ardian Want classified ad a , i ' ‘ ,g 1, I TELEPHONE 8506 “u: ' Buyer meets seller with Go 12h? _ Ads. Dial 8506 ask for .‘l - taker, for quick results. .4. he (onus "’Covers Prince, Edward Island Like The Dew” WEATHER Cloudy with a few snnn intervals and :3 = ,A v AGES 2.“, Second Class Mail “I. Department.‘ may. PM om" CHARLO’I‘TETOWN, CANADA WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1958‘ 9 cool; northerly winds 1 . w- h at CharlottetoWn 43 and 60. L9 mg “fig?” FIVE CENTS. _ at the Royal Winter fin Toronto will be these ,,- Club members. As part E FIVE 4-H Club mem- number of examinations which were chosen yesterday .et cluded the judging of different Court to represent the 4-H breeds of cattle and all‘ oral ex— .. k~ Clubs at the Royal Win- mination dealing with 4-H Club, on in Toronto. To quality work. Pictured above from left _mntestants had to undergo a to right, snarnn, :Janet Jones.l ‘ Baum-me the Project 0 their examination in projectgPict‘ured from left to right, James work the members had to judge! Gunn, St. Peters Lake; Erie Phil— various lcinds of vegetables and lips, O’Leary; Willard MacPhail, identify certain kinds of weeds. North River. GET TRIP TO THE ROYAL ln~ Pownal; Jean LeLacheur George- town, RR 1; STANDING, Wood- land Paupit, Sherbrooke; Elmer Hynes, Summer-ville; and Wayne Lockerby of Hamilton, P.E.I. \ .3, _ . iher Supply , , 'e - . Ip Braves Blockade m , Formosa (Wednesday) H Nationalist supply ship ' Communist blockade of i I" again Tuesday under a of Red artillery fire, the de- miniary reported. ‘An air drop to Little Quemoy was out uni-molested. ' Illinlistry said the ship un- lls supplies in 20 minutes. " y amphibious 'vehicles 59d to speed the badly .‘g‘ Supplies ashore. "T" Iliad bombardment during ship’s mart stay was particu- llteuse,'ihe minisistry said. .Malist count 5,820 shells ». “mug the 40 minutes it was '* labore. - , 3"" monies for Little Que-moy ‘ 'dmpped from seven C-46C At-Dlanes. No interference ' "“ .510!!! the Red air'base at .40 miles west of the Que- Where the Reds are be— i ‘r BAYONNE, N.J. (AP)—-An au- topsy indicated Tuesday that a weak heart contributed to the death of the engineer whose com~ muter train plunged from an open drawbridlge into Newark Bay. But medical officials said the exact cause of death will not be known until further tests are made. i At least 21 died in the crash Monday and perhaps that many more. One passenger coach, pos- sibly wit-h bodies aboard, stillwa-s on the bottom of the bay Tuesday with divers and barge crews struggling to raise it. . The engineer of the Jersey Cen- tral train, was Lloyd Wilburn, 63, of Red Bank, NJ. . to have MiG-175. One Of ,N’l‘REAL (CP)—One of the , Dionne quintuplets gave to a boy Monday night and filjst Words were: 8 is marvelous.” . s. Cecile Langlois whose own Caused a sensation 24 years - {and her sevempound, four- - son are both doing well. _ .her husband, CBC camera K 4 . Ian '.“hilippe Langlois, who ‘ I the floor Monday night like ~' Other father-to-be at Ste. Jus- .HOSDital. ' ba'by Will be called Claude 6381‘ one of her father’s middle ' "99118., one of the four surviv- . limits, was married last , i - 23 to Mr. Langlois, a hand- "' man from Quebec City. She ‘ a daughter, but her hus- e'h‘ad hoped Tuietly for a son. I . DISAPPOINTED .1“ Deli er was disappointed, g , is so Philippe will be . - said Cecile after the boy’s The baby was born natu- Officials stnove to find out why Famed Dionne Noel of Montreal was the attend- ing physician. After seeing Cecile briefly, her husband dashed to a telephone to spread the good news to her par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. Olive Dionne in Corbeil, Ont. He invited them to the Roman Catholic baptismal ceremony next Sunday. If the Dionnes friends said, then Mr. and Mrs. Alphonse Langlois will be inv1ted to be godparents. ’ The birth took place at 9:45 pm. EDT. C e c i 1 e ’ s sister, Yvonne, who is a nurse, was with her when the baby was born. Also expecting s h o r t 1 y is Annette, a second of the Quints, who was married Oct. 12, 1957, to Germain Allard of Montreal. Marie, the third of the 24-year- old Quints to marry, was wed qi'ietly here Aug. 11 to Florent Houle, 33-yearold court clerk. Still unwed is Yvonne who gradu- ated as a nurse last year from Notre Dame de l’Esperance Hos- pital in suburban St. Laurent.— Emilie, the fifth Quint, died m , With little pain. Dr. J. M. :i- an epileptic seizure in 1954. ReportWieckEngineer Sui eredHeart Seizure can’t come, ‘ Wilbum’s train did not halt on the bridge before it reached the lift - type "draw. Investigation were under way or ordered. The Interstate Commerce Commission ordered a public hearing Thurs- day in New York to establish “all of the facts, conditions and cir- cumstances” of the accident. SUDDEN ATTACK? . . . . . . . . .. One question to be answered was whether Wilbu-rn suffered a sudden disability, causing his hand to slip from the throttle of the diesel engine. Dr. Francis Boyle, assistant hudson county medical examiner, was asked directly: “Did Mr. Wil- burn suffer a heart attack?” “Just about that,” Boyle re- plied. * Wilburn’s body was found float- ing on the bay shortly after the‘ accident. His fireman, Peter And- erson. _of Jersey City, still is missing. . The railway said three warn- ing signals were strung for a mile before the bridge and all were working properly. In addition, an automatic detailing device put the twin - diesel engine off the rails 500 feet ahead of the bridge. But the engine continued to roll forward, its wheels on the wooden cross-ties supporting the rails, un~ til it went into the 50-foot deep water with three of its five coaches. Of the 21 bodies recovered, 20 were identified. They included that of George (Snuffy) Stirn— weiss, 39-year-old former New York Yankee second baseman. The drawbridge operator, Pat- rick Corcoran, 55, earlier had re- lated how he had set the signals to halt the train and had watched helplessly as the train continued i‘s approach. The railway feared the dearbh toll would reach at least 40. DIES AT ANTIGONISH ANTIGONISH, N. S. (OP)— Angus Hugh Fraser, 85, retired local‘ businessman. died at his home Monday. C Nationalist ' Warns War May Spread TAIPEI, Formosa (AP) — Na- tionalist Premier Chen I Cheng said Tuesday if Red Chin-a per- sists in sealing off the Quemoy offshore islands, “it would mean extending the war.” Chen, also Nationalist China’s viceapresident and heir- apparent to Chiang Kai-shek, told parlia- ment in a 4,000-word report: “For the time being, we are merely answering the \ enemy’s fire. We are patiently keeping on the defensive and trying to con- fine the enemy’s flame of aggres- sion to the smallest area pos sible.” But, he said, if the Red Chinese attempt to seize the offshore islands, the war in Formosa Strait would be extended to the China mainland. ' ' He did not go into detail on this point but presumably he meant- the Nationalists would bomb the‘ mainland. He said Red China’s offensive was “an acid test of the deterrent policy of the United States.” 'v THE “PAPER TIGEIt” , The Red shellings and the letters by Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev had, he declared, a common objective: continually to withdraw from the Western Pacific and to prove again their propaganda-line that the United States isvbut a ‘paper tiger’ . . .” , Chen said the United States had clearly understood the implica- tions of the Communist attacks on Quemoy and Matsu and had, through statements by President ,Eisenhowec-‘mdrifdate Secretuy Dulles, “made known its firm and clear—cut policy." Ford Moves Told AVe-rt Strike - This Morning DETROIT, Mich. (AB—Ford Motor Company convened a spe- cial meeting of its board of di- rectors late Tuesday amidst re- ports it would sweeten its con- tract offer to avert a strike of 108,000 United Auto workers at 10 am. EDT today. , John S. Bugas, Ford vice-pres- ident, said that if tlhe negotiations went into a night-long session as anticipated he would be in con . stant touch with the board of di- rectors “until we hive a settle ment or a strike.” Routlher has said the wage pact which the big three offered Mon- day wasn’t good enough. He made counter-proposals but there has been no indication either Ford or, the UiArw has budged since. Reuther has emphasized that today’s strike deadline remains unchanged. Monday’s three - year contract offers broke open 5% months of stalemath negotiations. TIFY CONVENTION NE DELHI (Reuters)—‘~India has ratified the International La-. bor Organization’s c o n v e n tion stipulating equal pay for equal» work for men and women. The convention was adopted in 1951 but India only accepted it in prin- ' “To force the United Statesi New Violence On Cyprus Feared . NBCOSLA, Cyprus (Reuters)— New fears gripped Cyprus Tues- day as Greek-Cypriots renewed charges of British brutality and Britons braced themselves for an expected outburst of terrorism. Greek-Cypriot leaders reiter- ated accusations that British troops illatreated villagers and caused wan-ton damage in week- end scarch operations in West Cyprus. They also said British guards behaved “bestially” at a deten- tion camp for Greek~Cypriots in West Cyprus, following the killing of a British soldier in the area Saturday” Authorities on the island feared a new outbreak of remisals against the British Iby the Greek- Iprriot underground organization EOKlA would follow. - Young PC “Meeting . On Today Some 600 delegates from all parts of the Island will'be in at- tendance today at the Prince Ed- ward Island Young Progressive Conservative Convention schedul- ed for the Community Centre in Charlottetown. ~ Chief item facing the gathering will be an election of new officers with possibly three or our offices, .dontestfedix}I " > . "' ‘ currencipresiclent, w. Chester MacDonald will be resigning, leaving the field open to two OO'I‘ testants, Don MacDoug‘all of K \ kora and H. Bennett Carr of Cahr~ lottetown. _ The day-long convention gets _ underWay at 9 a.m. Election of new~officers will take place "at the even' g session. ‘ Gu st speaker will be Thomas West Wins ; U. ' Assembl I By ALAN HARVEY Canadian Press Staff Writer MONTREAL (CP)—A forceful Canadian demand for complete convertibility of sterling and an Indian plea for help to under- developed countries ‘were among key statements Tuesday at the big Common-wealth trade and economic conference. ' ' Undeterred‘ by the cautious British attitude expressed Mon- day, Canada’s Finance Minister Fleming said plainly he thinks any practical justification for re- franing from convertibility now has disappeared. _ Sterling is practically convert- ible now‘and the position should be “recognized and regulariz ” by complete convertibility, Mr. Fleming said. ‘ His statement seemed to fore- shadow a continuing Anglo-Cana- dian conflict on Britain’s capacity to take the wraps ‘off sterling. AID F“R NEEDY ' Earlier, India urged ‘financial aid for. needy nations even if wealthy donor countries ve to do some belt~tightening 0 pro— vide it. ' - The statements by Canada and India came on the second day of the two-week conference. Indian. Finance Minister 'Desai, whose quiet but forceful deport- ment is impressing fellow dele- gates, stressed the disparities be- tween countries. India’s average income per head was about $50 a year compared with more than maniacal-32,000 in the Unlted=States and Canada. - - He said there are “heartening signs" that some net importers of capital still manage to find fu s for needy nations. As‘an examp e, he cited Canada and praised her contribution under the Colombo Plan and other agenciesv MAIN POINTS r) . His 20-minute speech came as ‘Bell',,M',P., of St. John, a .past president of the National Y.P.C. APEC Meeting HALIFAX (CPl— About, 50 business and professional men have registered for the meeting of the Atlantic Provmces Economic Council Sept. 22-23 at St. John’s, Nfld., APEC said here Tuesday. - ‘ .APEC executive manager Nel- son Mann of said the re- gistnation was about double original estimates for the coun- cil’s meeting in Newfound~ land. It is being held jointly with 'rmcnasnxnuu WADENuA, Minn. (AP) — Four person-s were killed Tuesday when their speeding car left the high- way and race into the path of a Northern Pacific train travelling 70 miles an hour. Officers said the nearest crossing was half a mile away. The dead included an air- man and a civilian electronics expert employed at the Wadena air force radar base and two Wa- ciple because she could not en- sure its immediate application. By JOHN LcBLANC Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (OE—Eight provin— cial governments Tuesday. got permission to intervene in a tele- phone case before the board of transport commissioners, claim- ing the issue could affect freight rates. ' The provinceseall except On- tario and Quebec—were allowed by the board to take part in a $16,000,000a-year phone rate in- crease proposed for Ontario and Quebec by Bell Telephone Com- pany. As the telephone and freight rate cases got tanglal up, the board also received an applica- tion from British Columbia Tele- phone Comipamy for new rates. Bell was seeking an increase of an average five per cent on its annual $326,000.000 from Ontario and Quebec subscribers. BC Telephone asked for'an 50 Register ForPremiers, dena women. Eight GovernmentsPermitted ’ lo Intervene In Telephone Case ‘ average 12.6 per cent increase worth an estimated $5,754,000. SEE FREIGHT TIE-IN The eight provinces dived in against the Bell application on the contention that a board ruling granting the increase could. set a precedent that would follow through in freight rate cases in- volving much more money. The railway freight rate in- crease case will involve about $60,000,000 a year immediately, to cover what the railways say they need to meet present and pros- pective wage increase demands by employees. Likely, the railways will file their application for an increase ——of an immediate 19 per cent and also an indefinite future amount— with the board of transport com- missioners Wednesday. TAX JUGGLING Hearings on this biggest case— in terms of money—etc be heard delegates to the 11-country,- two- week conference completed their At St. John's ‘ the annual Atlantic premiers con- ference. ' The meeting will hear a report on the inter-relationslup of the economics of Newfoundland .and the Maritimes compiled by Albert B. Perlim of St. John's and R. E. Tweeddale of ‘ Blind Father Of 14 Killed KENTVILLE,—N.S. (CP)-— The 60-year-old blind father at 14 children was shot to death d: nearby Woodville Monday night. RCMP here said Robert Archer died from a bullet wound in the head fired from a .22-colibre rifle. Police said no arrest had been made in connection with the shootingnThey said it would not be known if charges would be laid until after an inquest this afternoon. A by board in many years are ex- pected to start in early October here. , Argument over the Bell lease Tuesday hung on the way the company proposed to set up its books for income tax purposes. Earlier this year, the cabinet knocked out a board-authorized increase that would have given Bell about $13,000,000 a year on the basis of its tucking away about that amount into a tax re- serve fund. This time, Bell pro- poses to change its complex tax setup with about the sa-me effect, plus some $3,000,000 which it says it needs in addition. It would pay the government— instead of hanging on to the taxes —witlhout delay. The provincial governments asked for the unprecedented in- tervention on the claim that the shift in tax setup could cost heavily in freight rates if the rail- ways made increase requests on rfailed to act quickly enough, had INDIA PREssEs FOR AID Canada DemandsWraps' Be Taken Off Sterling opening policy statements, ‘and prepared for detailed discussions in forthcoming plenary sessions or in private bilateral talks. In Tuesday’s business-like pro- ceedings these main points emerged: \ , General agreement was ex- pressed that the worst of the Iforth American recession is over and that possibilities of recovery look brighter. ' Several countries, notany Ghana and Malaya, emphasized the need of a Commonwealth de- velopment bank. The idea often comes up at Commonwealth dis- cussions, but objections are usu- ally raised that Britain is the only net exporter of capital, and that such a “family bank” would dup- licate existing‘ institutions. South Africa tentatively raised the question of a Commonwealth approach on the price of gold. This is another Commonwealth perennial, seldo’m pursued in view of known United States re- luctance to (gauge the price, pegged for 24 years at $36 an ounce in US funds. All delegates referred to hopes and world trade. Sterling coun- tries supported Britain’s deci- sion, expressed Monday, to go cautiously in moving town-rd com plete convertibility of the pound sterling. acno PROTECTION CALL New Zealand echoed Australia’s call for greater protection of primary producers, indicating she would like to see something that would do for food products what the General Agreement on Tar- iffs and Trade (GATT) does for industrial goods. Finance Minister Fleming of Canada, conference chairman, met reporters a briefing ses- sion and said deliberations are proceeding in a spirit of “com- plete friendliness, sympathy and understanding." VANCOUVER (CH—John An- drew Foley, 103, Vancouver’s old- est resident. died Monday night in hospital. His heart gave out following a minor bout of pneumonia and a cold he,.caught on his birthday Saltiefi.’ gr Until end he. was chipper and'jaunty, expounding his views oh any and all subjects. . On his last birthday he entered a reporter .the secret of his longevity: ‘ .lO3-Year-Old Island Man - Dies At Vancouver, B.C. “Just donit worry. You’re no good for anything you do." Mr. Foley was born in Prince Edward Island. He married in 1885 and came to Vancouver in 1888. Later he moved to Slocan, B.C., and ran a store but ‘re- turned to Vancouver in 4908. Until his retirement in 1928 he was en- gaged largely in real estate“ Until age 94 he cut and piled woodpan’d did his own gardening. Then he took it easy. The longest frealnnan class opening day regulation in the history of the University took place at St. Dunstm's Univeiuty Tuesday. - Register Rev. Edmund reported 116 registrations receiv- ed and 11 more yet to come. The arts class tops the list CHIMPS COME LONDON (Am—Paintings- by small, children, abstract artists and clfimmaees are on display «Mo’s newest art exhibition — and the chimps come out on top. When the, Royal Festival Concert Hall made an inter- mission lounge avilable ,for exhibitions by “young artists of various schools,” bearded art critic Mervyn Levy inter- preted this broadly and put together a strange show de- signed to reveal the funda- mentals of patterns in First 'he got several recent works ‘by Congo, a- talented chimpanzee from the London Zoo, and Betsy, a finger- painting chimp from Balti- more. ' Beside these, Levy put paintings by some newcomers —a 15-month’-old baby, Gra- ham Phillips of London, three- year - old Timothy Vaughan, also of London, and some full- time art students from the Ipswich school‘of art. He called his exhibit “com- ‘parisous in the art of the higher primates.” For clarity of patterns, the chimps have it all over their distant cousins. ‘ ' Drifting Blimp Comes To Earth BRUNSWICK, Ga. (ALP) —— A huge blimp, free of the shackles of man and of its normal loam-an crew, floated freely for six hours Tuesday, .a vmenace to planes travelling one of the busiest air- line routes in the United States. Then, as the navy’considered shooting it down, the blimp settled easily to the ground some 25 miles east of its naval air sta- tion base here. The crafit's helium bag was sagging as it dropped from its flight. The navy presumed that a helium escape valve, which the crew had pulled but which had a similar basis. OUT ’ON TOP - finally done its job. Record Freshman Envrollm-ent At St. Dunstan’s University . with 40. General science is sec- ond with 29. Commerce attracted- Ill freshmen and ergineerim 28. Freshmen registering hull ilrom «farawayasHongKongwith three emailed from that Colony. Eight are registered from the United States. As usual Prince Edward Island leads with 76. other figures are Newfloumilmid, 13; New Brims- wick, 3; Nova Scolds, 5; Quebec 7 and Ontario, 1. NEHRU VISITS BHUTAN NEW DELHI (IReute‘rslf—Plime Minister Nehru left Tuesday on a state visit to the «remote kingdom of Blmtan in the heart'of the east- ern Himalayas. Bhutan is sand- wiched between with which it has political ties, and unuse- miedribei, towardwlrichltscus- tomsflnd religious traditions are orientated. Without communica- tions or roads and totally closed to foreign visitors, Bhutan re- ,for expansion in Commonwealth ‘ , ed that Malik’s election had been because of the 'to the assembly iCtOry . In 1 y-Electlon PrO-West M lebanese Elected By LLOYD McDONALD Canadinn‘rress Staff Writer. NATIONS, N.Y. (CEP) The West won a major victory at the United Nations Tuesday when Lebanon’s pro - Western foreign i minister, Charles Malik, was ! elected president—over opposition from the Soviet and Arab blocs-— of' the new 13th General As- . sembly. E In the opening minutes of this i new session which was called to order in mid~afternoon, the Amer- ican - supported Malik defeated , F o r ei g in Minister Mohammed x Mali-gout) of the Sudan for the top assembly Dost by 45 votes to 31. United States sources imme- diately hailed the victory as an indication that the ill-member as~ ‘ semlbly will generally favor a pro- Western course during the com- ing months of its 13th session since 1945—a session in which the problem of Red China is expected to be a major issue. . Even sources less inclined to support this us. believe conced- something of a surprise. Most of the Alfalb states had capo, sed his candidacy because he favored the intervention of American troops 11‘]. his country, and just before «Tuesday’s session opened the So- . vict Union gave notice that .it 31 would support the Sudanese can- didate put forward by the Arabs. CZECH wn‘im. RAWS Czedioslavakia’s Jiri Nosek had been mentioned as a third candidate, but be formally with drew before the vote, leaving all nine Soviet-bloc members free to cast their ballots for Mahgou‘o. Arab sources had claimed in‘ advance that the bulk of the 27 AdncamA-sian votes also would go to Mahgoub, leaving only five more to be picked up for the ne- cessary simple majority in the assembly’s ballot. But on the _-st tally Malik i emerged with mere than enough ‘- l for election, and Mahgoub’s‘3! in- ’ " dicated that some of the Asian- Afmcan countries themselves had - l voted for the Lebanese candidate e i There were four abstentions and = ‘ one country. Israel, was absent 'i‘l Jewish new year’s . ,I» I holiday. Sir Leslie Munro of New Zel- land, the retiring assembly pres- nt, noted in hiséarewell speech w t at its] st . Slon had failed to win wig; ' 5 on even the first steps toward dis- ‘ armament. This “central prob- lem." he stre , ‘brooks no delay." . With the presidency hurdle ac- complished, attention turns today . to uieissue of Red China’s ad- 5 mission. The assembly’s steering committee, which .will thrash out i a formal agenda for the coming weeks, is expected by most of the West to turn down Peiping’s mains the last ‘forlbidden king- dom” of the East. . entry for the eighth year in a row. ‘ Delegate-s Of United Church I~ Gather For Ottawa Meeting O'I‘I‘AWA (ClPl—JUnlted Church ministers and laymen Tuesday were busy meeting planes and trains oh the eve oftheir church's General Council meeting, with 609 participants expected. , The nine-day biennial council opens today. Discussion of Can ada’s international relations—1n- cluding relations with Cline—is high on the. agenda, The delegates —‘both laymen and ministers—Thursday consider a report by the international af. fairs committee which includes resolutions on Grins, disarma- ment, technical assistance, trade and immigration, refugees, world food needs and the United Na- tions. , Heaviest debate is expected to centre on the question of disarm- ament and nuclear weapons. The 1952 ‘council went on record as favoring recognition of Red China and that country’s admission to the UN. ' MOVES UNDER WRAPS However, this year’s resolu- tions are being kept under wraps until they come up for debate Thursday. . The following day, Prime Min— ister Diefenbaker is to address the council of the religious body which has 1,000,000 regular mem- bers in its congregations and an- » versity. other 2,000,000 adherents under its pastoral care. Another item of business is eloction of a new moderator to succeed Rt. Rev. James S. Thompson, dean of McGill Uni- versity’s divinity faculty, whose usual two-year term ends this week. Electio‘n of a Westerner is ex- pected, with Rev. H. A. Mc‘Leod of .Winnipeg and Rev. R. W. Smith of Edmonton, both pastor: of churches, mentioned as strong contenders. Since, the church's formation in 1925, only one of its 18 moderators has come from Western Canada— Rev. Aubrey Tuttle of Winnipeg, elected in 1940. PONDER YOUTH LIAISON The co'uncil, which meets in Chalmers Church on Coo-pet Street in central Ottawa, is to consider a proposal for stronger efforts to, keep in touch with young c o n- gregation members when they leave home for uni- Rev. A. Leonard Griffith, min~ ister of Chalmers and council host, said this is “of the most urgent importance." All 10 provinces will be repre- sented. So will the church’s mis- sions in West Africa, India, Ja- pan, Rhodesia and Trinidad, mainly through ministers and lay missionaries home on furlough.