g. .-I;-.3.-n-31.. ' 12 PAGES he Q5MI&tJ&i&M "Covers Prince Edward Island Like 77!: Dew” WN CANADA. MONDAY, JULY 15. 19s7T Carl Glerum. left. 85. of Hono- lulu, owner of a 72-foot trawler which went aground in fog early today. struggles to reach shore rd cw I FOR i aher despairing of refloating the craft. Waiting at right for an air mattress containing the ship's pap- ers is a member of the crew. Sylvlo Martin. of Santa Barbara. who swam ashore earlier with two other crewman. (AP Wlrephoto) Warns US Trade Practices irritate Canadian People SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-Lester 3. Pearson. former Canadian Min- ister of external affairs. said Sat- urday night "any further restric- tions on Canadian exports to the United States would make furt.ber defence cooperation more dif- flcult." In a speech to the American Society of Newspaper ltors con- vention. Pearson sai Canadians are "Irritated" both by United states barriers to Canadian goods and by the dumping abroad of U.S. farm surpluss which catn- pete with Canadian mu ' Pearson said whept psodueed a ar greater- ””."':."'.”.m'i".":.i "'.....”: " t . . a s a. significant. fact that any further- restrictlona . . . would make Mr- S::.:..:''"''.:' ..'::."'""" "" t." . Surplus wheat sold or given away abroad impinges on Can- "”" '"."::la"".l3'tt WILL "if we lose them-or a large sraliy will suffer." said Pearson. a Liberal member of Parliament. The Progressive Conservative party recently took power in Can- ada after an election campaign in which the winners placed great emphasis on trade. "I know that those in Washing- ton who are directing agricultural policies are doing their best. with- in the legislation under which they operate." Pearson declared. Can- ada could not afford "to match your new sales methods. give- aways. easy or tied credits. and of local currencies." Unless Canada could incense exports to the U.S.. she "obviously wnlhvetatakammskindofre medial action." "You will understand. therefore. our irritation and worry when our efforts to bring about such an in- crease meet demands here for fur- ther tariff protection against Canadian imports. already so much less than your own exports to Csnada." With a present total of l0.l0.- ooo.ooo invested in Canada. Pear- son asserted. "the United States now has a great stake. in terms of money alone. in is northern neighbor." Tfeid'-gen Man The death occurred suddenly. at the County Memorial Hospital. following an accident of Aeneas Patrick Mcdillivary. Car- digan. in his tl year. The late Mr. Mctlilllvrsy. was found in a selll - conscious condi- ioa early Friday mornlnl. by Asa- aas Morrison near the village of Are Promised New Efforts To Find Lasting Coal Markets HALIFAX (CP)-Bow Illlla to flililfiiigii ' l:li'5; ilfi afford to re-open No. t. "The mine is. . .In some areas in great disrepair. To fix it would coat a great deal of money. money the company just doesn't have.” During the morning conference. l is 1.7: T! 9731;: Being Found On Highway C Diesillfih? W" ' E Mr. Meaillivray had (the former Violet Mcbaarlnid also four children. . Shirley. and Patrick. ranging ta sgefromoneandahalfyearate meet at he Canadian ltooms. at 8:!) pm. Thursday. July llth. The Jurors are: Douglas Mc- Gowan. (foreman); Arnold Wight- man, Alan Nelson. Kenneth Cle- ments. George Nicholson. John Shaw and Neil Hooley. Problem Of Saving N. S. Coal Industry HALIFAX tCP)-What can be i llill? sill??? lllslsll yl First Federal By-election Is To Be Today GUELPH. Ont. (CP)-A ridinl thathaavutedlslheraiinlbofzl previous elections votes Monday in a contest that holds national interest because of the close party standing in the House of Com- lnons. The voters of Wellington South name their membe late because of the death during the campaign forthe June 10 federal election of Liberal candidate Henry Hosklng. He had held the seat since 1949. in :2 elections since Confeder- ation. Wellington South has voted Liberal 16 times. Conservative five. and. during the First World War. for a Unionist. Two oi the three candidates seeking the seat Monday have had previous political experience. They ran as opponents to Mr. Hosking. Only David Tolton, 29-year-old business man running for the Liberals, is making his first bid for political office. GIIOCEB PC CANDIDATE Alfred D. Hales. 48. is running as a Progressive Conservative. He is a Guelph alderman who runs his own farm and retail food store. Thomas L. Withers, 15, interna- tional representative of the United steel Workers of America and CCF standard-bearer. ran third behind Mr. Hosking and Mr. Hales in the 1953 election. There are 29,589 voters eligible to cast ballots between I a. m. and 1 pm. In the 1953 election Mr .Hosking polled 9,275 votes, Mr. Hales H.722 and Mr. Winters 2.431. Prime Minister Diefenbaker's forces now hold 109 seats in the 85-seat Commons. The Liberals, including a Liberal-Labor member who supports the party. have 106. Others are, CC? 25, Social Credit 19. Independent 2. Independent- Liberal 1, ' dependent - Progres- sive Conservative i. There is also a vacancy in Lan- ark due to the death June 16 of Progressive Conservative William Blair. A byelectlan has been called for Sept. 16. Gives New Twist To Gulf Problem k cargoes - puch as grain. tea and potash and all- grrd the gulf: mouth Tlran alt. once Eg- yptian guns. Eilat is virtually surrounded by Arab territory. lsrael holds only a six-mile stretch of the gulfts shoreline. Egypt. Saudi. Arabia and Jordan control the rest. The new twist gave fresh im- petus to the Arab cry that Aqaba is a purely Arab gulf and only Arab ships have rights there. Saudi Arabia, which borders the gulf: eastern shores. has taken the lead. in a speech to Moslem pilgrims. King Seud hinted the Arabs would use force if nec- eseary to prevent lsraeli ships us- ing the gulf. ,. . Later his minister of state. Ah- med Shukalry. said the UN Emer- gency Force should be withdrawn on the ground it was only provid- ing protection for what he called illegal Israeli shipping. Strike-Tense D Now By Third Explosion OTTAWA (CP) - Summer holi- days sppear to be almost entirely out of the picture for the new Progressive Conservative cabinet as it bones up on duties assumed little more than three weeks ago. , A canvass of ministers' offices shows that outside of Prime Min- ister Diefenbaker who left Friday for 10 days' rest, none of the cab- inet has any holiday plans. Must say there will be on c" of a prolonged rest. during the three months before the new Parliament opens Oct. 14. Govern- ment members must learn the in- tricacies of departments adminis- tred for 22 years by Liberals and whip new policies into shape be- fore meeting the newly - elected Commons. Works Minister Green. who holds seniority under Mr. Dlefen- baker in the 17-member cabinet. is acting prime minister during the leader's absence. STRENUOUS STRETCH Mr. Dlefeubaker. in Calgary Saturday to attend the stampede. will have nine days of rest at his Prince Albert, Sask.. home and at a fishing camp at Lac lal Rouge in Northern Saskatchewan. It will provide his first extended period of relaxation in six mouthsl of strenuous activity which cov- ered the last session of Parlia- Vment, a gruelling election cam- 'paign and the Commonwealth prime ministers conference which-. 1 followed hard on the heels of the election. The rest of the cabinet has not. had to follow such a heavy pacc.3 Most, however. are not only pass-l lug up vacations but also are turn-1 ing down speaking engagements outside of the capital. l The reply of Labor Minister- Starr was typical: ”l'm slickingl ;close to the office and have mini-l mized " engagements. .l have a lot to learn before the ses- sion opens Oct. it." There are a few exceptions. Fisheries Minister Macbean was in his home province of Prince Edward island to attend a major provincial event at Summerside Sunday, the annual lobster festi- Few Summer Holidays This Year For Canada's Cabinet val. Revenue Minister Nuwlayn was at his Wolfville. N.S.. home last Thursday to keep a previous engagement to speak to s provin- eial rally of womens' institutes. Resources Minister Harkness went to his Calgary home town with Mr. Diefeubalter and will return Tuesday. Finance Minister Fleming and 'State Secretary Fairclough made flying visits to campaign in the delayed election in Wellington South. Some of the ministers are ex- pected to take some business trips afield. Transport Minister Hees plans a trip to the Northwest Territories, leaving at the end of the week. to survey transportation problems there. William J. Browne, minister without portfolio. will go to his home at St. John's, Nfld., this week for the July 22 opening of hearings by the royal com- mission r e v i e w l n g Newfound- land's 1949 terms of union with h Canada . LONDON (AP)-Time is run- ning short for the United Nations disarmament subcommittee. With ngreements still scant. the four Western e t s are split over ; iaosderen &lt:.I'dp0t'tIotheUNAug.lon unsade mud; arms may negotia nau erway hesiaeeltarehls. , Irltlah officials are known to bavesuueated that thetalksba bittarnen. US. officials believe irnportat hvelopmeata may come in the next three weeks. They want the talks to go on after the deadline. France and Canada. the other Western members are somewhere whathsrtopiaeeetatkswithg between the U.8. ant British posit- ions. ZOIUN SPEECH The Western arguments were crystallised by a 90-minute speech ms. The background for Zorln's speech was yet by two develop- tnenta: l. The Western powers bad Just ted two new proposals for Illlll the hydrogen bomb race which they felt included conces- sions to the Soviet position. 2. The Kremlin had Just under- gone sweeping changes In which six Soviet leaders were ousted and the power and prestige of Com- munist Party chief Nikita Khru- shchev was enha . Zorln. using the ars'hest lan- suns: in the present talks. WesternMembersAreSplit Over Talks With Russians branded some elements of the Western nuclear plan as "fictit- ious." He said a Western sugges- tion that scientists be put to work immediately on a plan for enforc- st nuclear tents woo he "a waste of time." British officials in general sug- gested that the speech was a true statement of Rus sin n policy. thereby offering little hope that the subcom '” would be able to settle the key matter of nu- clear controls. ' Only the U.S., which had indi- cated it expected no concessions at this point. appeared undisturbed. High american officials believed Zorln may have made only a hold- ing statementl that he had voiced the old arguments pending the ar- rival of new instructions from Moscow. VATICAN CITY (AP) - The Pope lashed out at materialism of both East and West Saturday and called for return to Christian prin- ciples in an eneycltoal hailing the forthcoming centennial lubilee of Lourdes. The Jubilee will begin Feb. ll. lied, and continue for a full year. During that time millions of peo- ple ara expected to visit the fam- ous Roman Catholic shrine to the Virus Mary in France. it was in the hollow of the Mas- sshielle rock at Lourdes that Ber- nadette Soubtronx, a 14-year-old French girl. reported the Virgin Mary smeared to her on Feb. ll. lass addressed French cardinals. archblshx sad bishops was &ted J 1. Bass Catholic The pontlfrs encyclical letter. poiat to feast of the visitation of the Vir- gin. It was released Saturday by the Vatican press office. in It the Pope made one of his sharpest at- tack on materialism, which he called the modern worlds ter- rible temptation." "This materialism." he said. "is not found only in the con- demned phllosophy (communism) tint rules the politics and econ- omy of one part of humanity. it also pervades the love of money whose ruins are broadening. . . . "It is experienced in the cult of the body: in excessive search for enmfort.; in avoidance of all aus- terity ef life that prompts disre- spect for human life even to the of destroying it before it has tea the light. "It is manifested in an un- search for pleasure that Pope Calls For A Return To Christian Principles shamelessly exhibits itself, and tries also to seduce with litera- ture and spectacles the souls of those who are still pure. "it is demonstrated in a disre- gard for lone's) brother: in ego- lsm that oppresses him none": brother). and in injustice that de- prives him of his rights - in a word in that concept that regula- tes only functions of material pro- sperity and earthly satisfactions." The Pope concluded his encycli- eal with words of comfort for the humble. sick and grief stricken. many of whom will go to Lourdes during the jubilee year. He urged Christians of cvcry class and country to banish "in- eomprehension and suspicions" and to seek each other in truth and charity during the jubilee year. MURDOCHVILLE. Que. (CP)- A strking miner's arm was torn off and two companions suffered severe injuries Friday night in an explosion slightly damaging Ga- spe Copper Mine property. Herve Berube, assistant man- ager of the mine where 1,000 workers walked out March 11, said the latest of three recent dis- trict blasts was caused by dyna- mite. The men had no business in the area at the time, he said. "first because they are strikers and sec- ondly because there was no need for anyone to be there at the time." Lieut. Gerald Timlin, head of the H0 - man provincial police area shortly after the strike be- gan, said he lacked details of the blast pending an investigation. I The explosion ripped off Herve Beruatchef arm and he was listed in critical condition at nearby Ste: Anne des Monts Hos- pital. Nestor Henley and Normand Boudrcau were the other strikers hurt, 1-leniey with eye injuries. Boudreau was least seriously urt. MINOR DAMAGE The blast came more than a mile from the copper refinery. causing minor damage to a waste pipe whch Mr. Berube said could be repaired in hours. it was the third explosion since the strike began. On Aprl 26 a dynamite blast ruptured a 4.5M,- l000 - gallon company oil tank at Mont-Louis. 22 miles north. Dam- age was estimated at 8150.000. June 21 another rocked a trans- fer house where ore from the un- derground mine is reloaded on an- force which was moved into the b PRICES: istrict ls Hit Striking Miner's Arm Is Tom Off In Dynamite Blast other conveyor carrying it to the smelter. One worker was injured slightly and production was shut down a week. The company had resumed pro- ductlon on a reduced scale. using new I orkera including immi- grants aad some from New Brunswick. Adding to the tension in the town was the company's recent ultimatum that strikers renting or buying company - owned bonus must pay arrears or get out. AWAIT COURT ACTION Roger Bedard. spokesman for the striking King United Seel Workers of America (CLC). said the occupants will await court act- is. He attributed the latest blast in- cident to "the irresponsible at- titude of the Gaspe Copper Mines and its decision to hire German workers to replace striking am- ployeesi the provocative attitude of the provincial police; and the indifference of the Quebec gov- ernment." The union struck over issues of certification and wage increases averaging 50 cents an hour. Last summer the company ob- taned a writ of prohibition re- straining the Quebec labor reis- tlons boanl from acting on a USWA application for certifica- tion. Gaspe Copper says because the union is not certified the strike is illegal and refuses in ne- gotiate. About 300 strikers live in Mur- dochville. many in company homes with rent and mortgage payments deducted from pay diequea. Thus. none have been collected since the strike begsa. Wellington South Election is Today GUELPH. Ont. (CP)--The vu- ers of Wellington South today so- lect their representative in the House of Commons. Their deferred election-caused by the death of Liberal candidate June 10 voting-holds national in- terest bec ,. of Parliament's close party standings: Progressive Conservatives. 109 seats: Liberals, including a sup- porting Liberal - Labor member, 106. CCF. 25; Social Credit. 19; and four independents. One other seat. in Lanark. is vacant. Wellington South has voted Lib- since Confederation. The Conserv- atives won five times. and a Unionist once during the First World War. The late Mr. Hosking. the rid- lngts member since 190, won the 1958 election with 9,275 votes. ahead by 553. The new Liberal candidate, Da- vld Tolton. a 29-year-old business- man. is making his first bid for political office. Conservative candidate Alfred D. Hales. til. a Guelph alderman. polled 8.722 votes in 1953. CCF candidate Thomas L. Withers. 45- year-old international representa- tive of the United Steel Workers of America, ran third with 2.431. Henry Hosking Just before the can Condemned Man Granted NewTrlal - HALIFAX (CP) - Daniel Mur- doch Morrison, 65. convicted of murdering his wife Daisy Feb. I and sentenced to be hanged Aug. 21. was granted a new trial Satur- day by the Nova Scotia Sqaresne rt. The Baddeek Forks N. S. farmer was convicted of klling his 61-year-old wife by haiulng her ll their Cape Breton home. The court said Morrison an granted an appeal because in the first trial "the issue of provoca- tion was withdrawn completdy , fkomthe jury." No date was set for the new ersl in 16 of 22 federal elections trial. Four Perish In Head On Crash PRINCEVILLE, Que. (CPI Four persons are dead as I re- sult of a head-on collision between two cars Saturday near this Artha- l baska County town 96 miles north- west of Montreal. A fifth person is i In serious condition in hospital. GUARD TEETH In British schools canal-en ...;.'.'. ;, examination as have a denial soon as possible after entry. WASHINGTON (AP) -- About This figure. based on official and unofficial estimates, does not i ii... liilml 5-. Scrap Billion In Research Work hes been no major cascellstima omits!- I-lerstheconspetltioaiswlihthe ah'foroe'a'l'harll.lM. I - Defe-an department on- ..c-::, -g-. in its research and developmut 1 f l