TELEPHONE esos Buyer meets selle Want Ads. tied ad taker, 1' with Gr ardian Dial 8§06 ask for classi. for quick results. Elmo mnarrltiu WEATHER Snow beginning this winds increasing this afternoon; 11 g 1| 17 afternoon to east 25. Low-high at Ch’town 10 and 30. V “Covers Prince. Edward Island Like The Dew” l1iffGE3 " ‘°°‘::;‘..$::*:..E‘*:."...'::.‘”° CHARLOTTETOWN CANADA, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 3,1953 »"°i,,“,i§fi’” FIVE CENTS \ I '4 MTAWA (CP)—Prime Minis- ” Diefenbaker said Friday he 5 to call an informal federal- wnioipal conference this year to agcuss the financial plight of ,mnicipalit1es. _Mr. Diefenbaker disclosed his ‘fan after the cabinet met for ' hours with a 30-member dele- 'on of the Canadian Federa- gon of Mayors and Municipali- es. fij-1e told reporters he has in find a conference at which the fiunicipalities could outline prob- ms. lathe federation brief asked the ernment to . help loosen the financial straightjackets” of ‘gunicipalities until a new over- -Gigi. plan can be worked out. . 'rhe'brief proposed a Dominion- fpovinc-ial - municipal conference 4,), consider means to improve financial position. If this was mt possible there should be an informal conference. ' ;i‘l’was very impressed with the "' estion that an informal “ ting with the municipalities enable th m to set out Mr views in f ," Mr. Diefen- baker said. iccnoas -ro REQUEST :;'j‘,'I have every intention of ac- ceding to their request as a pre- liminary to full consideration being given‘ to their problems.” Diefenbaker said the con- fience certainly will take place year. However, it would not gfheld until after._;tbé,«March 31 general election. ' .The prime minister was asked trliether the talks will be held be- or after the next federal- jrovincial fiscal conference. -,“I,am not going to fix dates," pm-. Diefenbaker said. ;..TheIast federal-provincial fis- cgl conference was in November Y. Schools VEXPGI VNEW YORK (AP)—New York dry’: schools expelled 544 pupils ’ ' ‘day as chronic troublemakers. .,3l‘«l1e‘ suspensions came in the wake of a new ultti-matum to . green the school system clean of éilltractable delinquents. uded. The laws: exodu-s was from klyn, area of many of the school rapes, stabbing-s and dis-‘ ; orders that ‘spurred the disciplin- ary measures. Tlhere, 339 pupils : , suspended. . X K fillcebreakers Push 1 ‘ ‘Near To Montreal MONTREAL (CP) — The ice- lneakers D’Iberv:ille and Ernest Lapointe Thursday staged a 330!‘ push to‘ within 22 miles of lepiastern tip of Montreal an . Channel engineers said Friday ~_ St. lllchel. 15 miles downstream. .'.1‘he two ships r__:1de their best ‘lflgle day's progress of the sea- umsday, in a ‘ mile jaunt . 111 Lanoraie to a point above 9011 oeur. .. was estimated Thursday the in might reach Montreal in ‘Wit 10 days, but this was re- fised other the breakthrough. :15 lhlrd ’IIl‘ea.lner, the sauce], is . ‘fhfiduled to sail upriver this Weekend to keep ice moving in ‘grinding the last dollar out of M. Promises Informal ,FecIeral-Municipal Talks last year. No date has yet been set for one this year. Lloyd D. Jackson, federation president and mayor of Hamil- t0I_1,_ 0nt., welcomed the prime m1n1ster’s statement. He de- scribed the meeting with the cabinet as “friendly” and said g‘;’n‘,1,ele8a”10n got a “good recep- MUST BE NEW DEAL Mr. Jackson said the core of the submission topthe cabinet was that theremust ‘be a new deal for municipalities so they can dlacharge their responsibilities. We are sick and tired of D1‘0P€_I‘ty owners and having to go cap in hand to provincial gov- ernments for financial aid,” he said. - V The problems were accumulat- illg year by year. Municipalities could not operate properly when they had to earmark up to 42 per cent of their revenues for education. The brief said the new deal The Dominion Change From “The Dominion Building” is the new name for the structure housing the Post Office and other government offices which has been _known as Confederation Budding. The change was felt to be necessary in view of con- fusion resulting. when -tourists wished to view Confederation Chamber‘ in the Provincial Build- 1ng. . . Judge H. L. Palmer, at the re- quest‘of chairman Earl Taylor, president of the Charlottetown Board of Trade, read a list of 61 names which hadgbeen suggested in letters. He pointed out that the issue had been first raised by the Historical Society and. brought» to the attention of Ottawa with the full support of . the Board of Trade. — Correspondence with Ottawa of- ficials indicated that authorities at the Capital would prefer a name with a definite. historical significance-and suggesting that the name ‘Federal Building’ not be used. \, 61 NAMES, READ ;-»;Themeetin.gt.o discuss ’the%1aoe-- 1 ter was held last night in . [the City Council chamber and’, was at- tended by representatives of a ‘large number of service clubs, organizations, other groups and individuals. Of the 61 names read by Judge Palmer only four re- ceived any serious consideration from the meeting. They were in addition to the one chosen, Kent Building, which was not‘ voted upon; Jacques Cartier Building, WASHINGTON (AP)-—-Russian- American relations took a new and possibly significant twist Fri- day involving two ambassadors and a Polish plan for barring’ atomic arms in Eastern Europe. There were these develop- ments: 1. U.S. Ambassador Llewellyn Thompson b r i e f e d President Eisenhower’s c a b in e t on pros- pects for an East-West summit conference this year, then headed back by air to Moscow. . 2. New Soviet Ambassador Mik- hail Menshikov swapped pleasant- ries at the state department with Secretary Dulles. Ihagish Lalce st. Peter. 1. T = ‘WASHINGTON (AP) — George A . ;fi§n5‘t‘“eY,. American Motors presi- ,1 in.» urged Congress Friday to y ‘ s; It “I3 the power of the corpo- 5 _and.labor giants in the auto- , - .9b1le industry. He also con- 1’ ‘led the people are demanding ,‘,; mailer car-s_ R°mn€Y. whose company pro- =; “S95 the Rambler, recommended = glslation requiring G e n e r a I »°t01‘s and Ford to break up into . 91‘ companies. He also urged ,. (lamp _ _. . . I. . force: ed to CIlVld€ its bargaining liblnney 4': vesh . industry. Wu r E!‘ 7‘ I I another point, ., “age I) , ;» ° 3111 rea " X; “Foss 1, 9° C re : ' eflually’ important," adding: I‘, g°°d £01‘ the gander." ~ HAS WRONG IDEA ‘»I:I1)1am1 Beach. 1«‘1-an a lnate” r » 81 the United Auto Workers be ,§h“_¢h' “concentration” of eco- -«mlc power should be limited, told the Senate anti-trust m°_110l>0ly subcommittee in- Eating pricing policies in the ""WheY1 you get so darned big, get muscle-bound,” he said °mY1€y predicted this spring’s ma argaining in the industry 3 = 3’ Send “another block-buster ction wage-price spiral” the U.S. unless his pro- 5315 are adopted. "He said he -mgards the break-ups in both oanagement and labor power as fits good for the goose is ,(30fIlmc11«ting on the testimony at; _ UAW 1 01‘-esman said Romney "has an’ asgerated and erroneous esti- Of the union’s power in the Y. He added that Romneys bles stem from his comneti-I said. ‘No, we didn’t settle the .flUrges U. S. Congress To 2 ‘ hreak Up Automobile Giants ,tors.” . The spokesman said the unlon’s collective - bargaining proposals, which include a demand that the industry share its profits with the workers, are non-inflationary and would help rather than hurt the smaller producers such as Ameri- can Motors. To curb‘ what he called “union monopolies," Romney suggested that power to bargain with big firms in any basic industry be representing the employees of a single employer.” He also proposed that a com- place in a basic industry. The come when a firm exceeds 35 per cent of the total sales in its in- dustry; or, if it is engaged in more than one basic industry, 25 per cent. ' SEES NEW FIRMS Romney s aid his proposal would make several new com- panies out of the big threc~—Ford Motor Company, General Motors poration. Contradicting testimony of ex- ecutives of the big companies longer small car produced by American Motors has a public opinion.“ g “Demand for the smaller, com- mon sense automobile is sound- ing throughout the country,” he name . and ‘decision on the winner ,Metropole Building, the Charlo- New Slant Seen In U. S., Russi,-pan Relations :Ye-sterclay . lodged with unions “exclusivelyv break-up point, he said, should Corporation and the Chrysler Cor- that the public wants bigger and cars, Romney said the “rendezvous with should provide that “that an equitable. proportion of any shared revtnues as between the Dominion and provincial govern- ments will flow back through the provinces to the municipalities in all provinces on some uniform basis.” SHOULD ACT NOW Pending a permanent solution, the government should take in- ter-1m measures to assist muni- cipal governments. ‘ The brief proposed that this aid should include exemption of municipalities from federal sales tax, an increase in the $300,000 maximum the federal govern- ment allows for individual grade crossing projects, more federal participation in low _renta1 hous- ing and urban redevelopment un- der the National Housing Act, federal participation with the provinces and municipalities in providing modern throughways in cities, and, federal guarantees for, municipal loans. ' Building‘ Is Conteclercltion defeated‘ 18 to 3; and Federal Building defeated 17 to 2. The vote in favor of the selected name was 17 to 3. Many of thoseattending expres- sed their views on the matter and gave reason for their pre- ference. Judge Palmer was strong- ly in favor of use of the word Dominion rather than Federal as expressing more fully the feeling of early Canada. Mrs. B. Earle MacDonald, as representative of the I. O. D. E., strongly urged the word Dominion and was sup- ported by many other groups. Robert Large pointed out that the name chosen would have to be acceptable historically ~ and also accepted by the public and thought‘ that Dominion satisfied both of these Uclassifications. Mayor J. D. Stewart’and,Major T. E. MacNutt agreed fully. T0 DECIDE WINNER. It was announced that five let- ters were received in Board of Trade competition suggestingthis would rg. It-,,wi h the three judges V f :~‘—\ y_‘,,,;,IFa'f"i‘_lId!yi‘a1'é,‘t:- ‘ Justice George ’-Tu.',,1‘wee‘tly,'Ju f H. L. Palmer and , Mrs W. M Brehaut. Their decision will. be based on the quality of the letter outlining the reason for the sug- gestion. ' . . Among the names offeredwere Kingdom Building, Territorial Building, Queen Elizabeth Build- ing, New Abegweit Building, Dominion Hall andcanada House. disarmament‘ question,” Dulles chuckled to reporters. “Not yet, anyhow,” said Menshikov. Their meeting apparently was taken up with diplomatic niceties ‘pledging both sides to work for peace. 3. The state department spoke kindly of Communist Poland’s peaceful intent but pulled back publicly from a secret critique it cabled its European missions call- ing the Polish proposal “ex- tremely dangerous.” “ -Thompson’s Russian counter- part lost no time in taking charge of the " Sov-iet . Embassy here. Quickly, he called on Dulles and arranged for a formal presenta- tion of credentials next week to Eisenhower. The Polish plan for an f‘atom- free” zone was the main topic at /the daily press conference of state department press chief Lin- Pro-|ects Britain Has Snow Storm LONDON (Reuters) Five- foot snowdmifts piled up across western England ;.-.d southern Wales Friday in one of Britain’s worst storms of the winter. The storr closed roads into -the Scottish Hi-ghlands and hundreds of snowplows were trying to keep major highways op~.n. I About an inch of snow fellon L_o n d o n but it disappeared quickly. However, weather fore- casters predict more snow for most of Britain today. _ On the Continent, snowfalls were even hes.‘ : and some parts of the Swiss Alps were threatened with avalanches. Avalanche walrnin-gs also were issued in southwest Germany dur- ing the third day of snowtalls. In Stuttgart, the snow brought traf- fic to a standstill and troops were called -out to help clear the roads. . Heavy snow fell’ on Austria and in many parts of France with Vienna and Paris reporting thick blankets. , Fuchs Reaches Depot; 700 Miles To Go WELLINGTON, New Zealand (Reuters) — British explorer Vivian Fuchs struggled into a New Zealand base 500 miles from the South Pole Friday and pre- pared for the final push in‘ the first land crossing of the Antarc- tic continent. ’ ‘ The bearded adventurer, racing the winter, took only 14 days to cover "theV500 miles from the pole to Depot 700, but the remaining 700 miles to the coast through dangerous crevasse country is ex- pected to take about 48 days. Fuchs waited Friday night for the arrival of Sir Edmund I-Iil-' lary, the New Zealand conqueror of Mount Everest, who will guide the British party over the last part of the journey. , A blizzard prevented Hillary from flying‘ to Depot 700 Friday but spokesmen at McMurdo Sound said he may be able to take off today. Fuchs has completed two-thirds of his crossing. His main concern now is to avoid the polar winter which begins in March. WASHINGTON (AP )—Defence Secretary Neil McElroy appointed a director of _ac- pmojects Fri- day and tentatively seleted the air force to man any space ships that might come out of the pro- gram. . Roy 1W. Johnson, a vice-presi- dent of the General _Electric Com- pany, was named to head the new ‘ , Advanced R,e s e a r c h Projects Agency. He will be in chargeof developing anti-«missile missiles, spae vehicles and other things still below the horizon. An elec- tnonics veengineeo‘, Johnson was in charge of GE's electronics busi- ness for. six years starting in 1951. Later, at a press conference, McElroy was asked which branch of the armed services would skip- per the space ships when they are perfected. ' . “In my judgment,” he replied, “the operation of manned flight vehicles seems very naturally to fall within the scope of air. force ‘\responsi'bi1=ity..” ’ X-15 AT SPACE DOOR ' The defence chief noted the air force is climbing , higher and higher into the sky and that the projected X-15 rocket research plane is designed to take an air force man to the edge of space. The house of Representatives coln W/hite. pany be compelled to split itself . " when it approaches a dominent Knight at a dinner of the Scottish armed services committee made T. C. A. Monopol YT° Encl, Gov't Minister Announces . Plans Another Step Towards Peace In Cyprus LONDON (Reuters) with Greek, leaders. Lloyd also may meet Greek Orthodox Archbishop Makarios, exiled leader of the movement united Cyprus -with Greece. A foreign office said “I would not :"cludeit." Cyprus ~Governor‘ Sir Hugh Foot may fly -to Athens to join Lloyd. N. B. Oil Well Down 400 Feet MARYSVILLE, N.B. United States. Harold M. Young -aid the crew has found evidence of crude oil and samples have been analy aed. Mr. Young and four other men of the Fredericton - Marysville area formed a compa years ago. CONDITION UNCHANGED OTTAWA (CP)—.Ju1es Caston- guay, 7-5, Canada’s former chief. ellectoral officer, Friday passed his 18th day inn coma that fol- lowed a heart attack last Jan. 21. Hospital ocfficialssaid there has been no change in his con- dition. " public Friday testimony about pro guess in otlierphases-of the mis- sile effort. _ . Air Force Secretary James Douglas told the will be at -its post by December, 1959. Douglas said_ the unit will use the air force Atlas, an ICBM de- signed to hurl a hydrogen war- head at targets 5,500 miles away.’ He did not -say \vL‘=ene the unit would be stationed’ but it-is ex- pected to be at the ICBM la-uncl - ing base being developed near Cheyenne, Wyo. An Atlaswas test fired Friday at Cape Canaveral, Fla. In testimony at a secr 4 session last Monday and made public in censored form Friday, Dr. John P. Hagen suggested to the com- mittee that early next year might rocket to be -a_ good timeto fire a, the moon. ‘ COULD HIT MC ON NOW Hagen is head of the Vanguard, satellite project, under the direc- tion of the navy. He indicated he thought the U.S. a‘ eady has mis- siles capable of “putting some thing on the moon.” Douglas, in his prepared tes-tl- mony, agreed the U.S. now has rocket engines powerful enough to reach the moon and even to “ex- plore space beyond.” _ ATTEND INNER OFT SCOTTISH RITE‘ Gordon Bennett presided lastlftite, held in the Charlottetown of the picture. Others are, left to Macbougall, Hotel. Mr. Bennett is at the right. right, F. A. Vanlderstine. Eldon Campbell. ——Another step in the bid to bring peace to Cypruswill be -taken by Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd Monday when he flies to Athens -for talks spokesman, asked whether Lloyd would be willing to meet the man Britain deported from Cyprus in 1955 (CP) - Promoters of an oil-drilling pro- ject reported Friday niglh having reached a depth of 400 feet after nearly a month's work and said they plan to. bore an additional 2,000 or more feet’ following ar- rival of a larger rig from the almost two -mmittee «the first U.S..~military unit armed with intercontinental ballistic missiles MIAMI, Fla. (AP)-More cold weather moved into stricken Florida' Friday, worsening .the record of a winter which already has been the most disastrous in state history. There was‘ little damage the new «mass of Canadian cold air could do. F1orida’s w-inter vege- table crops already have been vir- tually wiped out by three freezes and floods. The big citrus industry has ing by the thousands on pastures destroyed by cold. J. O. Pearce Jr., president of the Florida Cattlemen’s Associa- tion, predicted 275,000 cattle will die in the next five weeks because of lack of feed. “I’ve never known cattlemen to be in such bad shape with the worst month of the year staring them in the face,” Pearce said. Meanwhile, a Florida citrus ‘commission official said the De- cember freeze caused at‘ lekst $26,500,000 damage to the citrus industry. been hard hit and cattle are dy- More Cold Hits Florida Hard said this will be offset in part by higher prices for the remaining crop. LOSS STILL UNKNOWN Hooks said 29,500,000 boxes of fruit were wiped out in December. Citrus trees were damaged toan extent which still cannot be cal- culated and thousands of citrus workers face job losses. The new cold wave, said chief forecaster Gordon Dunn of the Miami weather bureau, “is just a continuation of the lousy weather we have been having. “There is no relief in sight for some time except for an occa- sional day or two of sunshine. “There is a tremendous reser- voir of cold air in Canada now, and we could have one cold. snap ‘after another for a while yet.” Rain preceded the new cold wave as it pushed southward down the pen-insual. Hail was re- ported at Tampa. It will be colder Saturday night, with temperatures below freezing in north and central portions and near the danger ‘point in the south. General. Manager Homer Hooks _ TORONTO (CP)-—Toronto po- lice have been told‘ to drop “powder puff tactics” but the current surge of hold-ups contin- ued Friday. 2 :Two windbreaker .- clad teen- agers slugged G. W. Mornan of suburban Scarborough and rob- bed him of $2,200 he. was taking from a bank to felolw-workers. It was the 42nd. holdup in the area this year. The V, two things mo Morn r of Toronto Brick Company em- ployees. V 2 Mornan estimated that he was unconscious about 10 minutes. He recovered to find himself only a few yards from the bank. ’ Police later searched the “Wooded; Don and Rosedale Val- leys for..th'e holdup men after a report that a green and yellow car had driven into the area. The “get - tough” policy was followed in a magistrate’s cou-rt. Donald Arthur Graham, 22, of -$.2’5o,ooo Fire ‘At St. John's sr. Joru~rs,1\1ud. (CP) — Fire Friday caused an estimated» $250,- Iloodamage to a building occupied and National Cash Register Com- pany. _, ’ Fire , u had the blaze out about two hours after the alarm was turned in. Intense heat melted windows and steel roof girders. The blaze was fed by a large stock of paint. ' Had the‘ fire gone out of, con- trol it might have reached the provincial department of labor and ,ed,rucation building nearby. ‘Firemen’ from the USAF’s base at nearby Pepperrell helped soak the building down. The owner of the building said damage was at least $250,000. Persia \ Crosby, by Canadian Pittsburg Industries» their deaths last Aug. 11 bore a ter, was built in 1944 and had Toronto Police Told To Get Tough As. Holdups Continue Toronto, committed for trial on a robbery charge, was obviously shocked when iMagistrate Thomas H. Iago‘ refused him bail. 5 ' CROWN BACKED MOVE The refusal was urged by Crown Counsel Stanton Hogg who said: “We’ve found, and the police have found, a tendency of-people while on bail on such offences '9.’ this to ‘go outnand commit offences.’-’ _ ,v._,_- .. r.../.~o, alrarn electedltrial by udge jury on a charge of»rob‘bing a gr.0§CeI‘:v‘ store of $331 Dec. 2. , The tough "line on criminals waslaid, down at a Metropolitan Police Commission meeting Thursday when Metro Chairman Fred Gardiner said: “Powder puff tactics are out. Criminals are going to get shot at.” ' “When these fellows realize the police are going to shoot—_not to kill but to incapacitate—they’ll be like the Arab who folded h-is tent and quietly slipped away.” But Magistrate C. O. Bick, commission chairman, said the crime ‘wave -was not confined to Toronto. “It’s not a local prob- lem, but general and wide- spread.” ‘ ' U. K. Goes Ahead With Atomic Sub‘ LONDON (AP) .—- me House‘ of Commons was told Friday that Britain is going ahead with her plan to ‘-build a nuclear submar- ine. . ' .A statement by Cmdr. Robert to the admiralty, came after re- ports that Britain would scrap its plan and be supplied instead with a Nautilus-type vessel by the United States. — 100TH BIRTHDAY ' KINGSTON, Ont. , (CP) Mrs. Mary Nesbitt of Kingston. Friday celebrated her 100th birthday at her home.‘ She received messages of congratulations from the Queen and Prime Minister Diefen-baker. MONTREAL (CP) ~— Aircraft CF-MCF which took 79 persons to clean bill of mechanical health, ,a board of inquiry was told Fri- day. t The Maritime Central Airways DC-4, which crashed in a ‘Quebec bog in Canada’s biggest air disas- changed hands four times since leaving the United States military in 1945. hours, had its Canadian air-. worthiness certificate and was within the limits designated by department of transport regula- tions for flight overhauls. The inquiry which began its public hearings Thursday heard another seven witnesses Friday before a greatly reduced audi- ence. Five witnesses appeared opening day and about 35 tenta- tively are scheduled to appear al- together. Transport department officials gave testimony on the aircraft’s A.‘ Allan, parliamentary secretary ‘ It had logged more than 28,168 ' airworthinessas the last of 10 wit-I nesses completedthelr evidence- J. A. Molsan, a paint company trouble. C. N. R. LAWYER Henry C. Friel, Q. C.- prominent Atlantic Provinces barrister, has been appointed vice-president and general counsel of Canadian National Railways. Born at Dor- chester, N. B., Mr. Friel is a graduate of St. Mary’s College, Halifax; St. Francis Xavier University, Antigonish,, and Dal- housie University Law School‘, where he received his Bachelor of Laws degree. He was appoint- ed Queen’s Counsel in 1943 and joined the CNR in the same year as counsel for the Atlantic region at Moncton. He was appointed ‘general solicitor for the system at Montreal in 1945. . Q 0 Wlll Continue , . . And On Salt . ' OTTAWA (CF) —- The govern- ment inteudsto continue in 1958 the policy of paying Atlantic Coast producers of salted fish products a rebate of 50 per cent on the cost of salt, the vvdepsr-o‘aenc~ansonoiiesorFmdoy for severlalyears in Newfound- land, Nova Scotia, New Bruns- wick, Prince Edward Island -and Quebec. It does not apply to prod- ucts sold in the United States. HARTFORD, Conn. (CP)-A 14- year - old boy, clasping his .mother’s hand, said Friday he helped rob a Waterbury bank of $27,000 because he was afraid -teen-age accomplices would call" him “chicken.” The boy, John J. Sullivan, told U.S. Commissioner Benedit M. Holden he wanted to leave the three boys before they stuck up the Colonial T ru st Company branch in Waterbury Thursday. But, he said, “I was afraid they’d call me “chicken.” Young Sullivan came to court smoking a cigarett and wearing a black leather jacket. His accom- plices were still at large. He was arraigned on a federal. armed ba..k robbery charge on the ba.sis of statements police said he had _:Jen, admitting he stood by the door of the bank holding his fath "s shotgun. His mother, Mrs. Dorothy Sulli- van, told the commissioner she had_o’bjec'ted to his running with older boys but he had retorted: “Ma, you don’t have to know 'F a’ r m c r Napoleon Laliberte said he had heard a plane making a strange noise over his hayfield the afternoon the four-engined MCA chartered airliner dug deep into a swamp near Issoudun, 15 miles southwest of Quebec. He said he found two pieces of pro- peller stuck in the ground ‘about 1,000 feet from the wreck. He had‘ pulled them out. 1 They had gone when he re- turned with investigators, he said. Two witnesses said they had been outside summer cottages at St. Nicholas, on the south shore of the St. Lawrence River be-, tween the crash site and Quebec’s’ airport. " Reporter Lucien Plante of Que- bec l’Action Catholique said he saw for “two seconds” a multi- The» assistanice—i«ha7s been paid. But Privqte Firms Face Some Snags TIMMINS, Ont. (CP)—Elimina- tion of '1‘-r-ans-Canada Air Lines’ long-standing domestic monopoly on transcontineutl air routes was announced Friday night by Trans- port Minister Hees. The minister said the govern- ment has decided on gradual _in- troduction of competition which will be developed by it. Air Transport Board. Private companies such as Ca- nadian Pacific Airlines will be able to ‘try for franchises on routes now overed by the pub- licly-owned TCA. A’ the same vtime,'TCA will be able to apply for rights on routes flown by pri- vate lines. . .~ ” But the minister made clear that private companies ‘..'i11 not be permitted to go after only the most profitable routgs. Granted he rightof competition, private airlines in future would have to assume greater, respons' ill-ty for non-sustaining air services as well as profitable runs, he said. Sir Winston To Visit -Presiclent ROQUEBRUNE CAPE - MAR- TIN, France (Reu»ters)—-Sir Win- ston Churchill has definitely ac- cepted President Eisen-hower’s in- vitation to visit him in Washing- ton in April, his secretary, Mon- tagu Brown, sadi Friday. Brown. said Churchill. hopes that nothing will prevent him from making the trip. Churc1hi1l’s visit will coincide with the showing in Washington of an exhibition of his paintings now tourin-g,North American cities. Therehas,-been a long-standing ~Chur?."h‘ill,. 3, to ’visit~Washin»gton. It was announced week that the Eisenhowers had‘ asked Churchill and his wife to stay at the White House if they decide to make the trip. 1': Feared Chicken, Turnecl Robbery their pedigree.” Sullivan was placed under $20,- 000 bond and taken to a juvenile borne in lieu of bond. WOMAN WAS FRIEND A 20 - year - old woman, Mrs. Roberta Joan Darcy of Water- bury, was held under $10,000 bond as a material witness. Police identified her as a friend of two of three teen-agers being sought. Police said Mrs. Darcy ad- mitted two of the young gunmen came -to her apartment after the -holdup to shave off their goatees. Three youths walked into the bank at noon hour Thursday, waved guns, . lined 10 persons against a wall and -mad- off with the money in a car driven by a fourth teen - ager. Their leader wore a goatee. Police said young Sullivan, son of a truck driven, told them the four had been “read, to shoot it out”_ if necessary. ther’s gun, hiding it under his jacket and catching a bus to join his accomplices and rob the bank. C. A. Plane In Crash Said Mechanically Okay executive, said that in the same area about 2:20 p.m. EDT he saw a plane flying at about 1,800 feet. COURSE UNUSUAL He said that in 11 years’ resi- dence there he had never seen. a_ plane flying that low in that direction. It was just crossing the St. Lawrence River, he said, fly- ing toward Montreal. - = The board, under Chairman Lucien Beauregard, adjourned sittings until Monday after hear- ing presentation of documents, some salvaged from the crashed aircraft. ‘ It was returning from London via Keflavik, Iceland, with ‘73 pas- sengers, largely British ex-serv- icemen and their families home- bound from an Old Country holi- engined, piston - powered plane which he judged was less than 3,000 feet above the ground. He said a storm was approaching from the west and"he got the im- pression the aircraft must have taken. off from the airport and was turning to avoid the storm. ‘ day. It had left Montreal Aug. 8 ‘bound for Munich, Germany, via Toronto, Gander and Shannon on Ithe outbound run and had been pronounced fit for the journey. The ' "‘r_le’s last report was with Quebe airport at 2:07 pm. The report Eisenhower for ~ He told of sawing off his fa- I save no indication of