ste 5 | E of Ff. a. | i E el tL i rf fel if FF ie "eh gi i : creeat tafe Fs Hi x t Monday, the socidier and two others drove to Israel in a UNEF ear and returned to Gaza with three Israeli girls from Tel Aviv, the agency added. The three soldiers and the three girls were asleep when police arrested them, the agency said. Lisa Rose Chionchio from a hos- pital Jan. 2. Judge Nathan R. Sobel ordered her committed for mental examination. Guilty Of Man Civic Elections Assured. In Borden And Montague BRUCE H. YEO Borden’s Mayor for 20 of his 76 Kings MP. } iit YEE | ¥ Ocean Vessel Reaches Quebec 5,000 - ton Sinetlagitin freighter is specially reinforced for winter navigation. Name of the vessel was not available. She will lead’ cargo here for the slaughter Plea Is Taken In Fire Deaths Case OTTAWA (CP) — Two men pleaded guilty “uesday to a re- duced charge of manslaughter in connection with a fire that claimed the lives of seven per- sons here Sept. 13. The trial of Merrill Plouffe, 27, came to an abrupt end when Mr. Justice Charles D. Stewart ac- cepted a guilty plea on the man- slaughter charge. Minutes later William Warren, 34, entered a si- milar’ plea. They will be sen- ing house. Another child and two adults were victims of the fire. The sudden ending of the mur- der trials came after 18 witnesses had been heard. Arthur E. Evans testified Mon- day that Warren was promised $500 by Plouffe for starting the fire. Evans said that he drove ‘Plouffe to Montreal the day ‘of ithe fire. He said Plouffe told him that Warren had agreed to “‘do the job” of setting the building afire for $500, suggesting it would be paid out of $40,000 in insurance on the building. “I took \it -as-a joke,” said Evans, “thinking he was only fooling.”” Will Press rf i i ‘ i ‘ iu | i : IE 5 a z : : Z | PM's Tour Cost ~ 'gentina Walkout Smashed By SAM SUMMERLIN BUENOS AIRES (AP) — The government of President Arturo Frondizi Tuesday apparently smashed a nationwide walkout called by Communists and fol- lowers of former dictator Juan D. Peron. “It’s all over,” declared a spokesman emerging from a long ‘conference in Casa Rosada, the government house. An order p utting-transport ane St eae Aires under army jurisdiction and threatening them with court martial unless they returned to work appeared to have broken the back of the strike. Drivers and motormen. trudged back to work and buses and street cars began rolling again. Armed police and troops rode the cars and buses and guarded the stations. Rail and subway work- ers, already mobilized under pre- vious orders, were at work as $50,000, Claim TORONTO (CP)—The Star says in an Ottawa story it has learned Prime Minister Diefenbaker's seven-week world trip lest fall cost upwards of $50,000. Kh says most of the cost was for opera of the four-engine C5 which the prime min- ister’s party of 14 plus 14 RCAF crew members on the 30,000-mile tour. The story adds that Elmer Diefenbaker, the prime minister's brother, two newspaper men and a photographer paid their own way although it was understood the prime minister had p: iged his brother with $1,600 to take some time to complete. the cost. » WORKED IN SUMMERSIDE Missing iain toind Sate In NB. Tuesday He was .bungry, but uninjured. The 25 - year - old construction worker from Red Bank, near Chipman, disappeared Monday afternoon while heading from Saint John for Fredericton on a solo training flight. He said he had found his fuel running dangerously low to come down on the north of Fred- rescue. (McGinnis is a part time em- Ployee of the M. F. Schurman Co. in Summerside. Hes was Christmas when work down temporarily because, of cold weather.) The area was , searched Cuban Postage Stamp Planned HAVANA, Cuba )ap) — A spe- cial postage stamp will be issued showing a rebel soldier with rifle raised and with the word “‘lib- erty,”’ the ministry of communi- cations reported Tuesday. alles SEAWAY CRUISE MONTREAL (CP) Home Lines announced Tuesday the 2,- 0004on yacht Stella Maris will in au%urate a new St. Lawrence Sea- way cru'se service between Mon. ‘rea’ avi Tovon'>, Hamilton and Rochester, N.Y., starting May 9%, 4 ulton Green, a Doaktown mem- is of the RCAF Ground Obser- ver Corps, told the Moncton filter centre he saw a small plane over the district Monday afternoon. Six RCAF planes and 12 civil- ian aircraft scoured scuthern and central New Brunswick. Fit. Lt. S. D. O. Schneider and D. Smith, in a Fieet Canuck similar to the missing plane owned by Frederic- ton Aviation Limited, spotted Mc- Ginnis at 4.30 p.m. "Tuesday be- side his fire. A helicopter took him to the Chatham RCAF base ‘|N.B., and leave for Imgonish, NS., at 10 p.m. the same day. Time of the visit to the Island | General CAMBRIDGE, Mass. Atlas, the satellite that broadcast President Eisenhower's Christ- moon was launched from Cape Canaveral, Fla., Dec. 18. Scientists predict it may fall in flames between 8 and 10 a.m. EST, possibly near the Hawaiian Weal and he was then flown to Fred- ericton. A searching Tri-Pacer of Fred- ericton Aviation was damaged after almost successfully complet- ing a landing on an ice-covered bog 40 miles from Fredericton where feot tracks were seen in snow. The four occupants escaped injury. Another small plane, from the Fundy Flying Club at Saint John, escaped damage in a forced Hyndman, who was notified by Lieutenant General H.D. Graham, commissioner for ae Roya: Aisi. OTTAWA (CP) beth, making her third visit to Canada, will see out-of-the-way places as well as bustling cities in her meet-the-people tour of Canada this summer. Accompanied by Prince Philip, her escort. on her two previous trips in 1951 and 1957, the Queen will spend some time im every province, an itinerary showed The royal couple will also visit ‘the Yukon and Northwest Terri- tories. starting June 18 will be spent cruising the St. Lawrence and Great Lakes waterways from the east coast into the heart of the continent. They will depend also on rail, air and highway transport as they move from Newfoundland’s lonely shores across the country to Van- couver Island into the Northern Territories. ARRIVE AT TORBAY Flying from London, the Queen and Philip.will arrive at Torbay landing on St. John River ice near Fredericton. Airport, St. John’s, Nfld., Thurs- day, June 18. They will oe for Opposition Charges Jobs Program ‘Drop In Bucket OTTAWA (CP) — The federal government's winter works pro- gram, designed to create jobs during the slack winter. nionths, is producing meagre results, Lib- eral Opposition members charged Tuesday in the Commons. The question of mounting unem- ployment and the federal pro- gram to help municipalities cre- ate winter jobs got the big play during the second day of the 10- day throne speech debate. Hubert Badanai (L—Fort Wil- liam), for eight years mayor of the lakehead city, said the gov- ernment should do more for mu- nicipalities than its current pro- gram. The federal! assistance— amounting to half the labor costs involved in special municipal pro- jects that would not normally be undertaken in winter—had in fact given work to only 120 men‘ in “ort William, he said. Mr. Badanai sai the goverp- ment should make loans to mu- nicipalities at low interest rates. This would enable them to finance public works projects. Meanwhile, H. J. Robi (L—Gloucester) said only two per cent of the unemployed would get work from the govern- ment’s highly - publicized winter works program. That,was only a drop in the bucket and another example of the government's lack of foresight. Meanwhile, the government is- sued figures Tuesday showing that at mid-December there were an estimated 440,000 unemployed, 79,000 more than in mid-Novem- ber and 48,000 more than at the corresponding time a year pre- vious. OTHER DEVELOPMENTS Other Commons developments Tuesday : aud 1. CCF House Leader Hozen Argue sugzes‘ed emergency ac- tion on unemployment, such as reducing the qualifications for drawing seasonal - unemployment insurance benefits. Labor Min- ister Starr replied that such ac- tion has not been considered, add- ing that the special municipal works program vill make ‘‘quite an improvement.” 2. Health Minister Montéith an- nounced he has ‘eceived a report from Lt..Gen. Howard D. Gra- ham on Canada’s civil defence setup and that he expects to make an announcement in a few days, after cabinet study of the docu- ment commissioned last year. « 3. Lionel Chevrier (L—Montreal Laurier), former St. Lawrence Seaway Authority president, pro- posed that Queen Elizabeth offi- ciate at two ceremonies opening the seaway—one at Montreal and another in the waterways’s inter- A wes announced yesterday by/ province Lieutenant Governor F. Walter| Week to confer with the provin- Details of the Island tour are expected to be worked out when Graham comes to the on Tuesday of next cial co-ordinator Brigadier W. W. Reid, DSO ED, and other ase regarding the pro- Queen Will See Remote: Spots And Busy Cities — Queen Eliza-home by air from Halifax Satur- day, Aug. 1. Their itinerary, issued by royal tour officials, left still to be de- cided the arrangements and ac- tual location for the official open- ing of the St. Lawrence Seaway, main reason forthe visit. The ceremonies are to take place June 26 and 27 at Montreal, Cornwall, Ont., or both. A spe- made concerning the portion of the visit. The royal couple will visit 78 Canadian centres and Chicago in seaway Much of the six - week tour hthe U.S. They. will visit Quebec's Knob Lake and Gaspe areas, cruise the St..Lawrence with stops at Quebec City, Trois-Riv- ieres and Montreal and ‘sail the Great Lakes from Kingston to to, Chicago, Sault Ste. ip, Ont., and the Lakehead. PRAIRIES By train, plane and car, they will: cross the prairies and the mountains of B.C., with a two day stop in the Kamloops area for a holiday. Returning eastwagd after visits to Vancouver, Victoria and other B.C. points, they will fly north at least to Whitehorse in the Yukon. The tour will end with a visit to Cape Breton Island in Nova Scotia, before the flight from Hal- ifax back home. Tl Men Quit Burning Plane, Land Safely OLATHE,. Kan. (AP)—Eleven U.S. Navy men bailed ot of a ‘burning patrol bomber in a snow- storm Tuesday and landed safely. Less than two hours after they took to. their parachutes, the 11 were accounted for. Officials at the Olathe naval air station said none suffered severe injury. The;.men landed mostly on ms near small towns in ex- trérne eastern Kansas. The burn- ing craft — a P-2V Neptune— crashed soon afterward near Ot- tawa, Kan. * BRITAIN THAWS OUT .LONDON (Reuters) — Au of Britain had abnormally mild but wet weather Tuesday with tem- atures nearing 30 degrees in some’ areas, including London. national section near Cornwall, Ont. Prime Minister Diefenbakcr | per sa 1@ sur. ion wou'd be stud- ioc ap i> “soecle n Coma. 2 acranging the vasit. Me’ ..g snow and rain caused | flooding in some rural areas. \ : ¥ ; . | 0€ service. cial announcement later is to be! ARGENTIA, Nfld. (CP) — A Scandinavian Airlines System Plane carrying Anastas Mikoyan, Russia’s deputy premier, home to Europe made a forced landing here Tuesday night with one en- gine burned out and another out The big four - engined DC-7C came down at 9:04 p.m. AST. It was escorted for the last 20 min- utes by an RCAF rescue plane from Torbay, Nfld., and a Lon- don-bound Pan American World Aifways plane. - Fire developed in one engine ever the Atlantic south, of New- foundland. © The airline said the flight com- mander was Capt. A. Schultzberg of Stockholm, Sweden. Shore sta- tions received a radio message eS 9a. that the pilot was aring an emergency and heading for Argentia, a United States naval base. He said he was 200 miles south of Argentia. The plane had left New York for Copenhagen, where i it was due this- morning LANDS IN SNOW AIF emergency equipment ahd erasif trucks were on the field when crippled airliner landed. Ht Was ‘snowing at the time but the pilot came in without diffi- culty after a ground-controlled approach know their plane was in trouble until they were about five min- se Some, He Set. There wee to veloped in another and the pildét decided to land at‘ Argentia. “He made a beautiful landing.” Chabin said he could speak Russian and talked with Mikoyan and members of his party. “Mr. Mikoyan, remained very calm,” he said. ‘‘After he got off the plane he strolled around the ‘ e . © TELEPHONE 8506 WEATHER Buyer meets seller with Guardian Want Ads Dia) 8506* ask for classified ad perl ow high ‘ob Chase taker, for quick results. ie lottetown 12. C 4 : | . — ae 200 “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” ‘ ih | VOL. LXXII NO. 17 a CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 21, 1959 12° RAGES wor "* FIVE CENTS een: | DOWNLAT ARGEN Tite = 2, “* — = eu naa aS aul oan . Emergency Landing Is Made In Snow Without Incident watched some bowlers having » game in a bowling alley at the base.” “Mr. Mikoyan told me he was going to have dianer on the base at the bachelor officers quarters although he had a meal on the plane just before the trouble de- veloped.” TO DINE AT BASE a Sees ee Oe eee were t spend the night in the bachelor officers club, a @lush 16store dormitory with hotel-like accom- modations. A navy base spokesman said the plane made ‘‘a routine emer gency landing” on two engines The No. 1 engine was burned out and the No. 4 engine feathered, that is, not in operation. Scandinavian Airlines said an- other plane would go to Argentia to pick up the, passengers early today. In Lobster Cases Seen OTTAWA (CP) — Prosecution and fines are the wrong way te said Tuesday. The solution is to educate fish- ermen in conservation practices, {he saif in the Commons throne speech debate. “More good can be accom- .| plished by a friendiy chat on the wharf or in the country store than by this game of hide-and-seek (by fisheries inspectors).” Mr. Robichaud urged the fish- eries department to divert one per cent of its budget for the fish- eries protection branch to the education brancn. If the departmert persisted im “its rough-tough practices” the problem of illegai tobster fishing and packing would continue and airport buildings and then NEW YORK (AP) — Agastas Mikoyan ended his two-weeks visit to the United States Tues- day, saying that he did not fore- see war in the near future. Before he left by plane for Moscow to report to the Kremlin on his U.S. tour, he declared: “I do not see any war in the near future.” Before he boarded a Scandi- navian Airlines System DC-7C at Idlewild Airport, the Soviet first deputy premier received a tele- gram from State Secretary Dulles urging friendship of the Ameri- can and Russian people. Travelling with Mikoyan was party of five, including his son, Sergo. ‘ grow worse. No War In ‘Near Future’ Mikoyan Declares In N.Y. In his parting telegram, Dulles told Mikoyan he was acting og behalf of President Eisenhower, himself and other U.S. officials ‘the Soviet No. 2 man met. Tiey hoped, Dulles said, that Mikoyan’s visit had been of value and that he would give to the Soviet people “‘an expression of the sincere desire of the people of the United States for friend- ship with them.” Dulles also hoped that Mikoyan could report to Premier Nikita Khrushchev ‘hat Americans de- sire peace and that they believe, ai respective .of their political party, in the right of people te determine their own form of gov- ernment.” Philip To Make NEW DELHI (Ruters) — A Comet IV, airliner carrying Prince Philip here on a_ two- weeks visit to India Tuesday was diverted to a landing field at Agra, 100 miles south of here be- cause of fog. He will fly on to New Delhi when the fog clears. His Indian visit was the first leg of a 100- day world tour.. The Queen, looking a little wist- ful, waved goodbye to her 37- year-old husband as the British Overseas Air ways Corporation plane left on the flight due to land here today. Philip is the first member of the Royal Family to visit India since it gained independence in 1947. His two-week Indian tour has been mentioned here as the likely prelude to an eventual visit by the Queen. Usually - reliable sources forecast that if he is well received Elizabeth will pay-a ceremonial visit in the winter of 1960-61. PACIFIC CRUISE Philip, due back in London on April 30, also will visit Pakis'an amd cruise the Pacific in the New Delhi ne First Stop On World Tour will board in Burma Feb. 18. The yacht will carry him through the Panama Canal te Nassau, Bahamas, from where he will fly home via Bermuda. But the travel4oving duke, now on his third round-the-world tour in five years, will have only six weeks in Britain before he and the Queen go to Canada for the opening of the St. Lawrence Sea- way: They are “ue at St. John’s, Nfid., by air June 18 and join the _ Britannia June 2 at Sept Nes, Que. ATTENDS SCIENCE MEET The main purposé of Philip's current trip to India is to attend the annual session,of the Indian Science Congress at Delhi Univer. sity. But he is expected to tour major cities. Philip is scheduled to receive a doctorate of letters degree from Delhi University and address 8 convocation there. He leaves for Pakistan Feb. 4. ~ The trip began with the Queen, Princess Anne and Princess Mar- garet ‘waving from a doorway of London airport's royal lounge as the Comet IV taxied away is pouring rain. Prince Charles, #0, royal yacht Britannia, which he was at boarding school. ‘Wrong Slant __ ® vee