. ., l . Expect New Ministerial . 7 Link From Conference ly IIAIOI-D N OIIIDON ,,.-'Canadisn Press lltaff Writer orrsws, (CP)- A new fed- "; ppovinghl permanent min- steriai body likely will emerge lot of next week's conference of premiers. into its lap undoubtedly willbe dumped a number of sticky is- sues such as health insurance and public investment which the experts here believe will not be resolved at the P A k usesslon. How far the federal govern- ment will go on health insurance will depen on how strongly the more influential provinces-pan ticularly Ontario-push their views. But federal officials are being not hopeful of anything p- Comlngv Events "Look on Page 12 for list of perennial plants." Hot turkey dinner, Moreli Hall, Monday. October iii. ' Pantry sale tonight, Kennedy's 8:00 .p.m. Hamilton W M. S. Central Queens Junior Farmers meeting Oct. 3rd. C p.m. P.W.C. lleserve October 10th for United Church chicken supper Mt. Stewart. Lobster supper served at Sea Shdell inn. Victoria. Sunday October 2n . - itegular Saturday night dance. St. Peters Hall. Don Measer's Or- chestra. - Regular dance Stanley Bridge ve . Rollie McKensle's V 1 Reserve Thanksgiving Day oct- aber link. for hot chicken dinner, South Rustlco Hell. Regular dance at the Castle. Dunataffnage to-night. Dancing horn men-l oielock. chic ' Ag” c.uZl,' sills Dance Went Royall? Hail, wed. nesday. Rollie McKen1.ia's Orches- trs. Canteen Service 9:!) to 12:3). ..Y." Coma" to an mum Hotel. Victoria. for a delieiou 3'esh,labatu supper on Sundgy, c. . Chicken and ham supper wga. nesday October 5th. North Milton Hail sponsored by St. John's Angli- can Church. Grand bingo St. Andrew's Hail. M Stewart Monday. October 3rd. Farmers-'-Jlmn-s achieved more than agreement in principle among the it govern- ment lesders to work on the scheme. "CATCH-ALL" IODY The whole issue then would be tossed into the hands of a work- ing committee-the permanent federal-provincial link envisaged by authorities here. The com- mittee probably made up of fed- or their deputies, "catch-all.” Problems which the premiers cannr' resolve or on which they want more study or negotiation coult )e referred to the perman- ent body. it nlay prove useful to the federal government which next week expects to hear a lot of tie- tmands from the provinces for financial aid in exnnntiin, and exploiting resources through pub- lic investment. would be a es-ai-provincial cabinet ministers ject informants said that at the Se . 10-ll Halifax meeting of f eral-provincial deputy min- isters the provinces voiced many gebaands for federal aid in this e . One wanted federal aid in re- sources survey work. another in the first against Water pollution. a third in developing forestry projects. a fourth in developing an irrigation and power pro- It is understood the federal government will give these prov- inces little encouragement. The federal view is that it is doing enough: it is aiding in building a trans-Canada highway; work- ing with the provinces in develop- ing land for housing: and put- ting up money for harbors and some river works. But the central administration is certain to agree to have all these requests ”looked at" by the permanent committee. ELSCTED COUI -, Princess-Knyol Prince EflWll'(: island Friday was elected honorary president of the Canadian Council of Com- merce and industry. W. E. Ag- new, deputy resources minister of the same province, was elect- ed acting president. Mr. McKinnon succeeds Trade Minister Beaulieu of Quebec and Mr. Agnew succeeds deputy trade minister Louis Coderre oi Quebec in the national organiz- ation which groups officials of the federal and provincial trades and resources depart-. ments. . Other officers: John A. Patter- son. director of the industrial di- vision of the New Brunswick in- dustry and development. elected vice-president. and H. F. Ward of the Saskatchewan government civil service. elected secretary. Fkrrlves.-Few - a l" ' ' "0 a . dlen Visit QUEBEC. (CPl- The Princess Royal. aunt of Queen Elizabeth. arrived here Friday for her first visit to Canada. but a slight irizzle and overcast skies blotted ut much of the pageantry of . .tuebec's autumn colors. Princess Mary. whose arrival aboard the liner Empress of France was delayed one day by rib 3" games. prize. it run, Custom srlndlns and mixing d8”3'- We pick up and deliver for a moderate charge, A, 3. pg”. Rae. Checker Mix Service: 9514. Winsloe. l-of 7 chicken supper. It ' Nlarltl Pariah Hail, Wednesday. - Oct. 5. Supper 8 H I, then tn: hours bingo. Dance after. Com- and have a good time. will be buying fowl ml-y Mo vlar from 1 to 7 p.m. and Tuesda. ' will pick up and at the iarlns. Paying mung -mu-Ru prices. A. P. Gallant, uni , For best returns null uj. ll-V '0 38.! premium raid en ce hm. - T0" Ind .fowl. "ms every why. 3 until is R. L. Dickieaon. New Glasgow. d will be buying fowl every Mon- ay from 1 to 7 p.m. and Tuesday lwmvlckusanu pay at the :"'3- Pllflnl llllhest nsarbet ces. A. P. Gallant. Rlltleo. Sh i WW1". Itarrhg James &t- more. lug-1,.” ud g,"""0" Clrventar. he etc: of wirpllllintoln Raiders of orld 3 5 Ilker. Johnson ' "Ml Hutch. so. aunt." -llckllol us.oo door; 3,5... Mr. W. E. Agnew JACKSONVILLE. Fla... MAP)- The nsvy said Friday it had a report from Guantananamo Bay. Cuba; of the vague possibility I New Wiltabire district L.0.L. visits Barton Lodge on Oct. 3. Dance Vernon River Hall. Tues- day. October 4. Regular glance Elliott Hall. Sat- urday nlg . Dance, refreshments Kelly's Crosr School. Monday. October ......"'fi"l..”n...”"'"-l n:l.f"'s.i.".':: heels). Oct. 4. A 1;o.a.s. Iordan are holding . sale at nebnan Youth Iunnnsrsiae. Oct. 7. start- IIC it no p.ns. at Cliff Pdters. Rol- lo gay. oateher . laycautua. 3 . a" cone and Ianr a.m..' sseoonuses is non Vallq aglll Wedneslli slit. Attention ' ' Miilview. cllffe. Vernon and onvsil. beg: Oct. 4 . ooiisettla Check Possibility Rafi Sean From Missing Pfane bad weather. was greeted on board the ship by Governor-Gen- eral Massey. - Then she stepped onto Canadian soil where she was met by Pre- mier Duplessis of Quebec. Vet- erans Affairs Minister 1-Iu hes Lapointe and Mayor Wt rid Hamel of Quebec. She wore a plain light blue hat and coat. srasmur nltszsxmo OTTAWA (CF) ; The apartment of Nicolai Ostrovsky. second sec- retary at the Soviet embassy here. has been the victim of what police armed "a straight breaking." itolen were s valuable camera. a top coat. shoes. two bottles of liquor. shirts, cuff links and other articles. V "4... -..g.u iorrlcislis Storm Damage Reports Delayed MEXICO CITY. iAPi-Rivers-' flooded by hurricane Janet'sl heavy rains covered Tor washedl out big Ways and communicat- lgnclhiinsggsfrca lung dtl-etch of .. c4."-- .9!-L. ti-"G9-L gaing reports lit the gto'rrn's Coastal towns from Tuxpan it) below Nautia, a small fishing port 75 miles north of Veracruz, have not been heard from direct- ly since the season's most vic- ious tropical storm crasiied in- land Thursday and heal itself out against the Sierra Madrc mount- a us. the coast and 70 miles north of Mexico City. There was some radio communication with the or injuries. Banner - Crop of tho Dnmininn been gathered under the most many ycnrs .- The Farm superintendent repm-1. raft from a hurricane hunter plane. missing with two Toronto ... spaper men aboard. had been located by radar. Contact with the plane was lost Monday just after it had radioed it was about to enter hurricane Janet in the mid-Caribbean sea. on board were llired 0. Tate. a reporter. and Douglas Cronk. a photographer. both of the Toronto Star. and 1 crew or nine The navy said its report indi- cated the search and -rescue head .rtcrs a t Guantanamo Day (I picked up some kind of object by radar in the wake of the storm but that identification was uncertain inasmilcli as I great amount of debris was in the water. GM. strike Tdlts Adieurn TORONTO. (OP) -- Top com- pany and union officials Friday agreed to adlourn for the week- nd negotiations in the strike of I7.” workers at five General Motors Corporation of Canltll MARI. -fouls B. Seatoa. company Gl- all from Detroit. favorable. wcather conditions thatl tho Provlllrr has experienced in. nu, ma. Wm, ,.. ,,,,,,.y M... mom. i ed that most of the grain crop hasl CANADA, sarvanal . OCTOBER E ETING OF UN Protest Move To Debate Algerian Issue AND NCO'S O Ar.'.,(CP); -Iuxtr.-moi i Pearsonv niiviou in good spirits. Friday embarked on a visit to Russia and it other countries. The minister's plane paused briefly at Gander. Nfld.. where it landed at 6 p.m. AST and then the group was airborne again at 7:55 p.m. -Bcforc the big RCAF C-5 plane ltook off from Rockcliffe airport Floods extended inland as target 1:08 p.m. EST. Mr. Pearson as Pachuca, 100 miles west from: posed for photographers with smiling members of the Russian embassy. Russian ambassador Dmitri fringes of the flooded area and Chuvahin left earlier for Moscow no reports mcniioned any deaths to be able to grz-ct Mr. Pearson when he reaches there. Mr. Pear- Conditions For P.E.l. Island Reported Prince Edward Island has hadvnow been harvested and potato best all-round crop season it hasldigging is well under way. He said ever hurl to his knowledge. stated indication point to a bumber crop Mr. RC Parcni. Superintendent of of tubers this season. 4 Edp9"l'"9""'l Several mcmherit of thc Farm F””"- ('h,m'”""',”wnt I". ”9mm""' staff will leave Monday for Truro I" ”" lb” "'3" ”m"”3 "”V"' Nova Scotla where they will attend les. TlllF bountiful harvest has the mum”. Mm mmmm". which will deal principally with chcmical weed connnl Mr. Parent points mug coming on the market from year to year. tho subject of control Continucd no l1Ij:?”2;r7Q0l;f 7” on no i gumr followi s I PW! SW mo in ota:s. They an. it" as right: Norman M” 3"' Mac . gig unwed Press; C. It. Black- 1, 1955 The French delegation then rose and walked out while the QULBEC, .c,., , Resources assembly went on with other Minister Doug:-lr. .Vlcl(innon of bll5lll9F5- Outside the assembly chamber. . .. ... SIGNALS lxlsbperscription of Queen Elizabeth Personnel receiving the CD. left to right - Major E. A. Mccarey. Capt. H. W. P. Hughes, R.SM. J. vsagimiis to he in: Russiroct. &l2.' v - g"seversi sovietvcitier-be sldes Moscow before he pushes on to the Colombo plan confer- ence at Singapore. V The scene at the airport re sembled the excitement back- Typiloon Poses New Threat For Japanese Island TOKYO. tlleutersi - Typhoon Louise. which killed at least 31 persons and is reported to have left 500.000 '-omeless when it struck western Japan. turned north and threatened new de- struction t.o Kokkaido island to- day. An official weather bulletin is- sued Friday night said the whirl- ing storm. which curved out over the Japanese see after pounding Kyushu early in the day. had turned again and was headed straight for Hokkaido. most northerly of the main Japanese islands. it was expected to strike there this morning. Police reported that the ty- phoon left widespread destruction in Kyushu. chief southern island of Japan. during a seven-hour assault by 123-milc-an-hour winds. The storm now is reported to have lost some force. with maxi- mum winds estimated at ll) miles II hour. 77 born, The Canadian Press: Mr. Pension; I. NMIIIII Otnmi. Ot- tawa Journal: and Paul P9009!- aat, CBC Te eviston. A fifth mem- V A. . . . Six officers and NCO'S of 5 Sig-5D.S.O.. E.D.. Commander of No Ziflrst time on issue. the image and F. Smith. RQMS. A. E. Richard, nais Regiment received the C. D.iMilitary Group. in the presence of (Canadian Decoration! at a cere- the full strength of the Regirneni. mental function at the ArmouricsiThe medals accompanying the cf- last night. The presentations wereltation commending 12 years of made by Brigadier G. K. K. Peakeiscrvice in any rank, bore for the lPearson In Good Spirits, Leaves On Trip To Moscow Island Like the n.;... UNITED NATIONS, N tions decided Friday night Algerian independence. question on its agenda. What the assembly actually did was reverse a decision of its 15- nation steering committee to turn down an Algerian debate. The vote was 28 in favor of the debate. 27 against and five ah- staining. Forelgn Minister Antoine Piuay immediately took the floor and said France would regard any action taken by the assembly on Algeria as null and void. l-le add- ed. ill do not know tomorrow what will be the relations between France and the United Nations." French delegate Herve Alphand was asked whether France would withdraw from the UN. "We might." he replied. Foreign Minister Paul - Henri Speak of Belgium had warned the assembly earlier that a de- cision to take up the Algerian problem might cause many coun- tries to consider how they could remain in the world organiza- tion. Spank and other opponents of the debate contended that Al- geria was a part of France pro- per and thus did not fall within the jurisdiction of the United Na- tions. which can consider only international problems. Members of the Asian-African bloc. made the original request to take up the Algerian question. In the General Assembly they re- Eisenisower p Moises Progress DENVER. Colo.. (AP)-Presh dent Eisenhower. still progressing after an "excellent" night. pre- pared Frlday to take the first tiny step on the road back toward active direction of the govern- ment. But even as he made ready for the step-inltiailing of a couple of official documents--one of his heart specialist physicians, a world leader in the field. con- tributed to already strong in- dications that Eisenhower won't I” 14.. P SSM. J. B. Gallant. S-Sgt A. W. Wellner The Canadian Efficiency Medal had previously been award- ed to R,SM Smith and S-Sgt. Wel- lner. Barter's Film Lab. siege after the opening of a hit smlsical. -About 200 persons "tuni- ed out to see Mr. Pearson off. There were grins and rounds of handshakes for the minister from friends and members of the diplomatic ' corps. Mrs. Pearson. who is accom- panying her husbandt carried a bouquet of yellow roses. NATO MEETING Continued on page 2. Col. 4 Tries New Cure For Sleeplessness tax collector received received a letter them an anonymous wo- man who said she couldn't sleep because of her unpaid tax. She inclosed 10 pounds and add- ed in a postscript: ”lf I still find i can't sleep I'll send you LONDON(APl - The income scek a second term. Dr. Paul Dudley White of Bos- ton. who examined the president last Sunday and Monday. hold a television audience that if he were Eisenhower he wouldn't want man Is; - Y-. (AP)-The United Na- to take up the hot issue of Over bitter French opposition, the assembly decided by a margin of one vote to place the highly controversial ceived the support of Russia and other Communist countries. ll- cludlns Yusoslevia. and of some Latin-American nations. the United States. Britain, the smaller colonial powers and a scattering of nations tom Latin America. s It was the second dgfegt be the anti-colonial pow”. 1. an current assembly. Thursday this group succeeded in getting the steering committee to recons- mend the airing of the future of West New Guinea. The assembly will make the final decision a; whether to put this long standing hot dispute between The Netherl- lands and Indonesia on its ngen. da. France has boycotted prev-long sessions of assembly 00HHI1.itferu on debate over Morocco." 1.. sue whidl the assembly has allel- a French protectorate. Canada's Wheat "HAW-M (CF?-Canada's IQ wheat crop was officially estima- ted Friday at 408,342,000 mgmig, down 2.245.000 from the prelim- inary estimate last month of M0,. 557.000 bushels. This is in. sign. laraoot mo in history. 'l1se prairie wheat crop we. 0.- timated at 47s,ooo,ooo m.s..u, down 2,000,000 from an puma, "W7 Oitlifllle. the bureau of sta- tistics rlvoried. The eatiisaa h The revised the all-Canadian wheat expo: 51 per cent higher than the ace. P" "M llliiher Elan the last. your average of 4-t5.900.000 boats- 53. ii.".”.".'.5'.a”'m”i'oli”oooi”un.' ”" harvested in 1952. ' ' W -L to run" for re-election. That view probably will carry tremendous weight with Eisen- hower in making his final decla- some more money." ion. New Outlets Seen For Canadian Farm Products From Birds Eye Purchase The recent purchase of the Ca- expebtedc to result in new mar- . 1 , ,. mods busy, kets or anadisn producers of fish. "mm" Bwds ylllf, group is poultry. fruit and vegetables. re- Vnff" P? 3": ”''' ,,W,,:- prts the Financial Post. Toronto, Victoria TORONTO. Dawson Vancouver .............,.. in its current issue. the new operation haven't few weeks. Hugh Paton. president of Paton Corp. Toronto. who sold his half interest in Canadian Birda Eye to the new group. sees the Birds Eye organization as a.snaJor potential outlet for Canadian produce. The company markets about 50 per cent nf the frozen foods sold in Canada. And 65 per cent - 70 per cent of frozen foods sold here in the past have originated in the U 8 it's expected that be new group L may be able to base its opera- Continued on page 2. Col. 4 Wheat Board Reduces Prices WINNIPEG, (CF)-The Cana- dian wheat board Friday reduced the selling price of top-grade milling wheat by three and foil? cents a bushel. the first maior reduction in several months. At the close of trade Friday on the Winnipeg grain exchange. the board announced its prices for numbers l, 2 and 3 northern were ldosvri threc renLs-, No. 4 was - down four ccnts. The cut applies to all categor- Agreement. domestic. and out- side the IWA class two. The new ces are: i norhsrn 1.71; I not re 1.0. Lorenso 1.00. 4 northern 1.01. l.'Aetdon Observers said the move Isitli A be intended to stimulate lawns export sales. her of the M08! Pifly. Pare of Quebec City's Catholique. was not present. C.P. Photo All the details in connection with, (lE;:1:g,?:l:,on " M9" flcuinn worked out yet. but an announrc-. wm,,,m.g ment is expected within the next 1-m.(,,,.,, Ottawa Montreal Quebec . Fredericton . Saint John Moncton Halifax Charlottetown Sydney Yannouth office says scattered showers will spread slowly eastward over the Maritirnea Saturday. weather will not reach the east- ern regions until early Nu-than Nova ldwul Island: CIIIII: so” ed showers sum a sunset: Ittle ebassu h - able: soothed: ll fag light by evening. Low New Glrugrlw IO Ind lnhetown S0 and Sunday: Sunny. St. . scattered showers ending this afternoon. clearing by little change in southerly winds northwest is .in evening.- low-s hlgh at Moncton. Fredericton and . Saint John I! andvi. Outlooi 'ie.s of !al('S1 international Wheat for Sunday: Sunny. ssaaaaisltxic 2i i'i21S8S.'.83i33l32t”.S3lt.E HALIFAX. f CPl-The weather Clearing Sunday. C8. Orltleilw Eastern N. 3. counties. John river valley: Cloudy; evening: temperature: lb becoming High tide hday at Charlottetown at i0-.12 a.m. and l0'.!'I pm: at g M,-mg" Rustico at 3-40 am. and kit p.n. Surnrnes-side tide eighteen minim later Gran Charlottetown. -- sn rises at on an. and lab ved for this session. Morocco h t -2 ?5”'49'l'll'V0llsatieen M 900.000 bushels last year aura... I-lnlns up with France were i Cronfigures - A s it?) - Minimum 1. and maximum temperatures; Min it 48 .35 "3 "Ni 82 56 .57 at 5:)! pm. 5 V,