1 between the Egyptian and S"dan- l ,l"ln Khartoum, a Sutanese gov- TELEPHONE 8506 _Buyer meets seller with Gr ardian Want Ads. Dial 8506 ask for classi- fied ad taker, for quick results, hr @i11b11’dlidtI “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew" WEATHER Variable cloudiness with a, few snowflur- ries; not much change in temP91'3t1“°°' Low-high at Charlottetown 10 and 23. All“ -2420 an seggnd Class Man by an pm. 03;" 1 ‘i A V /, MI 91"» on-we CHARLOTTETOVI N CANADA. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1958 N°'§.H”,’{,9,RE FIVE CENTS ‘I’!'AWA— Rheal Lefebvre, 9, scratches his head and wonders yghyhls teachers. say there should TWAIRO (Reuters) — Sudan and, Igypt Wednesday broke off ne- ptiatlons on frontier disputed territory. EA Sudanese Embassy spokes- vsnun announded following talks foreign ministers that “no further meetings will take place fiinorrow. prior -to the departure gr the Sudanese foreign min- ‘i"ll»n .-Egyptian communique is- ‘: M; tbemeeting 1.-tween ' *=.~.-‘int .«- s ’MahImud Fawzi :« rejected an Egypi'an -: to postpone elections in $09000-square-mile territory. tghment spokesman said Egypt “I turned down Sudan’s propo- s. 5‘f'l'he Egyptian communique said ' ‘ had proposed that neither .government should hold elections go the region “pending negotia- ns.” Mahgoub is scheduled to leave Cairo tonight. . The Sudanese cabinet member met with Egyptian President Nasser to confer on the quarrel, Wfhed off by Egypt’s annnounce- fnent it would hold a plebiscite in the disputed territory Feb. 21 011*-he presidency of the new Eyptian - Syrian union. -The s“d_a11 Plans to include the area ln Its Feb. 27 general elections. EACH ACCUSES OTHER Both countries have acccused gm of sending troops into {MONTREAL (CP)—Two « avia- ‘°“ experts .indicated Wednesday 113 plane that crashed last d 3“-St I Quebec bog with 79 tgll-h§—Canada’s worst air disas- rydid not have enough gas to ‘~‘30h_ Montreal. ‘Their quietly dramatic testi- "‘.911lI was given as a three-man . 3111 continued a public hearing “E9 the crash. w,.It (the Maritime Central Air- iu"§’_S_D1am) would not have had reéllgient _fuel to reach Mont- Do . said aviation Inspector ml: _McLellan, after outlining maxi ation-s made on the DC-4's V mum \_endurance by the “sport department, the RCAF 3'13 others. amfillle aircraftrould have flown ing Qer 46%”min_utes after pass- Beu llebec,> said Lieut. W. K. of Ottawa. an RCAF expert use one. The mistake was made Two Experts Testify M.’ C. A. Aircraft Was Short Of Fuel be a double “,M" in accommoda- tion when the educationists just the disputed zone. Both sides deny the other’s story, though Sn‘- dan conceded there was a small Sudanese garrison in the zone. Egypt has demanded with- drawal of all Sud-anese troops from the area, the Halaib region of the Red Sea coast. The Sudan has asserted Sudanese sover- eignty over the area and de- mands tlrat Egy-pt_withd~r-aw offfi- cials and armed forces. The semi-official Cairo news- paper A1 Shaab ‘blamed “im- perialists and"tiheir stooges” for what it. called “the fictitious Egyptian - Sudanese crisis.” It added: ‘ “Imperialism divulged its sinis- ter intentions when an. official spokesman in London declared that the British government was in constant touch with Sudan over the dispute.” . '1‘-he Sudanese Embassy here is- sued a communique “denying ab- solutely” that the,Sudan govern- ment had established any contact with the British government. BECAME MORE SERIOUS The Egyptian government- sponsored Middle East News Agency has reported the situa- tion “‘took a serious turn” follow- ing the dispatch of Sudanese troops. In. Khartoum, the various Sudanese political parties ' were reported almost in agreement on a truce in the face of the dispute. Observers in the Sudanese cap- ital said political parties and or- craft. He converted the time figure into nautical miles for the board. Based on its Sept-Iles, Que-. to Quebec City ground speed of 133 knots, his computation meant the plane could fly another 103 nauti- cal miles. DISTANCE l30 MILES Distance from Quebec to Mont- real “as the crow flies” is 130 nautical miles. Both witnesses based their cal- culations on the plane’s fuel con- sumption on its final flight from Keflavik, Iceland, where the air- craft was refueled after landing from London. It was flying 73 persons and six crew members- mostly from the Toronto-Hamih ton area——back to Toronto after a holiday overseas. Lieut. Bell told how he made his calculations and recorded 911 ' . - technical performance of air- sfi-ngrancis Xavier University « fiver Stgonish won a split decision . ~ Dunstan’s University in aritime Intercollegiate De- ° here last night. The visitors ‘or 9 negative of the resolution . the T ~ L ians Canada ,Pipe Dgfitbe Nationalizcd.” Only one se ‘en thllarated the two teams tailed. e judges‘ cards were to? eafingil Mulrooney of Bay Com- of §t‘ Jelfiip and Richard Cashin member‘; S. Newfoundland, the w regidthg Xazveriatnt teérm, ape s on s arming llllnakgis by the more than one and fifty people who 5?. F. X. Debaters Capture Split Decision From S. D. U. them on a simple graph. hear‘ the debate in the Univer- sity’s gymnasium auditorium. The visitors had won from Aca dia University in Wolfville on the previous night. Upholding the affairmative of the resolution were Don MacDon- ga‘l of Kinkora, member of last year’s Canadian Intercollegiate Championship team. and Charles Campbell of Kelly’s Cross. ‘ national communism, ;. SOMEBODY'S WRONG in a poster at the Canadian Con- ference on Education, of‘ all places. (CP Wirephoto) :Sudane$e-Egyptian Talks ::ln~Dispute Broken Off ganizations, which a few days ago were villifying each other, now have rallied to the calll of the Nationalist party. .Will ‘Take Issue Before The U. N. KHARTOUM, Sudan ("‘hurs- day) (AP)—The Sudan govern- ment early today announced it will bring the border dispute with Egypt before the United. Nations Security Council. Former Chief Electoral Officer Dies vln Ottawa OTTAWA (CP)—Jules Caston- guay, 75-year-old former chief electoral officer of Canada, died in hospital Wednesday night. His son, Nelson, said he never regained consciousness after a heart attack at his home Jan. 21. Death came about 11:30 p.m. EST. , He had lived tiring in 1948. Nelson succeeded him as the officer in charge of the country's complicated election machinery. Nelson, in fact, was still at work in his office on preparations for the election on March 31 when at home since re- . he learned of his father's death. Chctllenge u. 5. -To Full Troops ‘From So. Korea “ PEIPING (Reuters)-—Commu- nist China announced Wednesday it is withdrawing its troops from North Korea and challenged the United States to stage a similar pullout in South Korea. The offer came at the end of a five-day visit to North Korea by Chinese Premier Chou En-lai and was announced in a statement is- sued here and ' in the North Korean capital of Pyongyang. ~ Withdrawal of t-h e “volun- 'teers,” who poured across the Yalu River in 1950 to halt the United Nations advance during the Korean War, will be com- pleted by the end of the year, the statement said. ' It added the first stage of the withdrawal will end April 30. Some 200,000 Chinese troops en- tered the Korean War but a gov- ernment official said he could not reveal their present strength- South Korea has estimated the force at 350,000. ’ WAS PARTY ORGANIZER TORONTO (CP)——Garrett Tyr- rell, 70, organizer for the Con- servative party in Toronto from 1914 to 1944, died Tuesday. Mr. Tyrrell was an accountant at the county sheriff's office and retired last Jan. 1. ' GUILLOTINE MOSLEMS ALGIERS (Reuters) -— Three Moslems were guillotined Tues-, day for tereonista.attacks.anuEu.no- peans. ' OTTAWA (CP)-Soft - spoken Tom Nye, a labor delegate from Lindsay, Ont., says co-education is bunk and boys ought to be taught by men. President of the Lindsay and District Labor Council and a for- - mer school trustee, Mr. Nye Wed- nesday told the Canadian Confer- ence on Education that “worxen teachers cannot teach the man- liness necessary to equip a boy for this tough wor1d.” Addressing a workshop on cur- ricular organization, Mr. said the hundreds of new schools planned in communities through- out Canda should be boys’ schools and girls’ schools the girls taught by men or women, and e boys taught only by men. Teen- age delinquency would be solved and the school system would turn out a better product. , “Boys now are raised to see this world mainly through the eyes of women,” said Mr. Nye who has a 19-year-old son in high scho‘ol. Co - education a Education Meeting Speaker Nye. Is Bunk Says “From birth until the age of six they’re dominated by mom, between six and 13 the’re/domi- nated by women teachers at the elementary school level, and be- tween 13 and 18 it's the same again in high school. . “A lot of life’s experiences emanate from the teachers ‘on the side’ in the classroom. Let boys absorb a man’s stock of such experiences.” “Women,” he added, “say that if they ran the world there would never be _a war.” “Have you ever seen what happens when two women have to share kitchen and bathroom facilities?" “I am not in the least belit- tling girls or women. But I feel they belong in the mature age of man, not to any great extent in the adolescent school age,” the 46-year-old widower said. “I believe the basic decencies of manhood are learned on the playing field by the participation of all types of boy." Pearson said Wednesdr one of the best ways of gaining head- way towards world peace is to split the forces of national com- munism and Russian imperial- ism. The Liberal leader told a cheer- ing group of some 50 ethnic news- paper editors that he never has been “soft” towards the Reds. The Russians twice had vetoed his chances of becoming secre- tary-general of the United Na- tions. . And there were times d i__g the last few days of the election campaign, “when I wish I had got that job,” he added with a smile. ~ Then he continued: “The cold war cannot continue indefinitely without it turning into a hot war. If we somehow can make a split between Russian imperialism and we would be making headway towards nnscunn FROM LAKE JACKSON’S POINT, Ont. (CP) Thirteen persons four of whom had‘ not eaten in 36 hours, were resuced Tuesday from Lake Sim- coe fishing huts, where they had Judges were Major J.F. Mac- Millaii of Prince of Wales College Staff Sgt. Matthew Hagan, R.C.M ‘ P. from Southport and John T.) Place of Charlottetown. ] Bob Doyle of St. John’s, New i on the campus, presided- beeii stranded by high winds and drifting snow. A group from Hol- land Landing, 20 miles north of Toronto, had been trapped in their small huts on the ‘lake for foundland. president of M.I.D.L.‘four days. All were reported in lgood condition. Pearson Says He Was Never Soft Towards Communists \ it TORONTO (CP) — Lester B. world freedom and peace.” The split would be only the first step. After that, the former ex- ternal affairs minister would look for the Communist country that had broken away to decide “its own fate.” ' Carolina Report Sir W Pneumonia And Pleurisy OTTAWA (CP) —- Louis Fred- erick McMurrer, 36-year-old for- mer employee of the Prince Ed- ward Island government, Wednes- day was added to the RCMP’s ‘list of most-wanted men. McMurrer is wanted by the RCMP on charges of fraud and refusing to deliver property. He has be‘en missing since May, 1957. The bddition of McMurrer to the list brings to four the number of men on the list of most-wanted men.vThe list never has totalled more than 10 names since it was instituted in 1952 as an aid to police agencies. The charges against McMurrer arose. while he was employed "at Charlottetown as manager of the duplicating branch of the depart- ment of the provincial, secretary of the P.E.I. government. FALSIFIED INVOICES He is accused of obtaining about $15,000 by falsifying ‘in- voices and orders for supplies to fictitious business firms. The RCMP says M-cMurrer is charged with picking up and cashing cheques issued by the provincial treasury department in payment for the supplies. The RCMP said McMurrer left P.E.I. at the end of May, 1957, driving a government owned 1956' Plymouth sedan bearing li- cence number 12-452. The serial 20 Bodies Are Picked Up NORFOLK Va. (AP) -—Search‘ ships Wednesday rescued two more -survivors and recovered the bodies of 20 -crew members fromthe sunken Italian freighter. —-Bouitas. Two others _were"miss-‘ ing and three were rescued ear- lier. The Bonitas’ 27-man crew, who abandoned their sinking ship in raging seas and a blinding snow- storm 120 miles off the North coast~Tuesday night, were thrown into the water when their lifeboat capsized as the American fr e i g h t e r Presi dent Adams WEI/ll: alongside in a rescue attempt. number of the vehicle is 96921370. McMurrer, a native of Char- lottetown, is five feet, six inches tall, weighs 150 pounds and has a sallow complexion, brown eyes, dark brown hair, large protrud- ing ears, and bushy eyebrows. He ' Query Premier And Minister Interviewed yesterday, the Hon. A. W. Matheson had nothing‘to say except that, “Anyone who does wrong will be prosecuted, and until he is brought before the courts I have no comment to make.;' In conversation with Hon. B. Earle MacDonald under whose department Mr., McMurrer was employed, he stated that the de- partment was well aware of Me- Murrer’s disappearance and at that time the Attoreny- General issued a warrant for his arrest in Canada or the U.S.A. Former Gov't Employee On Most-Wanted List is a printer by trade. The RCMP says McMurrer “lives high” and is an alcoholic. Also on the list are: John Fed- erick Meagher, 26-year-old To- ronto , salesman, wanted on a charge of robbery with violence and escaping custody in Toronto last April 9. The robbery charge stems from an offence in Novem- ber, 1956, when a man entered a home in Th'ronto’s suburban Scarborough, assaulted an 80- year-old woman, pistol - whipped her son and robbed them of a large quantity of jewelry and cash. The RCMP says Meagher is considered dangerous. William Adams, alias Wasely Sc. nborski, alias Joe Lacheau— wanted by police at St. Cathar- ines, Ont., for the murder of his father in the latter’: shoe-repair shop in June, 1949. Daniel William O'Connor, alias Mike Clancy, alias Bob Collins- wanted by police at Keremoes, B.C., on a charge ofattempted murder. ST. JOHN’S, Nfld. (CP) — P r i In e Minister Die£enbaker’s aircraft squeezed through a hole in the fog late Wednesday to land th e Progressive Conservative leader here safely for an evening election meeting. \ ~ The TCA North Star piloted by made two passes at 300 feet over the fog shrouded airport and finally, after abbut an hour of third’, successfiil’-1 approach.‘ The fog closed in again almost as soon as the plane landed. Mr. Diefenbaker, who dozed much of the time, went forward to shake hands with the pilot and then left the plane to be met by a band—playing, horn-tooting, wel- come from more than 200 New- foundlanders. He was to speak later at a nom- ination meeting to pick Consexv- tive candidates for St. John’s BAHREIN, Persian Gulf (AP) A new British freighter carrying explosives for Iran’s oil fields blew up in Bahrein harbor Wed- nesday night while the. crew was fighting a two-day fire. Some wreckage was found two miles away. The explosion rocked the island, off the coast of Saudi Arabia. Rescue craft working by the light of flames from the shattered hulk of the 7,400-ton Seistan quickly picked up one body and nine wounded survivors from more than 60 persons reported to have been aboard. “The ship just seemed to jump out of the water,” an injured sea- man said. There were reports that at least 20 others also lived through the blast, which rocked the har- bor area at 9:45 p.m. The exact casualty toll was not likely to be known until daylight. The Seistan, a motor ship built in 1957 at South Shields, England, had a fire aboard -when’ she en- Ship Wrecked In Explosion tered‘-the Persian Gulf on a voy- age from Liverpool and put into Bahrein waters to extinguish it. FIRE CONTROLLED The fire was brought under control, but burned on while the crew fought it with steam and tackled the job of unloading about 175 tons, of explosives from the holds. Half the explosives had been moved ahsore when the blast ripped the ship. Owned by the Strick Line Lim- ited, of London, the Seistan was carrying the explosives and other material for use in the Iranian oil fields. The cargo was esti- mated worth $2,800,000. The skipper is a Welshman, Capt. W. Chappell. A company spokesman said there were 12 British officers and about 50 Asian crew mgmibers un- der Chappell. ‘ Also aboard was a woman pas- senger and her eight - year - old son. They were among the sur- vivors. By THE CANADIAN PRESS Southern Ontario continued ef- forts to overcome the effects of a four-day storm Wednesday, aided by h i g h e r temperatures a nd lighter winds. Most Quebec areas dug them- selves out from drifted snow that blocked highways and isolated towns. The forecaster predicted con- tinued moderation today in On- tario with temperatures to 2‘ de- grees after three days of sub- zero recordings. Quebec’s forecast was the same except for minor snowflurries ex- pected in southern areas. Skies were to be cloudy. The rest of Canada enjoyed normal winter weather, with sunny skies in southern Manitoba and the Maritimes. British Columbia had tempera- coast and snow in the north. Prairie regions expected slightly cooler but still mild weather with some snowflurries. SIX DIE IN ONTARIO Ontario’s death toll attributed to the storm rose to six Wednes- day. Quebec’s standsat five. A Brockville, Ont., man died of a ‘heart attack while shovelling and police found the frozen body of an 31-year-old man in Fort Erie in a one-room shack. They esti- mated he died Monday during the intense cold. The milder weather allowed some towns and villages isolated since Sunday to dig through to outside contact. Reeve Frank E. Grey said the village of Creemore, 35 miles southwest of Orillia, was opened Wednesday after a snowplow tures in the 505 with rain on the Ontario ls Struggling From Under Deep Snow hours. Stayner, 60 miles «northwest of Toronto, and Lloydtown, 30 miles north of Toronto, dug themselves out Tuesday only to be snowed in again overnight. They were open again Wednesday. Carlingford, n e a r Stratford, was still isolated as highway de- partment plows finished celaring ship roads. BU'S SERVICE SHAKY Montreal reported difficulties with bus service to the suburbs but a return to outine in city traffic. City garbage collection was running behind“schedule. Quebec City, at 27 degrees, was dug out with traffic normal. The storm that caused all the havoc was moving east in North- ern Quebec and near the Quebec- worked steadily for almost 12 Labrador border. Captain Jim Flett of Montreal, .;cn_jc1iiig,, ‘found a_ clearing ‘forhis. main roads and started on town- It P. M.’s Aircraft Squeezes, Through Fog: To Nfld. Field, East and St. John’s West constit- uencies — the two - riding beach- head in this province which the party won in last ‘year's election from the Liberals. The other five provincial’ ridings were held by Liberals. EXPECT RE-ELECTION The two Conservatives were ex- pected to be ‘re-nominated: -Hon. W. J’. Browne, minister without portfolio, in St. John’s West,Ma_nd James A." McGrath, at" 26/ the I youngest MP in the last Com- mons, in St. John’s East. , The welcome given Mr. Diefen- baker contrasted sharply with his arrival here on the eve of last year’s election campaign, wt :1 there was no demonstration. This time there. was a crowd waving balloons and signs, while the brass band from the Mount Cashel Orphanage school played in the background. From the air- port, about 150 automobiles made a cavalcade through city 5' "eats just at supper time, led by two motorcycle policemen with sirens screaming. 1 Last year, although there was a demonstration on Mr. Diefen- baker’s arrival, it was staged for the then Liberal immigration minister J. W. Pickersgill who travelled on the same plane with -the Conservative leader. On Wednesday’s flight from Montreal, Mr. Pickersgill again was along for one leg—between Halifax and Sydney—-bu-t he is not due to arrive here until Thursday. Mr. Pickersgill is seeking re- election in Bonavista-Twillingate riding. . ’ JOKES WITH PMS WIFE When they met at Halifax, they joked together. And when they parted at Sydney, Mr. Pickersgill remarked to Mrs. Diefenbaker, accompanying her h u s b a n d: “Don’t get too many votes.” “The same to you," she replied with a broad smile. On the plane the prime minis- ter played bridge with reporters. He and his partner won. He said it was his first bridge game in two years. Decide To Create No-Man's Land PARIS (Reuters) -—France de- cided Wednesday to create a “no-man’s land” along the Al- gerian sideof the 500 - mile frontier with Tunisia. 1 Purpose of the zone is to pre- vent Algerian rebels escaping into Tunisia, as the French claim they do, after attacking French troops trying to crush the Al- gerian rebellion. ' Tension in the frontier area reached breaking point following France’s bombing of a Tunsian claimed, Algerian rebels had set frontier village where, France up a stronghold. The cabinet gave no details re- garding the zone beyond the fact that no one will be allowed into SEES GOOD MARKET BRANDON, Man, (CP)—Ralph Bennett, chief of the federal agri- culture department’s marketing service, said Tuesday night a rapidly expanding population in North America promises a bright future for the beef cattle raiser. He said prices will be good until April 1, may drop during April to July then strengthen and be good for two to four years. 3, Doctors Say ROQUEBRUNE CAP MARTIN, France (CP) — Sir Winston Churchill has pneumonia and pleurisy, his doctors said Wednes- day night. but he was described as comfortable and in good spir- its. A medical bulletin -issued at 9:30 p.m. through Anthony Monta- gue-Browne, the 83 - year - old Churchill’s secretary, said: “Sir Winston Churchill is s: ‘jer- ing from pneumonia at "ie base of the lung and pleurisy. He had good night and has passed a .omfortable day.” - The bulletin was signed by Lord Moran. Qhurchill's private physic- fan who flew from London, and Dr. David M. Roberts, his physic- ian on the Riviera, Montague-Browne added: "Sir Winston is in good spirits. He passed the day reading pa- pers, talking to his family and dealing with correspondence.” Reporters had been promised the bulletin would be issued late in the afternoon. Asked about the delay, the secretary replied: “You must realize that we wanted to inform merrrbers of his family about his condition before they read it in the papers." ACCEPTS ROBERTS’ REPORT Told that Dr. Roberts said earl- ier Churchill’: condition was not dangerous, Montague - Browne commented: “If Dr. Roberts said his condit- ion is not dangerous then, I am prepared to accept that this is true.” Dr. Roberts said before the night medical bulletin that the British elder stateman was suf- fering from a chronic bronchial condition. All members of Churchill’s fam- ily have been informed, Monta- gue-Browne said. This . includes. his» son, ~ Ran- dolph, at present in the United States, and two daughters now in London. from Hollywood Feb. 7 and Lady Churchill arrived from London Tuesday. The secretary said there would be another medical bulletin to- night. He said he did not believe he would have any official, news this morning. / , The illness casts doubt: on ‘Congressmen Tip No Value ter - tipped cigarets produce as or more nicotine and tar a-s cig- arets without filters, a congres- sional committee reported Wed- nesday. « The congressmen accused cig- aret manufacturers of,hav-ing de- ceived the public in filter-tip ad- vertising, Approving a report made by a subcommittee’ after hearings last year, the House of Representa- tives government operations com- mittee also took the Federal Trade Commission to task. It held that the commission, by not pol- icing the’ advertising, allowed smokers to become “brainwashed that filters would furnish health protection)" ‘ The commission announced Sat- urday it had invited manufactur- ers to help develofi uniform spec- ifications for determing tar and nicotine content. It said its aim is to end confusion over various claims. While the tobacco industry de- nied there were any health haz- ards in smoking, the committee said, the industry made the haz- ard charges appear true by im- plying that filter tips remove al- leged causes of cancer and heart disease. 40 P.C. OF ’57 SALES» Filter-tips accounted for 40 per cent of cigaret sales in 1957, the report said. The figure in 1952 was only 1.4 per cent. His daughter, Sarah, flew here WASHINGTON (AP)—Most fll- T inston Has Is In Good Spirits And Comfortable whether Churchill will .be able to visit the United States in April in response to an invitation by Pres- ident Eisenhower. A _member of his household said all plans must be left in abeyance for the time being. TWO ATTACKS IN '43 Churchill suffered two attacks’ of pneumonia in 1943. The first came in February in London. The second was in December after he took part with President Roose- velt, Chiang Kai‘-shek and Joseph Stalin in'the Cairo and Tehran conferences, ‘ , The former prime minister is confined to his bed here at Villa la Pausa, Riviera home of Emery Reeves, Churchill’s literary agent. Churchill came here from Lon- don Jan. 15 for a Riviera vaca- tion. His illness was reported’ Tuesday night. On M o n d a y, Churchill and Sarah Churchill were entertained at lunch by shipping magnate Aristotle Onassis aboard his yacht Christina. Local residents believe he may have caught a chill at that time. Lord Moran, when he arrived at Nice airport and was told Churchill had been puffing on one of the cigars that have become his trademark, said: “Oh, did he? That's good." “HE HAS A CIGAR” With the British people an- xiously following the news of their wartime leader, the London Even- ing News apparently was cheered by the smoking report. It head- lined across page 1: “He Has a Cigar.” And the London Evening Stand- ard said in its own headline: “Sir Winston (With a Cigar) Plays Cards}? _ e g , / The Riviera Villa, which over- between Monaco and Menton, was guarded by more than 20 French policemen, plus several British detectives in Churchill’s personal bodyguard. Churchill’: last reported major illness, paralysis of his left side, occurred for a few days in 1955 while he was still prime minister. He gave ip the premiership in 1955 but remains a Conservative party member of the House of Commons. I Say Filter In Cigarets When many people didn’t like the taste of their first filtered smokes, the report said, the man- ufacturers loosened the filters and used lower grade, stronger tob- acco to let more smoke particles get through. But they still charged two to six cents more a pack for filter - tips, the report said. It added: ' ' “The filter cigaret smoker is, in most cases, getting as much -or more nicotine and tar from the regular cigaret the advertisers have persuaded him to abandon -—for his health’s sake. Public statements from medical experts were quoted in the report but the report itself did not offer any conclusions on a possible re- lationship between smoking and cancer. “NO SIGNIFICANCE” Bowman Gray, president of the R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Com- pany, said in a statement: “We attach no significance to the measureable quantity of sol- ids and nicotines reported to have been found in the smoke of cigar- ets.” Bowman added the figures used by the committee for 1957 “were those published in the March, 1957, issue of a maga- zine” and that later findings by the same source were ‘lower. “It would appear that the figures qubted in the committees report able.” OTTAWA (CP)-— W. J. Smith, president of the Canadian Broth- erhood of Railway Employees (CLC), said Wednesday he will ask Prime Minister Diefenbaker and Liberal Leader Pearson to state their policies on railway workers’ wages. In a statement, Mr. Smith en- dorsed a declaration on the issue made Tuesday night at “ggar, Sask., by CCF Leader Coldwell. Mr. Smith’s 34,000 — member To Ask Leaders For Policy On Railway Workers Wages 000,000 - a- year contract conces- sions from the railways. He said he was gratified that Mr. Coldwell had backed the rail workers in their demand for wages equal to those paid in the durable goods industries. “The statement made by Mr. Coldwell that ‘no section of rail- way employees should have to suffer inadequate wages because of our national transportation policy’ is so obviously just that it should receive widespread sup- union, Canada’s largest body of port not only from railway work- transport labor, is one of the non- ers but also from the country at operating group seeking $125,- ' large,” Mr. Smith said. »looks-- tlie.%Medite1‘.’ranean~and -lies’ filter than he would get from the ‘ were hardly the latest ones avail- . . e I l 3 .