e TELEPHONE 8506 Buyer meets seller with Guardian Want Ads. . Dial 8506 -ask for classified ad taker, for quick results, : Che . “ VOL. LXXIJ NO. 33 BONN (Reuters)—John Foster Dulles left by air for home Sun- day after he:and the West Ger- Man government made it clear the Russians might win conces- sions on Germany by offering Some themselves. The United States secretary of state took, off for Washington shortly after Felix von Eckardt, chief West German government spokesman, dec! ared Dulles’ Bonn talks revolved around this “motto for the future: ‘No con- cessions without concessions in| teturn.” 3 Von Eckardt also announced that one. result of Dulles’ five- day round of German-problem meetings in London. Paris and Bonn was agreement by the four Western powers oa holding a Western foreign rmunisters’ con- ference at a time and place to be fixed later. The session, tu:herty widely ex- pected, would s.ape policy to- ward a possible East-West con- ference of foreign mmsters later this year. Specuiation puts the Western meeting in Paris in mid-March—well before the May 27 date set by Russia for handing ever its Berlin powers to Com- munist East Germany. SATISFACTORY TALKS Dulles told reporters at the air- port that his “highly satisfactory” talks Friday morning and Satur- day with Chancell>- Konrad Ad- enauer and others here ‘‘will help te assure that we shall be united end firm for our rights.” “That does not exclude being conciliatory,’ Duiles continued, “but it does exclude merely’ making concessions for which there is no counterpart.”’ “Excellent, excellent,” Aden- auer declared after Dulles’ state- ment was translated to him. AGREED ON CONCESSIONS Von Eckardt, at a press con- ference was asked whether there was Western agreement on con- Cessions in case Russia offered some. He replied: “A certain frame for calculated Meanwhile. an American | ,gaid Dulies probably report personally to Presi- dent Eisenhower today, on his =. Pressure © pull out their troops—as well as the entire Ger- fan question ant any future East-West talks. POSSIBLE MOVES With the Dulles tour over, ob- @ervers said, the following moves a@ppear likely: 1. The sending of Western re- plies in about a week to the pony note of Jan. 19 calling an East-West peace confer- ence on Germany; the replies are mot expected to contain counter- proposals but may say the West ‘Liner QE Will Dock At N.Y. LONDON (Reuters)—The liner Queen Elizabeth, diverted to Hal- ifax because of a“New York tug strike in progress when, it left Southampton on Wednesday, now Will go to New York after all. A Cunard spokesman said Sat- urday night that news of the end- ing of the New York strike had tome in time for the iiner’s cap- tain to change course from Hal- ffax to New York. The Queen Elizabeth will arrive fn New York Monday morning as originally scheduled, he added. |. Broadcasts beamed around the pdepartment statement released at Authorized as Secend Class Mail by the Post @ Department. Ottawa Dulles ' Would i Cons Sy is 5 sii for East-West talks. 2. The foreign —ministers’ ses-| 3. The 1 sion of the U.S., Britain, France|ing of NATO i. and West Germany—aeld to de- cide whether the West puts coun- ter-proposals to Russia in antici- pation of any Eas*-West meeting on Germany and European secut-| p ity, or merely asks for such ’ io conference ¥ meet | «ington in! April, providing * chance for more Western talxs 4. A four-power foreign min- isters’ conference with Russia, probably in May before the Berlin ajhand-over date. 7 Sick Man Is Taken Off Vessel Caught In Ice SYDNEY (CP)— Lawrence Roy, 20, of Liverpool, N.S., a crew-member of the pulp-carrier Vinland, was brought her Sunday night by the icebreaker Labrador after being stricken by appen- dicits Saturady while his ship was jammed in ice near the. Magdalen Islands in the Gulf of St. Law- rence. The Vinland radioed for a heli- More Religion Pa SS j —_ “— x . Cleuly With widely qunttered enoutiee- ries; winds 30 with gusts to 50 diminish- 3 ; 4 ing to North 20; low-high 12 below and 8. “§ Price Edward Island ‘Like The Dew” a es CANADA, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1959 12 PAGES wor NORE FIVE CENTS XS, '\aITETOwN, e ° copter from the United States air|! i force base at Stephenville, Nfld., to remove the sick man but weather kept the ‘coptér ground- ed. The transport department icebreaker Saurel _ plouched through heavy ice to reach the Vinland Saturday. Roy was taken aboard the Saurel and later transferred to the Labrador for the trip to hospital here. In Politics, Urged By Woman Senator OTTAWA (CP)—Senator Muriel Fergusson says there should be more religion in politics. “We Canadians have a preju- dice against mixing religion and } politics,” she told a meeting Sat- urday. “To me, this seems an ir- rational and unjustitied preju- dice.” Senator Fergusson, New Bruns- wick Liberal, addressed 100 Ap- glican _ University students at- tending a National Conference of Canterbury Clubs. Many Christians avoid politics because they are afraid they will be “contaminated” by the con- flicts and compromises so often .demanded in political life, she said. But they still were “‘really responsible” for the act of polit- MoscowKeepsRussians ical officials. WE ARE TO BLAME society of which we are a part behaves in am immoral fashion,” Senator Fergusson said. “Upon every Christian there rests the obligation to see. so far as he can, that the government which is his legal arm acts in a way that is consistent with his own personal mora! duty.” Christians have a religious @b- ligation to clothe the naked, feed the hungry and shelter the home- less, she added. “That obligation has not been changed because the power to do these things has been delegated .by us to officials, elected or other- wise.” In Dark Over Charges MOSCOW (AP) — Neither the Soviet press nor domestic broad- casts Sunday told the Russian people about Moscow Radio’s de- nunciation of U.S. tape record- ings of conversations among So- viet fighter pilots who allegedly shot down an American plane. {world in several languages Satur- day charged that the tapes, made public by the U.S. state depart- ment Thursday, were a fake. The recordings and the state the same time have not been mentioned here in the press or domestic broadcasts. . The purport of the state depart- ment statement was that an un- armed American transport with 17 airmen aboard was deliberat- ely shot down on Sept. 2 when it strayed over the Turkish border DWELLING DESTROYED TRACADIE, N.B. (CP)—A fire at nearby Neguac, destroyed a two-storey house Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Alyre Savoie and their three children escaped without injury. Damage is estimated at $8,000, partially covered by in- surance. The fire is believed to have been caused by overheated stoves or stove pipe. BAN H"1iLA HOOPING BANDUNG, Indonesia ‘AP)— Police have banned hula hooping in Bandung on the ground it “awakens sensuality.” Wealthy Canadian Finances Vacation For Billy Graham MIAMI BEACH,F la. ‘AP)— The Canadian who is financing Billy Graham's vacation in Ha- waii made a million dollars be- fore he was 30 and says he then learned from the evangelist that: he was on the wrong track. Charles A. Pitts, Toronto multi- millionaire, talked reluctantly Saturday about his gift to'Gra- ham. “I'm.sorry about getting this publicity,” he said at his winter heme here. ‘I didn’t want any.” Graham, who went to Hawaii on his physician's orders after he was found to be suffering from an eye ailment, revealed that he had accepted Pitts’ offer to pay’ for the trip. VOID IN MY LIFE “T was al the peak of my ca. reer when I met Graham,” Pitts said. “I had three homes, cars, Boats. But there was a void in my life.” In October, 1%, while Graham was preaching in Toronto, Pitts listened to 10 of his sermons, “then gave myself to Jesus.” “I stopped .cursing, drinking, gambling and smoking three packs of cigarets a day,” he said. “My life changed. Since then, I have spent 60 per cent more time with my family. TOO MUCH MATERIALISM “The way of life of too many people today involves working for the material things in life and| Come forgetting other, more important values. Now I am interested in the time when I'll be living in eternity.” Pitts, who is about 40 but de clines to tell his age, is a mem- ber of ‘the board of directors of the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association. Pitts is head of the firm of C. A. Pitts, general contractors in into Soviet Armenia. QUOTES PILOTS The tape recording quoted the conversation of four Soviet fight- ers as they shot down the C-130 transport in response to an order to “attack.” The state department Saturday night said it was shocked that Russia would compound previous denials with a “new and trans- parent one.” TGR Bey PM RE > r ~. WING oe. and part of Toronto, - ‘crasued Americaa Airlines plane - “We are the culprits when the Delegates to the World Univer- sity Service St. Dunstan's University were feted to a banquet Saturday at the Charlottetown Hotel sponsor- held Friday through Sunday at) WUSC DELEGATES ARE FETED ed by the City of Charlottetown. and- Prince: of Wales College. | theson, Mayor Edwin C. John- Canada sessions} The WUSC conference was joint-} stone, Rt. Rev. John A. Sullivan ly sponsored by St. Dunstan’s|and Dr. Frank MacKinnon. Among those attending were, Heard in brief remarks at the) left to right, Mrs. Edwin C. | banquet were Premier A.W.:Ma-' Johnstone, Miss Patricia Robin- son, assistant secretary of the national office of the WUSC of Toronto; Olga Dowling, Charlotte- town, Catherine Bolger, Hope River, and Irene Gaudet, St. Louis. U.K. Election May Be Delayed Until The Fall (Reuters: LONDON _ Prime Minister Macmillaa’s forthcom predictions that a general elec- tion will be held in the spring. Observers now think that Mac- millan, anxious not to appear to be making political capital out of his trip this month, will hold off the elections until They said it would be damag- ing to the prestige of the govern- ment if the prime minister's trip was presented to the voters as\a blatant electioneewAg man- oeuvre. Government. supporters reported Macmillan will avoid handing his political opponents this kind of campaign ammuni- tion or giving Soviet leaders the impression he is on\a vote-catch- ing junket. ig hes ed aboard barge in Ea "| sliver, ing trip to Russia has shaken! the fall.| Russia Will Build 78 By A. I. GOLDBERG . MOSCOW ‘AP) — The Soviet Union agreed Sunday to heip Communist China further along the road to industrialization by! al |building 78 major industrial | plants in China at a cost of bil- lions of rubles. Premier Khrushchev signed the new economic pact with Pre- mier Chou En - lai, who had stayed over after the close of the Soviet Communist party congress Thursday. The official Tass agency said Saturday the Soviet Union will send equipment, technicians, ma- terial es . “et ~ s \ +. t Po ot std oki. sae, ad ae $ (AP Wirephete) and other aid" to build) New Plants In China chemical, coal, oil, metallurgical and electrical power plants. Communist China will pay for the aid “by delivering to the U. S. S. R. goods on conditions already determined in the exist- ing Soviet - Chinese trade agree- “The total cost of Soviet equip- , Soviet work on designing of technical aid some 5,000,000.- 000 rubles,”” the agency added. (That would be about $1,250,000,- 000 at the Soviet rate of four rubles to the dollar in foreign dealings.) All this aid is in addition to help for industrialization pre- viously extended to China by the Soviet Union. The new agreement is an ex- tension of a series of pacts en- _| tered into by the two powers al- most from the day the Chinese Communists drove Chiang Kai-| ' the shek’s Nationalists from mainiand in 1949. The Soviet Union firs! under- took to help restore the indus- trial complex the Japanese built in Manchuria and which the Rus- sians dismantled and hauled away at the end of the war. ; The Soviet Union then under- took to build industry for China's first five-year plan. By 1953 Peip- ing was forced to cut back its ambitious plant - building pro gram, apparently because make promised equipment deliv- eries. Despite a new agreement that year for delivery of more Soviet equipment for heavy industry, by 1954 China was reported com- plaining again that the Soviet Union had failed on tool and ma- ee commitments. the; Russians did not or could not) Wild Bill Donovan ‘Dies At 76 Gen. William J. (Wild Bill) Dono- van, 76, lawyer-soldierdiplomat and wartime director of the Of. fice of Strategic Services, diéd Sunday in Walter Reed Army Hospital. Donovan suffered a cerebral hemorrhage in April, 1957, and later underwent treatment for arterio-sclerosis. He had been in hospital since. Donovan, who commanded ‘the Fighting 69th regiment of the Rainbow Division in ‘the irst World War, gained, the nickname of “Wild Bill” for the exacting methods of training he used and the aggressive example he set for his men. : His greatest fame came during the Second World War as chief of the OSS, the secret intelligence organization that conducted dar- ing oprations behind enemy lines. Greeks, Turks Agree on Cyprus ZURICH. Switzerland (AP) — Greece and Turkey have agreed in principle that the British col- ony of Cyprus become an inde- pendent republic, it was reliably reported Sunday night. Greek Premier Constantine Karamanlis and Turkish Premier Adnan Menderes started negot- iations on Cyprus here Friday. Conferencé sources said the two “premiers: argeed on the outline | Of a constitution for Cyprus that | will safeguard the rights of east- ern Mediterranean island’s Turk- |ish minority. Some major points remain to be agreed upon, however. The British government is ex- pected to accept whatever solu- tion is proposed jointly by Greece and Turkey. ‘| Some were only partially dressed. WASHINGTON (‘AP) — Maj. | -\Non-Strikers Into Near-Ze By ROCKY SCHULSTAD Canadian Press Correspondent GRAND FALLS, Nfid. (CP)—It is expected charges will be laid today against at least 79 strik- ing International Woodworkers of America (CLC) loggers who al- legedly drove 51 non - striking woodsmen out of two camps in a below-zero. blizzard Saturday. The men were turned out of | camps in the nearby Sandy Lake area in central Newfoundland about 275 miles northwest of St. John’s. They had to walk between 10; and 15 miles through the storm to the nearest shelter. Ht is believed the men went. to PRR rete a. hea NRT RET Are Driven ro Blizzard rested men were marched 10 miles. to jail here by RCMP. Eleven were being held in the © town jail and the remainder im the armouries under RCMP guard. This correspondent, who watched the marchers énter the town, saw evidence of -frost bite on many. Even some of the | RCMP officers had white spots on their faces, indicating frost bite, The temperature Saturday was around zero. Snow was whipped by wind gusting to 3 miles an hou. Wives of the striking loggers left their picket line posts Sun day to provide the men with hot meals. Women and children had A company spokesman said a) group of more than 100 striking! loggers broke into Burt Mat-| thew'’s camp, smashed every win-! dow in the bunk hocse and made. @ shambles of the camp. Twenty- five non-strikers were forced to vacate. An hour later the’ loggers) reached Bob Budgell’s camp in the same area. They gave the 43 men there 10 minutes to get out. Seventeen refused to move under any circumstances. MOUNTIES ARRIVE The loggers moved off as 4 RCMP officers moved into the area from Grand Falls. Some of the Mounties rode in two snow- mobiles, but most .waiked. About 104 men were arrested, RCMP Imspector Arthur Argent eaid Sunday. However, it turned Se cdas ie eiinee, aeeek ok taken over on the picket line when the men were arrested. SAYS UNION HELPLESS IWA spokesman Hank Skinner said here Sunday the union does not approve of the loggers’ raids on woods camps “but there is nothing we can do to stop it.” He said picket lines were so far- flung it was impossible for of- ficials to patrol them effectively. The strike started Dec. 31 when 1,200 lovgers left their jobs to back demands for a five-cent hourly increase in the basic rate of $1.05 and a six-hour reduction in the 60-hour work week with. out loss of pay. The demands would bring the basic hourly rate to $1.22. Before Saturday's raids about S® strikers had been arrested on a variety of charges. Thirteen were released because of insuf- ficient evidence, several. wete fined and two received short r others were ee By FRANCIS STILLEY NEW YORK (AP) Little Bobby Sullivan was given the sad news Saturday and it was a heart- breaking ordeal] for everyone at the hospital. Three uncles from Chicago told the eight-year-old lad that his! mother, father and two sisters| had been killed in Tuesday night’s airplane crash here. Bobby, stunned into disbelief first, broke down and wept piti- fully. Tears also streamed down the faces of the uncles. BUT I SAW MOMMY “But I saw mommy down- stairs,’ the boy cried out over and over again. ‘‘She’s not dead." Bobby begged his uncles to say that it wasn't really so. “She was downstairs but she died after you saw her,”’ said one of the uncles. Don Murphy. . The uncles had flown here upon} learning of the crash of an Ameri- can Airlines plane in which 65 of the 73 aboard perished. \Bobby and his family were returning from a trip to Chicago. Bobby was sifting next to his mother, who was expecting an- other child in three months.! Nearby were his father, Joseph, and sisters, Patricia 13, and Joan, | TRIED TO HELP SON The boy told rescuers a plucked him out of the East} River that his mother tried to) support him in the water after | the plane hit and burst apart. But, he said, ‘“‘we couldn’t stay up. I tried to hold my breath. I I‘Crash Boats’ Might Have Saved More From Airliner NEW YORK ‘AP)--It was a chill, foggy night, with icy rain turning to slush after it hit the ground. Ar airliner headed for the runway ‘at busy La Guardia airport, coming in on-an instru- ment approach. Suddenly the plane ploughed into the water, short of the run- way. It came apart, throwing some of its passengers into the freezing water, trapping others still strapped in their seats. | UNNECESSARY DEATH? The cause is unknown, and it may take weeks to learn why the plane didn't reach the field. In- vestiga‘ovs hove that the cc - ‘ot ant fE“r enc neces among ‘he & te su. vived. wil] be le ue.) aye Sixty-five died’in the Ameri- ean Airlines Lockheed Electra Tuesday night, and the question uppermost today is how many might have been saved had crash boats been available to speed in- stantly into the East River. Normally there might have been more boats in the river. But there was a strike of New York tugboat operators. A passing tug coming in from Connecticut picked up nine survivors, one of whom died in a hospital. The tug chanced upon the spot when split seconds meant life or death. From the shattered fuselage, survivors cired for help. In min- utes. 23 coast guard, police and fire boats strained through the fog and rain. But a police lav och, arriving three minuies after the no ~- ’ _——~ alert from the nearest post. was too late. ASK BETTER EQUIPMENT Leaders of the United States Air Line Pilots Association plan to discuss again at an interna- tional meeting in Helsinki. next month a resolution drawn up: at last year’s meeting. It advocated adequate fire-fighting and search- and-rescue facilities at all major civilian flying centres. “We haven't been very success- ful in implementing it because airport operators say it’s a heavy expense to have: crash boats standing by.”’ said Capt. Charles C. Spencer, an ALPA vice-pres- ident. “It's possible we'll get a more sympathetic ear from operators prison terms. Cases of the others . . The ar-! are pending. Little Boy Is Heartbroken As Learns All Family Dead__ was cold. My arms felt ene The crew of a tugboat found Bobby in time, but his .mother had been too seriously injured te survive. She died not long after the rescue. Trio Is Held In Million Dollar Theft MONTREAL (CP) — Montreal police are holding three men in connection with the theft last weekend of an estimated $1,000- 000 in cash and securities from the Premier Trust Company m St. Catharines, Ont. A police escort is on its way from Ontarie. police said, and the men would be handed over as soon as it arrived. The escort is bringing warrants for the men’s arrest. The men Were detained follow- ing a number of raids carried out by Montreal police working with police officers from Ontario. Stock shares ‘‘worth $10,000 at = outside’’ were also recovered. Bomb lest an Talks Near End By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER WASHINGTON (AP) — Russia and the Western powers appear close to the. break-off point Sun- day in their .negotiations for am agreement banning tests of nu clear weapons. | statement issued by the So- viet foreign ministry and broad- cast by Moscow Radio Saturday was regarded here as a move to put blame for the threatened collapse on the United States. The Moscow statement said that Washington's attitude on the issue_makes it impossible to con- clude an agreement.” For its part tne United States has told Russia it will be im- possible to negotiate an agree- ment if the «Russians insist on @ aeto voting system to control the proposed inspection teams that would enforce a test baa.