TELEPHONE 8506 Buyer meets seller with Guardian Want Ads. Dial 8506 ask for ‘classified ad taker, for quick results. THE NEW NAVAL BARRACKS HMCS Gusen Charlotte To Get-New Home Today To celebrate the 35th anniver- ‘partment of national defence will present HMCS Queen Chariotte, the reserve training establish- ment, with a new today. the building. At 4:35 this afternoon Com- modore Edward W. Finch-Noves. Commander Lee, Commander Kenny and Mrs. Kenny, Lieuten- ant N.W. Black and Mrs. -Black and Commodore Finch-Noyes. OFFICIAL OPENING Due to the fact that the build- ing is still without lights, and with landscaping and paving still to be done, the official opening of the establishment will not take oe until June or July, when it , Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth Il will officiate at the opening ceremonies during her visit to the province. The new barracks, a two-storey brick and steel construction is 165 feet long and 91% feet wide. The drill deck located on on ground floor is 105 feet by #4 feet. In addition, the ground floor has accomodation. for es, loc- kers, offices, etc. recruit- ing, sick bay, examination, dis- pensary, interview and medical ‘Bonny’ Sails From Halifax For Exercises HALIFAX (CP) — The air- craft carrier ~ Bonaventure leaves her berth at Shearwater naval air station here today to begin training exercises at sea. The navy said Wednesday the carrier will operate about 100 miles off the Nova Scotia coast for carrier qualification trials by naval pilots of anti-sub- *.| marine squadrons 830 and 881.- The Bonaventure will return *<| to port Jan. 21 to embark other. naval planes for exercises off Bermuda. The destroyers Algonquin and Nootka also sail from here to- day for Bermuda and the West .| Indies. The destroyers Iroquois and Haida will join them later. TRONSIDES, Que. men were killed late Wednesday when they were crushed under a 50-ton rock slide at the Hull Iron Mines Limited at Ironsides about 12 miles northwest of Ottawa. The .dead were identified as: Alfred Henderson, 37, of Hull, Que., and Harold MacDonald, 25, of Belleville, Ont. Two other workers were. in- jured and taken to hospital with undetermined injuries. They are Clement Roy, 28, and Marcel Parent, 32, both of Ironsides. All were eniployees of Dravo of Canada Limited, Toronto, which was installing a mining shaft in the old. mine that was reopened last summer. THREE AT BOTTOM The four, men were the only workers in the mine when the ac- cident ocurred at about \4:50 Two Men Killed In Rock Slide (CP)—Twop.m. EST about 172 feet below the surface. Three of the men were at the bottom of a shaft and the fourth, Henderson, was on a shaft sts- tion,-or ledge, about 15 feet above the others. A corner of the shaft above him apparently became dis- lodged, discharging tons of rock. The estimate of the rock fall was given by mine engineer Arthur Wright, formerly of Val d'Or, Que. 5 Roy crawled out on his hands and knees from the bottom of the shaft and reached the surface within minutes to give the alarm. A crew of eight miners immedi- ately went down the shaft. Parent, partly buried, was pulled out by a rescue worker. The bodies of the other two were dug out about two hours later. waiting rooms are also located on the lower floor. The ward room, mens’ and Wrens’ messes, radio and radar rooms ,and sevetal classrooms are all the - second floor. The Atlas Com- pany , N.B., con- structed the for De fence Limited. Since the 30’s until the division was quartered in the er in the Hyndman Bond Sales By Chain Stores Increase OTTAWA (OP)—Sales in Cana dian chain stores increased in November hy 2.4 per cent tojtry een from $257, are in a i earlier, ‘thet pt of statistics reported Wednesday. In the first 10 months of 1958, sales rose 6.6 per cent to $2,678,- 285,000 against $2,511,283,000 in January-November of 1957. BOY INJURED MONCTON (CP) — Doucette, 15, is in hospital here with serious eye’ injuries suf- fered Tuesday when a dynamite cap he was playing with explod- ed. Police said they are invest- | i g the incident. Leonard | joers Prince Edivard Island Like The Dew” , CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, THURSDAY, et ~ 1959 10n_ Opposi ‘On House pa wil More Building Permits Issued OTTAWA (CP) — Canadian building permits issued in Nov- ember rose to $174,924,000, a 26 per-cent increase over the cor- responding month a year earlier, the bureau of statistics said Wed- nesday. SPEEDS BUSINESS MONTRBPAL (CP) — An elec- troric high-speed machine for automatic processing of bank de- posits and withdrawals was dis- played at a national exhibit here WASHINGTON (CP) — Secre- tary of State Dulles Wednesday won from the Senate foreign rela- tions committee support for his insistence ‘that the West be al- lowed to keep troops in Berlin and have free access to the city. Dulles conferred later with of electrical apparatus. West German Ambassador Wil- George V. Fraser, director of tnformaiten tetthe Province ot |i Prince Edward Islafd, has’ been granted a three-month leave of absence to proceed to West Af- rica as advisor on tourism to the new Commonwealth country of oe ee ee son. He is bein technical ex tourism to Ghana ‘as a field of iombo Plan is aimed at assisting coun- South East Asia and Af- develop their economics aise their standards of liv- A native of Montague, Mr. heed for seven years directed developed the tourist indus- of Prince Edward Island as yl of the and infor- mation divisier the provincial Bevernment. j As a result of his ‘long and suc- cessful experience in the travel field, he was selected by the im- ternational economic and_tech- which tries in rica to and r (.\-Fraser To Become Ghana Tourism Advisor Ghana, it was announced yes-|_ Se SE Te a nical co-operation division, de- | partment of trade and commerce, Ottawa to undertake this impor- tant assignment in Africa. |OPEN TO U:S. RESIDENTS Selection of a candidate for the Ghana project was not limit- | ed to Canada exclusively but ‘was jopen to residents of the United | ' States and other ‘participating | GRAND FALLS, Nfid. (CP)— Three members of the striking International Wood workers of America (CLC) were\charged in magistrate’s court here Wednes- day with theft with violence. The charges involve a snowmobile Pat Paul and Howard Penney, both of Badger, and Neville Bur- ton of South Brook, were arrested Tuesday after woods foreman Walter Fudge complained to RCMP that a number of loggers 16 Fire Deaths Said Accidental MONTREAL (CP)—A coroner’s jury Wednesday endorsed reeom- mendations of ‘the fire commis- sioner’s court and returned a ver- dict of accidental ‘death in the Nov. 9 fire which ripped through the Oldfield Apartments, claim- ing 16 lives. son of the arson squad told the inquest.that neither natural gas nor faulty wiring could be blamea for the fire. There were no ap- Parent signs of negligence of any sort, he said. (MIKOYAN ENTERTAINED Reds, Wall Street Meet NEW YORK (AP)—The Krem- lin finally shook hands with Wall Street Wednesday as Soviet Dep- uty Premier Anastas I. Mikoyan lunched with leading men of fi- nance: ikoyan walked into the City Bank Farmers Trust Company building at 22 William Street as luncheon guegt of banking repre- sentatives. Police lines were posted in the financial district to keep the cur- ious at a distance. About 10 anti-Communist pick- ets, headed by their leader, Bela Fabian, handed out leaflets in the area. As Mikoyan emerged after lunch, they shouted: murderer, murderer, murderer.” Fabian, head of a Hungarian refugee group, has announced that he has 1,000 pickets ready to harass Mikoyan during the Soviet official’s two ;- day visit here. Tuesday night,” however, he gat- hered only about 20 for Mikoyan’s arrival at Idlewild airport, and in Wall Street mustered “ half that number. BIG POLICE GUARD New York City has assigned some 500 police to keep demon- Strators in hand, in/a display of security unmatched except for visits here of the president of the United States. “Red butcher, Red butcher .. . . ™~ Earlier in the day, Mikoyan visited one of the citadels of the retail sales industry — Macy's giant department store at 34th Street and Broadway: There, Mikoyan spent more than an hour examining a com- plex display of merchandise— and violating the ancient injune- tion of the trade against finge1- ing the goods. “He went around feeling even leather,” said Macy’s board chairman, Jack I. Straus. “He seemed bright and inter- ested. He seemed very intelligent About our kind of merchandise? I found he was very much inter- ested in the carry in this country.” r DetectiveSergeant “Philip Coi-|' merchandise we! ‘Striking Loggers Charged With Theft With Violence forced him to give them the key. Mr. Fudge, 64, has worked with the struck Anglo-Newfoundland | Development Company for @| years. He told Magistrate A. E./ Cramm the men twisted his arm. | heaging was postponed un. til Monday and the loggers were | released on bail of $2,000 each. Four followers of former Cu- | {ban dictator Fulgencio Batista ' 4 GEORGE V. FRASER countries. Mr: Fraser was first approached for the assignment last year while he was employ- _ | Statement “ |States regards free elections as helm Grewe and Herbert Ditt- mann, director of political affairs in the Bonn foreign ministry. REAFFIRMS POLICY On leaving Dulles’ office, Grewe read to reporters a state- ment saying: The secretary reaffirmed that it is the policy of the U.S. gov- ernment to seek reunifcation o Germany through free elections. As the secretary said yesterday at his press conference, there are various theoretically possible methods but reunifcation of Ger- many by free elections is the natural method and the formula agreed to at the summit con- ference in 1955." The state department press of- ficer, Lincoln White, issued a saying the United “the - best and most logical ;}method of achieving a true and ;jworkable reunifcation of Ger- ; | many.” White said that Dulles, in || speaking of possible alternatives || Tuesday, did not mean to endorse ‘jany of the proposals on Ger- many’s future which Russia has so far advanced. Dulles also told the senators in a prepared statement that the United States must be prepared to face up to perhaps generations of self-sacrifice and self-discipline to counter the economic and mil- itary growth of communism. The committee, beginning a new study of world problems, in- formally approved a resolution expressing its sentiments after a closed-door discussion with the secretary. Dulles said the dangers ahead may be “even harder than we have become used to.” The primary threat to peace, ed with the federal department ‘of trade and commerce, editorial | and art division. He will leave for Ghana by air | January 28th travelling via Mon- | treal, Glasgow, London, Rome ‘and Tripoli. One of the first as- | signments will be'a meeting with | trade officials from all parts of | Ghana (formerly the Gold Coast) | to be held in the capital city of | Accra. Prior to taking over the tourist industry: in his native province | in 1950, Mr. Fraser had exensive | experience in the newspaper field with The Guardian, Evening Patriot, British United | |Press in several Canadian cities, ‘and the International Service of ithe Canadian Broadcasting Cor-| poration. In addition: he was one of the founders and _ vice-presi- dent of an Ottawa public rela-| | tions and publishing firm. a Bs hy ee ‘ : ncaa AIS. Sie ‘UK Miserable US Senate Committee Supports Dulles On. The Berlin Question: Dulles said, is the rapid economic and industrial growth of Commu- nist na and the Soviet bloc through forced labor. In the long run, Communist rulers would en- counter increasing difficulties from peoples balking against dic- tatorial rule. , At the same time, there was a movement toward independence and freedom; especially in Africa. “Our aid and investment must continue to support the efforts of the leaders of the developing free tions to sustain their peoples’ confidence that economic pro- gress can bé*-attained in free- dom.” Fog, Smog And Ice Keep LONDON (Reuters) Fog, sitiog ‘atid ice made most parts of Britain miserable Wednesday. The chill, grey blanket began lifting in wide areas late in the afternoon, allowing Logdon air- port to resume operations after a 16-hour shutdown. The smog swirled so thick in Preston, northern England, dur- ing/ the night that a health de- partment machine for measuring smoke and sulphur dioxide was unable to record it In snow-choked northeastern Séptland, a snowplow was unable to reopen the road to’ Braemore, in Caithness county, where 35 villagers have been cut off for 13 days. However, an Automobile Association: patrol man trudged in with emergency food supplies. 18 PAGES’ ‘to read OF ~ ning livaler Than Ev Yaor kes, Liberal Leader Declares By ALAN DONNELLY Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (‘(CP)—The Commons opposition parties, professing themselves full of ginger and fight, are ready to move to the attack on the Progressive Con- servative government in the new parliamentary session. Opposition Leader Pearson said Wednesday there is ‘‘vigor and enthusiasm’’ in the 49-member Liberal group — “‘ntuch livelier than they were a year ago.” Both Mr. Pearson and Hazen Argue, House leader of the eight- man CCF group, indicated their main points of attack will be gov- ernment handling of the ems of inflation, recession and unem- ployment. Mr. Pearson has called govern- ment policies “uncertain and in ept’’ and Mr. Argue says the gov- ernment has ‘“‘bungled” the coun- try into financial crisis. GOVERNMENT REPLIES The government has already made its reply to this, stating \|jthe economy is recovering and that prospects are brilliant. The administration is supported by a whopping 208 - member majority in the 265-seat Commons. Infighting starts Monday with speeches by party leaders’ follow- ing two days of session-opening formalities starting today at 2:30 pm. EST when Governor-Gen- eral Massey comes to Parliament the speech from the throne. , The session, likely to last until early summer, could be the live- liest- since the Progressive Con- servatives came to power on a minority mandate in te-election June 10, 1957. The abbreviated session follow- ing that election was featured by a marked opposition unwilling- ness to force the government into another election. And when Par- ‘Executions In Cuba Soar; Will Continue, Is Report HAVANA (AP)—The reported |toll of war-crimes executions in | Cuba soared Wednesday to 180. | Rebel chieftain Fidel Castro de- clared they will continue, regard- less of work’ opinion. Asked as he left his quarters in the Havana Hilton Hotel ‘whether the shooting of Fulgencio Batista’s acet.sed henchmen would be called off, Castro re- plied swiftly: “No. To the contrary, we have given orders to shoot every one BATISTA | MEN ON TRIAL r before a Cuba rebel tri- at’ Santiago Su os y~ night where they ’ of these \murderers. And if we have to battle world opinidn to mete out justice we are prepared to do it.” MORE ROUNDED UP Revolutionary tribunals moved to bring more suspects to trial. Fresh reports of executions fil- tered to Havana. Radio station CMQ said 19¢per- sons were tried and executed in Camaguey, a provincial capital 320 mites east of Havana. were convicted of|movement. They were among 75 crimes agains the revolutionary ‘executed here at dawn Monday A Havana newspaper published the names of eight men — ex- soldiers and Batista followers— executed Tuesday at Monzanillo, in easternmost Oriente province. Three former army men drew death sentences at Colon, in Matanzas province of west Cuba. A dispatch f, Colon said the three confessed their crimes to a Canadi ‘oman Catholic priest, Rev. Juan Langlois of Montreal, after they were condemned. Just how many will die is any- body's guess. JAIL JAMMED - in the island nation’s six prov- inces swelled by 6,000 from 4,000. Suspects still are being hunted down. Perhaps 5,000 or more re- main at large. Some are accused of acting as informers, others of a variety of misdeeds. Castro, the civil war victor who now heads the Cuban armed for- ces, has recommended long terms at hard labor for those convicted of lesser crimes. He -reitereated Tuesday night thats murderers and traitors:must di Castro and other Cubans con- tend that Cuba has as much right to exterminate war criminals as the Allies had in condemning Nazi leaders at the Nuernberg trials. mn Estimates of the number jailed} liament met again last spring fol- lowing the Conservatives’ land slide election victory of March 31, the shaken Liberals held their criticisms mainly on a moderate note, : nicanresuie BY WIN But a byelection 15 gave the Liber: inet minister, c Trinity from the rvatives. That offset their loss of oy magny-l'Islet in Quebec to Con servative Louis Fortin in a Sept. 29 byelection. . In two other byelections since the last session ended Sept. 6, government candidates. retained the ridings of-Springfield, Man., and Grenville-Dundas, Ont. The Commons gained its third woman member when Mrs. Jean Cassel- man won the Grenville . Dundas seat held by her husband, Clair Casselman, before his death last May 10. Party standing in the Commons now is Pro ve Conservatives 208; Liberals 49; CCF 8. An innovation has been pre- pared for the Commons, with simultaneous interpretation of both English and French speeches into the. other official language. Eight interpreters will work in shifts on the tough job of interpreting the sometimes hectic cross-fire of words in the bilingual chamber. Tiny ear- phones for members have been tied in with the sound amplifica- tion sy stem installed several years ago. ECONOMIC MEASURES Today's wpeect from the throne an outline of government legisla- tive plans for the session, will contain some general comments about the economic situation. It may also announce some specific economie measures which could include a $360,000 - 000 increase in the fund avail able to boost housing construc; tion. A similat increase last year raised housing activity to record levels, but the fund held by Cent- ral Mortgage and — Cor- poration is expected to pleted this spring. : The government's main econe- mie moves won't be made until Finance Minister Fieming brings down his budget . about three months. Criticism will be aimed at last December’s 17-per-cent railway freight rate increase, especially by Maritimes and western MPs whose areas claim such across- the-board rate increases are dis- criminatory. Last month Works Minister Green, then acting prime minister, said a “propo sal’’ would be put before Parlia- ment to alleviate freight rate dis- cramination. | Halifax Brewery Strike Settled. - HALIFAX (CP) — A 22-weeb strike of 150 Halifax brewery workers ended Wednesday with the signing of a contract that pro- vides pay increases totalling 87 cents an hour over a three-year period ‘ Representatives of Oland and Son Limited and A. Keith and Son Limited reached agreement with Local 361 of the United Brewery and Distillery Workers (CLC) afteF negotiations presided over by Byron D. Anthony, as- sistant industrial relations diree- tor for the provincial labor de- partment. ; In Death Of St. ST. JOHN'S, Nfid. (CP) Whe death of a three-month-old boy, attributed to a “shocking case” of advanced malnutrition by a hospital sup¢rinitendent, is being investigated by the Newfoundland welfaré department Three other children—including twin of the boy — and the mother are in hospital being treated for malnutrition. The mother also has: an undisclosed illness. Neighbors described the fam- ily as “skeletons.’’ The father is a house painter and the family, including eight children, lived in two rooms behind a store. ASKED FOR BLANKET Evening Telegram reporter Don Morris said the woman's sister told him “Last Wednesday my sister asked me fdr a blanket in which ‘Shocking Case’ Is Reported John’s Baby to wrap one of the infants to take it to hospital. : “My sister had to heat the baby over a hot plate to thaw it out.” The 26-year-old mother then started off on foot, baby in arms, to reach the Grace .Hospital where the superintendent said the baby appeared suffering ad- vanced malnutrition. Betause bed space was lack- ing, the child was rushed to the General Hospital by taxi. A spokesman there said the child died half an hour later. “ The mother and three of her children were later taken to hos- pital. The four other children, rang- ing in age from three months te eight vears, were being cared for in various homes The welfare department d& clined comment on the case,