1'El.E'PI-IONE ssos Buyer meets dlan Want seller with Guan- Ads. Dial 8506 ask for classified ad taker, for ' quick results. 18 PAGES France Orders Strict Patrol Off North America PARIS (Reuters)-France has recalled its ambassador from Egypt and ordered a strict naval patrol off the coast of North Africa to prevent gun-i nning to Algerian nationalists. The steps were announced by Premier Guy Mollet Tuesday as a protest against Egypt's aiieltd connection with a shipment of arms destined for the Algerian. re- bels which the French Navy seized off Oran last week. Mollet also said the cabinet had arms shipment to the United Na- decided to take the case of the tlons Security Council. Addressing the National AI- sembly during debate on a confi-' dence motion involving govern- ment policies ,on sues. North Africa and economic social mat- ters. ltlollet said the reason he has . alied the French snibaal-Idof was that Egypt has failed to (We will If!!! ..".........f ” li.t;;”i''”it..i...'i'l”” :32? re France. and Egypt. other oificials of the French Embassy will pro main in Cairo. FREEDOM son ALGERIA Mullet, winding up the five-dl! debate . said "We desire Ill? iiii dependan and freedom 0 I human bgiengs in Algeria . . . and I am convinced that one day P0?- haps not far off this policy will ginumph over ianaticisni and vio- Bcuat. he stressed. "whatever nap- in. France will remain present merlng hroue frui the .."'”"i”'..-:.'”. ":1" "' 55.?-32 is gy over Ca.rl. He depicted I2 I30: ier) but whose ambitions are none the less dangerous." . Rain Ends Forest Fire Threat In N.I.. CHAT!-IAM. N.l!. (cm. lists M” ”'”'......'t.” L::::'....."-- gar res asoremt.han too acne of mixed timber in Northuniberlasd Count! since . Thr . ll the wellfisid area. covered shun 00 acres. other outbreaks occur- tsdatbei-hy.ilaie8teA Id KM". nose A GROUP of high ranking li.C. A.F. officers is addressing Univer- sity students in the Atlantic Prov- inces this week including St. Dun- stan's today. as part of the over- all vlsit of twenty officers to 25 Group Capt. C.G.W. Chapman. D.S.0. Commanding officer of RCAF Station Greenwood, NS. will address the student body of st. Dunstan's University at a meeting there at ll:i5 o'clock this morning. In an interview last evening G.C. Chapman touching on the subject matter of his visit said that since the beginning of the lt.C.A.l". in the 1020's, "We have looked to University graduates to provide the largest part of our officer com- plement, particularly for executive command and technical positions. Due to the great increase in the complexity of modern military avla ur need for graduates I I is greater than ever WWW. .. "Students will be informed of the opporlun ties available to them in the RC following graduation and the asaistannce that the two trainin plans can rovidefortheir ediics ". 0.0. Chapman said." This year we hope to make the non-engineer. as well as the en- gineering graduate, aware of the many opportunities available to him within the RCAF." Touching on defence. G.C. Chap- i Canadian Universities. Headquarters St. Hubert. will also sddrus the .students The Seated A.V. Brons- combe, Group Capt. C.G.W. Chap- man. D.S.0. F-L SM. Mclnnis who met the group. Standing F-L R.K. Wilson. F-0 J.R. Sutherland. F-L R.G. Harvey, F-L .l.B. Randall. lefi- Wing Cmdr. RCAF Will Tell Students Of Air Defence Plans And Needs man said "The Canada-U.S. region is an integral part of the North Atlantic Treaty area and what is being done here has a direct bear- ing on the defensive strength of the Alliance as a whole". RCAF SHARE "National Defence is big busi- ness. when we consider that 81,750 million was spent by Can- ada in the program of 1955 and of this amount 3705 million was devoted to the requirements of the RCAF", G.C. Chapman said. Wing Commander A.E. Brann- combe. Air Defence Command P.Q.. O situation contrasting the students we are meeting is twenty-live Un- Canada is a challenge". he said. The RCAF party on tour here arrived yesterday from Wolfviile, 11.8. where the students at Acadia University heard other speakers. They leave today for An lsh N.B. to speak at st. Francis avier University to night. LONDON (AP)-Foreign Secre- taf! Selwvn Lloyd dropped I head hint Tuesday th1tuB'r.i.tain might ccept corn rorn e- meat of the Bass digpute provided the IntO;e.:IIb;)fEtlIGl' nations are Son (fterwards French Foreign for a sudden and unannounced e in hidden Tueadl! nihg-iit.with I..loydootiieSusssitua- t . Prime Minister Eden and Lloyd made a similar hurried flight to Paris oniylast week in order to agree next steps in the te. Llwd made it clear in the ones of Cuninons that the goverarnent JOYOUS. POLES DEMONSTRATE 917'-".d zwssasw 'i”' A on- IIB IIIIIIIIU Christian Pinean took off 11 U. K. Compromise On Suez Hinied does not maintain that interna- tional management of the water- way is the "only method" of pro- glcting the interests of user coun- es. since the regime of Egyptian Pruident Gemsl Abdel Nasser took over the canal July !. Brit- backed by France- haa ended that Sues should be fatal out of the "unfettered con- trol" of one power and be placed instead under international man- agemeat. The issue arose Tuesday during a discussion of the Suez situation iversities and colleges throughout HUI "Covers Prince WN. Potato Shipments At Hartland Down HARTLAND, N.B. (CPI -Rail shipments of potatoes from Hart- land so far this season show a sharp decrease. shlppefs said Tuesday. The total during Scptem her and October to date was 65 carloads. compared with 150 in the Luireapondlng period last year Hartland shipping figures are regarded as indicative of trends throughout the New Brunswick potato belt. i Wife, Himself Edward Island Like The Dew" CANADA. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1956 lldlt 200 VOLUNTEERS BATTLE THROUGH NIGHT Rescue Workers Aband Hope For 7 Trapped M Husband Shoots TORONTO (CPI M A hughand shot his wife and then put, . bullet into his own brain in guburbgn North York Tuesday. James Middleton, 28. died six hours later in hospital. His wife. 10811. 25. was killed instantly. The couple. separated for seven weeks, had four children. The slaying and suicide oc- curred It 9:05 n.m after a coffee session in Mrs. Middleton's kitcheni attended by two women neighbors. Police.sa'id Middleton. armed with a-.22-calibre rifle. apparently utered the house through a side door and hid in the living room while the women drank coffee. When the visitors were leaving. he stepped out and after a brief argument, pumped two bullets into his wife. Then he turned the gun on him- self. GRSUENTHER TO VISIT OTTAWA (CF)-Gen. Alfred M. Gruenther, retiring supreme com- mander. Allied Powers Europe, will pay a brief farewell visit to Ottawa Nov. 22 at the invitation of the Canadian government, the defence department announced Tuesday. ALGIERS (AP)--Killings, riots. general strikes and Arab I380? erupted across North irica Tues- x t. Three Fre n were killed in clash at eknes in Morocco. demonstrations broke out in Tunisia and Morocco. A 24-hour eral strike was declared in those former French protec- toratea and started to spread in Algeria. French security forces is Algeria b d themselves for vio- lent reprisala The whole raising a diplomatic storm. PEACE TALKS END The 2!-nation Asian - African groupattheUNinNewYtl'k was reported asking secretary- Gescrsl Dag liarrunarsklolifl good offices in seeking release of the five revolutionaries. alter their French pilot landed them in French-controlled Algiers instead of independent Tunis on s Arab Anger In Africa Erupts ' Arab world began - A meeting of Morocco's Sultan sldi Mohammad hen Youssef and BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP)- Tcns of thousands of demonstrat ing Hungarians pushed into Stalin Square Tuesday night shouting ”Ruskies (Russians) go home"l and "Down with Geroe." Hung ary's Communist party chief Secret police fired shots into a crowd near Budapcst's broadcast- ing station. Ono eyewitness said one man was killed. Thousands of students and work- ers took part in demonstrations during the afternoon. crying "Out with the Russians" and "We want a change in the government." By night the crowd grew into an unruly group numbering prob- ably 100.000. Following up afternoon demands that the statue of Stalin be re- moved from the square because it was a symbol of tyranny. the crowd moved into Stalin Square. STATUE STILL STANDS Young workers. who had marched in the Afternoon demon- stration in oil - stained overalls. brought trucks with mounted winches. Youths scaled the statue on ropes and fastened cables in its neck. But their work was amateur- ish. The cable snapped several times. Then they brought acetylene torches. The colossal statue TRY TO PULL DOWN STATUE OF STALIN Demonstrating Hungarians Shout "Russians Go Home" workers were still trying Tuesday night to bring it down. Radio Budapest, in a broadcast heard in Vienna. said that former premier lmre Nagy, whose restor- ation fhe demonstrators are de- manding, talked to them and later confered with their leaders and several parliament I embers. It gave no other details. Attempts to establish telephone contact between Vienna and Bud- apest Hwerc blocked by an an- nouncement from the Budapest telephone office to the Vienna long distance office that ”we cannnot connect you to any Budapest num- bers because repairs are being made on equipment." It said the repairs may go on all night. LOCAL NEWS BLACKOUT On its final newscast at mid- night, which usually includes dom- Ban Meetings, Demonstrations VIENNA (Reuters) m The Hun- garlau government today banned all meetings and demonstration: for the time being because of "the action of reactionary elements in the form of attacks on our public buildings and the police." Buda- swayed but did not fall and the pest radio announced in its first transmission early today. WEATHER Rain ending in th warm; e afternoon; southeast winds 25 shifting to west 20. Low-high 55 and 65. esfic news. the Budapest radio broadcast only foreign news dia- patches. This indicated a local blackout on Budapest events. The US. embassy in Vienna said it was unable to contact the U.S. iegaiion in Budapest by tele- phone. The crowd tried unsuccessfully to pull down a 26-foot statue of Stalin. then managed to haul down a huge red star on top of a trade union building facing the statue. Their demonstration came after Ernoe Gt-roe, successor to Maiyas Rakosi as chief of the Hungarian Communist Party. made a sur- prise broadcast calling lies any rumors that Hungary wants to loosen its ties with the Soviet Union. Geroe had just returned from talks with President Tito in Yu- goslavia where the parties of the two nations pledged non-interfer- ence in each others internal af- fairs. SOLDIERS FRATERNIZE Police were not visible near the square but five trucks of soldiers who rushed to the area around the broadcast station fraternized with the demonstrators. A celegaiion of demonstrators got into the radio station and was prevented from leaving. The crowd began to surge to the rescue. Uni- formed police used tear gas bombs to eject them. Premier iiebih Bourguiba of Tn- .'-1 '- ' He said he could not accept open Tunisian and Moroccan interfer- uca in -Alxiaa ailatrs. CLASI WITII -raooivs Angry demonstrators in Tunis clashed with make police and troops whu they attempted to march on govaralnnt btI&ilgI and the French Embassy. Four French cars were burned near the embassy. Troops turned fire hoses night from independent Morocco. oniliecrowdstoh-aakthemiip. Celebrate 50th CHARLOTTETOWN ' October Hh has been selected as the data for the Prince Edward island Ae- aociatloii to mark the fiftieth an- in the resumed session of Parlia- merit. G-ornuika Restores Friend aiversary of its national organi- hitch- life UnderwritersAss'n'. To P" asgryguniveniiy etudenta tossed QUEBEC (CPI -- Hundreds of s3. and at the Qinbec legislature buildings Tues- day after being dened an immedi- ate interview with Premier Du- plesais. The students. mainly from La- vai University and estimated at i.IIl strong. miilied around the leg- iallture building chanting "We want Duplessia" in French as they eiaaged kitchen pots and set off ls-eerachers. They refused to break up im- mediately after lldebert liuard, president-of the general associa- tia of Laval students. told them Hunter Dupiessis had agreed to meet a delegation of 12 students later to discuss increased provin- dal grants to universities. POLICE STAND BY Anniversary satioa. Life Unh-writers As- "No. no. we want a hearing to lessis Avoids Hearing tossi, coins at them. at the broke up-. sma students through the streets. City police, on the alert all day Chief Roger Lemire. tag. The demonstration started in Quebec universities. Mr. return in the afternoon. said. he received assurances that; the student group would be rej ceived at a later date by Mr. Du-' plessis. day." they shouted. Some ioo provincial police con- lahles barring the entrance to tho legislature. made no attempt to break up the demonstration. iature grounds Mr. them to disperse. He no the rea- gova-nment set to Roman Catho- PUIPOSE MISUNDIRSTOOD As the millinil. placard-waving crowd re-assembled on the legis- Huard told even when the students began son the delegation was not re lic humns. Heavy Adding To PRICE scf on en Rain Difficulties VARENNES. Que. (CF) -- Two bodies were unearthed at the bot- tom of a sewer excavation Tues- day night and rescue workers abandoned hope that any of the seven men trapped in the ditch survived the crush of tons ol stil- ing clay. The men were trapped Tuesday afternoon when timbers shoring, the walls of the some: deep es-I cavation gave way. Rescue work-i ers dug desperately through the night in the hope that some of the men mightbe alive at the bottom of the ditch. But after discovery of the bodies, all but the most optirn abandoned hope that any of the other men might be alive. ENCASED IN CLAY Rescue workers said the men found were so firmly encased in the wet blue clay that it was im possible to lift them from the ditch and it would probably be- several hours belore the bodies, are freed. I one of the men was in an up- right position. apparently trsppedl standing when the tons of clayl pushed in from both sides of the excava run. The s e c o n d was digiitly bent over. A driving rain. which impeded work of the rescue crews, let up shortly before ll p.m. and the vol- unteers gwere expected to continue digging throughout the night. Eight men were in the bottom at the ditch when the walls caved in. Georges Ferland, the head of a four-man pipefitting crew, clawed his way up the bank to safety Is - the clay crushed in. Hundreds of curiosity seekers. from f g H nig. Early Tuesday night. after the government was not clear on just i t ' tune what the students wanted. u bands o too up He said the demonstration had more youths--many of them not been wandered ahnles-sly not directed and acting under direct orders of group rallied at the legislature in followed support of a resolution of the stu- the wandering groups to prevent dent associaion Monday night de- trouble and to keep traffic mov- mending increased provincial aid the mornng, and when Mr. Du- ing in do with federal grants to plessis refused to see the it-man universities which Quebec inatitu- Pisments Ltd.. plant to the rivu. group representing Montreal and tions have turned down for five MON "III! I Quarter-mile of Pi” liuard years and which Mr. Dupiessis op- lil'9Id.V llld been llid Ind 006'- aaked the students todisperse and poses on the grounds that they 3&1 During the interim. Mr. Hoard! eial rights in education. din-ing the more than zoo cars listed a side road leading to the scene other cars were parked in in fields. Many became stuck in sticky clay as the rain po ccived' was because the Quebec "misinterpreted" and was ”against provincial down. .uS'lp"e)f:'lfl:llv the Laval student "1", IN OXYGEN 1 i Oxygen was being pumped L through the sewer pipe in the faint hope that someone might still be alilvhe in the rubble. to i it! . e men were completing the H:ns:eill'tb:Kresoiution had noui- III! notion of I never pin lead- ing from the Canadian Titanium! no names of the trapped man. believed to be from Montreal. Students left ciauea shortly Weft not ' ' ' mmedilillyc after 9 am. to rally on the legis- since their families had not been lature grounds. A few girl students notified. Other Work”! On the PN- joined the youths waving card- iect also were worried about their board placards inscribed with dol- families as they dug in a drama lar signs and slogans. l-it FICG llainst time to readh They sang songs with words their trapped t-'0'lIiJIlIl0tIl- - about Premer Duplessia and his "I haven't even had a chanceitev tell my own famly I'm safe."- -id one. constitute a violation of provin- sociationofcasadmaccordiqto an anaouaeesnenthybir Li: I Rcy Gallant. oi smiriu-Que. Association's Predm. The island life underwriters will .. m'&t l