TELEPHONE 8506 Buyer meets seller Ads. with Guardian Want Dial 8506 ask for classified ad taker, for quick results. 12 PAC Es mummmhhpmoffi“ Department. Ditawa RUSSIANSV ARRIVE IN SWITZERLAND K, Tsarapkln left, Geneva, head of the International Organ- He is followed by Izations Department of the Soviet K. Fedorov, head of delegation foreign office, stands in line for of Soviet scientists now confer- passport check after arriyal III ring with western scientists about Semyon Switzerland, Monday. Prof. Yevgenl entering into nuclear test con- trol talks. At right is A. Sadov- ski. Tsarapkin is a member of the delegation. (AP Wirephoto). World Scientists ,S’rar’r v Talks On Test Detection GENEVA (Reuters) —- scientists from the Communist and non-Communist worlds Tues: day talks on our clear teat detection. ' , ' In a closed'session which fol- lowed a short open meetinglhe scientists conferred “in a friendly way" about terms of reference, the order in which subjects will be discussed and-other proced- urai questions, Maximum sauces said. raiding part in die talks at the ' figalace, of nations“: ‘ egates firom‘ United" States, BMWMW,“ day’s closed seSsion was done by the two chief delegates, Dr. James Fisk of the United States nnvamf. A. K. Fyodorov of the soviet Union, the sources said. perm TERMS Pimpose of the closed session was to define various terms to each other and to explain what Eastern and Western scientists meant by certain technical ex- precious. «The sources emphasized the were of a general hats we. The experts, who meet again this afternoon, probably won’t'get down to particular tech- nical problems for at least a couple days, they added. During a brief public session open‘ to the press, Russia can- ceded the Western position that the talks were purely technical and not tied with the political problem of nuclear test suspen- lion. ~ Professor A. K. Fyodorov, Icader of the Soviet delegation and one of Russia's leading Sput- experts, declared: “We are not suppOSed to take a) the solution of the problem of test cessation. This is a matter to be solved by governments.” ASKED GUARANTEE . Russia had insisted on a guar- antee from the United States that the meeting would lead to the halting of nuclear tests. ' The American refusal led last week to a threatened Soviet boycott of the meeting. ’ Dr. James Fisk, leader of the Western side and a member of President Eisenhower’s science advisory committee, said the group had assembled "to study the technical problems invole in the detection and identification of nuclear explosions.” “Each of us brings to our task the tradition of science,’3 Fidk told the delegates, “a tradition that places the highest premium on objectivi .” During the 25 - minute public the chief and West delegates agreed-on the precede ore for S. K. Tsarap- kin, a senior Soviet foreign min- Westerncolleaguesbackiniothe conferenceroomforthesbaflof the private partof the confer- ence. Fyodorov,» who is over-all chief wasanveron (Ar) —’ Pres! ,ideut EisenbcIWer appealed anew Tuesday for a bigger foreign aid budget from a House of Rep- resentatives apparently of mind to spurn his plea. ' The White House promised a new bid for more money before voting starts today on a bill ap— propriating $3,078,092,500 in new aid funds for the fiscal year that started Tuesday. This is $872,000,- 000 less than Eisenhower origm- ally asked and $597,500,000 below the ceiling set last week in a sep- arate authorization. ‘ ’ Tuesday’s presidential plea re- iterated last week’s claim that the cuts recommended by the house appropriations committee would jeopardize U.S. foreign pol- icy. lit was made at a White House meeting with Republican congressional leaders. ’ Later, Secretary of Stat Dulles told a press conference the pro- posed: slash posed‘~l“a grave United States." Dulles hinted that Eisenhower may take his case to the people by radio and televi- sion if he believes such a course is necessary. ’ PRESIDENTIAL PLEA Congressional leaders of both parties hoped a new appeal from Eisenhower at his press confer- threat to the security of thé‘ of the Communist delegations, alternate daily in the chair with Fisk. The delegates’ taskls to recommend to their govern- ments methods of detecting atoniic explosions and a means to put them to work if an inter- national agreemeut is reached on stopping tests everywhere... Delegates must determine, whether all nuclear test explo- sions can be detected without in- spection. The Russians claim they can. <_Many...Wencmi.,Sci- courts challenge this idea. After the private session ended Tuesday, it was announced the next meeting will be held this at- ternoon at 8 pm. (ll sun. AIDT). US Foreign Aid ’ Hike Requested ence today would help their fight to restore at least some of the committee cuts. Tht White House said Eisenhower would issue such a plea at the outset of today’s conference. Privately, however, advocates of larger allotments were pes- simistic. Some of them feared a one-sided vote against amend- ments to increase funds would lessen the chances for ultimate victory in a‘Senate-House confer- ence. They assumed the Senate would vote more than the Blouse, as has often happened in the past. The practical situation is that almost every member of the House is running for re-election this year and the House budget- cutting record is not so impres- sive as it has been in recent years. A deep lash in foreign aid funds, many members feel, would give them a better economy rec- 0rd. TO DISCUSS CLOSING PICTOU, N. S. (CP)— A meet- ing of several county organiza- tions will be held July 4 to dis- cuss the closing of the G. J. Hamilton and Sons Ltd. biscuit plant here. Expected to attend are representatives of town councils, service clubs, labor unions and women’s organiza- tions. e Gaulle Is Told More Troops Needed In Algeria ORAN, Algeria (Am—(Premier Charles de Gaulle Tuesday took a soldier’s look at the military situation in Algeria and was told that more troops were needed to combat the Moslem nationalist rebellion. ‘ De Gaulle flew this morning from Paris to Telergma air force base in eastern Algeria for an m— spection of French posts on the Tunisian border. He made a brief stop at nearby Bama where he addressed a crowd of well—wishers. He then flew into this western Algeria port city—to continue his three- day tour—his second visit to Al- geria since his return to power a month ago. I In the eastern area operation headquarters at Ain Arna, Gen- eral Gandoet told de Gaulle that the situation in his sector, “al- though still difficult, showsxsigns of definite improvement since the May 13th, events." This was a reference to the French political upheaval in Al- geria whose leaders want com- plete integration of Algeria’s Eu— ropeans and Moslems as a means (if keeping this North African ter- ritory French. IMPROVED ATTITUDE Gandoet told de Gaulle that he noticed a great improvement in the attitude of the local popula- tion. The eastern Algeria area never has been considered by the French as completely pacified and the population there gen- erally has been hostile. Gandoet told de Gaulle more troops were needed to make the French military effort in Algeria more efficient. _ After inspecting several posts near the electrified barrier built to prevent the nationalists from crossing from Tunisia, the gen- eral flew to Batna. On the steps of the city hall, he invited a cheering crowd to work with him “for a French Al- geria.” ‘ De Gaulle returned to the Te- ergma base late in the afternoon for another military conference and then flew to Oran. He was scheduled to fly to Al- giers Tuesday night. hr comm “Covers; Prince Edward Island Like 11.. Dew”, CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA WEDNESDAY, JULY 2, 1958 I Threat Io Iebanon Is Eased BIE-IJRIUT (AP) — President Ca- mille Chamoun said Tuesday a rebel offensive toward Beirut and its airport was part of an all-out attempt to capture Beirut and overthrow the government. A government attack with jets, artillery and armored cars halted the relbel stab and drove the in- surgents back into the hills. The assault apparently erased any vital airport. ' The insurgents also appeared to be weakening on a second major front, at Tripoli in northern Leb- anon. Heavy fighting broke out there again this morning. President Chamoun said in an interview with The Associated Press the rebel attack, launched Monday, was part of the offen- sive he had predicted last week. It was coordinated with a plan- ned attack on- Tripoli which, he added, still “may start at any moment." “If this last effort of rebels in Tripoli and in Couf (rebel leader Kamal Jumblatt’s area) is beaten- completely, the armed rebellion will tcollapse as a military move- men- .” ‘ Death Toll ’ On Holiday Reaches 100 By THE CANADIAN PRESS Canada’s 91st birthday cele- braltions were her most lethal. A record of at least 100 persons were killed in road, water and other accidents during the four- dag Dominion Day' holiday Week- en . ‘ A CanadiarPress survey dis: anda unmixed-z Seven died L, . ‘vavriOus other accidents."'l‘he vey covered 102 hours from 36 gm. Friday Tues- y‘ Y j, ,.; ..,_ "42.11"". ‘ in: )" The toll topped the previous record of 9!} killed in last year's three-day holiday, when 54 were killed on the roads and 31 drowned. It ‘ms feared more deaths were yet to be reported. The 1958 road slaughter surh passed the 45 predicted by the Canadian Safety Council. A Quebec road collision ac- counted for six deaths, three were drowned together in British Columbia and a New Brunswick plane crash took two lives. , Douglas Skinnerp 30, of Guys- borough, NS. and George .Peart, 88, of nearby Rochdale,‘N.S. Were killed Monday when.the car in which they were riding crashed through a bridge and fell 14 feet into Ogden’s River. , William Charles Kilgar, 50, of Eastern Passage, drowned Mon- day when he fell into the waters of Eastern Passage at Dart- mouth, N.S. while transferring to a small dinghy from a larger pleasure craft. - The toll by provinces (traffic deaths in' brackets): Quebec 35 (17), Ontario 28 (14), Alberta 1]. (9), British Columbia 10 (3). Nova Scotia 5 (2, New Bruns- wick 4 (2). Saskatchewan 4, Man- itoba (1). RECORD ' HEIGHT LONDON (Reuters)—A single- stage Russian rocket carrying scientific e q u i p ment weighing more than 3,000 pounds reached the record height of 294 miles, the Soviet news agency Toss re— ported Tuesday. immediate threat to the capital’s closed 48 pe sons killed in traffic" ‘ "In a CANADA’S NINETY - FIRST birthday was accorded an .offi- cial 21<gun salute by members- ’of the P. E. I. Regiment, RCAC. The salute was fired at Victoria 'Plan To Slash -, _ Curbs on Trade With Communists R-ve agreed to slash the clubs _ learning: cent; About 80 items, Western of- nuns said Tuesday night, will be taken off the, banned list. The 15 allies at the sometime have decided to revise the ground rules. of their system regulating trade between East and West. NewLake GyoWs In SI. Rive/r ‘ Valley Expect Power Generators Start Turning Next Week ' Lavvrence Park yesterday. Members of the gun crew were: (left) Major M. E. Campbell, Commander “A” Squadron, W02, Paul” Roy, Ser- geant MacEwen and Cpl. Stew- Brilliant sunshine, a light tbreez- ,. “e. plus "fem ‘ m ~. «its “the high “70's, Wed Day on Prince: .de W P Imam?- . ; , 1 tln-onged' the beaches; fished, picniced, gelled. or just lolled about in the shade. Chief sportim attraction of the national holiday \here cen- tred in Simmerside where an eight-dash race card attracted InduS’r’ry OTTAWA (CP) — A (two-day Commons debate on the plight of Nova Scotia’s coal mining indus- try ended Tuesday night with de- feat of a Liberal non-confidence motion criticizing the govern- ment’s “failure” to avert a five- ‘week shutdown of the surplus- plagued mines. The big Progressive Conserva- tive majority overwhelmed the combined Liberal - COF opposi- tion 137 to 42. The motion, moved Monday by N. J. Rolbichaud, Gloucester, also contended the government has backed away from its commit- ment to promote development of Industry in the Atlantic provinces and has retreated from its “spec- ific undertaking” to ensure use of Maritime coal in the area’s thermal power plants built with federal aid. Before the vote, Opposition By THE CANADIAN PRESS Canada’s 915i birthday was cel- ebrated Tuesday wit 21 - gun sal- utes, parades, sports events, bar- beques, fireworks displays, the creation of a new lake andsum- mery weather throughout of the country. Hot weather in the East and pleasant temperatures in the West sent thousands flocking to beaches, lakes and summer cot~ tages. Traffic authorities reported a heavy flow of cars on the high- ways and the holiday spirit was marred by ahigh toll of highway deaths, drowning-s and other acci- dental deaths. The Dominion Day holiday, July 1, celebrated the federation of the united provinces of Upper and Lower Canada (Ontario and Quebec) with Nova Scotia and New Brunswick in 1067. Manitoba joined in 1870, British Columbia in 1871, Prince Edward Island in 1873. Alberta and Saskatchewan in 1905 and Newfoundland in 1949. For Quebec City it also meant the celebration of its 350th birth- day, marked by a parade with 80 floats and 30 bands and folk dancing. In British Columbia, the Parades, Salutes, Sports Events Mark Dominion Day the province’s own centennial. Zl-GUN SALUTE . In the Maritimes, the weather was fine and warm. Ships in Hali- fax harbor sounded their horns at noon and a 21 - gun salute was fired from Citadel Hill. At Digby, N .S., water sports, a parade with floats, baseball game and fire- works display, studded the activ- ities. The biggest event in Yarmouth, N.‘S.,was the arrival of the ship Yarmouth on her first trip of a threedtimes-aaweek service from Boston after a four-year lapse. In New Brunswick, 3,000 per- sons attended an annual chicken barbecue at Fredericton. Sports activities included harness rac- ing, baseball and boating. A Zl-gun salute from the top of Mount Royal heralded celebra— tions in Montreal. The lst Battalion Canadian Guards trooped the color before Governor - General Massey in a military display at Ottawa. A huge blast near Cornwall, sparked by 03,000 pounds of ex- plosives, created a new lake which will serve the Ontario-New York state power station being national birthday coincided withISeaway built along with the St. Lawrence Debate On Coal ‘Encls Leader Pearson called Commons speeches by Revenue Minister Nowlan and Resources Minister Hamilton “quite inconsistent” in part at least. Mr. Nowla-n had said that Marl-' time coal would be used in Mari- time thermal power stations re- ceiving federal assistance, Mr. Pearson said, while Mr. Hamil- ton had declared Monday that such a commitment would be ob- soulutely against the best inter- ests of the area’s coal industry. Yet Premier Stanfield of Nova Scotia last March had assured the province that use of Maritime coal was guaranteed in’ thermal power units by virtue of a mas- ter contractcovering station con- struction. Mr. Pearson quoted Mr. Stan- field as saying his assurances came from Prime Minister Diet. enbaker. ' ' Mr. Nowlan, wh o s e speech preceded that of Mr. Pearson tagged the word "poppy-cock” to Liberal claims that Nova, Scotia mines are losing central Canadian markets under- Oonservative pol- icy. The government could not have acted sooner to prevent Nova ,Sco tia layoffs affecting about 9,500 ' miners. WANTED FASTER ACTION The revenue minister, Nova Scotia’s representative in the fed— eral cabinet, was replying to for mer Liberal inun-igration mints ter J. W. Pickersgill who asked why the government couldn’t have acted sooner. Mr. Norwlan said the govern- ment had agreed last week to as- sist the Dominion Coal Company coal stockpile so the company could keep its mines operating If the government had not step- ped in, Mr. Nowlan said, the mine lay-offs in Nova Scotia would have been much longer than the 25 days now scheduled. As it was, the layoffs would be spread over several months and in different mines, softening their impact. The company had said the layoffs were necessary for economic and efficient operation in view of the big stockpile. Mr. Pearson said Mr. Nowlan had thrown a “smokescreen of his irony and eloquence” around the facts, and had not dealt with the points raised in the non-con- fidence motion. Cheri _ _ with carrying charges on its big, art. One of the many youngsters who gathered to watch the six- pounder in action appears at the extreme left. Weather Provides An Idea Setting For Holiday Here some 3,000 fans. nus was follow. mm evening.- s ,l - ottetown’s' Victoria / who,“ _ 9f. the/'4). i :4 Regan", fired 'a 21-gun‘ harm the event. ‘ I Though mantle was extreme- ly heavy on all 111131111" hugbw' aye. pazfimuarly those leisdlhrg to the beaches 'and other amuse ment centres, no serious ac- cidents were reported. Officials of the local division of the CNR stated “that their Borden ferries were able to take care of all vehicles seeking accommodation either In addition the normal quantity of freight was also transported across the Strait. ' Yesterday 430 cars crossed via the Borden route, while 341 were ferried in the opposite diectiou. N _ berlamd, Ferries re- port - at traffic on the Wood Islands-Caribou route was far greater thn that handled on pre- vious.Dominion.-Days. However, “no one was left behind” a spgakesman for the Company 83.! . Find Bodies In Plane Wreckage PERTH, N.B. (Cm—The bodies of two Arthurette, N.B; youths were recovered Tuesday in the wreckage of a light plane in the Tobique River about four miles from this community near the New Brunswick-Maine border. They were identified as Wayne Blair and Jack Grain, both 18. Pilot Charles McLaughlin, 35, of Eaisfield, Me, and Waltes Poth- o .ier, 22, stationed with the United States Air Fosrce at the Lime- stone, M'e., air base, were res- cued from the river Sunday by a fisheries department boat and taken to hospital at nearby Grand Falls. Police said the New Brunswick pair hitched a ride in the plane which took off from Limentone. Dragging operations were organ- ized by RCMP and USAF author. WEATHER Clear with a. few cloudy intervals; con-n tinuing very warm; southwest winds 20. Low-high at Charlottetown 55 and 80. CORNWALL, om. tor) —- A ' nameless Lake W) 5 growing with startling speed '1‘ esday night af- ter 63,000 pounds of nitrone rup- tured a river plug and launched a‘ relentless 75-hour flood in the , St. Lawrence seaway valley. The blast tore two gaps in a (Mimi cofferdam at 9 sun. AM Tuesday to release the pent-up waters of the St. Lawrence, Can- ada’s greatest river. ’ The shock was felt in down- town Cornwall, more than five miles from the blast. Force of the explosion sent tons of earth more than 200 feet into the sir and hurled rock boulders more than 1,000,, feet. V _ Although the blast did not de molish the cotferdam as en- gineers * hoped, hydro offi- cials pronounced it a success. They said the earth fill in the dam was so heavily packed it had the ensity of concrete. Ba ' 'ng up from the half-mile- wide“power dam near Cornwall, the muddy river waters inched higher during the day, swallow- ing‘ the old Cornwall canal in a gurgling gulf and starting to nib- ble at the abandoned Mille Roches townsite, five miles west of here. Eight hours after the blast the water level had gone up 10 feet at the Long Sault control TRIGGER'S EXPLOSION _ Dr. Otto Holden, (W - year- old veteran chief engineer for On- tario Hydro triggered the explo- . sion from a bunker 3,400 feet from the conferdam. ’Atfirst, the firing team feared that only halftime 3,100 cause! ileum-n- : nor MORE THAN FIVE CENT? It took 65 minutes for the this trial flood crest to cascade 2% miles along the river basin to the power dam itself. Thousands of people watched the blast—but all they saw or heard from the hydro dike was a puff of smoke fol- lowed by the bang. , v The new man-made lake will be 35 miles long and five miles wide ringed by a picturesque parkland with sandy beaches and picnic sl es. START GENERATORS SOON Early next week Ontario Hydro officials expect to start genera- tors spinning in the dam to pro- duce 125,000 horsepower of elec- tricity. Eventually 2,200,000 horse. power will be generated—bait for Ontario and the rest for New New, York State, partner in the $00,000,000 power proiect. The inundation signalled the start of parades and parties in this city of 41,000 people, jammed with visitors. Across the river at Massena, N.Y., officials of, the St. law rence Seaway Development Cor- poration-Canada’s partner in thc’ $473,000,000 ocean waterway to > the Great Lakes, prepared for the opening of two US. locks for Lt foot navigation. About 12- vessels queued Tues day night at the entrance to the US seaway channel. awaiting the formal opemng' after the flood reaches its peek—expected later this week. , ’ The U.S. locks bypass the hy- dro-elem 'c dam and provadc’ an entrance to the power pool. A Ca-. nadiaulock, opened last Novem- be“ the exit for Great‘ ships at W 3:5 PUGWASH, N. "s. —<cr) —. Autigonish, N. 8., ‘won four dabce events here Tuesday at the annual gathering of the clam. Miss Maclnm's took top'honors in the over 16 class Highland Fling, the sword dance, the seam tribuhas and the reel of Tulloch. Two New Glasgow girls, Ellen MacLean and Patricia Mach/Tillman and Sharon Forbes of Monoton were other top Miss MacMillan, entered in the under 10 class, won the seam tribuhas and sword dance. Miss MacLean won the highland fling, the seam tribuhas and the sword dance in the 13-16 class. Miss Forbes won the same three dances in the 10-13 years of age section, Piping honors went to a Chair lottetown entry and two from Cape Breton. Tom Burke, Char- lottetown, won the under-14 title. The 14-16 years age group chem.» pionship went to Deannine Munro, Three ,Killed In Collision NAPIERVILLE, Que. (CP) —- Three persons Were killed and seven others injured in a head-on collision Monday night near this village some 35 miles south of Montreal. Police identified the dead {as Miss Claire Dcucette, 21, of the Montreal suburb of Rosemcre, Mrs. Robert Legare, 415, of Mont- real, and her two-year-old son Rejean. Five of the seven injured per- ities. Piping I Honoers From City At Pugwash Meet Light~footed Mabel Maclmis of , Looh Iomond and the over-16 laurels to Vera Bum-ell, Sydney River. other P. E. I. Wilmers includ- ed: Sword dance, open: 1. Judy Dow, North Tryon. ' Sword dance open, under 10: 3. Judy Dawson, North Tryon. Seam Tribunal ‘ 5, open under 12: 2. Judy Dawson, North Tryou- . Piping, over 16: 8. Shirley Burke, Charlottetown. Iceland Will Extend Limits REYKJAVIIK, Iceland (Reu- ters)——Iceland Monday night offb cially announced its decision to extend its offshore limits to 12 from four miles. Iceland’s action, effective Sept. 1, will forbid all foreign boats from casting: nets inside the fish- filled continental shelf extending . 12 miles off its shore. Icelandic trawl-ens and seiner: will be allowed to fish inside the new 12-mile limit but only subject to special licensing rules. 7. HEELS BAD FOR HEALTH ' LOURENICO MARQUES, Moz- zamhique (Reuters) High‘ heeled shoes c ause steeping shoulders, a curved back and wrinkles on the face, a scie_.tific congress was told here Tuesday. Dr. E. S. Priester, addressing the South African Association for the Advancement of Science, said laceless shoes could not be fit- ted properly and resulted in loss of posture. sons were reported to be children. Four More Americans Are Carriecl Off By‘ Rebels HAVANA (AP) — Four more Americans were carried off into the hills Tuesday by a rebel band in what is considered a blackmail campaign to force U.S. interven- tion in Cuba. The rebels thus ran up a total of 50 captives —— 47 U.S. citizens and three Canadians — in their kidnapping raids that began last Thursday night. There was no word from two US. consuls who have been at- tempting through rebel contacts to arrange the release of the 41 Americans previously captured. Nor was there any indication of progress by the Canadian Eam- mill manager from Toronto; Har- old G’. Kristjanson, 37, of Gerald- ton, 0nt.; and Edward Cannon, 50, of Cornwall, Out. The last two are engineers working on a cop- per mine project. Rebels have been quoted as saying the abductions were to force the United States to cease assistance to the government of President Fulgencio Batista. The United States says it is not giv- ing such assistance. N0 INTERVENTION In Washington, secretary of State Dulles told a press confer- ence the rebels were trying to force the United Statesto inter- bassy to obtain the release of Sear-gent, about 50, sugar no U.S. intervention. The vene in Cuba but there will be States,’ he said, will not pay blackmail for the release of the Americans. A band of 30 to 40 insurgents in trucks carried off the latest raid. Coming down from the hills they drove into a United Fruit Company plantation at Guaro on the northeast coast of Oriente province, grabbed all the Armr- icéns they could find and reared oi . The rebels entered the sleep- ing quarters at Guam and took the men in custody without any shooting. No one was reported harmed. The rebels were believed to be those under the command of Raul Castro, brother of KM Chieftain Fidel Castro.