was taken in, too. 16 POST BONDS Magistrate Walter Frampton asked all 24 whether they would put up £25 and be bou:.d over on a promise of keeping away from gambling houses. Sixteen of them —— including Lady N a n c y Jane,‘Lord Willoughby, and Cav- endish-Bentinck — agreed. _T-he other eight —— including As- pinwall and Lady Mary--refused. They put up £50 and were asked to appear for a formal hearing Feb. 12. 67 Weds 12, Lands In Jail LINN. Mo. (AP) — The hill country romance of a 67-year-old school girl Friday had four per- sons in trouble with the law. Officers stepped in Wednesday Ellwood, a seventh grade pupil at Belle, Mo., were married. The bridegroom is in jail. So delinquency of a minor. The same charge was filed against Mrs. Ellwood, but she was allowed to remain at home to care for four younger children, the smallest 18 months old. ; The child-bride is in custody of the Osage County juvenile court and is staying at a private home. WEATHER Cloudy; snowflurries beginning in the afternoon; colder by evening. Low-high at Ch’town 22 and 35. Sunday: Cold. N°T,“,g§,‘.“‘ FIVE CENTS P.M. Announ Date Will Be OTTAWA (CP)—Three and pos- sibly four provinces will begin re- ceiving federal contributions July 1 in a national hospital insurance scheme, if Progressive Conserva- tive intentions announced Friday are carried out. They are British Columbia, Al- berta, Saskatchewan and likely Newfoundland, It was learned. Health Minister J . Waldo Mon- teith said in the Commons the government plans at the next ses- sion to amend health plan legis- lation so any province ready by July 1 can get federal benefits- roughly half the Cost. The legislation now requires at least six provinces with a major- ity of Canada's population must sign with Ottawa and have pro- vincial legislation in force before federal payments can be made. The scheme introduced by the Liberals had not been expected before Jan. 1, 1959, when On- tario’s plan starts. Mr. Monteith said he is confi- dent at least three or four prov- inces will try to be ready by July 1 and that “most, if not all, of the remainder of the pmvinces Vt:-Ill soon have plans inopera- on.” . SOME ALREADY QUALIFY Later is was learned that Brit- ish Columbia and Saskatchewan hospital plans are considered eli- gible as they stand and Alberta’: will be when coverage is broad- ened April 1. Newfoundland has hospital-in surance to cover persons in out- lying communities, officials said. It probably would hav to be ex- fiended to include s to qual- y. The federal plan stipulates that provincial plans must be univer- sally available on giulfnin germs m%ne well-informed estimate or the government this year. if im- plemented July 1, is about $20,000,000. The price would jump after next Jan. 1.wlien Ontario and possible other provinces eu- tered. Federal costs would be some $200,000,000 a year if all provinces were covered. Probable Four Provinces Will Join Hospital Plan cers Effective July I Next has an ynderstanding from six provinces that they will partici- pate. These are B.C., Alberta, Saskatchewan, » Ontario, Prince Edward Island and Newfound- land. Nova Scotia is working out it plan and Manitoba is interested. The officials said New Bruns- - wick also is expected to enter eventually. While Quebec has not in any way committed itself. there was some expectation that it would join, too. oPi>oSi'rioN APPROVES Mr. Monteith’s announcement was w e l c o in e d by Opposition members, including former Lib- er-al health minister Paul Martin. But Mr. Martin asked about fed- eral contributions for tuberculosis and mental institutions, most of which are financed by provincial governments. He referred to a statement on hospital insurance by Prime Min- ister Diefenbaker at the federal- pnovincial fiscal conference last November. The former health minister said Mr. Diefenbaker had stated the government would. include TB and mental hospitals but the esti- mated $68,000,000 cost would have to be deducted fpom further fis- cal grants tofthe provinces. Finance Minister Donald Flem- ing interjected: “He did not say that." ’ (Mr. Diefenbaker told the con- ference on that point: “We wish to make clear that whateveris offered to provincial treasuries in this matter cannot be provided in other forms and in particular must be taken into consideration in any revision that takes place of the tax sharing arrangements act”) N0 PROVISION MADE V ‘ originally‘ proposedby the Liberals the scheme would cover regular hospital and diagnostic services but not patients in men- tal and TB institutions. 5 The present session of Parlia- ment is expected to close by the and of January or mid-February. The next session likely will begin almost at once, unless an election . ..~ Officials said the government Prince Edward Island definit- ely cannot be ready to institute a scheme of Hospital Insurance by July 1st this year, the date announced yesterday by Federal Health Minister Waldo Monteith. Premier A. W. Matheson stated last night. OTTAWA (CP) —- Governor. General Massey is suffering from ‘‘fatigue'' and will rest in the West Indies -for three weeks next month, Government House an- nounced Friday. A l t h o u g h the announce- ment said Mr. Massey is suffer- ing from fatigue, he will fulfil 10 official engagements during the remainder of January and early February. The announcement said: “Although the governor-general has completely recovered from his recent chill and fever, he is still suffering from fatigue and his doctor had advised him to take three weeks’ rest in the sun as soon as possible. It is planned that his excellency will fly to the West Indies about Feb. 5 and re- develops. P. E. I. Hospital Insurcmce Plan Geared T011959 Date “Our target was set for 1959. e date announced early last year by Hon. Paul Martin. the then Minister of National Health" the Premier said. “We have a committee working on it and we are tryingto meet the 1959 target. But we definitely cannot be ready by July of this year. Gov.-General To Rest 3 Weeks” tional New Year levee on New Year’s Day. The announcement was made shortly after Government House issued the itinerary of a one-day official visit Mr. Massey will make to Toronto Monday. The visit will be the first of the 10 functions Mr. Massey will attend prior to his depature for the West Indies. Copter Lifts Pair From Ice MONTREAL (CP) — Two men were lifted safely by helicopter Friday from a huge ice floe drift- ing down the St. Lawrence River turn approximately Feb. 27. “His engagements for this per- iod have had to be postponed, but he will fill all engagements until his departure.” It is understood Mr. Massey's Under Missouri law a girl -in- der 15 cannot marry and if slne is under 18 she must have her parents’ consent. In their marriage licence appll-' cation at Rolla, Mo., Harris gave‘ his age as 50 and Patsy told of- ficials she was 18. School records, however, showed the girl was 12. Friday’s double firing—unlm- ‘into mass production. It was the The girl’s mother. about 35,. first time that two huge missiles ever had been fired in such close proximity. , The distance the three - stage pro- EST. Fifteen minutes later. the'zi ramjet engine and is capable of‘Atlas flew probably was about said “Theispeeds of only about 1,000 miles‘600 miles, the same range cov- ‘ered by another Atlas last Dec. '-17 in the first successful test of Illie weapon. Two earlier shots ,ended in failure when the mis- .owed the Atlas trail down across to blast away from Cape Cana-I silos strayed off course and were the chain of missile-tracking sta- veral since Dec. 19. Since tlien,‘destroycd soon after leaving the said she had married “an old man” and she had no objections to her daughter doing so. Ellwood is about 70. SEES THE LIGHT have turned out to be anti-Com- munist. One editor, the Peiping paper says, described commu- nism as “a society full of dark- ness and bloodstains." No effort to shoot the 100-ton Atlas over its full range is ex- I pected until late this year. doctors have for some time been advising him to take a rest. How- ever, he is not seriously ill and it is not a sudden decision to take a holiday. Although he has spent a fair amount of time at his family cent months, he still must keep up with a heavy load of govern- -ment business while there. Mr. Massey is 70 and will be in the West Indies for his 71st (birthday Feb. 20. TIME IS CONVENIENT home at Port Hope, 0nt., in re- off Montreal. Real Castonguay and Bill Craig, ‘members of a survey crew for the St. Lawrence Seaway author- ity, were marooned on the floe about 21/2 hours. _ The rescue was effected by a helicopter. Long Terms For Bunk Bundfl ‘ MONTREAL (CP) —— Two Que bec City men Friday were sen» tented to long prison terms for a 16,000 bank holdup here last Sep- tember in which a police detec- tive was wounded. Roland Letellier, 29, who hat been found guilty in December The time picked for his vaca- was sentenced to 10 years in peni- HONG KONG (AP)—Red China tion is understood to be as con- tentiaI'Y- He Still 53¢‘?-5 _ has admitted that no less than venient as possible taking into con- Charges Of attempted mllfdel‘ 31‘ 15' 13 staff members of its official: sideration his schedule which isling from the case. organ, the Peiping People’s Dailylfilled sometimes for a year or‘ more ahead. Mr. Massey was confined to bed with a chill and fever at the twl Wilfrid D u s s a ul 1., 35, wht pleaded guilty shortly after hit capture outside the Fluery Stree branch of La Banquc Canadiennl ‘-beginning of January. The illness {Naiionale, was sentenced to cigh [forced him to cancel his trad}-Lyears. ‘ ’