If Chicago art restorer, Alex- ander Ziatoff-Mirsky (right) points to a copy of one of the 10 paintings by Italian masters which art experts said had been found in the home of an im- migrant Pasedena television ate FP: MASTERPIECE BELIEVED FOUND < ae repairman, Ziatoff-Mirsky said the painting a print of- which he is pointing is known to art historians as “The Lost Master- piece” valued at $1,500,000. Jay Di Renzo (left) and his brother Charles (centre) be- a cOEFECgE ee elitigti : i t cy came interested. {n the paint- ings and retained famed US attorney Jerry - Giesier in whose office the announcement wes made. | the province of their offspring. He told of how the staff of the child welfare départment places the children in homes and the | various ways of trying to get i them established, providing for them up to the age of 17 and in some cases 18 years. He told the meeting that, ‘‘We were ex- (AP Wirephoto), Austrians Said 2_53Eree Hui ER more. Startling revelation, Mr. Reid said might be the fact that the welfare group -for their excellent work in which he said they “‘are E accompanied by Mrs.-John Whe- lan and Mrs. William Forbes ren- dered two instrumentals on the Mike Gallant of the Montague ‘branch of the Bank_,of €om- merce has been promoted to the rank of assistant account- ant at the Summerside branch of the bank. Mr. Gallant left Tuesday to take up his new duties. a CNR Persohne! es Buy More Bonds \.MONCTON — Canadian Na-, tiotal Railways personnel in the Atlantic region, with purchases of $2,652,250 of the 1959 series Canada Savings Bonds, have bet- showers beginning in afternoon; | by to- tered their last year’s total $105,750, it was announced day by Douglas V. Gonder, vice president and general manager, Atlantic Region. The information was contained in a congratulatory message from the vice-president to all those. Page May = ’ Teen a . ‘ Fs ‘ ‘ . ‘ s J ey ‘ 50, Charlottétown 35 and 45, |Moncton 34 and 45. | | Northern Nova Scotia, eastern, shore, Cape Breton: Cloudy, quested. mild; southerly winds. 15 increas- eC SECS TEN NR BRU | | _ (Sgd.) L. M. JOHNSTON, Pres. ~ ™ TORONTO (CP) — Tempera- (45. fires issued by the weather of-) st. John River valley, Pi Min Max mild: : with. gn. tht tn rea Bownen seateetere a - ee 45, Edmunds- sreeeee, 31020440» ¢ and 40. » Campbellton Calgary ........... 30 42 Bay of Fundy: Southwest wind SMBS wo ccacccss se 8 34. |25 becoming southwest 30 in aft- | Winnipeg ......... 25 30 |¢rnoon; cloudy with showers and Toronto .........+. 39 53 |& few fog patches; visibility 10 CRONE :..-50+., B - | RESO lowactng in showers to two a og to near ; ae eS a ee orig Fredericton seeeses 26 32 High tide today at Charlotte. | St. John’ ........%.. 28 38 town at 3.51 a.m. and 5.03 p.m. —— wetneneees = br At Rustico at 12.58 p.m. and 11.42 Charlottetown .... 29 37 hy Be ripton 21 36 ‘ # : armout eteteereer Om 4 j st'om's | PLE, Egg and Poultry Assoc. HALIFAX aorta eee 4 eS office says mild air w low into all regions today accompanied by | A Directors Meeting of the P. E. I. me showers. , | : “Forecasts eae a | Eg and Poultry Association will be held Halifax a cinity, uth P shore, Annapolis Valley. Prince | @t Summer Lea Restaurant, Summerside, Edward Island, eastern N.B. Counter: Cloudy, showers Sean: November 25th. at 7 P.M. ning in the morning; ; south- erly winds ereeing during A general meeting of egg grading morning to southerly 25. w- ; ‘high at Halifee 42 and 30, Yor | Station operators and graders will also be -) mouth 38 and 50, Kentville 35 and] held at 8 P.M. A full attendance is re- _ Fisheries Group To Consider _ Research Program Ideas Proposals for ' grams. and legislation will be ex- | gear. amined by the semi-annual meet-| The occasion of the meeting is > ; ing of the Federal Feoveiad [te coincide with the official open- | N° Return, the show's producer, ing of the Provincial Aquarium for sea fisheries. Located just on the Quebec side of the new | | bridge to the city the aquarium ter of fisheries, E.M. Gorman, |is said to be rivalled only by Coral Gables, Atlantic Fisheries Committee to. - be held in Quebec City this week. -Leaving yesterday to attend | were Hon. Leo Rossiter, minis- deputy minister, and Frank a similar one at Campbell of the Fishermen’s | Florida.—— . ‘Loan-Board. \ __ Comprising the committee are the -federal deputy minister of @i Mr. Campbell is a’ member of! expect to return in a week. _ _U.S. Writers Urge Slowdown yresearch pro-| the sub-committee on vessels and While away. the. local officials | will visit along the New Bruns- ick North Shore gathering in- fisheries and deputy ministers| formation on operations there of the provinces on the Atlantic. | of draggers and long liners. They tremely fortunate in this /pro- who took part in the campaign. | flute. : Average purchase of 9,972 CNR 'Unduly Sensitive TORONTO (CP) — The Aus- trian embassy “seems to be un- Culy_sensitive” in its complaints about the CBC television program Divorce (Continued on page 1) = subscribers was $265.97. Both| proposed that were acceptable! figures represented increases | and the measure was sent to the, °VerT the corresponding 1958 fi- | Commons. There it died in al-| FUTes: most exactly the form that Sena- BUTTER FOR BRITAIN fort the preceding year by Sena-| | Roland Weyman, -said Monday (tor Aseltine to revive a divorce night. ‘ The embassy protested. against Senator Aseltine’s 1955 bill was the program to the government , modelled on one in 1938 by the on grounds that it depicted am late Conservative senator Len-| Austrian village still in Nazi con- drum McMeans, another former ,trol long after the Second World | divorce committee chairman, and | War and gave ‘‘a completely dis- would have applied only to resi- torted picture of conditions im dents outside Quebec and ~New- Austria.” | foundiand. “Tt was not set anywhere In| This bill proposed that in addi- particular,"’-he— said. “It could tion to adultery, the grounds for jhave been any small European divorce include desertion without village.” ~ ' ; cause for three years, . incurable The only identifying aspect was insanity where one of the parties that the village was having a Mo-| involved had been under contin- zart festival, but plenty of Europ-|Uous treatment for fite years, ‘reform measure proposed in 1938. | tor Aseltine used in his attempt certs to revive it 17 years later. —— snp ig al con. informants oad neeene Croll’s | Cenadian butter er ng fn te et aa eee eee Wednesday to help overcome ti niggwes ; ity|a@ Dational shortage. The butter, ion; cruelty, — ° — p which afrived in the. Canadian and adultery a ‘ollows tha ao T the Aseltine bill closely. Whether |Pacitic cargo iver Beaversien is| it will be submitted in that form earn ee tee ethe emecce ins wat tesee dectied: 7 \is sending for the emergency. Politics Said ‘Labor ‘Must’ . GANDER, Nfld. (CP) ‘Eastern Provincia! Airways air | craft’ made the first landing on} e Special Course in Cooking r next summer. The P.E.I. Tourist Association, with the support of the. - | Provincial Government, will sponsor.a course in cooking | during March or April. > » Board Paid Applicants accepted will have board paid during the course. They must be prepared to work a seven-day week, for a minimum of two months in a tourist establishment wv to— On Road To Summit Meeting \ By DAVID ROWNTREE Canadian Press Staff Writer Wo eminen T &@ them out of office—are urging @ slowdown in the race to the summit. Dean Acheson, secretary of “ state under president Truman, and Lester Pearson, external af- fairs minister in Canada’s St. Laurent government, say that plans for next spring’s meeting of heads of government with Pre- mier ev are a surrender to Soviet pressure. _ _ Pearson, meeting reporters in Halifax during a political speak- ing tour, said the West shouldn’t abandon traditional methods of consultation by normal diploma- tic channels. “We are becoming victims—al- though I don't like that word—of the Soviet pattern of diplomacy by the man at thet op.” UNPOPULAR VIEW { The withdrawal overseas ba | far as Europe is concerned, that | British troops would have to go back across the English Channel and American troops would have to cross the Atlantic. But the Russians would still be | in Europe and there. would be) nothing to stop them rolling west- | ward again through Poland and, East Germany. And — as was shown at Suez in 1956 and Lebanon in 1958—it would be a slow job to ferry U.S. and British forces back over the water. Both Pearson and Acheson be- lieve that the West has no reason | to apologize for building sound defences in Europe. The danger in the forthcoming summit conference, as they see it, is that the West may be tricked into making concessions to Russia over issues that Khrushchev is solely responsible of troops from | j ean villages added. The half - hour program was broadcast Oct. 28-as the first im the CBC's winter Unforseen sef- out Tor. onto studios, it teld the story of a man who returned to his village after the war ‘to reclaim his fac- tory. A former concentration camp guard had taken over both the man’s identity and his factory and the returnee was shot when he attempted to assert his own identity. } Tory Policies stage them, he conviction of a husband for rape, | sodomy or bestiality, and cruelty | las defined at that time by the a new 2,000 foot airstrip midway between St. Anthony and Cook's British. courts. As a safeguard against hasty | ‘|marriage and hasty divorce, Sen- ator Aseltine proposed that no di- ° vorce action could be started within three years of marriage, except where adultery is charged. He suggested no time limit in cases involving adultery. Senator Aseltine steered his bill successfully through the first stage but, after considerable de- bate in which doubts were ex-| pressed about the manner of de- fining cruelty, it was defeated by a vote of 37 to 20 on second read- ing—approval in principle. Harbor in northern Newfoundland during the weekend. } |. The 100-foot wide strip is the ‘northern part of the province by the transport department. The, lamers are at Main and North West River in Labrador. They’ }are ised mainly by small air- craft supplying northern routes. } ALSCO-TISCO . The Home of Better Aluminum Doors and Windows gust nus Apply in writing before December 15th ™ Gordon Shaw, — 7 aa Chairman of Committee _ Brackley Beach, —P,_E,I. : ve now that the Western) vers — France possibly ex- for bringing to a head. Atomic Bomb | Seen Balance QUEBEC (‘CP)—Prime Minis- This viewpoint is bound to be cepted — believe that there is| nothing to lose by sitting down | with Khrushchev and talking @bout his\ demand, now a year old, that Western occupation oa: be withdrawn from West in. ter Felix Houphouet-Boigny of It will be remembered that atithe Ivory Coast said Monday the time he said they must go/night France must have the within six months. Later he said | atomic bomb in order to balance there was no deadline but it’s| its forces with those of other | eet he would like to see them | .ountries. isappear, i i | lies. mpsoking to partis. The prime minister of the Ivory . x 4-'Coast, a French republic in mentarians from North Atlantic | South Africa, arrived with sar ee, oes in Washington, wife and aides Monday by air Ort tushehev's demand: | trom Ottawa for a one-day ‘visit. er and over and over again They will go to Montreal today. he has stated that the object of | The couple met Quebec: Pre- his policy. is the withdrawal of Rainn < lee ase | mier Paul Sauve and civie offi- hess |cials before being entertained at ee : |the French consulate. i “And I think th. y * | Seiuact Mr Tireaek ae aaa Mr. Houphouet - Boigny, who that we mast ot that when he leads the French delegation at strikes he strikes at the jugular the United Nations general as- there is no fooling around with S¢™bly, came to Canada at the minor issues. He's striking right Teqwest of Frewch President) at the .heart of the. West.” < | Charles de Gaulle to give Cana-| - ‘dians regards from France and LATE NOTICES the French republics. {Also see announcements § in He said that some time ago the French would have hoped for to- columns adjoining Classified Ad- vertising Section.) tal destruction of the atomic ibomb. .But now France could make*use of it, as a peaceful measure, with a view to balanc- \ ing her forces with those of other BOWNESS — At Stewart Mem-| 2” orial hospital in Tyne Valley GREAT PERFORMER on Monday November 23rd,{ The late. Sir Harry Lauder, 1959 Nettie Jane Yeo, wife of| famed Scottish comedian, worked | late Herbert Yéo of Harmony | as a mill-boy and miner in his in her 79th year. Resting at! youth. i the Bowness Funeral Home u- til funeral arrangements can be completed. | MacLURE — At North Rustico, Nov. 23, 1959, Mrs. Newton S. “MacLure, aged 53 years. The. funeral will take place on Wed- | nesday, Nov 25,, with a short | service at the home at .2/ o'clock, followed by a service | jn ‘Cavendish United Church at 2.30 p.m.-Interment in Caven- dish cemetery. j HAGEN — At Springfield, Now. | 23, 1959, Wilbert Hagen, age -9 years.. Remains will be for-| warded from Davison’s Fun- eral Home to‘ his: late resid- | ence this evening where fun-| eral ors, be oe oe morning leaving home to: St. James Church, areas:— side, announces that the ment insufance benefit. This service is free To all residents of Tignish, Alberton, and O’Leary “* The National Employment Office, Summer- been appointed to take applications for unemploy- Tignish—William Handrahan Alberton—Gerald Rooney \O'Leary—E. L. MacDougall wishing to file their claims may do so by contact- ing the agent in theit-area, € Your Electric Light Bill Can .Be Paid At Our Office Open Saturday until 9 P.M. Montague Electric Co. Ltd. NOTICE REGENT —— ashe 7) following agents have _—TECHNICOLOR? | CSE ORGE SAY PeonucTION - Screen Play by DOROTHY KINGSLEY - Cased on ee gteg “Pal Joey,” book by John O'Hara, music by Richard Rodgers, tyrics by Lorenz Broduced on the stage by George Abbett Precaedby FRED KOBLNAL- Owes by SIE of charge and*anyone TA HIV WORT Maleate OVA Tonight (Tuesday) & Wednesday 7:15-9:10 4 ef wy | MONTREAL [RUST — The.McMeans bill was more Quee » 8559 Coz “pan Are Attacked successful in 1938. It was intro- ” pom Bt. Phone P y a duced and received second rad. ———_—_— —— : \ : s BATHURST, N.B. (CP)—Pro-|ing by a vote of 4 to 29 and { (> gressive Conservative defence po-| went to a Senate. committee for EXECUTORS AND TRUSTEES licies came under attack from | detailed study. At first the com- Teacher Wanted ~ Liberal leader Pearson at a pub-| ven the Senate returned: it for Odes antl bie nae > ea te | further study some changes ol ns econ ona : ~ ously oppose the decision of ae rton & ffi Feline Maekdir Dlducdiess!| PILES School, commencing Jan. announce the opening of a new office at eevecnness to equip Canadian’ 4, 1960. ° = h d S \ 7; l h 2 1215 orces with wea that be ; ent o used for the alence of Canada \ (Haemecrhotde) Applications accepted I I 9 Ric mon treet 4 Grep none ladies only with the authority of another | Group of ex\sufferers until Noy. 30th \ country.” |] have imported and recom | ioe \ under the management of es defence department was a mended Mrs. Blanche England, “classic example of fumbling and i tary bungling.” It provided “a dozen treatment COATUM aoa a Secre : ; : ‘coe + om administra. | Pylatum relieves pain within * “ af Nobel Peace Prize winner sonia Anger tan gman, — DEVELOPING Yl Inn Said: ency, a | 71 Wimbleton Rd. : Dehn mined recently, sites Islington, Ontarie. Your Film For 20 Years \ . ence Minister Pearkes and _ some of his colleagues had con- $1.98 C. 0. D. ee ferred with U.S. counterparts at | This product has been ap- GARNHUM PHOTO ( Camp David, that nuclear weap- |] Proved by the Department of STUDIO : f ons would be stored in Canada. | Health. |) 135 Kent st. . Ch'town We are pleased to offer our services as Executors and Trustees, ant int Bomare missiles went | _ : itted w nuclear warheads ¥ * ‘ sgeis e .. . Our air force will be sup-| . making the complete nationwide facilities of Montreal Trust lcd wun meeps for the. de SOURIS THEATRE oe : : ‘ rai sidents of the City o arlottetown el control of a foreign MONDAY — TUESDAY — WEDNESDAY Company available to the residents y w While ao = a and the Province of Prince Edward Island. While the United States was a a“ es as friendly power, it was not right THE NUN’S STORY” ; . that a aanee country should J-- i -- - : 2 i a. ali ti 2 ffi f : control | ef of another. : ‘ ‘ ae z z ei ee . 4 : ie : That is how tat. octient govern- with This ‘address will also be the new office o so ee eae AUDREY HEPBURN | that i how it ; Americans” | Ow ee * ee a, | Prince Epwarp IstanD Trust ComPANY and THe Maritime Trust COMPANY MOoNTREAL TRUST Company Br. John’s, Nfld. * Charlottetown, P.E.L © Halifax, N.S Saint John, N.B. * Quebec, P.Q. * Montreal, P.Q. Brockville, Ont. * Toronto, Ont. * Winnipeg, Man. . . Regina, Sask. « Edmonton, Alta. + Calgary, Alta. ‘ Vancouver, B.C, « Victoria, B:C. « London, England « Nassau, Behamas} IN CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. L., 119 Richmond $ treet—Royal Bank Tel.: 2-1215 Manager C. J. Flinn Building ~