+ This fs described as an early “against the Nike —fest_model “of - mci ca _ MISSILE AGAINST MISSILES missiles. The U.S. Army | was launched successfully at a the photograph | New Mexico missile range on released weapon _ @nti-missile missile or a missile | said a Liberals Plan Varied Attack OnGovernmentAt Session By fie talks Friday with party sources a We aia lence: A demand for some form of investigation into Can- ada’s national defence policy, possibly by a parliamentary com- mittee that could keep secrets away from the Russians by the unusual procedure of holding some sittings behind closed doors. AIM AT DEFICIT Trade: The government will be clobbered for the foreign trade and also for not getting to the tariff-lowering trade Immigration: Conservative pol- is wrong. The Liberals will probably call for bringing in more people who could be taken care of by the expanding Canadian economy. They may open fire at i eases of discrimina- Housing: A general attack on the government program, centred mainly on the suggestion that the government is encouraging the wrong kind of home construction. Sources close to the opposition leadership came up with these § preview ideas, -reinforced by res- olutions adopted a fortnight ago Asia Summit Meeting Is Proposed By China By RONALD FARQUHAR PEKING (Reuters) — Premier “hou En-lai Friday night pro- “ted an Asian “summit” meet- *\ - with Prime Minister Nehru “*lindia a week from today to “ass the border dispute be- You suggested in a 3,000-word *<@ to Nehru that they should | % either in Communist China bre Rangoon, Burma. He said *) talks were an “unshirkable -( gonsibility, not only to our own ’’ “ples but also to world peace.” a hou’s letter, sent to Nehru ; day and published here Fri- ding out patrols along the dis- But he disputed charges by lehru that 10 Indians taken pris- oner by Communist troops in re- tent border clashes had been lied in fhe clash. ; there noted that Chou’s proposal to begin talks Dec. 26 allowed only nine days to prepare for what would be a meeting of world importance. But the Chinese premier said he was prepared to consider any other time suggested by Nehru. Nehru’s letter of Nov. 16, to which Chou was replying, said “preliminary steps’’ were neces- sary before he and Chou met, and a foundation should be laid for their discussion. WHERE-TO-FIND-IT Announcements, notices . 15 Births, deaths, etc., .. 2, 15 Classified section .... 14, 15 Comics, features ........ 13 Charlottetown news ...... 5 MINE ss cess cx vcs 4 Finance, markets ........ 10 Island news .........+:. 2,3 Qe ris iekves ods 8, 9 Women’s page .......... 6,7 respondents now appear on the Island News Page. A ; \ = “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” © CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1959 Trade Talk Is Needed: At Summit TORONTO (CP)—Prime Minis- the forthcoming summit meet- ings should give some attention to trade relations between Russia and the West. “The governments of the West- ern world are preparing to negoti-|” ate with the Soviet Union in dis- armament and other fields,” he said. There was some hope that progress could be made in this difficult subject. “Surely there is no reason why there should not be parallel pro- gress towards an improved basis for economic relations.” The prime minister told the an- nual banquet of the Commercial Travellers’ Association of-Canada that the summit meetings “would be well advised to give adequate attention and study to the prob- lem -of establishing sensible and orderly trade relations between, the Soviet _Union and Western world countries.” © Text of his address was re- leased to the press in advance of | delivery. VITAL TO CANADA Probably no country had a a4 , Se greater stake than Canada in international trade which repre- sented nearly 30 per cent of its Gross National Product. Trade between the Soviet Union and the West could sharpen pol- itical issues or could lessen the likelihood of canflict. Heavy Storms Hit Fisheries Large-Family Home To Sell EDMUNDSTON, N.B. (CP)— The farm home of Mr. and Mrs. ance, it will house 454 convicts Heliodore Cyr, parents of 27 chil- dren, will be sold here by auction | next Tuesday afternoon for county tax arrears of about $600. | - Fifteen of the children are still at home, three miles from the) at the annual meeting here of the | National Liberal Federation's «¢- visory council. ‘ It appeared that on defence the Liberals might make their strongest attack on the Diefen- baker government, which they an already accused of mud- HALIFAX (CP) — Winds and heavy seas have hampered fish- ing operations off Nova Scotia and parts of New Brunswick for the last two weeks, the fisheries department said here Friday. In its weekly report on fishing conditions, the department said the lobstering effort along the} Eviction after the auction 300-mile open area in southwest-! would require application for @ ern Nova Scotia was hampered | court order, “Madawaska County near Maine border,-and 28 miles Edmundston. Although the sale is scheduled for only three days before Christ- mas there appeared no chance the large family would be home- less in the holiday season. the from by weather. Catches were only fair. ¥ . Other inshore fishing was at a} near standstill because of the) weather. Lobstering on the Nova Scotia shore of the Bay of Fundy was! so poor most fishermen quit for | the season, the report said. NO TAXES, EASY DRINKS Law-Fre Wants No Rules LUNDY (Reuters)—This gale- whipped islet off the English Coast, where residents pay no taxes and drink when they please, today was braced against main- land attempts to bring it the blessing of rules. For hundreds of years, Lundy— population 13 including an infant- area 1% square miles—has gone its free and easy way without the benefit of statutes. Then the members of the Devon County council, which runs the nearest English county to Lundy, got to fretting. What, they said, would happen should some of the population of Lundy, which even at the height of the summer, tourist season seldom climbs_eyond 20, com- mit a serious crime? JURISDICTION PROBLEMS Who would act? Could the Devon police legally pursue their inquiries into the matter? And, if they did, would the Devon courts be empowered to bring the cul- prits before the bar of justice? The solution, they felt, clearly was to make Lundy an admin- istrative part of Devon, 14 miles away. Not so fast, said Lundy, through its self - appointed ambassador to the mainland, tavern - keeper Stanley Smith. “Leave Lundy as it is,” de- clared the host of the “Marisco tavern. SEEMS LIKE PARADISE As things now are, Lundy—a one - time haven for pirates and refuge of seabirds — issues its own stamps, pays no taxes, has no laws drinking times, lacks telephones‘and cars, and educates its own children in a local farm- house. Supporting the fight of Smith and the Lundyites is Albion Har- man, who inherited the \island with its farm, hotel, tavern, church,: stores, half dozen cot- tages, two lighthouses, two tele- vision sets and radio transmitter from his father. Harman pledged that Lundy will “remain as they have always known it.” The first threat to Lundy’s com- e Islet two years later it won out against | the threat of taxes when Britain's | treasury chief decided it was im-| Possible to tax so small a place. Now Lundyites are digging in against the new threat. Winner in @ contest for a de- sign for Winnipeg's proposed plete freedom came in 1951 when it wes incorporated into the) new City Hall wes this model Devon electorate division, but| of @ two-structure centre, de- 1 ~ YULE GREETING SCOTCH STYLE MONCTON (CP) Nell McLellan received a Christ- mas card Friday from George L. Bartlett of Sydney. Mr. McLellan, CNR ex- press ‘superigtendent here, added it to his collection. But he’s keeping an e¥e on it. Next year he'll send it back te Mr. Bartlett, CNR express agent at Sydney. é It’s been that way for #0 years now. Both Mr. Bartlett and Mr. McLellan are Scots, The card reads: “I'm sendin’ a cairt tae wish ye “A Christmas fu’ o° cheer. “I'll sign my name in pen- cil “So ye can use the eairt next year.” signed to fit a tri lar area across the street the M-n- itoba Legislative buikding. De- signers were the Winnipeg firm — MEDIUM SECURITY federal government offi- i the new medium- urity penal institution at eville. peniten sense of the word or in appear- sine? in a four-storey U-shaped build- ing with no armed guards, no high stone walls, and few lock. ed doors. An administration block and traming shops com- plete the plan. Joyceville is 14 miles from Kingston. In Visit Eisenhower warmly greeted’! President de Gaulle and then! went immediately to the ~ U.S. Embassy residence to rest until the Western summit conferences begin today. . The talks here, the climax of} Eisenhower's three - continent tour, are an important prelude to’ the East-West summit session ex- petted in the spring. After Paris there will be visits in Spain and) Morocco before Eisenhower re-| turns to Washington. WITHOUT FANFARE In sharp comtrast to Eisenhow- er’s receptions elsewhere on his tour, there was no thundering welcome in Paris—none had been planned either for him or the British and German chiefs of government who arrived earlier. The president came by train from Toulon. The arrival area was cleared for security reasons. Only a few scattered cheers went up from members of the official CITY HALL HAS MODERN DESIGN of Green Blankstein Russell eed “sociate: wo woa £1* “30 and the contract to design the actual bu'lding. Cost is estimat. ed at $6,000,000. The 10-storey Ike Has 2 Tasks o Paris PARIS (AP) — President Eis-jwelcoming party and newspaper enhower came to Paris Friday} men. : night with a double-barrelled ob-| . There were no arrival speeches. jective—to shore up the West for} A guard of honor in plumed its 1960 summit meeting with So-/ mets viet Premier Khrushchev and to! salute as Eisenhower's clear up the French role in) NATO. } snapped their sabres train entered the Lyon station hind an electric locomotive ing French and American flags. . Syndicate Of Crim Is Dealt Mass Body Blow Brackley Injured | Two trucks parked on the high- way after dark while their driv- ers exchanged pleasantries spelled accident and serious injury to Harold P. Cudmore and his wife last evening. The accident occurred on the Brackley Point Road about two miles north of the airport about 5:45 p.m. No details of the injuries suf- fered by the Harrington couple could be learned last night, but Mr. Cudmore is believed serious- ly injured. Mrs. Cudmore is be- structure ts to © offices; the adjacent two- storey building will accommo- date departments dealing with glass-faced he Is Convicted | NEW YORK (AP) — *|victed Friday of a conspiracy of silence to cloak the real purpose behind. their_ underworld conven- tion two years ago. A justice department spokes- man said the verdict could mean that “syndicated crime may soon have its death knell.” : Seldom if ever has a cartel of American crime suffered such a mass body blow. The defendants themselves were not big names. But the government said they represented some of the king- Pins of the underworld. The convictions may provide the federal government with a mew lever to from the de- Sundente the suciine of the ma tery meeting Nov. 14, 1957, at the upstate New York home of the late Joseph Barbara Sr. The gov- ernment attributed sinister mo- tives to the gathering. The de- fence said it was purely social. FACE PRISON, FINES Menace Seen [rar crn FINES cw On Watch Dial ==," Sas sc ie up . each. | atc a ge ee eee pends on the degree of co-opera- GENEVA (Reuters) — Switzer-|tion a guilty man shows toward land’s Rolex Watch Company,|the government. makers of a watch judged Thurs- The various Apalachin dele- day by the United States Atomic | gates, however, have given ample Energy Commission to be dan-| indication in the past that they gerously radioactive, said Friday | prefer prison to the of it is instituting a testing system| gangland vengeance should os 2 seteguard against such 4&/ talk. None of them took the : Manager Andre Heiniger said trial. 4-3 that only about 100 watches were! . Federal district Judge Irving R. involved in the AEC warning and|Kaufman continued the 20 free efforts are being made to recover/ on bonds ranging from $10,000 to them in order that they can be) $100,000 pending sentence Jan. 14. modified. Most are believed to be| H¢ told the jury of eight mes in ‘the United States. and four women whose verdict The radioactivity is caused by|climaxed a 54-day trial: luminous paint used on the dials.| “You have returned a most is- The AEC said that though it/telligent verdict.” might be a -term danger to| The defendants came: from- bosith, the’ Muslin wae cvery|siates for the Oct 30 opening small.” > the conspiracy trial. The jury got ee oe The 20 were among 68 hood- ou jums and their friends known te have gathered at Barbara’s hill- top, home in Apalachin. State troopers broke up the gathering zut found no grounds for arrest- n as ing the delegates. In questioning before nine fed- eral grand juries, the Apalachin are patients Prince Ed-|delegates said they happened te ward Island Hospital where they |be together at the time because were taken by ambulance. Barbara was sick and they Its reported that the car Mr. | dropped by to pay their respects. Cudmore was driving from the |The host died last June 17. city rammed into the back of a| Investigators, however, believe parked truck, the driver of|the convention was called te which, Herbert Phillips of Brack-|carve up gangland territories ané (Continued on page 2 Gol. 1) |rackets. . OTTAWA (CP)—Don't lose your temper at foolish drivers, or you'll be a holiday - season traf- fic menace too. The Canadian Highway Safety Council issued this warning Fri- day ani coupled it with several safe-driving tips. i Be § : Fiz be bee i i the public. (CP Photo) a Safe Driving Warning ls For Holiday Season et ee ee ee mess next mon beng boomerang rector of the agriculture depart- ment’s livestock division, any market pileup will result in delayed slaughter and settlement and unnecessary carcass shrink- E The government is: switching from outright purchase to defici- Lr : : i I a eC Crime Cartel -