LORENS IN PARIS last Paris, Miss Laren “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1959 at Orly Airport in Paris ; will receive a French movie week. During | award. (AP Wirephote) Ike Predicts Universal Freedom Explosion Rips Apart Yank Titan CAPE CANAVERAL, Fila. (AP) A Titan, America’s biggest: mil- itary rocket, exploded into a roar- ing inferno Saturday as it. lifted off on its most critical test flight. The 98 - foot intercontinental- range giant barely struggled from its launch pad when it was ripped by an explosion of tons of burning fuel. When the smoke eleared, the Titan service tower was a fire blackened mass. None- of the 60 members of the launch crew, in a block house 100 yards away, was hurt. . The blowup was almost ident ical to the last Titan launching Aug. 14. That missile also rose a few feet, then was consumed in a holocaust, FAULTY RELEASE, The August explosion was blamed on a faulty release mech- anism. There was no indication of what caused Saturday’s blowup. Both the launches were aimed at igniting the Titan’s second stage for the first time. 22 Persons Feared Killed | In Apartment House Blast Manual Throws Doubts On Red Navy Scrapping By ROBERT TUCKMAN LONDON (AP) — The leading manual on: the world’s navies raised doubts Sunday that the So- viet Union is scrapping 90 per cent of its cruisers, as announced by Premier Khrushchev. The authoritative Jane’s Fight- ing Ships, in its just - published 1960, edition, said; “It remains to be seen to what extent and over what period this (Khrushchev’s) proposed course of action will be implement Jane’s reported the Soviet Union has three atomic-powered submarines under oo one nearing completion. MONTAGUE BUREAU OF THE GUARDIAN In Address To Million In New Delhi NEW DELHI (CP)—President ee fete ol Lae os. . ever ae “freedom: He was addressing a civic re- ception as the climax of his five- he|day visit f India, seen as the most significant part of his 22,- wil be. won every.0-mile gévdwill journey to Asia, eS ee HON. J.P. MATHESON ROADS TO RESOURCES Highways Minister J. Philip Matheson on behalf of the pro- “‘yincial government tomorrow swill-sign a $15,000,000 federal- provincial roa ds-to-resources ‘agreement providing for the pavement of some 400 miles of dsland roads in the next eight ‘years. Hon. Alvin Hamilton, Winister of northern affairs nd national resources will re- ‘present the Diefenbaker govern- ALVIN HAMILTON HON, ment at the ceremony schedul- ed to commence in the Confed- eration Chamber at 11:00 a.m. Premier Walter R. Shaw wiil preside and the four federal members and all members of the Legislature have been in- vited to attend. A luncheon in honor of the federal minister will follow. Mr. Hamilton is ex. pected to arrive in the Pro- vinge ante today. ee 8 New Cardinals Created VATICAN CITY (Reuters)— Pope John will create eight new cardinals today, bringing interna- tional representation into the cen- tral government of the Roman Catholic Chusch to the greatest degree in its history. Seven of the new cardinals will be given curia posts, Vatican sources said Saturday. Curia car- dinals are in effect ministers of the papal government, advising the Pope constantly. After the secret consistory Mon- day, and the events leading to the final public crowning of the Princes of the church with their red hats Thursday, eight of the 31 curia cardinals will be non- Italian. There were 14 curia car- dinals when Pope Pius XII died % October, last year, and only two were not Italians. INTERNATIONAL BODY After the consistory, the 3 Halian cardinals in the Vatican will be flanked by an American, @ Scot, ‘two Frenchmen, a Span- ferd, an Argentinian, an Armen- jan and a German. Vatican observers said they be- | / By Pope make the curia more an interna- tional body because of the forth- coming ecumenical council ex- pected in 1963 or 1964. Domenico Cardinal Tardini, pa- pal secretary of state, has de- scribed the coincil as the first full-scale re - examination of the church’s organization, doctrine and discipline since the 16th cen- tury. The Pope is believed to hope it will give a great new impulse to Christianity throughout the world and lead to the ‘reunification of all-the Christian churches, 79 CARDINALS The consistory will raise the over-all number of cardinals in the world to 79, Italy having 31. The English-speaking world wil} have 12 cardinals, including six in the United States and two each in Canada and Britain. \ The pontiff will announce his choices at a secret meeting of the old cardinals Monday mor- ning. On Wednesday, Pope John will give the new cardinals the first signs of their office—a red biretta Heved Pope John was spurred to |and purple. shoulder-cape. His audience thronged the Ra- mila Grounds—traditional scene of mass meetings in the city. Eisenhower told the cheering crowd, 60 acres of solidly packed humanity stretching” as far as the eye could see: “We believe that freedom ulti- mately will be won everywhere. Human hunger for it is far too deep-seated in human nature to be put off by contrived definition of man-made philosophy.” SEEKS CLOSER TIES He called for closer ties be- tween the United States and In- dia, declaring: “Between the first largest de- mocracy on Earth, India, and the second largest, America, lie 10,- 000 miles of land and ocean. “But in our fundamental ideas and convictions about democracy we are close neighbors. We ought to be closer. ‘We who are free and who ‘prize our freedom above all other gifts of god and nature must know each other better, trust each other more, support each other more.”’ After his speech, Eisenhower and Nehru met for a last talk over the dinner table, then issued satisfaction at U.S.-Indian rela- tions. This said Nehru reviewed Asia problems for Eisenhower. The communique did not mention Red China’s pressure at the Indian border, but James Hagerty, Eisenhower’s press _ secretary, said the matter of Communist China was discussed. Ch‘town Ship Is Christened SOREL, Que. (CP)—Mrs. Paul Comtois, wife of Canada’s mines minister, Saturday christened the icebreaker and supply ship Tup- per, sending the traditional bottle of champagne crashing against the hull of the transport depart- ment vessel. In a brief speech her husband described the 1,890-ton Tupper— to be based at Charlottetown—as a worthy addition to the federal fleet and one that could serve in many ways. The vessel was designed for icebreaking operations in shallow waters and harbors, search and rescue work and buoy and tender- placing service. WHERE-TO-FIND-IT Announcements, notices . 14 Births, deaths, etc., .. 2, 14 Classified section .... 14, 15 Comics, features ......;. 13 Charlottetown’ news ...... 5 WN oo ikssscesis 4 Island news .........:-: 2,3 GPW oo i aia nc hesasss 5, 9 Women’s page ......... 6,7 Late reports from Guardian news bureaus in Summer- side, Montague, Alberton and Sor is, and from special cor- re ondents now appear on t-e Island News Page. a communique expressing deep) to have an official meeting with ald; the—Armouries;—grade_ten, Mr. Murphy, Armouries; both the board within a day or two. Montague High Classes ResumeOnWednesday Grade twelve, taught. by. Ed- win MacDonald, will. be located in the Nurses’ Home; Grade eleven, Donna MacLeod, Church of Christ; grade eleven, Jerry Pineau, Nurses’ Home; grade ten, Mrs. Boudreault; St. Mary’s Hall; grade ten, Mrs. MacDon- Jane’s predicted -the nuclear- powered sub may soon become the capital ship around which the navies of the future will be built. The United States, Jane’s re- ported, plans to have 75 atomic subs by 1967 and about 40 of these will be armed with ballistic missiles. 5 Jane’s said Russia’s 500 subma- rines represent a formidable threat to the allied control of the seas. It said it was. not surprising that the United States and Brit- ain reduced their. cruiser Bests in the last year. “But it did come as a ssieiectinn when, during his recent visit to the United States, Mr. Khrush- chev said... that Russia was to scrap 90 per cent of her cruis- ers.” CRUISER STRENGTH | Jane’s gave Soviet crufser strength as 32 vessels, more than half built within the last few years. “As Russia, no doubt with due deliberation and a fixed policy in mind, embarked on such a gigan- tic program only a few years ago, there would appear to be at least some good reasons for consider- ing that such comparatively new and sizable vessels still retain a fair . potential for active_service, both in actual hostilities and in a cold war.” ) CIVIL AVIATION J.R.K. Main, director of civil aviation of the department of transport, has been named sen- ior Canadian representative on the council of the Internation Civil Aviation Organization. Mr. ‘Main, one of the most widely known officials in Canadian aviation, succeeds J.R. Belcher, who returns to his former posi- tion as secretary of the air | transport board. (CP Phote) Makarios Seen Victor grades nine, United Church Hall; Noting a considerable increase in Soviet naval activity in the last year, Jane’s said the Russian leaders ‘“‘well realize the vital im- . |portance of the positive control of Hall: |the seas in the gtand strategy of Life On Mars Is Seen Likely LONDON (AP) — Soviet scien- tists have produced new data in- dicating there may be life on Mars, Moscow Radio reported Sunday. “Physical conditions on this planet closely approximate those necessary for life,” said a broad- east report of research carried out at Pulkovo Observatory. “The new data now becoming available is gradually forcing the opponents of the theory of life on Mars to withdraw.” CAPITAL EXPENSES By ALAAN DONNELLY Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP) — A proposal which could shake one of two pil- lars of Canadian income tax law has been put forward by a man who helped draft the law. Kenneth Eaton, former assist- ant deputy finance minister and :|now a private tax consultant, la-- bels as “utterly fantastic?’ the principle stated in the law that capital expenses cannot be de- ducted from the taxable income of a business. His proposal: Rewrite the law to recognize the general principle —with some exceptions — ‘‘that all expenditures in business, both current and capital, are incurred for the purpose of producing prof- its and should be allowed as a deduction in computing profits.” IN TAX JOURNAL The thesis of the 65-year-old tax expert is published in the current edition of Canadian Tax Journal, magazine of the Cana- dian Tax Foundation, a private organization. Mr. Eaton éonceded, at once, that there are two major excep- tions in the law which “remove by far the greater part of the dis- ermination which would other- wise exist.” These permit dedtic- tion of annual depreciation charges for plant, machinery and equipment, and of interest cost of borrowed money. But he said there are many other capital costs which are dis- allowed. Years ago when the tax rate was very low, unfairness in the = structure could be shrugged off, “INTO BED WITH THEM” * “It is something else again to into bed with them and walks off Great Britain and the United States, and their clear intention is to isolate North America from Western Europe in the event- of war." Jane’s listed the major strength of the world’s three leading naval powers as follows: Britain — Carriers (light and heavy) nine, battleships one, cruisers 13, destroyers and fri- gates 157, submarines 56. Soviet Union—Carriers and bat- tleships none, cruisers 32, de- stroyers and frigates 480 (estima- ted), submarines 500 estimated), nuclear submarines (under con- struction) three. United States — Carriers (all types) 79, battleships and battle cruisers 12, cruise 51, de- stroyers and frigates , subma- rines 186, nuclear submarines 10. RegulationOnIncome Tax Is Said ‘Utterly Fantastic authority practically moves right, in the morning with about half \ their profits.” NICOSIA, Cypris (CP)—Cyprus elected its first-president Sunday. -Results will not be known until late today but supporters of Arch- bishop Makarios claimed an over- whelming victory. “We are confident of a com- said it was too early to comment “The election was like @ general vote of confidence in the| archbishop. A spokesman for lawyer John; ‘Clerides, Makarios’ o p ponent, DORTMUND, Germany (AP)— two apartment houses here Sun- A pre- ss eb Two Large Buildings: Smashed To Rubbie stood or lost strengzth. They let go and plunged inte the fiery debris. co a cee ee Ss ee are believed to have died. were, ony eight survivors of the iecay Lohdings te rubble im the! Acne because full reports had not come a in from outlying districts. He con- ceded, however, the turnout of supporters for Clerides was not as high as had been expected earlier . Il 1S “LUCKY” FOR SQUIRES EASTPORT, Nfld. (CP)— Number 11 greets the Squires family ‘of Eastport from all” sides. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Squires have 11 children. The youngest is 11 years old. On Nov. 11, Mr. Squires bought a door for his front porch from nearby Gander. When it arrived, the number 11 was painted on it. A friend suggested he use 11 as his house number. Mr. Squires believe it was all a coinci- dence. So he counted the number af houses leading to the road. His is the 11th house. By DOUG HARKNESS Canadian Press Staff Writer here Saturday killing four naval crew members. The anti - submarine aircraft the flight deck of the aircraft carrier Bonaventure. It was the climax to a run of bad luck for the storm-battered Bonaventure. and her four de- stroyer escorts which arrived here Sunday after six weeks of A 35-FOOT wave crashes in expect businessmen to a mountain of spray over the calmly toleraté these inadequac-| bow and onto the flight deck of ies in the.law when government] the Canadian aircraft carrier Bonaventure during a wild At- lantie storm 500 miles north- east of the Azores. The Bonny, ceivéd ‘considerable damage during the furious two-day storm. One aircraft was lost and four destroyer-escorts, re- and four crew members killed. Parkacd cre m-mbers can be seen on the carr.er’s “.:land” at right, (CP Phoete) Fatal Crash 0 Hard-Luck Voyage - ~ Meets Queen LONDON (Reuters) — The tal- lest and most criticized governer= general in the Commonwealth Friday kissed the hand of the Queen on his appcintment as Brit- ish newspapers dubbed him a “hater of Britajn.” No other Governor - General ever has faced as intense a bar- inch Charlies Swart fof his role in developing South Africa’s race segregation policies as justice minister. Labor members. have urged Prime Minister Macmillan te — speak out strongly against apar- theid (sttict race segregation) during his forthcoming visit te South Africa. ls Climax exercises in the North\ Aflantie. Naval officials identified the ROUGH ALL THE WAY The task force nosed into port accompanied by the rough weather that plagued it almost A leading naval officer said “We ran into a string of bad luck.” Car horns and whistles blared as anxious relatives lined jetties im a torrential downpour of rain Ribs bye vlad Ms f [ i re i added that the sense of interna- tional crisis appears to have les sened, but warned against drop- ping NATO's guard. He said in his arrival statement that the NATO meeting this week beside its usual military review, will discuss the international sit- uation, in¢luding plans for a sum mit meeting.