Buyer meets seller Ads. ’ WAGE HIKE ,____ €7,3-Year “ By anlfLEs CAIN :pE’DROIT (AH—Ford Motor any and the United Auto yorkers‘ reached agreement on a “99.er contract Wednesday mgr a Silhour bargaining session . , l“mutilated by a strike of 90,000 V gainers. . . .UAW president Walter Reuther ,med the contract beneficial to he uni-on, Ford and to the gen- . ml U.S. economy. ‘ _' ,ne said he could not estimate 'Wa-tely what it is worth but .; "'14 it is “considerably better" m the company’s previous offer “,1 two-year contract and 16 » . cents an hour in wage increases. ' “ ','The union obtained concessions a many fi e1 d 5 including in- : “med supplemental unemploy- ' ml pay, increased pensions, .mpensation for those on short york weeks, severance pay and gist - of - living and improvement tor allowances. - heather appeared especially ‘ y about Ford’s decision to the union severance pay. Authorized as Second Clan Mail by iTFord-UAW Sign J TELEPHONE 8506 with Guardian Want Dial 8506 ask for classif' taker, for quick results. ~ led ad the Post Department. (Maw. om“ Pact worker with 30 years service could get as high as $3,000 if his job was terminated. COMPANY OFFERS The auto company offered an improved costqof-living allowance of three cents an hour retroactive to Sept. 1 and an improvement factor of seven cents going back to the same date. ' The union which had asked that cost - of - living and improvement factor allowances be retroactive to June 1, the date its contract with Ford ran out. Ford Offered nine cents hourly for the period July 1 to Sept. 1 and 10 cents from that date on. Reuth-er, Who by agreement with Ford held a press confer- ence before Ford officials gave their views on the contract, tenrned the pact “‘a very fine doc- ument” and sound collective bar.- gaining. With the UAW-Ford agreement, it appeared likely the other~ com- panies now would go along with it, the UAW chief said, a Ademaud for a speed up in the of the potato support {urged in a resolution passed the Young Progressive Con- m at their convention in , Community Centre yesterday. The resolution read as follows H... -... the close of this year’s In: season, saw' a large meofP. E. I. potatoes still at eted, and whereas new i in council Legislation pas- lat the 23rd session of Parlia- providing for thesupport of a: commodity and whereas the v' off in markets caused con- V NTO (’CP)‘ —- m. a... (William Cook, 62, a research ‘ at the ‘ University , Toronto. died in hospital Wed» am ii Murray River, P.E.l., wrecoived his BA at Acadia * I ,ersity and doctorate at Yale. lie joined the Acadia Univers- 4' Staff M1929 and became a professor the following year, \ w n. I: -: ‘became professor of psychole ’ .v at the University of Toronto, - n 1946 until 1949 he headed University of Saskatchewan ‘ w cut of phydhology. Dr. k had been a member « th‘ 'anadian Army opera- M research group during the _ nd World War. At the close his, duties in Saskatchewan, joined the defense research at Ottawa, and left two X . ~ , Thomas 7 __ ‘sln' Toronto Hospital I [post beheld until 1941, when a similar settlement. ' Demand Speedup In otalo Support Payments siderable basic loss to ,our pri- mary producers. And whereas no payment has yet been received by (our potato growers. Therefore be it resolved that the Y.P.C.’s urge upon all the rospon-sbible bodies a speeding up of the im- plementation of this payment so that the situation may be eased.” OTHER DEMANDS other demands favored in re- solutions passed by the young Conservatives were: the dissatis- faction with the progress of /the Hospital Insurance on Prince Ed.- Cook, 62, ': , \ years ago to doresearch at the Unit/ersity of Toronto. Recently he was honored with a felloWship in the Canadian Psychological Association. ‘- His wife, the former Dorothy Clare Cochrane. died two years 'ago. He leaves a daughter, .Mrs. Florence Sudden of Toronto, two sons Edmund'of Ottawa and Francis at University in Wont. ville; his. mother. Mrs. T. L. Cook, of Murray River, RE I.; seven sisters and a brother, Roy Cook of Toronto. s The seven sisters are Mrs. Dr. E. S. Giddings, Mrs, Wallie Seantlebury, Mrs. Percy Shar- am, all of Charlottetown; Mrs. Malcolm MacKinnon, Murray River; Mrs. Alfred Innocent, Waterbury, Conn, Miss Jessie Cook and Miss Clara Cook” / than on. ,5. 'c p‘ . i ; Corporation.” In business. . ‘ Plan of Governor Orval E « ' ‘ma‘Sh ' Nationalist gun positions. “.Previous heavy shellings were Emma at blasting supply vessels Femlng ashore at Quemoy or at .N‘llonalist troops, By Nationalist count, the Reds , “3990 in 8,333 shells on the 3: a-tlonalist offshore islands up to 3 pm. The Nationalist military infor- ' math!!! service said Tuesday 5 ‘ . ‘mWY bombardment of Quemoy led 11 civilians and wounded 22 “hers. \ k l l . The bombardment did not halt ’ , Nationalists’ trickle of sup- , l “we? Quemoy. Two vessels , cargo Wednesday and e . “ In“amused. 5%. l has» Drivaie Schools ' n L. Rock Aim MTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP)-——A ‘ Rock lawyer filed incorpor- yl‘am Papers Wednesday aimed at mating an agency to operate city schools as private institu- incorporators were a group lizensxThe name of the cor- i’hfifion as listed on the docu- ‘ment read: “Little Rock Private CWt Judge .J Mitchell Cock- , Immediately si g n e d the jars putting the corporation le- ‘Thls. “lion by a private group ‘ ed out what was obviously é’ WW8: ’To set up a private Pound Quemoy Guns As " EJWO-Vessels Land Supplies WEI, Formosa (Thursday) =“P>’~,rhe Chinese Communists , f med WP on Quemoy With heavy : winery and deep - penetration men's Wednesday in what ap- ‘ 10 be a new attempt to Montreal. school system to operate with state funds on a tuition basis. Faubus apparently believes that Supreme Court orders declaring public school segregation uncon- stitutional do not apply to private institutions. FORESAW LITIGATION President Eisenhower earlier said any such private school plan would result in “a basketful of litigation.” . Observers here believe any at- tempt to reopen the four L1tt1e Rock high schools closed by Fau- bus will result in immediate ac- tion by the U.S. department of justice. The uns now being used by the Reds gwere described by Na tionalist ordnance experts as 204- millimetre and 212 - millimetre weapons, as compared With the 152~millimetre artillery prevmusly aimed at Quemoy. The smaller artillery sputtered the Island w1tn anti-personnel shells. The new, bigger guns use deep-penetration shells. Apparently the Reds hope these will silence the underground gun emplacements from . which the Nationalists are returning the fire. The landing moy was made pite the l'lefavat revlou-s e fo . geceived naval escort from ‘ tionalist and American warships for as far as the three-mile limit. But observers noted that the sup- of cargo at Que- in 20 minutes des- Is, the landing ships V_ ,_ Moderator Red shelling. At in Na- ' hairdl enough to keep phes were f 1300,000 Nationalist @1108 @llfll’uli it; “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” l CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1958 Britain Opens Doors Paper, :SalmOn, Gov’t. Bonds anppe’d Up OT‘TAIWIA (CIP)—A government of Canada $500,000,000 bond issue was oversubscribed W'ednesday 45 minutes after the issue was put on the market. ‘ The Bank of Canada said Wed- nesday purchases we're about evenly divided at some $300,000.- 000 each between nine - month 2%-per~cent-interest bonds and 18~ month 2%«per-cent-interest bonds. Proceeds of the short-term loan Will be used by the government to refund bonds which mature next Oct. 1 in the amount of $400.~ ‘ 000,000 and for general purposes, the announcement said. Ward Island; placing of farm Workers under the Unemployment Insurance Act, and a revision of diam Farm Loan Board. The young Conservatives re- ceived.- an official welcome from his Worship, Mayor Edwin C. (Continued on Page 17 001. 3) London, Ont. Man New U.C. O’l‘Tm'ifoPleRev. Angus J. MacQuyeen of London, Out, Wed- nesday; night was elected moder- ator of the United Church of Can- ada for the next two years. He was chosen from among four nominees for the post by 400 delegates to the 18th biennial gen eral council'of the church which opened here Wednsday. ; ‘ He succeeds Rt. Rev. Jame _ S. Thomson of Montreal. Mr. MacQueen, chairman of the church’s board of evangelism and social services, was elected too the third ballot. , ‘I The other candidates were Rev, R. Douglas Smith, pastor of Rob- ertson' United Church, Edmonton; Rev. Hugh A. McLeod, pastor of Knox United Church, Winnipeg; and Dr. Malcolm C. Mac-Donald, Toronto, secretary of the church’s board of home miss-ions. ' Mr.- MacQueen is pastor'of the First St. Andrew’s United Church in_London. He will preside oer the balance of the council ses- sious, which continue to a week from Friday. YOUNGEST MODERATOR Mr. MacQueen at 46 becomes the youngest moderator since the formation of the church in 1925. He is the son of a Cape Brett-on Island coal miner in Port Motion, NS, where he was born. He was educated at Mount Al- lison University, S'aclcville, N.BJ, and at Pinevllle Divinity Hall in Halifax. in 1935 and his first charge was let a year he was made pastor of the United Church at Port Hawkesbury, N.S. Says Speed 01‘ Train Abnormal5 plunged ' through a. Monday. I the disaster. day. Another 19 people were re- North Jersey coast. Whipple said draw. ark Bay. ‘I the statues governing the Cana- - He was ordained at Sackville as assistant minister in St. An- drew’s Church at Sydney, N.S. Af- BAYONNE, N.J. (AIP) —- The Hudson County prosecutor said Wednesday .a Jersey Ce’llral com- muter train was going at “an ab- normal rate of speed” when it drawbridge Prosecutor Lawrence A. Whipple questioned witnesses at Bayonne police headquarters in an investigation of the cause of The toll of known dead in the disaster mounted to 27 Wednes- \ Thomas Bell, M.P., of Saint John, N.B., past president of the National Y.P.C., congratu- lates H. Bennett Carr of Char- A hint that the federal gov- ernment was now consideriug1..ad- dirtional assistance to the fragile economies of the CommonWea‘lth’s less-favored members by further bolstering of both the Colombo Plan and the internationaltMonc- ,tary Fund was .in a Speech delivered here last night. {Mr. Tom Bell, Progressive Con- servative M.P. Who represent-s Saint John-Albert in the House of Commons, (speaking to the delegates attending the provin- cial convention of the Young Pro- gressive Conservative Association, said that in. his personal opinion it was “very import-ant that Can- ada, with its great wealth and Godagiven resources should make those available to the underpri- vileged areas of the Common- wealth . ’ ’ CONGRATULATES NEW PRESIDENT lottetpwn on ‘ils election to the presidency of the P.E.I. Young Plogressive ‘Conservatives at the wind-up. sesion of the con- The benefits accrued from such increased trade would help to maintain the nation’s standard of living, he added. . Mr. Bell was introduced by Dr. Orville Phillips M.P'. for Prince, and thanked by W. Chest- er S. MacDonald, Summers-ide, the retiring president, who pre- sided at the final session of the one-day convention held at Char- lpttetowu’s Community Centre. Other speakers included Mr. Melvin MacQu-aid of Souris, the. provincial president of the senior oganization, and WE. Shaw, leader of the provincial PC par- ty. ' NAMED PRESIDENT The 104 accredited delegates; present chose H. Bennett Carr, Charlottean insurance agent. Cabinet Seen Unlikely ‘ lo Kill Rail By JOHN LELANC Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (GP) — The cabinet will not disallow a Elmer—cent freight rate increase sought by the railways if the board of trans- port. commissioners grant-s it, highly - placed informants said Wednesday. The railways Wednesday asked the commissioners for this im- mediate increase to cover the cost of a contract settlement with un- nions. They also asked the board for an increase of: an unspecified amount, to take effect later. The last boost the railways were given authorization for by the transport board—3.6 per cent— was killed by the cabinet in late April. A taxation issue was involved in that case. This time, the nail- ways are seeking for the moment just about enough to cover addi- tion-a-l wage co st 3 of around $65,000,000 a year. Information Wednesday was that the board probably will grant the 19-peruceut boost, ef- fective perhaps about Nov. 1. Hearings are due to start Oct. 6. SEE APPEAL REFUSED Well - posted informants said that, in the event of an appeal to ported missing and were believed to have taken the train from the the five-coach train ,Was going at abnormal speed as far back as a warning signal 2,000 feet from the open Had it not been for the speed, Whipple said, he believes a de- railing device would have halted the train on the trestle over New- think the engineer was stricken at the home device (the red light 2,000 feet from the the cabinet by opponents of the first and “interim” rate increase, they likely will be urned down, despite the fact that eight pro- vincial governments may do the appealing. These governments—all except Ontario and Quebec—have fought every freight increase case before the board since 1946. They were the winners of the case before the cabinet in April, when the minis- ters for the first time in Canadian history knocked out a transport board rate increase cut of hand. But this time the setup is dif- the garrison o t ‘ troops in battleready condition. dram," Whipple said. ferent. Rate Hike The paralyzing strike of em- ployees of the big railways looms unless the carriers come across with wage increases for 130,000 employees in 1-5 non-operating un’- nions and thosevin three of the running trades unions. . The non-opstied up the rail- ways in 1950 for 11 days over a wage dispute. They now are tak- ing a strike vote, returns from which will be in about Nov. 1. .l vention held at the Community Centre Wednesday. Carr replac- ed outgoing president W. Ches- ter S, MacDonald, Summerside. Saint John. M. P. Speaks Al as their president for the coming year. in preference to teacher Donald MacDougall of Summer- side. Ln [two othe of Charlottetown was secretary. Running against the two vic- Mrs. Sonia MacRae, and William Rix, tors were respectively, Junior, both of CharlottetOWn. With all other executive posi- (Coutinued on Page 2 Col. 5) r contested execu-. tive *positions Tom Doyle of North Rustico was named vice-president , for Queens and Artlfur Machluis chosen as Key Issue At UN ls , Held Over By LLOYD fi-McDONALD Canadian Press Staff Writer UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (CP) Red, China’s admission to the United Nations was not pressed to debate Wednesday in the UN Assembly’s steering committee, amid indications that the United States was behind the postpone- ‘ ment. ,, The steering committee, a 21- member body which recommends to the Assembly the makeup of its agenda in the coming weeks of debate, had been expected to vote at the outset on whether to inscribe Peiping’s admission as an issue for the Assembly. But Assembly P r e 5 id e n t Charles Malik' told theeommittee that one of its members had asked that the item be held off until some time Thursday. With no objection recorded, the committee then passed a long list of questions for in-clusion‘on the Assenuoly agenda, but left in the air the key issue overhanging this new 13th meeting of the UN's par—- liamentary body. ' The U.S. was believed to have been the st ee ri n g committee member who asked tor the post- ponement, and there were re- ports as Well that Washington is ~ hilt; behave the whole V _ alibi HM that.“ current osa’ogflbreak— during the Chinese-American am- bassadorial talks in Warsaw. To Study Subs As Northern Cargo, Carriers EDMONTON (CP)‘ — Arrange- ments have been made for the “very fullest study” of submarine transport as a means of aiding northern development, Resources Minister Hamilton said Wednes- day night. Red China Makes Lou-n To Ceylon COLOMBO, Ceylon (Reuters)— Ceylon and Communist China Wednesday reached agreement on a 50,000,000 - rupee ($10,000,000) Chinese loan to Ceylon. . The loan will be made in, four, annual installments starting this year " the form of machinery and eq ipment. It is repayable at 2% per cent interest in 10 equal annual instalments starting in groups, - 1961. Canada’s ice-covered northern waters could be transformed from “barriers to opportunities" if cub- marine cenlmercia-l transports materialize, he said. The recent voyages by two United States atomic - powered .ru-bma-rines bad “shattered the insight an impenetrable polar sea and [demonstrated that the Arctic'c'an become the Mediter- ranean of the modernworl .” Mr. Hamilton addressed the first se 5 s i on of the National ‘lorthern Development Confer- mce, s p o n s o~re d by private The text‘s! his address was Reds May Renew ‘Weapons' Tests LONDON (Ari—Radio Moscow ‘ ‘said Wednesday th e Russians , probably will be forced to resume ll ‘ile fishing I alone on awe-Pata- r‘Iclear weapons tests. It d hated “the Western" powers are i.- ‘irnply forcing the Soviet Union ; e use 0 take back its word." issued to press before deliv- ery. I ‘l V r program 1 CAMPBEILTQH; NE. (on) —— {mules 43, of Tide - «ad, was drowned Tuesday 3‘ ‘a. River. Friends found his : on the river bank. Searchers e kept in the background at the WEATHER Overcast, rain be continuing cool; light ginning in afternoon; winds increasing to easterly 15. Low-high 38 and 60. NOT MORE THAN , By ALAN HARVEY Canadian Press Staff Writer MONTREAL (C‘P) -—- With a showman’s sense of tir'nin , Brit- ain Wednesday opened her doors wide to C a n a d i a n newsprint, salmon a nd machinery, and hintedrthat restrictions on such things as pots and pans, clothing and other consumer goods may soon be lifted. In an announcement that trans- formed the atmosphere at the Commonwealth trade and eco- nomic conference, Britain's Sir David Eccles proclaimed “almost a clean sweep” of controls on dol- lar imports of industrial, agricul- tural and office jmachinery. The next move, he said, will be to free imports of consumer goods and any ’foodstuffs still banned from the United Kingdom. Sir David, president of the» board of trade, a British govern- ment department, gave the per- haps equally significant word that colonial governments are being "invited" to relax restrictions on a wide range of dollar goods. Some colonial restrictions are tighter than those applying in Britain. MINOR SENSATION Sir David’s statement, following so closely on earlier United King- dom pronouncements indicating an almost tremudous British 'ap- proach to trade liberation, caused a minor sensation among dele. gates on this third day of the two- week commonwealth trade meet- ‘lllfégest since 1932. ' ‘ Can-ads, chairman .of the confer- encé;‘pronlptly called it 5 “states- manlike stroke." Only Tuesday Mr. ""lemi-ng had appeared to re- buke Britain as he forcefully called for complete convertibility. Economic (experts made these general ,reflections on the start- ling British move: 1. The statement will have a tonic effect on Commonwealth trade. Australia and other ster- ling-area countries will presum~ ably follow the British lead by emoving their own curbs on- dol- ars imports. 2. It shortensthc odds against ‘an early announcement of com,- FIVE CENTS Announcement ls Sensation en c e observers surmised that such a move may well be syn- chronized with next month’s meetings in New Delhi of the In- ternational Monetary Fund and World Bank. There, broad agreement is ex- pected on new moves to increase the free world’s supply of money reserves, an action that would give Britain an added safeguard against the dangers of a run on sterling. FULL CONVERTIBILITY? Another school of economic opinion holds that Wednesday’s ; announcement in fact amounts to full convertibility, even though certain restrictions remain. 3. With qualifications, it com- mits Britain to a “timetable” of trade liberation in future months or years. “The next move will be to make a start in freeing our im- ports of consumer goods and the remaining foodstuffs," Sir David said. “All being well, we hope to make a start‘next year.” The British’sta-temeut listed ac- tion under four heads: - 1. There will be virtually I clean sweep of controls on dollar imports of industrial, agricultural and office machinery. A small range of specialized machinery will remain under controls. 2. Canned salmon, except from Soviet Russia, will be freed of controls. 3. NeWSpriut ,. v -~I'_ “V _" sources said this would have»: useful but not nec- essarily dramatic effect on the newsprint industry. 4. Colonial governments are be- ing invited to relax restrictions on a wide range of dollar goods. Reactions from other delega- tious were slow in crystallizing, but there were early pointers that Australia may not be prepared to go all the way" with Britain’s lib- eral views. In other action Wednesday, con» ference members expressed qual— ified optimism about the pros- pects of sterling-area recovery.- , it was generally agreed things were looking up, but some differ- ences of view on how soon and plate convertibility. Some confer- how complete recovery will be. MONTREAL (OP) — Finance Minister Fleming Wednesday de— scribed B’ritain’s big step toward freer trade as a “statesmaulike stroke.” In a brief comment after the announcement by Sir David Eccles, president of the board of trade, on British action to sweep away nearlyall remaining dollar controls, Mr. Fleming said be “greatly appreciated” Sir David’s statement. , Pakistan Finance Minister Syed Amjad Ali also expressed appre- clatibn of the British: statement. Canadian officials said the Brit- ish move will be highly welcome ‘to producers in this country. Re- moval of the quota on salmon ’would be of “utmost importance" to British Columbia, these ble to heats the body sources said. ‘ ' ELIZABETH, N.J.—’One coach of commuter train that plunged water below raised section i into Newark Bay sticks out of'plunged Monday. Two other coa‘ f.- drawbridge through which train WHERE TRAIN PLUNGED INTO BAY 0f. ches are-below water and two re; lmain on tracks. Death toll is ex- 1 pected to be approximately 40. Some ,Comment On British Step‘Toch‘rds Freer Trade The British announcement that colonial governments were being invited to relax restrictions on a “wide range of dollar goods” was . also important to Canada, offi- cials said. LONDON (Reuters) -- Britain’s relaxation of controls on dollar imports of industrial: agricultural and office machinery—announced Wednesday in Montreal—was dc- National Union of Manufacturers Wednesday night as an “import- ant and a good thing,” that kind that can be better ob- tained from the dollar area than elsewhere, particularly machine tools," he said. “We hope. that we shall see cor- responding relaxations on the other side of the Atlantic, particu- larly in the United States.” ‘ Will Ask Yanks To Quit Lebanon BETEUT, Lebanon (Reuters)— Rashid Karami, a candidate for the Lebanese premiership, said Wednesday the new government will immediately ask for the with- drawal of United States troops from Lebanon. He said hethought the United States would not hesitate to with- draw its troops when asked to do so by the new regime. A new government is due to take office after the inauguration of President-elect Fuad Chehab Karami has been nominated by opposition and rebel leaders. U.S.- Army Tests Another Missile CAPE OANAV‘ERJAL,‘ Fla. (AP: A Redstone, the.most adanced ballistic missile in the United States, roared aloft Wednesday. The 63 - foot medium - range weapon was launched as one of the final steps in the army’s pro- gram to make the missile opera- l AP Wirephoto tional. It was tonoed luv u am wanhv ead. 'will be “formally” scribed by a spokesman of the ' “‘There are many imports of a