3 Buyer meets seller At: TELEPHONE 8506. with Guardian Want Dial 8506 ask for classified. ad ta.cc, ior quick resuits, She. euler ‘shelled of Prince County, Art Arthur Hudson stiff competition at the annual PRINCE COUNTY PLOWING CHAMP champion of Cascuroes ve ae erent “Covers Prince Edw Prince County Plowing Match Thursday in O'Leary. Chinese Reverse Charge; India Is Said Aggressor By WATSON SIMS NEW Seu (AP) —C including corres- the Chinese. He the countercharge was made f TT rade ky dies ‘inet andeseacit the Chinese border attacks. SHOW SOMETHING DEEPER “I don’t know whether it is local aggressiveness to show us our place or something deeper,” he said. circulating maps_ claiming for China broad sections of Ladakh province, Assam, the northeast frontier agency agd other Indian regions. ; Nehru told Parliament he 'still Presiden feels ‘ ‘these twe great nations of -| Asia — India and China — must have friendly relations.” “Tt would be a tragedy for Asia and the whole world if they should develop some permanent condition of hostility.” WON’T BE BULLIED He made the points that: India will not allow itself to be bullied, but is quite willing to submit the border disputes to arbitration by anyone agreed -to by both parties. has no wish to push things ‘to the point where there is no recourse but to arms. - India will persevere in attempts to retain the friendship’ of Peking “even though it sometimes is hard to feel friendly when we see our people not being treated courteously and when we get communications , Singularly lack ing in court Nehru again diteres his oppo- sition to a debate on Tibet's sit- uation in the United Nations, as urged by the -Dalai Lama, a royal refugee in India. “What earthly good would come of a debate for anybody?” Nehru asked. “It would be an acrimon- ious discussion after the cold war fashion—nothing more. NO ARMY FOR TIBET “Nobody is going to send an army to Tibet. If they couldn’t send an army to Hungary (where PRussia crushed a revolt in 1956), in the heart of Europe, How on t Rests _ With Golf Round By JOHN HEFFERNAN AYR, Scotland (Reuters}— ors Eisenhower breezed a tricky golf course near his weekend castle home Friday, but his travelling White House in- dicaied he was far from_relaxing , his line on policy back” home. While Eisenhower had his first golf game since leaving the Uniied States.10 days ago, press secretary James Hagerty an- nounced the president's decision to veto the revised housing bill passed by Congress in his fight --~...$ maintain a balanced budget. Eigerhower covered the seaside course in 89 strokes—well above the 71 par but on the winning side of a foursome match. He teed off at Turnberry, a fine ec: se about four miles from Cul- zean, the turreted, :18h-century ezsie on the rocky Ayrshire Pt where he is staying. He’ ficw fiere Friday morning ‘from talks in Paris with French President de Gaulle — the last stage of consultations with West- en Allies over his coming meet- int with Promier -Kbruchchev. LETTER FOR DE GAULLE A letter sont’ Friday from Eis- enmhower to de Garle sai he felt “gttongly , that common under- ’ standing has been advanced and that our common purposes have been clarified and reaffinmed.” The president had planned to fly to Washington Monday, but press secretary) Hagerty hinted that he might delay his departure “if the weather continues as nice as it is.” The brisk, suolit air stirred Eisenhower's golfer’s blood ‘Fri- day. Wearing- brown slacks, a fawn sweater and checkered cap, as he stepped up to the first tee. He surveyed the crowd of spec- tators and quipped to tis part: bank: “1 don’t feel so good about-this. This is a pretty critical crowd for me to play off before.” But he took an easy stance and blasted his. ball about 200 yards down the fairway. No Paper Monday Monday being Labor Day, the next edition of day, Sept. 8. he was in obvious good’ spirits ' ner, club professional lan Margh- |: The Guardian will be Tues- | Ladakh province, munists west . China. tier agency. by Chinese patrols in 1957 said the Chinese now the northeast portions and -have} laid a road there linking Tibet and Sinkiang province of north- earth could anyone think ~they would send an army to Tibet?” Among other developments: 1. Kushak Bakul, Indian Kash- mir’s minister ‘or the affairs of | declared Srinigar that the- Chinese Com- have fixed November “for their advance on Ladakh.” It is a frontier area first invaded| ties will be heard at hearings of . Bakul|the Board of Broadcast Govern- occupy| ors here Sept. 28-30. 2. From Leh, the Ladakh prov- ince capital; came a report that the Chinese are building bases, including airports, at the Tibetan towns of. Rudolk and Gartok. ° - India’s charge of aggression was based on intrusions by Com- munist China’s units 1,000 miles! apart in the Himalayas — into Ladakh and the northeast fron- in a - By WILLIAM N. OATIS UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) Secretary-General Dag Hammar- skjold Friday nizht started set ting up a session of the UN Se- -eurity Council for Sunday or Mon- Laos for an emergency force to stop Communist aggression. A UN spokesman announced the action slightly more than seven hours after Laos officially Laccused Communist North Viet Nam of aggression and asked for « nited Nations force to stop it. salammarskjold acted while in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil where he stopped on a hurried flight. back to New York from a curtailed South American tour. Six young men and one woman are in hospital in Charlottetown this morning following a spec- tacular two-car crash which oc- curred at the intersection of ‘| Great George and Euston Street at approximately 11:15 last night. Involved in the collission were il Ford sedan which police was driven by Ronald Mac- eer New Dominion, and a 1956 ontiac, station-wagon dri: by coe ee 168 North weve oad. , BBG To Hear ‘Applications 2 new televise” Gatton in Grond Falls, Nfld., and for new radio stations in 10 Canadian communi- The radio applications are from Dartmouth, N.S., Joliette, Sher- brooke and Dorval, Que., Mon- treal, Brampton, Ont., Estevan, Sask., Stettler, Alta., Kamloops and Duncan, B.C. The Sherbrooke and Brampton applications are for frequency modulation * stations. The Mon- treal bid is for a multitanguage tion is for a satellite radio sta- tion linked to station -CKDA Vic- toria, “CHARLOTTETOWN, (/ * day to deal with the request of station and the Duncan applica-. Island # Like The Dew” _ RDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1959 grororor ~ ee re >" oo A 4 Dag Calls Security ra To Study Laotian Request council through his executive as- sistant, Andrew W. Cordier. CABLES RIO The spokesman met corres- pondents and told them: “The secretary-general Mr. Cordier, formally curity Council; suggesting leagues on the council council Sunday or Monday.” Canada is a member. of the Security Council. The council president month is Ambassador Egidio’ Or- He dealt With the 11 - nation!tona of Italy. Two-Car Crash Sends T Persons Io Hospital Phail, New Dominion, and Win- ston Mason, Long Creek, all pas- sengers in the MacPhail~<iriven vehicle, and . a be Currie, Jr. Soeice cout at, be iy @Potiedh sah phat! opposite direction. force scene. cabled from Rio before his departure in- structing his executive assistant, ap- proach the president of the Se- that the president consult with his col- with a view to calling a meeting of the this | Robert Cur- of the-victims in- ot 4 was eiccane = at the time of the accident Pontiac was proceéding of the impact threw vehicles around and as a re- sult the Elm Avenue exit was blocked for over a half-hour. The accident, one of the worst on City streets in many years attracted several hundred spectators to the + re x “Mr. Cordier talked with Am- bassador Ortona a half hour ago on the telephone,”’ the spokesman said, “‘and is sending him a letter confirming the conversation.” Foreign Minister Khamphan Panya submitted Laos’ request to Hammarskjold through the Lao- tian delegation. He asked ‘‘the appropriate procedure against actions of the Ho Chi Minh re gime, which is not a UN member. VETO POSSIBILITY If the Soviet Union should veto council action, the General As- sembly could-be called into emer- gency session within 24 hours by a vote of ‘any seven of the 11 | council members. The assembly is empowered to recommend that member coun- tries use armed force to maintain or restore «international peace. Thephathay Vilaihongs, of the Laotian delegation handed his foreign minister's letter to Ham- marskjold’s executive assistant, Andrew W. Cordier: It said that since July 16, for- eign troops with “reinforcements from’ outside in personnel and in supplies of food and ammunition” have been fighting Royal Laotian army garrisons on the northeast- ern frontier, forcing them to abandon many posts. went on, “a new attack surpass- ing in violence those previously encountered was launched against the posts of Muong Het and Xieng Kho with the partici- pation of elements coming from the aie republic of Viet e based on the other side * the frontier. “In the face of this character- ized aggression, for which the democratic republic Viet Nam bears full responsibility, Laos re- quests the assistance of the United Nations organization of which it is a member. “In particular, the royal gov- ernment requests the sending in the shortest possible time of an emergency force in order to stop the . aggression and prevent Vl gue Pres. Bows - To Demands By ROMAN JIMENEZ .. BUENOS AIRES (AP)—Pres! dent Arturo Frondizi quelled a threatened army rebellion Friday by bowing to the demands of his dissident generals. War Secretary Elvio Anaya re signed and was succeeded by a close friend of the rebellious army Gen. Rodolfo Larcher, leaders. “On the 30th of August.” it!c sunported'chy.artillery! Courts from spreading.” OTTAWA ing costs, which had been rela- tively stable for nebrly a year, rose nearly one-half of one per cent in July due mainly to what the bureau. of statistics said was ENGINEERS VISIT GOVERNOR 2 ¢ District engineers from the|ernment House to pay their. res-,right: Olive W. Currie, | dis trictptteut—@sv, ee ae ae Aaritims, , Sasher- -and © awa,|pects.to His Honour, Lieutenant-| ang neer, Charlottet wen and ine Bgpwn, Nova > . Kn'cs.t soe ccf their t ree< cy d'scus-|Goveonor F. We'ter Hyndman. At | Gin abtterk-a- 3 2 Gi Mewtiwde=d: 6 4 oa Ma -a8 “< gi 5 o F tay pi ' ye th Mar s?o%n oF t" j g CT; 4; < r i at val N0.0E! | noon iw wder to proceed to Gov et. wiih His. Henour, let to! didz.ct engineer New ccc: Mieidashe Quebec. " 4 ‘ r (CP)—Canadian liv- a World Law een Need By JIM PEACOCK Canadian Press Staff Writer VANCOUVER (CP)—The need world disputes for settling Pate ‘Seasonal Prices Boost Canada's Cost Of Living “seasonal” wpswing im food prices. 125.9 on July. 1. prices in July for ec compares with 122. lier, and the reco Oct. 1. of 123.4 las 1 last year. on 1949 equalling 100 WHERE-TO-FIND-IT Announcements, notices . 11 Births, deaths, etc., .... 2, 11 Classified section side, Montague, Alberton and Souris, and from special cor- respondents now appear on the Island News Page. . é t The bureau’s consumer price index reached a record 126.4 on Aug. 1, just topping the previous -peak of 126.3 last Nov. 1. The living-cost yardstick, based on 1949 prices equalling 100, was The new level on Aug. 1 meant a 12-month rise of 1.2 points. That gain compares with increases of 2.6 points during the correspond- ing period in 195756 and 3.5 points in 1956-57. The usual summertime lower prices for fresh vegetables, par- ticularly potatoes and tomatoes, were not enough to offset higher gs, oranges, lettuce; beef and pork. As a re- sult the food component of the} consumer price index rose by 1.1 per cent to 120.5 on Aug. 1. This a year ear- Among miscellaneous goods and services there were higher price tags in July on a fairly dex of “average industrial wages and salaries at July 1—latest date for which figures are avail- able—was 171.7, compared with 4171.9 on June: 1 and 164.6 on Jul The index is based Comics, features a Bodh SHCEFFERVILLE, Que. (CP) Premier Duplessis lay eritically ii and paralyzedsin a mining~ town hospital Friday night, the victim of a series of strokes. The 69-year-old premier was in @ coma, his right' side immobile At 9:30°>.m. EDT Friday nigh!, ‘his doctors said: is unchanged. He suffers from paralysis. The outcome of the ill- Ness will not be known for 24 or 4% hours. During this time there can be no question of mov- ing the patient as this would fén- stitute .grave danger.” The last rites of the Roman Catholic Church have been ad- Three Quebec Oity doctors were ._| flown to this isolated northeastern Quebec community Thursday mght shortly after Mr. Duplessis suffered ithe first of four cerebral seizur ‘es. Mr. Duplessis was stricken at 3 pm. Thursday while chatting with Maurice Custeau, Union Na- onale member of the Legislative. oe for Montreal Jeanne- area | were in an Iron Ore Company of Canada building at the time. UNABLE TO SPEAK The premier walked ‘over to a windew then turned abruptly to wards Mr. Custeau. Mr. Custeau looked at the premier, saw that INIKITA EMERGES AS ART CRITIC American exhibition Thursday At the contemporary art dis- play, he stood before a lon: canvas covered with straight orush strokes in all colors and asked: ‘‘What’s that?’ Told that it was called Cathe- dral, he chuckled loudly and said: “That's cathedral? I can’: believe it. That’s freedom. Stil), I'm not opposed # i. Let him paint.” In _ the seulptere park, Khrushchev stood: several min- utes before a statue of a nude woman, g He looked, turned away, then looked again and told his first deputy premier, Anastas Mi- koyan: & “T don’t understand #. That artist doesn’t understand any- “The condition of the premuér-| thing about women.” ae LONDON (Reuters) East- ment, stalled since 1957, will start again early in 1960, usually re- liable sources reported Friday. t| The sources said the next two or three days should produce an announcement that a new, 10-na- tion body -with equal representa- |‘ tion by East and West will be eet wide range of items including up, probably in Geneva, to tackle gasoline, taxi fares, Soppital woth conventional and nuctear me har “Z : -\aleo- oem ee ee etanal “No dare nt. negotiat inhi care items. The sub-index for this No Gsarv —e — a field of purchases climbed to 135.3 on Aug. 1 from 1349 a month earlier Ottawa Quiet During June, wage figures showed a slight decline. The ‘in- On Laos Bid OTTAWA (CP) | little official reaction here follow- 4| ine Friday's Laotian request: to the United Nations for UN forces to help repel Communist attack ers in that southeast Asian. state, External Affairs Minister Green declined to comment on the matter at this time. Oofficials said the matter has not yet been discussed in the department. Canada has more than usual Charlottetown news ....., 5 |interest in the tiny country. This Editorials = = sss ees 4 {country is a member of the three- Finance, markets ........ 11 |nation truce supervisory commis- Island news ....... ees. 2,°3. | sion set up in 1954—a body which Sports ccdbabaaueass 7, | wound up its work and adjourned Women’s. ‘page s <enaoe 6. | indefinitely a.yvear ago Late repor(s, front Guardian India ‘recently sought to re mews burcaus in Summer- | activate the commission, of | which’ it is also a member with Canada and Poland. But Canada opposed the move on grounds the) gove-2ment *of- Laos didn't want | the commission. 7] West talks on general disarma~ — There was. Prenieg ' suicken With Four Seizures someting was wrong, that he could mot speak. Mr. Custeaw asked others to help and to sum- mon a doctor, The premier was helped to bed in_ihe company's guest house. The company doctor was sum- moned from the smail hospital - operated here mainly for miners and their families. At 8 pm. itt was decided to summon special- tsts from Quebec City; 2 Schefferville, with a population of 1,600, is the northern most town in the province. Located 720 air miles northeast ef Mont- real, it is in the centre of rich iron ore depo which straddle the Quebec Unzgava and the New- foundiand Labrador boundary, és the northern terminal of -the Quebec North Shore and Lab rador Railway which carries irom ore 365 miles south to Septdles, a St. Lawrence” River shipping” centre. It was to see something of the progress being made at mining developments which his goveru- _ ment. has encouraged that Mr, Duplessis came tere. He left Quebec City by air Wednesday with some supporters of his gov- ernment. Their first was Sept-es. Then they came os there. He was to have returned te Quebec today. COMPANION ON TRIP ported that Mr. Duplessis was ia @ coma, his right side was para- lyzed and was gravely ill. He had “a four cerebral attacks. “Tt will be 24 hours before the a. of. the premier is known,” said Mr. Martineau. “We can only pray that prove dence will spare him. A “Three of the best doctors e@vailable are in attendance.” Heading the team of doctors Dr. Lucien Larue, longtime friend of the premier and a brain spe cialist at Quebec City’s St. Mi- chel-Archange Hospital. A sister of the hachelor premier, Mrs. Edouard Bureau, of ae boarded a plane at Quebec Friday to fly to her brother’s bedside. : First official word of the pre- mier’s illness was given ia Que bec City shortly before noon. Mr. Duplessis was administered the last rites of the Roman Cath- olic Church—at 4:30 p.m. Thurs- day by Rev. Marcel Champagne, parish priest of Schefferville, Disarmament Talks To Start Again In 1960 have been conducied sce twe gears avo when the fivecountry united mations disarmament sub- committee failed to reach agree- ment in a London conference. In the new panel—associaied would kg@p- the world organiza- on informed of ite jwork the west would be represented by the United States. Camada, Britain, France and Italy. The east bhioe members would he the Sovied Union. Poland Czechoslovakia, Romania and Bulgaria The U.S... Britain, France, Can ada and Rw constituted the 1957 UN subcommittee. ALBANIA SWITCH s It was understood that Russia accepted Weetern objocticns te Albania bewz on the-—new body amd substituied Bulge The U.S, and B n do net have Ldiplomatic rela is with Afbania. The compo of the new panel is similar to that of: the Kast-West conference on prevent- ng: surprise attacks. This group could not even agree on an egenda when it met fruitlessly in Geneva -last Novembe;.. The forifcoming agreament was reached through diplomatic chan. nels in Moscow, the sources here said. ‘The move to get disarma- ‘ment ne ations going again be gan among the Big- Four foreiga rot goti< ministers at their Geneva com creswce this simmer The present 82-nation UN die ‘armament commission ts ‘com sidered too umwieldly for detailed ' negt@iatiions. Jt has never met with the UN in the sense that #- ‘ on | ; GO ALAA ALLL AALS LLL AE