K "Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew" CHARLOTTETOWN CANADA. SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 1957 ov't Decision Delayed Until Sometime Next Week St. Ldurent, Diefenbaker Are Non-Committal After Meeting Mr. St. Laurent said it would not be proper to "formulate a de- cision" until the service ballots are counted. CABINET MET The cabinet met again in the 1': 5 TELEPHONE ssos Buyer meets siellerl with Guardian Wo-itAde. DIIIIISOO Ishfofdssssi-' fiededteiter.fesquldrresuhs.. . WEATHER Cloudy with e few showers; not much - ' if change in temperature; light winds. Lew-high at Charlottetown 55 end 70. PRICE 5c "174-K61-zs Army Dismisses Haiti President PORT AU PRINCE. Haiti (AP) The army booted provisional pres- ident Daniel Flgnoie out of office and into exile Friday. A military junta took over and immediately proclaimed a state of emergency. Fignole. 43-year-old .mathemat- ics professor who is the idol of thousands of Haiti's workers. headed the sixth government to ride this Caribbean Negro repub- lic since last December. Fignole's regime lasted just 19 days. Brig-Gen. Antonio Kebreau, 48- yesr-old army chief of staff. heads 1 ' e e thensfwthree-man Junta. He said t.."'.".:'.'::f.t':t:l.:::e:.:l..f't:':::: S ' ' F ' R C M P i:.:i.i.'::r;'i'::.;2.:.:?.”.:,.e5:53;;. 9l'VlCe; Orcesz -that Haiti's six months of politi-. cal violence was born. ; DEPENDS ON ARMY i gs) OTTAWA (CF) - There via: a lot of scurrying about and confer- ring on Parliament Hill Friday but. on the surface at least. it didn't add up to much. The basic news about whether OTTAWA (CF) -- The federal retary of the federation. said ”lJse The tttttz-.tton of cm! service sal- ; PRINC Prince Philip. left. husband of Queen Elizabeth II. grins as he ulkstoandai ' thaltlllllllll slthree soldtereoflheRoyalCau- E PIP Irisescrs CANADIAN BEARDS sdisn Regiment during his visit to the regiment at Fort York. near Dostmund. GGTNIBY. today. While Prince Philip was inspoci, the regiment. the White House announ- ced thst he and Queen Elizabeth would make a five-day visit to the United States in October. LONDON (Reuters) ,- lootlsnd Ysrd's murder squad is swamped sith cases. A rash of violent deaths through- out Britain this spring has forced tn manpower from other police departments. Friday. Scotland Yard borrowed s detective hon: the west London district of Psddiogtsn to head an investigation into the slaying of a would-be emigrant to Canada. lirs. Rosetta Oliver. wife of a local businessman. was found strangled Thursday at her home In Exeter. she was lying on ht bed. fully clothed. Mrs. Oliver. who was to go to Canada with but as to Join their cillllila, Ill ID: 29th slaying viottn shes apsl II. MYSTERIOUI . Scotland Ybsd. which in ms- able to investigate tnnt-tlsr cases onrequestfrompolicsinllypuh of the country. is working on a number of unsolved as-inns. Among the nice mysterious ass: 1. The case of Polish OonntQ Teresa 'l.ubtenska. wartime Polish rtsistance leader who was stabbed to death seconds silt she left a the detective bureau to uek ex- had 5: subway train is London May 14. She died in the arms of s porter muttering the word "bandit." Po- lice are working on the theory she was knifed by a young rufflan she reprimanded. I. The case of the bicycling wi- dow. Mrs. Muriel Msltland. 34- yslr-old mother of two children who was attacked as she cycled to work through woodlands near Crsniord April 30. Her body later was found in a shallow grave. She had been strangled and sexually assaulted. I. The case of hsbordssher Da- vid Kelsey. 21. who was found is the back in his Dudley four days before he Police said it Egg-.222 rs;gi E : -3 E E s 8 5. The case of the strangled mistress. Elsie Taylor. who was found dead in. her Csnnock home Scotland Yard's Murder Squad Swamped By Cases April 17. her hands and feet bound with clothesllne. She had been beaten and stra ' d. Her husband had left her two years earlier and the coroner told an inquest she had been carrying on with two lovers. 0. The case of the buried tobac- oonist. Frederick Walter Jeffs. 37. who was found half-buried under twlgs. leaves and bricks near a lover's lane in the Birmingham area April l9. He suffered severe head injuries. Police searched for a 20-year-old brunette believed to have had a date with him. and a man who was in Jeff's store when Jeffa made the data. Meanwhile. police charged three be men with murder in sonnsctton with two recent cases. his men were tmss-ged in Not- gnghm lnuthe dsemsf hitched u . I - year expectant fstbc who was beaten up while out pigeon shooting last Sunday. At iloddesdon, a Ibyesr-dd agri- cultural worker was charged with murder in the death of Robert Bishop. Bishop was found dead with head injuries among weeds by the side of the River Les two days ago. GENEVA (Rent:-s)-The seeds strata been born under the t u- once of nuclear fall-out from ten ummnl sit in. officially d b- I -Iflllpwe-1-5'!" n The bed "virus A be- Philipplnes. about 18.” casts have been re erted with lsl tenths surf to lnflnsusa. As Australian virus authority, sir Mscfsrlsns luraet. said he be lfcves the Asian epidemic will Ivrcsd to nearly every country is lhe world. especially during the winter momhg, sneonrun JUNE 9 ' W antibiotics penicillin Asian Influenza Virus . Spreads To North Amemu .. erlands. and is assumed already is be spreading through Europe. in stressing the snildness oi the new as strain. a WHO report said ' .017 few deaths have been set- The virus flow not respond to or other treatment but and similar drugs an useful against complications such as pneumonia. In order to prevent further out- breaks of the new vtnts. vaccine production already has started is several countries, using specimens collectsdbytheWH0lnits5'I centres in as coustries. it is impossible to stop the epi- demic by quarantine "because such measures are as costly as they are ineffective." the WHO re ported. But it said "acute cases" shotdd be isolated. Dr. Plrie's suggestion that the virus might be s consequence of nuclear radiation fall-out wes pub- halted in the Lancet. British medl- c weekly. Dr. Pirle. head of the Mechan- istry department oi the Rotham- ct stsd experimental station at Han pssdea user London. said that "vi- lo rnntats Woman Amassed Huge Fortune NEW YORK (AP)-A frail little woman of I). who lived in a fire damaged apartment and dined fl is-cent hoidogs. turned out to have had a fortune oi nearly 500,003- sndkcptmorethanhslfoflt under hq bed. The woman. Mrs. Emma Buhl Ii! HIE. died three weeks ego after being found almost helpless from malnutrition and kidney and heart diseases. Her astonishing wealth was suspected by no one although she had been a prominent business man. she was the widow of a tugboat owner. A search for s will turned up the startling hoard of 8274.00) is 10 NIECIS. NEPIIEWS 33.: iii and his three Workers Fever in nu Oae0ItlnSeskAltelCY-NT lll s 4 to s s as s s a 7 1 Us to s s s s as as I 4 l 1 1 (T? as o s s s s s s to s 1 s 50 is s s s s s s o s is s s N . 2 s s s s a s 0 s s o to N4: . s s s s s z s s s s o s 3-K? I s s s s ' I s s s s s s 3: 1' s,Vs 0 s o l s s s s s ' -o to .-.-. .. I; -m - - TMI m- 1 I is is is u is 11 I1 ss s sales tbelnssryw :"'"l'. algae said it ended Flgnole's rule be- fans to army positions. Fignole's lo ”' were believed under arrest. Troops and police. sent to key points. had orders to start shoot- ing st any sign of violence. But Fignole's downfall was carried out without a single shot and with ma- chlne-like precision. l(cbreau's two associates on the Junta are Col. Emile Zamor and Col. Adrian Valvllle. The Junta also named a seven-man cabinet One of Fignole's first acts the day he became provisional presi- dent had been to name Kebreau to succeed Brig.-Gen. Leon Can- tave as army chief oi staff. Kebreau promised elections will be held "as soon as peace is re- stored." In the originally sched- uled elections. 10 candidates. in- cluding Fignole. were in the run- ntng. But Fignole already had cancelled the date and suspicion ran high among the various can- didates that Fignole was setting things up so he would he sure oi election to a six-year term. Rumors had been building up In the capital that Fignole support- ers planned a mass march on the presidental palace Sunday to de- mand that Fignole assume a six- yer term without elections. The Army my have decided to act to forestall any such demonstration. lgnvernment has approved an av-qpercentage seems not too had but ary increases became an issue in Tl!!! lfmy-Upon whose co-oper- ierage six-per-cent increase in sal- stion any reslme must depend-laries for non - professional civil .servants and members oi the cause he tried to destroy thc.armed forces and the RCMP. srrny's integrity by naming civil-; Finance Minister Harris an- the average appears low." he Paid. "it would indicate that the lbulk oi the civil service is not going to receive the increase it should." tnounced Friday that the increases J. E. Osborne, president of the boosts will not appear on pay Geques until the new 23rd Parlia- ment has voted the necessary funds. The increases for the 130000 non-professional civil servants will range from 316 to 12 per cent. or an average of about six per cent. The ll7.000 members of the armed services and'the 5,018 in the RCMP will receive boosts "of somewhat similar orders of mag- nitude” as the civil service. 110 MILLION Cost of the increase would be about S110,000,000 a year, made up of 579,000,000 for the civil service and S31,000.0 for the armed forces and RCMP. The to- tal includes the government's matching payments into the super- annuation fund. The government May it an- nounced a general increase of from 4.5 to 12 per cent for about 7.000 professional civil servants. These increases. also effective May 1. will cost some Sf.000.0W annually. Fred Whltehouse. president of the Civil Service Federation of Canada. welcomed the increases but said his group felt justified in making its original request for a l0-per-cent boost. AVERAGE LOW fembers,will be retroactive to May 1. 1957. Cvil Service Association of Ot-. undersecretariesmowever. it is understood the laws. said since the average in: tcreasc appears to be around six jpclr cent "we are concerned that lthis may not bring us in line with the federal election campaign when Prime Minister St. Laurent said they would be granted if his party was returned to power. PROTEST!-ID DELAY During the campaign Progres- sive Cunservative leader John Diefenbakcr protested the delay in granting the salary increases. He said the boosts would be quickly approved by a Conservative gov- ernmenl. lrates prevailing in industry." Fredericton Minister Elected President Maritime Conference Rev. .1. Arthur Forbes, M.A., minister of St. Paul's Church. Fred- ericton, N.B. was elected president of the Maritime Conference of the United Church of Canada which is now in session at Sackvllle. A native of Guysboro County. N.S. the newly elected president was educated at Plctou Academy. Dal- housie University and Pine Hill Divinity Hall. During World War If he served as a padre in the Royal Canadian Air Force. He is married to the former Geneve Glennie oi Oxford. N.S. They have two children: John at Queens University and Margaret at home. Rev. Mr. Forbes has served in pastorates at River John and Ox- ford in Nova Scotla; Queen Square in St. John and at St. John's William Bagnato. national see- Church in Winnipeg. He began Russia. Proposes End... . Of Nuclear Bomb Tests LONDON (AP)-Russia offered Friday to admit Western Inspect- ors into the Soviet Union provided agreement is reached on ending hydrogen bomb tests. Western quarters termed the Soviet offer a milestone in dis- armament negotiations. It was made by Soviet delegate Valerian Zorirrtn the UN disarmament sub- committee. Zorin suggested a two- or three- year moratorium on nuclear tests be declared immediately while a plan is worked out to abolish them permanently. The moratorium would be en- forced by an international com- mission under the United Nations. The commission would have in- spection posts. with scientific de- tection equipment, in the Soviet Union. the United States. Britalnl and in the Pacific. where some U.S. and British tests are con- ducted. Untll Friday Zorin had firmly resisted Western demands that any agreement to end nuclear and enforcement. SIMPLE AGREEMENT Russia had maintained the ex- periments could be ended by simple agreement among the H- bomb povvcn. Britain. Russia and the United States. Western sources said that while Russia's agreement to admit in- spectors rcpresented a major step forward in disarmament negotia- tions, many other details must be cleared up before its full signifi- cance can be Judged. Jules Moch. French representa- tive ln the disarmament sub-com- mittee. told Zorin that simply end- lng tests would not halt production of hydrogen bombs. ' The Western position has been that scientific knowledge acquired from past tests could permit the. H - bomb race to continue un- checked even if tests are halted. The Western powers have in- sisted that any agreement on end- lng bomb tests also include a ban on production of nuclear weapons spectlon and enforcement apply not only to test explosions but to the production of fisslonable ma- terlals. asked Zorin whether his proposal represented a change in Soviet thinking on the ending of fission- able materials production. N0 REPLY Zorin did not reply immediately. The Russian offer to admit in- spectors mey settle one basic dis- agreement between Sovlet and Western scientists. But it may merely raise the curtain on a sec- on . The first disagreement is on the efficiency of present equipment for detecting H-bomb tests. Russia says all such explosions can be de- tected all over the world. Western scientists are doubtful particularly about tests in remote areas of Si- berla. The second difference is whether inspectors always would be able or fisslonable materials. tests be backed up by inspection They have demanded that is- to detect the production of nuclear weapons. I U.S. delegate Hamid E. Stasscn i REV. J. A. FOR-IE8. ILA. his ministry in, Fredericton II .-.1 s-'4."-av.--2--t -H 4 Mr. lzlorlieslwhiielected ion the . first ballot and escorted to the platform by Rev. J. D. MueLeod of Centenary-Queen Square Church Saint John and by Rev. D. M. Sinclair. Fort Massey Church. Hall- fax. the other nominees for office. The retiring President of the con- ference. Rev. W. Fraser Munro installed the new president. the Liberals will continue in of- fice or turn over the government to the Progressive Conservatives amounted only to this: There will be no announcements until early next week. Prime Minister St. Laurent and Conservative leader John Diefen- baker held a 90-minute afternoon meeting after a three-hour Liberal cabinet session in the morning. Mr. Diefenbadter. who tv.uned to the capital before breakfast from his Prince Albert, Sask., home. said his talk with Mr. St. Laurent was "most amicable" and that they would confer again at the beginning of next week. The 61- year -old Conservative chleftain was pleasant but ap- peared neither elated nor down- cast. He said he was "satisfied" with the talk in the prime minis- ter's east block office. GOOD MEETING Mr. St. Laurent said: "We had a good meeting and we will re- sums: on Monday." , Mr. Diefenbaker said the two leaders had agreed that there would be no announcements until early next week. The announce- ments. when they do come. may make clear who will attend the June 28 Commonwealth prime minl.sters' conference in London. Asked whether he will see CCF leader Coldwell or Social Credit leader Solon Low-both were in Ottawa Friday-Mr. Dieienbslcsr replied: "Not that I know of." He said he planned to "rest and read and go to church." Report- ers wonderlug about a possible change in government could "gs fishing" during the weekend. Vila It-Nliir that to form a govcnmsnt if called upon to desmhereplied only with a shrug. After the morning cabinet meet- ing. Mr. St. Laurent said he will await the results of the armed forces vote before makin any sn- nouncements. Result of the vote is expected late Saturday or Sunday. late afternoon for 75 minutes. When this meeting broke up, Mr. St. Laurent said no cabinet ses- sion,is planned for the weekend. One might be held Tuesday. Asked whether he planned to see Governor-General Massey during the weekend. the prime minister said he did not plan to do so be- yond attending Mr. Massey's gan- den party this afternoon. Mr. Diefenbaker may also at- tend the party though this was not definite Friday night. Meanwhile. the Conservatives picked up their lllth seat in the 265 - member Commons. gaining Yukon from the Liberals. The Lib- erals have 103 seats. the CCF :5. Social Credit 19 and independents six. Voting in the Ontario riding of Wellington south has won de- ferred to July 15. There was plenty of speculation on the forthcoming turn of events. One gs.-port was to the effect that some cabinet mlnistc . wanted the Liberal governmen to carry on with External Affairs Minister Pearson replacing Mr. St. Llunnl as prime minister. WANTS so RESIGN Another report had it that Mr. st. Laurent wants to resign as Lib- eral leader and that a leadership convention would be held in time for a new election upected within a year. ' Mr. Low returned to the capital and reiterated that he is needy to co - operate fori the good of tin country." Mr. Dlefenbaker should be given a chance to form a governns-t. nhe decision could be eehsd as the party's course of action. Mr. Dlefenbskcr was live: a tumultuous welcome at Uplands Airport. Among the 300 out to greet him were two lormer Coo servative leaders. Georse Drew and John Bracken. Closing Exercises Held q At Notre Dame Academy "You must bring much serious thought and reflection to the choice of your vocation in life.” Judge C. St. Clair Tralnor advised the 38 gsldllhlel at the Closing Exer- cises of Notre Dame Convent held in the school auditorium last night. in his address to the white-robed Class of '57. Judge Trainor deplor- ed the practice common among parents of urging their children to enter a certain profession solely because of the remuneration or social prestige that particular poe- itlon carried. the Directorate of the Elelitrh ance Dealers- Service League of P.l.l.. sew Directors absent ivhen the pic- F0110 or ELEC mc SERVICE LEAGUE Pictured above. at a mung Chalottcsown Electrical Contree Public utilities Covnnrisston; Hes. held yesterday in Charlottetown. is tops and Ned minor. for Ann. ,3eml-rv- M-M V-ll Poole WI! and Hal. Macbeed. Electrical inspector; Treasurer. Mr. Earl Provincial Fire Marital. "I could give you many instances where lives were wasted as a result of this practice." the jurist com- mented. His Excellency. Most Rev. Mal- colm A. MacEachern. D.D. Bishop of Charlottetown presided. Distin- gulshed guests present included A. Walthen Gsudet. Deputy Mayor of the City of Charlottetown. Diplomas. Certificates. awards and prizes to graduates and under- graduates were all presented by Bishop Macl-Sachem. The salutatory was given by Miss Anne Gills and the Valedictory by Miss Jennie MacDonald. The subject matter of each address. plus the diction and poise of each of the young speakers. gave ample evidence of the excellent training and instruction they received at the Academy. The Processlonal and Overtur- were played by the Misses Pat- ricia Grant and Margaret Mac- lntyre. Notre Dame Choir delight- ed those sttendlng the exercises with two songs sung in unison: "Jubilate Dee" by John Lee. and the traditional Welsh air ”All Through the Night". arranged by W. H. Anderson ADVICE T0 GRADUATES Judge Trslnor advised the young ladies to always "be worthy of your training". adding that their lives should be lived in u Genevieve Oil-isnley. Charlotte- town Donna Shes. Watervale Marion McGlnn. Charlottetown- Marts Csrragher, Charlottstowr Edith Mclvor. Borden Sheila Scully. Georgetown Mary Lou Henry. Georgetown Doreen Walsh. East Royalty Sybil Coker. Charlottetown Gertrude Rush. Charlottetown Myra Murphy. Summerside Cecile Richard, Wellington Elizabeth Walker. Charlottetown Graduation Diplomas ('15 per cent - 05 per cent): Carmella Gallant. Sumrncnlds Pntri Leightizer. Charlottetown lrenus Roberts. Chulottetown Pauline Decoste. Charlottetown Sonia Griffin, Charlottetown Irene Quinn. Cardigan Mary Smith, Charlottetown Helen Dalton. Summerstde Helena Dowllng. Charlottetown Mary Waye. Charlottetown : Mary Fiske. Charlottetown Constance Egan. Cardigan Jennie MacDonald. Charlotte- town Estelle DesRoches. hflscooche Monica McQuaid. Smith Melvllh Adrianne Callaghan. Charlotb- (Continued en page 1 col. 8) that would "bring honor to their school and their teachers." The speaker recalled that 1957 marked the 100th anniversary of the establishment In this city of Notre Dame Convent. in the begin- ning Noire Dame Academy con- sisted of four teaching sisters and I3 pupils housed in a small wooden building. the speaker noted. adding of the Congregation of Notre Dame bed under their care 1.09! island students. 8 of whom attended the "Qleudld edifice" known as Notru The leagues are non-profit organ- Italians and are affiliated with the National Institute sight. seated. James Toosnbs for Dell for Public Utility and sons kpolnted during the meeting wu-etsus is to promote safer and more Architects; secretary . rnsrstde Contractors; l'.A. Stewart nee Dealers: le- t "Constitution." E.S. "Sundurd." W. I. Hi: "FlllIt'C.: A.E. sclal: and "Edueatlou."NeIVldecl1. . Electric knit! IJIIUI II active in hrttish Columllu ta. uskatettewll. Itsnbbe. lb. Ousbss Id N Chandlm; comfortable living through the iLlvlng. with its head office in To-I being organised. shown are. leftb ton was taken were C. Kenneth Chairmen of Committees. sp- ronto. The nhiocttve of the Len-l Dame Academy. "Wk can reckon the contribut- of Electrical I lost of this coast-esstton to the for- mal education and culture of this that at the present time the Sisters f Province?" Judge Trstno said. GRADUATIIC IONOII Graduation diplomas were use of electricity. and will have awarded to the Mayors Discuss Transit Problems urban transit systems