Buyer meets seller ' Ads. K 14 PAGES 1'. Walter Hyndman, wife ‘ the Lieutenant—Governor, wel- gnpd-s great number of ladies 5,,- I :11. r?” ' . . Penis (AP) Sir Winston ' ‘ , tears Welling in his Ms, received the Cross of Liber- hlion and a kiss on each cheek tron Gen. Charles de Gaulle lhursday for helping deliver trance from Nazi occupation. The medal. worn by only 15 M foreigners, is the highest for those who walked to ;. France. I ay’s ceremony was the occasion in 14 years bring— ‘tlhe two war-time leaders to- . All signs of old friction . een the intro were dissipated the flow of Churchillian prose, ench champagne and affection Ire attentions from de Graulle. HATS WITH HOST 84 the end of this month, walked haltineg about lie mrawling gardens and salons d dc Gaulle’s Matignon mansion. fie appeared a little haggard but vitrith smile frequently lit his '_ as he chatted with de Gauile . , English and French. 1:” De Gaulle, wihrose frosty dignity ed amazingly, tried out a , simple English phrases for his .. ‘ingurirshed guest. ..;De Gaulle inquired: “How are goo? Very well?” , agfir Winston responded _ very well." “Yes, I v I am going to speak'English ," Churchill said at the cere- . “I have often made ' in French, but that was Dial 8506 ask for taker, for quick results. Authorized In Second Clan Mall TELEPHONE 3506 with Guardian Want classified ad Department. Ottawa to her first “At Home" at Gov- ernment House Thursday after- noon. Included in the callers were “In the somber days of 1940. I said ‘here is the constable of France.’ How well he lived up to that title. “Now he is back again in a position of the greatest and grav- our @llatrdlibmt by the Post Office “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1958 ,- lcft to right, Mrs. Alex Horne Mrs. Leigh Horne and Mrs. Wil- fred Lecky, all of Summerside .ir Winston Receives Cross liberation From De Gaulle lADI-ES CALL AT GOVERNMENT HOUSE Also seen are Lt.~Cmdr. Douglas Saunders, aide to the Governor. and Mrs. Hyndman. Five Missing In ToppIecI Drilling Rig PORT BURWELL, Ont. (GP)— The wreckage of a galeJWrecked struggle for survival 18 years gas-drilling rig was sighted late ago . . ." Thursday by RCAF search De Gaulle, clearly moved, re- planes. . spronded: “I want Sir Winston to know this: Today’s ceremony simply means that France knows est responsibility for his country. what she owes him . . . Long Live The problems whichconfmnt us Churchill, Long Live England, are no less our long Live France.” O'I'I‘AWA, (Special) -- Prince Edward Island fishermen are earning almost as much money this year as they did in 1957. The Dominion Bureau of Sta- tistics disclosed Thursday that the value of fish caught off Is- land waters in the period Jan. l—Sept. 30 was $3,151,000. This compares with $3,179,000 in the same mine montlm of last year. The lobster catch was again the most profitable for those engaged in this phase of the industry. Cod provided the next largest return. The value of lobster landings was $2,413,000, compared wrtn $2,429,000 3 year ago. Ood caught was worth $163,000, as against $149,000 in 1957. The qua-nifty of fish caught in ' to war-time, and I do not of darker and sterner 000 not I‘recalrled: subject you to the or- slightly, totalled ng at de Gaulle, Church- While the oldie-month period was down Landings totalled 31,744,- pounds. A year ago they 34,307,000 pounds. the overall value an quantity caught in the January- ‘ HALIFAX rcr) — Dr. Frank lackinnon of Charlottetown said Thursday night it is time for ' limithners to start gambling on “future. . n - "We need to gamble a bit, ‘F Willem of the Atlantic , 5 Economic Councu told “I? Nth anniversary dinner of “‘0 Halifax Junior Board of n .in business we will look ' filly gilt-edged investments. h_£expect an immediate re- .a ,Jud >3 -. 3 Judging at the Provincial Fox *M was completed early yes- “"‘day afternoon by Parvin Cass 1‘” expressed the opinion that fie fW98 were much improved '1“ COIN!” and other qualities -. file pT‘CVIOlh your. In the 0‘ an expert rancher of y“ ago the srhorx werc as N ‘5 ill the. old days and the 'V‘” ter. fox Corning hack llllO style. "our ranchers now have an 00- nmii 0‘ “1(llxvt'l'.‘ nw‘rm yrs." n he“, said. Judging of mink commenc- 2 O'clock yesterday air er Wiles in some cases wel‘e‘ ‘ long period in the \nldorw Time To Start Gambling, APEC President Declares turn on every penny we invest; we will never develop Dr. MacKinnon said the Man- times are too slow answering the door in reply to the knock of o tunit . live cab get too comfortable so that we let economic oppor- tunity slip by," he said. We must get the positive idea that this area is as much worthy of development as is any other area of Canada—we must sell that idea to others as well as to ourselves." PEI Fox Show ' ternoon. Walter MacFarIane of Ithe Hudson Bay Company, Mon- treal made the decrsrons. MacFarIane has had over :0 years experience w1th the H.B.e and in his capacity as grader hit: its familiar with all types an. Iqualities. It is interesting to see him concentrating and placlnn the top mink and domg u so gummy. ement re im rov . I lyeglr in quglity is very noticeablte1 Iand quite a number of Islam“ rmtn‘k bromims are no“ prqurruéx Iin quantity. with two or film) having in the vu-ruuy (vi, . r/r {kiti In each of firm" run I In conversation \Mlh seie from Iahl rail or Island Fishermen Have Good Year September period were down this year, the monthly landings and value in September itself show- ed a sharp increase. The September catch was val“ ued at $530,000, compared with $379,000 in the same month last year. The quantity caught was 5,931,000 pounds, as against 4,- 959,000 pounds. ' Explosion, Fire Take Two Lives PALERMO, Ont. (CPI—Work- men Thursday found gas leaking from a defective valve across the road from a house wrecked Wed- nesday night by an explosion which took the lives of a young mother and her infant son. A. R. Croiier, chairman of the Ontario Fuel Board. said work- men found a break in the shutoff posi-te the building destroyed. W. J. Dutton, operations direc- Comrpany, said he believed the leak may have been caused by a heavilyloaded truck. Four men had to abandon Mrs. Roy Skinner, 2A, and two-months- old Gregory to a fiery death when they were unable to free them from the wreckage of their exrplo- sion~shattered home. They lay trapped under s ches- terfield held down by the weight of the smashed roof. The men flames. ge Sees Improvements Entries them it was found out that they flare making money.. one reason ' being the supply a. fist at reason- able prices and another the cli- matc which helps produce good t'uI. It appears that mmk farming ‘is destined to be a factor 1n the .lslaud‘s economy in the years come. m A star! was made on the judg- 1: lIl’lacings are shown below. 3 It will be noted that in the E513 irlard poarl platinum, medium Hermes l..l'\'. Lock- grcat many pluc- cinw and light ror'jv \‘\17.l 3 “HI continue this in. menu on page 5 Col. 2; tor for the United Suburban Gas ‘ couldn’t budge the section of roof and were forced outside by the of mink yesterday afternooni A US Coast Guard cutter sped from Erie, Pa., to see if the five men known to have been aboard were afloat in the vicinity. The wreckage was sighted about eight off the Pennsyl- vania shore of the lake, several miles south of the point where ga‘les that reached 60 miles an hour tore the structure apart be- fore dawn. J. E. Wolfe, a geologist with Underwater Ga-s Developers Lim- ited, which owned the steel tower anchored on the lake 28 miles southeast of here, said that their families were being notified of the finding of the rig. News that the rig was gone came first from the skipper of the US. collier Sumatra, en route early Thursday to Port Burwell with a load of coal. The owners said it apparently keeled over sometime before dawn during the gales that swept the Great Lakes and shore areas of southern 0n- tario. Underwater Gas rents the plat- forms and towers to drilling firms. Mr. Wolfe declined to identify the firm in this case be- cause the information might cause distress to next-of-lcin still not notified. FRE IGHTER REFIBATEI) HAMBURG, Germany (AP)— The 12,459-ton Argentine freighter Argentina, which ran aground in the Elbe River, was refloated Thunsday by the help of tugs and the rising tide. The vessel contin- ued its journey from Hamburg to London. valve on the main supply line op. y . When Canadians everywhere 'observe a moment of silence at :11:00 a,.m. on November 11th., it will hr in tributc tn lhosc Can— rrrlrrm scr'Viccmcn who have paid ;thc supreme sacrifice in battle. I in It'f'wlc to Canada’s fallen Isoldicrs, the above phonograph DETAILS NOT DECIDED , Royal Commission WiII1 WEATHER Clear with a few cloudy intervals and colder; west winds 15. Low-high at Charlottetown 45 and 48. NOT MORE Truce Ends Israeli-UAR Tank Duel 'I‘IIBIE‘RIIAS, Israel (0P) —- A United Nations - imposed truce Thursday ended a two—hour tank and artillery duel between Israeli and United Arab Republic forces near Lake Huleh. Swift intervention by UN mil- itary observers succeeded in choking off the barrage over the Syrian border at 4 pm. local time. An earlier request that fighting cease at 3 pm. had been ignored. Thursday’s incident apparently began with sporadic rifle fire di- rected against an Israeli tractor plowing land in reclaimed fields south of Lake Huleh. Within minutes it became a battle—with both sides using ar- tillery, mortars and tanks. 28 Persons On Hiiockecl Cuban Airliner Safe HAVANA, Cuba (AP) A Cuban airhnr' " er that vanished Wednesday night is in rebel hands and all 28 persons aboard are safe, a qualified source said Thursday. It was the third Cuban airliner to be hijacked in little more than two weeks. The informant said radio mes- sages from the Cuban Airlines DC-3 reported the aircraft is be- ing held on a rebel air strip. The radio messages said the rebels promised to turn over the 25 passengers to the Interna- tional Red Cross as soon as it can be arranged. No mention was made of returning the three crew members. Strong Quake Inlapan TOKYO (Arm—A strong earth- quake centered deep under the ocean bed of the western Pacific shook northern Japan for two irightening minutes Thursday. A tidal wave warning was flashed throughout Hokkaido, the northernmost Japanese island, but was cancelled later. National police said they had no immediate reports of casual- ties. Kushiro, 800 miles north of Tokyo on Hokkaido‘s eastern coast, absorbed the strongest re- ported jolt. It registered five on a Japanese scale of seven. Five is strong enough to crack walls, topple some rigid buildings and cause other damage. shows: centre a Canadian corpor- a]. standing in reverence beneath a figure of the Virgin Mary, mirr- aculously remaining practically untouched amid the ruins of a church in Carpiquet, France: top left, row on row of crosses in the Canadian cemetery at Dieppe, Moon Rocket Firing May - ITake Place Early Today CAPE CANAvElRJALL, Fla. (AP) An improved space prober, Pio~ neer H, waited out t.’ 1e, weather and good fortune Thursday night for a possible launching in the early hours Friday. If plans and schedules mesh properly the threestage launch- ing rocket, more than 88 feet tall, will hurl its 85-pound payload or fourth stage literally out of this world. The payload will include—along with a small terminal rocket—25 pounds of instruments. including a light-sensing device designed to relay to earth crude photographic impressions of the far side of the moon. If all went well as the payload coasted on toward space, some time early next Sunday afternoon a radio signal from might touch off the terminal rocket and send the probe into a lunar onbit. Attainment of the vicinity of the moon would represent a major step beyond the achieve- ment of Pioneer 1. Launched Oct. 11, the first pio- By ALAN DONNELLY GROS TENIQUIN, France (CP) Prime Minis t e r Diefenbaker ada’s opposition to any proposal that would lessen the political in- Thursday spelled out Can- that would lessen the political in- fluence of smaller NATO coun- tries in the defence alliance. “We could not accept any plan if advanced at any time which would have the effect of creating a triumrvirate of authority for the making of political or other de- cisions for NATO," he told a press conference here. The Canadian leader, visiting the RCAF’s No. 2 fighter wing here as part of his 544d'ay world tour, was asked for his opinion on what a reporte; called French Premier de Gaulle‘s proposal for a three-nation “directorate” on global policy with NATO’s big three—France, Britain and the United States. WELCOME CONSIDERATION Diefenbaker said Canada would welcome consideration of any change to improve NATO but he added: "NATO was founded on a com- mon contribution by member na- tions and any alterations in that concept would require a rebuild- ing of the structure of NATO—— something I’m sure no one would desire to bring about." In their Paris meeting Wednes- day, Diefentbaker and de Gaulle discussed proposals for stronger political consultation that the French leader made in letters to Prime Minister Macmillan and President Eisenhower. TBU'I'E TO ERVICEMENI 1 France: top right, little Dutch girls, two of thousands who look after graves in the Canadian Cemeteries in Holland, gazing pcnslvcly an: crosses in the Holten cemetery; bottom left, two small neer followed a trajectory steeper] than had been planned, and there- fore failed to attain the velocity needed to carry it close to the moon. Disaster Drive Meeting With Early returns last night indica- ted that the house—to—house cram- paign in Charlottetown and sur- rounding areas to raise funds for disaster-stricken Springhirll was meeting with outstanding suc- cess. With a completion of returns still far from complete, Clive Oudmore, president of the Kins- man Club which is spearheading the drive, said the outlook was "exceptionally good” and he felt that final returns would surpass all expectations. He said that before the one- night blitz even got underway some $2.000 bad alread been real- mentum about 90,850 miles from ized from people who couldn't PM Explains Canada's Views On NATO Policy At that time Canadian sources said Canada would welcome closer consultation within NATO but with no lessening of indivi- dual member nation rights. . The prime minister was asked at a press conference here whether his tallos with de Gaulle provided helpful information for his meeting today with Chancel- lor Adenauer of West Germany. He said the conversations would be helpful “in any meetings not. only with Chancellor Adenauer and Prime Minister Fanfani of Italy but also in the exchanges of information I will be having with the leaders of the Common- Pioneer I lost its forward mo- the earth. Falling back, it was de- stroyed entering the atmosphere 27 hours after launching. In Ch’town Great Success wait for the canvassers and who personally brought or mailed their donations. Mr. Oudmore said more complete figures would be available today. Nine organizations joined with the Kinsmen Club to put nearly 200 canvassers on the job of call- ing at households throughout Charlottetown and immediate vicinity. Other W98 participating were Parkdale Fire Department, Young Liberals Association, Young Progressive Conservative Association, Botany, Lions, Ki- wanis, Knights of Columbus, Centennial and Alpha Y’s Men and the Junior Board of Tnade. The prime minister flew here from Paris for a day of inspec- tion and visiting at this base in northeastern France. He was wel- comed by air force officials and cheered by 600 school children. At his press conference Diefen- baker made these other state- ments in reply to questions: In his world tour he will always have in mind efforts to expand trade. NATOis “outstanding in its ef- fectiveness, deterrent results and efficiency." There is “no intention" by Can- ada to reduce its NrArI‘O contribu- tion in Europe—an air division wealth. " Stocks Advance In Wake Of Democratic Election Sweep By THE CANADIAN PRESS Industrials broke through to record highs on the Toronto and New York stock exchanges Thurs- day on the strength of a buying surge prompted in part by the Democratic election victory in the United States. Brokers said Wall Street was buoyed by the belief that US. government spending will be greater in the next two years as a result of the strong grip the Democrats took on both Houses of Congress in Tuesday's elec- tion. ’ Korean boys, while visiting the; United Nation M.‘.1;ary Cemeteryt land. (National Defence Photo) Profit-taking late in the day near Pusan. Korea. pause beside a grave in the Canadian plot to salute those who gave their lives in the Korean conflict: bottom right, rows of crosses in the 0am- adian cemetery at Holten, Hol- V and an army brigade group. trimmed gains on both the To- ronto and New York exchanges but industrial indices were still above previous highs at the close. ALL-TIME HIGH In Toronto the industrial index of 15 selected stocks hit an all- time highof 507.31 at mid-day. the mark of 506.33 set Oct. 2, 1956. It closed at 5(534, a gain of 1.71 on the day. At 2 pm. the Dow Jones In- dustrial average in New York stood at 557.75, up 7.07. It closed at $54.85, up 4.17 from Wednes- day when it reached a previous FIVE CENTS last Body Removed HALIFAX (CP) — The violent underground upheaval that killed 74 miners in No. 2 colliery at Springrhill, N.S., will be investi~ gated by a royal commission, the Nova Scotia government an- nounced Thursday. The provincial cabinet made the decision while miners con- tinued the grim job of bringing out the last remaining bodies from the shattered pit.’ Mines Minister Manson said the com- mission’s terms of reference had not been worked out. Mr. Manson said commission personnel probably would not be named for several weeks. The commission is expected to have a job similar to the inquiry into a Nov. 1, 1956, explosion and fire in neighboring No. 4 mine in which 39 men were killed. 1956 COMMISSION Donald Mlclnnes, Halifax law- yer, headed the 1956 commission. Members were G. ‘A. Vissac, Montreal mining engineer, and F. E. Grillfitih of Pittsburgh, en- gineer with the United States Bu- reau out Mines. Mr. Manson said he will meet this morning with Labor Minister Pyrke, a Springhill native, to dis- cuss the town's rehabilitation. They will contact federal Revenue Minister Nowian later today, he said. Mr. Nowlan is Nova Scotia’s representative in the federal carb- inet. The last body was removed from the mine Thursday night. two weeks to the hour after the bump. The royal commission will study the general behavior of “bumps,” a phenomenon of the Cumberland Railway and Coal Company at Springhill. More than 400 bumps, slight and: major, have been recorded there. The latest was the most severe since records were started about 40 years ago. Bumps earlier this year injured 14 miners. RUNAWAY TRAIN The 1956 commission blamed the No. 4 explosion on a runaway coal train, but attached no re- sponsibility to any individual. Its report, released more than 13 months after the accident, said six loaded cans of a sevemcar train became uncoupled, roared down the No. 4 hoisting slope and cut an electric cable. An electric arc ignited clouds of coal dust stirred up by the runaway. A tremendous explosion followed, prdbaibly worsened by the presence of lethal methane gas. The commission recommended tightened safety regulations, and better training and tougher phy- sical examinations for mine res- all-time closing high of 550.68. cue operation-s. Unions AreEIated By; US. Election Results WASHINGTON (AP) The AFL-CIO, elated by the results of Tuesday’s congressional election, Thursday called for an end to the state right-to-work laws that ban a union shop. The federation’s e x e c u t i v e council called on Congress to knock out these devices by tak- ing away the federal sanction given them in the Taft—Hartley Act. It pressed, in fact. for an over- haul of the whole act, which has governed labor-management re- lations since 1947. It was disclosed Thursday that President Eisenhower and Vice- President Richard Nixon held a private conference at the White House Wednesday night on the election results. INCREASED MARGIN These results increased the Democratic margin in the Senate to 62-34 from 49-47 and in the House of Representatives to 231- 153 from 235-200 with one race for the 1960 presidential and cob gressional races. to make a pitch for the organized labor vote and to continue his backing for civil rights laws at- tractive to Negro voters. CONTRIBUTING FACTOR President Geonge Meany of the AFL-CIO told a press conference that the righ-t-toowork issue con- tributed to the large turnout of voters Tuesday. Nelson A. Rockefeller. the man who suddenly shot into political prominence as governor-elect of New York States, again refused to show interest in the national political field. The multimillionaire reversed the national trend against Repub- licans by defeating Democratic Governor Averell Harriman. FLEMING IN JAPAN TOKYO l'AP) -— Canadian Fiv nance Minister Fleming arrived Thursday by air from Hong Kong undecided. Details of the Eisenhower- Nixon conference were not re vealed, but it already has be- come apparent that Nixon is tak- ing charge of efforts to get the Republicans back into contention for five days of touring and con- sultations as a guest of the Jan- anese government. Foreign Min- ister Aiichiro Fujiyama and Eis- aku Sato. the finance minister, met Fleming and his wife at the airporL The viceqpresiden-t is expected ' at . -.,: “our; .58 | r : Probe Springhill Bump From Mine