Maxims of e More Man - Many can bear adversity. but few contempt. 16 PAGES BUTLER 77:9 -Gad:-dian WN. CANADA. THURSDAY. OCTOBER 27. 1955 HIT Speculation Thai Harris ' Considering New Tax Cuts OTTAWA (cp) ., Th, govu-my It rl not in 'Ii'” military! menus bill for arms expenditures wages, allowances and other Id- this year will rise by In cstfmattd iuinistrative cA,ieuut..i.es .t . ed but on the basis of cur- directly by the defence depart- .-em orders spending next year meat. The pver-all 1055-56 defence may drop by some 0200.000,000- budget has been placed at 31,775,- This authoritative indication of I 000.000. drop in government arms outlays It now is estimated that actual in the 1956-57 fiscal year adds strength to speculation that Fl-1811' equipment will be: . nanre Minister Harris is consider- Aircraft. 3370.000.000: ships. 875.- ng tax cuts for his next budget. 000.000: defence construction. 0100.- Fnr the current year which be- m.mnot including mid-Canada gan last April I. authorities close radar stations; mid-Canada con- to Production Minister Howe csti- struction. 856000.000: suns. S14.- mate that arms spending will rise 000.000. general mallllellilce t'!llllP-i to 51.023.000.000 from smo.ooo.ooo e ment S25.0.000: purchases in the year ago. United States and Britain. 580,- This fi"iii'tv : "es 000,000. for aircraft. guns, ammunition, ORDERS DECLINE gnu ”" c But while spending this year is mid-Canada radar warning system expected to rise, the flow of de- l- I" i te I fence production department orders gquipmellt for Canada's Irmsdtfor future delivery of arms and i0l'('E5. lequipment has declined. indicating outlays this year on various mili- to smsller requirements for 1960-51. Total orders placed the first half of the current fl cal year- April-September-droppcd by 3115.- ooo.ooo to 0840.000.000 from .- 000,00. There was I reported rise in some arms fields but this was insufficient to offset the sharp drop 803000.000 from Sl00,000.000 in orders placed for aircraft. The gov- ernment has decreased its con- tacts both for Sabre jet fighters produced by Canadair. Ltd. Mont.- real. snd CF-loo jets- produced by the A. V. Roe C0,. Melton, Out. The experts said Caiiada Ip pears to have reached a "plateau" in defence orders. If the trend is orders placed is continued. there will be an over-all drop for the whole of this year of more than The experts believe this may be reflected in a similar Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew PRICE 5e ldecline in actual expenditures next year- Vancouver Has Bonk Holdup VANCOUVER (CP) - Two masked. g u n - wielding youths "cleaned out" a suburban branch of the Canadian Bank of Com- merce here Wednesday and esca- ped with more than 010,000. The bandits. who forced a tel- her and Bank Manager J. E. Menula to open the bank safe. fled in I stolen car driven by s young woiplsn and a male com- panion. A pretty redhead was arrested shortly after the morning holdup and was held by police. suspect- ed of driving the getaway car. Police were also holding a zi- year-old man, picked up in sub- urban Burnaby in connection with the robbery. MONT-JOLI, Que. (CPJ-Tired but uninjured. the crew of s C-46 freight aircraft reached here Wed- nesday after spending 24 hours in northern Quebec wilderness where their plane run out of fuel and crash landed Tuesday. The men-pilot Francis Baleskie. 34. of I-lasting. Pa.. and co-pilot. Emerson Cheasman. 34. of Toronto -were picked up earlier by an Imphibiou plane that landed on I lake near the crash scene. A spokesman for Maritlmes Cen- tral Airways. owners of both the wrecked and rescue planes. said the men suffered no injuries when Crew Rescued After 24 0 Hours In Quebec North their aircraft went down half-way between Fort Chimo and Knob Lake. The plane was described as I total loss. however. Temperatures in the ares were reported "well below freezing" and I layer of snow covered the ground. Shortly after the crash search planes established and maintained with the downed plans until the rescue was radio communication completed. Officials said that Baleslde and Cheesman craft. took shelter in the wreckage of the plane. and ate food contained in an Arctic survi- val kid put on board all their air- Flames are seen gaining head- way at the MacPherson store and Southport Post Office last even- .j...........:mj1.n. Faure Faces Vote Friday PARIS (AP) - Premier Edgar Faure lost two procedural votes in the National Assembly early today and then demanded I vote of confidence from the rebellious lawmakers. The confidence ballot will be taken during the assembly ses- sion starting at 10 Im. Frday. lug. Firemen stayed on the scene for almost two hours be- fore the danger of the fire Posioffice A At Souihpori Fire of an undetermined origin about eight o'clock yesterday even- ing completely destroyed the gen- eral store of Joseph MacPherson of Southport. The Post Office which was housed in the same building STRANDED BY WASIIOUTS VANCOUVER (CPl Thirty train passengers, among them prominent political figures, arriv- ed hero by bus from Hope, B- C., late Wednesday after being strand. ed 24 hours by wsshoula in the Culllllhlwl Kan. 110 miles east of here. " e d a wonderful time." slid M. 0!. Caldwell, national ined- er of the CCF party. He was en route to 1: Vancouver island speak. if; g elliiagemenb Coming Events .5"t180 Hope River Thursday by I. Norman smith. associate editor of the Ottawa Jo ' who is I member of the official party Iccombanybg. External. Mints Minister Pearson to Russia and the Far East. IIII who is reporting his impressions for I number of leading Canadian newspapers. nigh Singapore, October 19-(By air mail)-It is exactly one week since lllasquerade dance Hopefield I left Moscow. having been in Rus- Hall October 28- sin for a wleek that seemed like Dan. H a month. T e period seemed long mdge'-zfinlcggrcguednolnizt Gordon not because it was unpleasant but because the days and nights were unending in activity. One doesn't "Discover" Russia in I week. however long it seem- ed. And one's impressions must be hasty and uncertain. For that Lot 65 hall Masquerade dance T""'”i5.V- 003. 27ylgood prizes. Rllmlnlxz sale Saturday, Oct. mil 7 pm. St. Peters Cathedral plilrisli hall. reason I reported my doings in ilusqitcrade dance Mt Stewart dilgpw hi:wameec.(tlhuhT . . . v r, H3" "idly. B.urns' after a week to mull it all over I reporter may he sxpsctgd to try to sum and welsh his impressions. My summary will bring me more brickbata than bouquets for the lively state of the USSR t d me and I was overwhelmed by the ignorance of my preconceived notions of what I would find. I found a Moscow of broad thor- llrtrui United Church. hot i'l1irltcn supper in MN. 3 Morelj Hall F V”-uiry sale at Sher-win-Willisms' Wflfllny. Oct. an by North Winsloe Stunned "By, Russian Visit, Sees Lesson For Free World seemed cheaper than in our living stands .1. SPORTS AND OPERA The football stadiums in Moscow and Leningrad were finer than any I've ever seen. the ballet and opera incredibly more exciting than Lon- don. New York or Paris. the night express trains between Moscow and Leningrad superior in comfort and equipment to the Toronto-Ottawa rim. the Hermitage Museum and art gallery in Leningrad more im- pressive than the Louvre in Paris or Manhattan's Metropolitan, the Crown jewels and state treasures in the Kremlin seemingly more fabulous and richer -than London's Tower collection. I didnlt see much of the country- side but on farmhouses as on city rooftops were plenty of television sets: the rich fields of the Ukraine looked superbly groomed and Mr. Pearson who motored several hun- dred miies in the Crimea reported villages and hamlets more neatly cared for than many Canadian set- tlements. EXHIBITION FACILITIES I saw the permanent soviet Ag- ricultural Exhibition that is pro- ll . --- T .-....:.;'.'.i”,i.i.3li””i..t?.'i 5i...i3i li25"21.5i”.i'.':'.?.'E.'-ii?..'. "iii iii2l'."l”.; il'2.'.1il i?.."'.'ifif.f.'.'”.i'if..'l2.'l.'?.”?.5L'f hm mrkey s"”l'"' tigaoffl; itlrtlrhtnsysteiiris land round- Elllfilibitioll ltd Tolrontokiand .-i 'l h u . e nest II su way trim. w c a year roun pa nsta ugly n.ni'.ml('5:,. ;:"e'::gaud"&ial?'?Fu”g: sit. and artistically and excltinsl! rig... N"... I H 3 pm ' ml walked slope byidgy grid night, educates for fit frgrlnighi at a time git-nicing every T gdgy night sfifggtih Iii! oafndmriisscr-Tutti bl:?iiil:iiridfsi'o; ali oevsrbilsife niaatitiiliezi .wr(i'tlt'tii; np,Iuc.It(g::'g,1. Marc 1,, mg me; only (I-fem-uy cu,-imhy, state , -educates them in sea Orchestra. ilnd natured "assistance when asrlaiiltugepnng alisofiaggdlnftlsdaiild . no topont Iwordin my crs an n e no ve eas 5”" u" " Tfidl! Ililllf Russian dlctionIry- of politics and citizenship. They llllb urls.- The food stores had plentiful - stocks of attractive goods being rspdily bought st reasonable prices 3 ordttlnary III: era poorer-sherm day. October 2'7. in aid 5". I sens. In some clot lug '' "3 tad luxury gadgets or furnishings Mllllzusrsda dance lmerslg were prohlbtlvsly expensive. but if ll Frid . O tober I Dgnlws 63;ch.':n' I. Is; I van shirt or I subway ride or lulor innpig St. Mary's fuse by Al Blsn Masquer d d iiarty in i;oi..n.C.""n.u','”-1-.”f.f claim to have opened new soil last year equalling Canada's en- tire cultivsted prairie acreage. But I am not s farmer. As I newspnpcrman who worked 10 years with Canada's National new agency. the Canadian Press. I re- port thst I visit to Toss. the fins- Oct 2'! It 8 'clock sponsored ' South Willlitijl W. I. Date lunches. Drew Wants l Aid For Prair In cream cone or potatoes or start Agency. showed it to be motl- beat costume. rut or I book or I theatre ticket era in equipment. orderly in work 3h -G in te .i.'....'.. .t.t"'..:i. C.:r.....,""" mmediate ie Farmers Masquerade dance. Cardlgu on Thursday. Wsbstus OFITAWA (OP ' . 0,3,.” . g A. anun emu. P F-IEIIIOCIU Ie- farm-held grain. Prime Minister St. Laurent. corn- pwvieomnp. Door prlltl. 000030 to nrovitlonm fsnsus x matting later, said no considera- 'wp" .. and u 3:: gig ' tin hlss been given toncalllng I 1 buying W N- lI session of Par ament or ill! from I (07 pm. IIId.&Idu 0."? '0'." '"”&i'' x' Ring the Gordon commission to I will pick up and pay at Q. lervs ve lender. study the problem. - Plyins highest market Mr. Drew said tbs new federal Mr- Drew called an hour-long - A. P. Gallant. Rustico. 213310! 8IIIrl'I::ilI:mbI: lolnsu F conference to elaborate op . I'll” 35 w proposals. made prev- 'aI hhgbhnc” mu '93" '34 '"'3iWNWl7- ll am only during his recent western ..,- .,mmm 0” W” cuedln-tudmosuu-unseat tmaoium FridIyforFred- M Mm.” umhdfy museum: form by home clean and s two-week swing cm.ag”m' we” wttostbosr-d.wtthdsilvsrgniIrangmgM.rmme. mun”; dmnnd when contention onus is in said the week he recently ' min olovnian out n hospital It Winnipeg re- Realsour soswsxpsrtaslss trsvoaeoidlisdcotiwo - 3...; drive ttmiu recruitment of "I lent his planned Manitoba -.top-fltgtttsIIsforee"sIsIslm- lryasdtwoom.fi-ombis lnIdtItostndyofihowhelewIeetIlIrftbi1.A fellow- I-ifiuntioil byctlli.e.g.or-doIroysloIII- DDiXw&hnnmdnm selou on 's . Girl! A special If P III sum-I should be immedia if lag of I muting needed to authorise purchase of was also destroyed. No mail was lost as it had been dispatched to the City earlier in the evening but the date stamp was lost and a small quanity of stamps and postal notes. The buildng which was 25 X 20 feet had a second storey which was used as I store room. Mr. M . arson and four cu .mers n57. uwistore at the t fire was discovered. One of the custom . saw smoke coming from the rear of the store and before anything could be done the .41" ' ' " I ”-. o n c e n t ration and immesself Fiiroad in vision and scope. .- Lenlngrad proved a city of great chum, a truly "planned" metro- polis of noble edifices. sweeping e the" spreading was over. Only a few articles of store equipment were saved. There was no mail to rid Store Destroyed By Fire Last Evening place was tilled with dense clouds and almost immediately burst into flames. The cash register. I set of count- er scales and a refrigerator were all that were saved from the burn- ing building. Mr. MacPherson esti- mated his loss at 35.000 part of which is covered by insurance. The MacPherson dwelling is close by but was not seriously affected by the blaze. Charlottetown and Parkdale Fire departments responded to the call but were unable to save the building or its contents. A continu- alstream on the &I.-fling prevent- lled any possibility of the fire spreading. The building has been used as I store for the past 25 years. bridges. graceful parks- and proudly showing in a central square the statue of the town's creator. Peter the Great. At the southern end of the country I found the townsfolk of a Black Sea village about as simple andtgay and lets- urely as you'll find along the Med- iterranean shores of France or Italy. and their buildings and play places much the some too. A LOOK AT THE PEOPLE So much for I brief glance at what we might call "things". Now about the people of Russia that I saw. and let me make clear I was not often with Mr. Pearson The P. E. 1. Potato Marketing Board announced last night that several cars of potatoes have been shipped by an Island dealer, points in the Winnipeg area. to Churchill which represents I haul over 3.000 miles. compared to less than 800 to Montreal and Takes Manitoba Outlet For P.E.lsIand Potatoes about 1,100 to Toronto.iThe freight. including heat, on such per 75 lb. bag. The Board manager had high through Winnipeg connections. to praise for this enterprising firm. which, while not claiming to be One car has even been shipped a marketing authority has been Gilbert's sug- gestion for the benefit of the Is- able to utilize Mr. land potato industry. and his party and was seeing jusg anybody snwhere on their own un- premeditated terms. They looked healthy but they dressed drably and cheaply and so at first glance seemed spiritless and even unhappy. But if you look- ed again you found them as ready to smile among themselves as any- body else. quick to argue or to clown. by no means all cut to common pattern except in cloth- llS- . But they had an added some thlng I can only describe as curios- ity or perhaps even keenness- Their good book stores were jammed with buying people. the Agricultur- al Exhlbltion was crowded with farmers and city dwellers alike seeing and studying the exhibits. the masses of ordinary public flow- linngl throisshuthe Iliremliu treIililiire- I s III e u n . we" hung", H"en1gnrl.dm”,hee?;t Those who do not zinrcc in pay guide. and ueemmgly proudly ghop. such a levy i-irc pl:i('cd iii Lias-s D ping up the Knndem. mid 'mmens.1alld pay it flat annual license fee ity of Russian history even though "7 "50 it X180 mostly of Czarist days; can ucied student fours were en- countered every day in all man- nor of places. hotel reception clerks or subway guards passed empty moments reading what seem f to be school books or government literature of Instruct- ion in some trade or alter science. or in politics. In the theatre the audience's en- thustssin Ind gldc was obvious but not blstsnt. the stores thoiish government-owned the show- ed patlencs with the Russian buy- era and seemed to appreciate their taking a careful examination of the goods. whenever I pulled out I camera they were quick to smile or group about save for the oe culonsl shy one Is It home. New Potato Boa rd Order A more or loss "voltinlni'y lcvy" is imposed on potato dozilcrs by Board Order No. 28 which apllilari in the Current issitc UL the Royal Gazclic. it rcpcals all orders made by tho .l'oi.'itn llourd except No. 24. mnric hl.'u-t-li in. 1054 Under the unit lltitirrl Order deal- ers pay an inilttil for or deposit varying in anuiuut according to the volume of huxiiicss they will, probably do in the opinion of the Board. The dealers. in applying for a license. agree in pay a levy on a volume basis as fixed by the Board. The initial fee. which wll he re- funded in part or increased. ac-- cording to the volume of potatoes! actually handled is for Group A,l more than no cars, 8200: Group! B, 40 to 00 cars. 8100; Group C. less than 40 cars. 350. I The manager of the Potato Board 1 has discretion to exempt I Group? C dealer from Iyment of I license .fee. whose vo ume of busin is ac Reports ' Soles Record NEW YORK. (AP) -- General Motors Corp.. giant of the world's manufacturing corporations. Wed- nesday reported I new all-time in very short I got the feeling high of more than 80.500.000.000 here was I people with more in in sales for the first nine months dividuslity. more spirit. IIIUII pride of I955. Profits also set a record. in country. better health and greIt- This nearly equalled OW: busi- or energy than I had been led to nest: for all of IBM. believe. I took some pains to find Sales of new Iutomobiles lifted out from non-Russians who had the IIiltO-m0l10iI sales total to I been around the country to run! whopping In that of the republics and over many period .GM sold !l.022.m0 rars months whether Moscow and and trucks from its U. S. and to Cosunnuilsrn. Csusdisn plants-I gain of more Leningrad presented In excepilon- than 1.000.000 over the first nine ally favorable impression. I was months of 1054. bid "No". he! in some ways the In the first nine months of last countryside and other cities would year. GM earned S55.000.tIl0 Ma rkefi ng Gazetied lsn small as to make the payment is lmrtiship bttt whose operations provide I needed service for the industry. Monthly statements of shipments tare required by the fifteenth of the tfollmving month. to be accompani- yeti in the case of Group A. B and C dealers by any balance of levies payable- Effcctivc Oct. 15. 1955. the 0rd- W T IFLATION Boosts Taxes, Cuts Spending LONDON, (CP)--R. at Butler, chancellor of the exchequer, Wednesday lanced the inflated British eco- nomy by increasing sales and dividend taxes and cutting government spending. The nex tax rates are expected to yield i112,500,000 in the next full year while economies in government ex- penditures are expected to save another iE40,000,000. The moves were contained in I 4. Telephone and post nffioa special budget - second of the charges Will be increased by I '0- year-dictated by Britain's domes- tal of E,126,000.000. tic buying Splurge End Summer 5. Gas. electricity and coal DTPSSUTC 00 the D0000 !19F1inS- boards are to economize where Butler presented the budget 10 possible. making do with present a tense house of Com with equipment and faculties. Some the Labor opposition in it sardonic government building in London. and hostile mood. There were sp0- land the construction of a new era- radic cries of ”resi80-" H9 Hid .'bassy in Washington, will be halted the second budget was necessary for the time being. because overapending by the peo- V pic was forcing the country to pay mC0ME TAX "NCHANGED a ship- ment amounts to slightly over 02.00 ' goods to exporf- l l RESERVES LOWER 3 Butler said that in the last month the serious drain on Britain's gold and dollar reserves has been "ef- fectively halted." ; But, he added. home consump- tiun is ”sapp-ing" the export drive.. And in the light of. this he an- nounced these steps: ., 1. Sales tax will be Increased by 20 per cent. Items now taxed It s rate of 25, 50 and 75 per cent now will be levied at 30, 60 and 90 per cent respectively. Some house- hold itcms, hitherto tax-free, will move into the 80-per-cent class. For example, autos, washing machines. television sets and elec- trical appliances will carry a 00- per-cent fax at the retail level. The top bracket of 00 per cent af- fects such items as cosmetics and perfume. Moving into the 30-per- cent class are kitchen and house- hold wares. HOUSING SUBSIDY OUT 2. The tax on gross profits dis- tributed by companies as div- idends to shareholders is increased five per cent to 2734: per cent. This has long been demanded by the Labor party. It will bring about f.40.000.009 I year into the the Post Office at the time. -Photo by W. Taylm-. Wins 5140.000 On Ticket From Dinner Money SOUTH BERWICK. Me. (AP)- A 40-year-old shoe cutter. who went without dinner to buy a 33 Irish sweepstakes ticket. won 3140.000 Wednesday when Retrial won the Cambridgeshire Handicap Stakes at Newmarket. England. "Pm going to rest for I while after I shock like this." said Rich- ard St. Laurent. who was informed of his luck while working today at Main Shoe Co. in-by coincidence - ewmarket, N. H. ' rid I went without my dinner to buy the ticket," he told I re- porter st his South Berwick home. "It was the first sweepstake ticket I ever bought." said St. materials and leaving her too few go out too much on imported law! Hnwmm' mo, Wm be "Md . ahead only with their most" urgent and necessary projects. This brought a shout of "Let them die" from the Labor benches. Butler left the income tax rate unchanged. He granted a sixpencll reduction last spring in the budget that the Labor party charges was ”window dressing" for the sub- sequent election. won by the Con- servstives. He allowed small concessions. The silverware and cut glass in- dustry received : tax fllllp to help it export more. The chancellor, who raised bank interest rates and tightened instal- ment credits earlier this year. an- nounced I further credit squeeze. He said government loans to civic and county governments will be tightened. Butler found himself unpopular tonight on nearly all sides. The motor trade. radio industry. bi- cycle manufacturers, and other in- terests deplored the increases in sales tax as damaging to their trades. ' IMMEDIATE VOTE In the House of Commons. dis Labor Opposition was so Ingry that it forced a vote right away on the budgei J ' ”ons-virtually treasury. 3. Housing subsidies which now cost the government 973,000,000 I year will be cut and eventually abolished. The size of the cuts will be announced Thursday. They will mean increased rents for 4.000.000 subsidized houses and apartments- Henceforth the government will di- rect its subsidies to slum clear- ance and dwellings for industrial Laurent. who earns :80 a week. A tax expert estimated that St. Laurent, father of four daughters, will be able to keep about 860,554 after taxes. TO LEAVE TRADE BARS GENEVA (AP)-Britain was re- ported Wednesday to have shelved the idea of seeking early relaxa- tion of Allied trade bars on Red china, or "overflow" towns. Local Board Of Trade Holds Dinner Meeting The first general meeting of the the A.P.E.C. will be held in Char- lottet wn' on November 22nd. - gharlgstseggwntefgariazt Eggehhx Theo minutes of the 63rd. annuali e . ' s meeting of the Board of Trade and - evening at the Charlottetown Hotel wnoplt, of . number of ooufrcii in the form of I dinner meeting. meetings were read by the sec-I The President of the Board Ben- retary J. Walthan Gaudr-t It the? iamiu I-7. Rogers. presided and the opening of the meeting. l guest speaker Mr. William Hay- Following the talks the Presid-l ward, who represented the board out asked the members for sug- at the annual meeting of the Cana- gestiona as to subjects that should, dian Chamber of Commerce at be brought under conaide lllllfll by, Winnipeg. gave an interesting and the board council and among those well received talk on his trip and submitted was one by Mr. Alban; gavri the members an insight on Farmer, who proposed that the; ltho number and variety of the council should give very serlnlls problems which were brought up consideration to the plight of the. at that mpeiing. Island farmer in the present pot-, nth.-r spORi(t'i'S were Cril Frank atoe crisis. During general dissp Starr-v uhri spoke on the functions cussion on this matter it was of the llztrilin-to Tinard of Trade mentioned that it is possible is-' and llr Kr-ith MacKlnnnn. a vice land businesses will lose between prcsirlcni on the Atlantic Provinces five and seven million dollars be- er makes the potato marketing Er0n0n1iCC0ll"P"- M1 Mi"',Ki"""" ”"lc:”n”f itigletrd ::;:S:;'s' werel M'ui ii-lax. year and July 31. each year. Any mentioned that the council is com- 8 Y , Damn" . , , , , . , , . , . , ,, 20 2! it, ' ' I f seven members from heard on this subject and the pre , , 41 51 cnsec who is found to have Vl0- lifts" 0 A - 4 , y. M t md It would be given Vsncmner ilaied any Provision of the Scheme. each nf the fiiarittme PTOVIIICEI 5 er; 1070mm. " the next mum . V,,.,,,..g,, I - so iorder or regulation is liable to have iand four from Mswfmindlanid am: ::fIIF'-;nl'eeg,C,'g" 3' l Edmonton 37 4; his license cancelled forthwith. said that n directors mcei nil 0 - lCalizarY . 36 0 - Regina . 43 03 O Winnipeg . . . . . .. . 42 71 . . Toronto . 42 46 o o ov romises -- Vlrinfreal 30 41 Quebec .. 24 35 0 ' Fredericton .. '23 45 O Saint John . .. 23 44 u ' a I Iiionftnn .. 2; -Q . - I .Hali ax . . . - ' Ch lniiirtnwn 2' - sow ----- --- -.2t::.i".ii:.i-..i..t;:'.;;::..'::: .1: . .. - F"'i'n mam" Mold" dechnd seek I clarification of the Soviet Western leaders-the troubled Mld- St. John's . 39 M -,-,-,d...,,d.y...v. at in. Big Four v- die East HALIFAX. tCPi:rite weather conference-that Russia will do its part in the search for "Isreed solutions" and an end to the cold war. Ills pledge followed on the heels of I plea for results at the Genevs conference earlier Wednesday by President Eisenhower. speaking from his slckbed in Denver. Colo. Molotov was the first of the for- eign ministers to arrive. U.S. Sec- retary of State John Foster Dulles and British Foreign Secretary liar- old Macmillan followed separately by plane later in the day after plot ting strategy earlier this week if Paris with French Foreign Minis- ter Antoine Plnay. Those who have followed tbs course of Big Four relations over the last few years have no great Before flying to Geneva Wednes- pecud on dth" nae. Delegate. day. Dulles and Macmillan had' in tin: ,imast- in one rtiiitcrcncc source. will "try to stare each other out." Dulles said earlier he shared with Eisenhower a "measured hope" for concrete progress. He said on his arrival here that the U.S. "will seek with necessary con- ciliation to achieve the construc- tive elements of a just and durable peace sought by the earlier con- ference of the heads of govern- ment.-" The Soviets. noted in the past for being close-mouthed. held a press conference six hours after Molotov arrived. Foreign ministry prae chief Leonid llylchov said the So- viet delegation had stopped one day in Berlin for talks with Communist East German leaders. MIDDLE EAST PROBLEM- separate meetings with lsraell Pre-- mier Moshe Sharett. who also has arranged to see Molotov here Sharett appealed for help from piles and I security guarantee lie was told the Western minister could not finally determine their policy until the whole problem was explored with Molotov here to Gen- eva. In the ”scussioi-is the West will propose to Russia a phased pro gram of negotiations. culminating in the simultaneous conclusion of an East - West set-iii-ity alliance through free elections. would the treaty come into opera hopes that much progress will be III at those meetings, expected to lsst about three weeks. Continued 0! MI! 15. Col. 4 after tens of IIld.0iI).(ll. Essentially . l mnut hot the Bay of Ftincw is ex- : times except Cape Breton. the West through more arms sup-t n reunit v 0"” "he" mm” y " Rustlco at l as s m and us p.I'II. tion-and Germany would be free to choose its own alliances. includ- Although German unity will be in: membership in the Atlantic the conference is re the big topic another has loomed Pact. In Immediate attempt to censure the government Usually voting does not take place till I budget has been fully debated. The government won the division 314 to 227. The chancellor of the exchequr is bound to upset housewives be- cause in his sales tax proposals he included a long list of kitchen ware previously exempt--such II dishes. brushes and brooms, gari- bsge pails. washtubs, rolling pin and sothcs pins. 'Ri:p t-toil ETBIIS mvoainei-Y use cow TORONTO, -CPI - llinimiitl and maximum leinv0l'0"lT"53 office says a disturbance at the pected to continue its ravifi 010- ilnn eastward causln rain and snow to end in all n the Mari- . Sunny skies are forecast for 1Nova Scotls Thursday but a sta- ,tionsry disturbance in Quebec ;will cause considerable cloud in the northern rations. Prince Edward Island. casters N. R. rosettes. lows hint Jobs river valley: Variable cloudiness: warmer: um winds. l.-Iw-hill! It Clierlottv-Mwri mid Wlictnn 35 and U5. Frwlarkhvn and Salli John 35 Ind 30. High tide today at Charlottetown It 0:38 am. and 7:32 p.m.: It and the reunification of Germany Summerslde tide eighteen minutes later than Qiarlottetcwn. Sun rises at 0.40 am. and sets It I.l0 pm. - .T .....' .- -v--.. -..-v.-,-.2-::-.-'-.::.e-ti -4”.