if Maxims of if More Man "Democracy means not '1 am as good as you are'. You an as good as I am'." 10 PAGII Wood Alcohol Blamed but 47 Sailors From Carrier Poisoned IAIJFAX (CF)-A dozen weary naval doctors and teams of nurses Sunday night continued their round-the-clock efforts to aid 47 sailors who drank dupllcatln ma- chine fluid at a party riday night aboard the aircraft carrier Magnificent. - The fluid contained a large per- centage of deadly methyl alcohol. Seven of the men were on the danger list and seven were listed as seriously ill. The other 33 re- mained in liiapital. A naval doctor has been quoted as saying that as little as an ounce of methyl. or wood. alcohol could have "serious conse- quences." No IIJNDNESS REPORTED Traditionally a ny o n e drinking methyl alcohol went blind, if he lived. However doctors at the hospital at Stadacona naval base here. where the men are being treated. said late Sunday there has been no cases of blindness. They said if there were none within as hours after the party. believed to have started about 10 p. m. Friday. there probably would be no loss of eyesight. The II naval doctors worked in eonsultation with Dr. D. H. Ton- ning. a Halifax specialist in inter- nal medicine. They fought the ef- feats of the poisonous cocktails by injecting acids into the veins of the stricken sailors. 158 Ill ITATEMENT Sunday afternoon they issued the Inllowing statement: ”Naval doctors said at I230 this afternoon that they are encouraged by the fact that the patients are showing some improvement, but it is. of course. still too early to say any more." Naval sources said there was no apparent reason for the party. but it was reported that some of the sailors were under stoppage of leave and confined to ship. DETAILS ICA NTY Details of the actual fling are scanty ending a ship's investiga- tion te made by officers of the Magnificent this morning. Some repoitrltsbsaig the lzongigctlon was prepare ggulflo; mg: V who 1 me. no 0 e ttl a :1 . fluid used for :i..i'ii".":?-ol.w3ii stencils for duplicating mschlneg. Th! navy said most of the sailors Ilinarently did not know what they whether the cocktails were con- tained to one mess or distributed WN, CANADA, MONDAY, JANUARY 1956 EISENHOWER wiii ASK TODAYFOR us: or AMERICAN FORCES AT FORMOSA about the ship. ALL WATCHES KEPT TWO Petty officers were involved but the rest of the victims were in the lower ratings. -All watches were kept Friday night and early Saturday. The first case was not reported until about 10 a. .m. The first symptom was drowsiness. About 40 of the men were Wlmdad UP by early Saturday af- ternoon and the remaining seven came in following appeals broad- cast by radio stations. The 18.000-ton Magnificent re- 2lh months training cruise to Van- couver. Partial List Of Sailors On Carrier Poisoned HALIFAX (CP)AFollowing is a partial list of sailors poisoned aboard the aircraft carrier Mag- nificent Friday night by drinking punch containing methyl alcohol. Next of kin have been notified. Dangerously ill: S Douglas Brukholder, Stouffville Ont: P0 Mnynard Johnson, Vic- toria: LS Fraser Way. Colchester, 0nt.: AB Robert Mur hy, Athens, 0nt.: AB Raymond arry, Duo- glastown. N. B.: AB Clarence Res- sor. Toronto; AB John MacDonald, Beaverton. Ont. Seriously ill: OS Allan Mcl(ellar. Plaster Rock N. 3.: AB Francis Peppiatt. Kings- 10'1- 01'"--G A3 BOY Labnmbarde. Chatham. Ont; AB Pierre Freeh- ette. Quebec city; LS James Fri. ars, Saint John. N. B.; PO George Brown. Dartmouth, N. S. In hospital: 08 Robert Patterson, Montreal; LS Joseph Lees. Springhill. N. 3; AB Ronald A. Shamess. Sudbury. 0ni.: OS Allister Arnold. Grand Falls. Nf1d.: OS Ian Hamilton. Fruitland. Ont; OS Garnet Knight. Orllli-. Ont-; AB John Mclntnsb. Urges Hearing Be Postponed Support of Prince Edward Island Premier-Matbeson's stand on post- poning the CNR hearing on dis- continuance of the railway's pas- senger service in the Province is given by Neil A. Matheson. Liberal MP for Queen's. here today that he is forwarding a l""'9d W Hmf” D9C- 4 from I recommendation to the Board of Transport Commissioner- accede to the Premier's request for deferment of the hearings until the session of the P. E. I. Legislature has risen. He feels that the . , t on the part of the provincial gov- ernment ls very that the matter is of too much im- portance to be dealt with hurried- Is! the hearing was February 14 and lb. It is believed that the Railway would not oppose a suggestion that national employment office said Saturday the employment pic- ture is brighter than it was this time-last year. surance through the last year. 500 River for. six-year-old Harold New- OTTAWA, Jan. 23. (Special) - Mr. Matheson told The Guardian that it reasonable and Date suggested by the CNR for it be postponed until May or June. Nfld. Employment Picture Brighter ST. JOHN'S Nfld. (CF) -The here Figures showed there were H.390 people drawing unemployment in- nffice .com- pared to 13,000 at the same time Child Missing.- Neor Yormouih YARMOUTH, N. S.. (CF;-Some vnlunieers Sunday searched the winds around nearby Lillie ell. lost since Saturday in freez- Express SUTTON COLDFIELD. England (Reuters) -At least I4 persons were killed and more than 30 in- jured when an express train ran off the rails here Sunday. Six per- sons were still trapped in the wreckage Sunday night. The train. from York to Bristol. was diverted from its normal route through nearby Tamworth because the line was being re- paired there. As it went through the station here, the engine left the rails and took nine of its 10 coaches with it. Police said the train was "al- most fuli." Six of the coaches were over- turned and some were telescoped LONDON. (AP)--Like an old war horse, Prime Minister Churchill Sunday sniffed the smoke of a new political battle arising from Bri- tain's expensive and slow-moving defence program. In recent weeks Britons have be- gun to wonder whether something basically wrong exists in this coun- try's arms planning. Doubts have taken root among Churchill's own Conservatives as well as in the ranks of the opposition Labor party. The whole question is expected to explode soon after Parliament reconvenes from its long Christ- mas recess next Tuesday. It is an issue full of political dynamite for the 80-year-old prime minister and he knows it. 14 Lose Lives In Wreck or hurled onto the platform. Part. of the station roof was torn off. Three hours after the detail- ment, rescue workers were still cutting through the wreckage to free trapped passengers. IIALTS SECOND TRAIN Another accident was averted when an express coming in the opposite direction was stopped only 200 yadrs from the wreckage by a woman in blue jeans waving her arms. It would have plowed right into the derailed train. As soon as the oncoming express halted. an appeal was made to all servicemen and people with medi- cal knowledge aboard to help form emergency rescue squads. Churchill Sniffs Battle Over British Arms Program In recent years Britain has con- Uneosy Peace Settles Over Central America By CARLOS EBCUDEBO TEGUCIGALPA. Honduras (AP) Uncertain peace settled over ex- plosive Central America Sunday with blondy revolts apparently crushed in Costa Rica and Guate- mala. In troubled Panama. a National Assembly commission started the final week of an investigation into charges that impeached ex-presi- dent Jose Ramon Guizado was im- pljcated in the machine-gun assas- sination of his predessor. President Jose Antonio Remon. three weeks ago. In Costa Rica the government was mopping up the few remain- ing pockets of rebel hoidouts in the rebellion that broke out Jan. 4 and which President Jose Figuercs claimed was sparked from Nicar- agua. Gen. Anastasix) Somoza, Nicaragua's dictor-president. has denied the c h a r g e. Observers looked nervously toward his Pacific port of Corinto where 25 F-511 Mustang fighter planes pur- chased from Sweden were being uncrated. Those planes. constitut- ing the most powerful air force in Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew i By JOHN M..ll1Gl!'.lOWEB WASHINGTON (AP) - President Eisenhower will ask Congress today for authority to use American armed forces in the defence of Formosa and its military approaolies. y The wording'of a resolution, prepared for introduction in House of Representatives and Senate following the presi- dent's request, is broad enough to cover: 1. The use of American wardiipe and . in evan- uating the division of 12,000 or more Nationalist troops from the Red-menaced Tacben islands. ' l 2. The use of American warships and planes. If U19 PFP-SP dent should later decide this is necessary, in helping General- issimo Chiang Kai-shek's forces defend the key approach is- lands of Quemoy and Matsu, which face the Communist har- bors of Amoy and Foochow. This in effect would set up two defence lines-one outer line of Nationalist-held islands including Quemoy and Maisu for which the United States might or might not fight. depending on conditions at the moment. and a primary inner line which the U. 5. would be com- mitied to defend under a treaty now awaiting Senate ratification. LINE DRAWN IN 1950 The inner line runs roughly through the middle of the Formosa strait. That is the line drawn by former president Truman back in June. 1950 when he. assigned the U. S. 7th Fleet to prevent the Reds from seizing Formosa while the United States was engaged in Ko- rea. The defence pact signed by State Secretary Dulles and Foreign Minister George Yeh last month resolution. On the other hand he The key islands of the forward might not. although the thinking in official quarters at the moment is that he would do so. The proposed congressional reso- lution is based on the recognition that the Chinese Communist regime has declared its intention of invad- ing and conquering Formosa and that continuation of this outpost in friendly hands is vital to U. 5. sea- urlty in the Pacific. China Rebuffs Cease-Fire Move: Warns The U. S. gratulated herself on research she Central America, couid gm-ow in. has done in military aircraft-ow region's delicate political equilib- ticularly swept-wing and delta- 1-gum mic chaos, LONDON (AP!--Thieves Friday sinle several hundred pounds worth of jewelry from the home of Chief Superintendent R o b e rt Stevens. head of Scotland Yard's fraud squad. wing fighters. But the Spectator. a Conserva- tive jnurnal of opinion. complained that these new fighters "have been so long in development they have become obsolcscent even before they have become operational." Peace In Formosa Area dangerously narrow waters of For- Ily SPENCER. MOOSA moss strait in sailing from Manila. Hope New Moves'Will Mean. will confirm that line. when it is ratified. by committing the United States to the defence of Formosa and the nearby Pescadores islands. The outer defence line is that which runs through Nationalist- held islands on the western side of the Formosa strait near the Red China coast. I The United States has never stat- ed precisely whether it would help Chiang Kai-shek's troops defend any of these islands. LET TACIIENS G0 The administration decided about a week ago that the Tachens were not worth fighting for. Hence the HONG KONG (Reuiers)-Com- munist China rebuffed Western suggestions for a United Nations- ed cease-fire in the For- mosa etraits and warned the United States to pull her forces out of the area if she wants peace in the Far East. Peiping Radio. giving the first authoritative Communist comment on mounting Far East tension. said Western cease-fire moves were "an attempt at interference in the dom- estic affairs of China and at ex- panding a g g re s s i o a under the United Nations flag." It was quot- ing th e Communist newspaper Peiping People's Daily I his punch bowl.- Smith Falls. Ont.; 05 Murray Ur- quhart, Hamilton. Ont; A3 Ray Middleton. London. Oht.; AB Ron. VIM, Bawtlnhaimer, Toronto; .05. ' Mltro. Ottawa; AB John lrlinbridge. Montreal, AB Gaston Fortin. Quebec City; AB Donald Blair. Embro. Ont: AB Ernest Jarvis, London. 0nt.; iAB Ray Longpre. Windsor. Oni.; Ls John W911 drinking. It was not known Six Killed In Two R. C.A. F. - Plane Crashes On Saturday EDMONTON (OP)-Six persons were killed Saturday in two RCAF plane crashes. one in Alberta and the other in Manitoba. A Mitchell bomber crashed 28 miles southwest of Edmonton after witnesses said. it struck a ferry eable strung across the north sas- katehewan river. The three oc- Wnants were killed. men Saturday night as: F0. Dou. llas Merrill Ward of Edmonton, the pilot; F0. Richard Grant Of- ficer of Vancouver. engineer. and F0. John Kutyn of Edmonton. navigator. Seine Floods Of Acres In, PARIS. (AP)--The normally peaceful seine bucked and tore at brldlizes and parapets Sunday. It flooded tens of thousands of acres around this city. In some. places the water raced '10"! two feet or more above street level. held in check by bsrrlcadea of steel and concrete erected in past years and now be- Olns raised to inset still further increases in the river level ex- pected today. . Paris' great buildings are not in dlnser but water has flooded into the Palace of Justice. in one tower Coming Events "Skatln to Rink . an 10' g night Crapaud CO I-fall.”-lceii?:ryu1iAt.ll. ' V”-Mn enters the Seine below Paris. has aeD.nc. In Form" - ml .4 also over-flowed its banks. "Me! tum. svscvs-rs: iussinsm-s "Rumsn essie. Trinitiw 03113031 Police barred all rsons from M-Ir. I o' act. the Seine river near the to;'iC;:d party Dunstaffnage school I I:N tonilht. West "Card party R0i'aity ball. Everybaiy welcome. "Reserve March as-so-so. Kins- men Greatest Variety !how,P.W.C. "N85 arrived. mixed. car of Him: I! Grower. area. and B-rl-v is W. l. lowmsa. "Variety Concert. Millview Hall. Wettneed . January sun. all. six- cellent teem. Iponsored by selli- view W. I. at time meat blend, was flooded. iconilnucd on page 9. col. 4i F0. Officer was on active serv- ice. The other two were air force reserve members. Early Saturday morning. three airmen died when an RCAF Beech- craft Expediter crashed in in field 20 miles south of Winnipeg. The pilot of the plane was iden- tified as F0. C. R. Jones, 22, . C. The others were a NATO student identified as acting PO. Edward Erich Nash of London, England. and another student. be- lieved to be from France. whose name was withheld pending nn- tlfication of next-of-kin. of which Queen Antoinette was imprisoned. A few bridges had to be closed to traffic. The river rose about 10 inches during the night and was expected to go up another several inches by morning. it is already the highest water since 1924. Streets of hundreds of villages and towns In France are full of water, for the flood is not con- fined to the Seine itself. There is high water on every major river system. from north to south. An estimated 200 factories. with a total of 50,000 workers. will not be able to open today because of flood conditions. The Marne.whlch pours into the Seine above Paris. has spilled over its banks, spreading over thousands of acres of lowland and forcing thousands of villagers out of their homes. The Oise, which ions service corps have been cail- h ed in to help move people an: 1, an n F and a group of missing from the group when it came out at noon. ians. Yarmouih vale aircraft from Yarmuuth Fly-, ing Club. Church At Milton. N. S. Destroyed wooden frame Baptist church at nearby Milton fire a few gr:-izaiinii was due to arrive Sun- day morning. the furnace room. The church had recently been s2.500 , I was expected in cover part of the Th. no”. he" kkmmed the vavhosef father lives in Chilliwatk. 1055. - TwoT)rowned In N. S. Lake ans .Jr.. 21. pulled his father and uncle from a gaping hole in the 5 ice of a nearby lake Sunday. then watched in helpless horror as his brother and a Ll in 87 feet of frigid water. Plains. about 18 miles from here. were taking a shortcut across his; Pockwock lake to the lumber camp where they worked. pound supply sled smashed through the thin ice when they were about 300 yards from shore. All but Garvey were plung- ed into the wateo. an improvised lifeline. threw it to the his 55-year-old father and 42-year- old uncle Wesley to solid ice. Carl Smith. 29. were drowned and their bodies were not recovered. through the W;-inch-thick ice and begin dragging operations Mon- day. Seek Sanctuary In So. Viet Nam ' Ragged Refugees Flee Communists ing weather. The child entered the woods ' ' I .wmi hie. mac! other boys but 'was include RCMP. civil- firemen and re- serve soldiers. assisted by a pri- Searchers LIVERPOOL, N. S.. (CP) - A was destroyed by hours before the con- Fircmcii said the fire slaricd in and a insurance renovated organ installed. HALIFAX (CP) -Garvey Rom- panion drowned The five men. all of Hammonds Their weight and that of a 200- they hauled He tied his jacket and shirt into struggling men. and pulled Perry John Romans. Iii. and Men in boats will cut their way HEAVY CRITICISM lgtrfgur. ears -Britain ffarhpent ” " E 000.000.000 ou--de- fence. Churtililliv ha been is power three years and three months of that time. On public platforms and in the press. critics have begun hammer- ing away at this theme: For all that money Britain has a cut down navy lwith a large part of its per- sonne shore bound. an army with no clear sense of what sort of war- fare to prepare for and. worst of all. in air force burdened with old- fashioned planes. Admiral Sir Louis Hamilton. chairman of the navy league. re- cently callleld ii: aeaiag building program. e c arg e govern- ment has allowed thel navy "to run down to an ebb ower than ever before in living memory." QUESTIONED NAVY FUTURE Field Marshal Viscount Montgo- mery has questioned whether nav- les have any future in the world of atomic and hydrogen bombs. TORONTO (CP) - A hotelman "has to be a diplomat 24 hours a day and still retain enough vitality to instill the personal element in his operations." says Jack J. Jonh- son. who ran the biggest hotel in the Commonwealth for 20 years. He retired Jan. I as manager of Toronto's Royal York. Halifax Man PHOENIX. Arlz. (AP) - Mrs. Patricia Jane Milavec. 22. Phoe- nix. also known as Jatrlcia Jane McGinn. was in Jail here Sunday for investigation of assault with a deadly weapon after a reported "double life" shooting. Joseph S. Tremblay, 40, Halifax, a uranium prospector. was the in- tended vlctim. police said. He suf- fered only powder burns although the gun was held next to his chest. investigating officers said posi- tion of the gun prevented Tremb- lay from being killed. in piecing together the story. officers said Tremblay and Mrs. Milavec had dated several times but the wealthy Canadian did not know she was married. ly CORLEY SMITH HAIPHONG. Indochina (Rin- ters)--Ragged refugees from Viet- minh Communist rule have -told ow near-starvation. forccl labor nd constant pressure of prop- ganda and brsl washing drove around floor -p-rtmeim in WI them to leave their villages and seek sanctuary in nonCommunist some parts of Paris downstream souu-, vm Nun. irons the Eiffel are at; (set or below high water. it would em has a lake. use lease tnrdli the cathedral. itself oh any two IOIIOIIS Litre most of the 000.000 refugees if the who already have fled the Commu- turl nist - dominated north. men and women messed at this northern down- evacuation post new are chiefly Notre Dune tventout poor people--peasants. summon. and the base- coolles and small storelreepe rs. Nearly all the refugees fled They were so TAIPEH. Formosa (AP)-Three U. carriens and other warships ay 'steasned"toward the invas; ,lon neced Tachen u islands to ewa orders in cover the evacua- tlon of the Nationalist Chinese gar- rison. The evacuation is to be carried out as part of a deal by which the United States will help to de- fend some other offshore National- lst islands. a reliable source said. The informant added that the U.S. warships. now all within a days sailing time of the Tacbens. 200 miles north of Formosa. are ready for action in the event the Communists try to interfere. The perilous nature of the waters into which the warships are mov- ing was emphasized by a report of an attempted landing by a small Communist Chinese force on the Matsu island group northwest of Formosa. The Nationalist defence minlslry said its artillery broke up the at- tempt by the Red force of not more than I0 junks to invade the island of Kaoteng. Informed sources said the Na- finalist withdrawal from the Ta- chens is contingent upon President Eisenhower setting a final seal to the plan for regrouping Nationalist forces. and President Chiang Kai- shek issuing orders to the Tachen garrison to withdraw. The three carriers-Essex. York- town and Kearsarge-avoided the Near Victim hailed a taxi and wont to her hus- band. Frank W. Mllavec, at their home. She was arrested iifcre af- ter Tremblay reported the shoot- ing to police. Detectives said Mllavec had be- come suspicious of his wife's sud- dcn possession of stocks and bonds, a sports car and men's clothing. Officers said Mrs. Milavec told her husband they were given to her by a rich uncle who had died It Safford, Ariz. Officers said they believed Mrs. Milavec decided to kill Tremblay because he was planning to return to Canada. Tremblay and Mrs. Milavec met recently in Miama, Fla. They came to Phenix together in his car. They-Jklrtqd Formosa on the east. informed 'sources 1' ported. , "Sunrises aware of say the withdrawllpiof-the M. y sol- diers and guerrillas from the Ta- chen group is part of a package deal which would put at least Que- moy and the Matsus under the ro- iection of the 7th Fleet. The eet hitherto has been assigned only to protect Formosa and the nearby Pescadores. .The U.S. apparently hopes that after some offshore islands come under the 7th Fleet's wings. the Communists will refrain from ac- tion and the Nationalists will lie low. thus creating. for awhile at least. an "all quiet” in Formosa strait. OTTAWA. (CP)-Debate on the government's proposed legislative program has been interrupted twice during the first ll days of the new session but is expected to and late this week or early next week. The first interruption of the throne speech debate came when the government introduced legis- lation to widen supplementary un- employment insurance benefits for winter jobless to the level of reg- ular benefits. The meaaue was approved alter a debate lasting one full day. The debate was interrupted a second time last Thursday to en- able the House to discuss a gov- ernment resolution urging ratific- ation of the Paris agreements pro- viding for the entry of a resrrned West Germany into the North At- lantic Treaty Organizations. De- hate on the West German ques- tion continued through Thursday and Friday and will be resumed Monday. REPLY TUESDAY Finance Minister Harris, gov- ernment leader in the Commons. said he hopes the debate will con- clude Monday so the House can return to its discussion of the legislative program outlined inthe After the shooting the woman verge of. starving and could not feed their families under stiff new communist taxes: and they de- tested their new Communist bos- see and the ceaseless campaign of brain-washing. forced labor a d "people's courts" enforcing c - tot-mity and penalties in Commu- nist territory. TAXI! Itilflolil Tran Van Tau. a Roman Catn- olic lemonade peddlar from -nearby mat gs haddwitcngd vegeta e a h-enen left lint still. reould notIe;ri'i :0 living. ” " e a ee t is sales." h'e"said. Fillies: nix Tremblay said. just enou h to feed my children." Dinh an Than. a barefooted rice farmer from i Thien village in the Red river delta. told the same story of near-stsrvatiqn -un- der Vietminh taxes. The Vietminh gave him about 1'4 acres of his own land to take the place of a similar plot he had re- viously farmed as a tenant. inn Van Thong said. But he said the land was not as good and stiff taxes paid in rice took most of his crop. susntcra nsmarrails The final Communist move which forced him to flee was an an- nouncement test Jan. I that every- throne speech. However. he said one would be forced to do nine months' forced labor of an undis- closed nature. ”'f'hey didn't say where we should go or what we should do." Thong said. "Just forced labor." Nguyen'Vsn Xuan. 28, a truck driver from Phuong Tri. said in his village it was "illegal to say the word isvacuatlon.' " and spies kept watch on anyone suspected of plan- ning to me Communist rule. sus- pects were ordered to attend Com- munist meetings late at night and then were kidnapped on their way name and not seen esein. he said. "People now are hoping the war will start again and antlCommu- Debate Resumes Today At Ottawa On Paris Treaties 5-"d t” Pl "'F9”l ”"u'”my i” The '1-iewspape a rtlele also evacuate Rihiangs forces firm ad wnmd an mmid 5"," thwmhl "” "W" m S3 -dean?-anvil" fin-(es protecting the W9" 6”'5'i'li"-" ' A N tie in: z gh ld r Formosa "P9 '" Ah” Qua" --ma M'"" if hf: ":e:l)ll;- gonczrnsd aver groups. which go two invasion in.” m um ml, Eur. routes to Formosa. If they ever come under massive Red attack the president might de- cide to use American forces in their defence. under the proposed SOLDIERS IIDB FREE. THE HAGUE. The Netherlands (Reuters)-Defence Minister Cor- nclls Stsf. who set off a national furore when he banned hitch-hik- ing by soldiers six weeks ago. now has announced that servicemen will be provided with free trans- port when going home on leave. SAID OWN AFFAIR It said only the presence of the U. S. 7th Fleet in Formosa waters had revented Communist capture of ormose.-whose offshore out- posts in the Tachen islands now seem threatened by im m in e n t Communist attack. It repeated pre- vious declaratlons that Communist attempts to take Formosa were ”entlre1y China's domestic afssisf that if the debate ends Monday External Affairs Minister Pearson will not reply until Tuesday. Ratification of the Paris agree- ments was supported by Liberal. Progressive Conservative and Bo- cisl Credit party speakers and by CCF leader Coldwell. However. it was opposed by four memh . of the CCF and one other member of the party. Alistair Stewart. Win- nipeg North. said he would ab- stain from voting. The Progressive Conservative and CCF parties have proposed want-of-confidence motions criticis- ing the government's legislative program. Under the rules of the House the Social Credit party is precluded from presenting a sim- ilar motion. SIX-POINT INDICTMENT The Progressive Conservative motion is a six-point indictment of g i '- goiernmeni policies. it charges the W? 'in " government has failed to act on "" P53 retention and expansion of over- gamnw seas markets, unemplo mun. tax "" relief. ending of governmentwaste and extravagance. unwuragement of natural resources industries and a federal-provincial contributory health insurance plan. H The CCF motion adds another charge that the government has returned deliberately to the de- presslon-time policy of uncontrol- led and unplanned private enter- prise. It says the government has "failed to undertake the economic planning necessary to cope with the serious problems now facing the Canadian people." TORONTO (CW)--Minimum and maximum temperatures: M 3 is I Dawson . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Vancouver Victoria 2a::a:s.:.:a. szsscsszcasasxnscs St. John's . . . . . . . . HALIFAX (CP)--The weather of- fice here says temperatures are seasonable. pressure is steady. and little change is expected today. Forecasts: Prince leward label and New I niaewl k Clo d with 9 Lucky Chance :llE'er'alI.t::vua.Ie '.a'a Ih!C:.Qo: r : change ampere. Ro"5.3 tare; light winds. Low-high at Charlottetown II and DI. Ioncten Mr. and Mrs. Albert Brunger of ;::.' nearby Louth were mused from ".4 3., 0.m,.,,'m.,. 1. Hi ” bed early Saturday by fire en- ggyoftm-idy: Light winds; vari- Pm" '"'""l"' Wu "Mr h9""- able cloudiness with a few light The apparatus was enmuto to s ,m0wmu.,,". "nmm, lo mu" cum” ll" ” P P” "Wt "ml lowering in inurrles to four miles; ey started to return to bed. . mok ., Mud "um" little enaagelutemperature. flames and discovered their home was on fire. three-room frame building , was destroyed la a few minutes. ST. CATHARINEB. Ont. iCP)-- nlst troops some back." Xuaa said. u..:"..:.--..::-.:- - - -- i .'