zmaximror :1 I More Men 'l'he promises of yesterday are the taxes of today, 6 at at p ,2 14 PAGE , Rebel Planes Over Fort And Sirafe By JACK IUTLIDGI GUATEMALA. (AP) - Rahal planes roared over Guatemala City, bombing a fort in the sub. urba and strafing the National Palace where President Jacobo Arbenz Guzman was reported to be at work. . Extent of damage was not im. mediately known. but there was no material damage to the large Na. :inna1 Palace. The rebels. who had boagted -hey would take the capital city Coming Events "St. 'Rresa's Picnic, Wednesday, July 21st. "Reserve July 26th for Cardigan Tea Party. "Reserve Pariah Picnic. Juli! 11”. Tignish "variety Concert, Vernon Hail, Monday June 20th. 1 "st! .'Brigld's Parish Picnic, Tuesday, July llth. "Unloading Wheat 03.00 per ewt. Mccuigan at Boyle. "Dance, Kelly's Monday, June 28th. "Don't forget Vernon dance every Tuesday. "Kelly! Cross present their play in Moreil Hall. June 30th. "Reserve July 2nd. Ice Cream Social. Hasclbrook school. "Long Creek Baptist church Pic. nlc and Supper, July 7th, Cross School, River "Rummage sale at the Holy Name Hall. today at 2:00 p.m. "Palmer Road picnic on church grounds,. Wednesday, Aug. lath. "Turkey Supper. crspaud Hall, July 1st. Crspaud United ohumh, "Dance. Fort Aug-ugtug 1-nu, Wedneldlx Burke's orchestra "D8309 in Little PODU. Hill, Mon. day, June 28th. Chaisson's 0;-ch. Liifll. f Wednesday. July siat, 01' I may Harbour united Church Tea "whiter SUPM1'.Lcgion Hall. s:. "M. Tuesdstv. June nth. Dinner Wvod I p. m. "Pantry sale at Moore & Mg- geofgl lflgor, Saturday, June "35"" Vlfednudsy. Aug. dth for St. Johns Anglican Church Iucnie at Orapaud. "Cake sale at Prowse area. to- gay It 2:00 p.m. in aid of St. s.i'iAf'ieI Auxiliary. "Hear Clyde River play "uncle losh Perkins" at North River Friday. July 2nd. "wukllr dance Winaioe Station H-ll ovary Tu-ad-y. Doiron Bree. Orchestra. Canteen. ."5t. James Sunday School Pic- nictod ay leaving Church hall 1 D. in. Standard Time. "Dance in Monticello School. Tuesday. June N. lunches. Chaisson s Orchegtrg, "Reeervepmly lath for Mt. Herb. rrl. Womcns Institute Ice Cream Social at David Mutch's. h"Graduation dance, Klnkan Ill. Wednesday. June 30th. Good music. Dancing 0 to 12. x "Dance. West Royalty Hall, Y'd1'i95dlY- Rollie MacKenaie's Orchestra. Canwan service. "Ice cream festival and dance in North River rink June 29th. Proceeds in aid of schools. "In stock. strawberry Boxes. Mustard Killer 2-4-D, Fly Spray and Baler Twine. Dillon & Spiilett. A"Garden party in the Youth .).i-nter in Ci-apaud, Saturday. June Jiih in aid of St. John's W. A. H "See Georgetown Players in 39"! the Girl 0' My Heart" in Fortune Hall, July and. Curtain 0.00. M;'K;l1::tlf: Viwdnasdlayt. Jug 14in y mmacu A I oncep- lion Church grounds, Wellington. "See Georgetown Players present ”Betts the Girl 0' My Heart" in acggdlltn Hall. June both. curtain "This is the last chance to see "A may use. v by Wheat- lary Riv Players in Wheatle River ""0 and lot 00. June y "Nlular Thursday night dan- " in Emerald Hail. sponsored hy the 0Toole Trio. hr lunar. Bingo and 2: entertainluit in new Pariah . North July ng. gup- P" Ierved at 0 o'clock. h "Attention farmers. There will d' I meeting of whole milk pro- Jurors in Eldon Hall. Tuesday, ""0 39. at 0 o'clock. (f;N0W in stock-reed asoiaaaaa. .:r..:""-W..." "1: 't."”'...... - r s. & Hume. Wlnaioe, 1-. 1 1. "Another car cement to arrive 3"." '"-In lmiai eritea. In stock grades cod” and aspbaltl Widen I In In I Q,.-.,,.L 8.1.3. Ilusie by the Ixtre f ' Provincial Home and School Assoc- Ouaiemala Bomb National Palace Friday. sent the two planes on the raid during the siesta hour, shortly before I p.m. This reporter saw on use as slash low over a beta a block from the palace. Its guns were blazing. There was a roar of anti-air- craft fire from both the palace and from nearby roofto a. some soldiers an police on the streets. tried to.down the planes with rifles. (Reports from Guatemalan em- bassies at the United Nations and in Mexico City said three planes raided Guatemala City Friday. These r orts apparently were based on nformation telephoned to them later than this dispatch. which was filed in Guatemala at 3 p.m. (5 p.m. EDT). Other P-47s have raided the city in the last week. This was the first raid in two days. however. Canadian Ace To Be Released By Chinese Reds OTTAWA (CP)-Sqdn. Ldr. A. R. MacKenzie. DFC, 34-year-old Cana- dian fighter ace, will be released by the Chinese Communists after 19 months as a prisonr-of-war, the external affhirs department said Friday. The department said Maclienzie, credited with destroying 855 enemy allanes during the Second World ar, is alive and well. It could not say exactly when and where the Montreal airman will be released, but presumably he will be returned to the United Nations command in Korea. - Macxanzle. one of 31 RCAF fighter pilots who served with the U.S. Air Force in the Korean War, was shot down Dec. 5. 1052, about six weeks after his nrrival in the Korean theatre. N. 3. Mon Heads Telephone Ass'n SA5KATOONI(CPl-F. H. Doyle of Saint John, N.B., general man- agar of the New Brunswick Tele- phone Company Ltd.. was elected president of the Telephone Associa- tion of Canada at the closing sas- alon of its convention Friday. Vice-president is E. A. Ralph of Montreal: operational vice-pres- ideift of the Bell Telephone Co. of Canada. W. P. Montgomery of Montreal is secretary. "Lobster Supper. School, Wednaads, Juno both. Meals commencing 4.30. Dance after. Ohalaaon Orchestra. Note change of date. "Unloading car of Wheat at our Summersida Mill, Friday and sat- urday, zilth and 28th. Very low price. Bring bags. P. L. Morris, Water Street West. Summeraide. "Old time nddling and step- dancing contest in seven Mile Bay Hall, Tuesday, June 29th. Good cash prises. Dance after. send an- trfes to William Chaiasoii. Borden. "Auto and Farm Supplies, 203 Great George Street, Sales and Sei- vice. Complete line of De Laval Milkera, separators. Water Prea- sure Systems, Automobile Parts. Oils, Greases, etc. "Just. Lundell Lundell :3 chepatow arrived a shipment of forage harvester and forage harvesters and Mscftae, Shur-Gain Feed Service. Winslne. See elsewhere in this issue of demonstration details. "The Annual Convention of Dis- tricts Cross Roads. Bouthport, Johnsinairs River, Mt. Albion, Mt. Herbert. Mermaid. Alexandra, Don- agh. Haselbrook, Pownai and Sun- bury will be held in Mt. Herbert Orphanage on Tuesday. June 20th. Afternoon 2 p. m. Evening 8 p. in. standard Time. "Showing at Mt. atewart Friday and Saturday. the Technicolor Pic- ture with an Historic background of old Scotland.-The Master of Bai- lantrae, starring Errol Flynn, Bea- trice Osmpbell, Yvonne Purnaux, Roger Livuay and Anthon steel. All scenes filmed in sootlasi . corn- wall and on the '-4-1” You will enjoy this picture. "Buying Pigs Monday at Fred- erioton. Tuesday Brookneld 0 a. m. Hilton 10 York 1 p. m., Redford 2. Tracadie sso. Mt. Stewart a, Piaquid 0.00. Fort Augustus 4. Watarvale 4.00. Vernon River Pow-nal 0.30. Wednesdoy. New Glasgow 0 a. in. Whaetiey River in. Holmes Corner 11.. New Haven 1 R llg. Donahaw , . Delable 2, e 'a I Kenalnltea 0.80. ruins irforgoodPigaover00lbe. each .00 over 00 lbs. 811.00 over is lbs. or in between: Will buy any sine. Knud Joegenaesi. "District convention consisting of lamb Hilton. North Hilton. springvala. Brackiey Point. brack- los. Harrinsion. swine Park. Park- dale net, West and Central Roy- alties. South winaloe and lsighneld Won-ien's institutes will be held in winalee mead Hail. Wednesday, June sotn. Afternoon session 2.00 evening. 8 p. m.. ltandard Time. During the evening session the lotion will present a humorous one- these be slides and by Gordon Warren. All lion and women are it The Pei's ape Chou And Nehru At New Delhi On BY PETER JACKSON NEW DELHI. (Reuters)-Prime Minister Nehru met Communist China's Chou mi-Lai for ma first time Friday and talked with him on world issues for nearly three hOi.llI. The private conference, with Chou'a interpreter the only other person present, followed the pre- mier-foreign minister's arrival for a three-day visit on his way home from the Geneva Far East con- ferenee. Flower petals showered down on Chou as he stepped from the Diane before 5.000 cheering spec- tstors. Members of the Chinese-Indian Friendship Society threw garlands of flowers around his neck and chanted "Long live India-China friendship" and "Indians and Chi- nese are brothers.” NEHRU RECOGNIZED CHINA Nehru's government recognized the Chinese Communist regime al- most ss soon as it replaced Gen- erallssimo Chlang Kai-shek's gov- ernment in 1940. Since then, Nehru has campaigned in world forums for admission of Red China to the United Nations and other international bodies. The Chou-Nehru talks are tak- ing place at the same time as the Churchill - Eisenhower week - end conference in Washington and are expected to cover some of the same issues. Chou said in an air- port speech that he and Nehru represent 060,000,000 people whose friendship constitutes "an impor- tant factor in maintaining the peace of Asia and of the world." MAY RETURN TO PEIPING The first trade talks between U. N. Posipones Discussion On New Conflici By FRANCIS W. CARPENTER UNITED NATIONS, N. 31., (AP) Despite Russian cries that Guate- mala City has been bombed while diplomats talked, the United Na- tiona'Security Council Friday put off further discussion of the Guate- malan confiict until the organiza- tion of American States can take action. Four members of the council voted to adopt an agenda listing the Guntcmalsn complaint of "aggression" for debate. Pivc members voted against it and two abstained. seven affirmative votes were needed to approve this pro- cedurnl motion. The Soviet Union fought a los- ing battle to have a debate in the council as asked by Guatemala. Russia voted with Lebanon. New Zealand and Denmark to put the issue 'on the agenda. The United States, Brazil, Coi- onibia, Turkey and Nationalist China voted against it. Britain and France abstained. The council adjourned right af- ter the vote without setting a date for another meeting. Henry Cabot Dodge Jr.,. chief U. S. delegate and council PFC!- ident, strongly opposed further debate in the council at this time, saying that the charter of the Organisation of American States requires that all disputes in the American states should be taken to the OA5 before being brought to the council. Flltlf HIIIIICANI BROWNSVILLE, Tex. (AP) Alice, the first hurr cane of the season, sprang up su denly in the Gulf of Mexico and swat Brownsville and the lone Mex ican coast today. it wasn't a bi! blow as hurricanes 0- Wind! if the centre were reported 80 miles an hour, just five miles above hurricane strength. One man was inius-ed. OTTAWA (0P)- A Nova lcol-ll Liberal has envisaged the possi- bility that ass produced from coal nuned in the ldaritimaa may some day he piped to eastern consuming centres. A. J. Maclechen. (Investme- ltiehmond). told the Commons this ihight be possible in the future I! a revolt of current experiments with coal at llorgantown. W.V. leutgmeat developed by the Uni- ted tataa bureau of mines in as- sociation with an engineering firm urged to attend this iosigucilva C- e was gun-cealia Open Conference World Problems India and Peiping began here Friday. Officials said it was a coincidence same day as Chou'a arrival. It was learned here that Chou may return to the Geneva Far Eastern conference after a few days' stay in Peiping. He is due to leave for Peiping Monday morning. Ambassador To Japan Named Ul'I'AWA, (CF)-The long-cx- pected appointment of Hon. '1'. C. Davis (above), 64. of Prince Albert, Sask., as Canadian am- bassador to Japan. was announced Friday. . Mr. Davis will replace Hon. Robert Mayhew, 73, of Victoria who is expected to retire from Public life. He was recently taken ill in Tokyo while attending the OVQP . funeral of a. fellow diplomat. Also announced is the appoint- ment of George L. Magann, 82, of Toronto as Onnadian minister to Austria. He will also act as Canadian ambsssdor to Switzer- land. The latter appointment was announced earlier. Mr. Davis now is on home leave after serving as Canadian ambas- sador to West Germany. He has been succeeded at Bonn by Char- les Ritchie, 47, of Halifax. 'Mr. Davis was called to the Saskatchewan bar in 1015. After three years as mayor of Prince Albert. he was elected to the Saskatchewan legislature and was appointed nrst municipal affairs minister and later attorney-gem eral. He became a justice of the Saskatchewan appeal court in 1930, associate deputy minister of na- tional war services in Ottawa in 1940 and high commissioner to Australia in 1042. From 1047 to 1040. he was Canadian ambassador to Nationalist China and went to Bonn in 1060. Mr. Msyhew, a native of Cob- den, Ont... has been in public life for more than 20 years. In 1033 he was elected reeve of Oak Bay, near Victoria. And became a mem ber of Parliament in 1087. He was minister of fisheries from 1048 until 1052, when he went to Tokyo as Canadian ambassador. STE. ANNE DE BELL!-:VUl-1, Que. (CP)-Dr. T. J. Harrison of Winnipeg. director of the Barley Improvement Institute of Canada, said today Canada sold about 00,- 000,000 bushels of feed barley to Japan last year to "aduitcrate" rice. The former head of the depart- ment of Agronomy at the Univer- sity of Manitoba said in an inter- view references in the Bible and the study of caves in Europe dis- closed that barley is the world's oldest cereal. But following the Second World surface units. "Of all the research that is now going on into further use of coal, no rules of experiment: is fraught with greater possibilities," he said. "If this gasifioaton would prove to be suitable and economical for Nova Seotio coals. then the future markets for the industry may not be solid coal transported by sub- vaation assistance to the central market, but a. coal market at the pitbeed with conversion units turn- -, WN,i0ANE& SATURDAY, JUNE 26. 1964 ' (By C. R. Blackburn. Canadian Press Staff Writer) WASHINGTON, (CP)-Sir Winston Churchill, in the White House Friday night, was again attempting his his- toric-role as co-architect of'world victory over the forces of disruption and war. He and Foreign Secretar y Eden and their chief ad- they began on the visers opened a two-day concentrated discussion with Presi- dent Eisenhower and his aides. They were struggling with a number of problems. Generally Sir Winston. who flew in Friday morning from London. hopes to close, as far and humanly pos- sible, the widening rift between the two English speaking powers. More immediately the conferees were concerned with the Commu- nist successes in Southeast Asia and the joint handling of atomic weapons and their development. They also were concerned with the slow-moving plan for a European Defence Community. CONFEB. ALL AFTERNOON There was no indication at the public meetings between the lead- ers Friday morning that their talks would be tinged with the strong feelings widely heralded as existing between the Allies. But the conferences were in clos- est privacy and there were no immediate announcements as to the course or nature of the talks which went on all afternoon. It was announced only that they talked about EDC and the exchange of atomic information. Much has been made of the pro- posal of Anthony Eden for a col- lective security ”Locarno" type of pact for the safety of Southeast Asia-which it is said the United States rejects because it would in- clude Communist powers. It is believed. however, that this will not play a major part in the personal talks between the two leaders. it could have no effect upon the Korean or Indo-Chins sit- uation whcre there is no acknow- ledged aggression by outside pow- era. PEARSON COMING What the discussions will deal world war in ord . to stop further extension of Communist conquest by whatever means it is achieved. External Affairs Minister Pear- son of Canada is expected to come here Monday for two purposes. He will come in the RCA? plane in which Churchill and Eden will be taken to Ottaw Tuesday for a jbrief visit ending edneaday even- ng. Pesrson also will join with other high officials of the Commonwealth including Australia's Foreign Min- ister Richard Casey. Sir Zagrulia Khan, foreign minister of Pakis- tan, and New Zealand and other Commonwealth officials on a dis- cussion of Southeast Asian events. Sir Winston, although close to 80. appeared more like the Churchill of wartime than he did on his last appearance here. His jaunty figure appeared at the top of the high ramp placed a- gainst his British aircraft when it landed on schedule. Parliament Maya Prorogue Today OTTAWA, (CPJ--The first session of the 22nd Parliament may prorogue sometime today. The senate met briefly Fri- day afternoon and then reces- sed until 8 pm. in the hope that prorogation might come Friday night. However. when the llppn-Chamber reconvened it adjourned immediately un- til noon today. CANADIAN GIRL SIGNED NEW YORK (CF) Dianne ,Foster, chestnut-haired, brown - eyed native of Edmonton, has been with is likely to concern more im- signed to a film contract by the portantiy the hopes. probably Hect-lsncaster organization for a shared by both, that the two pow- role crs may reach an agreement on Gobriel Horn," basic policy which may ultimately drama of in Burt Lancasterls ”'l'he atechnicoior the early American set a point at which they will risk frontier, it was announced Friday. POTATO DUMPING COMPLAINTS AIRED BY NOVA SCOTIA & OTTAWA, June 25, (Special)- charges that potato growers of Prince Edward Island and New Brunswick had been "dumping” potatoes on the Nova scotia and Ontario markets at prices far be- low cost of production were lev- elled in the House of Commons late today by George Nowlan,Con- servative, Middlesex East, Ont. Blame for the potato-dumping was placed by both members on the Federal marketing administra- tion which entered into agree- ments with the provinces of P. E. I. and New Brunswick. Owing to the way potato-marketing was be- ing carried out by these provinces, potato-growers of Nova .Scotia, Ontario and Quebec suffered con- siderabiy, the members said. Mr. Nowlan said the marketing agree- ment to which Prince Edward Is- Forecasis Big Marliei For Barley If Orientals Use ii To Adulierale Rice War the Japanese discovered they could mix up to 40 per cent of barley with rice and still produce a palatable dish. Tito mixture is better than rice alone because it contains a higher percentage of protein. Dr. Harrison said there is al- most a limitless market for bar- ley if the Japanese method of mixing it with rice "catches on in a big way" in the Far East. Dr. Harrison was here to at- ONTARIO MEMBERS land was a party was not wen drafted and did not provide for orderly marketing. "In order to get the price guar- anteed" (by the P. E. 1. Potato Marketing Board), he said, "the growers had to get rid of their crop before a certain date. They flooded the Halifax market with potatoes to such an extent that the Nova Scotia growers suffered heavy losses." The Dlgby member felt that the marketing arrangement should be modified to give to Nova scotia growers some protection against heavy losses. He proposed some sort of arrangement as in the case with Nova. Sootia apples which do not competn against apple growers in Ontario or Quebec. Mr. Whitc charged that through the Federal Department of Agri- culture, "Maritimers were subsid- ined and allowed to bring potatoes info Ontario". He asked Robert Mccubbin. parliamentary assistant in Agriculture Minister Gardiner. to take steps to rectify the situ- ation. Defending the existing practice of marketing New Brunswick po- tatoes. G. W. Montgomery, Con- servative, Victoria-Oarleton said that while Nova Sootia may have a complaint, there is no reason why that province should not set up a Potato Marketing Board of its own in co-operation with those of New Brunswick and Prince lid- ward Island. He said that before a Pouto Marketing Board was established for New Brunswick, tend the 34rd annual convention the P. I 1- Nlfklfvlnl 30111 of the Agricultural Institute of knocked 40'?” Polall-0 DfiMl- NOW. Canada at Macdonald college the boards of the two provinces which ended Thursday. I-Gasification May Save Coal tnahd at Morgantovn. and at some future data it is even possible that gas from Nova Scotia coal will move by pipeline into the large consuming centres. 11' this type of research proves practical then it may provide the real answer to the problem of a Nova Icotia coal industry." Mr. Maeliaehen said there should he a firm and generous policy of support to the Maritime coal in- dustry. However, he said an im- inl coal into gas for domutie and proved market for coal can only he industrial use in the ldaritimes and achieved by lower production costs. Quebec. i;"lova -laqqpa gpg as. J 5: One to this VII p 3 got. -080 (Continued on page I, col. 0) I ndustryi mines. Up to now. however. no lower costs had resulted from mechanization. The Dominion Steel and Coal Corporation has expressed doubt that the current. mechaniutinn program should he continued br- cause of the do-is-closeted market for coal. However, any reluctance to pu the mechanization pro- gram ahould be resisted "because such a position means that the indtntry expects a guarsnued market so a precondition of cost- reducing innovations, which are in or "r the only way to assure ocoallulst-ji A, Covers” Prlnce Edward island; . Like The Dow PRICE Io Churcleill-Eisenhower Conference Gets Under Way A! Washington HALIFAX - (GP) - An RCA! search aircraft Friday night lo- cated the pilot of a light plane who had started to walk out of the bush north of Sept Iles, Que., after riding his craft to a forced landing Tuesday. The air force here said a Canso aircraft out of the Greenwood, N.S., air base had located pilot Eldon Mscxart-en. 42, alive but further details were not available immediately. The single-engine plane missing since Tuesday was found earlier Pilof Of Light Plane localed After Forced landing In Bush Tuesday in the day 40 miles north of Sept lies by a civilian aircraft. A note left in the Norseman hv Macxarcen said he had statrri with the aircraft two days and then started to walk westward. hoping to hit a railway. He was the only person aboard on the lbs-mile flight from Mount Wright to Sept Iles. An RCAF search and rescue aar- craft from Greenwood, N.S., urril into the area Friday night with ii loud hailer-a type of public ad- dress system attached to the plans -in an effort to locate MacKarrcn. DEATH YESTERDAY CANADIAN PRESS OF FORMER BUREAU CHIEF HALIFAX. (CF) Merkel. 68, form- er Atlantic bur- eau chief of The Canadian died in here let a lengthy ill-, ness. ' . He retired May:. with The Can- adian Press since its formation in 1917, h e made CP l-inlifsx an known news source in the Sydney Record, he - Andrew D. internationally days of pioneer trans-Atlantic flights. As a cub reported on the old covered the and came to Nova. Scotia when his father took charge of a. parish at Dlgby. Upon his retirement he returned to the scene of his boyhood where he bought 300 acres of land as , Lower Granville, NB. near Cham- . piain's first habitstion. In addition to his newspaper L 1946' H” . work, Mr. Mekel wrote two voi- yea” as jnewifr. umes of poetry, "The order of pap” man in,-1 Good Cheer, about the first the Maritime French settlers in Nov:-. scotia, and prmqncu. "Tallahassee," a story of Halifax during the days of the American Civil War. Mrs. Merkel died four years ago. Survivors include a son, J. Arthur Merkel of the CPR. public reis- tiona bureau in Montreal; and two daughters, Mrs. Gordon Thompson of Halifax, and Mrs. Charles B. Lynch, wife of a Reuters news story of Mai-coni's transmission of the first commercial wireless mes- saife. Two Years afterward he re- corded the first airplane flight in the British Empire when he watched J. A. D. Mccurdy take off from the ice of Nova Scotia'a Bras d'0r lakes. AIDED YOUNG REPORTER! In later years be organised cov- erage of the Moose River mine dissstcr of 1036 and the Interna- tional Fishermen'a races off Hall- fax. He was head of the bureau here during six years of war when in most stories Halifax was known only as "an east coast Canadian port." He contributed greatly to the ad- vnncoment of The Canadian Press, especially in the discovery and development of young newspaper men. WROTE POETRY The son of an Anglican minister. Rev. A. D. Merkel, he was born in LI.-Col. Harry C. F. Morgan, 45, of Halifax and Kingston, Ont, now at eastern command head- quarters. will he posted to Ottawa. For Korea July 1 O'l'1'AWA, (CF) -- The Tribal class destroyer Iroquois, com- manded by Cmdr. Maurice F. Oliver of Victoria, will sail from Halifax July 1 for a third tour of duty in Korea. The fmqunia will rail-va H. M. C. S. Crusader. which will return in her home base at Eaquiman, BC... after a nina-mnniha tour of patrol duty with United Nations naval forces. The Iroquois will call at King- ston, Jamaica, July 6 and proceed to the far out via the Pgngrng Canal and Pearl Harbor. She re- turned to l-lalifaxx from Korea In February and has since completed an extensive refit. N. l. MA; KILLED SAINT JOHN, N. B., iCP)-3y- ron Frederick Brycnton, 31, of Quarryville. N. 1a.. was killed ear- ly today at Collette. N. 3., when the truck he was driving crashed into a ditch, " A maximum temperatures (Continued on page 2, col. 4) :M:foi.i)' iSWtMiNQ Hon: is'coMmc. RN10 i-fsggoyuuf TORONTO (CF)--Minimum is upper New York State 08 years ago Mm. M, lawson 50 . - xancopver :9 ictor a . 1 Army Officers .. . Calgary 41 Regina 46 Swiich lobs Toronto 64 OTTAWA. (GP)-The army has Onawn 66 announced that two of its senior M"m'”I (ER officers in the Royal Canadian Qliebec '34 Electrical and Mechanical Engi- Smm Jnhn CR nevrs will switch Jobs in early August. ' l.t.-Col. Cecil o. Kirb. 42 of F'”d””'""' ' 51 Ottawa, assistant rlirectoi-I of 'thc gwrlnuemwn RCEME vehicle section at hend- EY-);rr:::,):,"h "T quarters, will command the St John-, Nu A RCEME eastern command hend- ' ' quarirrs at Halifax. HALIFAX (CPi Tho ilrvvninmu public weather nifico hmn says the weather was mostly sunny in the Maritimes Friday, but a few show- ers were reported in eastern Nnva Scotia and in the Gaspe and Gulf of St. a e Iroquois To Sail around the district. and indications points toward a period of unsettled weather with and widely scattered showers dur- ing the weekend. Lawrence north shnre reg W 0. I k disturbances arr- variable cloudiness Regional forecasts. with an out- look for Sunday: Prince Jldwaril Island. New Brunswick. Bay of Chaleurz Clear with a few cloudy intervals: widely scattered showers Saturday after- noon and evening: Not much change in team erature; light winds lnw-high at arlottrinwn 55 and 15. Mansion and Fredericton as and I0. Iaint John 35 and '15. Ed- mnsulston 05 and 80. Carnpbeiltesi B5 and 'il. Outleek for Sunday: Cloudy. Bay nf Fundy: Light winds: clear with a few cloudy intervals: widely scaitorrd showers Saiiirrily afternoon and evening; visibility 10 miles; temperature in the 50's. High tide today It Charlottetown at 5.41 a. in. and 7.12 p. m. lummeraide tide eighteen min- utes ister than Charlottetown. High tide todny at. the North Shore at us a. na. and 13.00 p. Ii. sunrisu tadayat4.Ia.ni.a.nd sets at 0.04 p. ni. P