o v $12,000 HOBBY FOR SALE Eighty-one year-old Bartlett of P Ernie} largest in Canada. Mr. Bartlett, S| a retired Trent Canal employee, takes a last look at his collect-|has been ordered by the doctor ae of a postage mares te ave te Se ee nee believes to the'of a heart ailment and hopes to! instead\_ sell it for around $12,000. He was saving them for his grand- child, but he now says he will give his grandchild the money (CP Wirephote) City Finds Additional Dentist Is Now Required and all councillors were except William Boyles who is out of the province and MacRae who is in hos resolution authorizing the fmcreased dental services read as follows: LESS THAN HALF “Whereas — The Charlottetowa serves less than children and whereas — The Provincial Government pays the present professional charges ser- ving this group. Be it resolved — That the City Council approve the following recommendations submitted by the Welfare Com- mitiee: That the sum of $1,400 be auth-| Dutch Reject Molotov As “Ambassador THE HAGUE (AP) — The}; Netherlands has informed Russia # does not consider former So- viet foreign miaister Vyacheslav) Molotov a suitable envoy to The} Netherlands, an informed Dutch source said Monday uwicht. The source said the Dutch gov- ernment had told Russia it does mot consider Molotov suitable since he had been denounced as @ member of the anti-party group at the Communist party congress in Moscew. At present V. N Kousuetzov ts eharge d'affaires. The Dutch gov- ernment does not exneci an early sor to S. P. Kirsanov, who for Moscow last September to ‘undergo an opers!'on. Gravel Trucks Begin Rolling Across Man-Made Ice Bridge EDMONTON (CP) - foaded with tons of grave! rolled across an artificial ice bridge) over the North Saskatchewan River a few miles northeast ‘of!Company Limited, which is finan- fhere Monday. The first truck crosseg at 5 m, Its driver said it was just like crossing a road. Altogether, 112 trucks bearing /|tons of gravel hauled into Edmon- loads as much as 15-tons often on the shorter route the gravel were scheduled to cross | bridge provides. The bridge is lo- e bridge Monday. feet of sub-surface ice on ,the river route is being sustained by a 7-horsepower ice-making plant, the same type used to|herta, suggested artificial ice as make ice in hockey rinks. An jthe only means of overcoming a other foot of natural ice ha: been | warm current that keeps channel it on fhe artificial ‘layer ige east of the city weak. The stic pipes carrying refriger @at from the plant stretch 150° chemical plants in ped the , orized to pay for the professional- services of a second dentist and his assistant in order to double the dental clinical service \ ef- fective forthwith. Be it further resolved that the |sum of $1,800. be also approved for the purchase of required new dental equipment.” The matter was brought to the attention of the Council by Councillor E.C. Baker, chair- man of the Welfare Committee. WEIFARE AGENCIES Councillor Baker also told the Council that the Welfare Com- mittee had met with a large re- presentation from both Welfare Agencies last week. The agen- cies“had’ brepared a brief, he said urging financial assistance to cover administrative | costs. The agencies had requested $2,- 500 each and Coun. Baker sug- gested to the Council that $2,000. to each agency would be a great help to them. After a brief discussion it \was |decided not to pass a resolution juntil the estimates were brought ibefore the Council in March. GARBAGE. COSTS Councillor. Gormley gave a brief report on the cost of civie garbage collection a disposal in respect to other Maritime cen- tres. It cost Fredericton, New Brunswick about $38,000 annual- ly. To inaugurate such a service in Charlottetown, Coun. Gorm- ey said would probably _ cost | about $50,000. Mayor Johnstone remarked that it was too costly an under- | taking for the City to contem- ‘plate at the present time but suggested that Councillor Gorm- ley pass on any additional in- formation at a future meeting. Councillor Foster gave notice of motion that he would. propose an amendment to the City By Law to ask for periodic medical examinations of city employees now on pension by reason of ill health by a doctor appointed by the City. He would also ask for provision for appeal by the employee. Trucks | feet across the channel of the 300 if foot-wide highway of ice used by juntil late March. By then, jcompany hopes to have 200,000 Resolutions passed included foot-wide river. They form the 30- \the trucks. Twin Bridges Sand and Gravel cing the venture, hopes the bridge will bear the weight of the trucks the jcated near,the company's gravel quarry” Prof. R. M. Hardy, dean of en- gineering at the University of Al- current is warmed by power and one petitioning the Legislature for an Act to authorize the of 2 now unused portion... of miral Street, another changing the word “earmarked” to “be willing to vote’’ in a resolution passed Jan. 12 regarding the ‘projected Civic Centre and a third calling for a medical ex- amination by’ Dr. R. G. Lea of Sst. Hugh MacKinnon to deter- mine the Police Constable's fut- ure status with the department. os oe mark the opening this after- BAND WILL ATTEND Directed by Lieut. C. E. Mac- Gregor, the regimental band will accompany the guard to and HAVANA (AP) — Post-revolu- tion executions in Cuba rose Mon- day to 289, by unofficial count, with the death of a former army captain before a firing squad in Santa Clara, Las Villas Province. Revolutionary courts at Manzan- illo in Oriente Province pro- nounced death sentences on two more former army men. Dulles To Have Operation, Is Given Leave WASHINGTON (AP) Secretary Dulles is taking a leave of absence to undergo a hernia opera‘‘sn aud to recuper- ate further fiom a recent intest- rinal illness. A White House announcement Monday night said the leave would be ‘for a short period.” Dulles will enter Walter Reed Army Hospital here today for the operation. The arrangement was disclosed shortly after the 71 - year - old Dulles had conferred with Pres- ident Eisenhower. Dulles, who returned only Mon- day morning from taiks in \Lon- don, Paris and Bonn or, the Ber- lin crisis, told E:senhower a written communication: “My doctors advise that I should have an oyeration for a recently developed hernia; and I have not wholly thrown off the effects of the inflammation of the a which occtirred last Decem- ber.” TO FILL TOP PuST During Dulles’ absence, Under- secretary of State Christ'an A Herter will fill the top state de- partment position. However, Herter now is on va cation and C. Douglas Dillon, der uty undersecretary for economic Queen Mother Arrives For. Kenya Tour’ MOMBASA, Kenya (Réuters)— ;The Queen Mother arrived here by air Monday night to a tumultu- jous welcome frem crowds lining the seven-mile route between the airport and Government House. On the way from the airport she passed under welcoming arches and banners. As she pas- sed one arch put up by the Sikh community, turbaned Sikhs with drawn swords stood to attention. €arlier Monday the Queen Mother visited. the parched area around Narok and told a gather- ing of tribal elders she hoped they would be blessed with rain. Thirty. minuteg later there was a clap of thunder, and the ditches and gullies on the wind-eroded plains 70 miles west of Nairobi became muddy torrents Vehicles. in the royal party were bogged down in their dash forthe airstrip and had to be puited- out. Of Absence — Stateaffairs, will fill in until Herter re- turns. In .1947 Dulles was operated on for the removal of » cancerous portion of his ower intestine. Last December, when the colon again became inflamed, doctors said there was no connection. They said there was no indica- tion of any flareup of the cancer. E. Prowse. Senior service officers joining the Lieutenant Governor at the Provincial building will include: Commander John N. we \ Colonel A.W. Rogers, and Color, Ceremony To Mark Opening Of House Today ceremony will be Surgeoa Commander L. | Group Captain J. E. Creeper, aie of the legislature will in- clude the members of the judi- ciary and their wives, and the wives of the members. Newly-ap- (Continued on page 5 col. 6) OTTAWA, — (Special) — Con- struction will start in April on a new west shed at the Railway Wharf in Charlottetown, accord- ing to a joint announcement Monday by Fisheries Minister J. : Angus MacLean and Heath Mac- quarrie, MP for Queens. The replacement of the exist- ing west shed will cost an esti- mated $200,000 to $250,000. Tenders for the project have already been called and will close March 11. The two Conservative MP's for ‘Wharf Job Here Begins In April Queens express pleasure at this development which, they said, would mark “another phase ia the program of improvement of the Charlottetown Harbor facili- ties which are being carried Estimates on federal. spend- ing for 1959-60, tabled last Thursday in the Commons, dis- closed that extensive wharf re- construction at Charlottetown is planned. Total estimated cost when completed will be about $2,000,000. S. S. Prince Edward Island was slowly making its way to- wards Borden yesterday at a pace of about three knots through exceedingly heavy ice in the Gulf of St. Lawrence. [ It is not known. as yet when Nfld. Loggers Are Charged GRAND. FALLS, Nfld. (CP)— Seventy - nine striking Interna- tional Woodworkers of America (CLC) loggers were charged here Monday with committing ‘mus- chief by damaging a woods camp and its contents.” Bail was set at $500 each for 71 of the loggers. The remaining eight were denied bail. They were out on bonds and awaiting triat on a variety of ez lier charges of assault, intimidation and ob- Ferry Reports 'Heavy Gulf Ice the ferry will arrive at Borden, | sher ultimate destination, she left Halifax following repairs at the Halifax shipyard late last week. The P. E. I. will make the trip to her Borden base around North Cape. After she left Halifax, the P. E.I. called at Sydney. got stuck in the ice off the northern tip of Cape Breton and docked at Port aux Basques for oil. When she arrives at Borden she will be given a new coat of) paint by a local crew. She has been out of service since Dec. 19%h. COMPOSER “DIES LONDON (Reuters) John Guy Jones, 84, composer of light and stage music and former Lon- don musical director, died Mon- day. His best-known composition struction. was The Gay Gordons. PAUL MARTIN CRITICAL OTTAWA (CP) — Liberal Paul Martin Monday accused the gov- ernment of ‘‘contempt of the pro- vinces and contempt of Parlia- ment” in not calling a new fed- eral-provincial conference on, tax- sharing. He suggested in the Commons that Prime:Minister Diefenbaker is ‘‘reneging” on his promises in order to avoid embarrassing po- litically friendly governments of Ontario, Quebec and Manitoba. Mr. Martin, -MP for Essex East, spoke for 1% hours in opening the first supply debate of the ses- sion and wound up by presenting a want - of - confidence motion calling for an immediate federal- provincial conference to deal with “serious problems of common common concern” including unemployment and fiscal rela- tions. E He said that at the las! confer- ence. in November, .1957, Mr. Diefenbaker undertook to hold a further meeting ‘‘as soon as pos- sible in the new year’ of 1958 STILL WAITING The provinces still are waiting, he said. * CCF House Leader Hazen Ar- gue, supporting Mr. Martin, said the government has taken an “‘ar- rogant™ and insulting attitude to wards the provinces. A conference could have been called last fall. But Mr. Diefen- baker and Finance Minister Fleming went on—world trips in- stead. Mr. Fleming, launching his re- ply shortlfbefore the supper ad- }journmenl, was “mouthing empty, baseless charges without any facts to sup- | port them.” POINTS TO COMMITTEE He referred. to the govern- ment’s plan, announced. in the throne speech, to give federal- provincial fiscal relations “active co-operative “study” by the joint continuing committee on fiscal and economic matters. “In the face of.that . . . how can any member of the: House say that this government is pro- pusing to do nothing to advance the study or discussion between the Dominion and the provinces of the question of their joint ‘fis- cal relations?” At the night sitting, Mr. Flem- ing said it is difficult to conceive of anything ‘‘more hypocritical” than the Liberal party's claims that it stands.for consultation with the provinces. Referring to constituional amendments in 1946 to change the repre sentation of the prov- inces in the Commons, Mr. Flem- Ling said the former Liberal gov- ernmen acted without consulting the provinces. The Liberals then had “bla- tantly’’ departed from the posi- tion of former. Libesals like Sir Wilfrid Laurier, and Ernest La- poinfe who had aways claimed that no constitutional change should be made without first ob- taining provincial consent. POSITION “HYPOCRISY” The present post‘icn of the Lib- erals was “a snare, a delusion, and hypocrisy.” 4._W._Pickersgill (1 § Bona- . ‘Immediate Conference’ Is Urged By Liberals vista-Twillingate) interjected that “these perversions of history” were interesting, but he failed to see how the “‘irrelevancies” could be related to the question of a conference now. Mr. Fleming 3uid Mv. Pickers- gill apparently had rot followed the “twisting, tortsous :emarks”’ of Mr. Martin. As the day’s sitting began, there were these developments: 1, Defence Minister said the government is consider- jet fighter in the RCAF air divis- ion in Europe with some other type of aircraft. 2. Mr. Diefenbaker said the Borden royal commission is ex- pected to report next April or May on oil marketing. This re- port is likely to deal with the pro- posal for an oil pipeline from the Prairies to Montreal. The supply debate begun by Mr. Martin will continue today. WOULD BE EMBARRASSED In his lengthy, broadside attack gested that the government, its forecast $700,000,000 deficit, isn't calling a new conference with the provinces because it would be “embarrassed by addi- tional demands.” Besides, he added, the Conser- vative governments ‘of Ontario and Manitoba will face elections soon. The only way Premiers Frost and Roblin could avoid the embarrassment of a federal turn down. of their demands at a con- Pearkes | | the former health qinister sug-| | & with] — HEADS CADETS H.P. [lsley of Montreal has been elected president of the Air Cadet League of Canada. Mr. Illsley, one of a group respon- sible. for formation of the league in 1940, succeeds J. G. LeDroit, also of Montreal. He was elected at the annual meeting at the Seigniory Club, Que. (CP Phote) Starved Kiddies Said Improving ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP)—The condition of three children ad- mitted to hospital here last month for treatment of\ malnu- trition was reported greatly im- proved Monday. Their mother, Mrs. Michael | O'Grady, was also receiving treat- ment for malnutrition and an un- specified ailment. OTTAWA. (Special)—A native Islander, John Eldon Green, of Charlottetown, has been appoint- | ed regional director of family al- lowances and old age security for Prince Edward Island. ° Health Minister J. Waldo Monteith said that the appoint- ment would be retroctive Dec. Ist, 1958. Mr. Green succeeds Alfred S. Tait. who recently ac- cepted a position with the pro- vincial government of New Brunswick. Born in Albany, Mr. Green is a graduate of St. Dunstan’s Col- lege, Charlottetown, and complet- ed his postgraduate studies in social work at Catholic University of America, Washington, D. C., in 1943. Prior to his promotion, he was supervisor of Welfare Services in the Charlottetown regional of- fices of the department of nat- ional health and welfare from 1950 to 1958. Secretary of the Maritime Con- ference on .Social Work. Mr. Green is also affiliated with the Canadian-Association of Social Workers, the Canadian Confer- ence on Social Work and the Canadian Welfare Council. An officer of the Canadian Army (Militia), he has also been actively associated with the o~ ing replacement of the F-86 Sabre z = Chariotletow ri’s Mayor "Edwin Johnston, lef, makes a pre- ference was for Mr. Diefenbakery (Continued on page 3 eol, 1) sentation to retiring . Deputy John Eldon Green Is N ‘Family Allowance Director Fire Chief James Walker. The Ads. 8506 ask for classified ad changing to intermittent rain; =. taker, for quick reswts. . | ly winds 20. Low-high 5 and 33, ' “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” . VOL. LXXII NO. 34 detected oo Qeomns Case Mal bs Ge Fee ote = CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1959 12 PAGES “rn FIVE CENTS — : ee ee eS ee — ae = SO ———— 7 Men Lost ndering Trawler Captain Reported Vessel Was ‘On Her Beam Ends’ HALIFAX (CP)—Fears for the safety of 17 Newfoundland fisher- men grew Monday as hours passed without word of the St. John’s trawler Blue Wave, re- ported capsizing in an Atlantic | up gale. The 60-mile-an-hour wind, whip- ping up 25-foot waves, already had ¢rippled the Nova Scotia trawler Cape Dauphin, believed to have sunk after her 13-man crew abandoned ship Sunday night. Four ships searched for the Blue Wave but fog and high seas cut visibility almost to zero. Two Newfoundland when the fog closed in. Other trawlers and coastal arrived here coated beam ends.” Nomad ee : ae i “aE MR. GREEN Catholic Social Welfare Bureau in Charlottetown, and has lectur- e€d on social philosophy at St. Dunstan's. Married and a resident of the | provincial capital, the new re- gional director has three children. SER presentation was’ ele at annual dinner last night of the Charlottetown Fire Department. Mrs. Walker-was presented @ the |: Capt. Dan Pitcher, 35, of Louts- bourg, N.S., and a crew of-12 Newfoundlanders abandoned 179 - ton Cape Dauphin on Grand Banks. a by the Newfoundland trawler aeae: They said the Dauphin began leaking so badly they could not control the water with pumps. When abandoned she was not ex- pected te stay afloat more thas an hour. The Blue Wave is owned by Bonavista Cold Storage Compang of St. John’s, Nfld, the Cape er’s most piercing .cokt across eastern Canada. Temperatures fell below zero almost every- where. VESSELS ICE-COATED trawlers Halifax coated it took crew to chop it sledge - ham Thomas V. Nfld., had some parts A waterfront “She's the most badly ice-up sel I ever sew here.” Tornado, Fog, Ice Hit US CHICAGO (AP) — elements spawned thunderstorms, dense fog, ing rains and a sea of ice Monday from Colorade te the middle Atlantic coast. The result was destruction, dis- ruption of air travel, snarled traf- fic, and a rash of auto accidents which took several lives. The tornado in southwest Mis- souri hit Duquesne and another community near Carthage in the ine . A a | afternoon as turbulence developed between a wide sweep of moist southerly winds and the edge of a deep mound of harsh cold air. It injured one man and destroyed several houses. Along the Canadian border, temperatures remained below zero in North Dakota, Montana and in northern Maine, after a night of extreme cold. Low tem- peratures of early, morning in- cluded 34 degrees below zero at Newport, Vt., and Saranac Lake, N.Y., and 27 below at Bismarck and Grand Forks, N.D. At the other extreme, south- ern Firida enjoyed afternoon teme lperatures in the 80s. Tempera- itures in the 60s extended from the gulf into the Carolinas and the lower Ohio Valley. DEPUTY FIRE CHIEF HONORED uquet of ‘Toses ‘by the Maver. puty Fire Chief Walker is ® native of Caledonia, P.E.L (See story on page two.) r