TELEPHONE 8506 Buyer meets seller Ads. PAGES / \. ' a field near For- I'lss’s capital city of Taipei as Mist' gun crews set up In I chord weapon nearby dur— reesed yesterday by Wanner of a branch» office W , here by a large To brokerage house. lit. Leo. P. Maelsaac, with sev» years of marketing expen- .l-~ behind him, said that the w he represents had marketed lane proportion of last year’s Island crop, and were their predictions of coming -I »; condiu‘ons on a variety factors, the plac'e, he said. an m survey he had con- .last week showed that blight had already made huge in many attrith that marketing experts the marketable crop would be. reduced at one-third appearedtobethesolo Dial 8506 ask for taker, for quick results. AnfllmfleduSecondClauuau ing the. current Chinese crisis. The island stronghold of Chiang Kai-slick is the seat of stepped up - - mt seriously affected. he with Guardian Want classified ad “I Department. only. ' M 0"“ military m'eparatlons following ,«Ees Hope ForStronger otato Market Inlall: [ Thong; blight we not a pre- . . It .flw . up a smaller e, than was ex- ggcted earlier, Mn MacIsase not- Also, he said, early crops in On- tarlo and Quebec were cleaning up well, which was not the it:qu tion at the beglnm'ng of the mar- keting season last year. All these factors were contribut- ing to the grode of s new mar- keting approach, Mr. Mach declared, Whereas inquiries lead- ing to pln'chases forfutnre do- livery were lacking earlier, sever- al such hadbeen received by him in the last few days. This type of demand indicates that the trade is quite conscious of the developing situation he asserted. While admitting that the Am- erican crop estimate k consider- ably him this year,, Mr. Mac- Isaac declared that this situation was somewhat by the ,_ WAR AN PEAE 0N FORMOSA’ the continued Red China artillery attacks on the nationalist-held scheduled to leave the Newfound- offshore islands of Quemoy and Matsu. (AP Wirephoto) Carson Will Begin Dain ' Service _Oct..5 MONCTOIN (Cm—The multi- million dollar ferry William Car- son will begin daily round-trip service North Sydney N. 8., Port Aux Basques, a _ figure - as V.‘ I , general manager of the Canadian Na- tional Rallways’ Atlantic Region, said the first scheduled trip by the Carson is set for 1:30 am. AST. Oct. 5, from North Sydney. She will be due at Port aux Basques at 8 am. AM. She is land port at 1:30 pm. AST the same day. I Mr. Gender said sailings will coneide with time tables of GNIR trains between St. John’s, Nlfld., and the points of Truro, Halifax, Charlottetown, MJoncton, Saint John, Boston and Montreal. MAKE TEST RUNS ‘ Since Aug. as the 8,300-totn ves- sel has been shuttling back and mu across Cabot Strait in a se- ries of test runs. The vessel can accommodate (Wonpeh2c01.8) _ rNJ. (AP) — A ‘Wn. ripping through and an automatic on open draw- “: and plmrged 50 Newark Bay. Ahmad estimated 40 per- beneauasleetorwater. 3‘ eat 33 persons were‘lo- ln the disaster. ‘ and believed among the was George (Snuffy) Slim» fill former second baseman of, New‘ York Yankees. The children, he is said have, scrambled aboard the Central train just as it 'W'Of Red Bank en route in? connections with New «a? passenger coaches that , trestle to vanish into the Waters of the bay. Until it I" I'llised, be death toll re- w,memln. ‘ r “be Operations were ex— to take hours, maybe days. “divers. navy underwater . . 8t! and surface rescuers ~ . a! foot as they could in it, wit. restless tides to pen- afigw inky depths and recover . 4, was no immediate ex- t" gallon for the crash of the five- ensey Central train which ‘i .ed about 100 passengers. Rail mals said warning lights fes- ‘ml‘fi Ihefi‘PDroaches to the open “flge. An automatic derail- “ gtvlce clutched at the hurtl— ' ,‘ lggsagfitw‘rentchcd it offi its I - ‘ ue rain rlppe on - the naked ties until it hit reacherous bridge gap. ‘uvaron BRIDGE 43.. railway estimated lw at 30 mph. One M“ r Claimed it was going as fast "no I 3. died. most of them were at tile victims were in one- 3N SKIij l-Nro woes Die In Rail * The dulaw‘bridge—dactunlly it op- erates on an elevator principle rather than unfolding—had been opened to let a dredge through. “As we approached the draw- bridge, the brakes went on and I heard a loud rumble,” said one of the train pasaengers, George Barry, 32, a railway employee. He dictum an open window, sm'faoed-/ m the ‘0in water and .was one of the first survivors ashore. Two lead diesels of the train went to the bottom of the bay dragging the first two coaches with them. The first coach was an empty—“deadhead” in rail- way language. The second car- ried passengers. The third passenger car teetered half in and half out of the Water for 2% hours, before it, too, vanished into the depths. The other two cars of the train By SAUL PETT ELIZABETH, N. J. (AP)——lt began as Monday mornings us- ually begin for commuters— wistfully. A lovely weekend. one of the last of the dying summer, had just ended. Alon-g the Jersey Central Railroad, brokers, ex- ! ecutives, Wall Street men and others were returning to work with the usual reluctance from the ocean resort spots of north- ern New Jersey. I Men scurried out, of station wagons. as they had done for years, hurriedly kissed thelr wives. grabbed a morning pa- per and boarded train No. 3314. The stops ticked off Point Pleasant, 8:32 a. m, . . . Sea Glrt, 8:38 . . . Spring Lake, 8141 . . Red Bank, 9:16, 246 passengers and p0 automo- biles. . ‘ jolted to a stop and remained on the bridge. For many of the 100 passengers aboard the train, theirs was a splitusecond transition from tor- por to terror and tragedy. One moment they swayed in languor to the forward rocking of the train. The list they were jolted out of their seats into the water. ‘All of a sudden the brakes went on and went, topsyluryy,” saida survivor, El. wood E. De Hart, '72. N0 TIME FOR PANIC There was no panic~appa~rently there wasn’t time for it. Many of the survivors were at a loss to explain how they got out of the coaches and to the surface of the water. “I "could see people all around me coming to the surface,” said The Morning Began As Usual Lloyd Nelson of Little Silver, NJ. Land struggled with his con.- science It was such a nice Lay he was tempted to take it off. His conscience won and Land climbed aboard No. 3314. At Red Bank, Mrs. Lloyd F. Wilburn, whose husband was the engineer of No. 3314, list- ened as the train went through town —.— as she has done for years. In two years her 63' year-old hquand would retire. The train pulled into Eliza- bethport. Now it had only 16 minutes to go to Jersey City, the end of the line, where pas- sengers normally take ferries to downtown Manhattan. No. 3314 pulled out of Eliza- bethtport on time, 9157. Next stop: Bayonne, 10:03. The train At Red Bank, broker Paul I waters of'Newark Bay. never made Bayonne. At 10:02, it fell firm an open t‘:'au"::':‘ 2 1. 3 ti 3 dark, 0in at The Mastodon “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1958 _ l E h I By ALAN HARVEY Canadian Press Staff Writer MONTREAL (CP) -— The new Commonwealth looked beseech- ingly to the old Monday at the formal opening of two weeks of intensive trade talks. Kindergarten nations, repre- senting the cocoa farmers of Ghana and the rubber planters of Malaya, dwelt on the pres-Eng need for development capital as v the big Conmlonwealth trade and economic conference held its first plenary session. , Joined by India and‘ Pakistan and colonies like Sierra Leone and Tanganyika, they ‘ coupled their capital demands with nerv- ous reminders of the sharp ef- fects a North American recession has upon producers of, primary products. Finance Minister Mac- Intyre representing the Federa- tion of Rhodesia and Nyasaland, said the prwent “phase” in in— dustrial growth has gravely af- fected Commonwealth countries whose standards of living hinge on raw material exports. LESS PESSIMISTIC Minister Fleming of Canada, playing a key role as conference chairman, was less pessimistic about world trading conditions and‘thus perhaps urn- consciously emphasised the differ- ence of approach among ad- vanced and underdeveloped coun- tries. ,/ Mr. Fleming said “we find our- sgrlve‘é in"! period of economic . . . . m4...“ . J (In an earlier, be ex- pressed general optimism that the Canadian economy is show- ing gradual improwemeut. Newcomers The Need For Capital Sixteen statements were read at the first public session, held in the basswood-panelled and pine- beamed convention hall of the Queen Elizabeth Hotel. Sliding doors opened to allow newspaper men to view the proceedings, their last look until the confer- ence ends Sept. 26. At a closed afternoon session a committee under Britain’s Sir John Coulson was set up to study the European free trade area. Derick Heathcoat Amory, Brit- ain’s treasury chief and head of the UK. delegation, restated his country's position on conventin- i-ty, saying that this remains the objective but that Britain must decide the pace at which it moves toward that goal. Thirty-two delegates,- represent- ing 660,000,000 people in 1-1 inde- pendent nations and six colonial dependencies sat around a green baize table to hear the opening address of Welcome by Mr. Flem- after which delegates spoke in turn. A remarkable harmony of ‘. Eews was displayed, causing Mr. Fleming to remark afterwards to a reporter that he was “very pleased" with the general tone of the speeches. ’ BITING ATTACK There was only one jarring note. This came when Finance Minister A. H. Nordmeyer of New Zealand, a gentle—looking man, loosed a shaft at “certain”, Oom- monwea‘lth countries ; for unfair ~pmtectioni “Agricultln-al protect has severely damaged New'Zealand,” said Mr. Nordmeyor.~: “Ithas de- prived New Zealand'df many mil- ] Woman, 3‘Men Nominate For Two Federal Byelecfions' l OTTAWA (OP) — One woman and three men were nominated Monday for Sept. 29 House of Commons byelections. The woman was Progressive Conservative J can Casselman, seeking the Grenville - Dundas (Ont) constituency vacated by the May 11 death of her husband, A. Clair Casselnlan. She would be the second woman member of the Commons, joining Mrs. Ellen Fairclough, minister of immigration and citizenship. liisasler . It was the worst Jersey. rail dis- aster since a. 1951 plunge of a Pennsylvania Railroad train from a trestle at Woodbrid-ge took 86 lives. One of Monday's survivors, by coincidence, survived that tragedy also. He was G. H. Plan- itz of Fair Haven, N.J. . The train, No.. 3314, pulled out of Bay Head, a North Jersey shore resort, at 8:28 a.m., head- ing for Jersey City. There com- muters to New York board re - lies to cross the Hudson River. The height of the morning rush hour was past, or else the train might have carried a heavier hu- man cargo. HEADS FOR BAYONNE , The train moved routinely out of Elimbethpont, N.J., at 9:57 am. toward its heart stop, Bay- onne, just six nnnutes away over the 1% - mile - long bridge that spans Newamk Bay in the area. it came rattling onto the bridge toward the 216-foot drawbridge, a minute away from its next stop. A tramp ship moved lazily across the silvery surface of the bay. The dredge, which 3had cleared the dra‘wlbridge moments before, was not visible to the eyes of the passengers in the train. The draw- bridge had started to come down. As it moved toward alignment with the bed of the blid-ge, its huge cement counterweights be- gan moving up. Thus the path of the train was unimpeded by the barrier of cement that blocked the tracks when the bridge was wide open. The engineer, Lloyd Wilburn of Red Bank, NJ, sensed or saw his predicament at the last min- ute, slamming on his brakes when it was too late. But his side of the story must go untold—«his body was found floating a. quarter mile from the disaster scene, his mstorman’s gloves still on his hands. ' The constituency she is after has been rock-bound Conservative for generations. » The personabale and photogenic Mrs. Casselman will be opposed by Mark Salmon, Liberal, mayor of Prescott. In the other byelection—Que— bec’s Montmagnyl’lslet—the op- ponents will be Louis Fortin, Pro- gressive Conservative, and Ber- nardin Bla-nchet, Liberal. They are contesting a seat opened by the resignation of Jean Lesage from the Commons to be- come“ Quebec provincial Liberal leader. Mr. Lesage is the former minister of northern affairs and national resources. MONTREAL —- G. s. Vcnkata- char, India’s newly appointed high commissioner to Ottawa, ar- lions of pounds which she re- quires to buy her imports. “It has hurt—and it will hurt more severely still—those coun- tries which supply those im- ports.” I The criticism was aimed di- rectly at Canada, which bars cheap New Zealand butter, cheese and dried milk powder to protect price - supported domestic mar- kets. _ _ Mr. Nordmeyer's statement im- plied possible retaliatory action by New Zealand through import controls. About one-quarter of the country’s income is derived from dairy products. Mr. Fleming, asked for com- ment, said such statements are "bound" to arise at Common- wealth conferences. 'The subject is expected to be threshed out in bilateral talks. U.S. Jets TAIPEI, Formosa (Tuesday) (AP) —- The United States bol- stered its air strength on For- mosa Monday with a nuclear air- strike force and a contingent of F-104 Starfighter jets. .. At the same time, Nationalist ‘cango planes catm‘ed out another Supply dfl'ofitlbilittle Quemoy. It whs the second in two days. All- other ship convoy was reported assembling in the Pescadores for a trip to Big Quemoy, the Nation alist garrison cut off by a Red artillery blockade. ' The US. air strlkeforce arriv- ing here is similar to the one seat to the Middle East in JU'IYJ Some- Norwegion Paper Hits At Dulles STAVAIN‘GIEIR, Norway (AP) -- The influential Norwegian pro- vincial newspaper Stavanger Af- tenblad asserted Monday the world needs a new American for- eign secretary. The rural paper said editori- word in this matter because the ica’s allies, must be allowed a ally that Norway, as one of Amer- Formosa question concerns the whole world. . ‘ “We are allied to the United States, but not to John Foster Dulles," it said. ’ NEW HIGH COMMISSIONER FROM INDIA (Montreal, where he is attending1 the Commonwealth Trade and! Economic Congress. Left to right‘ I 1 Judge Halts Walkoui‘ On Boston, Maine BOSTON (AP) — A federal judge’s temporary restraining or- der Monday apparently ended a walkout by some 900 Boston and Maine freight employees. Movement of freight throughout the line's New England system halted as the Brotherhood of Rail- road Trainmen instructed mem- bers not to report for work. The union charged cabooses on freights were unsafe and un- healthy. The company denied the charge. The walkout was ordered stopped when Judge 'h'lllriarln T. McCarthy issued his restraining order on application of the rail- way which also seeks $1,000,000 damages from the union. nonnson LEAVES aussm IDINDON (AP) — Singer Paul Robeson left the Soviet Union Monday by TU-lotsjetliner bound for London after more than a FormOsa' month of touring the Soviet Union. Boos’r _ s Might times referred-to as a “small war deterren ." it includes, F-loo Supersabre jets, RIB-66 destroy- ers, RF-lOl Voodoo reconnais- sance planes, C-130 Hercules tur- boprop car-go planes and KiB-50J tankers. The force left the West ,of, the United, States Aug. The number of Starfighters, holders of the world’s speed and altitude records, arriving here was not disclosed. Fundy Tides Stop Troll-lie AULAC, NB. (CH-(Rail traffic was resumed here late Monday a few hours after high Bay of Fundy tides washed out a section of the CINR’s Truro-Iltdloncton main line. Three passenger trains were delayed by the washout at this tiny ‘wnnnunity four miles east of Sackville, NE. on the Nova Scotia - New Brunswick border. High mid-day tides broke through a dyke and flooded a short sec- “.on of the roadbed. The CNIR said ill-attic was re- sumed about 6 pm. Am. The Montreal - bound Ocean Limited and Section and the east-bound Ocean Limited were hid up. char. the High Commissioner. and his daughter Bharatl. (0? Wire- lrivcd with his lamily by ship in, are his son Arun, Mrs. Venk‘ata- photo.) Ambassadors of the United States WEATHER Variable cloudiness; warm; south-west winds 20. Low-high at_Charlottetown 55 and 75. NOT MORE THAN Formosa Casts ShadoW 5 UN Assemny Meets Io Commonwealth ‘ Middle By LLOYD McDONALD Canadian Press Staff Writer UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (CP) The 13th General Assembly of the United Nations convenes Tuesday under the shadow of the crisis in the Far East. While there was no solid indica- tion on the eve of the meeting on just what specific grounds the Formosa-Quemoy problem will be thrown into the world forum, the question of Nationalist verSus Communist China is expected to to last until mid-December. ' The problem could arise at the very~outset with a renewed de mand by the Soviet bloc for the seating of Peiping’s representa‘ tives in the UN and the ouster of the Nationalist delegation which holds one of the five big - power seats in the security council. But this expected demand is not re- garded as likely to upset the pat- tern of previous years when the assembly repeatedly turned it down; ' What is understood to be worry- in.‘ the United States particularly l- the attitude of the middle pow- ers — including Canada — should he actual Quemoy situation be gushed by Russia in the assem— 1y. SMITH TAKES SEAT External Affairs Minister arrives from“ Ottawa Tuesday morning to take over Canada's seat at the afternoon assembly opening. JHe is expected to speak provide major contention from ' t the outset of the session expected FIVE CENTS Powers Worry The US. in the opening debate at an early stage. The external affairs minister told Parliament in Ottawa shortly after the Quemoy shooting re- sumed that Canada had no com- mitment to assist the US. there l* the event of it direct outbreak, and Britain has given much the some indication. The Russians have given no specific advance notice of what Foreign Minister Gromyko plans to put before the assembly. State Secretary Dulles is ex- pected to outline American policy to the assembly on Thursday, but again t e has been no indica- tion whether he will merely de< tend the U.S. position or call on the assembly to condemn the Red Chinese shooting war against Quemoy. PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION Another matter of concern to the US. is the election during Tuesday’s opening session of the assembly president to succeed Sir Leslie Munro of New Zea-land whose term expires with the offi- cial end of the 12th assembly. Last September Sir Leslie’s Section was unanimous in the as- semtbiy’s secret ballot after For- eign Minister Charles Malik of Lebanon had stepped down in fa- vor of the Commonwealth candi- date, and at that time it was as- sumed that Malik, as s represent- ative of the Arab world, would not be opposed shalld he stand fof president of the 19th assem‘ bly. WARSA' ‘W, (Renters)— andCommunistChlnatalkedi-n sectotfor two hem-sandme ates Monday in an attempt to Strait. Neither the American sador to Poland, Jacob Beam, nor Chinese Ambassador Wang fing- nan would make any comment afterward. Beam said simply: “The next meeting will be on Thursday, Sept. 18, at 10 o’clock.” There was no indication that either side has modified its basic position of the same dead end that led to a breakdown of ambassa- dor-ial talks in Geneva last De- cember. ‘Seventythree sessions, starting in 156, were held be- tween Wang and then American ease the coral' ‘s'in the Formosan ‘ ambassador to Czechoslovakia. U. Alexis Johnson.‘ VATIJCAN CITY (AP) — Pope Pius XII, in a broad outline of the Roman Catholic Ohumh‘s stand on the subjects,nsays arti- ficial ’ insemination to produce childbirth or sterilization directly to prevent it are not moral. The 82 - year - old pontiff ad- dressed an international congress of hematologists, or blood spe- cialists, Friday at his Castel Gan- dolfo summer residence. The text of his address, part of it replies to direct questions asked by the doctors, was released Monday by the Vatican press office. The pontiff recalled that as long ago as Sept. 29, 1949, when he addressed Catholic doctors, he spoke against artificial W ' a- tlon for married couples. NOT AMONG RIGHTS “This practice.” he said, “a not included in the rights of mar- ried persons and is contrary to the natural law and Catholic morality." The solution for chlldlessness by “voluntary adultery,” be ad- ded, is 'condemned by itself. “No spouse can place conjugal rights at the disposition of a per- son." . Sterilization, d i r e c t l y pel- . formed to make procreation im- possible, “is a grave violation of the moral law and is, therefore, illicit," he said. The pontiff distinguished, how ever, between an action directly performed to produce sterilization and another—such as removal of diseased ovaries—in which an un- wanted consequence might be sterilization. The latter. said the Pope, is permissible. SOME PILLS OKAY Likewise, he said, use of pills by a woman to check uterine ail- ments is permissible it not done with the intent to prevent im- Talks “Rate. It: ' ' Warsaw; Continue Thursday The main American him then was to obtain a obmmitment from the Chinese to renounce the use offence and insecure release of Americans mmisoned' in Chm ' . The Chinese sought renuncia~ tion of the use of force but ex- cluded Formosa as “an hltellnal Cliinese problem.” Before entering the conference room Beam said: ‘I have only this to say—4 am veryhalppy it has been possible to arrange for this meeting at such an early date. I hope the will lead to constructive ream.” Wang said: “We are glad that this first meeting of the resumed talks is.being held in the city of Warsaw. Warsaw is a heroic city. We hope that fruitful results will issue tnom these talks.” ‘POpe Rules On Artificial Insemination, Sterilization. be a temporary result of it. “But,” he added, ‘one pro- vokes a direct sterilization, and therefore illicit. when one stops ovulation for the purpose of pre- serving the uterus and the organ- ism from the consequences of a pregnancy which it is not able to support." Married couples in danger of transmitting hereditary defects could have recourse to adopting children, the Pope said. “One sees everywhere,” no said, “that this advice is gen- erally followed by happy results and brings parents happiness, peace and serenity. From the re- ligious point of view, adoption presents no objections." CAN’T FORCE COUPLES -Referring to a blood ailment known as ‘Mediterranean hem- tological disorder”—a lessening of the length of life of red glo-. hides—the Pope said that an em gaged couple, one of whom might be discovered to be suffering from ailment, might be ad— vised not to marry, but could not be forbidden to marry. damental right of the human per- son." The Pope said that pro-maritalT health and blood examinations in Italy and the Mediterranean ba- sin should be encouraged in or- der to check against this blood ailment. But, he added, even in the event that one is found to be afflicted, marriage can not be forbidden. Such a couple, he said. may be advised not to have children but can not be forbidden to hhve them. Likewise, in instances where the “RH” factor occurs this can- not be considered a motive fog declaring a marriage invalid, said the Pope, even though snob pregnation, even though that may a situation is magic. “Marriage,” he said, ‘is a fun '