™ ‘%, Az Se ei ea STATE SECRETARY John Fos- ter Dulles combines a smile and a wave for photographers as-his car leaves National Air- 4 a» : B * WASHINGTON (AP) — Doctors ri s been clinging to the 29 # se if BE = g in his abdominal reg- ‘ hoped to attend the fol- “up big four meeting in Gen- _@va_a month hence. ANOTHER EXAMINATION _ A team of specialists gave him @nother examination at Walter Reed Army hospital Tuesday and the state department reported afterward: “During the last several days 5 bai ie : ‘port enroute to Walter Reed Army Medical Center. Looking haggard and underweight, Dul- les cut short a Florida vaca ulles Believed Mena y New Cancer Outbreak. increasing discomfort in-the lower neck. “X-ray studies suggest the pos- State | sibility that his discomfort may be attributable to the presence of a malignant tumor in the lower cervical vertebrae. External ra- diation treatment to the lower neck began today. “The condition of the secre- tary’s abdomen remains un- changed and further treatment to the abdomen is not now indi- cated.” The guarded language of the state department bulletin did not say. that Dulles had a new malig- nant tumor. Press Officer Lincoln White was asked to be specific: Does the an- fhouncement mean that Dulles de- finitely has such a tumor, or just that he may have one? NO FURTHER COMMENT — White left the inquiring report- ers for a time, presumably to telephone doctors at Walter Reed. He came back and said he could not make any comment beyond the wording in the announce- ment. White also declined to elabor- Secretary Dulles has experienced ate on the statement that the con- Accord Is Missed In Two-Day Talks By JOHN EARLE AANDON (Reuters) — French ler Michel Debre flew home Tuesday night after two days of; talks with British leaders on the gtand the West will take during mext month’s foreign ministers’ conference with Russia. \Both Debre and Prime Minis- ter Macmillan pronounced them- gelves satisfied with the talks but @ther government officials said the two leaders had not reached a fully ao - ordinated viewpoint for the meeting with Russia be- _ginning May 11 in .Geneva. While Macmillan was winding wp his talks with Debre, Home Secretary R. A. Butler told the House of Commons that Britain fs in “full agreement” with West Germany on essential points to . be faced in the ‘next few months. “Some of the recent reports about differences have been ‘greatly exaggerated,” he said. “IRON OUT DETAILS _ Officials said details of the Western approach to the talks @re being left up to the four- power working group that began meeting here Monda,. The working group sessions are @xpected to last for about 10 gays. The delegates from m the Lobster Price Sets Record. . PORTLAND, Maine (AP) — Lobster prices, at record highs tecause of unusually bad fishing weather, showed signs of weak- ening Tuesday. President Roland’ A. Hurtubise ‘of the Maine Lobster Company, United States, Britain, France and West Germany then will re- port to a conference of the four powers’ foreign ministers in Paris April 29. \ Authertesd ae Bocond Clase Mall se | Bepattuiced, bg @e Peat Ce iawe - ys —— : usard Island Like The Dew” CANADA, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 1959. ——_—__—— 4 cit On CN.R nid Largest In 20 Truckers Es and flew back to Washing- ton to re-enter the hospital for -a- resumption of treatments for | sei-oa" ina abdominal cancer. Trects the Commissoners (e ways redure cent rate the subsadv mated 6 The freight that, on frewght year, mest dition of Dulles’ abdomen re-| Say would mains unchanged. However, another informed gov- ernment official said he under- stood this to mean that no fluids have collected there as an after- math of the four weeks of mas- sive radiation treatment that was given Dulles in March. Dutles underwent surgery when he first was found to have cancer. in November, 1956. This time the doctors have not attempted sur- gery. Jewel Thieves Gets $16,000 MONTREAL (CP) — Two gun- men escaped with $16.000 in jew- elry from a midtown jewelry store Tucsday after they bound ne gagged the proprietor, Jean ack. Oppose is Lr ils aus i i F i ATE Aire if il with as” Mr. Vack said there was a/ . struggie im which he wounded one | of the gunmen with a small chisel. Potice are on the lockout | for a man with a deep gash be- tween the eyes. This is the sixth holdup ‘at the Sherbrooke St., store during the last three years. An estimated $60,000 has been taken altogether, said Mr. Vack. The bandits entered the first-| OTTAWA (OCP)—Fimasce Mim floor shop just as Vack was pre-jister Fleming's budget Teesiay paring to arrange his day's dis-| was described ty a Liberal as plays in the store. EXPERT ON RED CHINA SUMMERSIDE BUREAU : OF THE GUARDIAN Gerald Clark, a top figure among Canadian newspaper cor- respondents and ranked as. one of the country’s leading au- thorities om life in China under Communist rule, is to be the spez-er Thursday evening at the of the Summerside Y's Men’s Club. This evening Mr. Clark is ad- dressing a dinner meeting of the Charlottetown Lions Club, at the Charlottetown Hotel, which also is to be attended by representa- tives of all service chubs in the city and of Lions Clubs elsewhere on the Island, along with key Sewes in the Island’s public le. Mr. Clark’s theme in both ap- pearances is to be “The Chang- ing Face of Red China.” As one of fewer than a half dozen North years ago, a study. of conditions there. PRODUCTION HAILED .\ His reports appeared in many the world’s i Leading Newsman [n Summersice, Charlottetown To Be Heard Vs tr fi itl iF af Ig i h iH os fr 4 | f i if it 5 | ! p ir itt itt o H if ! fll H if i § I i , Fy ? i uf fil i ri 1! \ 4 i rf | | 7 a | : ; Lisi | i f | i | ; “the greatest mess im cor his- f 4 a it Terms Budget History's Worst Mess ory W. @ McMillan said in the Cemmmeons that when Prozressive (Camservative members applauded | queerament of the carly 1930s and ithe highest post-war unemploy- anenit. : Dr. McMillan said he had heard ' Not Final %. (CP)—No formal de- abandon their plan to Russia las been taken ny eg : Minister Fulton said giving up I il ? Hi i et | | tf ff r ' jhill town a RECOVERING Hon. B. Earle MacDonald, provincial treasurer, has made an excellent recovery following a major operation performed Mor- day morning, his brother, Dr. W. L. MacDonald stated last night. The well-known merchant who is one of the two city representa- tives in the local House, appears to be coming along very well, and hospital .reports indicate his recovery should be rapid, Dr. MacDonald added. Hon. Mr. MacDonald is a pati- emt at the Prince Edward Isiand Hospital. Dalai Lama Stirs Town + Br WATSON SIMS. - . India (AP) — The Dalai Lama, god-king of Tibet. has provided this sleepy town of 10,000 with an experience it will $51,600,000 Red Ink Dip ‘Said Deepest Since 1938 OTTAWA (CP)—Skidding rev- }|enues and higher debt interest + | charges hit the Canadian Na- tional Railways in 1958 with its} . largest deficit in 20 years. The deficit of. $51,600,000 was $22,000,000 higher than in 1957 brought revenue from that suvurce to $560,200,000 from $604,900,000. CNR President Donald Gordon said in the report that a large fac- tor in the reduced freight rev- enues, partly resulting from com- petitive pressures, was the com- This traffie — accounting for most freight volume—was highly sensitive to fluctuations in eco nomic activity. Dealing with costs, Mr. Gordon said rising wages and material prices were perhaps the j+and-the biggest since the pub-| pany’s increasing reliance on| single factor. These had far out- licly-owned company went $54,-| traffic from basic resources in-| stripped the revenue yield of ef 300,000 into the red in the depres- sion year of 1938. ' A nosedive of more than $44.-| 000,000 in-—_freight _revenue—the | big income item—was largely re-| sponsible for the heavy deficit, it} was shown in the CNR’s annual | report tabled Tuesday in the Commons by Transport Minister | Hees. In all, rail revenues of the cor-| poration sagged more than $48,-| 000,000. Debt interest. charges! jumped almost $10,000,000. A re-| duction of $34,300,000 in operating , expenses was not enough to out- | weight these factors. SECOND DECLINE The decline in operating rev- enue to $704,900.000 was the sec- ond in a row. It was $753,200,000 in 1957, a drop from the all-time peak of $774,800,000 in 1956. Operating expenses moved down to $700,000,000 from the all- time high 1957 figure of $734,500,- 000. This left the company with net operating revenue of $4,900,000 on its rail operations, but other transactions brought the CNR to a deficit position of $5,100,600 be- fore it could contribute anyt 1g to its fixed charges $46,500,000. In the previous .- it was able to contribute $7,300,000 to- wards fixed charges, which were considerably lower at $36,900,000. dustries. Ponte fective freight rate increases. Locomotive Firer To Get Higher Wages MONTREAL (CP) — The pub- licly-owned CNR Tuesday served notice on the locomotive firemen’s union that starting May 1 it will pay higher wages but will no longer hire new firemen for yard and freight diesels. Thus, the CNR took the step on! i the controversial diesel dispute made a year ago by the privat-| -/ ely-run CPR—a step that led to a three-day strike of firemen last May against the CPR. Decision to implement the terms of a federal conciliation board report was conveyed ‘Tues- day to union leaders by CNR pres- Ment Donald Gordon. He told them during a two-hour conference that they would iva a tant ; tlining anew conditions of service ive at midnight next NO DECISION ON CNR Union chief V’. E. Ganble said re the 1. Firemen at the present time on the ONR’s intenti He said the railway move would but western firemen were being polled. Earlier, Mr. Gamble had said The drop in freight traffic never forget. : mM was Tezpur’s fate to be) astride the Dalai Lama's path) when he walked across the bor- _| der on his epic flight from Lhasa, the Tibetan capital. As such it be-| came a jumping-off vlace for cor- respondents trying, to meet the Dalai Lama (He will reach this Assam foot- Saturday and im-| mediately leave by air - con-| ditioned train for the Himalayan hill station of Mussoorie, Eruters reported.) Few foreign visitors come to Tezpur. Untii the Dalai Lama crossed the border, less than 200 miles north, two weeks ago, Tez- pur’s chief claim to-fame had been its quiet and restful atmos- phere. TEA, RICE PLANTATIONS Most of the villagers live off carefully - tended tea and rice planiations which roll gently north of the Brahmaputra River to the northeast frontier agency— where the Dalai Lama now is resting. There are two Assamese-lang- uage movie houses, one hotel, the Paradise, a mission hospital and perhaps half a dozen taxes There also is an airstrip, used by a single daily mail flight from Calcutta, 500 miles to the south. 5,000 men and women met.-in Washington's armory in a nation- al rally with the slogan “get ~“ 5,000 ATTEN that no decision could be made authority. Saucer-Shaped Aircraft Is Seen As Revolutionary WASHINGTON (AP) US. Army researchers plan to begin testing soon a new aircraft de- veloped in Canada and patterned along the lines of a flying saucer. Word of approaching tests of a radical type of craft was given the House of Representative space committee Tuesday. Argue Probes N.S. Coal Aid OTTAWA (CP) — CCF House Leader Hazen Argue asked in the Commons Tuesday what con- sideration the government has given to a request by the Domin- ion Steel and Coal Corporation for a $6,000,000 loan to assist the Nova Scotia coal industry. Mines Minister Comtois said he will con- sult with the Dominion coal board and rej/ly later. Pts America back to work.” The gathering was nged by or- ganized o bid for more JOBS RALLY But army officials said they could not tell details about the craft except behind closed doors. Other sources said the craft is of a ‘‘flying-saucer” design that could revolutionize military re- connaissance. AVRO PROJECT Brig.Gen. Frank H. Britton, ‘director of development for army research, said the new craft is the result of a joint army - air force program carried ou’ by Avro Aircraft Limited of Canada. Like other radically - designed craft now being studied by the military services, the Avro veh- icle will make use of what is known as the ground cushiom phenomena, Britton said. This involves release of air under extremely high pressure from jets around the: side or under the vehicle—thus boosting the craft off the ground on an air cushion. Earlier, navy scientists had re- SUB KILLER Rear-admiral Rawson Bennett, chief of naval research, said an- other possibility is a radio-con trolled flying platform equipped to search out and destroy enemy suemarines. Bennett,called it a hunter-killer platform and said it would make an ideal anti-submarine weapon “able to place a bomb or charge irectly on the enemy submarine by radio command from the mother ship. and then scoot away to safety.”’ : The witnesses emphasized that most of the various projects still are in the research stage and that it will be some time before they will be ready for military use. Ice Packs - 5 government aid for those out of WinRound the battle to open the 1959 navi- gation season on the Great Lakes. Two freighters of the Canada day among ice floes in Eri about 20 miles west of Wel land Canal entrance. The Westmount hit the the Gleneagles 2s the two made an unsuccessful their sister ship Stadacona through ice blocking the ca trance. The Gleneagles, her stern aged extensively, prepared to re- -turn to dry dock at Lorain, Ohio, under tow by tugs summoned from Ashtabula, Ohio. Atlas Model Blows Apart CAPE CANAVERAL, Fia. (AP)—A streamlined new model ; z z alt ; work and for more iob-making by the ania ation. s