“—‘tetonated. West Faces Annihilation .In Nuclear War Say Reds pam ey «| - b - A‘s. Dial 8506 TELEPHONE 8506 Buyer meets seller with Guardian Want ask for classified ad taker, for quick results, VOL. LXXII NO. 110 pS my Authertecd as Second Class Mall by Ge Post Office eee eee ES ~ _ Four other anti - tank missiles were found in the rubble and taken by explosives ‘experts. from mearby Petawawa army camp-to) the Ottawa River shore to be i site is chosen. Some prisoners will be transferred here from the Maritime penitentiary at Dor- chester. Mr. Pyke said the number of men to be employed is indefinite, &. ‘ eos eo > % ” Bo ay a _ © 4¢ Edward Island Like The Dew” o AUTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, MAY 11, 1959 ‘ngineer Fro % mand. The dispute created some un- certainty about the actual open- ing of the conference set for 2:30 p.m. (11:30 a.m. ADT) today. British Foreign Secretary Sel- LONDON (AP)—The Western powers ‘‘would be literally wiped off ‘the face of the earth,” in any future war, Soviet Premier Khrushchev told a party of West German editors last week. “He told the statement—insist- ing he was not threatening any- one—in an interview published in Soviet n@wspapers and carried by Moscow Radio. a = Meapwhile Ryssia’s highest- ‘yanking soldier, Marshal Ivan Churchill Waves Koniev, declared that the ‘‘day of the invulnerability of the United States is past.” Soviet forces ‘‘have at their dis- posal everything for the defeat of any aggressor in any part of the world,’ Konievy said. in an article in the Soviet Army news- paper Red Star. . EIGHT BOMBS ENOUGH Khrushchev told the West Ger- man editors that eight hydrogen bombs would be enough to put West Germany out of action. “And do you think we haven't losses, the. Western powers would be literally wiped off the face of the earth.” Khrushthev’ said some Ameri- can generals and admirals as well as West German military leaders were trying to prove that NATO possessed military super- jority. WHERE-TO-FIND-IT Announcements, notices ..13 Births, deaths, etc., 2 and . wanted East and West Germany to be full participants in the for- eign ministers meeting. The West—the United States, Britain and France—wants the East and West Germans to sit in only as advisers. Lloyd called on Gromyko in his capacity as chairman of today’s opening session to discuss the ar- rangements for the meeting. ~+ Sources said Gromyko was able to point to a Soviet note to the West on March 30 which called for East and West Germany to be “represented” at the confer- ence. The West had stated in notes to Mostow March 2 that it re- garded the Germans only as ad- visers. ably would sound out the Amert- can, French and Soviet delega- tions this morning in a Jast-min- ute effort to reach agreement on the status of East and West Ger- many. a Lloyd’s meeting with Gromyko had been expected to be brief but it lasted almost two hours. The British _foreign secretary then hurried back to his residence to receive UN Secretary - General The sources said Lloyd prob-|.' Pei % 14 PAGES 1 Provi WEATHER . hhecening ceuhy Sy evening, ver? , Low-high at Char- neehen $6 end oh. ; nce a Pe $ es aay: ie ‘< 7, 5 See Ys n is Cae . - a Price Support Ch Premier Is ‘Not Satisfied — “4 With Report From Ottawa Slated tor Eggs, Pork Island engineer will be sent , The dra of the two vessels|Prime Minister John Diefen- to’ the Mackinac straits in Mich-| are 19 pe and 20.6 feet respect- epg Mr. aaineees : as vo ‘ ALAN DONNELL’ wouldn an to inspect the idle ferryboat | ively our provincia Contion Press Staff orher cece stat ene on Tpecstsauieedt’de ons aflent to ae- OTHERS ARE SOLD tives in the House of Commons i what alter-| Premier Matheson said he has| all of whom had copies ot the OTTAWA (CP) — The govern-|freight charges, or face the termine, if possible, ‘ : ; ee ment .is changing its method of | chance of having to get rid of its} [ ations would be required to have | learned since his return to the| resolution on transporta — i the ship operate between Borden | province that all of the six ships|ed unanimously at the Croats ac gp tang oy Saghwn Fags saga eliaat ee dh cea and Tormentine. owned by the State of Michigan| sitting of the Island Legislature. expensive items in its larder of GE COSTS HIGH In making this announcement | at Mackinac have been sold ex-| In his talks with Transport surplus farm goods: Eggs and | STORA last night, Premier Alex “Math- | cept the ‘‘Vacationland” and that} Minister Hees, the Premier was jpork. . Storage charges have beep eson said he was not gatisfied|a shipping firm is igterested in| told, “You get a boat and we Both farmers and politicians | tif. Figures tabled in the Com- with the verbal report received | converting her to ocean going ser-| shall be only too willing to put will be watching closely to see |™ons recently, covering all pro- on his recent trip to Ottawa, in| vice’ in the Pacific. He believed: it into service. how it turns out. For consumers |@ucts brought under farm sup- nat The: Hwhich it was intimated that ex-|the ship could be purchased from| However a the Can the change holds out thte possibil- | Ports, showed a storage) bill of cf BE ee - tensive alterations costing a mil- |the American firm for apprexi-| ada eer sa -~ ity of lower prices $2,935,000 for the 12 months up to lion dollars, would have to be | mately two million dollars boat, without the express conse: . , last Feb. 28. Costs had risen} FO OTTAWA _| made at the Borden and Tormen-| Before conferring with Trans. |of the Minister of Transport, shal The government, instead of steadily from last June to $450,- - . | time piers before the Vacationland |port Minister George Hees and! (Continued on page 5 Col. 4) buying up eggs and pork when 000 in February alone. Malcolm - MacKenzie, deputy could dock. : \ prices fall below the support inister and director of Educa “The matter of improved service a iowth ooh Sed produc! AASHS tion leaves. today for Ottawa | ree et such great itmatines own er pay = il attend ; a s ers any difference between the Military Pacts pene ar Satuue toate that we must not fail to exhaust ormer P( OF market and support prices ‘ Council of which he is a mem. |CVeTy avenue in this direction and - . This form of so - called defi- Are Avoided ber. Mr. MacKenzie will return |1.2m of the belief that the slight ciency payments has been used to the Province next Friday csnwetse tn tae beware, Oe important products such as wool, By SPIRO -ELISSA will not perhaps entail such alter- ~~ sugar beets, soya beans and On-| AMMAN, Jordan (AP) — The ations as have been predicted”’, tario winter wheat and peaches. |ew premier of Jordan said Sun- the Sees san wi day his country will steer clear ‘ — s only aes an ~~ PAYMENT FOR HOGS ______| of military pacts with either aieeean ae is ee, the | Rt. Rev. J. A. Murphy, DP, of Most Rev. Malcolm A. Mae In March, with 40,000,000/or West. a Vacationland is 73. The former is | VG, administrator of the Diocese| Pachern, will confer degrees om pounds of pork cuts on the gov-| Hazza Majali has been under 8 372 feet long and the latter 344.!of Charlottetown in the absence anes ng Uae ernment’s hands, Agriculture|attack by the United Arab Re- - exercises Dunsta Minister Harkness announced|public’s press and radio ever afternoon. that the agricultural ‘ since King Hussein asked him ee DISASTROUS FIRE an anes Se as set gd ae board had been told to work out | last Tuesday to form a new gov- to Rome. CANADIAN BALLERINA @ system of deficiency payments | ernment replacing that of Samir] CAIRO, Egypt (AP)—Between x Murphy, a former for hogs in ele 4.000 snd: 5,000 persons shuffied ; rector of the University (1926-43), Twenty- old L Seymour; Royal Ballet Company when she Swan Lake at London’s famous Thursday The U. A. R. press is charging| Silently ong Cairo’s main n a in armer will also give diplomas te four of eer an. _Canada’s| was given the leading role as| Convent Gardens. (CP Phete) |S@me system will be adopted for | na -‘Majali’s appointment is the|Streets Sunday mourning those engineering students. They are first Prima Ballerina with the! Odetteodile in Tschaikovsky’s | eggs. . first step in a plan by the king|Who were drowned Friday in the Joseph Daniel Arbing, Bedford; ; Opposition parties in the Com-|;, take Jordan into the Western-| Simking of the Nile riverboat Dan John Sterling Creamer, Souris; . mons were cautious in their com-|hacked Baghdad anti-Communist | 4aTe. Alexander John Donahue, Rose anning Expert Is Sou Pmt air Pron wi Sa ao dn eae Ps ene ean ka a © mpeamtiie to réicleve the bodies ; J a ee ee rae sharply government victims. They succeeded im released Bames : | ‘ » } < ‘ dius ten & eondiet “| Forest Fires ithe sot as cae tod MONTAGUE BUREAU , Nicholson, chairman of the fire| dents successful in the year's ' .|ficiency payments for western from the river bed. The salvage OF THE GUARDIAN | board, John Shaw, Preston Mac- | ©*@minations. to Guide Springhill Project er fi." Sweep State [radars cate | t,cem warn me ee [rege gtowere | Ci cin ce : Argue said he could judge the eep ‘|cluding those found Friday and |™MacLeod, lost his home, four well Druep sssisted by an eager | Merit the names of the students : system only after it was intro- Saturday equipped barns and a quantity of » who have made a general. aver- SPRINGHILL, N. S. (CP)—;studied, further by town council|but most will be from here. duced. AUGUSTA, Me. (AP)—At least ‘als said - livestock? and equipment ~in a | group.of neighbours put up a gal-| age of 60 = cent ‘an year’s Faced with keen competition|and the committee before being} Mr. Pyke said industrial estates|, In an interview. Mr. Harkness |16 forest fires were reported in ee about 75 persons Oa which was discovered about lant fight to have the a pore Sh ee nsed ae from other Nova Scotia commun-|placed before the citizens for|corporation and its subsidiary,|said the end result will be the | Widely separated areas of Maine missing. er se ae ae PEE with the ——, a a ing 80 per ~ above er ities in its search for new indus-| their decision next month. Springhill Development Corpora-|same for the farmer. “The con-| Sunday as dry weather kept parts} The captain < the ss Some ae hd aan water, shovels Bigs wg = course as os pHa ge nye Be tries, the Springhill industrial} the Springhill Industrial De-| ‘io are pressing every possible|sumer will get the product |° the state in fire index class 5— —“ arrsene ae Seaton tarda their a a : committee Saturday proposed the | yeiopment Committee was formed | °Urce for new industry. cheaper than otherwise.” exptecive. ne , the cattle were lost until they| The only water available ex-| Pass standing 50 per cent to 64 hiring of a planning expert as a/;, encourage new industry after} M®. Mason said “we must| As for the cost to the treasury,| , There was little hope for rain. sinking. ——were—rounded—up—from nearby | cept the small amount on the| per cent in the course named.) professional guide. the town’s economy hit rock bot-|™ake a co-ordinated ef im-|Mr. Harkness said he thinks that |The weather forecast called for fields and counted. -. -* pamper" was from ea oid cpen BIOLOGY The proposal was made at a|tom with the closing of the Cum-| Prove the appearance of this com-/in the long run the burden won't/possible scattered showers Mon- FISH AND MINK Mr. MacLeod succeeded in free-| well which had not been used for| First Class: Edward Blanch- eitizens’ meeting here ani will be |berland Railway and Coal Com-| ™Umity- be as heavy as it has been. The'day or Tuesday. ing some twenty head of cattle| years. ette, Albert Young, Ambrose Lee, pany last year following a mine = E ON HOOK and his one horse before the Sie intee esowe thet hed gut |Lammanss ‘Won, Geto tobe s disaster that killed 75 men. DEMAND IS REJECTED BIT flames hit the stable area. hered were able to save all the|Thomas Wong, Andrew Pau. War Missile Committee chairman A. J. The farm has been in the same | household effects and 200 bush| Second Class: ~ William Cain, Mason, a former mayor, told the ALBERTON BUREAU |family for three generations and|els of potatoes in the cellar. |Emmett Foley, Alfred Tsang, : cal OF THE GUARDIAN |it was one of the best equipped| There was a small amount of| Ian MacDonald, Charles Broder Causes Death wend or eyed alley x nin Se ° An unusual! fish story was {ia the province. insurance on the buildings andj ick, Justin McNeill, Francis Gil- een Se sow Ranceien woe reported yesterday by a West } Its modern equipment include | livestock. (Continued on page 2 Col. 4) oy ace ce! German Representation | ssc%ius jase risa DEEP RIVER, Ont. (CP)—The |°f the community “is not bleak.” i for trout at Marchbanks pond |ing machine, water system and a a body of Donald Gilmore, 17, was |ANNOUNCE SITE SOON ey i : near Montrose Henry Gillian [other ” standard equipment in - found Sunday night in the base-| Labor Minister Stephen Pyke of . ° ‘| of Alberton hooked a trout {modern barns. rl e | en. ment wreckage of his widowed | Nova Scotia said the federal gov- , x and a few seconds later the “Also lost was the usual farm mother’s home after the explosion | ernment will announce the site of 5 S e ee Ing fish was snapped up by a {equipment stored in the ‘build- - @f a wartime anti - tank missile|a prison farm in this area within large mink which the surpris- ae sagan thousand = ° . with which he had been playing. | the next month. Ottawa has an-| GENEVA (CP) — Russia.de Lloyd met with Soviet/Russi iti tated [ee ee eee When Mr Macleod of oot * (Mrs. Thor Gilmore and her two | nounced it will erect prison facik 7 poo : ne POR Wes, S by The hook was deeply im- . ope is venin ‘ ether children were not injured |ities this, summer to ease pver-| ™anded Sunday that German rep-| Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gro-| Viadimir N. Bendryshev. William} beded in the minks stomach |door leading to the central barn aie Siast tone ook ae ab tee nn Fo Sottiens jails oF a Tesentatives be brought into the | myko late Sunday afternoon in an|Gibson, speaking for the United] and the’animal had to be kill- [his face and hands were burned tire wall of their one-storey home| The Springhill member of the| °P@ing session of the Big Four|effort to resolve the disagree-|States, told Bendryshev that the} ed, making a novel way to ae ee “rt futile attempt to} ay traffic on the old Hillsboro, opened to permit passage of a near the centre of this Ottawa| Nova aut Legislature said he foreign ministers conferenc. to-|ment but the effort failed. Western powers will not recognize catch mink and an interesting COME B UR NED Bridge will be suspended for a| large floating unit belonging te River town 30 miles northwest of |has been informed there will be|%2Y 8 full participants. .The| Usually reliable sources .said|the East Germans as full partie- fish story. The Montagne Fire Déoart considerable period this even-| Foundation Mdritimes Limited of Pembroke. no delay in construction once the| ¥este™ powers rejected the de-|Gromyko told Lloyd that Russia| ipants. ment under,\ Councillor Claude |"&__85 the central span will be| Halifax. . The actual operation, the first time the span has been opened in more than 25 years, is sche- duled to begin at 6:00 p.m., en- gineer Alex Scott stated last night. The floating equipment which arrived from Halifax at 6:00 p. m., last evening is anchored in mid-stream a few hundred yards east of the bridge. It will be used by the big Helt- fax company which holds - the contract to construct the piers and abutments of the new bridge which will lie slightly east of the present one. \ Alberta Vote Is June 18th EDMONTON (CP)—An Alberta general election will be held Thursday, June 18, Premier E. C, Manning announced Saturday night. Nomination day will be June 4. The long: - expected: announce- ment was «made in a CBC radio broadcast, repeated later in pro- | ” vincial radio and television pro- i 5 Age Charlottetown news . Dag Hammarskjold. grams. | oe "*| Classified section .. 12, 13 The ‘Soviet demand -was pre-| | call aa lea is ye | Tearful Goodbye “And how many are needed to| Comics, features ........ 11 | sented to Western representatives| a gener; election this year. put West European countries out ae ee dep¥eotas 4 at a four-power meeting of offi- Eoerane vote May 14 and On Gparchil, 84 a0d ailing, ade a| ‘The tnleiview wet ghee riae,| Wand News -s.vas.: 7 ts ion ae STANDING AT DISSOLUTION tearful goodbye to the United|day but was not publicized im pe Page ........ 6,7, | This was the first time, a U.S. — was disso Sunday night, the land of| Moscow until Saturday. Late reports from, Guar | spokesman said, that the Soviet Saturday by Lieutenant-Governor Kis mother’s birth. Leaning heavily on a gold-tip- cane, the British statesman ee an informal visit ,among oid friends with a brief farew a@ Wlewild Airport. : ht while we should suffer “You may say,” Khrushchev told the Germans, “‘ ‘would the Soviet Union suffer no losses m the event of war?" Yes," would have losses, and great ones. dian news bureaus in Sum- merside, Montague, Alberton and Souris. and from special correspon“ents now anpear on the Island News Page. government had said it wanted the East Germans seated in the conference at the outset as full participants. Andrew H. Berding. assistant tes‘ifying to its destructive into en “er ‘U.S. secretary of state said the| power, a fire at Gien Martin to Peer W. MacLeod when. this, ern "\ ? ‘ig barn be' «ting barns, ‘a large amount of | the\MacLeod home, equipment ive- J. J. Bowlen. The standing: So- Glal Credit 37, Liberal--15,-Pro- gressive Conservatives 3, CCF 2,