TELEPHONE 8506 Buyer meets seller w A"s. , Authorized In Second Class Mail by I3TH ANNUAL "y ‘ ‘mual competition of the Prince Edward Island Rural Beauti- Wu Society were announc- ‘ ,‘d by the President, Lieut.-Col. ’1’ ; pw. Johnstone, the Board of Directors and r the Advisory Board ~ ‘ l-II ,V. i l 11m; .. WE“! “(159 Wt ’passengerinthesecoiulcar'os- ‘,wemallpassengersln a usual! e were 129 entries in all classes as compared with 159 m 1W7. ,A new competition was insti- tuted, Village Improvement Competition, Open to all incorpor- stad under 1,000 popula— lion. The field of improvement induded obuwh property, clergy- man’s residence, cemeteries, balk, schools and madstdes, ml the general improvement in the appearance of the village as . whole was given first coilsider- ation. In this competition the Village of Morell made outstand- Lug improvement and was highly oonnnended by the Directors and Judges. In Prince County, the Chief Justice Thane A. Campbell Sil- ver Cup, awarded for the great- est farm home improvement unong contestants of the first year in that County, was won by Harold Wbodside, Margate, who also won the cash prize of $100. 00. . -Mrs. John Jones, Harrington, .lOontinued on page 9 Col. 1) Father, Small Daughter Die In Collision ‘aAlthI‘ JOE-IN, NB. (om—rub- ort Machine, 5, of Lancaster, 11.3. and his two-year-old daugh- ter Lynn Lorraine, died Sunday night when their car was in head - on collision with another driven by Ernest M. Roberts of Saint John. Five other people were injured in the accident, two seriously. They are Mackle’s wife, Mrs Joan Mackie; a son, Robert Shell, 5; two friends identified a Mr.aners.A.Morinof Oro- moctn, N.B.; Maurice Rankine, 4, believed a grandchild of, the Morin mple. Most cerium indtmad were Mr. and Mrs. Morin. Mrs. Maclnie llle. The children were only makenupandareexpcotedtobe Theseven dead and unwed forcigncar'ownedby Mr.Mlac- hie. Police have releasednodo- tailsoftbeaccident. - BURN SHACK SYDNEY, — (OP) — Police on a torch to a grimy stack at the city dmnp here Saturday. 'lhen they gave 66-year-old own- er Frank Kowal a bed in the city jail. It was the third tune police burned a shock occupied by Kowtal, each time on orders Dial 8506 ask for taker, for quick results. ith Guardian Wr‘it classified ad th- Post ‘- Denartment. Ottawa or“. ( Rural Beautification Winners Announced ‘ . L '. Trim winners in the thirteenth No. 1 -—Home of Mr. William HaggaFW. New Amman, winner of the Hon. J. A. Bernard Silver Cup for first place in the Pm IiciaIMou Pope Ended VAfI‘lICAIN OIITY (Reuters)— Nine days of official mourning for the late Pope Pius XII ended Sun- day with a magnificent, candle-lit service in St. Peter’s Basilica. Eliot Vince in Farm Improvement, third-year class, in the 1958 com- petition. rning For On Sunday rotary-priest holding a lighted beeswax candle. It was the last and most grandiose‘ of nine re quiem masses celebrated each day since the 82-yearo1d Pope dried Envoys of 53 nations, dressed in evening clothes, and 41 crim- son - lobed cardinals, who will elect a new supreme pontiff next Saturday, attended the solemn two-hour requiem mass in the apse of the church. ' A forest of candles binned M299, . rem“ of the Pope. realm lay in a snail bare chapel in the crypts below—a few Apostle Peter. Noble guards in silver helmets with long horsehair plumes, pol- ished breastplates, scarlet jackets and white breaches stood at at- teution beside the catafalque. luceuse curled slowly upwards in wisps of blue mist as it passed through the shafts of sunlight streaming through the hast Mich. aelangelo dome. ARC LAMPS BLAZE Television arc lamps blazed down on the scene. More than 8,000 people in the upse fell to their knees at the most solemn moment of the mass, which was celebrated by silver- bearded Eugene Cardinal Tisser- ant, French dean of the College of Cardinals. ' ‘ from health authorities. , . British Troops Will Begin Moving From J By PAMELA MATTHEWS . LONDON (Reuters) — British troops will begin pulling out of Jordan on schedule Monday in a Withdrawal operation expected to take three weeks, the defence ministry announced Saturday. Some troops and equipment al- ready have moved from Amman ‘0 the southern port of Aqyaha m Preparation for the evacuation, the announcement said. ' About 3,000 British troops were “Ill to Jordan at King Hussein’s reQuest after the Iraqi monarchy Was overthrown July 14. Britain agreed to withdraw its forces un- Before each cardinal was a sec- ordan Today ' tions General Assembly resolution Aug. 21. PLEDGE NON-INTERFERENCE The unanimously approved re- solution, sponsored by the Arab nations, pledged non-interference in the domestic affairs of other nations. . Diplomats here said the Bl‘l-t- ish withdrawal will provide a critical test of the intentions of President Nasser of the United Arab Republic. Hussein’s regime bitterly criticized the UAR its propaganda broadcasts_ di- rected at the proAWestern regimes of Jordan and Lebanon before mmmmmmdmmfcethomthempuwdtombdthe- AVM KENNEDY Comptroller Of R-CAF Dies Unexpectedly OTTAIWIA (CPL—{Funeral serv- ices will be held Tuesday for Vice-Marshal Wlater E. Kennedy, comptroller of the REM since 1955, who died suddenly Saturday. A native of Vancouver, he was only 44. He is believed to have been stricken with a heart seiz- ure. He died at his home here. The funeral will be held Tues- day at the Protestant chapel at Rockcliffe Air Station, 'with full military honors. He will be buried in Ottawa’s Beechwood Cemetery. As RACIAF‘ comptroller, Air Vice Marshal Kennedy was a member of the air council, the five-man body that determines air force policy. Surviving are his wife, the for- mer Patricia Elizabeth MarcKin- non of Vancouver, and three chil- dren, Michael, 17, Judith, 15, and E the terms of a United Na- By Tiny PETERHEAD, Scotland (Reut- fl‘sl—A ven-year-old boy Sun- ‘ day ca ght runaway convict Johnnie Ramensky, one of the World's leading safecrackers to war and peace. ' Within 48 hours of breaking out Of Peterhead Jailo—Aby pickmg a fi’fiw locks, of course—Juhmue was baCk behind bars where he has Spent about 30 of his 53 years of e. ' Little David Smith found him hiding in the straw of a barn Within sight of the prison. DaVld, who had entered the barn to clean out the loft, holle:ed to his father: "Ramensky is here.” WAS ALLIED iurzxr The modern Jimmy V’alt‘nlmc, all" “ho baracliuscd betrud on.ch V line: In 1119 var and cracked ,. \‘ Nazi safes, said quietly: ‘ Y0“ \ Ghouldn't have come in "here. ”““)'~don't be frightened, when David: father and farm and during the Inaqi crisis. RUnaway Convict Caught y In SCotIand Bo worker George Henderson ar- rived, the fugitive pleaded: “Give me five minutes and I’ll get away.” They turned Ramensky over to police. ' Prison authorities were baffled by the latest escape. They said Ra‘mensky vanished from the sealed recreation room Friday night. Both doors of the room were locked and the windOWS barred. The ace safecracker was serv- ing 10 years for breaking into a garage and blowing a safe there. On his last escape in January, he was at large for 24 hours. TAUGI-IT COMMANDOS Ramcnsky was released from prison at the outbreak of war. He instructh commandos in the 1156 of explosives and was later dropped behind enemy lines to crack German safes and oblam secret Information. Mary, 11. I His exploits gained him a war record as one of Britain’s most skilled secret agents. During the Allied advance on Rome, he dropped behind enemy lines with a few other commandos and blew open a s to at a German head. quarters. Germans' drawa‘l to Northern Italy, headquarters in Germany. cracked a huge safe and escaped with more valuable secrets. At his last trial, the itchy‘ fingered war hero admitted he had devoted his career to safe- cracking. The crown pointed to his wartime contribution through his "specialized knowledge of 11):” lockrfajl, places," 0 But the judge said his career . 'rl he (‘<“".'_l “of be trusted fl... _ \. Em, was discovered \r‘flio‘obod'. - v , Ieonard Burger, 13, was “Covers Prince Edward Island Like 7713 Dew” CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA MONDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1958 Cardinal Valeri Mentioned As, The Next Pope VATICAN CITY (AP)—~Wa1erio Cardinal Valeni, with almost 210 years of experience in the Vati- can’s foreign service, is being mentioned by the Italian press as a strong possibility for election as the next pope. As prefect of the Congregation of the Religious, the scholarly cardinal is also the Vatican’s top administator for religious orders. He be 75 Nov. 7. Born in a small Tuscan village, he decided at an early age to study for priesthood and entered the pontifical College in Rome when he was 17. - ' He was graduated with brilliant marks, not only in theology and philosophy, but also in canonic and Italian civil law. At the age of 27, he became a teacher of dogmatic theology at the regional pontifioal semin- ary at Fano. After serving in the Italian army's medical corps in the First World War, he was transferred to the Vatican state secretariate to begin diplo‘ matic career. In the consistory of 1953, he was raised to the rank of ca - inal by Pope Pius XII. Four Burned To Death In Ontario Fire PEMBROKE, Ont. (OP) — A family of three and a relative were burned to death in their one- room cabin early Saturday near here. The fire, believed caused by overheated stovepipes, was spot- ted by soldiers returning to Camp Petawawa by bus. They thought the fire department had already been notified and did not stop. A fire unit was dispatched from the camp 15 minutes after the, soldiers arrived when one of them checked with the fire brigade and found out the fire had not been reported previously. The body of Ernest Hammell, 44, a. construction worker at the camp, was found near the only door of the cabin. That of his wIiIfe, Freda, 27, was faund in the bed. Their three-year-old son. undefineath The body of Mrs. Hammcl’s on the floor, near the door. KILLED 0N ROAD CHEZZETCOOK, N.S. (CP)-- Thomas Roma, 75, of Chezztcook, about 19 miles ffrom Halifax, was killed Saturday night when struck by a car as he walked across the road to visit his brother’s home. Policemen Go In Two Cities WEATHER Sunny clouding over in the afternoon; cool; light winds increasing to easterly 20. Low-high at Charlottetown 32 and 50. NOT MORE THAN On Rampage I FIVE CENTS Of The U.S. Dulles Makes Surprise Stopover ~ For Ialks With British Official ‘ B>RIZ>E N O R T O N, England (Reuters)-4Sta»te Secretary Dulles left by air here Sunday night for Formosa after a 90~minute con- ference with Foreign Secretary Lloyd during a surprise stopover in his flight from Rome. Dulles and Lloyd discussed the Far East situation and other world problems, but neither would comment on the talks. Lloyd made a special trip to the US. air base here to meet with Dulles while his plane was refuelling. Dulles was heading for talks with Chinese Nationalist Presi- dent Chia-ng Kai-Ishek in Formosa afterattendinxg final funeral rites in Rome for Pope Pius XII. Besides discussing the Formosa issue, Dulles and Lloyd discussed the Cyprus problem and Anglo- American talks with Russia on nuclear test detection starting in Geneva Oct. 31. IMPROMPTU VISIT Dulles had originally been scheduled to fly directly on a transpolar route from Rome via Alaska to Taipei. Asked before leaving Rome about the surprise visit to Britain, he said it hap- ' pened “so naturally." “Mr. Lloyd learned that I was coming down (at Brice Norton) for more gas and would be there for dinner,” he added. “The am- bassador in Washington (Sir Har— old Caccia) suggested that we should meet. I said I would be delighted.” Dulles said his talks in Rome Saturday with. Italian, Amintdre Fanfdfli and Foreign “Ministers Heinrich von Brentano of West Germany and Couv-e de Murville of France had been “very helpf .” Formosa was among the prob- lems discussed, he added. Von Brentano and dc Murville also were in Rome to attend the papal rites. Dulles’ 8,200-mile flight to Tai- pel, with a stop also at Nielson air base in Alaska, is expected to put him in Taipei Tuesday morning, Formosa time. MUTUAL ASSURANCES During the two days in For- mosa he probably will assure Chi- an-g there has been no change in US. policy on Formosa. Chiang, in return, is believed ready to give his assurance he will take no independent actions against the Chinese Reds, such as bomb- ing raids on the mainland. But the big question still is whether Chiang will agree to a manpower cut on the offshore island of Quemoy to relievo Com- munist fears of a Nationalist in- vasion. , The United States is reported to feel that if these fears can be re- moved, a dependable cease-lire can be achieved. The self- nnposed cease - fire around Quemoy goes into its third week. It is due to end next Som- day. The Taipei meetings also are aimed at showing that the United States and Nationalist China ar not split on policy in Formosa Strait. Federal Minister Of Health Arrives For On Jay Waldo Monteith, federal Minister of Health and Welfare arrived in Charlottetown by car yesterday afternoon on a. one-day visit to the Province, the first since his appointment as to the Cabinet. While here. Mr. Momtelth, who is accompanied by his two de- puties, Dr. J .D.W. Cameron, (Health) and Dr. G. F. Davidson (Welfare), will discuss matters of joint interest with Dr. L. M. Bon- nell, provincial of Health, and Hon. A. A. MacIsaac, provincial of Welfare. He will also pay a curtesy call on Premier Malthoson and inspect the local olfices of his depart- ment. At noontime the federal minis? ter will be guest speaker Willi? Chhilottetown Rotary Club. U He and hislparty will leave on‘ return to Monoton late in the afternoon. ' Mr. Monteith is senior partner in the. firm of Montcith, Mouteith and Company, Chartered Accoun- tants, located in his home town of Strutford, Ontario. He is also preo sident of James Lloyd and Son, Limited. He was first elected in 1953 as full plans for with- Later, Ramensky raided Nazi ,- ‘ air chief Hermann Goerlng’s a He EQUIMALT. B.C.-—The ensign. is lowered for the last IIITK,‘ on Canadian Navy‘s west coast-bast cruiser. Affter 13‘: years I11 con- to .chr clear at crlme' board IIMCS Ontario. the Royal; is being declared surplus and \Vllllqullllall. u‘no put up for sale by the gov- moment. The ship has trained several thousand officers and men of tho Canadian Navy am! at; ‘ iimnl tinuous commission, more than holds a special Place in UK at half a million miles steamlng ‘ H ‘ I 3 over the world's oceans. the slupfihc paving-oil rmcmony 1n [.5- thls morning Rear Au- e Day Visit J .W. MONTEITH and his grandfather, tario scene. Progressive Conservative repre- sentative tor Perth. Both his father, Hon. Joseph D.’Mlonltclth Andrew Momteith Were active in the On— Bnoaden-y restaurant early Sun- day and without warning fatally Shot {our men standing at the bar. The officer, Jvamcs McDermott, 34, then filed, crashing through the glass panelling of the exit door. McDenmott staged a run- ning gun battle with pursuing patrolman. H-e wounded one pur- suer before he was. shot down three blocks away. MoDermott was not expected to live. The patrolman, father of three, entered the Pich-«Rib Restaurant at 53rd Street about 1:45 am. He went to a men's room at the rear and minutes later walked toward the door as if to leave. SUDDENILY WHEELED Suddenly hewheeled and, with- out uttering a word, began firing. Three men atone end of the bar fall with bullets in their heads. Farther up the bar another man was felled by a bullet in the head. All four died in hospitals. Police salid MIcDenmott fired six shots in all . There were six patrons at the bar, including one woman. As the shots rang out, bartender Albert Kecy ducked behind the bar and crouched on the floor. The restaurant proper is soo- anated from the bar by a parti- tion. ' FEW PATRONS There were only a few patrons ' hie desmdbed by his chief as either drunk or out ofhismind,ldlledamanwho knocked on his door by mistake Saturday. Then he ran outside and critic- ally wounded in teen-age boy with his police revolver. Jerome Peter Kuk, a decorated war veteran who has been on the Mon Killed In N.B. Accident PETITCODBAC N.B. (CH—One man was and 15 persons narrowly escaped injury Saturday night when five vehicles includ- ing a truck became entangled in a traffic pile—up on the Elgin highway near here. Dead is Pearl A. Garland, about 50, driver of a car which was in collision with a truck. Halifax Doctor FAREWELL TO THE ’BIG 0’ lmiral H.S. Rayner. Flag Officer IPacific Coast said. “As Flag Of- 1l‘icer Pacific Coast. lhave aI-. . , , , . ‘ , Ways re“ thc “Big .0... wouldipllm. didnt know It. “as m do well whatever she was askch Dies At Age 33 HAIIAIFAX (CP) — Dr. Donald Hugh MacKeuzie of Halifax died Saturday after a brief illness. A native of Sydney, the 33—year old physician studied at St. Fran- cis Xavier niversity in Antigon- ish, N.S., before entering McGlll University Medical School from where he graduated in 1948. He practised in Campbell’s Bay, Que, several years before moving police force in nearby Las Vegas only 10 days. was booked on sus- picion of murder after he called the police station here and re- ported: “Come down here. I've killed a dopehea ." The dead man was Steve Bow- man, 47. a steelwonker at the Atomic E nergy Connoission’s atomic test site. Police said BUWman left his home to borrow some tools from a man who lives next door to Kuk. Instead. Bowman knocked on Kuk’s door. investigators said Kmk told them he recogmzed- ' Bowm an as “a fugitive from justice" and a “wanted murderer.” SHOOTS TWICE Officers quoted Kuk as saying he let Bowman in his house, then pulled his .38—calilbre police re- volver and shot him twice in the chest. Police said Kuk told them he heard an automobile outside, fig- ured it was "the getaway car,” ran outside and fired two shots at it. In the car were William J. here. ARGENTIA, Nfld. (CH—Res- cuers Sunday night feared wind— whipped waves may have broken up a giant United States Navy plane submerged in Placentia Bay here with 10 men believed trapped inside. Navy divers from Norfolk, Va., and a giant crane are attempting to salvage the Super Constella- tion which nose-dived into the bay Saturday after missing the run- way of a US Navy base here. Eighteen of the 29 men aboard the four-engine aircraft were res- cued by surface vessels. One man is dead. The fate of the 10 trapped men was uncertain. N o b 0d y would comment on the possibility they could survive this long inside the submerged plane. A U.S. Navy officer, the only spokesman avail- able, said “it’s pretty grim." Names won't be released until next of kin are notified. WENT DOWN FAST The plane went down so quickly ithat Lt. John Koskey, the co- trouble to do.“ It was a filling epitaoh rough." ’fections of Canada‘s sailors. Atilor a stout ship of the Royal ICauadIan Navy. “until I felt something Electronic technician Harold V. iMacey was unaware of what was (RUN Photo) lhaplpening until "I heard the Hagaman, 19, Jerry Bertalson, 14. metal ripping.” “The next thing I knew the water was coming in on me.” He swam through /a hole m the side of the plane. Lt. K o s k e y, who escaped through a sliding window in the nose, said the pilot relieved him at the controls on the second at- tempt to land while the plane was about 250 feet off the water. “The pilot said ‘I’ve got it’— indlcating he had the plane un- der control.” It pancaked into the water seconds later. It was rain- ing and foggy at the time but an officer said the field was well- lighted. The nose section sank first and “the rest stayed afloat for a con- siderable time.” The plane car- ried six tons of electronics and radar equipment used on routine Atlantic barrier patrols from here to a point somewhere in the Azores. FREE LIFEBOAT The survivors "read a lift boat from the wreckage and all them climbed in to wait for res- cue craft. Macey attempted to swim the 1,000 feet to shore but the cold water was too much. He returned to the plane. “I saw the in the restaunaot. 'Dhey Watched, than of r Oil-Duty N.Y. Officer . Goes Berserk, Kills 4 NEW YORK (AP)—An off-duty speechlessly and horrified, as Mc- policeman went berserk in a Denmott made his crashing exit from the establishment. Patrolmen Charles Prestia and Raymond Manners, both of Mc- Denmott’s own precinct, heard the shots and shouts as they cruised in their separate radio cars. They spotted McDexmott and gave chase. Manners said he shouted to MC- Denmott to drop his guns and was greeted with gunfire. Manners dived into a doorway and shouted again to McDenmott to surrender. When Mchemnott fired again, Manners said. he emptied. his own pistol and McDermott fell at Eighth Avenue and 56th Street. SHOT TWICE McIDermott was shot twice in the chest, once in the albdtmen and once in the left arm. Both Manners and Promo pounced upon MoDermott and each grabbed one of the fallen officer’s pistols. One was his .38- calibre service revolver and the other a .32ca1ibre revolver. Mcl)enmott was charged with Homicide. One of MdDemmtt’o bullets struck off duty patrolman Larry Rodeo in the right shoulder. His condition was considered not seri- ous. Chief of Detectives James B. Loggott said McDermott sufierod head and chest injuries last De- cember When his radio car and a tmick collided and has been under the care of a police surgeon since Knocks On Wrong Door Killed By- Rooki CITY, Nov.'(aAlP)-'-«A e Cop and Martha Patterson 94. Bertalwn was struck in tho night temple by one of the bullets. He later was reported in condition. Police said Kuk had the dead man handcuffed when they reached the scene. They said Kuk toldthomhehadkillcdonem live and had several more to ‘30. Las Vegas Police Chief Ray Sohaellfer, who came here after the shootings, said of Klulk: “He’s incoherent, rambling. It appears to me he’s been drinking. I don’t know whether he’s drunk or gone out of his head." Peace Returns To Lebanon By WILTON WYN-N BEBRUT (Am—Lebanon’s five- month crisis has ended in l. standoff. But [at least there in peace. The costly struggle that brought this country to the brink of civil war has proved one thing: Neither side in Lebanon is strong enough to pull this country very far East or West. The population is so evenly bal- anced in strength as well as num- bers that it must stick to its tradi- tional middle - of - the - road neutrality. Lebanon has learned it cannot embark on extreme pranestern ventures such as embracing the Eisenhower doctrine any more than it can merge with President Nasser’s United Ara-b Republic. High Winds Slall Salvage EllOrts On Crashed Plane propeller sticking out of the water and hung on to it until the life boat was inflated. “We all stayed together until we were picked up. We were in the water about 30 minutes.” The survivors were treated for exposure, shock and minor injur- ies at the base hospital here. The rescued thought the plane broke into “at least two pieces." WING TIP DISAPPEARS A wing tip was visible satur- day but it disappeared under the force of pounding waves Sunday. The divers and the crane were unable to work for five or six hours Sunday because of high winds and waves. Surfece craft and helicopters combed the crash area without finding a trace of survivorn. The Super Constellation was en- gaged in transferring personnel from the Patuxent, .Md., naval station. Normally an undisclostd number of these planes are med on 14—hour Atlantic bamicr Dal. rols. On regular trips lhey carry a crew of 23. Argentia is on the east side of Placentia Bay on Newfoundland! south coast. About 3,000 Ameri- ians man the bass here.