_iGov'I On Vo’re Monday 7 ' “meat but fight the government TELEPHONE 3505 Buyer meets Want Ads. fled ad taker, seller with G ' Dial 85_(l6 ask IO: aclldalsastl. f°1' ‘llllck results. j—. 12 PAGES Aulhorludlnlecondcleuhlallhych p Dem-awn. omw. ' M om" G TWO BROTHERS IN HOSPITAI. Two brothers, Raymond andlof the waterworks shortly before George Bernard, Hunter River, 6:00 p.m. The third brother, brother Raymond had been ad- were rushed to the P. E. I. Hos- Gordon, who was driving the mitted for additional observation, plnl yesterday evening, when vehicle, escaped with minor in- though his injuries were not con- thelr 1950 one-half ton Ford juries. Hospital authorities re- sidered critical. A blow-out of a plunged to the ditch on the Mal- ported last night that ,George front tire is thought to have peque Road about one mile west lBernard had been allowed to go caused the accident. liberals May \C_haIIenge home after treatment, but his -OTTAWA (CP) — The Liberals.- hlqtered ‘by a new leader,’ may e the, Progressive Con- ’ ' es on trade and economic , .j;Mondsy,.., byunovingt -2 ~ of'- confidence motion that -;;lead to a general election. ,1’ oddity is that the ‘Liberals ' don’t want enjxnplediate , . They hope the Conserva- may be able to squeeze gh with a narrow victory will keep them in office. jfime is required by the Liber- tls to build up .a strong political ‘lrganiz-ation behind their new‘ Chief, Lester Pearson, who day plunged into party reorgan- tion. He met with the execu- We of the National Liberal Fed- zfation. More m e e tin g s are ‘lallned. ‘ I But it is understood the 60-year- Okl Mr. Pearson wants to move ltsressively against the Conserv- ttives immediately. He wants to clear the party will no 891' sit on the sidelines in Par- 265-seat chamber: CCF 2; Social terms of the Liberals’ want-of- Credit 1; ‘independents, two. A confidence and side with the gov- government defeat would make a ernment. ‘giving the [Conserva- general election imminent. But it tives a fairly strong victory. appears-. But . and ' tives would be supported by the the utlook shaky, Prime Minis- independents and Social Credit ter iefenbaker no-ightw...se.ek I_I giving them a_narrow,._,«-_ ' election, taking the initia- mayjnot like . the tive. Will Build Ballistic Missile ' Detection Station In North WASHINGTON (AP)—The US. Air Force will begin building in a few months -three ballistic mis- sile detection stations in the Arc- tic. Using ultra-range radar, the stations ‘could spot Russiad mis- siles within minutes after their launching. Negotiations with at least two companies for the $18,000,000 building job—wllich does not in- clude equipment—are understood to be under‘way in anticipation of swift congressional approval of an appropriation. Testimony before the House armed‘ services committee was released Friday by chairman Carl Vinson (Dem. Ga.). Winson said the ‘purpose of an $18,000,000 item was to construct “three detection centres” at loca- tions “outside the continental United States.” Air Force Secre- tary James Douglas identified the centres as ballistic missile detec- tion stations. / Behind the cryptic references, there seemed to be these points: The ‘three detection centres will be spotted about 1,000 miles apart in the general area of the present distant E arly Warning line (DEW line) system for aircraft detection. The 3,000-mile range of the new radar equipment will provide aniple overlap to create an unbroken “fence" along the continent’s rim. 200-MILE RANGE ‘llhe DEW line system consists of more than 100 main and sec- ondary stations. However. the range of DEW line equipment is only between 100 and 200 miles. Gave $5,000 Tip In Hospital Now SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -— The retired navy captain who tipped a cab driver with a $5,000 cheque was committed to the state men- tal hospital Friday. Capt. Jesse L. Kenworthy, 66, agreed to examination by a-psy- chiatrist. The order, signed by Superior Judge Milton D. Sapiro, wasvre- quested by Kenworthy’s es- tranged wife, Lorna, who waited outside the hearing room. The cab driver, Bruno del Carlo, was told Thursday there was insufficient funds in the Far- mers Bank ‘of Parkesburg, Pa., on which the $5,000 cheque was drawn. The cabbie got the tip last Saturday morning. PARI.|AMENT AT A GLANCE By THE CANADIAN muss Friday A government P1‘_0I€SI *0 the United States on 011. 1mP0}‘I3 _1'¢_' striction said there ls no J|1St1f1' cation for the U.S. move. Transport Minister Hees an- nounced approval for two !_leW' Trans-Canada Air Lines serv-lces to Belgium and Switzerland. III the argument tha-t Conserva- §Ve trade policies led to mass un- tmploymen-t. WILLING ro RISK 1-r If this action leads to an elec- .-Mid one party source, “then are willing to’ take the risk." final decision on party tac- Wlll be taken at a caucus at ll‘!-11,1. .EST Monday. The Com- opens at 2:30 p.m. At that . the government will move a 0!! of-supply to consider de- ent-al estimates and the Lib- may introduce their first '39‘-of-cfpnfiidence motion of the Butt session. 0 Conservatives have 113 rs compared to 106 for the . . Other standings in the Bccldicm Bi-Centennial F-ommittee Is Named ‘F lbeeting of the directors of Joseph Gaudet, presented the fol- » .,Bdian Convention was heldllowing slate _of officers. W110 1. ouche Parish Hall re- were on motion declared elect- The Acadian Convention-ed: . Organization grouping thejoFFICERS “lie Fren h ian Socie- llfPnincecEdw:§'ac‘ldIsland. President. Arsenault. V. purpose of this meeting President. Euelld Arsenault, Wel- I-0 elect a new executive lington, Secretary, ‘Francis C. “Will be responsible for Blanchard, Charlottetown, As- .m¢FlInlzation of the celebra- slstant Secretary. Armand Arsen- ‘fiommemorating the two ault, St. Chrysostom._ Treasurer. ' anniversary of the';Joseph Gaudet, Wellington. D11‘- Ehr fiuntrdimit “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” CHARLOTTETOWN CAN-ADA, SATURDAY, JANUARY 18,1958 Says P. C's Not Afraid Of Pearson CALGARY (CP)—The Progres- sive Conservatives are no more afraid of Lester B. Pearson than they are of his bow tie, Clayton W. Hodgson, parliamentary assis- tant to Public Works Minister Green, said Friday. _'.‘We are not going to do any- thing to force an election except give good government," he said in an interview. “But it would be much nicer and easier to carry on if we had a working majority. I am quite confident we’ll get a WOYRHIE malority at the next election." M13 H0dgS0n’said Mr. Pearson, elected_as national Liberal leader, 1s_a “f1ne gentleman, but I don't think he will be the organizer or the force needed to carry a cam- Daign the way Paul Martin would have.” He added: “gearson has no election experience. He was a - civil servant and then he was put ' mm 3 riding that was a sure shot. He doesn’t know the rudiments of election warfare." Khrushchev Visits Poland Khrushchev broke a vacation to spend three days talking with gglllxllllklfamd 13°"’°‘°” Irmdfyslaw an r ‘ . _ewicz- enner ose Cyr The visit had been rumored. Then F1‘-Ida? mght Moscow Radio announced casually: Dumas ‘:1 sojourn in the area of the Soviet - Polish border on holiday. N. S. Khrushchev re- celved an invitation from Gom- “Ike and Cyranluewcz to visit the Polish _Peoples Republic. 'D111‘!_l1§ a three - day stay in the Polish Peoples Republic, com- rade N. S. Khrushchev had con- versations with leaders of the Party and the government of the Polish Peoples Republic, which t°_°k place in a cordial and friendly atmosphere.” N. S. Man‘ Is i!:!9ti¢h‘u| lseo TAWA (CP) F—-Alexander F. Laidlaw. a Nova Scotia educa- tionlst and co - op movement W0¥ker. has been llmmed national secretary of the Co-operative Un- ion of Canada, President R. S. Staples announced Friday. The appointment is effective March 1. Mr. Laidlaw is expected to complete his duties with the Colombo Plan in India in about mid-February. _ He has been in the far eastern country since October 1956 - to trim Personnel for the develop- ment of Indi-a’s co - operative -moment. At present he is acting as an instructor in a United Na- tions, Food and Agriculture Or- ganization training course for fishermen’s co-operatives being given at the University of Syd. -ney, Australia for the Ind Pacific region. ‘ < Later this month he will attend a conference of the Asian mem- bers of the International Co-oper- etive Alliance in Malaya. Mr. Laidlaw is a native of Port Hood, N.S., and a graduate of both St. Francis Xavier Univer- sity and the University of To- ronto. To accept the new post he will retire as associate director of the Saint Francis Xaiver Uni- versity. 0. post he has held since 1950 lFIoods Are Damage In Southern N.$.. Caus Praised, OTTAWA (CP) — Jake Schulz, former chairman of the Interpre- vincial Farm Union Council, said Friday farmers have no reason to trust the government to do right by them on farm price sup- ports. Mr. Schulz, now CCF MP for Springfield, Man., said he “wouldn’t dare” ask farmers to rely on the Progressive Conserva- tive pr-ice supports bill. Provision of fair prices under the measure, he said in the Com- mons, “depends almost entirely on the lcaprice of one man” — Agriculture Minister Douglas Harkness. Mr. Harkness was no better than former Liberal Agri- culture Minister James G. Gar- diner. “We trusted the former minis- ter of agriculture. He juggled us around and he juggled us down until we landed in hell and then he stood beside us throwing snow- balls to lower the temperature." If Mr. I-Iarkness really wanted to help farmers he would have used the existing Agriculture Prices Support Act. “The power is there, the money is there but he is not there.” Mr. Schulz said. CCF. SOCREDS FIGHT CCF and Social Credit members‘ spoke against the bill, before the Commons for second reading- approval in principal The CCF has presented an amendment which would kill the bill this session. Tension Grips .As Flcuje-up Feared In Strike.‘ "‘\NHSSAU, ‘ Bahamas '(Re‘uters~) Tension gripped this winter play- ground Friday as a'_,cri's7i's neared in as general strike paralyzing the tourist industry. _ A blow-up was feared today, when’ striking hotel workers in- tend to claim their pay from closed winter resorts. The hotel operators have said they will not Payo- Soldiers and ‘armed police moved through almost-deserted streets. Only a handful of the thousands of tourists in Nassau when the strike‘ began last Sun- day remained. The troops, flown here from Jamaica, were in control but ex- tra police patrols were planned for today as a “precaution -against intimidation.” A government official said no violence has been reported in the city. one garage owner outside town was forced to close by a carload of men who threatened to bow up his building unless he complied. Governor Sir Oswald Raynor Arthur talked with union repre- sentatives during the day but no details were available. BEGAN WITH CABBIES J. F. R. Hill, government press officer, said the workers have “no deep-seated irritations to- ward the British” and are loyal. The announced reason for the Farm Bill Is Blasted The two parties want a written- in guarantee of parity prices—- support prices related to farm production costs and prices of other commodities. Alfred D. Hales (PC—Welling- ton South), making his first Com- mons speech, praised the bill as recognizing the effects of supply and demand on prices.'Its sup- port levels, in effect for a full year, would allow farmers to plan production. He said the Conservative gov- ernment acted quickly to help agriculture. It put turkeys under price support and import control and put import controls on im- ported butter oil and powdered milk. The bill would empower the government to set 12-month price supports on any farm commodity early each year, -expressed as a percentage of the average price in the precedipg 10 years. AMENDED owN BILL The government last month amended its own bill to state the price should be set with regard to estimated production costs and other relevant factors. The measure also provides that farmers could always rely on a mandatory minimum floor of 80 per cent of the 10-year price over- age for nine key products: cattle, hogs, sheep, butter, cheese, eggs and non-Prairie wheat, oats and barley not under Canadian Wheat gnawing discontent by ‘Negroes of ‘meat. pute over who I sengers to and from the airport. The walkout spread quickly-—at meal] from the Bahamas Fed- eration of Labor——to the big re- sort. hotels and to street cleaners- and stevedores. Board'jurisd-lction. The Bahamas theirlweek voice in "The taxicab union quit in a dis- uld carry pas- sons in Britain had incomes of £6,000 or more last year after paying the country’s stiff income taxes, the government reported Friday. The basic income tax in Britain is 42% per cent, and the strike is a dispute involving taxi A government Commons s aid 10 ern_lJ10Y€9-5 have been fired for political ac- tivities in the last election cam-I paign. Debate con 1 tion of the 5.000 Frenchlcctors. Reverend J-F- Bllote. from prince Edwardlmont Carmel. Charles M. Arsen- ‘ 1753, ‘ault, Abrams Village. Aubln Doiron, Summerslde. _ The following resolutions lyeilréei iii: Questions were dfscus-, “H38 the afternoon. Theunanimollsly adopted by decided that these cele-‘meetlngi , . 1 , .11 I15 would be hem on wed-'_ “Resoveld that this meet,mg,prlce support bl . - uly23rd,1twa5 pmposséplace on record the great loss‘ Jake Schulz (CC ‘ to t he celebration Shoum be‘.sustained_ by the ' death of ‘Mr..sald farmers have no leason . ‘scouche, where, in the{Elmer Plncau. Principal fl‘ at a general conven-§me1-side Hlgh School. W110 -if d the Acadians comingdone so mucl; lgratlhigngauvfigo; Satur ay Maritimes, Quebecfgeducation ln en _ . . H New England StaLes,lintcrcst and devotion tn_the ad- EST to_con1mue debate lm decided to adopt as na.lvanccmenI of the Acadian peo- farm bill. The Senate IS 21 them the hymn Ave Ma-lple earned our sincere admira-_joul*ncd_#T fl§L . and it was also decid-gtinn. tinued all day oni L: 2‘? 2. s 555 ‘III?! §§ E A.‘ ll 5" report to the the government's farm D1‘0d“Ci5" trust the government to D1‘0Vi_de§, fair price supports under the blll.l>.::-3: F—Springfie1d) j 1 I The Commons sits at 11 em. drivers but it has its roots in I.lCE REEIVE Po«l|To AINEA take rises steeply along with in- come. ' 27 Winners A In Contest BRANTFORD, Ont. (CP) Board of education members got more than they bargained for when they sponsored a “name the school” competi- 'tion for a new school on Woodman Drive. The name selected was Woodman Drive School. The board must buy 27 prizes as 27 pupils sent in the‘ same name. The prize offered was a book. FEW MILLIONAIRES LONDON (AP)-—Only 600 per- . The Telegram, Mr. St. Laurent as ‘son's lone supporting vote.” North River Man Is Appointed Returning Officer OTTAWA (CP) — Appointment of 12 new federal returning of- ficers and chief assistants for the taking of the armed services vote, was announced Friday. New returning officers: Quebec — Beauharnois - Sal- berry, Jean Guy Philie, Valley- -field; Bellechasse, J. E u g e n e Chartier of St. Gervais; Comp- ton - Frontenac, Pierre Bcaudoin of Scotstown; Labelle, Francois Leduc of Papineauville; Montreal Lafontaine, Arthur DeCarufel of Montreal; Sherbrooke, N es t o r Boucher of Sherbrooke; Verdun, Edmond Beaudin, Verdun. Nova Scotia —- Colcester-Hants, Andrew Reginald Denney, Mait- land. New Brunswick — Victoria-Car- leton, William K. Davis, Bristol. Special returning officers and chief assistants for the service vote Quebec -—/Maj. Guy Levesque, St. Laurent, Que.’ . Mal-itimes — Major Walter‘ I. Blair, Fredericton, and And-rew MacEachern, North River. P.E.I. Queen 8: Queen, Mother Are III SANDRINGHAM, England (AP)—The Queen and the Queen Mother were reported suffering from fever and chills Friday mght at Sandringham. Court officials said the Queen has been advised by doctors to remain indoors during the week- end. She and her mother both cancelled engagements. The Queen suffered a chill shortly before Christmas but re- covered quickly. The officials b night after flooding southwestern \. I‘ Mr. Henderson? TORONTO (CP) — Did- Louis St. Laurent cast the lone vote for Rev. Harold Henderson of Bran- don in Thursday night's Liberal leadership vote? The Toronto Globe and Mail and Toronto Telegram, in Ottawa stories, suggest he did. Through the campaign, says retiring leader would offer no opinion as to who should win. “Maybe, just maybe . . . this attitude resulted in Mr. Hender- W Says the Globe and Mail: “It was being said‘ facetiously that the one vote . . . was cast by Mr. St. Laurent in maintaining his impartiality to the end." Mr. Henderson and his wife could not vote. They were not official delegates. ENTRIES SET RECORD OTTAWA (CP)-—A record 2,- 555,074 vehicles entered into Can- ada on traveller’s vehicle permits in 1957, an increase of 2.8 per cent from the previous year’s total of 2,484,444, the bureau of statistics reported Friday. All provinces reported more entries in 1957 than in 1956. sa to 81‘ Se 3 to for 2% days weakened Friday Nova Scotia with almost five inches of rain and burying north- ern New Brunswick in up to 20 inches of snow and sleet. gled to restore broken communi- cations, w-ashed-out roads and buildings. lives in a final wild onslaught Fri- day. when the gale touched 60 miles an hour. Settlement, near Tracadie, N.B., was electrocuted when a 12,000- volt power line snapped under a load of sleet and fell on him. Acker drowned at Birchtown, near Shelburne, N.S., when he fell into a flooded gravel pit. on’ Nova Scotia’s south shore, bore the brunt of the floods. way and rail traffic was out be- cause of floods and w-ashouts. DAM WEAKENS, H0‘LDS at Armdale on the outskirts of Halifax and isolate 2,000 subur- ubnites, but it still held Friday night. poles were down in many parts of northern New Brunswick. Power Commission said there were more than 50 breaks in transmission lines in Bathurst, §iewcastle.,Chatham and Trace- e. patched from Moncton and Saint John, N.B. Tracadle was without feet deep. precipitation. some of it snow. that swept the New England states earlier in the week. partment brac ‘battle of the winter as reports poured in of damaged roads. LUNENBURG, ROUTE CUT Lunenburg on the south shore was cut. Sections of the same route Halifax and Hubbards but pass- able. Route 7 impassable.between Dartmouth and Bedford in Hali- fax County. A bridge between Glen Margaret and Hackett's Cove near Halifax was washed away. shore between Halifax and Yar- mouth was washed out in several places. Route 10 between and Middleton was cut in three places by water. right over the road for long dis- tances," a spokesman said. Lake, about 13 miles from here, threatened to cut the main high- (Reuters)-—Sir Edmund Hillary prepared Friday_nlght to fly to the South Pole for a reunion with Dr. Vivian Fuchs, head of a Brit- ish expedition attempting the first land crossing of the Antarctic continent. A radio message from the New Zealand base on McMurdo Sound after his long overland trek by tracked vehicle from the Weddell Fuchs, last reported 85 miles from the pole, was expected to arrive there today or Sunday. ORIGINAL PLAN Hillary and Fuchs originally were to have met at Depot 700, from the pole. weather and mechanical difficul- ties put Fuchs several weeks be- hind schedule, Hillary pushed on. WEATHER Cloudy with a few showers; extremely mild; westerly winds 15. Low-high at Charlottetown 38 and 40. \ ‘NOT MORE THAN ing Heavy FIVE, CENTS Two Deaths In Maritimes In Wake Of Fierce Storm HALIFAX (CP)-—A storm that attered -the Maritime provinces way between Halifax and Truro. _Bridges were reported ltcing swept away “almost every hour” in the Bridgewater area, faced with flooding from the swollen La- Iiave River. Streets were flooded and several persons left their homes. A dam holding back Chocolate Lake on this city’s western out- skirts threatened to collapse and send tons of water into communi- ties where 25,000 live. DAM IS BREACHED A break in the dam about 10 feet wide was reported. The Sackville River at Bedford, near Halifax, flooded over it: banks and forced some families to leave their homes. Nearby Sackville Downs race- track was turned into a lake. Tons of excess water pouredinto a fish hatchery. _ ’At Kearney Lake. four mile: from here, 150 persons were iso- lated when a swollen ‘ brook washed away the only highway bridge. Six ships were delayed from on- tering port hege by wind: and high seas. Thursday mght the wind reached 60 miles an hour in gusts. Among the ships was the liner Britannic with 600 P855811‘ gers bound for here and New York. Two Canadian National Rall- ways trains returned to their starting points because of wash- outs on Nova Scotia’s south shore. Telegraph, telephone and power lines were reported gener- ally intact. In New Brunswick. Ihippegan Island in Chaleur Bay was iso- lated and could not be reached by telephone or telegraph. Com- Public service workers strug- ail lines and pump out flooded \ The storm took at least two Jacques McGraw fo Dignard Three-year-old Charles Russell Halifax and Lunenburg county A dam threatened to give way Power, telephone and telegraph The New Brunswick Electric Repair crews were des- Bathurst, Campbellton and Chat- 'd .1 ‘ . . >.!.°'l'9'.‘“v - = A III!!! in. !|01‘“!°l!|| 3"““'WI°k- fs:'omlghu*“‘ie¢:gunent"8o°d¢.'1‘1‘i‘f"‘ sflnwl - _, . nmost lbw E hishwnyl . 1-.«-------. 1 Vdted For ‘ ..n'-“'e§'°«$'3in3‘ """‘ ‘’°’““ "W" . as snow it would have been four Rain froze up 00 the S120 0' 0 man’: wrist on wire: in Glouc- ester County. » The rising Newcastle stream near North Minto, in Sunbury county 30 miles east of Frederic- ton, forced evacuation of Renaud Hor-nez, his wife and three chil- dren. Three residents of a nearby house refused to be moved. They are Louis Barbieux. 85 and re- ported ill, his son, Fred, and son- in-law, Leo Hornez. Saint John had 3.87 inches of The storm was the same one Q The Nova Sc tia highways de- for the toughest Route 3 from Mahone Bay to water level. Officials said if dy- namiting becomes necessary the three men must be moved even "if a court order has to be ob- Itained. The Newcastle stream was re- ported gbout eight feet above normal, with a 2,000-foot stretch of piled ice diverting the water into a valley where the Barbierux and Home: dwellings are sit- uated. The B-arbieux bridge and a new one farther downstream were in danger. ‘ ‘ A power transmission line carrying 6.000 volts trom Allard- ville to Shippegan bmoke near Six Roads in Gloucester County. A standby diesel unit at Shippegan supplied Tracadie and Sheila. Service at Tabusintac, out since early morning, was expected to be partly restored late Friday. ere reported flooded between Flooding at Burnside made The CNR line along the south Bridgewater “The water’; Rising waters from Rocky Fuchs Expects To Reach The South Pole Today Or Sunday WELLINGTON. New Zealand hicles. I-Iis party arrived there Jan. 3 and flew out two days later to McMurdo Sound. Hillary will fly to the pole aboard a U.S. Navy Neptune air- craft. He will be accompanied by nine newspaper correspondents. Fuchs and Hillary probably will try to iron out a controversy that flared earlier this month when the New Z c a l a n d explorer warned Fuchs of the danger of worsening w e a t h e r conditions and advised him to stop at the pole and return next year to complete the trip. Fuchs rejected the advice and said he planned to continue. id the New Zealander will fly the pole, possibly today, to eet Fuchs on his arrival there a. Polaris Test . Missile Fired CAPE CANAVERAL (A‘r1—A Polaris test veh.icle—-a ballistic stand-in for the United States Navy's 1,500 - mile submarine- New Zealand base 500 miles But when bad the pole with his snow ve-‘ OTTAWA (CP) ——- High-ranking artillery officers from the United States. Britain and Canada will meet in Ottawa Jan. 21-30 to dis- cuss procedures, standardization and equipment launched missile of the near fu- ture—streaked away here Fri- day almost faster than the eye could follow. The vehicle waas Inn fast and too smal1——from a distance of three or four miles—for it. to be ARTILLERT TALKS in the artillery _ recognized munications were disrupted from - An ice jam caused the rising’ branches of the three countries. Ii‘ Om Outside ‘I12 Constables El". Elliot. Heft) clinic held at their provincial om (right). He was assisted by den Ind Mrs. Rose Savage. The army headquarters announced and F.L. Connolly, of the Sum- headquarters on ‘the Ma1Pe<1“° Mrs. Helen MacLeod, R.N., with next clinic will be held today at Friday. About 85 representatives mersidf-‘ d9t3°hm911t0fthe RCMP R°ad Friday m°mmg' A total of the administrative work being St. Dunstan‘s College, commenc- line up for their second shot of 75 shots was administered in the _ B _ _ I-Sal-II anti-polie' vaccine at the three-hour cllmc by Dr. LB. K1ll- ‘F3495 W‘ l"’ M5‘ 3”” “5‘ "13 ‘I 10-00 “’ INCREASED TRADE Australia’s exports *0 Asia,“ ntries reached 3575.000-000 310“ ’ ve as (lag, the French; l<‘ul-tllrr rrsolvcd lhal the s,vm~ With a golden star inlpathy of this meeting be €.\.I.€lld- ' ed to Mrs. Pineau and famll)’ gfing committee (.0m_ in {he are-at loss sustained bylcou ‘ ‘‘ REV. J.F. Buloe. J.F.lthom in the death or their l0\’lllE1I.I'l€ 12 months ending Jllnl P. Anenault andiand devoted husband and fethel-.il957. 5. fenced-off test‘ centre. Launched vertically less than of the three countries will attend an hour after sunrise. it left a the meeting. the first of its kind‘ §!1‘aC€lUI While "all across the held since 1949. sky toward the southeast. gr’ ._