'l'El.EPl-IONE 8506 Ivyermssts IhewMIGuad'ron woman. oiolesos .a.r..a...5. fi-d-dv-In-r.to-qoaettmuus. 16 PAG3 for mumntliimt "Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew" CHARLOTTETOWN CANADA. THURSDAY, JULY 18. 1957 3l0NTRl'.'A!., - Mayor Armand! Lncotnbc. standing in front of Pro- BALLOTS DISAPPEAR vlnclal Police guard. tells glum- looking residents of Ste. Genevie- Iva that a municipal election could were stolen the home of the Mont- not be held because all the ballots real suburb's secretary-treasurer. Three Killed In Explosion On U.S. Submarine Chaser MONTAUK, N.Y. (AP)-An ex- plnsioll killed three men aboard a I 5. Navy Submarine chaser off this tip of Long Island Wednes- day night. Three others were sev- erely injured. The U.S. coast guard said the injured men were taken aboard the liner Queen Mary. asslng nunrby. outward bound from New lurk to England. The coast guard said details of tthe explosion's cause and effect lwere not available, but that the sub chaser. the U.S.S. Somers- worth. was not sunk or on fire. The Somersworth is about 250 feet long. the coast guard said. Another naval vessel. with two doctors aboard, was racing to the scene, the coast guard said. It was understood that the navy wanted the Queen Mary to stand by until the injured men could be transferred to the navy vessel, but if there was a delay the liner might leave and take the men on to England. The Queen May has considerable h o I p l t al facilities aboard. , In New York. a navy spokeb man said the Somersworth was 150 miles east of New York in the Atlantic when the explosion oc- curred. New Parkdale-Royalty Church Will Be Called Excavation on a new Church to be wn es Park Royal Unltad t'hu Canada will begin in- :nedl' This decision was reached list night at a largely at- tended meeting of the newly form- mii congregation of Parkdele- I ty. The congregation will take in residents oi the Ulllfd-QIIIQ &m pleased and oept several donations lncludlg in Parkdale. East Royalty Ventral Royalty. The site of E Church is at Mount Ed w a rd llelgbta between Bolvedoro Avo- hue and Palmer's Lane. A new street yet to be named will run in front of the new structure. The building will be approxim- ately so x no feet and will have a seating capacity for 400. A gallery 301- lottstown which during the past "Park Royal"' the need arises. It is estimated that well over Z60 families will be served by the new church. The people of this area have been at- tending Trinity Church in Chas years has become over crowded. the site. the excavation. the grav- el and sand. the painting etc. The finance committee report- ed that they were , ., T to launch their drive for funds be- fore the first of August with the expectatl that they would be able to anpouncs their first subs- ertplons in band by the first Sun- may be added to the church if day of next month. Hopeful For Disarmament ly WATSON SIMS LONDON (AP)--The United Na- (lone dlsamaement talks took 0 more hopeful tone Wednesday as Britain .pnopoeed that working enmmltteee be set up in fields where East and West appear cloa- ert to agreement. imoag the four committees sug- e-ared in the UN disarmament -nbcom'rnltteeubyyd Foreign Secto- laiiv Sewyn n was a group to mtdy how a suspension o hydro- rrn bomb taste in Soviet delegate um last week dechred such a working g would be "a waste of time" alt stage. neither ae Wpted not "I iecled Lloyd's pro- msat zortn said he would "poo- ;lcr" the statement and rwly Riff. It was the first time in the four mvnth-old negotiations that Zorln has not rulsted proposals that ng eorrlnitteea be appointed. cI.osER To Aollllllln Lloyd told the subcommittee Wen tihoam !orie's rejection of Outlook treaty than when the meetings op- ened March is. The most weighty criticism. be and, was mag while agreement in principle on a number of step! had been reached, there had been no attempt to get down to details of how such general agreements could be carried out. Lloyd then suggested that com- mlttees be set to work on details! of how: 1. Nuclear weapons testing could be suspended; 1. Conventional .. aments might be reduced; 3- Armles could be cut back to prev- iously agreed levels; 4. An inspec- surprlse attacks. . g The subcommii prev had agreed in principle that first step disarmament Hitch Hike 1600 Miles For Work P3 lit? Confectioners ' Elect Officers Mr. Wayne Body. vice-president of the WM. Wrigley Jr. Company Limited, was elected president of the Confectionery and Cocoa in- dustries of Canada - at the association's recent annual con- vention held at Elgtn House. Mus- koka. Ontario. Mr. Sydney Smith, President of and Mr. George Nichols. president of Ilowntree Company Limited. as second vlcge-presiden. of the an- sociatlon. Nato To Receive Weapons From US WASHINGTON (AP -President Eisenhower endorsed Wednesday the idea oi an American supply of atomic weapons for NATO. He said NATO members must be armed properly. The yreslden said at a press conference that if a country is de- fending itself against a nuclear at- tack it ought to have the resource to respond in kind. Furthermore, Eisenhower con- tinued, if the United States sup- plird atomic weapons to NATO powers then those countries would not have to manufacture their own atomic weapons and would avoid the economic strains resulting from creation of a nuclear wea- pons industry. Tributes To late Mr. MacPhee The following tributes to the late Mr. H.F. MacPhee. M.A.. Q.C., have been received for publicat- ton; From the Hon. 'l'h-re A. Camp bell. Chief Justice of Prince Ed- ward Island: "By the passing of the late H. Francis MacPhee, Prince Edward Island has lost one of her noblest and most distinguished citizens. He has been eminent in the public life of the Province since 1923 and has at all times commanded the respect and affection of everyone who knew him. "I had the privilege of a long association with him. both in the Legislature and at the Bar. We were usually on opposite sides, but that gave me an opportunity to appreciate fully his outstanding competence and integrity. "Since I have joined the Judic- iary of the Province. my col- leagues and I have always cordial- ly welcomed Mr. lVlacPhce to any court proceedings which he at- tended. llis native talent and fine education enabled him to pre- sent all his cues with marked ability and in eloquent and con- vksclng - rvf - t "The Courts have suffered a severe loss. and members of both Bench and Bar will mourn with his family and friends the pass- ing of this egltieemed and beloved - . 1'. Fun: Dr. W..l.P. MacMlllaI, O.B.E.. former Premier of the Province and former Leader of the opposition: "After a valient fight for life for seven months Frank MacPhee has ered the last roll call. "I have lost many good friends in the past few years and Frank MacPhee was the truest and best of them; after the untimely death of Premier J.D. Stewart, who had been my closest political friend. With them I saw some semblance of Justice given the Marltlmes by the Duncan and White Commiss- ions in ms and 1034, and I think Frank MacPhoe was at his best when he argued our case before the White Commission. We eat to- gether for over thirty years on the City School Board and there in dealing with difficult problems Frank MacPhee was a tower of ST. JOHN'S, Nlld. (CF)-Trade talks are underway here between Donald Mcl(lnuon, minister of in- dustry for Prince Edward Island, trade director W. E. Agnew and representatives of local business firms. were still underway Wednesday. The island officials are reported to be interested in more Newfoundland products. WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi- dent Eisenhower eaya it might be helpful if his old wartime friend Marshal Georgi Zhukov - now a power in the Kremlin-would ex- change vlsits with Defence Secre- tary Charles E. Wilson. The president, who has often given a boost to the Soviet mili- tary hero of the Second World War got so enthusiastic at his press conference Wednesday in recalling his conversations with Zhukov that some of his hearers feared he might be losing a propaganda round to the Communist in the cold war. Eisenhower recollected that when Zhukov was the Soviet corn- mander in Berlin and he was the western Allied commander they had "many long discussions" about democracy and commun- ism. One evening they had a three- hour conversation, Eisenhower ro- called. and: "We tried each to explain to the other Just what our two systems meant. to the individual, and I was very hard put to it when he in- sisted that their system appealed to the idealistic, end we com- pletely to the matterlallnlc. and I had”: very mush page wins to ED Ni ” The essence of the .. unseat, ' Ike Suggests Defence Chiefs Should Make Exchange Visits contention that communism is deelistlc because it requires that the individual sacrifice his interest for the state while democracy is materialistic because it permits the individual to do as he pleases. Eisenhower was asked whether he wanted to leave the impression that it was difficult to defend "the proposition that democracy is a more ideal system them commu- nism. ' in reply. Eisenhower asserted his own faith in democratic free- dom but "you could run into people you would have a hard time con- vincing that the sun is hot and the earth is round." He said that in encountering the kind of strong belief in commu- nlsm held by Zhukov "you run agains arguments that almost leave you breathless, you don't know how to meet them." Diplomats wondered whether Soviet propaganth would now pick up this point and try to us it as evidence that the leader of the Wutern dernocretlc world has found it hard to refute arguments of Communist idealism. The point the president wu maklng,hhowever, was that al- tluugh V had found Zhukov hard to out . .-male ihanr&khalwasboths' con- firmed Communist" and "an hon- lllsenhower said. was Zhukofa importing , Th was eoavinesd the New Post For Hon. Dr. McCann OTTAWA (CP) - Former Rev- enue Minister J. J. McCann, in "retirement" since the June 10 general elections ousted him from both his cabinet job and his House The visitors arrived from Charm of Commons Sen ,5 to lake an lottetown Monday night and talks executive position with the Guar- anty Trust Company of Canada, it was reported Wednsday. Dr. McCann, 70, restricted com- ment on reports that be will be- come the ompany's Ottawa and eastern Ontario divisional man- ager to saying that any announce- ment would be made next week by Guaranty's directors. Th post, now held by E. L. Par- ent, who deferred leaving on re- tirement last year when asked by the board to remain. carries be- tween 3l5.000 and 318,000 a year. Dr. McCann was associated with th company as a director until two years ago. A physician, he represented Ren- frew South in the t" -- stead- BURFORD, Ont. ICP -An as year-old retired farmer, described by his niece as a poor man, was found early Wednesday stabbed and savagely beaten to death by someone apparently bent on rob- bery. The body of Albert Hcarne was found stuffed under his bed by volunteer firemen answering a pre-dawn alarm in this village nine miles west of Brantford. The firemen put out the fire and called police. Inspector R. H. Wannell of The Ontario Provincial Police said ”the body was covered with blood." "It was definitely murder. It was done with more than a fist Police said a side door in the elderly recluse's frame home was forced during the night. The house was ransacked. A cash box was found on the kitchen floor. WEATHER lunnywlthafoweloudy warmer, ligli variable winds. Low- lslgliatcfsnrlottetewnilland 75. lntetvaleand PRICES: 86-Year Old Retired Man Sagvagely Beaten To Death Hold Trade Talks In Newfoundland Robbery ls Apparent Motive Of Brutal Murder In Ontario ,The mattress was slashed and ;drawers had been yanked from ltebles and chests. iasntv INJURED I Ilearne was badly injured 22 lyears ago when three men burst into his farmhouse near Burforti. battered him on the head and locked him in his bathroom. Two of the men convicted drew 10-year penitentiary terms and the third got six months. . Hearne's wife died later the tlsame year, 1935, and he retired. selling the farm and moving into 5 the village. l Mrs. Howard Davis. a niece, of ,-the Burford district, said Hearne 'got "a very small sum" for his lfarm and always was a poor man. A pr liminary post 3 mortem showed Hearne was stabbed sev- leral times in the back. He also had broken ribs and head injuries tindicaling he had been kicked. ily from 1035, when he was first elected. Questioned Re Missing Ballots MONTREAL (CF) -- Provincial police Wednesday questioned the mayor and secretary-treasurer of suburban Ste. Genevieve in con- nection with the disappearance of the ballots destined for the muni- clpality's election last Monday. Detective-Captain Marcel Pate- naude, who earlier Wednesday said the disappearance had been solved and a report mailed to the Quebec attorney - general, said secretary-treasurer Rolland Grat- ton and Mayor Armand Lacombe had appared "by invitation" for questioning. He said a third man also would be questioned. Mayor Lacomba had announced of the ballot and said the election. in which he sought re-election, was postponed est man." indefinitely. nora of It. Dunstart'e University and the Charlottetown Hospital his advice and assistance were most valuable in those years of expensive building and financing. "Frank had a long political car- eer and was a rock of strength to me in the difficult years of the thirties when he was my Attorney General. Witty and eloquent whether on the political platform or in the Legislature, it was al- ways a treat to hear him speak or debate. At the City Hospital we sorely miss Frank MacPhee just as we missed his talented sister. the late administrator Reverend Sister Paula. Frank MacPhce was made a QC. in 103i and for many years has been one of the ' d' ,, members of the Bar and It was a real education to hear him argue a court case. "To Mrs. MacPhee and his two daughters, and his sister. Bella. strength. "As one of the Board of Gover- I extend my sincere and heartfelt sympathy. ' By DAVE McIN'l'0SH Candiaa Press Staff Writer 0'l"l'AWA (CP)-No cuts in do fence expenditures are expected in the current fiscal year. officials said Wednesday. This could complicate the new Progressive Conservative govern- ment'a avowed ' t ” to reduce taxes and increase old-age pen- elona this year. Defence expenditures t for nearly 35 per cent of all gov- ernmeng spending and the defence department h conside cdtheonly department is considered the only one in which major reduction could be made. The defence budget i the Cllb rent fiscal year. which ends next March 31, la 81.746.000.000, includ- ing defence production and civil d ' This is down about three per cent from the previous year but the saving is accounted for almost entirely by near - comple- tlon of the 8200.0(l).000 mldCan- btttofflclsl TAO A preliminary review of 105550 defence estimates is under way but officials said there is, as yet. no indication whether defence spending will be out next year. INTENSIVE REVIEW An intensive review of the cur- rent yeer's estimates is also in progress but the main purpose of this is to acquaint the new do fence minister. Hon. George Pearkes. VC. with the fiscal oper- ations of his department. The difficulty in chopping do fence spending Is that more than half the budget goes to personnel and maintenance costs. A major saving could be made II this field if manpower and day- to-day takes of the armed forces were sharply reduced. But Mr. Pdaflis and Prime Minister Diet- eabaker have already indicated that there will be no such redne tlon ur. Dlefsabaker has said the Record low For U. 5. Dollar NONTRIAL ICPP-The discount as the United States dollar Wed- Defence Expenditures May Complicate Problem For Gov'i. The rest of the budget goes mainly for new plant and equip- ment such es barracks, aircraft and ships. Officials said this amount is not enough to take care of all armed forces requirements at once. COSTS RISING Cutting appropriations for equip- mean a further stretch-out of the procurement and construc- tion programa. But in the mean- time equipment costs are rising all the time. This complex problem may lead eventually to withdrawal of Cana- dian forces from Europe. As Vice-Admiral Harry DeWolf, chief of naval staff. said in March: "We operate under a manpower ceiling as well as a financial one. our effort in North American has been increasing steadily and has reached the point where further effort can only be met at the ex- pense of reductions elsewhere. . . "Sooner or later we must face I decision its to the relative value of our defence efforts at home and in By JOHN E. BIRD OTTAWA (CPJeA Canadian In- dian who has gained world recog- nition as a l ' engineer may be appointed to the Senate. He is Gilbert C. Monture. 60, a great - grandson of Capt. Joseph Brant. the famous chief of the Im- quois. It was through Capt. .Brant that the Six Nations Indians as- sisted the British to occupy Can- ada. Mr. Monture. born on the Six Nations reserve near Brantford, 0nt.. retired in June. 1956, as chief of the mineral resources di- vision of,.thI.1adI'al mines depart- ment. He now irvler.-president of Stratmat Ltd., a mining and met- allurgical development company. Prime "' ' Dlefenbalrer is reported to be giving serious con- slderation to the selection of Mr. Monttlre to fulfill his election promise to put a representative of Canada's l50.000 native Indians in the Senate. Jim Gladstone, 70-year-old chief of the Blood Band in Alberta, also is reported as a possible choice. However, sources close to Mr. Dfefenbaker say Mr. Monture likely will be chosen over Mr. Gladstone. a farmer and rancher and president of the Alberta As- sociation of Indians. MAYBE ANDY PAULL Another possible choice is Andy Pauli. president of the Native Senate May Have lsllndian Member Brotherhood of British Columbia. Mr. Diefenbeker may announce the appointment of an Indian h the Senate after his return in Of.- tawa next week. from a holiday h Saskatchewan. ' There now are 16 vacancies in the I02-seat upper chamber. Cur- rent memberahip is made rap of five Conservatives. 73 Liberals. one Independent-Liberal and two independents. Senators receive 810,000 a year and their awointa ments are for life. A world expert on tin produc- tion. Mr. Monturs was educated at the Indian late and QugQlI'I University. entered Queen's in 1014 but the First World War interrupted his education. He re-entered the Uri- veralty in 1919. grad-uatiru in l92L In 1923. he joined the mines de- partment as chief of the edttorhl branch. By 1946 he had become head of the mineral resources di- vision and had become known as an expert in his field. Mr. Monture has represented Canada at many international coo- ferences on minerals. During the Second World War he was (kna- dian executive officer of the com- bined productlon and resonance board in Washington. In this ea- paclty he represented Canada in the allocation of stratedc minu- als. Planes Engage In A Big Exercise OTTAWA ICP) Nearly an RCA? planes are participating ln' a Canadian Army exercise now in progress at Camp Gagetown, N.B. air force headquarters said Wed- Fainfing Not To Be Punished Now LONDON (Reuters) - The gov- ernment Wednesday pledged not to punish soldiers in the future for fainting on ceremonial parade. Labor members protested in the House of Commons that I) sol- nesday. Flying out of Greenwood. N.S., Chathnm. .V.B.. and Frcdcriclon. the aircraft are providing tactical." transport and photo - reconnais- sance support for the army dur-1 log the month-Inn: exercise srhe-I Europe." dnled to end lion. 2. l diers were punished for fakstlng at a rehearsal in June for trooplag the color, a ceremony marking Queen Elizabeth's official birth- tlay. Wer Minister John Hare told the House "The award of punishment was contrary to standing order! S40 Million Pulp Mill is Planned HALIFAX ICPI - The Nova Scotla government said Wednes-l day night it has signed an agree-' ment with the newly-formed Nova Scotla Pulp Ltd. which ”lt is hoped will provide a S20.tIl0.0lll pulp mill in Eastern Nova Scotla." The announcement. l s s u e d jointly by Premier Stanfield Trade Minister Manson and Landsv Minister Levy. said the proposedl mill will produce more than ll tone of hwhgrade blaeched pulp; daily and spent sto,om.mo ea-' nnnlly on wages and supplies mngftsfirst iyeers otopera-1 Requirements cords annually. The announcement did not name any company directors or give any details on the new firm. How- ever. if indicated it is closely as- seclated with the Swedish finn of per store ltopparbergs. i For Nova party's pins: for forest manage! ment must be approved by the chief forester of Stars l(opper- berrts before submission to the province. The forest management plan would control the cutting of pulp wood in various counties and would have to be approved by the government. The exact location of the mill- proposed to he "one of the larg- est and most modern in Canada" -was not disclosed and govern- ment officials would not elaborate, on the release until a press con- ference today. I The government has for several mill etablished in the Sheet liar- bor area, about 75 miles east of Halifax. and both Enrnpan andl United States interests have been mentioned. However, a group from the Strait of farm area has been seeking a mill near MuL' The statement "said ”the com- grave. Picton County has also paay will have available daring the life of the Ishmdnyahes: ScoHa crown lands. The lands leased the flnn In- clude forests in lnverness and Victoria Counties leased to the Oxford Paper Company many years ago. Engineering surveys for the mill have already begun. the an- nouncement said. an actual con- and purchase another INJ will be MG years been trying to get a pulpl cords from private operators. It will also use about isntoorde of hardwood a year. The government will supply the firm with fresh water supply 3 this cost will be repaid i