. TELEPHONE 3506 Buyer meets '-‘ant Ads. Dial tied ad taker, for 14 PAGES It was not entirely like com- ing‘ to a foreign country for Mr._ and Mrs. Melis Visser who arrived on the late train last night direct from Holland. Doz- ens of their countrymen who have been here for some time were on hand to give them a Royal welcome. The Vissers have seller with Guardian 8506 ask for classi- quick results. ““"i""lleU as second Class Man by an pg; 015.. Devartn em. Ottawa This Euotrdiau COUNTRYMEN WELCOME IMMIGRANTS“ seven children and hope to in Canada. His reasons for settle on a farm, “somewhere near Charlottetown". The eld- est of the family is a three- old nurse who left her training to be with her folks. The yo1mg- est of the family is a 1three- year-old boy. Mr. Visser said he was extremely happy to be awaits them in Canada. leaving Holland were because of urban expansion in which the family farm since 1824 was being expropiriated. Another reason given by ll/Ir: Visser was to give his family better opportunities which he feels The French Gov't Voted Out On The Tunisian Issue , months and 10 days. PA-RJIS tion government f or In ed five months ago was voted out of of- fice Tuesday night on a motion calling for resumption of direct negotiatinos aimed at healing Franco-Tunisian relations. Premier Felix Gaillard said he would hand his governmen_t’s_res- ‘ignation to President Re'ne°Coty before manning.- Although the issue was not put to the As-semlbly sa a vote of con- fidence, Gaillard called it one of the gravest votes in French par- liamentary history. As soon as the 321 to 255 result became known, he announced he was resigning. The government lasted five Gaillard, who took office on his 38th birtli- day. was the youngest head of. a, French government since Na- poleon. AGAINST IKE The government defeat was seen by observers here as a protest against what was consid- ered undue pressure by President Eisenhower in the Franco-Tunis- ian dispute. Last week, when the Anglo-American goo offices mis- sion in the dispu-te appeared to have ended in failure, Eisen- hower sent a message to Gaillard urging him to keep the mission alive. Gaillard fought through an 11- hour ca-b;\"et meeting last Satur- day to win the support of his con- servative cabinet ministers for a conciliatory attitude toward the co;:ntry’s North African prob- lcms. He finally wno their support in calling the assemrbly back from its Easter recess to vote on whe- (:Reuters)—'l‘lie coali- lage of Sakiet, near the Algerian border last February. The government’s fate hung in the balance in the early hours of Tuesday’s debate. Then the con- servative group turned against Gaillard and sealed his defeat. The feeling against American intervention in France’s North African, problems. wsa evident soon ‘artér the '§‘lfart of the debate when Jacques Soustelle, former governor - general of Algeria, charged that the American MONTAGUE TOO state department was ready to sacrifice everything, including its closest allies, to please and plac- ate the Arabs. The charge brought the pre- mier to his feet to deny the sug- gestions that his policy was dic- ta-ted by American pressure. Before the vote he told mem- bers the outcome of the ballot could “have a" profound influence not only on events in North Af- rica, but on the destiny of the whole of the French Empire.” W. I. Fish Pier To Be Re-built OTTAWA, -— (Special) — Re- building of the fish landing pier at Wood Islands, P. E. I. is to be undertaken this summer, the Public Works Department dis- closed Tuesday. . Tenders for the project, esti- mated to cost about $80,000, have already been called. They close PM AT MERGER MEETING OTTAWA (CP) — Prime Min- ister Diefenbaker will speak a-t the inaugural banq-uet here May 1 of the merger convention of the Civil Service Association of Can- ada, it was announced today. The organization, with more than 25,- 000 members, is merging with .the Civil Service Association of Ot- tawa, the Amalgamated Civil Ser- vants. of Canada and the Federal tlier or not to reopen Franco- Tunisian talks. The tailks had been broken off after French planes bombed the Tunisian vil- May 14. The reconstruction of the fish- ermen’s landing is set out in these specifications: “The work . . . shall consist of a steel sheet’ pile, 352 feet six inches long, tied back with steel tie rods to a con- crete anchor wall and filling be- hind the wall with sandstone and clay.” ' The Department has also call- ed tenders for repairs to the wharf at Montague, P. E. I. These will be received until May 21. About $43,000 has been set aside_ in the 1958-59 estimates for this project. Association of Stationary Engi- neers and Firemen. SWIMMER FLEES BERLIN (-Reuters) —— S-wim- mcr Han-s Zierold, East German holder of the European men’s record for the 200-metre butter- fly stroke, has fled to West Ber- lin, it was reported Tuesday. British BudgetHas Little To Cheer UpThe Taxpayer LONDON (CP) —A £5.500,000,— 000 budget pinpointing inflation as the continuing danger to Brit- ain’s econ-omy was presented Tuesday by Derick Heathcoat Amory in his maiden effort as chancellor of the exchequer. Although he offered minor con- cessions to encourage investment and consumer demand. the chan- cellor repeatedly emphasized in his two-hour budget speech that the signs still point toward cau- tion, that it is too early to relax credit restrictions. that it is a time for consolation. Heathcoat Amory said the pro- lcction of the value of sterling re- mains of paramount importance, and that industrial expansion must take second place. "We shall not k:-op zhc brakes on one day 10:12:-1' than we must,” he .-a.:l. bu: aolcil. “'l‘liL-re is no snlxa 1‘ an we non throughj iu.-no mg: ‘.u‘("]ll{'ll(‘l1 indiscrim-é l'‘- ":_v at :z‘‘_\‘ Witt." Cris si.ir.n'r X -"yfl ‘,;n;y"\*'g llllfl-‘.".'Cl ;’\-«v ... At only £108,000,000 ($302,000,000) for the full financial year endlflg next April. _ Defence expenditure is set at £1,418,000,000 and other big items are £540,710,000 for the national health service and £434,640-000 for education. _ _ Most of th- concessions are in reduced purchase (sales) tax on hou-sehold goods, cosmetics. S0-me wines and movie tickets. The new rates tacke effect immediately. Britain’s stiff income tax—421/2 per cent at the standard rate- remains unchanged. But m1Yl‘01' relief is given on allowance granted for elderly pe0*l31€ and those supporting dependent 1913' tives. , The cautious budget is flgured to leave a surplus of £364,000,000 WATCHING U.S. _ Heathcott Amory said business men everywhere are Wattfhing the United States r c c e s s 1 0 ii. whicli is causing particular con- ;cern in priiiiary producing coun- f._.;C,. which are affected by the Britain in the coming months. Opposition leader Hugh Gaits- ' kell, himself a former chancellor of the exchequer, said changing conditions argued for measures to promote expansion. In a brief speech, which re- served the main opposition argu- ments for ."oday’s speech by Har- old Wilson, Labor’s shadow chan- cellor, Gai-tskell said increasing unemployment, while slight, has been accompanied by a reduction in overtime worked and an in- crease in short time. Gaitskell also was strongly crit- ical of one of Heathcoat Am-ory’s budgetary amendments designed to encourage investment. In place of the present profits tax of three per cent on all profits and 30 per cent on dividends, the amend- ment imposes a single l0'-'per- cent tax on profits of all kinds. The chancellor explained that the move was designed to encour- age the more fruitful use of in- veslmeiit capital, now tied up in rcscrvcs. Gaitskell said it should “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” Vissers lived about 15 miles outside of Rotterdam. A prized possession of the 47-year-old Dutchman is a picture of his well kept farm home in his na- tive land. Until they can get settled on a farm of their own they will stay with friends. Art Treasures ‘lmperilled In New York Fire NEW YORK. (AlP)—-A lunch- hour fire Tuesday a. fabulous treasure hoard at the Museum of Modern Art in the fashionable heart of Manhattan. Ant worth $4,000,000 was saved. Six paintings—valued' at $1,500,- 000—were damaged but restora- tion is believed possible for all but one of them. Firemen wielded axes and di- rected hoses with amazing care and precision, lest their -_ life-sav- ing efforts at the same time destroy irreplaceable 0 b j e c t s. Women museum employees, their clothes wringing wet from the hoses, risked their lives to carry- pictures to safety. One workman died in the fire. Three women visitors were -treated .for' smoke poisoning. More than a score of firemen were injured or overcome. ' The blaze was confined to a small area of the museum’s sec- ond floor gallery, where air con- ditioning work was under way. It was under control in less than an hour, but th-icik, overpowering smoke clogged the main building and an adjoining annex. More than 500 persons fled the smoke. For a time, a number were trapped either inside the buildings or on rooftops. Several women broke windows and pre- pared to leap from upper floors as the smoke choked and blinded them. DELEGATES to the refresher course for poultry products in- spectors here include: FRONT ROW, left to right, J.B. Arsen- ault, Charlottetown, P.E. Robin, Adenuuer To Visit London B-ONIN (Reuters) — West Ger- man Chancellor Konrad Adenauer will fly to London today for three days of talks with British offi- cials on such topics as the 17- power European free trade zone and summit talks. While in London, the 82-year- old chancellor will meet with Prime Minister Macmillan. (11119 at Windsor Castle with the Queen and address both houses of Parl- iament. He will be accompanied by Vice-Chane-cllor Ludwl.‘-I ET’ hard and Foreign Minister HC1I'- ,,.i,.1_\. ,»_,”_;,,_,,,,.,,,b.«,m ,=:5.1:m.(l(l(i.. ‘{;~.u in (—(unm;)dj1_\r |)I'i(,‘CS. Hc an-lhc accompanied by a (capital ‘JUN out-‘l's lax (‘\M'\l.‘ ‘mus ofltjupalefl no similar reces.-ion in] gains tax. HARLOfI_"I‘ETOWN CANADA. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 1958 NOT MORE THAN New Session OfParliament To Open May 12, PM Says Four Teen - Age Gang Members Are Convicted NEW YORK (AP)-—A jury con- victed two teen-gang members of second degree murder Tuesday night i-n the slaying of a polio- crippled youth. Two others were convicted of manslaughter and three more acquitted. The jury in General Sessions court, out 24 hours with the case, spared the lives of two of the young gang members who could have been executed for first de- gree murder. The pair, Charles (Big Man) Horton, 18, a Negro, and Louis (Lit-tle Jesse) Alvarez, 17, a Puerto Rican, were convicted in- stead of second degree murder, punishable by a mandatory sen- tence of 20 yea-rs to life. Two others, not subject to judg- ment for first degree murder, were convicted of second degree manslaughter which carries ta maximum 15 years in prison. They are Leroy (the Magician) Birch, 19, a Negro, and Leoncio (Jello) De Leon, 17, a native of the Dominican Republic. The three remaining members of the Egyptian Dragons street gang were acquitted‘ of man- slaughter charges. They are John McCarthy, 15, and Richard Hills, 17, both white, and George Melen- dez, 16, Puerto Rican. The boys were members of a gang war party that attacked and killed Michael Farmer, ‘15, white, crippled son of a city fireman, in an upper Manhattan park last July 30. The mass homicide trial began la-st Jan 10 and was one of the longest and costliest in local court history. -Originally, all seven boy.s were charged with first degree murder and faced possible execution. But Monday, the charge against five of them was reduced to manslaughter. Totem Pole For Lord Mayor» LONDON <c~p)‘ — A miniature wooden totem pole, made by Haida Indians of the Queen Char- lotte Islands, w a s presented Tuesday to the lord mayor of London, Sir Denis Tnuscott. The presentation was made by 75-year-old Archie Sturrock of Vancouver, heading a party of 63 retired Canadian Pacific Railway employees now on a tour of Brit- ain. He also gave the lord mayor a hand - painted red silk. tie and a CPR veterans’ pin, which Sir Denis fastened to his lapel. Sturrock made the presentation on behalf of the Vancouver cen- tennial committee. ’ QUEEN IN U.S.S.R. BRUSSELS (AP) Queen Mother Elisabeth of Belgium ar- rived home Tuesday aboard a So- viet TU-104 plane from a visit in rich vou Brentano. Chairman H. Roy Bevan of the City Water Commissioner said yesterday that Coun. Gaudet was tryi-ng to pass the buck to the Commission for things which the Council has not seen fit to do. Referring specifically to the Toombs. property, Mr. Bevan said the City had never accepted this property but if they had, the Water Commission would be ob- liged, as in other parts of the City to supply service. He said the Council has been giving the public the impression that it was the Water Commiss- ion that was turning down servi- ces and preventing this property from being opened up. The City has to first approve area-s through which streets will be constructed, after- this, the Water Commission moves in to South Africa Votes Today; Whites Only JOHANNESBULRG (Reuters) — South Africa’s Na.-tionalist admin- istration concluded a general elec- tion campaign Tuesday night with a final clarion call for white su- preinacy. Police were no the watch for trouble in the native areas. To- day’s election is for whites only. Strong police forces patrolled the Johanneslburng Negro suburb Olf Sollhlartowu where two Africans have (been killed and five wounded in incidents following the calling- off of a “stay at home” demon- stration by Africans which was glue to have run through election ay. Elsewhere, the situation was re- Ported quiet. About 1,500,000 white , voters out of South Africa’s total. population of about 13,000,000 are eligible to vote. Their choice is between the Nationalist party, in power for 10 years. and the United party. Likes Plan For London Meeting FREDE-RICTON (GP) — New- foundland Premier Joseph R. Smallwood said in a telephone conversation from the Bahamas Tuesday ’ he w a s enthusiastic about a meeting of the four Atlan- tic premiers in London. The premiers will arrive in London May 26 to take part in the opening of an -Atlantic prov- inces t r a d e , promotion office. They will be guests of Lord Beav- erbrook. Fredericton publisher Brig. Mi- chael Wardell announced _the in- Russia-. Moncton, Hugh C. Cochrane, Ot- tawa, Associate Chief of Poultry Division, Marketing Services who is conducting the course, Fred M. Halifax, Poultry Products Inspectors Take Refresher Course Here Poultry inspectors from the four Atlantic Provinces are convening at the Experimental Farms in Charlottetown this week for a re- fresher course conducted by Hugh C. Cochrane of Ottawa, Associate Chief of Poultry Division, Market- ing Services. The purpose of the course is to review past work and discuss the various new problems that are ("‘)l1ll'()llllJhC£ the poultry ind.usl.ry in the Atlantic Provinces. vitation in Halifax Saturday. supply the services, Mr. Bevan explained. SPRING PARK In regard to Spring Park, Mr. Bevan said he would like to in- form Coun. Gaudet. “in case he does not know” that the City Wa- ter Commission has done a great deal of work in Spring Park area. This work, he said was done at the request of the Government and has cost the Village of Spring Park very little. He recalled that the Village of Spring Park through their com- missioners expressed formal thanks for the assistance that had been given them by the Provin- cial Government and the City Water Commissioners. SHOWED FORESIGHT The Water Commission Chair- MONTREAL (OP) Four hooded and armed bandits were offered a helping hand by Lady’ Luck Tuesday as they struck quickly and expertly in a holdup in an East-‘End bank which net- ted them $88,000 —- the biggest holdup haul on Montreal Island i-n more than M years. The bandits broke into a bank branch when telephone commun- ication in that section of the city was still tangled as a result of a two-alarm fire a few hours ear- lier. Witnesses who tried to phone police were unable to get their calls through. Earlier estimates of the loot were revised upward to $88,000 from $75,000. The four, described as experts, struck just before the 10 am. opening time at an east - end (branch of La Banque Canadiemie -Nation-ale, three of them gaining entry to the building through a rear door to a jai-ntor’s store- room. The fourth stayed with the pale blue getaway car, which van- ished with the bandits. From there, one smashed his way through a partition into a basement employees’ locker room. A startled male employee tried to run upstairs to sound the alarm. - He was easily headed off and the staff of 11 were lined up against a wall while the attack- ing trio. pistols in hand, ex- pertly rifled the vault. Police said they took about $60,000 In cash and $15.000 in securities, leaving a $1 bill and a handful of change. St. John's, Nfld., C.M. MacMil1an Nash, Moncton, District Super- visor, E.A. Hollett, Charlotte- town and G.T. Cummings, Hali- fax. BACK ROW, J.R. Mclnnis, H. E. Robbins, Saint The object of the conference is to place, upon the market, a “quality product”, one that will receive the ready acceptance of the public and consumers. To obtain this objective, egg grading stations and poultry pro- cessing plants are checked per- iodically for their accuracy in grading. Similar checks are ac- corded the market on the retail level. Assisting Mr. Cochrane at the mn"(*i'('u:~r‘ is Fred M. Nash of ’A. Phillips of Moncton, Moncton, District S'LipC‘i"v'l.C:-TL’. At- Jolin, N.B., W.L. Hanlon and R.A. Phillips of Moncton, J .W. Smith, Kentville and B.E. Douglas and J . O. McNeill, both of Sydney. tending the conference are Poult- try Product Inspectors and In- spectors of Consolidate Retail In- spection Units of the Atlantic Provinces. A total of 12 men are attending the conference from several Mari- time and Newfoundland centres. They include J.R. Mclnnis and GT Cummings of Halifax, C.M. MacMil1an, W.L. Hanlon and R. B.E. Douglas and J.O. McNeill of Syd- ney, P.E. Robin of St. John’s, Nfld., H.E. Robbins of Saint John N.B., J.W. Smith of Kentville, and the two local representatives, J.B. Arcsnault and E.A. Hollett, both of Charlottetown. The delegates will be in town until the conference winds up on Friday, ‘ -.47’? Coun.Gaudet's Statements Bring Reply From Mr. Bevan man said the Commission was alert enough to forsee what was taking place in this area and had pipes laid under the Trans Can- ada Highway so that when servi- ces are supplied there will be no need to tear up any of the new road. Mr. Bevan said he did not ap- prove of the way in which am- algamation with Spring Park was handled. “The Spring Park peo- ple were allowed to vote on the matter but the people of Char- lottetown were denied this pri- vilege," he added. “I would suggest that the Coun- cil adopt the principles of the City Water Works Act which has stood for over a half a century instead of trying to abolish it,” he concluded. Bank Bandits Get $88,000 The bank, which reported the theft the largest ever made on any of its branches said the branch was preparing for antic- ipated payday cheque - cashing from a neanby amiy depot. Police said the bandits forced vault or face a pistol whipping. Earlier reports said it had been open. The holdup total ranks behind that of the Hochelage robbery in driver and a bandit were killed. drew life sentences. in which $68,000 was -taken. a bank employee to open the 1924 when $142,000 was taken by ega-ngfroi'naba.nl:car.'I'-he Four men were hanged. Three It also recalled a still-unsolved 1957 holdup near Dorval airport WEATHER Clear and milder: light winds. Low-high at Charlottetown 30 and 60. FIVE CENTS Extensive Chores ‘Are In Prospect OTTAWA (CP)—The new Par- liament opens Monday, May 12. with a “fairly extensive” list ‘of chores ahead of it. Prime Min- ister Diefenbaker said Tuesday. He announced the date follow- ing a one-hour cabinet meeting, and told reporters the Parlia- ment elected March 31 has I great deal to do." “I think the legislative pro- gram will be fairly extensive." He declined to speculate on t-ht possible length of the first ses- sion. However, it is likely that if there is a fair number of EOVETI1‘ ment measures to pass._l1he Com‘ mons could sit until mid - sum- mer or even later. Mr. Diefenlbaker, who said_ last Sunday he favored 8 sessions! start on Thursday. May 3. 111- dicated the four-day cl1anB€_l| because of delays in comliletlnfl formalities to permit newly-9109' ted members to take their Com- mons seats. He said he expects everythifil will be ready by May 12- 'I‘|he prime repeated previous statements that there will be a number of cabinet ap- pointments h e f o r e Parliament starts but “when that will be. I ca-n’t say at this time." He has said there be three cabinet appointments from Quebec and possibly one or more from other provinces. He declined reporters‘ request: that D. R. Michener, 57-year-old Speaker of the last Commons. may be re-appointed to his post. Mr. Michener, Progressive Con- servative MP for Toronto St. Paul’s, held the speaker’s chair only during the last brief Per- liament. Normalil-Y the speaker- ship is alternated between Eul- lish and French-speaking mem- bers at each Parliament. Mir. Diefenlbaker said -the nom- ination of the next speaker “will of course not be announced in LESS MONEY OWED OTTAWA (CP) — Consumer of sales finance companies‘ at Feb. 28 totalled $752,500,000, down 15 per cent from the $763,700,000 recorded a month earlier, the bureau of statistics reported Tues- day. B-ala-nces outstanding with small loan companies and licen- ced money lenders at Feb. 28 de- clined 0.3 per cent to $364,800,000 from $365,900,000 at Jan. 31. I-IA-LI<FlAX (IC|P)—-Strict meas- ures to strengthen highway saf- ey in Nova Scotia were intro- duced in the legislature Tuesday by Highways Minister Smith. The lengthy amendment to the province's motor vehicle act would impose a 60 mile-per-hour speed limit no all roads and pro- vide stronger penalties to curb drivers violating the Nova Scotia points system. ' Mr. Smith said that while many amendments were minor there were eight or 10 which might re- sult in controversy. The proposed speed limit provi- sion would eliminate arbitrary limits of 30-40 m.p.h. in certain areas of Nova Scotia and the prima facie limit of 40 m.up.h. Violators of the 60 m.-p.h. “absolute maximum" would be assessed four points. Additional fines ‘l/ou-Id range from min- , imum of $10 for the first offence to $200 for the third. Optional jail terms would range from 60 days. The present points system pro- vides penalties ranging from six for failing to render assistance at credit outstanding on the books advance of the House receiving the first intimation.” The prime minister will go into the 265-seat Commons heading 1 208 - member Conservative eon- ti-ngent — more supporters than any Canadian prime minister be- fore him. Liberals under leader Lester 3. ‘Pearson have 49 members. The eight - member OCF group will have to select a House leader be- cause of the election defeat of party leader M. J. Coldwell. N. S. Plans Speed Limit Boost And Stiffer Penalties an accident to one point for op erating a poorly-equipped» car. Ten points in a year result in suspension of an operator’: li- cence for six months. Under the proposed legislation, a driver assessed 10 points in I two-year period would lose his permit. The provincial registrar of motor vehicles could suspend a licence after interviewing a motorist with between six and 10 points if found “likely to commit additional violations or is acci- dent-prone." . MILITARY APPOINTMENT OTTAWA (CP)—Capt. Gordon C. Edwards, 40, of Toronto at‘ Montreal, has been appointed dep- (air and warfare) at naval head- quarters here it was announced Tuesday. The appointment is ef- fective Aug. 25. P0 FLOODS FERRARA, Italy (Reuters) - The P0 River Tuesday flooded 7,- 400 acres of land near Reggio Emilia. The flood followed April rains unmatched in years. Secretary Dulles Tuesday ac- cused Russi-a of prostituting dip- lomacy for propaganda purposes and thereby endangering inter- national peace. At a press conference, he called on Moscow to halt its outpouring of public letters and diplomatic notes if it genuinely wants to ease tensions with the West. The United States has always felt, he said, that exchanges be- tween h e a d s of government “were designed generally on a sult." “that process has been de Dulles Accuses Russia , Of Endangering World Peace WASHINGTON (AP) — State baughed and prostituted into purely an organ of propaganda. “There seems ‘to be no desire whatever to use this machinery . really to get ment. . . .” Dulles defended the Eisen- hower administration a g a i n s t criticism it has failed to meet the Kremlin’s successful propa- ganda campaign. Dulles conceded that Soviet propaganda “initially is having a kind of field day” in newly- tindependeiit countries but he lquestioned whether the United to an agree- highly-confidential basis, sincer- States should seek to match the ely to achieve some practical re-lRussians in this field. A more ;effective way must be found to “For the first time that 1 know l deal with Soviet propaganda, he of in all history,” he added, ‘said, and eventually the answer n will be developed. to contfiirm published speculation- uty assistant chief of the naval .. «.7-