“Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” ee ee oe Oe tee oo oe Se Pe ee Se ee THE AMAZING part af this eccident, so far as spectators were concerned, was that the @river of the wrecked truck was taken out alive. The cab when the truck smashed into the side of a train yesterday Driver Has Narrow Escape When Truck Crashes Train Elmer , his truck loaded with shale erash-| lacerations but no broken bones. A Diana tfucker, Chappell, Prince Fward- Hospital! “end four freigint | are derail- | ed at Auburn yesterday | afternoon. Chappell was ee in a south westwardly direction when at Auburn, on the Lake Verde- Mt. Stewart line, about 17 miles from Charlottetown. Driver Earle Chapple of Breadalbane had to be freed from the twist- remnants_.of the cab with Four cars of the train were _ | Pinch bere tekes from the | train. Last night Mr. Chappel Se eee te woes 4 wake Verde via| Mt. Stewart. Mr. Chanpeil's docter seid lest | night that the patient entered | hospital with concussion, facial Polio Believed Cause Of Local Man’s Death With the death of Angus Mac- Donald, 32, ef Charlottetown at ,mother, Mrs. L.J. MacDonald, | Charlottetown, and one brother, the Charlottetown Hospital yes-|Ian, a geologist in Calgary. A terday, polio apparently claimed its first victim in the Province this year. Mr. MacDonald, who had been ™ with influenza was unable to | Passenger agent stand when he attempted to rise | Saturday morning, and was tak- | en to the hospital later in the | day. Dr. Burton Howatt, provincial health officer, said yesterday that medical - authorities suspect- ed that Mr. ‘was due to polio’ but as yet con- firmation had not been received from the Halifax laboratory. A well-known local athelete in his younger days, Mr. MacDonald was a craduate of Prince. of Wales College. At the time he took sick he was working as an estimator with the County Con- struction Company. He is survived by his wife, the former Teresa Sullivan of Newfoundland, one son. Alastair, two and one-half years old, and one daughier, Anne, one year and five months old. include his Try At Suicide Said No Crime LONDON ‘Reuters) — A five- man Church of England commit- tee recommended today that at- ed suicide should cease to a crime in Britain. “The law, as it stands. is out of date and ineffective. It no longer represents the considered atti- tude of our society,” it said. The committee, set up last year by the Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr. Geoffrey Fisher, suggested that partners in suicide pacts should be charged with a new of- fence of “aiding, abetting or in- stigating the suicide of another,” punishable with a maximum of life imprisonment ‘It pointed out that the Suicide rate im England is about 5,000 year with possibly another 30.000 suicide attempts, of which only about one-sixth are known to the police. “For centyries in Christian countries t suicide was re- garded primarily as a criminal. Now we have come to feel that the would-be suicide stands more fe need of medical or spiritual help than of conviction in a law MacDonald's death | third brother, Alastair was kill- ed in action with the RCAF |Prised Alf Eagan, during World War Two. A former division freight and with the CNR, at Charlottetown, Mr. MacDon- jald’s father, LJ. ‘“‘Lutie”’ Donald died May 17, 1957. last night. ‘- was in hospital suffering from and lacerations. What furthe injuries he might have suffere were not known at the time derailed. (Other picture on page ; 3) is a \patient in the ed into the diesel of a freight as far as could be determined at: ~ “thet time. | The cab of the truck was dem- lolished and Mr. Chappell’ had! ito be freed from the cab of the vehicle by pinch or crow bars taken from the caboose of the train. Damage to the train was ex- tensive. The truck apparently | struck the diesel on the sidé, the load of shale was thrown) onto the track and may have been partially responsible for | deraiing four of the cars be-| hind the engine. The extra was hauling several | refrigerator cars loaded with oot | tatoes, the first one was lying on its side. Between 100 and 1 feet of road bed was torn up. The crew of the extra com engineer; |George Godkin, conductor and | trainmen Ralph Miller and Keith Lewis. A wrecking train left Char- jabout an hour after tze accident’ line may be cleared this morn | ‘ing. Chamber Expansion By FORBES RHUDE Canadian Press Business Editer TORONTO (CP) — The policy committee of the Canadian Cham- ber of Commerce Monday advo- cated expansion of trade with all countries, but also favored devel- opment of domestic industry. The statement was interpreted as steering a careful course be- tween advocates of freer trade and those who would like to see more encouragement for Cana- dian manufacturers. Western delegates particularly were emphatic that chamber po- licy should not take on any pro- tectionist tinge. The statement, as adopted, rec- ognized “the important of free and competitive access to foreign markets for Canadian products” and said Canada’s trade policy “should aim for extension of cur- reficy convertibility and the ob- servance of the spirit, principles and terms of the General Agree- ment on Tariffs and Trade by all nations. INCREASE EMPTOYMENT It added: “Consistent with these princi- ples in foreign trade, the most favorable possible climate should be maintained for increasing in dustrialization so that, by effec- tive use of all Canadian re- sources, a rising volume of em- ployment and ards of living may be achieved.” The statement said further that while expansion of trade on a court.” ‘ multilateral basis is in the best ‘DOMESTIC INDUSTRY’ improved stand-|- Advocates Of Trade interests of Canada, she cannot | proceed further or faster in set-| ting the example for freer trade than is justified by the actions of the world’s leading trading coun- tries. It added that ‘‘for purposes of simplification, clarification and modernization, the Customs Act and the Customs Tariff Act should, without delay, be exam- ined and, where such purposes will be served, revised without encouraging a policy of restraint to international trade.” The Canadian government should confine to a minimum its participation in ventures involv- ing the buying and sclling of com- modities; the statement said. The statement was one of many policy statements and re- (Continued on page 5 Col. 4) WHERE-TO-FIND-IT Announcements, notices 17 Births, deaths, etc., ....2, 17 Classified section ...... 16, . Finance, markets ........ Comics, features .......... = Charlottetown news ...... 5 NG sick a eeskss ss 4 Island news ..-....... 2, 3 Sports . x Women’s Page .......... & side, Montague, Alberton and Souris, and from special cor- respondents now appear on the Island News Page. | DETROMT (AP) — The boy CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, ‘PARKING LOT’. PROVES PHONEY TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1959 —_——_— In Triumph By FRASER WIGHTON LONDON (Reuters) — Prime Minister Macmillan leads his tri- umphant Conservative party back to the government benches of the House of Commons today with a mandate to rule for another five years. The Conservatives, their major- ity increased in the Oct. 8 elec- _|tions to 100, will face a badly- shaken Labor party on the op- position side of the historic Com- mons chamber. The first business of Parlia- ment will be the election of a speaker and the formal swear- ing-in of members. Election as speaker, one of the most coveted jobs in Parliament, demands by traditions a display of reluctance. The ‘man chosen will be cvagged protestingly to the chair by his sponsors—an echo from the turbulent Parliaments of 500 years ago when kings occasion- 2lly ended a speaker's career on the chopping block. LABOR HOPES FADE The most likely candidate for was the picture of enterpris- ing youth as he beckoned bus- fly to cruising latecomers headed for the National Foot- ball League game between Detroit Lions and San Fran- cisco 49ers Sunday. Forty motorists eved the easy-in, easy - out lanes and glided into parking spaces on the big field near Briggs Sta- dium. The $1 asked by the youth seemed reasonable. When the parkers returned aafter the game; their car: ‘ove there but the lad wasn’t On the windshield was a $3 parking ticket. The lot was the J. C. Nagel Playground. nal. the post is Sir Harry Hylton-Fos- ter, Conservative solicitor - gen- eral, Labor hopes that one of thetr ‘members might be elected faded , Monday when Sir Frank Soskice, a former’ attorney-general who was acceptable to the Conserva- | tives, was reported unwilling to accept nomination. Members of Parliament will get down to the business of la- get down to the business of law- making in a week when the new session formally is opened. New ministers in Macmillan’s cabinet ~ - over their posts Monday at a ceremony in Buck- ingham Palace during which they kissed the hand of the Queen. They also took the oath of PEC Head Regrets Low Income Standard MONCTON (CP) “The most | startling and obvious fact in) |Canada today is the wide zap) that exists between the high per-! capita income of the central re-} gion and the lower per-capita in-| come of our Atlantic provinces, jsaid the new president of the At-| | tantic Provinces Economic Coun- i cil, Mac- lottetown about 4 p.m. yesterday | Nfid., Arthur Johnson of St. here Monday. In his first address as APEC John's, | “This is not a good thing for) ithe Canadian nation, and it is something that calls for contin-} ued, urgent. and positive correc- tive measures.” Mr. Johnson, who also Is chair- | man of APECs newly-created At- | lantic Provinces Research Board, | as well as deputy minister of ¢co- | nomic development for foundland, listed three factors he} said were major contributors to! tnis disparity in income: Burdensome taxation, excessiv- ely high freight rates, and the “appearing and reappearing tight money situation.” } MUST HAVE RELIEF On the first of these, Mr. John- son said: ““We must have tax *e-| lief, and we believe sufficient ar-[ gument and ‘treason have been advanced by the four Atlantic provinces governments and “oan oe to why this relief must e'available to us. Some of J best brains in the country recommend this as a way to help put us on a more equal _ footing with the rest of Canada.’ Mr. Johnson said “one of our most urgent needs is cheap and fast transportation. We suffer greviously and terribly from a lack of both.” Transportation is a two-edged sword that cuts us down in tne Atlantic region “On the one side is the burden of freight rates, This is greatly added to by the iniquitous sys- tem by which railway costs tend: to be borne by the most. distant provinces. It: falls heavily on the cost of living which has to be borne by every soul in the At- lentic region. CUTS INDUSTRY “On the other side, the sword cuts down our industries and po- tential industries. Large - scale secondary manufacturing is more difficult to é@stablish and operate in the provinces lying east, west and north of central Canada, than in the mass market area of central Canada itself. “High freight rates, with few exceptions, virtually rule out for |manufacturing involving weighi. iThis is a critical situation be- cause today few plants can pros- |rer on a small and purely local imarket,”” he said. ‘Hunters Shot In Accidents HELENA, Mont. (AP) — Three Funeral arrangements had not | occurred. It was hoped that the |head, Mr. Johnson added: | hunters were killed and at least jbeen completed at press time | two others wounded in gunshot ;accidents as Montana's biz-game hunting season opened Sunday. Another hunter was injured in a tumble down a cliff. Officers said Robert “Walter Smith, 32, Great Falls, was killed {by a bullet from a 12 - year - old boy's smallbore rifle. James Farstad, 16, ficers said travelled a long dis- tance and had nearly lost its momentum. To House allegiance and received their! seals of office at the meeting, | held after the Queen’s‘ return) from the annual royal summer | vacation in Scotland. NEW MINISTERS The new ministers at the cere- mony included former labor min- ister Iain Macleod, succeeding Alan Lennox - Boyd as colonial secretary, and Harold Watkinson, transport minister in the last gov- ernment now taking over as de- fence minister. Macmillan was still putting sume finishing touches to his gov- ernment reconstruction. The prime minister has to ap- point a postmaster general to fill the vacancy left by Ernest Mar- ples, now transport minister. Other. vacancies included the! ministry of power and a parlia-/ mentary secretary for power. Meanwhile, the Labor ‘continued a reappraisal of its re- \Jection at the polls. Top Chiefs May Meet In Europe By JOHN EARLE LONDON -(Reuters’ Presi- dent Eisenhower is likely to re- turn to Europe next month for 4 meeting of Western leaders, dip- lomatic sources said Monday right, \paration for an expected but, as mit meeting. It may be held in Paris, the observers added. Eisenhower last was in Europe in late August and early Septem- iber. He then made separate ‘visits to Chancellor Konrad Ade- nauer, Prime Minister Macmil- lan and President de Gaulle in acvance of Khrushchev’s Ameri- can visit. IKE TRIP TALK \ Talk of another trip to ® Western summit was touched off anew Monday. A usu- tally well-informed source in Lon- don said Western government heads were exchanging opinions about Eisenhower's reported pro- posal to have such a meeting in the near future. Eisenhower is reported to have put the question to Adenauer, Macmillan and de Gaulle in per- sonal letters Saturday. However this report—heard in Bonn and Paris as wejl as here—has not} been confirmed. British officials declined to con- firm or deny it, saying it was not government practice to dis- New-| was killed by a bullet which of-| ages. De Gaulle is reported to have! summit | discussed the Western with his senior men Monday. y The session would be in pre- | yet unannounced East-West sum- | Fisenhower | i | moo MR. FRASER By JOSEPH MacSWEEN Canadian Press Staff ' Writer UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. ‘(CP)) ‘Britain told the United Nations} Monday the Soviet Union moved closer to the West in | portant aspects of disarmament. | David Ormsby - Gore, British minister of state for foreign af- fairs was addressing the 82-mem- ber UN political and security committee on Soviet Premier Khrushchev's proposals for total disarmament within four years. Khrushchev outlined his plan before the UN General Assembly Sept. 18—just one day after For- Tourist Post Change Made George V. Fraser, Charlotte- town, has been named director of ithe provincial Tourist and In- formation branch, Hon. J. David 'Y |Stewart, provincial secretary an- nounced yesterday. Former direc- tor, A.A. Nicholson will remain with the service as deputy direc- tor. Director of Information for the | Provincial government for the |past year, Mr. Fraser formerly headed the same branch from 1950 until 1957 when he resign- ed on his appointment as infor- mation officer with the depart- ment of trade and commerce, Ot- tawa. Earlier this year Mr. Fraser spent three months in West Africa as advisor on tourism to the government of the new Common wealth nation of Ghana. He re- turned home May 12. Prior to taking over the tourist and information branch in 1950, Mr. Fraser had served in the | journalistic field with The Guar- dian, The Evening Patriot, Bri- | tish United Press and the Interna- | tional Service of the CBC. In ad- dition he was one of the founders of an Ottawa public relations and |publishiag firm. A native of Montague. Mr. Fra- iser, his wife and four children, George, Evelyn, Heather and Jeannine, reside at 30 Rich- mond Street. Mr. Fraser's appointment would give added impetus to the tourist business one of the Island's lead- ing industries, Mr. Stewart re- marked The position of information dir- ector would be abolished in line with the new government's policy of increased administrative ef- ficiency, he added. eign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd had enunciated before -the world body a British proposal for ‘‘compre- ; hensive”’ step-by-step disarma- | ment hand in hand with inspec- tion and contrel. FIRST LOOK A comovarison of the Soviet and the British plans revealed big questions and “at first sight our approach to them seems different from that implicit in the Soviet declaration.”” said Ormsby-Gore. “But it is not my intention to lay emphasis on our differences. We have noticed with pleasure that there are also elements in the Soviet proposals which show that there are important points upon which our two positions have come closer together. = I note that the Soviet | proposals no longer contain a de- mand for an immediate ban on nuclear weapons before any start | can be made with reductions in convention forces. “This is a major change, and is'@ move in the direction of bal- anced disarmament which we have _ consistently advocated.) Then again, foreign bases are to be abolished only as conven- tional disarmament becomes complete. HOPEFUL SIGNS “This could have a significant affect upon the attitude of those countries whose sense of security at the present time rests upon arrangements of this kind. These are hopeful auguries and we are fully prepared to examine the| Soviet proposals thoroughly, con- structively and in every detail.” Elsewhere at the UN Monday, the General Assembly tried once more—and again without success —to break the deadlock between | i back into the lead, 18 PAGES Soviet Moves Nearer West In Disarmament Aspects Mac Leads U.K. Tories Red Proposals Are Discussed Japan at’ the end of this year. Turkey took the lead for the first time Monday, but fell far ishort of the two-thirds majority necessary for election and the on the next final one for the day, regained the lead, 42 to TURKEY UP This was the highest number votes for Turkey during any the 31 dallots. At one ine ing the start of the voting Monday- the Poles tad been ahead 48 to 33, only six short of victory. The assembly held. more inconclusive ballots Tuesday, then called off voting until Monday. External Affairs Minister Green, who returned from Ot tawa Sunday night, cast Canada’s vote Monday. Because the is secret, it isn’t known for tain which country Canada backing, but observers believe is Poland. = Air Crash ils Te (AP) — A iG |Boeing 707 - 220 jet transport jerashed and burned Monday in lthe wooded Cascade foothilis about 25 miles northeast of here. At least three of the eight per- sons aboard were reported killed. Persons living in the area said the giant plane, being test-flown for Braniff Airlines, came down on a small island in the north fork of the Stillaguamish River. It apparently exploded on impact and set surrounding trees afire. Boeing said it appeared the pilot was attempting to make a forced landing when he crashed. It was the second crash of a 707 involving fatalities. One of the big jets that had been*turned over Turkey and Communist Poland in their fight for a Security Council) seat that will be left vacant by! to American Airlines crashed on Long Island last Aug. 16. Five men were’ killed, ‘EXTREME DISSATISFACTION’ e \s VI ( OTTAWA (CP) — The federal! men government's refusal to grant a |pay increase this year to civil Glentana, | close the existence of such mess- servants Monday drew from. the executive council of the Civil Service Association of Canada an expression of “extreme dissatis-| ifaction and shocked amaze-| r “Thc council, consisting of offi-; cers from coast to coast in the! 30,000-member association, issued | a statement after a meeting here. “The council feels strongly,” ithe statement said, ‘‘that the gov- ‘ernment has deliberately taken ‘advantage of its unique position [ean employer to offset its fiscal difficulties at the expense of its own employees. “If the budgetary position of | the country is such that restrict-| ive measures are necessary. then | the national council feels that the impact should be shared by every F jsegment of the economy and not ‘iby the civil service alone.” _|CAN’T AFFORD IT MENTAL HEALTH DIVISION Arthur H. Peake, (left) pre- sident of the newly organized Prince Edward Island division of the Canadian Mental Health Atlantic indusiry, any type of Association, discusses with ‘Dr. Robert O. Jones of Haljfax and Dr. J. C. Theriault the successful organizational meet- ing held last night at the Char- lottetown Hotel. Dr. Jones, professor of psychiatry at Dal- housie University, was the guest speaker at the meeting which saw more than 100 per- sons in attendance. (Story on . page 3) * : % _|the current year that ends March It turned down a civil service ,} commission recommendation for wage increases last week, Fi- nance Minister Fleming said the government could not afford it for | Service Council's Reaction Is One Of Shocked Amazement 131, 1960, in the light of a | dicted $393,000,000 deficit for thie year. Meanwhile, Postmaster - Gen eral Hamilton and Jack Roberts, general secretary of the Canadian Postal Employees Association, expressed concern Monday at a report from Toronto that associa- tion members there had voted unanimously Sunday night to |stage a one-day work stoppage during the Christmas season if the government does not increase salaries. “It’s an unheard-of thing,”’ Mr. Hamilton said. “I simply cannot am &. 2, 7° Mr. Roberts said no such work stoppage has been authorized by the association. He said he had not been advised of the move by the Toronto local and, until get- ting word, was inclined to look upen it as possibly a wildcat ‘move. Stolen Stati Kills Three COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) |— Four charges werefiled Motiday against Paul Graham, 22, a few hours after the station wagon he stole killed three school children. Three charges of second-degree manslaughter and one of auto theft were filed by officials. They originally considered ‘thé possibil- ity of a first - degree murder charge, but later dropped it. Municipal Judge William Gillie Graham held. without bond. Graham is scheduled for arraignment Tuesday morning. A many Bh and Was . racing after the ‘ammee car when it on Wagon Children skidded onto a sidewalk at a school bus stop and cut down two boys and two girls. One of the girls suffered a broken thigh and other injuries. About 50 other children were standing nearby. Officials said a murder charge was considered because Graham was engaged in a. felony—auto theft — when the station wagon plowed into the children. brother an 2 Jane's sister Jerri, 5, ‘ourth child, reported ia fair .condition i. eltieen's ba pital here.