EEK; e, as green. blue- land hand-I. s.“ ' de. Jewellcd sorted Buyer meets seller Ads. Dial 8506 k yoL. LXXI NO. 268 .y ‘ i'mimnmo mam signa- “a the firs formal agree- eoncluded between North- :l'hnd Ferries Limited and unlicensed employees are I . W, Of Halifax, repre- the certified bargaining ,- . _ _ ask for taker, for quick results. TELEPHONE 3506 with Guardian Want classified ad Authorized as Second ClnssMnll by the Post. Office Department. “2“? - agent, the Brotherhood of Rail- way Employees and Other Trans- port Workers, and Captain Claude R. Hunter, president of the Com- pany. Looking on are (lett)) Alex- ander MacRae, chairman of the COMPANY SIGN "V" is? in.-ea.wm art-lu- men: tram $36 to gem are in store tor 55 personnel now in the d Natiiumberland Fer-_ "Wed according to an ‘, signed yesterday in , by rqnesentatives fill company. the employees’ W and the certified ‘ agent, the Canadian i.-~ Employ- h als In Ear r a (Aim-The agri- ._ deputanent Friday an- ~ 'dnnges in its barter pro- l _. to expedite ex- I I I ,,‘ F d unplus farm products ins/mm abroad. ‘fifhmdmeitmademb- {law list of materialsap- -' by President Eisenliiow .1. w «disuse. ‘ “glitter law directs that the . H n beadministered insuch 8 to safeguard U.S. usual , _ to prevent disruption ' i " prices or replacement of l,‘ he (i farm products for " to Ezra ,. Benson, ag- , Eisenhower , ,mr transactions must re- i ,... 00¢ gains in farm exports. ii} -. there isa net gain to «.' "vi States from the ex- ‘ “I surplus domestic agri- l oumnodities for these “trials, the national in-' >. not lie in the accum- I ., dadditional amounts of - ~ = - available materials list for which 3' no current or prospective Elf- ‘ I Man. (cri— Friday of a 14—year-old I, a. {med blood transfusions » g at the religious beliefs of . 'v . appeared likely to IManitoba government ac- “ at preventing a re- ‘ d the case. ' - General Lyon said P' death of 14-year-old Don- of Neepawa, Man, Whole inatte- is under on by the govern- '1 .1: hr hlttlteme-nt after the boy‘s , ‘33 father, Louis Holland. . Ind his with i liLm ‘ I» being faithful to God's , M'” We have not taken the ' , 0‘ losing Donald for- ”. boy Was woundcd in the I. “w- 4 when a .22-Calibre rifle discharged m his ._‘ " Mine. A sm'ci'cd amen in an operation but I\I\ Members of Jehovah‘s Denied Tra Action Is would not allow trans- such as wwmigers. watchmen, and wading-room attendants are also covered by the agreement, which is ettective October 1, 1958, tor wages, and November 1, 1958, for and will remain in effect until December 31, 1959, and thereafter, until revised or amended. The increase in basic pay given the ferry employees includes the $15 per month bonus previously paid by the Company- SIGNATORIES Thesgreernentmsslgnedfor “WiWflEW E and msrin7‘ e stipel‘ibtendelit; 08155 tain Claude R. Hunter. Atlantic Provunces representative, L19 .' AbbottHaliiifaxsignedfortheBro therhood ' ,anllocalchamman. a nks Expedite Barter m Products governmental need," the presi- dent said. Hereafter, the department itself will determine—under a classifi- cation system—aoceptatble barter outlets or comitries. ofificials said that under the old system, emort- ers often had difficulty securing statements from foreign govern- ments that barter deals would not supplant normal commercial and dollar transactions. As a consequence, barter tran- sactions had dwindled conmder- ably in recent months. _ The strategic materials—Awhich which will be put in the national supplemental swckpilo—einclude: abrasives, antimony, asbestos, bauxite, beryl, bismuth, cad- mium, chromite, columbite, cryo- lite, diamonds and bort, ferro- chroime, fluorspa-r, lead, mangan- ese, mercury, mica, nickel, plai- ladium, quartz crystals, ruthen- ium, selenium, silicon carbide, tantalite, tin and zinc. Farm surpluses eligible tor barter were listed as cotton, tob- acco, rice, wheat, corn, oats, bar- ley, sorghum grain, butter, and non-fat dry milk. nsfusion Dies; Considered fusions to combat the severe loss of blood. Unconscious, the boy lay packed in ice in St. Boniface Hos- pital while the governr‘ent tried unsuccessfully to intervene. The government went to court Thursday in an attemp. to have the boy placed in custody of child welfare officials. However, the hearing was adjourned until 2:30 pom. Friday at the request of counsel for the boy's parents. The boy died at 4:20 a.m. Mr. Lyon, asked what would happen to the government’s case, said: “Now that the child has died; the action dies with it . . . _ Premier Duff "toan said: “We're considering - \i'y carefully what to do next. I'm afraid i can't make any announcement as to what action will be taken." A coroner’s it 'y was to View Illt‘ hurli- lnic Friday and [)1', .l M. llnoi. coroner, said hr reason why the plarrci ' could n01 continue next vcc --"\\ it“ its @uordiom “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” Ottawa . local union, who signed the m ment on behalf of the employees, and Arthur H. Peake, director and legal advisor to the Com- pany. The agreement was signed yesterday in Mr. Peake‘ office. FNor’rhumberIand Ferries Workers Gel Pay Boost AlenanderMacRaefor-tlieumon'. Other hitch-1W6 of the agree- ment signed yesterday are as 101. lows: A reduction in the ‘work week from more than six days to five days; overtime at straight time for the first two hours, and time and one<half thereatter for all work performed mitside regu- lar working schedules as laid down in the agreement; extra pay for seven statutory holidays, if worked; vacations with pay of one,twoorthreeweeksperyear the Circe-week period only appli- cable after, 10 working seasons; provided on ship; clothing allow-r slices of $200 for losses sustained by marine disaster, and hospital and life hum-m coverage. On Angus 21, 1958, the Brother- hood was certified by the Canari- an Labor Relations Board as bar- gaining aigents for the employees concerned. Negotiations com- menced on October 7 and were continued at intervals until the gaining d the agreement yester- Assisthg with the negotiations was company solicitor, Arthur H. Peake of Giarlottetown. B. C. Pair Sentenced In Prison VANCOUVER (CPI—A former British Columbia cabinet minis- ter and the men convicted of passing him bribes were each sentenced Friday to five years in prison. Robert E. Sommers, 47, who sat on the highest councils of the province as minister of lands and _ forests, will serve his term in nearby Oakalla Prison Farm. So will H. Wilson Gray, the 46-year- old timber executive and father of six. There was no im. iediite word about appeals. Starting sharply at the accused as they sat grim—faced in the prisoner's dock, Mr. Justice J. 0. Wilson of the Supreme Court of BC. told them: “I do not enjoy hitting men when they are down, as both of you men are . . . the jury, not I, has found you both scoundrels. BEFOUL ATMOSPHERE “The evidence on which that finding must be based reveals that both of you have befouled the political and moral atmos- phere of this province for a per- iod of many years, resorting to every sort and shape of device to conceal your iniquities. “The harm you, Summers, have done to our traditional respect for government will, I hope, be slight, because, thank God, the sort of behavior of which you have been convicted is not just exceptional but unique in our po- litical history." It was a dramatic climax to the longest criminal case in Cama- dian history. Changes that Som- mers was bribed to use his influ- ence in graduating forest man- agement licences on Crown land date back almost thr. . years. The trial went through 82 days of sittings, with six adjourn- ments. The assizes jury which convicted the two men deliber- atedatotaloffihoursontwo separate occasions aifter hearing more than 2,000,000 words of testimony. mar nxrorcrs mm” OTTAWA (CP) —- Canada’s wheat exports declined slightly in the first two months of the cur- rent crop year while those of the United States rose. Canadian ex- ports dropped to 44,500,000 bush- els in the August-September per- iod from 51,600,000 in those two months last year and 57,100,000 in 1956, the bureau of statistics reported Friday. U.S. shipments increased to 70,300,000 bushels from 68,100,000 last year, though they were down from the 76,700.- ooomisso. CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1958 OTTAWA (SpecialJ—A winter works program of more than $75,000 will be undertaken at PE. 1. National Park by the northern affairs department, Heath Mac- quarrie announced here Friday. The Junior conservative MP for Queens was on a flying visit to Ottawa to confer with officials of the northern affairs and trans- port departments in connection with constituency matters. Much—needed winter employ- ment should result from the pro- gram he said. Fisheries Minister J. Angus MacLean, senior MP for Queens, meanwhile is in Newfoundland ar- ranging a winter repair for :20 community landing is various outports. Mr. Macquarrie said the nation- al park program calls for: I. A step-up of camp ground development at New London Bay. 2. Sanitation cutting-removal of :tnnecessary bushes, trees shrubs, c. 3. Forest nursery at New Lon- don camp ground, Dalvay 311d Cove Head. 4 Renovation of lavatories and replacement of plumbing fixtures in four bathhouses. 5. Repair to the Green Gables Golf Club house. 6. Cliff protection—proper pil- ing of rock to prevent erosion, East Germans Vote Sunday BERLIIN (ReutersI—Aibout 12,- 000,000 East Germans vote Sun- day in a general election with the choice of voting only for or agamst‘ a single list of approved A new Volkshammerf— lower house of Parliament —— _will be elected, along with 14 ‘district parliaments and the East Berlin city parliament. Most important is t?» «too-mem- ber Volkshamimer, “ditch makes the laws for the workers’ and farmers’ state, as East Ger- many’s Communist leaders call their republic of 17.0(11000 per- sons. President Wilhelm Pieck's job is not at stake. He was re-elected a year ago by both houses of Parliament tor a tom-year term. B.C. Power Commission Head Fired After Blast (OP) H. Lee Briggs, who startled British Col- Ilnibia this week with an out- spoken sttack on the provincial government, was fired Friday from his post as general manager of the ac. Power Commission. The dismissal came a few hours after Mr. Briggs’ third pub- llc criticism of provincial author- ities in as many days. The Manitobadborn ‘ower chief said he was called into the office of T. H. Crosby, chairman of the board of commissioners, and handed a letter of dismissal. “lit was all done very nicely,” he said. WEDNESDAY BOMBSHELL Briggs, 55, dropped his first bombshell Wednesday when he I accused Premier Bennett and his Social Credit government of try- ing to juggle the commission’s fi- nances to fulfill a political prom- ise to pay otf British "qumbia's direct debt by 1960. He followed up Thursday with a statement questioning the high offices held by Einar M. Gunder- son, former minister of finance, and the source and handling of political fund's. Earlier Friday he launched a tirade against the BC. Electric Company, the province’s chief power supplier, which he said is earning 12% per cent more than is allowed under publi utilities commission regulations. POLITICAL PROPAGANDA Premier Bennett, :n his first reply to the chang Friday, SOVIET EXPERTS ARRIVE CAIRO iReutersl — Five Rus- sian experts, led by Pavel Niki- tine, arrived Friday to study the Aswan Dam project. Soviet Pre- mier Nikita Khrushchev an- nounced Oct. 23 that the Soviet Union would grant the United Arab Republic a loan of 400.000,- Wi "'i!'."”'ir"io at the ol- fiance called them a “planned buildup of political propaganda.” He said (Mr. Briggs’ statements are “com- pletely wrong” and that he will reply in detail Monday. A cheque for $6,200 was pre- sented last evening to Dr. Arnold Clivc Cudmore, president of tho Charlottetown Kinsmen Club. on )eth of the Charlottetown drive it; ltlie iirsi sage of this project. 'lor the Springhill Relief Fund. move by the authorities since he. began his criticism. Mir. Briggs vowed that if he were fired he would stump the platforms on a non-political tour The board's action in firing d the province to tell the people Mr. Briggs was not unexpected the “rancid things" that go on in although it was the first positive electric power matters." SPRINGHILL DOCTOR ACCEPTS $6,200 CHEQUE The money was collected by a number of Charlottetown groups. {born of the officers club Incl evening on the Springhill disas- Dr. Burden, second from ier. Mr. Macquarrie also conferred with transport department offi- cials regarding: ferry service to the Island. The Queens MP, who has been attending the UN General As- sembly as a member of the Can. adian delegation, spent several days in his riding before flying to Ottawa. While on the Island he took part in a Remembrance Day ceremony in Charlottetown. Lot 40 Mother Is Fatally Iniured In Highway Accident Mrs. Clarence Laybolrt, as. of Lot 40 was killed shortly before 6 pm. Thursday evening in a high- way accident. The driver of the car involved was Kenneth Squires of Britsol. Mrs. Laybolt, who was six months pregnant, is believed to have been walking on the high- way at the time of the acident. She is survived by her husband two small children, her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Rifius Clary, Georgetown; two sisters, Marian, (Mrs. Charles Super, Graven- burst, Ontario) and Margaret, Hamilton, Ontario; and two bro- thers, Frances and Gilbert. Members of the jury, impannel- led by Coroner, Dr. L.E. Prowse, include: Roy Milton Smallman, foreman; Leonard Cecil Mac- Phail, John Frederick. Worth, Russell Charles Beaton, William Allison McQuaid, Malcolm John MacMilan and George Louis Mur- vhy. The jury viewed the remains at the Hennessey Funera Home Friday morning and ordered a further inquest on November 26th. PEI Sheep Exhibitors Make Show TORONTO (CP)—Canada took the major honors Friday in the sheep section of the Royal Agri- cultural Winter Fa‘zr livestock judging. S. C. Stewart and Son of Char- lottetown, [P.E.,L, ter champion ram award, with John L. Fennel-l, RR. 2, Brad- ford, 0nt., named reserve. The Leicester champion ewe rosette went to Wilson Douglas and son, of R.R. 2, Caledonia, Ont, while the Stewart: took the reserve. The championship for a live barrow went to Alfred James Poole of Kenmay, Man, and re- serve to Hooker Brothers, Cairns- town, Que. BUTTER COMPETITION In butter, the champion rosette for the highest scoring exhibit went to Canada Packers Limited of Dauphin, Man, provincial awards were gained by Silver- wood Dairies Limited, Caledonia, Ont.; Lac la Biche Creamery, Lac la Biche, Alta.; Societe Co- Operative Agricola. de Passes- ville, Plessisville, Que, and Har- vey Creamery Limited, Harvey Station, N.B. In the north county sheep sec- BANK MANAGER KILLED NEW YORK (AN—James F. Duggan, 55-year-old bank man- ager was shot and killed Friday as three robbers took between $8,000 and $10,000 from a bank. A customer received a leg wound. left, expresses his gratitude to Mr. Cudmore, second from right. Burden of Springhill. N. S.. by Dr. Burden addressed the mem- Looking on Deputy Mayor A. VVLIIYllL‘II (iaudcl, loll and F U. Stan. l‘Iflt‘lnnis, presfdcnt of the United Sci'iice Uliicci's Club. ing At Royal MR. BNWALL A winning exhibitor tion the champion ram award was won by Winston Stewart of Charlottetown, and Almon Bos- wal-l, also of Charlottetown, took reserve. Stewart also took both ewe championship and reserve awards. Russians Plan Berlin Changes LONDON (AP) — Soviet Pre- mier Khrushchev Friday night announced intentions to make de~ finite proposals for altering the status of divided Berlin._ During the day a three-truck American army convoy was held 81/2 hours outside Berlin by Rus- sian soldiers. This was the first such harassment since Khrush- chev demanded Monday that Western troops pull out of West Berlin. Khrushchev said the Soviet Union does not intend to fight the West, and he would make his new Berlin proposal to the Western wartime Allies of the Soviet Union. A Moscow Radio broadcast quoted Khrushchev as saying the Soviet Union is preparing a docu- ment on the Berlin subject. Dartmouth Has Water Again DARTMOUTH, N. 5. Water services were fully re- stored here Friday after an un- explained break in a key 24-inch main shut supplies off from than 20,000 inhabitants. While workmen made repairs, trucks provided by the town dur- ing the lib—hour shortage. Some melted ice cubes while many drained hot water boilers cooking purposes. Many families whose homes employ a hot water heating sys- tem turned to foreplaces merits in the lakefront project. Temperatures Thursday ranged to a high of 45 degrees but be. ‘ fore midnight had dropped to the 'iuwaos. l4 PAGES (CPL. nearly 5,000 of the town's more“ residents draw water from tank for and electric heaters to keep warm, in- cluding residents of 500 apart- WEATHER Oloudy. with a few showers: milder; light Winds. Low-high at Charlottetown 35 and 48. Sunday: Cloudy and mild. THAN Details By THOMAS P. WHITNEY WASHINGTON (AP) — Nikita Khrushchev has take. the wraps off his economic timetable for licking the United States. The Soviet premier and Com- munist party chieftain, in pre- senting his thesis for the let Communist party congress in Moscow set 1970 as the year for Soviet eclipse of ‘he United States as the world‘s No. 1 in- dustrial power. And it follows, from the Soviet way of thinking, that on this ba- sis the Soviet Union will have taken over world political lead- ership by then as well. The Khrushchev plans make up a document testifying the very real possibilities and potentialit- ies of the Soviet Union in eco- nomic development. NEW SEVEN-YEAR PLAN They advance a new seven- yeair plan for Soviet economic de- velopment from 1959 through 1966 which would, if realized, put the U.S.S.R. within striking distance of OVENS!“ the United States tn economic might in five addi- tional years. Experience since the end of the Second World War indicates that even if there are failures in some particular arc :.s, the over- NOT MORE all development plan announced ’Befler Life’ In MOSCOW (ALP) Premier Khuishcbcv has promised the So- viet peopfl“: better like in his seven-year drwe' to outstrip cap- italnsm‘ in mdustnal‘ ‘- production. The Soviet citizens read Friday in Pravda, Izvestia' and other newspapers about his program with its strong anpbasia on heavy indist' ry, on work and on expan- sion in every field of Communist WW. I They heard albaut it on Radio Moscow. Teams of commentators explained how Khrushchev in the next seven years proposes to boostnatimalincomebyuptofifi per cent, cut the work day to six hours, the work week to five dolls and still outproduoe the United Statesinmanyareasofflieeco- nomy. The Soviet program, which en- visages an til-percent boost in gross industrial output by 1965, will lean on a new labor force of millions of schoolage youths. WORK WHILE LEARNING Linked to his seven-year plan. Khrushchev has developed a “work white you learn" program that will cut deeply ii '0 the edu- cation period of Soviet children. It will give many of them more work in factories and on farms and less time in the classrooms. The resulting manhours of la- bor will contribute substanle to the Kremlin’s seven-year in- dustrial program. The premier promised the aver- age man and woman of the So- viet Union that eventually theirs would be the highest standard of living in the world. He said major industrial pro- grams still must come first and heavy industry will must form the keystone of Soviet endeavor. But eventually, Khrushchev OTTAWA (CPI Establish- ment of a new penal reform sec- tion in the justice department was announced Friday. Formation of the section grows out of the decision that the fed- eral government take over re- sponsibility for all .convicts sen- 'sponsibility for those serving terms of two years or more. The decision, taken at a fed- eral-provincial penal reform con- ference here last month. means the federal government will have to build new prisons an.“ recruit new prison staffs. The new section, known as the correctional planning section, will develop a program for custody, treatment and training aimed at rehabilitation of prisoners. FURTHER PLANS It will also plan the design and construction of a system of in- stitutions which will permit carry- ing out a program of ‘eform and rehabilitation as well as provid- j trol of prisoners. FIVE CENTS Khrushchev Aims To Lick ‘ U.S. Economically By '70 ' $75,000 Win’rer Program Announced For P.E.l. Park Found In 7-Year Plan by Khrushchev will ' ilfilled. American economic experienc. indicates that though the United States perhaps will make some progress between now and 1965 in increasing industrial and other output, such progress will be slow. The Russians aim to increasd their production at a much more rapid rate. MORE FOR ARMS If the Soviet Union, by 1000, succeeds in this aim here are some of the things it can and no doubt will do: 1. It will be able to buy more weapons, equip more armies. build larger fleets on the ocean and in the air, construct more and bigger missiles. provide more arms to allies and spend more money on military - scien- tific research than the United States. 2.1twillbeabletofurnish more economic aid to underde- veloped nations, to spend more money on subversive activity in non-Communist lands, to use its might in foreign trade to disrupt Western channels of foreign trade. 3.1twillbeabletodevotefar more capital than it can at the present time to the economic buildup of Communist China and other Communist countries. Russian Pepple Promised New Plan pmnn‘sed, I the program works ontaspliannedtheSovietpe'oplo willenjoytlieshortestworkday and shortest workweekintho worldmorefoodandovetyithiing neededtomaikeliviingstanliards in the Soviet Union the world‘s highest. Vessel With PEI Produce Grounds CHETICAMIP. N.S. — (OP) —- The coastal vessel Philip Wayne grounded on rocks Friday near this northern Cape Breton town. Capt. Reuben Evans and his four-man crew managed to reach slime safely. It was not im- mediately known if the vessel would be salvagable. The vessel, owned by Clifford Shirley and Sons of Newfound- land, was carrying produce from Prince Edward Island to New- foundland. Reds Reject U.S. Plan GENEVA (API — Moscow clearly rejected Friday night a U.S. plan for controlled suspen- siou of nuclear weapon tests. This left the three<power talks as far away from agreement as on their opening tw0 weeks ago. In Russia‘s first public com- ment on the talks since the plan was submitted, Moscow Radio ac- cused Britain and the United States of “clumsy manoeuvres" to prevent an immediate. perma- nent cessation of atomic and hyd- rogen bomb tests. Justice Dept. Establishes New Penal Reform Section Justice Minister Fulton an- nounced three appointments to the section and indicated more would follow. The three are: Col. J. R. (Big Jimi Stone, DSO, MC. of Salmon \rm, B.C.. Army Provost Marshal; Allen J. “weed to terms of more Lha" one ,MacLeod. QC, 40, of Revelstoke. year. At present, Ottawa has re-v BC. and Sydney. N.S., director of the justice department‘s re mission service: and James A. McLaughlin, 52, of Kamsack. Sask, and Ottawa. assistant com- missioner of penitentia'ries. Col. Stone. decorated four time! for bravery in action, enlisted at a private with the Loyal Edmon ton Regiment in 1939 and rose it command the unit in Italy. Mr. MacLeod also serVed in tin Italian campaign with the West Nova Scotia Regiment and joinet the justice department in 1946, He was draftsman of ti: reviset Criminal Code and was appointed director of the department’s crim ,ing for secure custody and con- 591‘“ inal law section an! remissiol ce in 1954. He was appointed I: ~ . la Queen‘s Counsel in 1955. ‘