....--.. .._. ' Communist Q;-..' "“i‘:.fl_l' two """ nfouan‘ ____.______._________ Clilang Starts New Tenn: Urges Anti-Continunist Alliance PII0 Gt.-it Strong TAIPEH. Formosa. (APl—.PreI- ident Chiang Kai-shek. starting a new term. called for a strong Asian anti-Communist alliance. Chiang‘a inaugural address was delivered against a backdrop of air and sea clashes off the Red China coast and with the entire Nationalist air force on the alert for Communist air raids on For- rnosa. Chiang said all Asian nations. facing the Red threat “muat es- tablish on the Communist per- iphery a strong collective organ- isation capable of collective act- lcn." "No good viiil come out if uv =\'°ri0<‘k INN‘ I ha” "‘‘I‘“"‘ "The. level of activity is quite I!‘-EM If‘-d 1”" »""'5""l “'i”‘ “' uneven 'in the various regions. Un- Iulni an ""913" €"11°“l"* -"*““ employment in the industry. al- TMM belmlfi ~“mPiY ii” “"3*"‘ though decreasing. is still appre- Vi €°“9°‘i"" 5”‘“"'>’i" "" "“d’~"- ciable and new undertakings are Chiang maintained that h.; slow m ‘cum: smrwd... forces could reconquer the main- He mid nwnns needfid Assurance “‘"'T H “i"'“ "" ”“""’‘N'' that construction costs would re- arnmint of moral and material support from the free world and an adequate iiupply of the ini- pi-i-ments of mar." Chitin): declared "we have onl,/ one enemy Soviet Riissia." and called Mao 'l’7e-lung and other leaders of lied (‘liina “traiiors" For the first time in more than a. week. there were no reports of air or sea action betiieen the Na- tionalists and Chinese Commu- nists off the Chekzaniz Pi'fl\'ln(‘t’ coast. more than 200 miles north of Formosa. FORBSTALL ATTACK ' Defence ministry sources said the increased action against the Reds was designed to forestall any itttempt to seize the Tachen islands, northern outpost 220 miles north of Formosa. They expressed belief that Na- tionalist attacks of the last week, during which they claimed to have sunk two small Red warships. might have a discouraging effect on Red plans for an attack on the Tachens. The Tachens are a strongly gar- risoned base for mainland raids. a loolcmit post, 9. point for under- ground traffic and a possible stag- ing area for any future Nationalist attack on Red China. Their loss. while not fatal to Formosa_ might spark the dormant civil war into something very much alive. Three Coiii-milled For Mail Thefts M(’)NTREAl.. LiTPi— Tliive fi- tiiwa men WM! committed foi trial Thursday on charges ii’ stealing tvio bags of mail. IipI‘.'i~ lng the mail and keeping it in their DOSSPSHKIH. The three ivrie iiliiiiiimil .1- l.awre,nce Lavinlr-tic. J0; \'almoi- Germain. 37, and liainlri Rodgcr 33. Roger Chapleaii. moil-ir\ic.‘it driver, fr-siifieil the bags ivorc llolen from his iiuik May ill whil he \\7l! en route to Dorvai airport. 'l.|eiit. F‘.nii|e Cont:-int of tho proxincini police saitl the men were arrestod near Ste. Rosc- when a routine check on auto- rnohiles revealed the mail bag.-', one slit open, in iher car. To CallTAriny~ Secretary When Hearings Resume By ED (‘REACH WASHINGTON. iAPi — Senate investigators agreed Thursday to call Army Secretary Robert Stev- ens back to the witness stand when the McCarthy-Army hear- lngs resume next. Monday. Senator Karl Miindt iRep. SD.» acting chairman of the invt.~st.iga- lions sub-committee, said Steven.- wlli be invited to repeat under oath his statement that the arm: -—and not administrations higher- tipa—had fiili responsibility foi actions that led to its clash with senator Joseph McCarthy (Rep- Wis.» Mundi. told reporters he still ha.- no indication what course Mr- Certhy will take when the bear- ings. recessed since last Monday resume. The actiniz chairman said h talked with McCarthy this morti- lng about arrangements for re- luming the inquiry.nnd quoted thr Wisconsin senator as saying. "STACKED DECK" "We still have not made up oui minds what to do." Mccarthy contends an order by President Eisenhower, forbidding army witnesses to testify about talks they may have had with Whit; House and other officials in the executive branch. confront: him with I "stacked deck". He says he can't present his fui: one so long as this order stands And liaenhowar, while calling for a raltimption of the hearings. has refused to withdraw or modify tht drdar. ldundl eeld Itavene will be re- called to lutlfy on one matter o|ly—tha question of ruponeibii- Ivy ft the army's charge that Mc- Carthy and aides sought by im- mcane to get fsvored treat» meat. for a former aub-committee aide, Pro. 0. David Bchine Mundt said he looked for the army to wind up its case. and 3170 thd Ilddaflhy eide its turn acme time but week. He said than was general agreement a’. Wddlflfllyl III!-committee meet- ln that tho hllringe can and in ii." p can) charges the bed Iehlne as a "hostage" E (I236 to chat at an in- ¢~ allfll Oluinimiet -I he ar-7. aaftInplCI-a-—-k- mmi of fit’ . INMTN W . of constriiction in 1954 "have not ueadao. my u. use """‘ Contracts For Construction Down WINDSOR. 0ut.. iCP)--Raymond Brunet of Hull; Que.. president of the Canadian Construction Associa- tion. said Thursday the number of construction contracts awarded so far this year is 16 per cent below that for the same period of 1053. Federal government predictions that there will be a heavy volume as yet materialized," he said. main stable and in line. “Given these assurances. the in- dustry feels that a high level of construction work and employment may be expected in 1954 and 1955." Extend Controls Over Movement Of Goods in Bulk OTTAWA, iCPl——Legislation to extend federal control involving the rail and ship movement oi good.- in bulk for further two-year period was approved Wednesday by the Commons despite opposition pro- tests that the powers are too Wldf‘. Members gave third reading to the legislation which adds a nev; section to the Department 0. Transport Act and replaces ati order-in-council passed under the Emergency Powers Act. It was iii- troduced because the government plans to permit emergency powers to expire May 3i. Transport Minister Clievrier said the powers contained in the leg}:- iation are necessary to ensure Ill" movement oi’ biiik commnditics such as grain to meet. export ic- quirements. It gives federal trans- port controller Roy Milner author- ity over the movement of grain and grain products. ores and min- erals, ferroiis metals. iron and siiicl scrap. sand. stone and gravel. pulp- noocl. nooclpulp. poles and logs, coal and coke and sulphur and phos- phate. Opposition ineinbcrs agreed that ‘he lranspnii controller should have authority over the movement of grain for rixport iiowever. ihcy quertioned whether it was neces- rarv for the controller to have D‘\\\'Pi' involving the movement of other bulk commodities. Tiade .\iinister Howe. said lhc controller could not concentrate on the movement oi wheat without re- gard to the movement of other bulk products. All commodities moving in bulk used the same type of rail and ship transport. Victoria Lady Leads Home-School Group SASKATOON. (CPl- Mrs. Et_'n— est Evans of Victoria was elect- fil President of the Canadian Home and School Parent-Teach:-r Federation Incorporated Thursday the annual convention. Mrs. J. D. Taylor of Hamilton i-as chosen to fill the new posi- 'lon of executive vico-president. 2 H. H. Simpson of Sydnr-y. NS. iias alerted eastern \'ice-pres‘- rlent. EASILY SPOTTED OXFORD. England. «CPI.-A man lust. back from Arabia was fined for not having a proper licence plate on his car. I-its plates were nation This scene, from the hills near $23,000,000 Causeway Nears Mulgrave on Nova Scotia'a Cdnso ciiiiseway stretching towards (‘one Breton Isliintl. this )t"r'Il‘, \\ill inipi'ove transportation liciwecn the mainland and Cars and train<, \\iil('li now take nn hour to cross the Strait of (‘rinse by ferry, across the T.i'l0O-foot caiiseuay in a fciv iiiiniilt-S. i'llpll'l(' .\‘lounia:n ncar .\1\ilgrn\'e. uill have gone into the caii.<ei\.'iy by lock on tho Ciiiic Brritnn Sill!‘ \\.ll alloiv }\t“l~"‘-i’l.Zt‘ for *llll"- ‘(i eastern The $‘..'.'l.000.000 i'nusewa_\', Ciipe Br(~ion's .\lore than Sl.(l0(i.ii0(l tons of rock. blasted from Por- shoivs the new when completed coal and steel area. will be able to move mainland. the time it is finished. A navi- l' Photo). By FRANK CAREY ATLANTIC CITY, N J., tAl"l—— Significaiice of the ability of TB gernia to learn to “roll with the punches" oi anti-tuberculosis won- der drugs has been ovcr—rated, new stildy conducted for the us =i public health stzrvice revealed Thursday. Rt-suits of the study, involving almost 600 patienu from five oi 22 participating hospitals tliroughoiit ilie country. point "fairly clearly to the coiiclusioii that bacterial rcsisiance has both causing us doc- 'ors greater concern than it mer- its." declared Dr. Sumner S. Coh- cn_ director of Glen Lake Sana- iorium_ Oak Terrace, Minn., one oi the participating institutions. His report-perhaps the most enroiiraginz yet made on a subject that has worried doctors eversince “fiP(‘!lVE drug treatments for TB first started to become available a decade ago—was made at the 50th anniversary meeting of the Na- tional Tuberculosis Association. At the opening oi that meeting last. Monday. a British doctor, J.i-f Harley Williams of London, had spoken of the "amazing power" of germs striiins—and he declared druizs. Dr. Cohcn declared can develop such resistance to all three oi the best druizs~isonia7.‘.d streptomycin and pas»bui. he dc. the mos! part. only in TE cases oi long duration and far-advanced lung damage. And these long-tlur.'iiion, far-ad. vauced cases represent a type ivherein present-da_v dl'uil treat. merit could sometimes be “ex- pected" to be least effective. hc added. Moreover, Cohen said, the nevi study have hill‘iE‘.’t0 been assuming that failure to the presence of drug-reslstaiii germs. Rather than any such in Arabic. to develop drug-resistant "the gcrnis are catching up" on the T3 the new study had confirmed that the bugs clared evidence oi persistence of such resisiaiit bugs showed up. for indicates that some doctors incorrect in of such c:\ses to improve was directly duc cause- and-effect relationship. be sriid.tht- Declares Tuberculosis Germ's Ability To Withstand Drugs Is Overrated Camp Gagetown Being Prepared For 4,000 Men CAMP GAGETOWN. N. B. tCPi The army worked swiftly Wednes- day to complete the conversion of 427 square miles oi south-central New Brunswick farmland into ti gigantic proving ground for troops and weapons. Four hundred engineers and service corps personnel siockpiletl stores and c 1 e a r e d cabbage patches to be used as tent sites for 4,000 men of the Iircl infantry brigade who move into this incom- pleted training centre June 15 for a month of stiff manouvrcs. Maj.-Gen. E. C. Plow, the army's Eastern Command chief. inspected the units already here Tiicsday and said aftcr\v:ird thc spadework is on schcdulc. Camp Gagetown will cost Canadian tax- payers $l.'i.000,000 ii year but the army says the expenditure will give troops vitally ncedcd I"Xp(‘l‘- icnce in major formations which it can't get elscivhere. The camp also is big cnuiigh to permit the testing of long-range weapons like heavy artillery. The first units to be trained here will live. under "active serv- ice" conditions. That‘: army lang- uage for tents. Camp Gage-town eventually will have year-round i'acilitie.ii'for 5.- 000 troops and. Defence Minister Brooke Claxton said last month. “many more" during scrisonal training. The base will he finished by late 1954 or early 195.’). The civilian population, mostly farmers. had to be moved out of the district to make way for the army. The gnvcrnmcnt C(inl)l(‘ilSi'l« lcd property owners for the loss of their lnncls. U. 8. Living Costs Down In April WASHINGTON. i/\Pl— The gov- crumcnt reported today U. 5. living costs declined slightly in April. Tlie drop. the third in three months was almost entirely due to lowrr federal excise taxes effective April 1 The decline means a penny-an- lmur pay cut for about l.250,000 workers in the auto. aircraft and farm equipment industriu whose pay rates are geared by union cou- irncis to the governing living-cost indrx. The Bureau of Labor statistic.‘- reported its index declined two tenths of one per cent. from mid- March to niid-April. lowering the index to ll4.it per cent of the 1941- 49 average, British Concerned Over Canadian Textiles Inquiry LEEDS. England. (CP> — The Yorkshire Post says today in a front-page news story that wool and worsted manufacturers are con- cerned b_v it tariff board inquiry ordi-red by the Canadian govern- meiit. The story refers to "an unex- pected tlircat. to Biit.ain's mmt valuable ovcrsens market for wool textiles" and says that the inquiry may load to higher duties on Brit- ish wonls and worsted cloths. The inquiry was ordered to de- termine the effect of a preferential _ in back gardt-ns. Near an old covered bridge there is a sign reading: "Caution. cattle crossing" but. there isn't a cow for miles. Churches and graveyards have been ruled out of bounds. Vficllow-and-black army directio- nal signs stand at the side of nar- row. muddy roads. A lot remains to be done. Tlic service corps currently is hniisiiin its jeeps and 15-liiindredvvcight trucks in the cow stalls til barns. The engineers unpacked drafting boards and typc\vritc.rs in farm- new siudyqpoints merely to no '.iouse front rooms whose walls association“ of those. two ‘condi- still sport floivercd wallpriper and tions” in a. particular kind of 1953 calendars. Neglected black- case. bcrry bushcs and radishea flourish The signal corps is stringing miles of now telephone lines and '1n\\'(‘l‘ cnbica over the fields and for the Atlantic region of of experience with the system. cats and W5’-I1 whom this itruich duls. He has worked in the trmuapartetion de- partmuit of the railwaylt M IP90‘ k to the general passenger agent. and as chief clerk in the tourist and wit antion Bureau." Mr. Hardman. who was born in London. England. on May 11. 1904. ial cler llew Aral tleiit Marie er Atlantic Region or c it it MONOION. May no — Mr. I. 0- champ. traffic manager. National Railwayl. that Mr. H. V. 1-Iardman has been named to succeed Mr. W. L. Lowther as general mail and baggage aunt the Can- adian Nationai Railways. “Mr. Hardman brings 80 NI-VI railway to this specialized branch of our ser- vice". said Mr. champ. “Re hi! served 21 you in the seam! mm and baggage department of the and not only has a thorough C knowledge of the functions of that department. But, also. has earned the esteem and confidence of the travelling public. commercial inter- autburlties with will take up his new duties on June 1. Mr. the pension regulations of the railway. Born at Gt. Shemoguc. Westmorland County. N. B. on May 3. 1889, he has been with the railway since September 1908 when he joined the passenger depart- ment here as a clerk. He has serv- ed as travelling passenger agent at Moncton and Halifax, as City . tariff on British woolena on the Canadian textile indu.str,v. The ex- to which the Cana- dian industry has objected, was set Agreement on isting tariff, by the General Tariffs and Trade. Britain exported £l3.100.000 worth of wooiens and woi'sted—or 23 prr Canada last cent of its total-to year. Canadian today announced Lowther is retiring under I Flitelille COIIPIHYT’ Action Dismissed OTTAWA. (OP) —'1‘ha supreme Oourt of Canada Wednesday dis- missed a $062,141 action brought by Campbell - Bennett Ltd. of Vancouver against 'n-ans - Moun- tain Pipe Line Company. The supreme Court ruling on an important constitutional question. upheld the rulings of the British Columbia. Oourt of Appeal and the county court of Yale. B. O. 'rran.s-Mountain contracted with Cornstock Midwestern Ltd. for con- struction of certain portions of its Edmonton-Vancouver oil pipe line. ,“ ‘l-Bennett Ltd. agreed to undertake. on behalf of Comstock Midwestern. the clearlnl. drubbing and grading of construction right- of-wsy for certain portions of the line. Campbell-Bennett siaimed that because of changes in locations of certain sections. their costs of grubbing and grading were con- siderably increased. It claimed $862.14’! from 'I\”&ns-Mountain or. in default of payment, sale of the pipe line and right-of-way to pay the claim. ticket agent and port ticket agent at Halifax. and as chief clerk in the passenger department of those cities. He was named general agent in the passenger department at Monclon in 1947. and appoint- ed general mail and baggage agent here in 1950. ExrEssi\ii:_iriai;i"n"aV1'ioN BELIZE. British Honduras fCPi Artist Eric Griffith was sentenced today to l5 years imprisonment ation in paint a fire." The fire last October killed one man and destroyed It store and a private house. shoe C--.“ - .. White Mien to 8'2‘ Fjamed Shangi-LL. A. J. Lewis. Aldershot, is one of the missionaries have become the first white men to locate and set up residence 1.. (lat, Wha the remote New Guinea of "Shantgri-La." A missionary pilot. Lewis. flew a party or 9;, plorcr-missionaries to the B3191,“ river viilley where fierce ivan-in, natives live in stone-age cl‘-,i,la_ tion. It is a lush. tropical pl", cut off by mountains where ht," pigs live in houses with tribal women and children. where mm paint ihcir bodies. engage in ,i_ most constant warfare yet mph v:ite a rich agricultural pm, with methods so advanced as 1, startle explorers. valley for starting a $l.000.000 blaze be- cause he said he needed inapir-i Members of a national Lngllnl club “magnificent ‘ '. petitions. N0 SPYING GUNTHORPE. England top) ,_ decided binoculars should be banned in this year's fishing com. Previously some mg)", used field glasses to detect bit“ along the roads. Troops are filling in post holes and levelling plowed fitrriiivs. The medical corps‘ 4th field am- bulance unit has planted its reg» imi-niai flag in the front yard of .-t farmlioiisn. I I T I \ \ I I I I I trot’! Moat siiccessfiil growers ness. but only growth and vines. cause they actual rid»-by-sirle tests. how keeps fields blight-free and crease: yields. produced crops treated with These facts are important ported before! (fun you afford to risk It year’! crop by using an untried fungicide for blight con- tttai's why they're using DITHANE. Many claims are made about fungicidal effective- DITHANE offers proof of safe. sure blight controi~protection for top Year after year successful potato grow- ers turn to DITHANE to fight blight be- have aeen for themselves. in grower demonstrations- DITHANE-protected fields consistently out- terlals by an average of (O bushels per acre. with more No 1's in every bushel. cause the wrong choice of a fungicide t-In mean the loss of an entire crop. with DITHANIZ in your rig you're aura of adequate protection from blighh 0 | Testod—Approved I: —Accepted by :7’ Sifhlin River_VaIIey. Growers ,' I I I \..__--e--—--nus--a-' Here. are just a ' DITHANE stops Il.V M - --keeps clean it more it‘: easy !pTfi)'. in DTTHANE »And your equi ectuellv Ina DITHANE will Rlfl\Fl'f1hOl', other ma- " W" b!‘ for iziiriuim.-2. es mi, Mp. been doing for yea HAAS DITHANE. DITHANE promotes won't burn or stunt vines and foliage. spray or dusting rlgl. these claims. because DITHANE has been proven" as best against blight. Prove it to yourself. fection for your crop. There’! only one DITHANE---ROHM Q few reasons why: blight hefore it starts aids clean and halts blight in infected fields even though it has riiincked the crop. On a yield-per-acre. basin, DITHANFZ la an economical fungicide to use. What .1 when Potato Blight is here . . .don’tiake chances DEPEND ON D 5‘---“—a-—n—Il—‘_--5 _mioitm to use as a dust or healthy growth — aa fe hecaiise. pment is corrode not clog or are feeds . . . not "field- COH PAIY or ¢atIaea.‘i.vI. toeotito t. can to, causes‘ Aiik your dealer your neighbors have re. You'll get sure pm) Re" Off. DITHANE is a trademark. Canada and U. 3. Pat. and in principal foreign countries. amillion to make those better gacolinec. We buy th ings from Q dollars W pleace Imperial’; chopping bill is more than‘ I million a week . ...+hat’c what we spend in Canada just for everyday . , -~ ~. ' ‘ need.C..It doesn't include crude oil,which alone runs to‘4.'/2 million a week.’ Nor does it include wageccalariec or taxes. What do we buy? Everything ...tiom soup , . _(to feed geological parties) ‘ ...to nuts (to fitafew . million bolts) derrick: A dynamite”-‘fig-“'1 and diesel; and even catalytic cracking units: (“cat cracl<ers"they’re called) 6.000 Canadian firm: from coast to coast. Shopping on this scale create; a lot ii‘. W ofworié for a lot oi-‘people... " right acrocs Canada. 1 ‘'’.¢''“ 5’.