l. rural areas and road and rail traf- - III: the usual i'-u-nning time. . delays. Abandoned cars and over- I - 381‘ was found abandoned in the , I L prillared to launch boats as the ' ’’°bii>ly.wni be halted. TELEPHONE 3505 Buyer meets seller with Gv ardian Ellis fiumdioit V WEATHER / MISS FAYE PROUDE is seen verifying the information punch- ¢d on IBA cards. This machine is t Ad". ‘ . ' ‘ ed Wfl this ta-.'i:.‘:.‘ qiiti .::‘:...';:-r :’.::'":i..‘:t‘.i*; "i'.‘.“°.i.’2.”‘?.i‘f£".-i’......f’."‘i,..1.i‘.i§f Low-high at Charlottetown 18 and 23- “Covers Prince. Edward Island Like The Dew” " ’ 7T)X(';ES Authm-Inc u Second Class Mail by the Post om... 1 Devan: ..... 0...... CHARLOTTETOWN CANADA, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1958 "°§,,“f,‘,’,RE FIVE CENTS used to eliminate any mistakes made in punching the cards. MRS. ELAINE LARGE, IBM’ operator, punches information concerning the tuberculin testing Health Data Speeded Up Pertinent information concern- ing the health of Island residents, which would take a considerable staff weeks or months to obtain now can be compiled in a few hours by the use of statistical machines used by the Department of Health according to Dr. Lorne Bonnell, Minister of Health. The ' machines are rented from the In- ternational Business Machines Co. Ltd. and are administered under the Division of Vital Statistics, An, example of the work that is done maybe seen from the Provincial Tuberculin Testing Survey. A card has been prepar- ed for each individual of the 25,- 000 tested to date, showing the person’s name, age, sex, district in which they live, type of test, type of reaction and if an x-ray was taken. Informationdocating; areas in the province where tuber- culosis is more predominant can be found from these cards in- dicating where a more intense anti-tuberculosis program should By Statistical Machines be conducted. It can also be ascertained in which age groups tuberculosis is more predominant as well as a great deal more per- tinent information that aids the Health Department in planning its programs. SPEED. AND ACCURACY To attempt. to compile and analyze all of the data from these cards alone would take a large staff weeks or even months. How- ever, the sorting machine can (Continued on page 3 col. 1) Howling Blizzard Bogs Down Traffic In Britain LONDON (Reuters)—'l‘he worst blizzard in more than 10 years howled over‘ Britain Tuesday on its way to‘tli_e Continent. Snow-_ dfifts -l&~feet=‘-'-‘deep " tic collapsed. ' Western Europe was struck by snow and sleet and rivers edged toward their danger marks. Flood warnmgs were issued in France, Eelgium and Germany. Trains from Edinburgh arrived lulaondon 10 hours late after run- 1111!! .f'l)-I011-gh some of the worst IMW. Hundreds of half - frozen Passengers reported a nightmare ‘“’°!" .J°"mev- , 3-311 links between Londofl and Manchester were blocked by de- tailed coaches, more -than doubl- Snow swirled over London most if the day. causing huge traffic in snowplows blocked roads the north of England after an 13 - hour -snowfall. Hundreds of WW9!‘ and communication lines manned. Ilnrns ABANDON nus scA.b“' reported _missing near ,3"b°I*0ush in northern England ‘now. It ' Mk 'he1Stet;I‘n:’Iner‘a;1a<:'ni1>assengers mt Wtherly gale blowing down -in heast coast held fishing fleets ne1‘3t1'b0I‘ and delayed cross-chan- s eamers severalhours. _F1'3Me. villagers near Paris caded their front doors and ifwaehand its tributaries swelled ie tE3Vy_rain. In the capital it- -_ e river was rising about inches an hour. Water traffic mmildents in the suburb of Co- es ers splashed through 18 in- ' .. Of Water in their streets Pm: Itwhe 1_1€lg=hboring village of ml 0111111 could be reached V by boat. gtthward across the Belgian 1' er the Sambre River broke fie and flooded the rail line. Bel- glum braced for more snow. SNOW HITS HOLLAND -v Si1DW.<-stroBg“wi,nds'and~fneez- -heayy snowfalls. *‘ ing temperatures swept across Holland in-to Germany. The rising Rhine River flooded roads along its banks. Near Bonn, the Mo. selle River was rising about 21/2 incthes an hour, threatening the Oppose LimitFor -_ GENEVA (Reuters)-Britain’s attorney-general said Tuesday a proposal by Canada to extend its territorial waters to 12 miles for fishing purposes would be “ex- tpemely injurious" to British in- terests. Reginald Manningham-Buller, attending an 85-country “law of the sea” conference, told a press- conference Britain will oppose any move to extend the present general three-mile limit. The. conference, which opened Monday, was called by the United Nations to attempt international agreement on maritime law. Manningham-Buller said there is full agreement between Canada and Britain over the principle of retaining the three-mile limit. The point of difference, he said, f, town of Zell and smaller villages. Avalanche W a r n i n g s were posted in the Austrian Tyrol, ‘The Arlberg Pass was closed by_ Cold weather continuediin Scan- dinavia. 'Europe’s lowest tempera- ture was registered at Gudbarnd- sdal in central Norway, where it was 45 degrees below zero Mon- day night. l2—MiIe Canada were extended to 12 miles, it would result for Britain in a re- duction of more than 40 per cent of her yield from her deepsea fishing fleets.” If -the limits were extended, he said, the most affecting fishing areas for Britain would be in the Atlantic around Iceland, Norway, Greenland, Newfoundland ‘ a n d Nova Scotia. Canada’s conference delegation is led by George Drew, high com- missioner in London. . MALE COOK BEST MANCHESTER, Eng. (Reuters) —Roy Wilkins, 61, Tuesday won a cooking contest in which nearly survey on Prince Edward Island, These cards are later put through the IBM. sorting and accounting machines to compile data con- cerning the siirvey. Miss U. S. Is Single Again LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) Leona -Gage, dethroned as Miss United States last year in the Miss Universe contest because she was married, is single again. She obtained a divorce Tues- day from Sgt. Gene Ennis of the - air force. She- charged mental cruelty and tesfified her husband was “mean and made me so up- set and nervous I couldn’t work.” Judge Ryland G. Taylor awar- ded custody of their two children to Miss Gage and approved her request for $25 monthly support for them. She said she -is earn- ing $200 a week as a chorus girl in hotel cabarets. Sgt. Ennis did not contest the divorce. Leona, who as Miss Maryland won the Miss United States con- test at Long Beach, Calif, threw the international beauty pageant into a turmoil when it was learned she was married. Actress Ancl I, . , . , _ Novelist Wed» ’ BRANFORD, Conn. (AP) — Actress Paulette Goddard and novelist Erich Maria Remarque were married Tuesday in a quiet civil ceremony. “I’m very happy," said the 42- year-old actress after she was married for the fourth time. It was the second ma-rriaige for Re- marque, 59. Judge Cornelius T. DI‘iSC011 performed the ceremony in his second-floor office. A few work- ers in the building looked in on the ceremony. Three hundred persons met the couple as they walked out-side_. The crowd. shouted congratula- tions. ‘ . The two, linked romantically for several years, saidfohey chose Bran-ford——s-ome 80 miles from uheeir homes in New Yok City-— cause they wanted a quiet wed- ding. They aid they will honeymoon in New‘ York. Miss Goddard was mgrried previously to E dg ar James, comedian Charles Chaplin and actor Burgess Meredith. The German - born Remarque has written at least eight popu- lar novels since_ 1929, starting with his All Quiet on the Western Front. MONTREAL (CP)—-A move to obtain federal conciliation ap- peared likely after the breakdown of contract negotiatios Tuesday between Canadian National Rail- ways and the Brotherhood of L0- comotive Firemen and Engine- men (CLC). , The talks were suspended in- definitely when company and un- ion -representatives reached an im passe. headed by W. E. Gamble of Montreal, Canadian vice - pres- ident of the brotherhood, is to The union negotiating team,‘ ‘meet today to discuss future ac- tion. The CNR said the uni-on an- nounced during Tuesday’s discus- sion that it plans to seék federal conciliation on “all issues in dis- pu-te.” “The meeting was not produc- tive,’ said Mr. Gamble. “Neither side could find any point from which to negotiate.” He declined further comment. The union placed before the company a 16-point proposal that included an‘ 18-per-cent wage in- crease. _ WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi- dent Eisenhower described his foreign aid program. Tuesday night as “not a manoeuvre car- ried out by a dictator” but an ex- pression of goodwill and common sense. . Eisenhower climaxed a day- long conference organized _by his administration on behalf of the $3,900,000,000 aid program. The president said under present con- ditions the urgency of mutual se- curity and reciprocal trade legis- lation “leaves no margin for er- ror." Canadian Jet Missing In Fla. TOULOUSE, France (Reuters) -— Gendarmes used a 20 - ton armored car Tuesday night to :.5;o£9c.!.1i9i£..$si!,iut9i§.i§¥m -Where ‘a’ farmer with a shotgun defied capture. Three of 20 gendar-mes attack- ing the farm crept through the hole in the building made by the vehicle and carried out one of, their comrades shot to death by farmer Pierre Manent. They threw a cordon around the farm at nightfall and said they might have to set the ‘building on fire to force Manent out. " Manent barricaded himself in his farmhouse Monday morning when attendants of a psychiatric hospital called with an ambulance to take him away. ' He opened fire when gendarmes battered down the door after pre- paring the way with tear gas grenades. One gendarme was wounded and another was shot to death inside ‘the farmhouse. Manent barricaded the door ‘again with the dead gendarme still inside. Miner Killecl. ‘ - By Full Of Stone NEW WATERFORD, N.S. (CP) John Robert MacDonald, 55, was killed Thursday by a fall of stone in -the Dominion Coal Company’s No. 16 colliery here. a Eisenhower Calls Foreign Aid Program ”Common Sense” The president spoke at a dinner attended by national representa- tives of the Democratic and Re- publican parties and Protestant, Roman Catholic and Jewish lead- ers. Eisenhower said opposition to the aid program “is based on slo- gans, prejudices, penny - wise economy and above all. an out- right refusal to ‘look at the ‘world "of 1958 as it really is.” “What the ostrich-like oppo- nents of mutual security seem to be saying,” he added, "is ‘bil- lions for armament, but not one cent for peace!’ ” TRUMAN WANTS IDEAS The foreign aid rally began Tuesday morning. At a luncheon meeting, former President Tru- man called on the Eisenhower administration to “come forward with some new ideas” to combat R11-SSia,’.§_..IlIl_V§iSlVe~ economlg offgp; sive."‘““" ‘ ’ ‘ *‘"-""‘ "" ‘ And Ad1air»E. Stevenson, who bid for the presidency on. the Democratic ticket in 1952 and 1956, challenged Russia to join the United States in a pooled ef- fort to provide economic aid to underdeveloped nations. Eisenhower paid tribute to Tru- man in noting that in the winter of 1947 US. economic and mili- tary aid saved Greece from com- Continue Search For 22 Airmen ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP) — The search is continuing for 22 United States Nayy fliers missing over the Atlantic for six days but there is little hope the men will be found alive. On two occasions since the plane disappeared on a routine radar flight between Argentia, Nfld., and the Azores Thursday search planes_have spotted signs that there may have been sur- vivors. A spokesman said‘ Tuesday “20 objects of various sizes and shapes” were seen by a search plane Monday." He emphasized the objects were not identified and’ no further information" had been obtained on the sighting. 4,000 girls‘ competed. is over the Canadian proposal to extend its territorial waters to 12 miles for purely fishing rights. INJURIOUS T0 'U.K. FISHING “Such an extension would be a complete departure from existing international law and would be extremely injurious to British fishing rights," Manningham-Bul- ler said. He added: “Any extension of territorial waters might lead to increased friction between nations rather char § in several places near s halted barge traf- than reducing it. If these waters Egyptians Pull ‘Out Of Sudan E;yH:‘RT_0UM, Sudan (Reuters) M9131) troops Tuesday pulled r °i' 3 dlsputed frontier terri- y and Sudanese forces pre- Wired to move in. mgfilgll Affairs Minister Moham- compgggd Ab; Sin said about 0 gyptian sol iers °".‘:°“°1_1ed_ at Aburamadi, so flair; Inside what the Sudan _,lated as its territory,‘ has evac- ‘mule Egyptians have all gone he 9 deputy governor in the e 3 ha 11 -. -- 5 saidi auled down then flag, M559‘ moved up its troops ' hill"! Weeks ago in prepara- ’ 8 PIebiscite_.in the dis- ‘, pl 19-090-square - mile - area. 1.. eblscite was called off last tests. Egypt agreed to postpone its territorial claims until after SucIaii’s parliamentary elections Thursday. MAINTAIN SOLIDARITY the Syrian capital Tuesday that the new Arab republic of Syria and Egypt "will maintain solidar- ity with the Sudan against imper- ialism and the common enemy.” Government quarters here said Sudanese troops will move north and occupy frontier posts so far unmanned. l\"IC2IlI\\'lllll‘,, the Sudancsc for- cigh lI1llll.Sl.l'y disclosed. Kins.-, Baud of Saudi Arabia has offered Egypt and the Sudan his help in reach- Damascus radio said Egyptian , , President Nasser tol-d,a rally in . A cheerful smile and a joke make the day’s work easier. In face of Sudanese pro- ing a settlement. Prime Minister John Diefen- baker, no mean raconteur h'im- self, exchanges sallies with rail- way-men at Bishop‘: Falls, New- PRME MINISTER TOURS ‘ATLANTIC PROVINCES I foundland, the Prime Minister lottetown on Thursday, arriving will visit Summerside and Char- in Summerside at 1:45 p.m. Expect Pearson Here March '11 Hon. Lester B. Pearson, Nation- al leader of the Liberal party, is expected to be in the province on Tuesday, March 11th, it was learn- ed yesterday from Benjamin Ro- gers, President of Prince Edward Island,‘ Liberal Association. Although no definite announce- ment was available concerning plans, until the date was definitely confirmed, it was expected that the National Liberal lgader might speak to a meeting in Summer- side in the afternoon and to a meeting in Charlottetown at night: Missile lost After Firing CAPE C-ANAVERAL. Fla. (AP) The last of the U.S. Air Force’s Navaho missiles exploded shortly after launching Tuesday. The ramjet - poered ° m,i-ssile as launched at about 1:22 p.m. p.m. AST, rose a few thousaiid feet, then started falling.- Mere seconds before striking the earth it exploded, possibly from a signal transmitted by the range safety officer. From an observation post 1% miles away, it could not be de- termined whether the missile felt on land or in the water. The air force had disclosed that this ould -be the last of its series of five test Navahos. The Navaho program as can. celled last July because of the rapid development of intercontin- ental ballistic missiles which could, deliver heavier loads at much greater speeds. \ GREAT MUSICIAN Joseph Haydn, the great Aus- trian composer, was s chorister in Vienna at age 12. Yesterday's snowstorm brought all motor traffic to a standstill in West Prince and caused vary- ing degrees of trouble to the travelling public in other parts of the province. From Alberton it was learned last night that a foot of snow had fallen, and that all roads in the area had been closed about nine o’clock.’ Traffic was reported to be moving slcwely later in the evening behind snow plows, but later reports indicated that the roads closed in again shortly after the plows went through, leaving traffic halted onceagain. Here in Charlottetown about five and one-half inches of snow had fallen by midnight, accord- ing to advice from the Depart- ment of Transportfs meterologi- cal station at the airport. There was about one-tenth of an inch of rainfall sandwiched in be- tween the snow falls. Roads outside of Charlotte- town were filling in early in. the afternoon where the drift- ing snow _crossed the, highway. Some of the side roads were blocked and traffic was moving slowly and with difficulty ' on others although it was difficult to get a clear overall picture at midnight. The heaviest wind during the afternoon and evening «came about eight o’clock when it was gusting as high as 30 miles per hour, although it was OTTAWA (CP) — A murder charge has been laid against an Eskimo woman following a weird Arctic drama involving the fatal kuifing of an Eskimo man, the shooting of another and the death of one of two children buried in snow. The second child survived her ordeal after being entombed for about 30 hours wrapped in skins. The outside temperature at the time was about 30 below. RCMP headquarters announced Tuesday the woman, Kikkik, was charged with murder before Jus- tice of the Peace Douglas Wilkin- son at Eskimo Point on the west shore of Hudson Bay, about 800 miles north of Winnipeg. Kikkik is a.ccused of the knif- iug of the Eskimo otuk near Paldei in the Northwest Territor- ies, a hamlet about 200 miles northwest of Eskimo Point. The RCMP said an inquest was PARIS '(AP)—Foreigh Minister Christian Pineau said Tuesday night U.S. Middle East policy has been a long succession of failures and false moves. . He spoke in the Council of the Republic (Senate) du-ring debate on Tunisia where the United States and Britain are -trying to smooth the bitter French-Tuni- sian crisis. Pineau cited four cases where he said U.S. policy toward the Arab world hurt the long-range interests of the West. He said 11 each case France had ‘c o u n s el e d Washngton against such action. The four cases cited were:. 1. The Baghdad ‘Pact, which links, Britain, Iraq, Iran, Turkey and Pakistan in a so-called north- ern tier alliance against commu- nism. I “We called Washington's atten- tion to the dangers inherent in such a pact,” said Pineau, “and events have shown us right." The United States has joined some pac-t commit-tees, but has ‘WASHINGTON (AP) — Deputy Undersecretary of State Douglas Dillon said Tuesday. the French used some American military aid equipment in their attack on s Tunisian village. He said there “was certainly no excuse”. for this. ‘Dillon said, in reply to ques- tions at an aduninistration-spon- sored foreign aid rally, that the blowing steadily at a lower rate of speed. New Brunswick reported all main h-ighiways open last night and general travelling conditions much . French 1 Foreign Minister Hits U.S. Micl-East Polic Union-CNRTaIkis Break Down A Succession Ot Failures, Christian Pineau Claims not be come a full member. SUEZ ACT WRONG 2. Halting the British-French invasion of Suez. “A second error — and one more grave—committed by the Americans was to prevent us from following through and fin- ishing the Suez operation," Pineau said. “Whatever one .may think of that operation, once it had been launched it should have been car- ried through.” 4 3. The Eisenhower plan of of- fering aid to Middle East nations -to combat Communist aggression. Pineau did not explain why he thought this was a mistake. Pre- sumably he meant it has failed to attract Egypt and Syria from dependence on Communist arms. 4. North African policy—speci- -fically the shipment of arms to Tunisia. _ “We must repeat to them (-the Americans) that- if France is evicted from North Africa, it is the whole Western world which will‘ be the loser," Pineau said. Yanks Have Something To Say About The French Also United States intends to “take every precaution” to make sure the French do not use military aid for such purposes in the fu- ture. A secret report on U.S. arms aid says France diverted sub- stantial quantities of American material to North Africa where the French are trying to subdue rebellious Algerians. Dillon did not refer to this report. “Foot -5 Bloc ks Roads In West Prince fair. The snowfall reported ranged from nine inches in the Edmunston area to four or five inches in some of the areas where the fall was lighter. Top German - Physicist May Have Answer To Puzzle GOETTINGEN, Germany (CP) Germany’s leading physicist has announced a discovery which may provide the answer to one of the greatest puzzles remaining in man’s progress through nat-ure’s secrets. Prof. Werner Heisenberg, a Nobel Prize winner, said in a lec- ture Monday he and his asso- ciates have developed a mathe- matical equation from which the structure of the cosmos might be explained. Heisenberg’s research is aimed at achieving the fabled “unified field,” the object of which is to explain why natural phenomena such as light, heat, electricity, gravity‘ and nuclear energy be- have as they do—and explain them in a single theory. The late Dr. Albert Einstein worked on the problem for 30 years before he published his amended his formula three years later. Heisenberg said that at the jury returned a verdict of -death by stabbing by Kikkik. She was remanded in custody at Eskimo Point until the next sitting of the Northwest Territories court. PROBE GIRT’S DEATH The jury also investigated the death of Kikkif’s four-year-old girl, Nesha, who was found dead under blccks of snow. The verdict was death by abandonment. The second child, six-year,-old Annacatha, also a girl, was found alive beside Nesha. Both children had been wrapped together in a caribou skin before being buried. “Investigation indicates that Annacatha, thought dead from ex- posure by her mother, Eskimo Kikkik, spent an estimated 30 hours in temperatures in excess of minus 30 degrees, unclothed, wrapped in caribou skins and bur- led under blocks of snow,” RCMP headquarters said. held into 0otuk’s death and the The child’: condition is favor- presen-t stage of his researches he can not prove that his formula is right. To KNOW IN 2 YEARS Asked Tuesday night how long it will be before it is known if the theory is correct, he said: “There are many signs that it is right. But many points must be a n a 1 y z e d and difficulties cleared up. In one or two years at the latest, we shall know ex- act1y.” Heisenberg said his work had made use of the findings of two Chinese - born scientists, Dr. Tsung Dao-le and Dr. Chen Ning- yang, who won a Nobel Prize last year for their work at the Prince- ton Institute of Advanced Studies. Their research concerned the theory of parity, by which nature had been presumed to make no difference between left and right and to treat a particle in a com- pletely symmetrical way. Tsung and Chen found evidence that this was not necessarily so. Murder Charge Follows Weird Drama In Arctic able and she has been moved ts hospital at Churchill, Man... for further examination. The bizarre episode started about Feb. 7 near Paldei in the frozen barren lands west of Hud- son Bay. The RCMP said Kikkik’s hus- band, Hallow, was shot and killed by another Eskimo. The force ‘said preliminary investigation “indicated” the killer also shot at Kikkik. Ootuk then was found stabbed to death. TOOK CHILDREN ALONG Kikkik vanished into the frozen barren lands taking her five chil- dren with her. When she was found Feb. 15 by an RCMP pa- trol she said two of her children had died. The RCMP reported a patrol had found the children, one alive. An RCMP statement last’ week said the condition of the dead child indicated she also was alive when abandoned-