TELEPHONE 3505 Buyer meets ller with Gr ardian 8506 ask for classi. for quick results. Wipe mirtmsdimt "Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” WEATHER Variable cloudiness with a few 311011;- flurries; colder; southwesterly Wm 5 - Low-high at Ch’town 18 and 20. Want Ads. Diafle fled ad taker, 13 PAGES Ml?-hr-rizeo as Second Class Mail by an pm om" Denartn ent. Ottawa CHARLOTTETOWN CANADA, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 10," 1958 NOT THAN MORE FIVE CENTS TUN NEWAYGO, Mich — State Trooper Alfred Samdal of the Newaygo State Police post sits OXEN rofru astride his cruiser driving a tearii of oxen, Buzz and Fuzz, after be- ing mired in the heavy Newaygo E RESCUE county snow. The oxen are owned by farmer Marleen Palmer of nearby Croton Township. Gives Glimpse Of Frightening Arms Array WASHINGTON (AP) — Out of an official Pentagon briefing came an accounting Sunday of space weapons to rocket nuclear holocaust on an enemy and coun- ter his attacks. Some are in existence; others are in development. .From statements and answers by defence department experts, reporters learned that: ;,,Aaingle Polaris, missile sub- marine will be able to vaporize inland targets with more than , 100,000,000 tons of nuclear force f carried in more than 10 hydro- gen - headed intermediate range ballistic missiles. The first atomic submarine equipped to fire the Polaris is being built. Plans are being drawn for firing 1,500 - mile range IRBMs from far - ranging, high — flying planes, possibly driven by atom , will succeed Hound Dog, the I supersonic missile launched from ‘ a B-52 which can hit with “pin- point accuracy for hundreds of power or chemicals. This weapon . miles." But it may be five years before the plane-IRBM combina- tion is ready. EYES ON FLORIDA Radar eyes in Massachusetts now watch missile launchings in Florida. This is an easy-trick for the new 3,000-mile range equip- ment designed for detecting bal- listic missiles headed from Rus- sia toward North America. Actual “hardware” to go into- anti-missile missiles is being fab-. ricated. Contracts have been let for building the warning line in the Far North to sound the alarm of approaching missiles. Decoy missiles -- “Bull goose” and “Green Quail” — have been created. These are. intended to confuse an enemy‘s defenders by satur ' g his detection system, conc ing the true warheaded missiles hidden in the diversion- ary, phony flock of iron birds. The Bomarc long range anti- aircraft missile of the,air.; ce “can defend the entire United States with less than 45 squad- rons” of the weapons. ~ Using the USAF’s Thor IRBM, together with other existing rock- CHICAGO (AP) —- A possible new breakthrough in efforts to 8\I_lJDress certain human cancers with chemicals was reported to a national meeting of the American Cancer Society Sunday by Dr. Roy Hertz. The chief of endocrinology branch of the National Cancer In- shtute. Bethesda, Md.,- said 16 women with advanced cancers have been receiving an anti- cancer chemical for two years. He reported cells of one type cancer were duped into commit- Pig suicide by absorbing a chem- ical closely resembling a vitamin they needed for growth. The cancer studied is a hor- mone - producing tumor called choriocarcinoma. It occurs in Women during the child-bearing M90955. originating from what '10l‘mally would be the after-bir-th “T Dlacenta. Such cancers, generally rare, 5P1‘€ad rapidly and invade the lungs and brain. They usually kill 9 Datient within a year. I31‘. Hertz said the vitamin folic acid is necessary for normal en- Try Chemical In Cancer Cases pregnancy. developing em- bryo also requires folic acid in great abund-am: to survive. In- vestigators believed the cancer also would require folic acid. MOVED INTO CELLS Chemists developed chemicals so similar to folic acid that they took a special place in the body’s cells and crowded out the vita- min. One group used a compound called methotrexate, known as a vitamin antagonist. This chemical was taken up by the hum-an can- cer cells requiring an abundance of folic acid and they soon died. The normal cells requiring less folic acid were unharmed. ' Dr. Hertz said of the 16 women treated six have remained com- pletely free of "if ~nce of disease and five showed good response and a-re free of symptoms. Three showe “decisive orig- inal response” and are continuing the therapy. Two died of the far-advanced disease in the early phase of lafgement of the womb during treatment. OSAKA, Japan 'Reuters) — A Ieam of Japanese scientists Sat- “may claimed to have made ma- OF strides in harnessing hydro- ’ 39“ Dower for'industrial pur- '.30Ses ‘They said they had achieved »-ontrolled thermonuclear fusion 01‘ one-millionth of a second at 3 temperature of about 1.000.000 V§g1‘ee_s centigrade, using a de- R99 _s1m11ar to that employed in ussia. Russia claims to have achieved wrmonuclear fusion at 1.000 000 9y had achieved fusion at much Jops Claim Moor Strides In Harnessing Hydrogen Power egrees. The United States and greater purity of the hydi gen - ‘ritain jointly announced Jan. 23 supply and a shorter circuit for ~greaIer temperatures and for a longer period. _ _ British scientists, using the doughnut - shaped machine Zeta, claimed to have reached fusion at 5,000,000 degrees centigrade Ifor a period of two-to five-tl1ou- Isands of a second. American sci- jentists claimed fusion for a much Ishorter time—a few millionths of a second—at 6,000,000 degrees. Professor Minoru Okada ‘of the Iosaka project said Saturda the ‘,Japanesc success may rave can Icaused by ln'lpl'O\7€l'IlCll‘S sun“ as ets “a payload could be sent to the moon this year.” The pay- load would include transmitters for sending data back to earth in flight and a spotter charge to mark impact. ’(But the defence department has so far issued no orders for the air force to under- take such a project.) HAVE “BIGGEST” MOTORS The air force expects to ‘test- fire “the largest solid propellent motors ever built in the next few days.” (Since the navy already has ground-tested the rockets for its solid fuel Polaris missile, the air force claims seem to be that its rocket engine will be more powerful.) This was cheening news for a people growing fearful that Rus- sia was far ahead in weapons and space technology. But the cheer was seasoned by a sobering thought: How many of these same things are Russia’s? A navy missile expert said the Polaris submarine, firing its mis- siles from beneath the sea, would possess “almost complete invul- nerability to countermeasures of all kinds.” But don’t the Russians, like the Americans, have improved ‘anti- submarine equipment V and tech- niques? “We must assume they do,” said the expert. J NEW SOVIET AIRLINERS MOSCOW (AP) ‘he new 220- passenger prop-jet TU-114 will,be included in a flock of planes added to Soviet airline service’ this year, Chief Air Marshal Paval Zhigarev announced Satur- day. He said “tens of TU-114s, 100-passenger IL-18s and 84-pas- senger AN-1C will join the domes- tic and international service, but he gave no breakdown on the numbers. German Liner HALIFAX liner Berlin, scheduled to arrive here Saturday with 230 passen- gers, said it will bypass this port and carry on to New York. The tion protested the change. Locak agents for "the ship said she was delayed by fog at Brem- erhaven, Germany, and was omit- ting the Halifax call to make up the Longshoremen’s Association, said that “if one firm can do it happen to this port’s business?” Last year the Halifax port com- mission protested what. it termed a growing tendency among ship- ping lines to carry Can passengers to New Yor Two Children Burn To Death BRANDON. Man. (CP) — Two children were burned to death Saturday when fire of undeter- mined origin destroyed a single- storey frame .ouse on the out- skirts of this city. The victims were ‘terry Webb. 20-}, and his sister, Diana, 17 months, only children of Mr. and (the electric current. l\/lrs. Samuel Webb. Bypcisses Halifax i (CP)—’The German I Halifax Longshoremen’s 'Associa- ‘ time. J. J. Campbell, president of “ sda-bound I" T Teen - Agers Are MIAMI BEACH, Fla. Three teen-agers accused! of a Waterbury, Conn., bani; robbery were nabbed in a pre-dawn raid on a motel Sunday by FBI ‘agents and police. A warrant charged the youths with holding up the bank last Thursday and escaping with $20,- 357. Offlicers said they found $16,000 in the room the trio oc- cupied. ‘ ' ice, identified’ the trio as: John George Wallace, maintenance worker; Mer-son F. Gule, 18, metal plate worker, and Michael A. Berardi, 18, a stock boy. ~ Two revolvers W€!fei’fOlfild.’“..El-‘ the youths’ possession, Williams said. The arrests followed seizure of John Sullivan, 14," in Connecticut where he admitted he helped rob the bank and implicated the others. -_ WOODED COUNTRY More than 50 per cent of Maui- .toba’s land area is forested. LONDON (Reuters)‘—The worst blizzards in 10 yeals hit Scotland Sunday. Sharp, w-i. try winds, canrying Arctic snow, hit other places in Europe, but in spots ;. slight thaw spelled dangers of avalanches a-nd floods. Many Scottish villages were cut off by the snow. "Falls of three feet with 10-foot drifts were reg- istered. . Farmers worked hard to free sheep trapped in drifts. Long lines of abandoned cars and trucks lined highways. Northern English coasts were lashed by 50 mile-an-hour g-ales. for convenience, others will feel they can do it 'too——and what will ' Held For Robbery (AP)—— John H. Williams, special agent in charge of the Miami FBI of- 19, a Damage Saturday’s sleet and wind storm which made travelling slippery in other parts of the province disrupted power lines and communications in Western Prince County. A weather report from the Radio Range station last night indicated that between 9 p.m. Saturday and 3 a.m. Sunday the wind blewvfairly steadily at forty miles per hour with gusts to fifty-five miles per hour. Reports from Alberton in- dicate there were intermittent power failures on Saturday even- ing followed by —a complete break in the power dines around 1 a.m. Sunday when two of the main power transmitter line glolis broke off near Rose- an . ‘A spokesman for the Man- time Electric Company said last night that there were eighteen poles down West of Elmsdale but the company hoped to have the service restored» to Tignish by midnight. . Power was restored to Al- berton and vicinity Sunday af- ternoon. > Telephone service’ was com- pletely disrupthed between 0*- Leary and Tignish, and there were dozens of breaks in the lines between those two centres. the Alberton report indicated. E. G. Cameron, plant super- intendent for the Island Tele- Storm Hits Ontario Too into parts of Ontario and Quebec during the weekend, slowing high- way traffic, blocking sideroads and disrupting a Canadian inter- national car rally. traffic accidents. ceeded at their own risk. day afternoon. Southwesterly winds in the westerly approazhes to the Eng- lish Channel drove ships to shel- ter. Four men and a woman died in a weekend snowstorm in Den- mark. The Danish blizzard was the most violent in years. Avalanche w a r n i n g s were broadcast in the Austrian prov- inces of IT :r Au ‘ '~, Salzburg and V-oralberg. This followed a thaw iiiroughout the country. Torrential ‘rain and melting snow set rivers f ding through- out France. "zine Zllagcss were isolated and some persons in Nancy were forced to evacuate their homes. States east o’ "ie Rocky Moun- TORONTO (CP)—-Snow swirled Police attributed drifting snow, poor visibility and slippery road conditions as the cause of minor ---:The - Ontario ~-department of highways in Toronto said Sunday provincial police were stopping motorists on Highway 400 be- tween Toronto and Barrie and warning them ,0 that they pro- Snow fell in Barrie all Saturday night and was still falling Sun- Sideroads » were blocked to six and seven feet deep. Police reported a rash of minor accidents‘ during the night. Severe Blizzard 2 Hits Scotland Freezing Rain Causes In West Prince phone company, said last night that although there were many line breaks there were no poles down on the main lines. He said they had one line connected to Alberton yesterday afternoon and hoped to have all the toll lines restored by Tuesday night. Mr. Cameron could not say what the situation might be on the local lines on back roads, al- though he did not believe the situation was serious. “I know”, he observed, “that CHICAGO (AP) — "“‘e coldest weather of the winter continued Sunday over most of the United tains. High, blustery winds added to its severity over the northeast- ern states. Below-zero weather continued over the midwest with the tem- perature dipping to 11 below zero at O'Hara airport on Chicago's northwest llringe and 10 below in Des Moines, Iowa. Heavy squalls unleashed new snow across the Great Lakes with the heaviest falls reported in western New York_ state. The strong winds combined with near zero tempmatures and’ heavy snows in parts of New York state south and east of Lake Ontario. covered northeast as the winds mounted to b .ts of more than 40 miles an hour. The weather bureau warned of blizzard-like intense storm centre in northern east. ranuzn 1,sz__F1.on1_pa__ for so ma-ny da; sia (Reuters) ——P-ri :e Minister Garfield Todd of Southern Rho- desia considered a “liberal” in racial matters is ousted Satur- day from the lrrdershi-p of his United Federal party. Sir E d gar Whitehead, repre- sentative of the Rhodesian Fed- eration in Washington, was elec- -ted in his place. Under ‘the S-out‘ rm Rhodesia constitution, Whitehead can be prime minister for three months without being elected to Parlia- ment. By the end of that period he must be elected at a general or byelect.-ion. 'I‘odd’s four cabinet ministers resigned last man se ing they no longer had confidence in his leadership. , . The party banned newspaper men at the congress, although Todd urged the_ be admitted. Todd, 49-year-old former mis- sionary, said he presumed he would carry on as prime minister until Whitehead returned from Washington. WINTER ‘SCENE AT SUMMER PLAYGROUND Not a solitary cake of ice from the roof of Dalvay-by-the- from the shoreline so_ popular mars the surface of the Gulf of Sea Thursday afternoon. Even with the summer visitor. The St. Lawrence in this View taken the usual board ice is absent residence of the Park Superla- Cold Wave Grips Much Of U.S. Deep drifts developed over large se ctlons of ill 2 snow- Maine continued to generate strong winds across the north- Rhodesian Premier ls Booted From Lecidersliip Of His Party SALISBURY, Souflhern Rhode- any disrupitison of service is V serious to those affected”. but’ he did not think there was an) disru1’I.ion that could not be repaired fairly quickly. Ralph Arsenault, line chief for the Canadian National Tele- graphs, said there were quite a few breaks in their lines in the western part of Prince but they had no report of poles be- ing down and were working with a view to getting their circuits restored as soon as possible. I North Atlantic states overnight and drove the temperatures down to sub-zeno levels in the Appalach- ians as f..: south as western Vir- ginia. Temper-atu-res dropped be- low freezing in northern Florida. However, the 40s were the rule over most of the southern half of Florida. Upstate N. Y. Hit 2 - ALBANY, N. Y. (AP)—Upstate New York was virtually para- lyzed Sunday night by wind- dr-iven snow that plugged high- ways with towering drifts and cut visibility practically to zero. The city of Syracuse declared a state of emergency. Officials said it was the worst storm there since 1950. ' The state counted at least seven deaths r e s u 1 t i n g from storm - connected accidents and heart attacks follow-ing ' shovelling since the snow started Friday. only flurries were reported in most areas Sunday. But the north to 56 miles an hour whipped up the deep cover of fine snow al- ready on the ground. Whitehead cabled“ his willing- ness _to serve if this would avoid a split in pan‘-ty r...iks. MOST PROSPEROUS STATE Southern Rhodesia is the most prosperous and advanced of the three territories comprising the vFederation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland. Liberals fear 'l)odd’s defeat will be interpreted as a step away from racial liberalism in Rho- desia and i hrghten African opposition to early constitutional changes. , EMBA‘ Y MEMBER JAILED HULL, Que. {CP)—Police said Saturday that a member of the Russi Embassy, Nikolai Nikitin, spent five hours in a Hull jail Th-ursd-ay night after his automo- bile was ‘ 'olved in a two-car col- lision here. Dr. “obert Bisson, who examined Mr. Nikitin at the request of pc‘i'2e, said he found the Russian “strongly impai-red." A report was sent to the external affairs department. ‘V Fire causing damage estimated tendent appears in the fore- ground. (See story and other . tht‘d'-‘.- The mu mpact of me com 0 nor wes win s with gusts up which has plagued the midwest hit the Mid and acke, about 20 miles from here. The victims were Alex Gillis, an overloader and a supply of T automobile tires and equipment. Break With TUNIS (AP)—Angry Tunisians Sunday called the French bomb- ing of a frontier town an act of war. An authoritative newspaper hinted at a break with the West. President Habib Bourguiba de- manded the French pull the last troops out of Tunisia and give up the vital NATO naval base at Bizerte. Tunisian officials said the hour- long bombing and strafing Sat- urday lnilled 78 persons and wounded 84 in the town of Sak-iet Sidi Youssef near the Algerian frontier. They earlier had put the death toll at 100. V A Swedish Red Cross official, who watched from the town’s out- skirts as the 25 French planes attacked, called it a “horrible sight.” He said dead and wounded were lying everywhere. The French said the attack was a local military incident aimed at wiping out a nest of Algerian rebels harassing French troops and planes from a Tunisian sanctuary. They insisted they had sent a warning in advance of the attack. ACT OF WAR The influential Tunisian news- paper L’Action, spokesman for Bourguiba’s ruling Neo - Destour party, accused the French of committing an act of war on their former North African colony. “The hard reality ‘teaches us every day that hanging onto the shirttails of the West brings us only insults and humiliation,” L’Action said. “One thing is clear: To be re- spected in 1958 one cannot re- main 3. friend of the West. To be treated with consideration and courtesy one has to be‘ a Nehru, Tito or Nasser.” The attack on the town of 2,000 Only Military _l'-‘ARIS (Reuters)-—G»en. Raoul Salan, commander of French .twe1>.s.in-- 'A1S°1’i“.».f'_T53“. Similar the Tunisian Lllage of Sakiet Sidi youssef, bombed by French planes Saturday, is “nine-tenths int-act.” In a report to the defence min- istry, Salan said aerial photo- graphs and reports from the pilots -shows" only military ob- jects had been hit. These in- cluded a gendarmerie building and a former French bam‘-acks “where the guns ‘.ich fired on our aircraft were located." suns CHARGE “ACTOF WAR" Frontie«r'Town Is Bomloed; West Hinted population stunned the nation. Bourguiba told his people in a radio broadcast Saturday night to remain calm. But he assured them the government would seek stern reprisals. He said his government would demand the immediate with- drawal of the 20,000 French n-isia gained its independence from France in 1955. INCLUDE NAVAL BASE Under the treaty of independ- ence the French have 20 years to withdraw all their forces from Tunisia, but even then may re- main in possession of the Med- iterranean base at Bizerte. Bour- guiba said the navy base would be included in the withdrawal de- mand. Tunisian national guard troops ‘took up posts around French Mil- itary areas here. French military vehicles were banned from all roads. A French source said telephone communications between French headquarters in Tunis and out- lying units were cut. ‘In Paris, the Tunisian ambas- sador to France, Mohammed Masmoudi, prepared to leave for home today. He was recalled by Bourguiba. ' In Washington, Ambassador at the United Nations in New York with Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjold. , BRITAIN, U.S. INVOLVED French-Tunisian relations have been deteriorating for several months. The United States and Britain became entangled in the feud late last year when the French objected to shipments of US. and British small arms to the“ Tunisians. Targets Hit French Commander Reports gun emplacement was destroyed. The village school was intact and the Pi10t§.-Tflimited no va- raid,’ he added. (Red Cross officials in the vil- lage during the raid said clearly marked Red Cross and Red Cres- cen-t trucks were destroyed by bombing.) Information from Algerian reb- els t a k e n prisoner confirmed there was a rebel camp in a mine at Sa1:i.~t Sidi Y ussef, Salan said, and 50 per c ‘ of .the “ii-ne and buildings and aims emplace- ments around it had been d Salan said 80 per cent of the NEW YORK (AP) — A Staten Island ferry with about 500 pas- sengers aboard collided Saturday night with a 12,238-ton British tanker in New York harbor. Two ferry passengers were in hospital. Police said 28 others were injured, none seriously. Ten were treated at Staten Island hos- pital and released. The ferry Dongan Hills collided with the Furness-Withy tanker Tynefield near the ferry’s Staten Island terminal ‘at St. George. The tanker, damaged at its port bow, anchored. No i n j u r ie s were reported aboard the 557-foot tanker which had left Bayonne, N.J., for a trip up the Hudson River. The ferry can carry 2,500 pas- sengers. Its crew of 13 was under DROWNED IN DITCH TRURO (CP) — Two people drowned Saturday night when their car plunged into a deed water-filled ditch near Stewi- 38, of nearby Brookfield and Marshall O'Connor, 41, of Truro. Two other passengers escaped EQUIPMENT BURNED SAINT JOHN‘ N.B. (CPy -- at $200,000 swept through the equipment deport of Fowler Transport and Paving Company Limited in nearby Simonds Par- ish ‘Saturday destroying eight dump trucks, two bulldozers, two private cars, a road grader. DROWNED AT SYDNEY SYDNEY (CP) -— Allan Mac- Donald, 65. drowned in the har- bor here Saturday when he slippccl. off a narrow plank be- tween a wharf and small coastal pictures on page 3.) steamer. The body was covered. !'€- stroyed. N.Y. ‘Ferry And Tanker Collide the command of Capt. Jeff Jean- ette. The trip from the Battery pier to the St. George terminal, to- ward which the ferry was bound, covers about five miles of the upper bay and takes the boats between the Statue of Liberty, Bedloe’s Island, and Governors Island. REVERSED ENGINES A spokesman for the marine and aviation department quoted the ferry captain as saying he or- dered the engines full the danger. This action reduced the severity of the collision, the spokesman said. He estimated damage to the ferry at $15,000. ' IN THE MARITIMES CRUSHED TO DEATH ST. STEPHEN, N.B. (CP) - Kenneth Mitchell. 28, of St. Stephen, Saturday was crushed to death beneath a transport truck which tumbled into‘a ditch on top of him after he had been . thrown clear of his car in a collision between the two vehi- cles. STORES CLOSE ST. JOHN’S Nfld. (CP) —. Major retail and wholesale stores remained closed Satur- day in compliance with a government closing law which became effective Feb. 1. At least 20 stores defied the law last Saturday. Thirteen have received summons. One case was deferred in court. DOG EXPERT DIES ILFORD, England (APT — T. Roger Boulton, 75, chairman of Cruft’s, the "firm that runs one of the world’s most famous dog shows, died Saturday. Boulton was one of Britaln‘s leading bull- dog breeders. troops who remained after Tu- _ Mongi Slim lined up a conference ‘ hiéfes. in -the village during the speed. §_ astern as soon as he recognized ‘