quick results. 14 PAGES Certificate Winners. Instructor! and Officials, at the Exercises held at the Provincial Vocational School yesterday in coonnection with the completion of the First Welding course 1956-51. Front Row. left to right, Wendell Noonan, Bordon; Hammond Godkln. Charlottetown; foiark Ahearn. Bummer-side; Paul Warren, Charlottetown Rear Row left to right. Milton Poole. Instruc- Spends Six Million Developing Mines IATIIURST. ND. (C?) -.'I'he Brunswick Mining and Smeltlng Corp. has spent nearly ss.ooo.ooo so far developing its base metal properties in northern New Bruns- wick. the complnfl resident Manager, Lawnsnson Riggs, said here Friday. He told the Gloucester county council that Brunswick hopes to build a mill oi 4,000 tons daily capacity somewhere in county. possibly at Dathurst. Meanwhile. Heath Steel inter- ests ave started 1.500-ton mill at' Little mm south of the Brunswick holdings. nrmswiel unflis has I)-second intervals. TELEPHONE 8506 Buyer meats seller with Guar- dian Wanf Ads. ask for classified ad taker. for Dial 8506 tor; Oliver MacI.eod Charlottetown George Cudmore, Charlottetown: Dr. L.W. Shaw. Director of Edn- cation; Ralph Mackenzie. Monta- gue; E.D. MacPhsll, Principal. Vocational School. The exercises opened with re- marks by Mr. Mar.-Phaii. the Prin- cipal, followed by the class In- structor, Mr. Poole, and the Direc- tor of Education. Dr. L.W. Shaw. MACH AIR FORCE BASE. Calif. (AP)-Three B-52 Strato- fortressee lifted the U. S. Air- force to a new pinnacle in avia- tion Friday with a 45-hour. ls- minute non-stop round-the-world ht. The first of the gleaming eight- englne Sat bombers dth:.I:d:red out skies a own I 'HiFcelFy:;”'llsrce nbele at l0:l0 am. PST. The others rolled in at It was the first non-stop globe- Northern Ontario FREDERICTON (CP)-4oseph flnanc Mr. Connolly, a olic. t sear Taylor who resigned party leadership to accept- Senate appointment earlier this month. Mr. Taylor was I Protest- snt. The new House leader was eral Association executive meet here today to discuss the site and date of a convtion to choose a Position leader is unlikely to have my serious bearing on the out- come of the convention. Mr. Connolly. however. could exert strong influence on the Joseph E. Connolly Is Named Liberal Leader in N. B. House ial FINANCIAL CIIITIC th--county which sent him to the I where in the world." b- Llberlln circling flight by jet. planes. The average speed was about leadership himself. Mr. is 09 and a res- ident of northern Bathurst in tra- ditionally - Liberal Gloucester fell. 106: and 1050. lie is a contractor and has been party's chief financial critic since voters oustad a 17-year Lib- eral administration in ms. when the ature opens Feb. 3!. Mr. Oonnoly will lead the it against the 87 Pro- gressive Conservative members headed by Premier Hugh John Flemming. Mr. Taylor's seat will be vacant. The Liberal caucus also named Louis J. Robichaud, 31-year-old member for Rent. to succeed Mr. Connolly as financial critic. Don- ald J. Harper of Westmorlend was .re-elected to head the Liberal caucus during the Ill? session. first since voters returned the Progressive Conservatives for rank and file if he chose to back a contender or seek the party their second term last June. 525 thousand airmen. "Etta Guardian VOCATIONAL SCHOOL WELDING CLASS GRADUATES Certificates were presented by; Dr. Shaw and prizes presented by Mr. Poole. Following are the winners of prizes: Class Standing, presented by the Department of Education- I. Hammond Godkin: 2. George Cudmore; 3. Paul Warren. Attend- ance prize presented by the De- partment of Education won by Hammond Godkln. Achievement 3 U.S. Strata-Jets Make Non-Stop World Flight miles an hour. Their time for the 24.325-mile flight was less than half the N hours. one minute required by the propeller-driven B-50. Lucky Lady II, on the first USAF non- stop fllght around the world in 1919. MEDAL FOR EACH The lhreeplanss streaked over the air force base runway in for- mation. circled and came .in smoothly. They rolled s.ouo feet down the runway, than lumbc -d back to cheering acclaim by a ralatives and reporters. Gen. Curtis bemay, commander in chief of the strategic air com- mand. met the 27 crew membe and pinned the Distinguished Fly- ing Cross on each. Mei.-Gen. Archie J. Old .lr., commander of the 15th Air Force and in command of the lead plane, was the first to step down and commented the night was "a routine training mission." But the air force said it was a demonstration of its "capability to drop e-hydrogen bomb any- Five Strato-Fortresses toook off from the Castle air force base near Mcrced. Callf.. at I p.m. Wednesday in secrecy that wasn't bmken until Thursday night. Gen. Lemay disclosed one of the planes landed in England "as planned:"' another in Labrador 'not as ,lanned." He did not give the reason for the Labrador land- ing. The three bombers looped "ll globe by way of Newfoundland. French Morocco, Saudi Arlbllc the coasts of India and Ceylon. the Philippine islands and Guam. Off the southern tip of the Malay Penlhula. the bomb!- made a mock bomb drovr Till planes were unarmed but the drop was under simulated combat con- g Inherits 3200.000. Dies Two Days Later TORONTO tCP) - Mrs. Mar- garet Kerr. wife of retired clef!!- men Rev. Malcolm 8. Kerr. died Thursday in Toronto only N0 3:, mg mg she had inheri- near . . A will probated by the Born- gata court Tuesday showed Mrs. bequeathed I large estate of he of suburban "Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew" prize presented by 1955-56 student body won by Oliver MacLeod. Prize for Practical Work presented by the Women's Institutes of North Shore District No- 2 equally merit- ed by Hammond Godkin and George Cudmore. The next course in welding opens at the Vocational School Monday. January 21st, and will continue until May Ilst. ditlons. The planes. which have a range of some 0,000 miles. were re- fueled in night by KC-97 aerial tankers. The number of refuelings was 'not revealed. The Boeing-built 3-52 is billed as America's first - line heavy bomber. It has a ceiling of 50,000 feet, a top speed of 650 miles an In U. S. For Visit NEW YORK (AP) Ingrid Bergman. returning to the United listen for the first time in eight years, says she has "never regret- ted anything." Tlse actress. who bore a son about seven years ago to Italian movie director Roberto Russel- Iinl while still married to an merino. said in a radio inter- w: "The wind blowsthis way and blows that way. and in life you have to take what life gives you. "I am grateful for everything that has happened to me. I have never regretted anything." The taped interview. in Paris Thursday was broadcast Friday. Aaked'what she believed Amer- ican women thought of her. Miss Befiman replied: "I am afraid I can't answer because I have no idea what the American women think of me." To a question why she had not returned to America for eight Yllfl. Miss Bergman said: "I think all America knows my reason. I was raising I family In Italy." She and Roses-lllnl were mar rled after she divorced Dr. Peter Lindstrom. and since the divorce -driven-'-are-y-a-burib load tries CONDEMN EISENH Russia & China Move Head OH US in Mid-East owes DOCTRINEV OTTAWA. (Special) - In the Commons Friday. J. Angus Mac- Lean. Conservative MP for Queens asked citizenship and Immigra- tion Minister Pickersglll if a group of old order Amish settlers in the United States who wished to settle in Prince Edward Island had been barred from Canada by immigration authorities. He told the House that there was a report to this effect in a Washington D.C. newspaper. Mr. Plckersgill said that he knew of no such group as de- scribed by Mr. Macbean but ad- mitted that one of this sect had been prevented from entering Canada because he did not satisfy the immigration officer. DELEGATION HERE Last summer. Mr. MacLean told The Guardian. a delegation of Ties Between Canada, Former Enemies Grow OTTAWA (CP)-The reported imminent appolntrn t of German Lt.-Gen. Hans Speldel as corn- mander of NATO land forces in Europe comes as no great shock to the Canadian defence depart- ment. Speidel was wartime chief of staff to Field Marshal Erwin Rommel. officials say that Canada's mil- itary tles with West Germany - and with another former enemy. Italy-have been growing stronger in recent months. For one thing. all three coul- are members of "the North" Atlantic Treaty Grgnnlsati and Germany and Italy have received millions of dollars worth of Cana- dian military equimnent. The and Canadian Infantry Irigdade and two of wings in the RCAF air overseas are ed many. An RCAF transport squad- ron uses Naples as its base ta ferry United Nations troops to Egypt. Italian airmen fly from the same field. Canadian. German and Italian fighter pilots are using the same biase in Sardinia for gunnery exer- c ses. MINGLE FR-EELY.. Not only that but the Germans soon will be flying the lame alr- craft, as the Canadians. The RCAF sir division has started to turn over to Germany free 75 sabre Jet fighters valued at 339.- ooo.ooo. This is being done under Canada's mutual aid program for European allies. Canada also will sell Germany another 225 Scores from new pro- duction for 875,000,000 and train 300 German pilots in this country. Four German air force officers now are in Canadn looking over the training arrangements. One of them has been in Canada before -as a prisoner-of-war. The Canadian infantry brliiade has helped out new German army units in its area with tcmporaf) loans of equipment. Canadian an German officers discuss train- lfll methods informally in their have had two other children. twin lirla now tla years old. Amish people from Indiana visit- ed Prince Edward Island, con- ferred with Prcvinclal govern- ment officers and expressed their wish to settle in the Province. Since the departure of that dele- gation. he had not heard further oi their plans until he noticed the news report stating that they had Queries Minister Whether Amish Settlers Barred been barred from Canada. The Amish sect is somewhat similar to the Mennonites. Mr. MacLean was informed, and it is contrary to their faith to bear arms or engage in war. The Queen's member proposes to go further in- to the question of their admis- sion to Canada next week. PORT AUX BASQUES. Nfld. (CP)--The work of salvaging mail and cargo from the stranded CNR ferry Cabot Strait began here Friday but it was a slow job. Three dory loads of mail and passengers' baggage were taken off the ship under difficult condi- tions and rowed to the beach 100 yards away.. The 2.043-ton ferry still lay on I sandbar called Big Barachoix about six miles west of here. where she stuck Thursday mor- ning in a blizzard after missing the harbor entrance. Her 12 passengers on the over- night run from North Sydney. N.S. were taken off in dories through a heavy surf. The 39-man crew followed. Some crew memt . and a group of Port aux Basques sieve- dores boarded the ship early Fri- day to start unloading. fen'y's master. Capt. Edward O'Keefe of St. John's, Nfld.. di- seom the operation. I CONDITIONS IMPROVE Faster progress is expected at- Salvage Mail And Cargo From Ferry here Sunday from New York. pro- viding weather is favorable. Con- ditions improvcd Friday. the so- mile gale of Thursday morning bad moderated to a 20-mile north- west breeze, CNR officials said the ship's cargo. valued at under 325.000 ap- pears undamaged. So far the ship has remained watertight. al- though listing at a seven-degree angle. Sounding of water depth in the area of the grounding will deter- mine the prospect of reflecting the ferry. Cargo to be salvaged includes 1,077 bags of Newfoundland mail. and 168 tons of express and freight. The 1.500-ton ship Sprlngdale will replace the Cabot Strait on the I00-mile run between here and -11,, North Sydney beginning Monday. with the Bonavlsta. alternating daily run Friday whcih made her on sched ' . The ferry service connects CNR lines on the mainland with the trans - Newfound line to St. ter the salvage tug curb arrives John's. LONDON (Reuters) - A parlia- mentary financial watchdog com. snittae Friday criticized the 'ex- oeasive" amount of taxpayer-3' spent on military plgneg um never left the ground, The com. mittee called for 3 government scrutiny of aircraft mlnufacgurerg profits. The House of Commons select committee on estimates, in 3 re. port. suggested a "critical exarnl. nation" of the present military alr- cflll Program to make sure pru- iects are kept to a minimum con- sistent with security. The report criticized as "execu- sive" the amount of money pourgd into development of plane. which were failures and never went into production. It urged that the sup- ply ministry check up on the prof. its made by firms with ministry contracts. As an example of waste, the committee pointed out that more than .f:4.000.000 was poured out for d the Vickers ltxll. a long-range jg transport. but the orders were cancelled before I prototype (vgg messes. SPRINGHILL RECALLS TRAGEDY ' . esee. kg, - was flown. Open Sealed Mine Safely brother Russell lay deep in No. 4, arnmamns. N.S. (CI')-Ten- for Arthur Phillipe followed the an in this an:-than Nova Scotia first mg: crews czeetlz; gyrllestlny cleared his desk of work '1-""E"""""'tti'l"""':':ul:?'noaloaaeuuisnasatamyaI "Mr. toldmehtah . UUUIRVIINIM comlssloainoairynextrnonth. thenextfewdayseffandhefa ”H..l?QalOonIpany.:'.bllghtea -fle&dlalaea lnspectorlfors.rhat'I'mtgolnm:hIo."badd. W. .591. hock. Fun. SW5. Till C1). to! CIII I Mfw " ::”I:I:.:amdh-Nov.Iaterhuaamunupqieaaaizliiwgnilaizeuyunwtuhlsd fl-OIIGIQ. n, usse ." Iaiae swarlntendent W. P ruat-upped Doeoo and United Pilovincial labor llama Causes! said the first bodies Mine Werkare' leaders relaxed as Stephen Pyke. a native organ... woddbebroaghttothesurfacetbeinitlaldangcofeatering the hill. slid "'l'hetowawon'tbeI- 31:!-d.s.ht :-he-.t:-rd-y.No . 's'a:y nine .w"&hhu!r'dled. hr: J 3:: nail those men are:.o:: . Eftd - Illd ovem a properybarid." In-ncslsdudoon Id--Ilvwtinibsunanuaamuioua intaaaxasaaaa bc-tNo.Inrlne,werereportedasscsndeapIcatea- &U of scbadsh in their efforts unwn DEADLINE SUNDAY zieer thnsine for investigation I Glllhfn at namwhua. the any 3... - Inillalewts facesotcootinned lures bets on - lwnrIfl3edthatdeeper.blowi ooaatygaauaae wuutuwsIl.Clt-otthernwithloecedalrffthsn he!-II-ssasaaaayaare-aaolobunoico-npieleasanoq.na ellilenaed la seven-footlwillagalabeseeledsomaun afqal Rreehwhich edseanreturntowerkhIGe.l&' "latttqeuonlysnskeonr Onuthe surface VII miners jshdswalnue. wsrnedanersnehednplhereedlsedhgle old-lasnlsnhgattaastaanitnemlaewaahnuaaeteee IlI&evnIseslny'saasitaePauonkl:isltcatPaaeselIseaI- hwastatvaa an snswee manna- :lMB&wtdbrlbqwouldbe , It . -saaasatsaa-sasaaaiaae -VIII tsaaaanaaa-ae,ma waned-Ii&n U , aetaaaaaaes. , Hksrecdvrlthaa v ehsaaarelasafkq British House Committee is Critical Of Aviation Program The committee was told by Sir Roy Feddcn. for 20 years chief engineer of the Bristol Aeroplane company and former technical ad- viser to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. that if war came to- morrow, Britain would be "in g desperate position for medium bombers." Fedden added that the United States eight-Jet Boeing B-52 is at least five years ahead of anything Britain has, Despite the criticism, the com. mittee said that Britain had pro- duced some of the finest planes in the world along with engines and various electronic devices. Icebreaker: Work In St. Lawrence MONTREAL 4CP) - The trans- port dcparlmrnt icebreaker d'Ih- erville headed downstream from Trois-Rivivres Friday to start eas- in: ice cnnzcsilnn. The break:-rs N. B. Mcbean and Lapolnte may start up from Qua bec today. a department spokes- man here said. The McLean was due back from Bale Comeau Fri- day night. The annual ire - clearing chore for the three vessels is designed to keep the St. Lawrence River level from rising behind Jams and posing a flood ihrrat in the Mont- gggl grep. Bad visihlllly had ham- bcfore now. the de- Plague The Ottawa-Hull Area o1'rAwA ICPI .- Six more fires II the Ottawa-Hull area Thursday light and Friday brought . in the district so far this to an estimated S2.000.000.' . the Ottawa began New Year's Eve n t1oo.ooo Iiawkesbury in- plsnt was destroyed. Jan- ) E a? is 33 E 8.3 PM CANADA YBIIITE. Italy (AP) - BQ in-sunets. alnou Charlottetown l0 l0 above. Offer Necessa MOSCOW (AP) - The Soviet. Union and Communist China Fri- day night jointly condemned Pres- ident Eiseuliuv.ers ivliumc policy. They pledged the countries of that area "any necessary sup- port" to avert aggression and in- ierierence in their affairs. Premier Chou En-lal of China and Soviet Premier Bulganln set forth their views in a 2.000-word communique signed by them at the conclusion of Chau's visit in Moscow. in reference to the Eisenhower plan for military and economic aid to the Middle East to meet any C ' t aggr ' the communique said: ”The governments of the Soviet Union and the Chinese People's Republic resolutely condemn this policy of the United States. ”They are prepared to continue to give any necessary support to the peoples of the Near and Mid- die East in order to avert aggres- sion and interference in the al- fairs of the countries of that region." OPPOSE SUEZ CONTROL By the phrase Near and Middle East the Russians mean to dis- tinguish between Arab states and non-Arab areas placing Afhganls- tan and Iran in the category of Middle East and the Arab states in the Near East. The two powers demanded full indemnification to Egypt by Brit- ain France and Israel for their intervention in Egypt in October Worst Trip Ever, Captain Of PORT AUX BASQUES, Nnd ICP)--Everything went wrong at once Thursday morning for Capt. Edward 0'l(eefs as be com- manded the CNR ferry Cabot Strait through the worst storm of his career. He went on the bridge when the ferry pulled out of North Sydney, N.S., Wednesday night on her reg- ular run to this Newfoundland terminal town. He left it 1) hours later with his ship hard aground on a sand beach six miles west of here. Twelve passengers and 35 of Capt. 0'Keefc's crew had been hauled ashore in dories through c h u r nl n g surf. Three officers steadied the pitching dory as the captain climbed down a rope lad- der. the last man off, leaving his ship dark and silent. Capt. O'Kcefe. a bull - necked. barrel-chested master mariner of 49. said he expected a roush trip with winds of 40 miles an hour when he left Nova smile. He ran into an U)-mile-an-hour blizzard. WORST TRIP EVER "I've gone across in some rough ones." he said Friday night. "This was the roughest. You couldn't see the forecastle head because of the snow." Capt. 0'l(eefe went to sea in the Newfoundland Railway coastal nervlce nearly 30 years a80- "9 spent 2) winters on the coastal steamer Kyle. if) of them as her skipper. making the North Sydney- Port aux Basques cross: . He took command of the Cabot Strait nearly two years ago. Thursday's grounding was the first mishap of his career. . He blamed it on a combination of factors: "The radar wouldn't bring in a picture. It might have been up. I don't know. "W were eight or nine miles alias of our log (a device that spins in the water on a N-fathom cable behind the ship to record mileage). Usually It reads R5 or I7 when we reach Port aux Baa- ques. This time It read 7!." He thought strong tides may have caused this. In said the iol nniyveryseldernyounetittbat BEACON NOT WORKING Capt. 0'l(eefe said the same thing happened when the Clribou. the Cabot Stralt's predecessor on the run. grounded about 5 years ago at back Island in the same area. The ferry usually got her bear- ings going into Port an Basques -beacon fromaradlo sa&ge inoreesignalfrosnchanelled attheharbor ."I'& wasn'tworki1u."th amt. Radtooperetor celas want by Monday. The appeal is usually a mile or two out. ''It's hard WEATHER . Sunny, with not much change in temperature. Low-high at below and Sundays Cloudy. PRICE 5c To ry Support To Arabs To Avert Aggression and November. This is a reitera- tion of previous Soviet views sup porting Egyptian claims for dam age to cities from bombing and loss of military equipment. The statement expressed op- position to "any intrigues by the imperialists to place the Sues Canal under international con- trol." The 2.000-word statement. III addi .1 to the Middle East, touched on the Hungarian pro- blem and "imperialist intrigues against the socialist camp." "NEW IMPERIALISM" On the Eisenhgwcr doctrine the ssnlsss 531 ; "Both the Soviet Union and China noted that after Britain, France and Israel failed in their aggression against Egypt the new imperialism is trying to -make use of this situation to replace the col- onial powers, Britain and France, in the Near and Middle East. to suppress the movements for na- tional independence, to enslave the peoples of these countries and is trying to enforce in this region the fulfilment of its policy of aggression and preparation for war." The communique added the two governments "fully suppo . the struggles of the peoples and coun- tries of Asia. Africa and Latin America against colonialism and efforts to strengthen their inde- pendence. sovereignty and free- dom and to achieve industrial de- velopment and economic sclf-suf- ficiency." Ferry Cabot Strait Explains brought the vessel's head into the wind on a southeast course in the belif it would bring her clear pf Channel Head. SAND WAS LUCKY "Then I felt the water getting smooth. I knew something was wrong so I cut her south. Less than five minutes later it her pened. "You couldn't see. and we didfl know where we were. When VI first saw land we still didn't know. All we could see at first war! breakers ahead of us and we knew she was still moving into the sand." He said his decision to cut to the south when he did was a stroke of luck. If he had grounded much west of where she did she'd have hit rocks off Cape Ray. Further out she would have hit the rocks of Channel Head. Either way she'd have been smashed to pieces with little chance of any- one getting off. "We were back aboard her all day Friday." Capt. 0'I(eefe said. There appea ed to be little dam- age. "There's no water aboard. and she'll swing at high tide. If they've got the power in the tugs. yes. she'll be floated." "We were just lucky it turned out as well as it did." Capt. 0'Keefe said. "You can always get a new ship. You can't get an- other life." Hanna Still Man Without Country VANCOUVER (CPL-A deporte- tlnn order was issued against Christian George Hanna here F11- day and the youthful migrant's V-'04 lawyer immediately filed notice of appeal. The deportation order was made following a 2):-hour private hearing before a one-man board. Donald W h it e. Counsel for Hanna, now must prepare a brief which immigration authorities M” be heard by Immigration Mink- !" Pltkenlill or by a three- Send Newsprint Front oonnnnnnoaccr. can-an g Corner Brook Iy Rail . .1 I l ;i' ? 1, -V