~~ Tacal medical society affaires @re discussed by four) of the Is- land medical men named Satur- ‘MEDICAL AFFAIRS DISCUSSED [day to the organization’s 1959-60, —— (left) Dr. J.W. More- side, secrtary; Dr. J.H. Maloney, Electrical Storms Hit Hard past president: Dr. T.A. Laid- | law, president and Dr. R.G. Lea, treasurer. All four doctors prac- tice in Charlottetown. At Digby, Yarmouth Areas By a CANADIAN PRESS A series of speak electrical storms raged throuch western Nova Scotia counties during the weekend causing heavy property damage. Digby County and the Yar Mouth area, on the province's St eee tip. were hardest knocked out - Yar- "s main power transformer , cutttiie off service, to] twothinds af the town and ~ half Yarmouth County. Full serv- ice was not restored until late Sunday. Most serious damage took place in Digby County where eilec- trical storms Friday night and early Saturday resulted in loss of at least one home and lightning Epemnee to two others and a fac- tory. A flash fire at Weymouth during the heigit of the storm de- : gx ft Matheson, hi Make Final Pleas (Editor’s note: A staff writer for The Canadian Press is on the Island covering pro- vincial election canipaign for os all across the country. ’ following is one of his re- ports.) - By DON HOYT Cenadian Presa Staff Writer _ Liberal premier )Alex Matheson “and Progressiv, Conservative jeader Walter R. Shaw wound up their province-wide election Spiels Saturday night with radio- television appeals for votes. \ ~ Premier Matheson urged voters to endorse his government's rec- Steel Strike Pinch Said Worsening WASHINGTON (AP)—The la- ra! department says the eco- gomic effect of the first month of the US. steel strike, up to mid-August, was slight. But it gaid Saturday that the pinch is steadily growing worse. More job ‘layoffs and \adverse economic effects will pile up; the Yeport said; if the strike goes through a second month The walkout started July 15. Already it is the longest steel gtrike since the war, except for) _ @ B-day walkout in 1952. . Joseph F. Finnegan, director of | the federal mediation and concil- jation ‘service, said there has been no progress toward a settle- ment. He has been presiding over peace talks in New York. They now ate in recess nantif next Wed- y. The labor department survey made public Saturday said the impact of the present strike has been relatively mild so far. The depariment’s bureau of employ- ment security conducted the sur- vey in 31 steel- eee: and con- Gemng: areas... ord of “promises kept” and. ig- nore the Conservatives’ ‘most amazing and ridiculous collection of promises.” Mr. Shaw, a former civil serv- ant leading the island’s Conserv- atives im an election campaign for the first time, said an unparal- leled opportunity: exists to elect a provincial government that would cooperate fully with Ot- tawa. The ban on broadcast election- eering was effective at midnight Saturday. Newspaper advertising and personal campaigning con- tinues today. While the premier was.making his last speech Mr. Shaw sat a few feet away in the same studio. He went on the air immediately after. WOOING NONSENSE Mr. Matheson said Conserva- tive’ campaigners had wooed the electorate with “nonsensical an- nouncements” about being a united team and the ‘‘party of the causeway.” - “. , Our party stands on its record of promises kept, on its outlook for sane, progressive ad- | ministration and planning, of con- cern for the province as a whole.”’ The premier said the Conserv- atives had stressed the good things done by Ottawa. Credit re- strictions, higher income taxes, increases in cigaret taxes and boosts in unemployment insur- ance levies showed “there is an- other side to the story.” “As a result of the federal gov- ernment’s inept fiscal policies, credit has become so restricted that, today, it is practically im- possible to borrow money from the bank." CREDIT TOO LOW | Premier Matheson said the federal Conservative government had so limited creéit.and loans “that it could affect the very livelihood of our island farmers and fishermen.” He said that in many eases during the campaign the PCs had done nothing but enumerate things done by the Liberals “for years or clung to the coat-ails of the federal government.” -: Mr. Shaw said a government is needed in Prince Edward Is- i fy E zn g tr : Pope Invites Other Faiths. CASTLE GANDOLFO, Italy (AP)—Pope John said Sunday the Roman Catholic church's “‘sep- arated Brothers”’ can be heard at the forthcoming ecumenical coun- el ff they wish. ‘The Pope was_ referring to the Qrthodox churches; which broke away from Rome in a great echism 900 years ago. He has ealled an.ecumenical (world- wide) council of Roman Catholic hishops and theologians. The date thas not yet been fixed. Pope John mentioned the coun- cil after imparting a benediction on about 2,000 persons who gath- ered at his summer residence in| ; the Alban hills south of Rome. “If they wish to intervene, the representatives of the separated brothers will be“heard reason- ably,” the Pope said, “because the Oatholic church is always their house, from which they withdrew.” : Driver Dies In Fiery Car MILWAUKEE (AP) — Driver Ed Elisian was killed Sunday when his race car skidded out of control, crashed into a wall in front of the crowded bleachers at) State Fair Park and burst into flames. WHERE-TO-FIND-IT Announcements, notices . 18 Births, deaths, etc., 2, 18 Classified section ........ 18 Comics, features ~ BS Charlottetown news ...... 5 MOR e ocisici sateen 4 Island news ............ 2,3 Sports ... 8, 9 Women's page ........ 6, 7 Late reports from Guardian lard “pledged to ‘the cause ae harmony and co-operation, a i (Cootnuad\Oe Page 8 Ca 8 | SNAKE FOUND UNDER A BED NORWALK, Cogn. (AP— Things are so mich more re laxed at the Klappert home now that they've found that boa constrictor they “were looking for. Max,:a fourfoot boa belong- ing to 16-year-old Peter Kiap- pert, disappeared three weeks ago. When Peter's mother was cleaning under the bed in the guest room Saturday she found Max looking shyly out at her Peter said his snake was a little thinner, but otherwise had come through im good health. There was no report, what effect the chance ing had of Mrs. Klappert. Known Piper ««|Dies In Crash MONCTON ‘OCP)—Pipe Major | Wallace Roy. 56. one.of Nova Sco- tia’s most famous pipers, was! killed here early Sunday in a traf-! fie accident. Roy. of Stellarton. NS. was one of two persons killed when a car crashed through a street bar- rier in suburban Humphreys. June Mytrea, of Amberst; was - | also killed, while the driyer of the ear, Donald Fraser of Moncton, escaped with minor injuries. Roy was one of Canada’s most photographed men during the last eight yedrs. He was better known as the piper’who greeted tourists at the Nova Scotia tourist infor- mation bureau. near. Amherst The six-footfour piper was a native of Inverness,. N.S. Police said the Fraser car went | through a street barrier where city workmen were installing sew- ers. The vehicle overturned. ‘aes os y ouidvae LVS -4.ace Hate Is Hinted Cause As 2 N.Y. Teenagers Slain: War Veteran Drowns {While Trout Fishing 1; "o verd land Like The Dew” a MONDAY, AUGUST 31, 1959 “3 PAGES on FIVE CENTS | ALBERTON — Thomas Elis- ‘| worth, aged 43, a veteran of the World War, was accid- drowned in a stream near at St. Lawrence some- DFE ue i on Thursday to iy school children ue rf E F e E the RCMP was notified and grap- pling operations Saturday morn- ing were successful in locating (Reut- ers)—President Eisenhower and their weekend conference Sunday night with broad agreement on their next moves to ease the Kast-Wést cold war. A spokesman said the two ~~ of talks around the fireplace at Chequers, Macmillan’s country residence, bad disclosed agree- ment between the two statesmen on ali questions they discussed | and a ‘broad identity of view be- '| tweem the United States and Brit- ain on what should be done next.” The talks ranged over almost the entire field of international problems, from the recent clashes between Indian and Chi- @ese border troops to the pros- poe president's visits Khrushchev. WELL NOT NEGOTIATE Eisenhower stressed .through- out his talks with Macmillan that there will be no question of nego tiations during bis discussions with Khrushchev. _ Bat’ the two statesmen agreed |'to let the Soviet premier know | they are ready for serious nezo- tiations as soon as Khrushchev makes a real beginning toward breaking the ice in the cold war. cEisenhower and Macmillan in ‘the day, services and later for a drive to the anciem university city of Ox- | ford. At the little Anglican church in ithe tiny hamig, of Ellesborough, the body from about 10 feet of water. Ceroner Dr. Charles Dewar, O'Leary, was called to the scene and ruled that an inquest would not be held. Besides his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Leo Arsenault, with whom following brothers and sisters: Leroy, Edwin and Vincent of St. Lawrence, Leo of Ebbsfleet, Mrs. Ingham Costain (Mae), St. Louis; Mrs. Fred Mallett rnvelvelyDec® Road; Mrs. Stanley (Ellen). Ebbsfleet: Mrs. red Carr (Catherine), Charlottetown. oe Richard. died two years The funeral will take place this morning fromthe Chureh of the Prime Minister Macmillan ended | . pects of a summit meeting after) with | | will get their end-of-month pay. terrupted their talks twice during | first to attend church’ Ike, PM Agree On Broad Front the president bowed his head in prayer as the minister asked Money Crisis ‘Puts Business At Standstill JAKARTA ‘Reuters) — Indo nesia’s major financial crisis en- tered its second workers wondering whether they A percent devaluation of large currency banknotes and the freezing of 90 per cent of large bank deposits bas left foreign and Indonesian firms without operat- ing cash. Meanwhile, President Sukarno, he resided, he is survived by his | 3 wife and four children and ‘the |) D.W. McGill, 52 a native ol Ottawa, has been named chief dominion customs appraiser, succeeding A.R. Hind who rec- ently was appointed assistant de- puty minister for customs. Mr. McGill entered the customs ser- vice in 1932. (CP Phote) STUDENT'S TALE IS 4NCREDIBLE Hurt In NEW YORK ‘AP)—A group of boys who shouted “‘we don’. al- low Gringos near the park” stab- bed two youths to death and in- jured three others early Sunday at a playground in the old Hell's Kitchen area. One of the victims described the attackers as six to ten Puerto Rican you hs. “Gringo” is a word of contempt sometimes used by Spanish - speaking peoples to de- scribe North Americans. Five boys and a girl. all white, were . sitting on benches in the unlighted playground shortly after midnight when the other , teen-agers appeared. armed with knives and bottles. A few moments later two 16-| year-old boys were dead. Witnes- ses told of seeing some youths flee from.the park and jump into a taxicab. Dead with stab wounds were Robert Young and Anthony Ker- zenski, both 16. Ewald Riemer. 18, was taken to a hospital with a stab wound in the abdomen The deaths brought to four the numberof _teen-agers—_slain by} gang violence in the last eight - 3 Other Youths: Assault days. The playground is betweem Weef 45th and 46th streets in the block extending from Ninth to 10th avenues. A tenement section still, it once was part of an un- _| usually rough - and - tumble area which got its name of “Hell’s Soh Kitchen” at the turn of the cen- tury. sa About 20 detectives swarmed - into and around the playground soon after the slayings. Later Sunday they had rounded up and were questioning more than 40 persons. Police said there had been no reports of racial friction in the area. The victims of Sunday’s at- tacks both collapsed and died im nearby buildings. Kerzenski fell dead, blood gushing from his chest and groin, in the hallway of a 46th street tenement before the horrified eyes of a man-and his daughter who opened the door of their -first-floor apartment te investigate. a noise. Young staggered to an adjoin- ing tenemen: and died in a sec- ond-floor hallway. ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP)—A told of hiding there | ‘or four years. was rational, both police and cmapecsiag authorit- iat walt a triding place in the rafters of | Sunday—et police bid“) it Dalai Lama my people,”’ over- troops last spring after an abortive uprising against Chinese occupation. The exiled spiritual ruler, who fied to India at the time of the revolt, said he had no other alter- |mative than to appeal to the United Nations since the picture of Tibet under. Chinese control ‘has become immeasurably darker and gloomier and the suf- ferings of my people are beyond Last week the 24-year-old Da lai Lama said the “freedom struggle” against the Chinese in his homeland etill is continuing. | He said he has received informa- ition that nearly 80,000 Tibetans lned been killed in the uprising, Asks UN. al Support Tibet's Fight NEW DELHI, India (Reuters) |mearly 20.000 of them in the re Winston Flies To Greet Ike LONDON (AP) — Sir Winstoa Churchill broke off a vacation in the sun of the south of Franc Sunday and flew to London to meet with bis cld wartime friend, Presidem Eisentower. The 83-year-old former Britisa premier planned to consult with Eisenhower at a dimmer Prime Mimister Macmillan is giving for the president tonigit. Churchill is expected to fly back to southern France Tuesday or Wednesday. whose- cabinet is coming under growing public criticism for the monetary measures, announced | he is going ahead with plans for Ree ne ee ee in theauditorium of the Sos cial Sanatorium during thei ~ PATIENTS RECEIV™ <0 ©: Members of the Parkdale - “Oo vs 2° Women’s Institute were NES GO ogy? ae young- stuck for assistance wnge A S ¥ vients at the came to arranging the oe” 4S «tously - contem- GN uy" -c& confronting them. re treme WB ta map ase: 208, “, yes-;Mrs. M. °F. Rodd; ‘ % LOWERS the Misses Betty Baker, Kim Strickland, Marion DesRoche, Margaret DesRoche, and Mrs. V. M. Hud- By PETER JACKSON NEW DELHI (Reuters)—Indian | troops are pushing north through the Northeast Frontier area to search for 38 men who manned the Longju outpost, captured o the Chinese last Wednesday, ficial sources said Sunday night. The lasi message from the out- post, five days ago, said the, men Chinese fire. Since then nothing thas been heard. As anxiety about their fate grew, the executive of Inda’s main opposition part Socialists, declared: ‘ ing claws of China be twisted back . The party executive called on the government to take firm measures “to make the Chinese Communisis vacate occupied areas of our country,” and..ac- cused China of ruthlessty-destroy- ing Tibet and then turning against friendly India. | NEW FIGHT RUMORS An official spokesman would not confirm a report of a new outbreek of fichting on the froo- tier last Thursday. Indian Army patrols from the outpost of Limeking. in the Noi tir east Frontier Agency were re ported to be pushing north in search of the lost outpost garri- gon. They also are expected to report on Chinese activities at the captured post. The Indian Communist party Sunday expressed “fervent hopes” that the border troubles will be settled by discussion. Troop re nis were’ be- ing moved to wild, isolated northern border area where Chi- of- |tcated on diplomatic approaches | . b- will e to j the time being at least, there; woud be no Indian military ac -| tion aimed at recapturing Chi-| nese-hehid Longju outpost in the | northeast frontier agency. Instead, efforis will be concen- to the Peking government. , tin Peking, the Chinese foreign | miniziry and the Indian Embas y were withdrawing under tieavy | decli: 1ed ‘immediate comment on the situation.) DISCLOSED FIGHTING Prime Minister . Nehru dis- Tax Program Is Instituted By Michigan LANSING, Mich. (AP)—Michi- gan’s state lezisteture, de-d- locked for 72 mons over the issue of new taxes, finally agreed Saturday night on a new tax ro- arem whic will bring in an ad- ditional $128,500,000 a year. Barring an unlikely snag, Mi-h- igan taxpayers will start paying ‘or it next Tuesday. The House of Represeniatives and then the Senate, meeting m extraordinary Sa‘urday night ¢=5- sions, approved a compromise tax package carrying a one-cent nerease in the three-cent sales tax and $3,500,000 in new business taxes. Governor G. Mennen Williams, far from enthusiastic, said he would sign the bills without de- lay to put them into effect nexl week, The governor and fellow Democrats lost a battle to meet © | the state's revenue needs with a. + matage nis g ap ngaaegecnalal come, . Indian Troops Are Hunting For3 8 MissingOutpostMen closed Friday that fighting had broken eut between Indian-border patrols and Obinese troops at Lengju in the Himalayan region of Subansiri. Accusing the Communist Chi nese of agzression against Indian territory, Nehru said the fighting went cn “for a considerable time” until the Indian troops withdrew, leaving the post in ch inese hands. Indian newspapers condemned the Chinese sortie Saturday and said Ind‘a would use all its re sources to protect its soil. Official eources said army de tachments already in the area were ready for action but would cot be “wasted” on routine bor- der patro!s where only minor skirmishes were likely. They added it is beyond Indias resources to maintain adequate forces a'déng the entire 2,000-mile front'‘er. NO HANDICAP New Dev officals declared that the fact. that Communist China was not a United Na‘ ons member wes .a mejor hand cap in dealing wih this’ kind of situa- tion. If Peking rejected or ignorsd India’s protests, they added, there was no forum in whi: the Communist regime could be called to account. : There was no news Saturday oa the whereabouts of the 38-man Assom Rifles militia detachment that was forced out of Longju and began falling back to Limeking, 20° miles away. A bid to air<drop the men am- munition {ailed.g Food pr. 4 dropped tater in te trope | would fierd it. wed tod ame Limeking is expected to take fow ‘ew five dave. -