hlltis-t. N. s. -P. E. I. so CHION Cecil "Hubby" bowling. profea- Id! Dowling played alonal at Cbar1ouetown's Beieve- IN"! llllfkli-ill I0" lilfhl ill! ders Club yesterday won the New Brunswick-Prince Edward Island three-day ithu t and emerged a comfortable marglnovsr the field. restof Few Changes Are Expected in c. 3. c. aroqiimiing..iI.ottq 13 IBINARD DUIRISNI O AWA (CF)-Few changes in tile federal government's broad- casting polices are expected in the nelr future. Revenue Minister George C. Nowlan indicated Wed- nesday. He declined. however. to com- init himself or the new Progre- lvs Conservative government ea future " t thon- ough study of Fowler royal commission on broadcasting and of conditions as they arise. it is understood that with th prospect of a short autumn ses- sion of Parliament-it st-arts Oct. 14-it is unlikely that there will be time this year to deal with the Fowler report. Mr. Nowlan. named Tuesday as the clnet mtntutm through whom the puhliclyowsed CBC will re port to Parliament. said he is give in the report careful study. In be could not say. phdlsg consul- tauon with his cabinet colleagues. what parts would be implemented or rejected. He holds the same duties with regard in broadcasting as his Lib- er in the revenue at predecessor gortfolio. lies. James J. Ilccaas. 0 TV 81' Mr. Nowiaa. 50-year old repre- sentative of Nova Sootia is the .pendinga - thareportoftbe to radio but you canii read mch.a TV screen at the same However. he has a TV set on order. to be installed when he and his wife settle down in a new Ot- tawa boats. Cabinet ministers are .. Canadian N mg; mg nu. iggp-3.; tllcbardti-ted-sssaaly tone-tin -4 g ml” "fa its units:-is ponifsiian. which III!" W M” "'4 P”"'i'"' ” p-e:i:Ayr:tv:i(i't)n calm? in the iacrsassitzsspereuiiioazasstnthlbovnnpo-ndtootlrodmson ,,,,,,,5,,,, , ,. euttnet.saldhelssaavldiulei.,g "mm 41501171., ipgi onaftertheyre bdhere. "t R ” . .'"' "'"y” "mm a nu cm: W, Ola". under.l'5 he gm, '1' responding period in the last 44 9"” 5" "'9"! i" 5'" l" 9" o83.ll9 were boys and moi 391 yen" w;'rido;'”-?tItg he doesn't own a tele- V." umg ' R u t T Latest estimates available here V l l l I fit J -J A heavy reader. be said "it's mg”; if:.,"';W",.,;': s O i:eTi:t:d.lillvl.7;.ot'lo. gorri-irilaui-.r:1y Oil! 90 Mm! GOV! Will! I N03 3. g,m,ggg (mm 1,321,733. they 0 69.924 in the first half of 1956 and in the llvins mom and It!!! lid-I proportion of the total population LOSE I entity 154,357 for all of last year. The comes rev- :-aaee. ' The Fowler eunmission esti- W urban areas had more F3. WN CANADA. THURSDAY. JULY 25, 1957 Leaders leave For Jamboree OTTAWA (CP)-Two Cfanadial scout leaders leave here Sunday by air for the boy scout iubiles Jamboree in England. Eli Boyaner of Saint John. N.B.. leader of the Canadian contingent at the iamboree. and Fred J. Fin- lay of Ottawa. deputy leader. also will attend an international boy Tories Gain Another Seat OTTAWA ICP - Progressive Conservative strength in the Com- mons hasbeenlncreasedbyoneto 111 through acceptance of Henri Courtemanche into the party can- eus. Mr. Couriemanche. member for Wu: muwrolinn "Covers Prince Edward Island La; 11.. Dew” Isabelle. Que.. was elected June 10 as an independent-Progressive Conservative. but has since been accepted into the caucus and now can he designated as a Pro- gressive Conservative. a party spokesman said Wednesday. Commons standings now are: Progressive Conservatives. 111: Liberals. 105: CCF. 25: Social Credit. 19: independents, two; In- dependent-Llberal. one; Liberal - Labor. one; vacant. one; total 285. output and sales. scout conference at Cambridge University following the Aug. 1-11 Jamboree. some i.5tli Canadian scouts. ro vera and leaders are to attend the Jamboree. Cost Of Living At Record High WASHINGTON (AP)-The U.S. (SPECIAL) -A broadening of its price support policy aimed at lin- proving means of preventing farm incomes from falling to unreason- 3"”"'”"'” c"”"”lVl”5 Ed” able levels in relation to prices the '". 'l”l”'-7 ,, 2:23;: ';gn:i'1:'l';? 0"? nlililog farmer must pay was adopted to- U , "M 0 '3 day by the Canadian Federation of Afe Plc'(Qd Fof l'eCrt;1'dl:1Zll in as many months. Agriculture, e crease. reported Wednes- 1-,, m 1 ,1 , dam. STU” Course My by H” i"""'" 0' 1'5" "cm" ienc; patytienfnfalriceuiiiptiiorts as tics. means that some s5a,ooo workers in the electrical manu- facturing. aircraft. trucking and construction industries in the Us. will have their pay increased by front two to four rents hourly under conriacts geared to the con- sumer price index. Food prices were reported to have jumped 1.4 per cent from May to June. a method of raising depressed farm incomes to be used as a supplemeni to the use or market price supports - was the main fea- ture of this broadened policy. The action was taken by the board of directors of the Canadian Federat- ion of Agriculture on the first day of a three day meeting being held In Port Arthur. Market price supports involve the government undertaking to buy a product. if necessary. to maintain the market price and tonsequenily the price to the pro- ducer. by this method governm- ent held surpluses maybe accumul- ated. Deficiency payments are a met hod where a support level is al- so set. but this is guaranteed to the producer by paying to him the difference between the support level and the actual market price he receives. With deficiency pay- ments it is not necessary to sup- port the market price. and so build up surpluses. A combination of market price supports and de- . OTTAWA ICP) - Army head- quarters Wednesday announced selection of 56 officers to attend staff courses in 1950. Most will attend the Canadian Army Staff College at Knigston. 0nt., beginning in J y. but five will go to other Common- wealth countries. . Among those going abroad are: Mai. William H. Mulherin. Grand Falls, N. 3.. to the Australian Staff College and Capt. Norman 11. Burch. Ville Lemoyne. Que.. to the Indian Defence Services Staff College. Boy' Too Tired To Sea World ROME AP) - The world has proved too big for s nine-year-old boy who had hoped to see its won- den before he dies. Comedian Red Skelion took his pallid. thin son Richard aboard a plane for home Wednesda and called off the rest of what had been planned as a two-month tour of the sights of Europe. More Canadians Are Bachelors OTTAWA (CF)-Canada's bach- elors ouinumbered spinsters by 432,593 last year. and the margin had widened in the previous five years. flclency payments may be applied to a product in some cases. MORE FLEXIBLE The new policy provides for a more flexible approach to the problem of supporting prices. The present federal prices suppoi pasgd in 1944. permits the govern- ment to use both methods. and both have been used on occasion. The action of the federation am- ended a previously approved state- ment of policy on price supports in which deficiency payments as a method of supporting farm re- turns were viewed as being ap- plicable almost BXClU5lVcly to rap idly perishable commodities. Fur- ther experience had shown, the federation felt. that the deficiency payment method was a useful and necessary one in other circumst- ances. particularly those in which there was a persistent tendency for the prices received by farm- ers to be below prices bearing a reasonable relationship to costs of production. The Federation declares. that except for perisbablcs like fruits and vegetables. deficiency pay- ments should be used when the level of psiccs to prod uc- below 80 percent of parity each your for two years and when re- quired in other special clrcumstan ces. CONSUMER BENEFITS A major advantage of deficien- Broadening Of Price Support Policy Asked cy payments is that they do not. result in the accumulation of sur- pluses by the government as a re-. sult of purchases made for the I purpose of supporting the market. instead prices are allowed to find a lower level and the consumer benefits from these reduced prices. Other advantages are:that the decision to pay deficiency psy- menis can. if desired. be made af- ier a product has been marketed and a more exact idea of the ex- tent to which producers returns have been depressed as been gain- ed: that in some cases. as with wheat. oats and barley marketed by the wheat board. market prices supports cannot be successfully applied; and that for some rapid-. ly perishable products support by government purchase is not prac-i ticable. The C.F.A. Policy gives a pre- ference to market price supportsi in a general way because the cost to the treasury is usually smaller than with deficiency gay- ments; because they are more easily administered and lend themselves to more orderly mark- etirig of the product. because they result in a market price that better reflects the true value of the product to the consumer. and because they do not lend to weak- en prices on other foods. which of course compete with each other for the consumer's dollar. The 1950 census listed 1.991.701 single males over 15 compared to 1.579.351 in 1951. the bureau of statistics said Wednesday. in the same period. the num- ber of single women over 15 in- creased to 1.269.168 last year from 1,242,431. Single persons of all ages no counted for 50.9 per cent of the total population. Among 2.631.587 rural farm residents. 1.35.40! or 57 per cent were single. Richard. his mother and father and his sister Valentina all were smiling as they boarded the plane for New York. Skalton said they weren't leav- ing because of any change in Rich- ardls condition. The boy is suffer- ing from leukemia. a cancer of the blood. from which doctors say he cannot recover. "We are all tired." skalton ex- Dlalned . "We are going home." - '1 50"” E. BIRD Slat! .WrIC' declined to 18.4 per cent from 11.1 per cent. RECORD MORE winows The widowed aswell as the man rled population increased In num- bers during the five-year period, but suit formed a smaller propoh tlon of the total population. The number of divorced persons increased to 36.76! mm 31.3. but their proportion of the total popula- tion remalned unchanged. More women than men-21.833 against 14.936-were divorced. . Numericaily and proportionally. widowed six-month figure is the biggest half-year total since 1915 when some 225,000 arrived. By the end of 1957 the flow of immigrants is expected to reach between 265.000. and m.ooo. a rate exceeded only five times since the turn of the century. The biggest group of immi- grants in the first six months of 1957 were from Britain. They totalled 72.000. as against 22.428 in the corresponding period last year and 50.563 for all of 1956. British arrivals by the end of the year likely will total between 95,000 and 90.iX'i0. The record was 157.000 in 1913. MAJOR ROLL Hungarian refugees have played a major role in boosting 1&5? fig- ures. Some 5.000 landed last No- vcmber and December and 23.- 000 since Jan. 1 for a total of 33.- 000 at July 19. By mid-August it is anticipated that about 35.000 Hungarian refu- gees will have reached Canada as By FRASER WIGIITON LONDON Reuters-Britain an- nounced Wednesday sha will pay tax-free lump sums to army offi- cers and men retired prematurely as a result of her streamlined new defence program. At the same time. another gov- ernment whlta paper disclosed that many crack regiments will lose their separate identity. The two moves are part of a sweeping reorganization to bring down the army's strength from the present 300.000 to between 1eo.0tlt and l70.0tI) by the end of 1961. The new defence program. rely- ing chiefly on push-button nuclear warfare. is designed to produce lean. fighting-fit forces. the end of conscription by 1961 and havltng of the armed services. now at a strength of about COOJXW. Under the payment system, colo- nels or brlgadiers will receive a lump sum of up to soon. Cash and divorced persons. IIONOR NB STUIIENT WINDSOR. Ont. (CF) - The Canadian Chapters of Beta Sigma P111. an international sorority. announced Wednesday the award of scholarships to three students taking courses in English In Cana- diaa universities. Recipients of the I1.m scholarships include John D. Ripley of Fredericton at the University of New Brunswick. Canada is Developing New Sub-killing Equip by DAV! Isstnrosa Preesltlf rt lgi'”l" if rrient immigrants. Formcr immigration minister Pickcrsgill said the Liberal gov- ernment would accept at least 2a,. 000 " rlan refugees. However, at the same time he said no ceil- ing would be placed on arrivals. The new Progressive Conserva- payment to enlisted men forced to leave the service before their time will range up to H.250. The number of officers to be affected in the next five years is estimated at between 5.01!) and 7.M). 'ai.TtEt-.14-Coal. stfril: live goveniment has not yet an- Coal was mined in Nova Scotia A nounced what policy it will follow as early as 1671 Most Immigrants In 44 Year Period on Hungarian refugees. ' if total immigration in 1097 reaches between 365.000 and 275,- 000, it will be the largest number in any one year since 1913 when a record 400.970 came to Canada to make new homes. FOUR OTHERS There have been only four other years since 1900 in which immi- gration has exceeded 285.000. A total of 272.409 arrived in 1907. 206,839 in 1910, 331.28! in 1911 and 375.756 in 192. An immigration figure for 957 of 275,000 would compar. with the two-year total of 174.90! in 1955 and 1959. Arrivals totalled 164.851 in 1956. 109.946 in 1965, 154.227 in 1954, 59.869 in 1953. 644R in 952 and 94391 in 96. the post- war record. Arrivals in the first six months of 957 boosted total immigration to Canada since Jan. 1 1946. to 1.562.215. Post - war immigration reached the 1.000.000 mark in Strikers-Getting Rough And Tough ST. THOMAS CF) -- strikers Wednesday rolled burning tires into the path of trucks leaving the Canada Vitrified Products Limited plant and buried a barrage of rocks at the vehicles. Four truck drivers were taken to hospital. Hospital authorities said a piece of glass from a splinte at wind- shield lodged in one driver's eye. One suffered a deep gash on the face. A third had his front teeth smashed by a rock. No informa- tion was givcn on the injuries suf- fered by the fourth man. Problem Who Wears The Pants LONDON ifteutersl -- Scottish soldiers are facing the problem ot just who wears the pants. it is one of the things to be sorted out in connection with "wssriise VeitalsIadsudtuiess.eIIIiaiiri'iisi winds. . ..........?i-" -c-'v......i-v -W By RANALD MacLUR1(lN LONDON Reuters)-The worst strike violence in more than ill years hit Britain Wednesday as London police clashed with mar- ket handlers and bus workers roughed up passengers. Not since the general strike of 1926 has Britain known strike warfare. Despite pleas by union leaders. battles with police and the public continued and grew uglier. Club - swing policemen fought bottiethrowing strikers at Lon- don's Covent Garden fruit and vegetable market. A truck loaded with fruit was set afire and crates of produce were smashed. Some 3.500 handlers in London: 'ive main markets have refused :0 work in protest against a new working system proposed by em- players. Striking provincial bus workers punched one woman and threw an- other into a hedge in Cornwall in a walkout which has forced some owners to ask for greater protec- ion-including the use of armed force it necessary-to keep buses running. The bus strike involving 100,000 members of six unions. started Friday ave r demands for .l:l-a- week pay increase to lessen the gap between provincial and Lon- don rates. The first move to settle the Worst Strike Violence In Britain In 30-Year Period Battles With Police And Public Are Growing Uglier PRICE5c strike ended in failure Wednesday. 4.: ii Union representatives made a i token appearance at a meeting of ,5. the industrial disputes tribunal 3,” and then walked out. They said N the only possible solution was to . give the men the money they do- mended. The strike violence-which has ; produced angry ieeters to news- H. papers-brought a front-page ed- itorial appeal from the Liberal rt London Star to Frank Coyla. 3,-" . leader of the six unions in the mi Transport and General Workers' , ; Union. to call off "the boo1l- ii guns." , fl Strikers in many cases have .. halted buses operated by Compan- ies not affected by the walkout. The association of transport op- erators in Northern England. which asked the government for greater protection. represents op- erators of 26.000 buses not in- volved in the dispute. it said only 28,000 of the country's 75.000 buses . are involved but these cover half 1- i the routes in England. Wales and it . Scotland. ,1 - Labor Minister lain Macleod vi said in the Commons that be ex- 1's pects the industrial disputes trlb- , unal awards in the bus strike will 3 ; be issued in the next few days. He said there is no prospect yet of a j... 1 settlement by conciliation in the 5 i market handlers dispute. - drastic u'mming of Britain day. Twentyone regiments will be amalgamated. One of the complications was foreseen Wednesday night by war minister John Hare. He told a press conference ”One of the most difficult mar- riages is that between a Scottish regiment which wears the kill and a regiment which wears trews (tartan trousersi." He said such problems are be- ing left to the regiments them- selves. if they cannot agree the war office will have to impose a solution. Encroachment On High Seas LONDON IAPI - Britain an- nounced Wednesday the is check- ing directly with the Kremlin to determine whether Russia has ae- tually closed most of Vladivostok Bay to foreign ships and planes. if the reply is "yes." the for- elgn office said in a statement. Britain will consider the move it "substantial encroachment on what appears to be the high seas." On July 20. Moscow R-adlo broadcast a decision by the Sov- iet council of ministers forbidding armed forces announced Wadnear VISITORS Premler Robert L. Stanfield. Mrs, Stanfield. and four children are spending a holiday at Shaw's Hotel, Brackley Beach. ALGERIA TRIES PRIEST ALGIERS (Reuters) Five Essa peaus. ' ”' g the deputy mayor of Algiers and a Roman Catholic priest. and 27 Mosli:-mii . prison sentences by a military court Wednesday for helping the werg jglled or given suspended fish. rose to 49.9M.lM pounds will K Churches Role in Maior Disaster ARNPRIOR. Ont. fCPl-Clergy- men and civil defence officials to- day started a three-day study of the role the churches could play in a major disaster. Protestant, it o m a ti Catholic and Jewish clergymen. totalling 62 and representing all the prov- inces. gathered at the Canadian civil Defeneo College here. a ' 'mli'es west of Ottawa, to pool the " ideas on the subject. Lecture subjects include the H- bomb. fcderal CD policy. idcologi- V cal and spiritual problems. sur- .'. vlvsl plans and the role of the clergy in a crisis. College officials said that 'dur ing a disaster. whether it be civil- ian or caused by atomic attack. the psychilogical welfare of the c. 5. i its material survival. FISH LANDING! UP OTTAWA (CF) - Landings of I g seafish and lobsters in the Man bl itlmes increased in June to l.'i.- 4; 544,600 pounds fmm 75.825.l00 in T, May but value of the catch fdl I -,, to 84.919100 from 85.654500. the '5 bureau of statistics said Wednes- day. June landings of ground fish. fig . including cod. haddock and red- Ii: 3 , r a value of 8l.4il9.500 from 39.751.- fiofi pounds valued at 8i.401.7m in LONDON (AP) -- Snvict Prom- foreign ships and planes to use the Far Eastern bay without priorl approval. The decision. in effect. turned Vladivostok Bay into a Rus i sin lake. A foreign office spokesman said if the Soviet action is confirmed! "such unilateral action coming st soon before the international con- ference on the law of the sea next spring is to be deplored." - War Ace is To Command Wing OTTAWA iCP--Group Capt. R. W. iBucli- McNair. one of the-' RCAI-"s outstanding fighter pilots during the Second World War. has been appointed commanding offl- cer of the air force's No. 4 fighters wing at Baden - soelltnsen. Ger-5 many. Group Capt. Mi.-Nair, 39, of on staff duties within air defence coirimaiid. Durtns the second erny aircraft. tie them In one day. For gallantry is action he was awarded the Hist- lneuished Service Order and the Distinguished Flying Cross with LAMPORT Loses GROUND TORONTO icPr-City solicitor . O. Angus tsld 1'sreute's board 9.! -. icr llulgiinin Wednesday night ac- Algerian insurgents. the previous month... 4.? I Accuses West Of Stalling si: Talks To Help Adenauer cuscd the West of stalling disnrm- l amcnt talks in ordcr to help Chan- rnllnr Konrad Aricnsucr's ram- paign for reelection in West Ger- many. ”Are not those people correct who say a deal has been made between the governments of ccr-iwhcn to go. tain Wcsicrn powers and the Ade- nauer g o v c r fl me-nt"" ter Macmillan. Gcrniany do tint conceal this fact." - The elections are set for Sept. .sa.ooo.onn.oon in five years-prth ll Biilganin did not elaborate on vided Britain agrees to shed al- ni-gotiation lied restrictions on the sale of how di it a r m smciit might affect the outcome The Soviet premier suggested Britain the United States and Russia-the world's three nuclear powers-should agree rim to base ' weapons on either East popment between European states .ing out on European territory. "But Iii man who. took Europe our two countries would stead aside?" Bulgaitiu's Sill - dated July I was translated and of .ers still believe Anglo-Russian re- . Stations can be improved "by per g Btllihfiililoi conference in Moscow in fig- i asked in a letter to Prime Minis-' I i .The suiiesrno-n nf We-stlcliatlzcs. Tor West German soil. He added: and fsraeti attache on Egypt l& "The concentration of atomic year have sharpened the conflict i . V..I.. I t ed weapons in Europe and the dtlfcl-lbC1WPQlI Jew and Arab. . """"""” ' W ' '"""" of an atomic mm rat-eiAflSWlRlNG I.l1'l'llI ; in-4 Bnlganilt. who was era:-erlng a g rreggeg in . menacing way ting June 16 letter frl'tl '0'” W" he annoy” i "vdangcr of an atomic war hreak- devoted more than half . iinsrtis to the problems of ilisann : there a single statea- sment. could maintain that-Germany. rAt if such a misfortune really over- linked the three issues. Riissians in "some kind of new variation of the Munich policy", 3. A reminder that Soviet lead- soiiitl contacts between the slaies- g men of our countries.” Macmillan , I has an open invitation to visit Moscow but has lid yet decided 4. A proposal for an Anglo-sow ure out wsys- of expanding cul- tural. scientific and technical es- 5. A rt-ncwed offer to increase Anglo-Soviet trade up to nearly war-potantial goods to Common- ist lands. 6. An assertion that Russia's sole aim intheilddle Eastlstai bolster the peace of the area and the charge that the Anglo-French: Mare-5 European security and several poms B The Soviet leader criticises the i Macmillan government's word letter. Il&K madepublicherebytlietereillihaf