TELEPHONE 8506 Buyer meets seller with Guardian Want Ads. Dial 8506 ask for classified ad taker, for Quick results. :O'PAGES v Members of the Provincial Jun- lhr Red Cross Committee held a glacial » meeting yesterday in charlottetowm. Those attending ulcluded FRONT ROW (left): Miss Iphigenie Arsenault, Pro- vincial Commissioner of the Red Cross Society; Mr. Merritt Cal- :MON'TREAL (CP)——The {Com- monwealth agreed Wednesday to construct a round-the-lworld link that will make a global telephone “call as clear and simple as one ' to the next-door neighbor. in a decision likely to make Canada the pivot of the communi. cations world, delegates to the Commonwealth economic confer- ence decided in principle to build a globe-gliding telephone and ‘ telegraph cable service, covering , all Commonwealth countries. . The $246,400,000 system is to be completed by stages over a 10- year period. In assuring a new quality to voice communication 3 across the World, it has incalcu- , table strategic implications in T event of war and may be the , forerunner of a world television _ ‘ce. ‘ l , The coaxial cable system, using repeaters to ensure» loo-«percent reception, will also provide telex, oabiegram and phototelegram fa- cilities. ' Radio telephone already spans . Halifax Hos Heat Record. V ‘HAlLllFAX (OCH—Autumn was ' only a day old when it started gearing reéords here Wednes- y. > 911me skies and warm westerly Winds shattered tw 0 weather _ marks for Halifax when the met- ‘eury rose to a sizzling 85. The reading was the warmest this year and the highest for the date lime the records began in 1874. Autumn started at 10:10 _a-.m. fAM‘ Tuesday. Warmest previous .fept.24h1llalilfaxwasan82in 920 Fredericton, the temperature rosetoszmbreakarecordof 78 set in 1937. £ . Nickel Miners Begin Strike SUDBUlRY (OP) — There was gloom throughout this mining area Wednesday as a strike by 14.000 workers at the Sudbury 811d Port Colborne plants of the International Nickel Company got ,Mder way. , _ The strike called Tuesday when union '~ management talks [Write down in the office of On- lla'l'lo La’bo r Charles Daley, is a body-lblow to the nuititnillion dollar economy of ,Jhiterritory. , ‘ .L HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) — The {OH-tine of everyday living closed «111 on Diana Faye Humph-ries TueSday, and to escape the Bore- dom she ambushed and killed her ’14-Year-old brother. Robert D. ~;Humphries Jr. . “I did it because nothing excit- lng ever happens around here." the Pretty, bloude 16-yearold girl robbed to police. ‘ She said she also planned to kill her father, mother and herself, butWeakened when she saw her mother. “I did it because everything ‘ Was so routine.” said Diana. "‘My mother goes to work every day and comes home tired. So ioes my father. and he is sick with ulcers. EVERYONE TIRED “Everyone was always tired. leemed we were always getting “l1. going to work or school, com- mg home, cooking meal‘ eating, Washing dishes, going to bed and Kelli-no up again. Robert was tired of school. It, ammo-momma”... an“ Woman m laghan, supervisor of schools in the Alberton area; Mr. Kenneth A. Parker, supervisor of City schools, Charlottetown, chairman of the Committee; .Mrs. Jeanette Yeo, teacher at Prince Street School, Charlottetown; Miss Es- telle Bowness, general secretary Canada Likely PivO’r ln ' New Commonwealth Link the world but is subject to ionos- pheric disturbances. EXTENSION or CANTAT The new system will be an ex- tention of the Cantat cable to be built by 1961 from Chan, Scotland, to Newcoundland. The first sub- marine telephone cable across the ocean floor was opened Sept. 25, 1956, and immediately proved a resounding success. ‘ Traffic became so heavy that it was decided to build a second link, now in the advanced plan- ning stage. v The first new stage will likely British Columbia and Aus- tralia. . ' When completed, the circuit will run from Britain to Canada. lacrosse-35‘ i ‘s t 1 n 3 domestic Prison , Term YARMOUTH, N. S. (CH—Har- old Hurllburt of nearby Carleton was sentenced to two years in the Maritime penitentiary at Dor- chester, N.B. on charges of crim- inal negligence in the death of his 19-year-old niece. Hurlburt was charged after the death of Shirley'Jvoyce Hurllburt on a highway near Carleton» May 30. Judge J. H. MacQuam‘ie or- dered ‘I-lurlburt'c driving licence Canada-UK. “Covers Prihce u ratio Edward Island. Like The Dew” ‘\ CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER’ 25, 1958 HOLD SPECIAL MEETING % of the P.E.I. Teacheré’ Federa- tion; BACK ROW: Dr. L.W. Shaw former deputy minister of educa- tion, and past chairman of the Committee; Mr. Clarence Mer- cer, supervisor of schools, Sum- merside; and Mrs. Marie Dev- lin, Charlottetown, provincial dlr-‘ ector of the Junior Red Cross. lines to the West Coast, via Fan- ning Island on the Pacific to New Z aland, then to Australia, Singa- re, Chittagong in Pakistan, Col- ombo in Ceylon, Karachi, Bom- bay and round the coast of Africa to Britain. First conference reports indi- cated Britain would foot about half the bill. Later the UK. dele- gation issued a statement saying that a “substantial” contribution will be made but that Britain can not be bound to any set figure. Alth-ought he total cost is esti< mated‘at $246,400,000, only $210,- 000,000 in new money will be in‘ volved because financing has al- ready been arranged for the cable stage. Can- ada's share of the financial-bur- den 15 to be decided later. Common-wealth circuit is almost: tantalum, phonic cable around 13-Yr.-0|d Boy Killed When Struck By lruck A 13-year-old Brackl'ey Beach delivery truck at Cudmore’s Cor- ner in Oyster Bed. Horace Ling, son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Ling, was on his way home from school about 3:30 with two companions on bikes, when struck by the truck as it pulled away from the general store on - the corner. The youngster was rushed by ambulance to the Prince Edward Island Hospital, but died enroute. The truck was driven by Law- rence Matheson of Charlottetown . according to police. An inquest has been called for October 2nd. Members of the jury will be Elric W. Campbell (fore- man) Harry T. Mortimer, Le- Roy Creamer, Robert J, King, Emerson J. Delaney, Raymond L. Steele and Kenneth Jay. Besides his bereaved parents Quake Shakes Central Chile SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) —- All earthquake shook Santiago and central Chile at 11 em. EDT Wednesday. There were no re- ports of damage of casualties. CHILD KILLED BATllUlRST, NB. _(CP) Nichole St. Pierre, 6, died in hos- pital here early Wednesday after being injured when she ran in front of a truck near her home .— mtmukeahan. a. here. . ' ’1 New boy was killed late yesterday af- ternoon when the bicycle he was driving was struck by a soft drink ' a limited market, he said, “in . help. Canadian farmers are. very , Iese the boy is survived by three sis- ters and four brothers, Nancy. Linda and Cyndria, David, Blame Gilbert and Brendon. Holkness Soils For Europe To Seek Markets MONTREAL ("P)—Agiiculture Minister Harkness has sailed for Britain and the Continent in an effort to sell more Canadian farm produce in Europe. He said he will try to open mar- kets for surplus farm goods. “I will be open to make as many deals as possible,” he told report- ers before sailing Tuesday on the Empress of England. For the last several years Ca- nadian dairy and pork products, apples and canned fruit had had fact in some cases we had no market at all.” Up to 1954 Canada was ship- ping 400,000,000 pounds of pork to ‘ Britain alone, but “in the last four or five years we have shipped none.” “llf we could get just 10 per cent of this market back it would anxious to reestablish overseas Firemen's Union _ w I Issue‘Tolks Bunny with: few cloudy intervals and confining warm; light westerly winds, ~ 4 Increasing. to sou’weat 15. Lowhigh 50-75 MONTREAL (GP) — The fire- men’ls union has demanded fresh talks with the Canadian Pacific Railway on the controversial 1 diesel firemen issue. The demand—termed “ir- responsible” by the CPR—would reopen a long-standing dispute - that twice in 21 months provoked nation—wide strikes by firemen against the CPR. The railway is expected to re ject flatly the union proposal on the ground the issue was settled in an agreement that ended the firemen's second strike last May. W. E. Gamble, Canadian chief of the firemen’s union, charged Wednesday that the May strike settlement was forced ion the union by a government threat to legiSlate for the withdrawal of firemen in yard and freight diesels. “As far as the union is con- cerned,” said Mr. Gamble, “it made a settlement only to pre- ‘ vent the government from carry- = log out a threat to make the Kel~ markets.” SNUW 1N! SCOTLAND a lair .. 3,. EXprésS ConCern Over '1 3-Year Air Defence Gap v OTTAWA (CP) —- Defence authorities Wednesday expressed concern about what they de- scribed as the three—year time gap in Canada's air defence sys- tem. , Their concern arises from the cancelled for eight years. SuSsex Man Is, Killed When . Covered Bridge Collapses SUSSEX, NB. (OF) —— William Arthur Powell, 44, of Sussex was killed Tuesday when his heavuy loaded .pulpwood truck' crashed through a covered bridge at Wa- terford, 12 miles from here and fell 15 feet into the Hammond River. The bridge was demolished. A heavy load of pulpwood, plus the weight of the bridge and the bed force of striking the river bed col- lapsed the truck’s cab and, trap- ped the victim inside for more than two hours. He had been haul- ing pulpwood to Sussex. The truck. was owned by John Cunningham of Sussex Corner. Dr. A_W. Clark, Sussex coroner, said death was due to a crushed chest. He found the death accideu-V tal and ruled an inquest unneces- ar . s Plywell, son of James and_t.he late Charlotte Powell, is survrved, by his wife, three sons, three daughters and his father. I Nothing Exciting Happens (:50 Girl Kills Her Brother “I couldn't stand it! I wanted to kill everyone quick so we wouldn’t have to suffer anymore.” Robert didn’t suffer, said police. He was shot thought he forehead with a .22-calibre rifle as he walked into the den of the Hum- phries home. . » SHOT AGAIN Diana reloaded and shot'him again as Mrs. Humphries, 34, came up the walk out-s1de. “I saw then there was no way that I could shoot mother without her seeing me,” the girl sob-bed. “I didn’t want her to see me shoot her, so I told her to stay out- side.” i u _ Mrs. Humph-ries said: She told me not to come in, that she had shot Robert and was going to - e. _ Shglnwrzrallked in and took the rifle away from her. I thought she was joking. They’re always playing Jelliislice said Diana Would be given a psychiatric examination. It is believed the truck failed to clear the right-angle turn at the bottom of a gentle slope ap- proaching the bridge from the south east, and crashed into the first bridge support on the right side. The bridge known as Haw- kes Bridge and constructed in 1907, buckled in the middle and fell with the truck into the river Robert Ness, Sussex, directed a crew from the bridge division of the Provincial Department of Public Works in clearing away the wreckage Wednesday morning so that the truck could be remov- ed. Traffic was diverted, and the detour will continue in effect un- a temporary' bridge can be constructed. 1 local reserve naval establish- ment will be carried out today by Commanders J.O.T. Lee and the staff of the Naval Reserve H.R. Beck, R.C.N., members of D.M‘. fact that Canada will not procure vanynewairdefenceweaponber tween now and 1961. It has no direct connection with the government decision to switch to groundto-air missiles from jet interceptoms because. the super- sonic Arlrow fighter, if it ever does go into RCACF squadron won’t be ready until 1961. Two Bomarc anti-aircraft mis- sile bases will be built in north- ern Ontario and Quelbec but they won’t be ready for operation un- til 1961. , In the meantime, themain de- fensive weapon will continue to be the subsonic CF—ioo jet, an ancient fighter plane by today’s standards. For armament, it car- ries a conventional LL n g uid ed rocket and no missile. ' One official said there will be tremendous pressure on the nine CF-100 squadrons — some 200 planes—«in the next three years to keep training and efficiency at a peak constantly. ‘ However, therewere no recrim— inations about the government— the previous Liberal and current Progressive Conservative admin- istrations — not taking action sooner to fill the gap. Authorities said it had been al- An informal inspection of the Training Dislsion Headquarters, Hamilton, Ontario. They were met on arrival at the local air- port last evening by Lt.-Cmnd1'. MacDonald, R.C.N. Staff Officer at H.M.C.S. Queen Char- most impossible to foresee such a time gap because of rapid tech- until recently of proven and re- lialble missiles. Th eventual grounding of the RCAF’s wombat fliers revived talk of integration of the armed for- ces. However,‘ officials said they could not foresee any immediate move in this direction apart from some further steps toward unifi- cation of administrative services. fWinnipeg Pch-ns‘ Slum Clearance , WlNNIPEG (CP) —_— Mayor Stephen Jluba of Winnipeg will ask million-dollar plan to clear the city’ slums and replace them with modern apartment buildings. Mr. J uba said Tuesday he hopes the slum clearance will be started as a winter employment project in the winter of 1959-60. The fed» eral government would be asked to pay 75 per cent of the cost of buying land and demolishing pres- ent buildings in slum areas. WILL INSPECT NAVAL ESTABLISHMENT craft, lotte. Pictured just after the visitors disembarked from their twin-engined Expediter, the group includes (left) Lt.-Cmndrs. S.R. Linquist and J.R. Burns, R.C.N., pilots of the naval air- little Eugene Borotra of St, Pierre from the plane which brought the’ _ EDINBURGH (Reuters)-—Brlit- =al-n's first snow of the season fell ~ infidel”, Sit": nological advances, especially in the last year, and nonexistence federal government aid in a multi- youngster to Charlottetown last evening/where he is to undergo John’s. Nfld. ‘- -—sl. Pierre Boy Arrives For ; CHARLOTTETOWN business- treatment at the City Hospital for man - 501m Simmonds, carries an eye injury. Mr. Simmonds was returning from the APEC and Premiers’ conferences at St. [Treatment By City Specialist An unexpected passenger on the MCA charter flight which brought home from St. John’s Newfound- land last evening the members of the Island delegatiom attending both the Atlantic Premiers. con- ference and the annual meeting of APEC, was Eugene Borotra, six-year—old son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Borotra of St. Pierre. The young boy injured his eye with a knif ; yesterday afternoon while the and group were visit- ing the French-owned Island off the coast of.Newfoundland, and it was decided that he should be tax- Rebel Leader | As New .Premi BEIRUT ' (Cm—«President Fuad‘ Chehal), withlhis first day in of- fice shot to pieces by heavy street fighting, Wednesday night named a 37-yearold rebel leader as pre- mier and told him to form 8 gm:- ’ ernment. PINNED UNDER TRUCK MONICTON (OPP-Donald Bel- '1iveau, 23, of Pres d’En N.B., was killed near his home Wed- nesday when the body of a dump truck he was repairing crashed and pinned him. Lt.-Cmndr. MacDonald, and Commanders Beck and Lee. They arrived here from Shear- water, N.S. via Saint John, N. B. and will leave today on re- turn to their home base. en to Charlottetown where he could be treated by a,speciallst. Two members of the party vol- unteered to foot all bills incurro ed, and MCA extended their facilities gratis. The boy was ac- compnnied here by his mother, and is now a patieht at the Char- lottetown Hospital where he is be- ing cared for by Dr. William Moreside. ’ " While in St. Pierre, the'Island visitors were the guests of the new Governor of the Colony, Pierre Pout. They were given an official reception and taken on a sight-seeing tour. 3 Selected er Of Lebanon At least 19 persons were re- ported dead and scores injured in gun battles in the centre of the city between supporters of former president Camille Camille Cha- moun and Chehab. . Named premier was Rashid K-arami, leader of rebel forces in the northern port of Tripoli. He has been opposed by proof-a- moun throes. * Chehab sent tanks, armored cars and troops into key loca-, tions throughout the city and em- powered them to shoot to kill to try to' restore peace. ORDERS CURF'EW Early in the afternoon, C‘hehlalb drdered a curfew, clearing the , streets. Wednesday’s fi g h t i n g was centred between the Falangists, a Christian organization supporting Chamoun, who retired Tuesday, and extremiSt Modems. ' Chen-ab issued three decrees: 1. He accepted the resignation of the previous government; 2. He called upon Karami to form a, government; , 3. He approved and decreed the government which Karami has formed. In the new government, Klarami is premier, defence minister and , interior minister. Canned Imports Are Challenge KENTVILE, N.VS. (CPL-[Phil— lip R. Robi-nsbn of, Ottawa, maln- ager of the Canadian Food Pro- cessors Association, said here Wednesday imports of American canned fruits and vegetables present a challenge to the in- dustry in Canada. Mr. Robinson told an Anna- polis Valley regional meeting of the association that imports last year equalled 767 per cent of the Canadian production. In 1940, the amount was only 21.9 per cent, I look report law.” 2 NON-BINDING RULING The Kellook report was handed down after the first firemen’s strike in January, 1957. In a non- binding ruling, the report said lO‘MiG’s tionalist China’s fighter M down 10 MiG: and pilots Wednesday in one of the biggest air battles of the jet age, the de- fence ministry reported. Admiral Liu Hon-tut the Na- tionalist spokesnmn, said 32 Nationalist Schneider and more than 100- Russiaunmade MiG~17s tangled in the 10-minute fight that ranged more than 400 miles along the Formosa Strait. .A Red plan to lure the Nation- alists ' over the mainland back- fired, he said. Allof the Sabres and their American-trained and eq ' pilots returned safely. The victory ran the National- ista’ string of claimed air kills to 25MiGsshotdownandsixpmb~ ables without the loss of a Na- tionalist plane since the Quemoy hostilities erupted Aug. 23. The Nationalists at first saidll Red planes were shot down but liter they revised the figurelto FIXING EVIDENCE? Lin told a press conference: “Thep tried to force our planes over the it was an ob- vious attempt to manufacture ew- dence for their claim that the United States and we are respon- sible for the tension (in the For. mosa Strain." Helene- Now Hurricane ' MlJAMI, Fla. (AP) ’— Tropical storm Helene grew into a huffi- caue' Wednesday and another storm formed in the Atlantic east of the Leeward Islands. - Helene, eighthstorm and fourth hurricane of the season, was about 425 miles east of Fort Pierce, Fla., moving toward the south Atlantic coast. The new storm, christened Ilsa by weather bureau forecasters, was 700 miles east of San Juan, Puerto Rico, and 1,700 miles southeast of Miami, and was mov- ing along the hurricane track of the Atlantic at 16 miles an hour. Editor’s Note: AP corres- pondent Forrest Edwards re- turned to Quemoy Wednesday with the first group of report- ers to visit the island since Sept. 15. By FORREST EDWARle QUEIMOY (AP) —— Military in- stallations of besieged Quemcy show surprisingly little damage considering it has been. founded with more than 350,000 artillery shells in a month. Most installations are solidly and deeply dug in. High explo- sive bursts just dust off the top of bunkers and fighting positions carved into the sides of cliffs and hills. The supply situation appears to be ialr from critical, although Na- Canclclicln‘ Pacific Terms Demand ’Irresponsible’ firemen were not needed on yard and freight diesels. Mr. Gamble said both Prime Minister Diefenlbakelr and Labor Minister Starr told the union that Parliament would be asked to en- dorse as law the Kellock report pated in government-union-com- pany talks in an unsuccessful bid to avert the May strike. ~ maud on the railways 12 days ago as a supplementary prdposal to be negotiated as part of a new working agreement. Mr. Gamble {fleeting with railway representa- was. He said it was “a little too early” to say whether the issue could lead to a third firemen’s strike. The union chief said the case for reopening the diesel dispute would be based on two points: 1. A union contention that the agreement ending‘flhe May strike applied only to the old contract which expired May 31 which meant the whole question could be renegotiated all over again in new contract talks. 2. Further union arguments on the need for diesel firemen for safety and mechanical reasons. Downed " In‘Big Air Fight TAIPEI, Formsa (AP) -— Na- - ('Peiping Radio claimed‘the Red Nationalith fighter and damaged one. The location was given as over Fukien province oppoaite the Nationalist offshore islands. Noth- ing was said about Communist losses.) ' News of stirred ex- citement in Taipei and coincided with increasing reports that pro- gress was being made in crack- ing the mist artillery blockade of the Nationalist for- tress island of Quemoy. Associated Press correspondent Forrest Edwards, who flew to Quemoy with the first group, of reporters to land there in nine days, said supplies were getting convoy, but were still not suffi- cient to replace daily expend- itures. ' L Find lot ln Swamp But Alive SUSSEX (CP)—— for 12 , hours from his home at nearby Urney, Thermals Adair, 2 1-2 year- old son of Mrs. Glen Adair, was found exhausted but safe at 10 p. 111. Wednesday after the area had been scoured by more than 100 men. Included in searchers were RCMP and perhnlulel on the black watch depot at camp Sussex. The boy was two miles from his home and was lying face down in a swamp. He was ex- amined by Dr. H. R. Bryant of Sussex and reported not to have suffered any serious effects. In the event he was not found by morninghalrrangements were ‘being made by RCMP to bring a police dog from Monoton. Nlewsmon Sees Little Damage _ From‘Sh-elling On Quemoy Is. tionalist officers admit they are using up more than is being brought in-by sea convoy and air drop. K At one artillery position, firing . against Red guns near Amoy,,no shortage of ammunition was ap- parent. A 50-yard trench leading to the ISIS—millimetre gun em- placement had seven well stocked caches of shells. Other larger stocks of ammunition are stored underground nearby. The artillery unit commander ‘said the problem was not one of immediate supply needs but re- plenishment of ammunition and other-supplies being used daily in order to keep this fortress ready to repel a possible invasion Itr tempt, ‘ if a settlement was not v~ quickly achieved. They partici--' The union served its latest de- '. is expected to ask for an early , Chinese air force shot down one . through both‘ by air drop and sea '