i l.- . i; ' Maxims ol a Mare Man ova-yuaeiiiuiei-nausea. sods saeIvI.a"e t-as-saw I. the L Covers ' 1 . Prince Edward Island Like The Dew .19 35”” Total Of Federal Grants To Hospitals In Province Ul'l'AWA (Special) - Iinoe the town. Itu.m. inception of fdderal grants h -Prince Edward island lollliial. hospitals. Prince lldward Island has received hospital grants total- ling 0'f70.0il). This was revealed hsaanswertsagnestionaskadus h the Commons by T. J. Kick- ham. Liberal member for Kings. Grants for hospital construction totalling 3461.000 were broken ooo down as follows: 5 Western Memorial Hospital. Al- berton. taaso. Charlottetown Hospital. 380,140. Falconwood Hospital. Charlotte- Charlottetown. ta),ooo. Klllls County Memorial Hos- pital. Montague. 38.500. Prince County Hospital. (13.- Stewart Memorial Health Cen- tre. Tyne valley. 8.000. Charlottetown Healli Centre. 00.- Othsr federal health grants were 8102.170 for Falconwood Mental Hospital and 3106.150 for the Provincial Sanatorium at Charlottetown. Churchill Resignaric I Is Expected Tues. Or Wed. By ALAN HARVEY Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON. (CP)--In a stnangely- muted atmosphere Britain is an- Pfolchlng-or appears approach- ing-a decisive J velopment in her domestic affairs. The big break is Expected next Tuesday or Wednes- ay. On one of those days. it is con- fidently predicted. Prime Minister Churchill will finally do what some have been urging him to do for three-years-resign and make way for his undoubted successo . foreign secretary Eden. The political guessing game on when Churchill will retire con- tinued Friday with Sir Beverley Baxter. Toronto-born Conservative MP, predicting in ' Birmingham the resignation will be in "a mat- ter of hours" and that Eden will take over in "s matter of days." The announcement. if it comes. will transform the political situa- tion. What has been called the present dragging. deadbeat par liament will be dissolved. Eden will assume an office he may feel overdue and the way will be clear for a general election. The ma penis will be over. MAY ELECTION SEEN Conservative party speculation is that Eden will select May 20 as polling day, Lobby gossip says there would probably be a minor government shakeup first to give -' :ln "Eden tinge" to the administra- - on. These important events. which ,F1eet street seams taking for ' granted. are heralded at.l iwlran lsh population'is cu off from their daily reading matter by a .strlke principally affecting the London newspapers. There have been suggestions that the strike might upset the timetabld of Sir Winston's expected retirement. but the general view is that Churc- hill would not be deterred from an affair of state by a more news- paper strike. Better to let the unsuspecting public learn the big news over the radio, Churchill may reason. Coming Events "Crapaud Rink ionlmst. Fare- well skate. , "Reserve Saturday 0 cake sale R. T. liolmanl Ltd. "Rummage Sale. B tist Church Hall. Saturday. Ap and. at 8 p. m. "Rummage Sale. Salvation Army Hall. Tuesday. April 5th. 3 D. in. "Cleaning Timothy Seed and grain daily. Elmer MacDonald, Crapaud. "Cake Sale. Moore 1 McLeod. Saturday. Ap ii 2nd. 1 o'clock. Sponsored by ghfleld W. I. "A n n u a i play. Immaculate Coxeption P a r i I 1:. Wellington. Tl:h ksgiving hall, April not and "Dance. West Wednesday. Orchestra. Canteen Service. to 12.30. --we can do your custom grind- ing and mixin now. at our Char- lottetown P. 1.. Lower Queen Street. ...-...1 Avril. he . playing gay Greek than to hold up constitutional machinery. STORIES GOING UNWRITTEN Two of Britain's most interest- ing stories-involving the future intentions of a prime mlnistlr and a princess-are in abeyance at a time when hard news is proving elusive, It appears taken as fact that Churchill will retire soon. and that Princess Margaret sooner or later will marry war hero Peter Towns- end. but official sources won't say yes or no. Even the most arbitr- ary pundits occasionally expen- ence a twinge of doubt - what if they change their minds, or it wasn't even true in the first place? . Whatever happens. the political outlook is sure to be clarified soon. When' the election comes it will be a straight fight between Conservatives and Labor. The Liberals. only other party of any pretensions .will have between 120 and 150 candidates for the 6:!) seats in the House of Commons. compared with 109 in 1951 and 475 in 1950. The Conservatives will probably be favored to retain their present slim majority over Labor. and per- haps extend it. The latest opinion polls give the ruling party an edge. but much will depend on whether recent internal conflicts in the Labor party have left it stronger or weaker: ' .hama saruansr, nan. 2, use U; 5. Senate Gives Approval i To Poris Treaties WASHINGTON. (AP) - The United States Senate today ap- proved the German rearmament treaties by an overwhelming vote. The tally was 70 to 2. with Sen- ators William Langer (R.ep.N.D.) and. George Malone (Rap. Nev.) voting against. . The twin pacts. which State Sec- retary Dulles said will give" West European unity an "irreversible reality." give sovereignty to the Republic of West Germany. bring her into the North Atlantic Treaty Organization NATO and' provide for a brand new 12-division Ger- man army. East Germany is occupied by the Soviet Union. The Senate action. deliberately delayed until France and Ger- many had approved the treaties. culminates a five-year U. S. effort to array Germany's potential mil- itary power on the side of the West in the cold war against Rus- sia. - ' Only one vote was taken in the Senate on the two parts. Senator Walter George Dem. Ga. asked that that vote be officially record- ed as covering each treaty separ- ately. TC A Plans On Pied-iced Surplus OTTAWA. (CP) -TCA is plan- ning on a reduced surplus of 3200.000 for this year. the com- pany Friday tnld the Commons railway committee. The publicly-owned airline had a surplus of 5496.000 in 1954. This year. it looks for higher operating revenues but also for expenses that will jump more than income. i .'. ,1 .;-...,...- Tiownsil NICOSIA, Cyprus. (Reuters) - slxteen explosions 'ed the four major towns of Cyprus almost l ”aneous' early Friday in the worst outbreak of terrorism on the strategic mediterranean island since the riots of 1931. The Cyprus radio station two miles south of Nicosia was the most heavily-damaged ' '”' lit: south wing was ravaged by e. Smaller damage was caused at Wolsely Barracks. lust outside the ancient walls of Nocisis. where Gen. Sir Charles Kelghtley's Brit- ish Middle East Headquarters are There also were xplosions at the ports of Famagusta. Larnaca and Limsssol. All the attacks were directed against government. po- lice and British military installa- one. The attacks coincided with the preliminary trial at Paphos of 13 men charged with promoting civil war. The men. accused of smug- gling explosives into Cyprus last January. were committed for trial at a higher court May 17. Radio Cyprus went on the air tangos. but they were interrupted for a dec- lsratlon by Governor Sir Robert Armitage that "all measures will be taken to trace and apprehend the vuongdoers." ' An official communique said an unspecified number of persons --32.. n Cyprus ,-4 1-,; 'v:'gg.'.,dE”'-.-u;fr;u' . .....,. have been arrested in connection with the incidents. Describing the explosions in Nicosia. the communique said four masked men armed with pistols and daggers overpowered night watchmen at the radio station. ex- ploded dynamite under a wall. and then escaped by car. Three Charged With Murder MONTREAL (GP;-Three per- sons--two men and a woman-Frl- day were charged with murder as a result of the death of 44-year- old Leon Januszewski during a fight Wednesday in his Torrance street rooming house. Judge Omer Legrand ordered the accused-Reginald Springer. 29. Lionel Bradshaw. 29. and Ruth Ryan. 21, for preliminary hearing April 6. Ball was refused. A coroner's court jury earlier Friday held the accused crim- inally rcsponsible for the death of the Polish immigrant who came to Canada in 1948. Mrs. Marie Jauuszewski. dis- traught vl'i(luw of the victim. fainted twice during the inquest as she testified that the accused at- tacked her husband when he threatened to evict them from the rooming house for making too much noise. Belgium Gov' Highest Tower In World BRUSSELS. (Reuters l-Belgium is planning to build the highest "Chi kl. Willi! . White Leghorn by lam: tower in the world as the main Sensational layers below feed attraction for the Brussels 3:5 0? wiiliid" nkelll Wild 1 l hm? "S V would bpen&'fset hilxlserctlhanctlgw am? P: vol-in Empire suite building, and more than twice the height of its the liffel .- . famous predecessor. Thahlfnut ad 1 1 cl 1 ll . assrov I llrn e Bolglan inet provides Illucaeu-port if........:. t. Planning to 1.475 feet with diameter of 302 feet at the top. will contain 30 floors housing radio and tele- vision studios. exhibition halls and a telecomunication school. ' A smaller 163-foot-high section on top will contain another 10 floors-eight for radio and tele- vision, an observatory. a meteor- ological offica and other scienti- flc-observation stations. and two for a restaurant. bar and terrace accommodating 1.500 customers. THREAT ro AIR mmc Concrete blocks. 19 feet long. 10 inches high and 11 inches thic . will be used. The town must be built within three years if it is to be ready for the fair. The Elf- fel tower took 11 years to build. Aviation experts say the tower will be a threat to ' inter- national airport. international rules say civil- transport aircraft must keep more than W. miles away frun sine titres higher than the altitude at '2?" "1" .::'...”i.''':;.., .. .. runs a a m as away min proposed site. :3: mac preseo IPPNIC would uter the boss" . no svoid aircraft sin I sue :.-.-s.-..'-":A..,,n , low O. P. K. Page of Ottawa and Can- berra, Australia. has been award- her book Flower. (C.P. Photo). TORONTO (CPl-Igor Gouzenko. former cipher clerk in the Soviet embassy at Ottawa. was today named winner of the governor- genei-al's literary award for fic- tion. He wins the 1954 award with "The Fall of a Titan." a story of the struggle for personal power in the Soviet Union before the great purge of the 19305. Now 36. Gouzenko threw up his job in 1945 and risked his life to expose espionage activities in, Canada. Announcement of the prize and four other awards for 1954 was made by R. D. Hilton Smith of Toronto. chairman of the awards boards of the Canadian Authors Association. NOTED WRITERS Other awards: Creative non-fiction: "Thirty and Three." Hugh Maclsennan, Mont- iviost r”iimoui:1l&sm,"'"sru:ull&nli M. Lower, Kengaton. Ont. - Poetry: "The Metal and the Flower." P. K. Page. Ottawa and Canberra. Australia. Juvenile: "The Nor'westcl's." Marjorie Wilkins Campbell. Tor- onto. lgor Gnuzcnko was born in Roge- cliova. near Moscow. in 1919. Un- til he was 14 he lived most of the time at Rostov-on-Don. the scene of his prize-winning novel. " of his academic record at secondary school he was sent to Kuiblshev military engineering academy from which he was posted to the cipher division of military intelligence headquarters at Moscow with the rank of lieutenant. rsan 'aMaAssv in June 1943 he was sent to Ottawa and a little more than two years later fled from the Soviet embassy with the informed I Arthur R. Lowerlof ston, 0nt.. has been awarded the lstream." (C? Photo). tlon that resulted in the spy trials. During the 18 months when he was testifying at the trials he prepared the material for his first book. "This was My Choice.” published in 1940. He became a Canadian citizen in 1947 by special letters patent. The award-winning "The Fall of 'a Titan." is the result of five years of writing and re-writing. In a search for documents of unusual ' A and importance in the archives of the Provincial townamei I Incorporation for Charlottetown. The document, written on heavy blue tinted paper carrying the makers water mark and the date. "Herta and Sons 1852." in excel- lent condition. and the signatures alone make a valuabl acquisition. The notation on the petition reads. "Petition for Act of Incor- poration for Charlotte Town- Received and read 13th. April. 1854-J. MacNeill. Clerk. House of Assembly. referred to committee to report on; Attorney General. Colonial Secretary-Haviland-Beer McGowan." The full text of the document, with names of petitioners follows: "To the Honourable. the' House 'of Assembly of Prince Edward Island in Colonial Parliament convened. 1 ”The petition of the undersign- .ed of Charlotte Town respectfully i sheweth; "That your petitioners are con- Too Many Northeast Gales By STEWART MacLEOD Canadian Press Staff Writer ST. JOHN'S. Nfld. iCP) - The the northern hunt Friday. ending a disappointing voyage although results were a bit better than last season. . The stubby Arctic Prowler slip- ped into harbor to lead the four ships of the Newfoundland fleet home and give St. John's its first chance at the flippers. considered a delicacy. pelts. better than last year but still a far cry from the old days. The damaged Arctic- Sealer. meanwhile, is riding in heavy ice off the province's northeast coast and has asked for the help of an icebreaker. She is not believed to be in immediate danger. ICE DISAPPEARED I Capt. Jim Gllleti of the Prowler said the catch would have been better "if it wasn't for those north- east gsles " Halifax Bridge Opening Todoy Macdonaid bridge. an arching rib- hon of steel spsnnin Halifax har- bar. will he official opened to- Its le- long fit in the British Common- is due in Vancouver. Hrs Mass of the late raises: was aasttedmagaaiasi r-.-.tr."'".....rj-'"'- first of the sealers returned from bottom during this year's danger- purchase of seal STE. CROIX DE LOBTINIERE. The four ENDS gathered 47.000 pushed aside the last snowbank "lt blew so hard. that ice Just Jrho 1,500 village;-3 berg wgrg 3-,. nsmrsx (CF)-The Ailgul L. 3;-mg. sub pg. day to climax half a century of 5 HALIFAX (CF)--The navy said ground-to-ground Astute.-the fir lning Halifax and the Ins- Navy undersea craft which will mi of Dartmouth makes it take up station here. will arrive second longest suspension at Halifax Monday. . The longest is Lion's Gate tional control of llear Admire L. Mscdoleld. WI- ittir disappeared. We had to go from one patch to another. . Although no ships went to the Road Opened To Villooe After 12 Days ' Que. (CP)-A heaving bulldozer early Friday night. opening the road between Ste. Croix and Laur- ier Station for the first time since this village was locked in snow 12 days ago. Mayor Paul Biron said the road. a ital link in suppiyin wi fuel and food. stii was con- sldered unsatisfactory for ordinary afic. , "But the heavy work is ." ' ” d and we expect to have trucks g H in coal and other sup- Ste. Croix duced to sharing fuel oil and food after three h avy storms struck the re on wi a week. The Ste. Croix- urier road has been closed since March 11. Monday at Halifax Friday the British submarine st ef.three Roy The subs will be under opera-- offieer At- IIVY IOT- trained and 1 R lidwell. flag E will to th 2- King- . Marjorie Wilkins Campbell of Toronto has been awarded the ed the Governor-General's liter- lGovernor-General's literary award 3Governor-General”: literary award ary award for Poetry for 1954 for for Academic Non-fiction for 1954. lfor 1954 for Juvenile writing with' ”The Metal and the for his book ”The Most Famous her book "The Nor'Westers." (CP l Photo). Canadian Literary Awards Announced ,Of it he says? ”This is one of .my ways to strengthen demo- I cracy." ' Hugh llrluclrcnnan. winner of the creative non-fiction award. is one of Canada's best-known 'wriiers. The award is his second success in the same category and he has also received two governor-genes ails awards for fiction. Continued on page 15 col. 2 Original Incorporation Petition From Ch'iown Citizens Comes To Light vinced that the future of the Col- ony depends to a great extent on the well being . of this it's ulation of the town, are among the re which demand for this community, equal advantages with all the towns similarly situ- ated in the British Colonies. "Your petitioners believe that the Bill prepared last year relat- Continued on page 15 col. 4 Parliamentarians Moy Visit Russia OTTAWA (CPI-A Soviet invita- tion to Canada in send a group of parliamentarians to Russia re- ceived qualified approval Friday in the Commons from External Af- fairs Minister Pearson and Opposi- tion Leader Drew. The invitation had its beginnings Feb. 9 in the Soviet Parliament where a declaration was road which included a suggestion for exchange visits of parliamentar- ians from Russia and the western al winds nations. cardboard. The Sainte Addresse out of Port The Arctic Sealer had her how beaten in and her hunt was ham- pered although she stuck it out rudder trouble and couldn't con- tinue. SEVEN REMAIN Seven Halifax sealers are still working ice pans in the Gulf of St. Lawrence. Five Newfoundland ships wont to the front last year. but two of them were sunk without loss of life. Another Nova Scolia vessel also went to the bottom. The total Newfoundland catch last yoar was less than 30.000 pelts. one of the CAMPOBELLO Island. N. B. lCP)-Fire following a gasoline explosion aboard aflshing boat Friday engulfed the craft and de- stroyed a 8270.000 breakwater- wharf on this island where the late president Fra kiln D. Roose- velt vacationed. o one was in- lured. An old wharf and another fish- ing boai were damaged and the entire village of Welchpooi was threatened for a time. Northwest sweeping over Panama- quoddy bay at 1) miles an hour fanned the names. Welchpool is a settlement of nearly 100 buildings a mile and one-half from Lubec. Maine. . Robert Aliingham. Welchpool road commissioner. said the ex- oceurred ahoa the Sig.- es- caped nnhurt hon & lifoot craft. Building, Mr. sober-tgcraig. com- .,lli15-tropo1is- . , . . per Co. Ltd.. with head office at A . -;-re,csntls - fire log its.popu1atgr;! giozoia. 0nt.. left i turn owns L. - i..- .. ' 0- ,..e" ,'c rth-.. .!'sn. ids." . - . . Wffifllm 5'81" 0' Co. uie diienae-o'ittsi-C: rgd police. the lml1f0V8m0nt i"'d '99 Transportation Co., operator of s 1 came critical several days ago. Conservatives Score Gains In U. K. Voting LONDON iAP)- The Conserv- BHVG DENY scored solid gains Fri- day in the nation's county council elections. The victory heightened speculation that the government might spring a general election this spring or summer. The Conservatives cut deep into the Labor party's 21-year-old grip on London county council. the body that runs the biggest city in the world. Final results showed Labor with '74 seats, Conservatives with 52. The line up in the old council was Labor 92. Conservatives 37. A redistribution since the last elec- tion reduced the number of seats from 129 to 126. The count in 19 counties ballot- ing outside London was not yet complete. Already the vote showed gains for the Conservatives-not so heavy as in London but still enough to give the party a big boost in morale. Forty-two other counties ballot next week. llAOIAllPOTATO anowrns up Ill ARMS OVER llEWll.S. RESTRIIOIIS ON IMPORTS CYPPAWA. (OP)-Canadian potato growers are up in arms against new United Stats import roatrictioru. Fed- eral officials said some countering action may be taken against American ex-porters if the restrictions are not x Canada-U8. potato cold war results from the decision of Maine--s. big potato state-to ban imports of the tubers less than 2 U4 inches in dia- lifted. The latest hassle in the meter when shipped in packs ports to the whole country. The Canadian Horticultural Council. spokesman for Canadian growers. said Friday that U. 8. Agriculture Secretary Benson hasi amended federal laws so that po- tato regulations siate against imports from an- other also must be applied to im- ports to any state or U. S. pro- tectorate from abroad. Canadian growers have been packing potatoes in accordance with American regulations which, previously, allowed it certain por- tion of two-inch potatoes. Now if exporters want to sell potatoes in the American market in 100-pound packages thy can only ship those measuring 2V4 inches in diameter or more, Col. McCormick. Editor And Publisher Dies CHICAGO (CP)-Col. Robert R. McCormick, editor and publisher of the Chicago Tribune and an ' nationalist whose attacks in the United Nations. British aristocracy and the New Deal earned him a reputation as a controversial figure. died Friday. He was 74 Publisher of two newspapers wiui a total circulation of more than 3.000.000 daily and more than 5.000.000 Sundays-The Tri- bune and the New York Daily News-McCormick also had broad business interests in Canada. He established the Ontario Pa- fleet of 11 modern ships on the Great Lakes. McCormick died at his farm in the Chicago suburb of Wheaton from a complication of diseases. He underwent an abdominal op- oration Jan. 19. His condition be- West German Truckers Pay BERLIN (AP) .. west German truckers paid a stepped-up Com- munist road tax Friday night to keep the highway lifeline open to isolated Berlin. East German bor- der guards sppeared confused by the readiness of the truckers to Pay- The new tax. with increases ranging from S5 to for a round trip, went into effect Thurs- Firsi Sealer Home Is Disappointed ous hunt. three vessels were heav- worst in history. ily damaged by the huge ice pnnsl that can crush the little ships likelwould carry 13,000 men to the seal Union was Caukhi in the W? Fmiliget a share of the catch and they had to return with only two prlts.la” bring hmm, a barrel M flipper , aytiozen. The Peary went into Sydney with N. B. Sardine day midnight. In the old days some 400 ships hunt. Crew members of the seniors which they sell themselves for 99 Will Build Reactor . For Power Station PETERBOROUGH. 0nt., ii'l"l-- Canadian General Electric Co. to- day announced that lhe nuclear reactor for Canada's first atomic power station will be designed and built at the company's Pets-rhor- ouch plant. The location of the station not been snnnun "1 yet. Boar Burns related. the fire had spread the length of the 250-foot breakwater which was built of braosoted tim- bers and ballast. There are no buildings on the breakwater. which is only two years old. The fire then damaged the stern of the 60-foot sardine carrier Mur- main, tied up nearby. Two other fishing boats. the Irene and the Nordberg. were moved to safety. Firemen. carried to the island from Lubec by ferry and coast guards from the Quoddy Head life- boat ststion near Lubec. h pour sea water into the flaming boat and wharf. They saved the old wharf which has one building housing valuable fishing gear. Allingham said that the regular has 3 ACCEPT SMALLER PACKS Federal officials said that luck- ily malty parts of the U. S. ac- r '1 po.;'.iues done up in 50-pound land 75-pound packs. These can lsiill contain a certain proportion of two-inchers. But Puerto Rico, which is I lrelatively large market for Mari- exports. demands potatoes up in 100-pound packs. in fact. said officials. a shipment from the! east coast which con- tained a normal proportion of two- inch potatoes was held up on the docks when the Maine decision was annount-. d The U. S, government pve Can- ada : few days of grace to get the Maritime shipment rolling. but time done strictions imposed by one state now applied by one L PBIOIB L V . .......,..- 1.. .. . of 100 pounds or more. Ro- apparently affect in- pect no further exceptions. L. F. Burrows. horticultural council secretary. said the Ameri- can restriciions may mean that Canada will lose the 3300,0001- year Puerto Rlcan export mar- ct. MAY LOSE MARKET "Canadian growers are seriously concerned about this arbitrary change." he said. ”Aboui 400 car- loads are shipped to Puerto Rico from Prince Edward Island and New Brunswick in April. May and June and it looks as though this market will he lost. "We have two alternatives-- either pack to the 2V4-inch min- imum or try to get Puerto Rico buyers to take a smaller con- tainer. Either one Will mean higher costs which will make us non-competitive." American potatoes come into Canada duty-free. except during a short summer period. while the U. S. charges Canadian exporters. a tariff of 75 cents a hundrzxl- weight with the exception of a 3,500,000-bushel annual quota on which the tariff is reduced to 37'.-& cents. About one-quarter of American shipments to Canada can be made up of two-inch potatoes. The re- mainder has to be 294. Federal of- ficials said they will demand the U. S. lift the MW. restrictions. If not. Americans can expect a lit- tle retaliation-no American pota- toes would be allowed into Canada . . ! - . --A officials were told they could ex- VANCOUVER. iCP)- Repres- entatives of a group 31'"-1511 and European companies an- nounced Friday plans for a major steel industry in the lower Pacific coast area employing approximat- ely 4,000 persons and representing a 510,000,000 investment. . The giant project, to rival the Annacls island-factory project un- der way near New Westminster. 3. C.. was announced by Dr. Wil- liam K. Waller. The plant. with components from Europe assembled here by British engineers. would produce 50.000 tons of steel a year. Dr. Waller also annnunred plans for a cement industry in B. C.. and 8.000.000 worth of other eon- structlon projects. HAVE BIG PROGRAM The steel project. he said. would be part of a widespread program of Waller companies. including cement manufacture by Anglo- Canadlan Cement Distributing Co. Ltd. of Vancouver. He said the 33.000000 program would include an office building. apartments. and two hotals. It would operate under Waller Es- tates. Ltd. which has a pilot home-building project in North Vancouver. Anglo-Canadian now imports cement for distribution. but is fi- nancing a manufacturing centre at Chllliwack. 65 miles east of here to operate as international Cement Company. CANADIAN lN GROUP Dr. Waller. German-born Brit- ish chemical engineer and a grad- uate of Cambridge. said his com- panies were mainly in Britain. A principal of his group. he said. is Brig.-Gen. A. C. Critchley. Can- adian-bnrn London financier. An- other is Hilary Marquand. former health minister ln.thc Labor gov- Parliament At A Glance By THE CANADIAN PRESS Friday External Affairs Minister Pear- son gave qualified approval of a Russian invitation for exchange visits of parliamentarians. Opposition Leader Drew warned Germany should be watched clos- ely to forestall any attempt to re- unify West and East Gsnnany by force. Howard Green (PC-Vancouver Qusdrsl said the eatsst threat to peace is in the acific; Canada should be more active in defence there. A. M. Nicholson (CC!-Mnckam aiel or ad diplomati recognition of the munlst Chinese govern- ment. A. B. Patterson (SC-Fraser Valleyl said Russian talk of co- existence is a blind to cover W plans for subversion and aggra- sion. Trade Minister Report New B. C. Steel Plan-r .....'l'a-. ..,4.,.Q00 it they are less than We inclin- srnment. Dr. Waller did not say where the mill will beestablisher. but said it will have to be ”possibly one or two mountain ranges nway." The associate projects. he said. include smaller plants to produce nails and window glass. ll: lilo is sttlsrirs lilml ilmsstr scum Sttlorlcs otlleae 9 TORONTO ((lPr-Minimum and maximum temperatures 2 ll Dawson Vancouver Victoria Edmonton Calgary Regina Winnipeg Toronto .. Ottawa . Montreal Quebec Fredericton .. Saint John ceagseslssecosssscl? f2! 333-iK33i&3fiS3SSg3 St. John's. Nfid HALIFAX. (('Pl- The Domin- ion weaiher office says it WFIIK disturbance is likely to calm some cloudiness over the district on Sunday. Not much change is indicated for Saturday. Forecasts: New Brunswick: Sunny with little change in temperature; northwest winds 15 becoming light in afternoon. Low-high at Mone- ton. and Fredericton M and 40. Saint John 25 and 40. Bdmundston and Campbellinn 1 and 35. Out- y look for Sunday: Variable cloudi- less. ldwarl Island: Gal" ntaslaterthanfharlottetiowa. Sun rises today at SM n. 3. int setsat6.4lg.m. .