Buyer meets seller TELEPHONE 8506 with Guardian Want Ads. Dial 8506 ask for 1 if‘ taker, for quick results. c ass led ad he finordio “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew" WEATHER Becoming cloudy by afternoon; little change in temperature; south winds 15. Low-high at Charlottetown 50 and 73. Nuc|ear Talks May f Have Reds G«E<N-EVA (Reuters) — A Rus- sian scientific delegation arrived hem Sunday night amid specula- tion Russia has decided nm to boycott E-ast-’West nuclear detec- tion talks. > At Zurich, where the delegation stopped en route here, their leader, professor Evugeaiy Fyodo- rov, replied to all reporters’ question with: .~.wa;;,..,,3d,..,,-e_na . .. The seven men who arrived Friday night were part of an 18- man Russian team which left Moscow. Eleven members had to remain in Prague as the plane for Zurich and Geneva was full. Arrival of -the delegation seemed to indicate the Soviet Union was not going to carry out its threatened boycott of the ' meeting scheduled to begin here Tuesday. / (But Moscow Radio said Sun- day that the talks could become a “fraud” charging that “at- temrpts are being made to tor- pedo the conference before it stamtsf’) I N-ew'Yo-rkers See Canadian Ship NEW YORK (-AP)——The Cana- dian frigate Swansea, on the last leg of a one-month training cruise with 82 cadets, was in- ’ spected by 500 persons this af- ternoon as lat lay docked in the Hudson River with its sister ship La I-Lulloise, Visitors inspected the entire ship with the exception of the of- ficer's ward and the radar room. The ships, each 300 feet long, arrived Thursday and will leave for Halifax early Monday mor- ning. YOUNG MAN DROWNED MHITON, N. s., _ (CP) — Ernest Percy Whynott, .20, of Bainsvillle, N. S., drowned Sun- day while swimming in the fiieersey River three miles from re. WNW (AP) — Polish Com- In-unist leader Wladyslaw G0- mulka has lined up with the Kremlin in lashing Titoism and ‘ ‘ng the execution of Im-I‘€ Nagy. He put all the blame fol‘ the Moscow-Belgrade split on Yugo- slav revisionism. . - The death sentence on Nagy All ‘Dd other leaders of the 1956 ungarlan uprising was tragic. said in a speech Saturday, but II Was not for Poles to judge 1'5 irness. . He went on to charge that ‘Nagy slipped from revisionism ‘WW8!!! capitulation before coun- — 1‘-revolutionary pressure. This Was exactly the charge levelled 7, the Hungarian communique ylnnouncing the executions two - Weeks ago. , Gomulka accused the West of {king the Nagy executions to un- fish an-ti-Soviet and ami-Cour Polish Leader A Backs Moscow Ilunist propaganda aimed at cov- up imperialist adventures CHATTING AT Government House last evening were, left I40 right, Premier A. W. Matheson, Austin A. Scales, Director of the An informal reception was held at Government House last evening for the visiting Board ofDirectorsoftheBankofCon- ads and the Industrial Develop- ment Bank, who arrived in the City last -evening. Today the Group will be the guests of Ml’_ Austin Scales, who is a director of the Bank of Canada, at at noon luncheon held at the Char- lottetown Hotel. Tins concludes an 8-day visit to the Atlantic Provinces which began in Frederiction on ‘June 2. From Frederiction the Direc- tors visited Saint Joh-n, Halifax, St. John’s, and Corner Brook. This is the second occasion when meetings were held in the‘ .-Atlantic -the first be: ing in 1950. Similar meetings _ere held in Western Canada 11! 948 and 1956. Bank of Canada; Lieutenant- Governor F. W._ Hyndman and J. Robert Beattie, Deputy Gov. evnnor of the Bank of Canada. Bonk Directors Arrive In City On Tour Of Provinces to enable directors from various parts of the country to form on- the-spot impressions of business conditions. ’ Direc-tom attending the re- ception at Government House included: J. M. Buchanan, Van- couver, British‘ Columbia; N. A. Hesler, Sackville, New Bruns- wick, C. B-ruce Hill. St. C‘ath'-ar- ines, Ontario; W. A. Johnston, Q.C., LL_B., Winnipeg, Manitoba; R. H. Mrilliken,' Q.C., Regina, Saskatchewan; H. A. Russell, St. John's Newfoundland; A Sam- oisette, Montreal, Quebec; and Austin A. Scales. ‘ Others at the reception includ- ed: J. R. Beattie, Deputy Gov. ernor of the Bank of Canada; ,D. G. Marble, general manager of. the Industrial ‘Development Bank, and L. F. Mu-nd, secret- ary of both bank institutions, H. R. Staker, Supervisor, I_D.B. The purpose of these visits is Atlantic Region, Halifax. Claim Russian (ALP)-—-lI‘he star of the Russian Bolshoi Ballet at the) Bru-ssel's World Fair has been caught shoplifting in a B-russels department store, police said Saturday. Oga Lepeshinslnay-a, once Stalin's favorite ballerina, was stopped by a store detective as she was about to leave Friday. Police ‘said she admitted taking an umbrella, two pairs of gloves, cuff links and some tape. The ballerina, who is in her 505, begged in French and broken English not to be taken to police headquarters. She said she was due at’ a ballet nehearsal. She did not appear at Friday night’s performance at thefair, although she was released after questioning at police headquar- ters and the palace of justice. A spokesman for the depart- No Paper Tomorrow Tomorrow being Domin- ion Day and a public holi- day, the next edition of The - Guardian will be Wednesday, July 2. in the Middle East and the policy of arming West Germany Wlllih nuclear weapons. POISONS ATMOSPHERE ' T his propaganda. he Said- “poisons the international atmo- sphere and tends to increase ten- sion and the danger of war. Gomulka spoke to shipyard workers in Gdansk. formerly Danzig. These were his first Pub- lic comments on either the Nagy executions or the ‘split With TWO- The Polish COII1l'l'lLllllS‘t‘S. had not specifically accused Tito of revisionism. a chargé ¥‘°591'Ved for the blackest devlatlon-S. In this context it means the Yugo- slav failure to join the Soviet bloc. Previously the Polish Commu- nist line was that Titos V164): was open to argument but friendly argument. The fact tha he stayed outside the bloc was viewed as increasing the value of his support for Soviet foreign Ballet Star Was Shoplifting) In Brussels ment -store, “L'CEnnovattl~on," said no decision has been made about prosecuting Miss Leap-eshinskava. He hadded, however, that legal action is barely taken against first offenders. RECALLS PREVIOUS CASE Thus an int-erna-ti-onal incident such as the case of the Soviet woman discus thrower may be avoided. Two years ago Nine Ponc- mareva, Soviet Olympic discus thrower, was charged with shop- lifting five cheap hats in London. The Russians called off an ath- letic meet with the British and Miss Ponomareva hid in the So- viet Embassy. The case finally was set- tled when Miss Ponomareva ap- peared in court and entered a denial. She was convicted but re- leased after the Soviet Embassy paid court costs. Miss Lepeshinskaya is one of the best products of the Moscow Choreographic School. She is generally considered the best- dressed woman in Russia. ‘From Stalin's death in 1953 un- til 1956 the elf-in dancer did not appear at the Bol-shoi. But she showed up merrily with the new leaders at every Kremlin func- tion. and is the most sought after part- ner at many a diplomatic shin- dig. Author Dies On Isle Of Wight VENTNOR, Isle of Wti-ght (OP) Alfred Noyes, 77. W'1‘i¢€!‘ Off 593 and country ballads and author of world favorite poems, The Hi-ghwaymau and The Barrel- 0-rg-an, died Saturday inhospital six days after he was stricken by an intestinal blockage. One of-the more famous poets of the English language, he leaves a body of work remem- bered by millions for its human sentiment, clear direct prose, and vivid descriptions. A tradi-tionial-ist, who usually wrote in rhyme with strong lilt- ting rhythm s. he continually flayed modern poetry and litera- ture as being cousciou-S16’ 0)?- s-cure. He once said a good epi- thet for D. H. Lawrence, James Joyce and Marcel Proust, was “-pa-th-ol»ogic.al.” ' Noyes leaves his second wife, the former Mrs. Mary Mayne. one son and two daughter-s. Funeral services are scheduled Wednesday in a chapel near the estate of Alfred Lord Tennyson, policies. nineteenth century poet- She loves Western dance steps I Two Believed Dead In Crash 01'' Small Plane GRAND FALLS, N. B. (OP)- Two unidentified men were re- ported missing and believed dead- and two others injured Sunday after a civilian aircraft from the Font Fairfiel-d, Me. flying club crashed into the head pond of the Tobiq-ue Narrows Power Dam about 10 miles southeast of here. The pilot, 35-year-old Charles Me-Laughlin of Fort Fairfield was said to have been seriously injured. Passenger W«al~ter Poth- ier. 22, United States airman sta- tioned at Limestone, Me. escaped with facial cuts and shock. The two unidentified men hitched a ride in the plane ]ust before it took off from Fort Fairfield. Reports said“ the craft struck telephone lines while crossing. the river’ and -plunged" below ‘the sur- face. The injured men came to the surface and were rescued by a department of fisheries vessel. '1.‘l1_-e plane was owned by J aim Phihbrick of Fort I-‘airfield. Leba nese PI HAVANA (AP) — The Cuban rebels’ kid-nap campaign mounted Sunday night with the disclosure that two m-ore North Americans have been seized. The two latest victims were identified as a Canadian sugar mill manager and the American assistant manager of another mill. . . The Canadian was identified as ’Richard Sargent, about 50, of To- ronto. manager of the Central I-sabel mill nort-heas-t of Guanta- namo. Mill officials said he was taken from his home Thursday nigh-t. His wife was left in the house. ‘The American’s name was given as Daymond Elmore, 53, of Haynesvillc, La. He was said to have been seized Saturday near the Ermita sugar mill, 10 miles west of Guantanamo in southeast Cuba. Their abduction pushed the toll of Americans and Canadians ‘now believed in rebel hands to 41. Word of the new seizures came as U.S. authorities headed into rebel /mountain hi-deouts to seek release of 27 U.S. marines and sailors who vanished during the weekend. EXPECT RELEASE SOON Walter Wadsworth, manager of the mill where Elmore worked, said he had word that Elmore would be released soon. The U.S. defence department announced‘ meanwhile that 27 marines and -sailors were re- ported missing from the US. na- val base at Guantanamo. It ear- lier had been announced that 24 servicemen failed to return Sat- urday from an overnight outing. T3191!‘ em-llt.Y.lms was found on I road near Guantanamo. ht also was disclosed belatedly Sunday that an enlisted man was da_ring1=y picked up by Rebels Saturday night outside the Guan- All the North Americans, along with Cuban"dr-iver and his assist- ant on the service bus, were be- lieved held by the rebels led by Fidel Castro. The U.S. Embassy here said there was evidence the men in the bus were -forced from their vehicle into rebel trucks and driven into mountains near Guan- tanamo. ’ ' AWAIT W0-RD still was await-ing word from Consul Park W-ollam and William D. Bowdler. embassy second secretary, who were ‘working to effect the release of the missing men. Bowdler was flown to Guant- anamo base Saturday to ‘set up communications with Woilam’s base near lvloa on the northeast side of the island. - Ten U.S. and two Canadian en- gineers were seized earlier oy the The “embassy said Sunday it Make], Lo NEW YORK (AP) —— Two U.S. Air Force jet tanker planes flew from London to New York Sun- day in the record -time of less than -six hours, more than an hour and a half‘ faster than the -old mark. The same craft had set marks of less than 5% hours for the New Yonk-London flight “ only 5)o days ago. The British held previous rec- ords for the flights. They were established Aug. 23, 1955, by Capt., J. W. Hackett, flying a Royal Air Force Canberra jet bomber. I-Iackett set a mark of seven hours, 29 minutes on a London- .to-New York flight and six hours, 16 minutes from New York to London. ~ The first of the two air force bombers ~— the Alpha — Flashed over Idlewlld Airport at 2:20 p.m. EDT‘. Its elapsed time for the 3,460-mile transatlantic flight was five hours, 51 minutes -and 24.8 seconds. ta-namo base. PHIL SKELDON, director ofland one of the tranquilizer pel- the Toledo, Ohio, zoo poses with Cyril the sea lion, captur- ed Friday at Sansu-sky Bay on Lake Erie after escaping from a zoo in London, Ont., June 19. Mr. Sheldon holyds a rifle lets he shot into Cyril, leading to the mam:mal’s capture. The Toledo zoo director caused con- cern in London by refusing to return Cyril to his Canadian owners. He argued that Cyril Cyril The Sea Lion To Be Welcomed As L0-NlD'0!N, Ont. (GP)-—-Cyril the sea lion, just about the slipper- iest creature ever to stir up an international shouting match, has a hero’s welcome awaiting him in this western Ontario city. Cyril, who arrived here in ob- sou-rity 10 days ago and then es- caped to swim his way to the great lakes and headline acclaim will be coming back to the sea lion home in Storybook Gardens, a new city park-zoo pl‘-0J'6CL _ In Toledo, Ohio, where Cyril was taken after his capture in Lake Erie, the civic zoo agreed Saturday to return the sea lion to London —— even though he has proven the biggest crowd — getter in the Toledo zoo’s recent history. Toledo zoo boss Phil Ske1d_0I1, who helped catch -Cyril and flrst announced Toledo would keep Hero, Is PIcin I him, said he relented after a bar- rage of telephone calls protesting what Canadians had -termed “kid- napping” the sea lion. Mr. S-keldon~ said “we will re- turn the sea lion when it is fit to travel,” probably sometime in the middle of next week. “TRANQUILIZED” Tranqulllizer shots fired with a dart gun to subdue Cyril ‘eff. wounds which turned up big wells on the sea lion’s hide. At first he Nfused to eat but quit the hunger strike Saturday and began nib- bling some food. Besides the protests from Lon- don and its own resident, Toledo was attacked from another quar-. t-er. Sandusky, the Ohio Lake port where Cyril was captured, was outraged by Toled-o’~s earlier deci- sion to hang onto him (or it malt The Alpha’s sister ship, the was captured in American wat- ers and now is the pro-penty_of the Toledo zoo. The lumps on Cyril’s neck were caused by a reaction to the tranquilizing drug. (CP Photo) be her, nobody knows for sure). Said a detective who helped hunt Cyril, “if I had known Tol- edo wouldn’t return the sea lion I’d have called Cleveland.” That remark, and many more like it, followed Toledo’s refusal Friday night to turn Cyril over to two officials of the London Z00. RETURN EMPTY-HANDED The London officials returned empty-handed. So did two report- ers of the London Free Press who went to Toledo with t-he $200 reward the newspaper had of- fered for the sea lion’s capture. Mr. Skeldon seemed ever more determined to keep Cyril when crowds lined up at the zoo, usu- ally quiet on Saturday-s, waiting to see the celebrated sea lion. But -the telephone calls finally turned him. “People are anxious that Cana- dian - American relations should not be strain-ed by this," he said rebels. ndon To N.Y. Record Bravo, streaked over Idlewild at .2234 p.m. EDT. Its elapsed time tor the trip was five hours, 55 minutes and 21 seconds. The airmen felt good over their accomplishment but were ‘sad- dened by thou-ghts of the tragedy which overtook the mission upon takeoff -from Wcstover. Four of the planes—<K:C-135.5- had been scheduled to make the round trip flight to England. The Alpha and the Bravo got away safely but the,th=ird plane crashed with the los-s of 15 lives. Six news- paper men were among them. The flight of the fourth craft was then cancelled». Memorial services for the vic- tims were held at Westover Sun- day while the Alpha and the Bravo were in midocean on the return hop. ' Briiidsh P. M. Is Welcomed By De Gaulle P A R I 6 (Reuters) Gen. Charles de Gaulle Sunday wel- coined, Prime lvlinister Macmil- lan to Paris on the first day of a hectic diplomatic week for the new French premier. Macmillan is the first head-of- government to confer with de Gaulle since the general as- _ sumed power June 1. After the 24 - hour Macmillan visit, de Gaulle will travel to Al- geria for a three-day inspection tour and then return to Paris in plenty of time to greet U.S. State Secretary Dulles Saturday. The French-British talks were expected to cover such topics as East-West relations and the pros- pects of a summit meeting, Eu- 1'-opean security and the Middle East. De Gaulle probably will go over similar ground wit-h Dulles. LOCATE HELICOPTER HALIFAX, — (CP) — RCAF Search and Rescue H|eadquar- ters here said Sunday night a Lancaster from Torbay, Nlfld., located a missing helicopter about 150 miles northwest of Fort C-himo, Que. A message from the Lancaster. said the two men aboard the ditched helicopter “appear to be in good condition.” Names of the crew and owners of the heli- copter were not available. Hammorskio Problem For BEI-RUT, Lebanon (Reuters)- United Nations ,_lSec1'etary - Gen.- eral Dag Hammarskjold has re- jected Lebanon’s case for UN in- tervention in the country’s seven- week - long revolt, government sources disclosed Saturday night. An authoritative source said Hammarskjold made it "abund- antly clear” to President Camille Chamoun that he is against send- ing a United Nations police force to Lebanon and is even more strongly opposed to Western in- icrvention. The source said Hammarskjold told C-hamoun he considers the revolt a matter for the Lebanese government to settle on its own. Hammarskjold conceded that the revolt was perhaps being ex- ploited by the United Arab Re- public, the source said, but not to a large enough extent to turn the rebellion into an international problem. ';2 Meanwhile, the 12-nation UN observer team continued its in- vestigation of alleged in-fil.tration into Lebanon from Syria.,and was expected to submit its first re- port to Ham-mar-sk-jold early this LONDON (AiP)—-Several West- ern and neutral po-wers—-Canada amcng them — informally have expressed misgivings to Britain and the United States about any intervention in the Lebanese cri- sis even under the flag of the United Nations. This was reported Saturday by diplomats of countries consulted by London and Washington about the sjt.uatinn..4n._ubc.1\tiduie Ea-at republic. ' The diplomatic lnforma-nits said resistance to interveution——espe- cially by the big Western powers -—l1as mounted in the last few days and has come mainly from Canada, France, Yugoslavia and India. Two principal objections to big scale UN military action in the Lebanon apparently have been cited in the exchanges: 1. There is no clear - out evidence that -Lebanon has sus- tained an armed attack in the sense suggested in Article 51 of the United Nations charter. Pol- itical, eoonomic and limited mil- itary interference in Lebanese affairs by President Nasser’s United Arab Republic seems to be generally recognized. But the feeling -seems to be growing that MONTMAGNY, Que. (OP) - Six persons, including three nuns, were killed Saturday when a sta- tion wagon and a trailer-truck collided on the highway near this industrial centre 30 miles east -of Quebec City. The nuns were Sister Ethelvbert, the former Marguerite Nellis, 63, Sister Marie - Helena, formerly Marie Helene Nell-is, 56, Sister Terrance, formerly Terran-ce Nel- lis, 30. The older nuns were related as sisters, the youngest was their neice. All belonged to the con- gregation of Sisters of Charity in Quebec City, but Sister Ethelbert 1; PAGES *"*"°"'°“ “ "&':."...f.:.?.:.:.,”‘.‘;h'.?.’. ‘'‘”’°'' W» f CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA MONDAY, JUNE 30, 1958 "‘°“£,1;‘,,‘,’,““ FIVE CENTS ea For U. N. Troops Is Turned Down Cuban Rebels Hold 41 Canadians And Americans I Id Sees Revolt Locci-I Gov’i week. A There was an indication edito- rially of rising irritation with Ham-marskjo1_d here Saturday as he was accused of seeming to lack “appreciation” of what’s go- ing on in this rebellion - racked nation. The indication came from the most influential spokesman for the moderate group that "stands between Chamoun and the rebels trying to overthrow him, said Beirut’s leading newspaper L’Orient. An editorial criticizing l-l-am- mai-skjold appeared to be unex- pected support for the president from a source that has been op- posing him though not siding with the rebels. The editorial indicated the UN observation mission here does not realize how serious is the ‘sil- uatl-on created in Lebanon by the infiltration of United Arab Re- public forces. A-ccusing the United Nations of ambiguity it said: “It seems that Hammer- skrjold’-s porwens of appreciation are as limited as his powers of decision." Opposition Seen Growing y To Intervention By West the main threat to President Os- mille C h a m o u 11'': government comes from his political oppon- ents at home. SHOWDOWN FEARED 2. Yugoslavia fears that Rus- sia may be preparing a show- down with Poland's independent- minded W1-adysl-aiw G-omullns. and that the Kremlin bosses would be happy to use the smolkesoroen of at UN venture in Lebanon to cloak any physical actions they may plan to take. British, and U.S. diplomats appear to agree that Soviet-Polish relations are heading for s cnl-sis. Yugoslav officials recall that the Russians were able to crush the an-ti-Soviet revolt in Hungary in 1-556 at the time of the British- French invasion of Suez. At that time the moral issues became confused, the allies were divided and the United Nations were un- able to act effectively to halt lhe Hungarian tragedy. As far as can be established the Canadians and French have sent no notes or other commu- nications to Washington or Lon- don. Their views and those of the Indians and Yugoslav-s have been made known in the course of nor- mal business in various capitals. Three Nuns Among The Six Victims Of Saturday Crash people's home in New Bedford. Mass., and Sister Terrance was a nurse at St. Joseph's Hospital in Pembroke, 0-nt. The other victims were Carmen Forand, 12, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Nelson F-or.and of Montreal; " Micheline Ouellette, 14, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Ouellette of Quebec City and Alexandre Nel- lis, 31, of Patricktown in Que- bec’s Bonaventure County. The truck was overturned but driver James Anctt, 35, of Mont Joli, Que., escaped unharmed. Police worked for more than an hour to free the bodies town the wreckage. They were not had been a nurse in an old DOMINION DAY MESSAGE OTTAWA (CPJ ~— -Canada was “a tough tradition" of freedom. today. age,” he said in a Dominion Da message to the nation. - “A nation’s bravery in wa“ cannot atone for timidity in time of peace. We deny our feeedom if we don’t speak when there is something to be said.” Canada needed not only cour- age and knowledge but also un- derstanding. LINES OF DISTINCTION‘ “Ours is a -countryof two chief cultures, and we have many lines of distin«ction—I will not ‘say 0 division — which mark different interests and innumerable groups with a straight face. created by brave men who left Governor - General Massey" said That freedom can -be retained “only th-rough daily acts o.f cou1'- “That is as it should be. Unl- formity would be not only dull; it would be intolerable. We have survived and we grow by the ex- ercise of,infin~ite care and con- ciliation." Mr. Massey’s speech was is- sued in advance of its delivery July 1 over a national radio and television net-Wonk, using for the first time the new coast-to-coast TV microwave network. Text of his recorded speech: Today for the first time Cana- dians fmm one coast to the other, at the same moment, are watch- ing a national television broad- cast. We thus have something new to help to bind us together. I am speaking to you on July 1--Dominion Day. It is a day when we are asked to think of our beginnings. As a community Canada isn’t young—-this year we identified until hours later. Canadians Need Courage And Knowledge, Is View A of the founding of Quebec-—-but as a nation we still possess youth. I want to say something about our heritage and of our duty to keep it safe. What is the legacy we are asked to treasure? We would all agree that it has brought us the gift of treedom. May I look with you for a few moments at this familiar word, and ask what freedom really means in -this new, hard, danger- ous world. CONDITION or)‘ snnvrcn Freedom has too often been ‘presented as just a negative thing. But of course it is not merely a refusal to obey author- ity; it is rather a call to action. Freedom is not self-indulgence. nor sell-expression, it is rather I con~dition of service to the truth as we know it. each with its own point of view. celebmate the 350th anniversary (Continued on Page 2 001. II