TV TELEPHONE 8506 Ioyer mods sales with Guardian WentAds.DloII506osltfsrelassi- 0. fisdodtekagferquidseatlts. twine wool? on "Covers Prince 'Edward Island Like The Dew” ueadllt wear:-tot Verielsie slatsdinsss end wu-men-ital winds 15. Leo-litglut chsrlsneswg 7:; PAGES C WN CANADA. THURSDAY, JUNE 20. 1957 SIR GARNER, GOVERNOR PROVVSE AND PREMIER MATIlES()N U.K. High Commissioner is Impressed On First Visit UK Hydrogen Bomb Tests Completed LONDON (AP) - Britain Wed- nesday night announced comple- tion of her hydrogen bomb tests in the central Pacific with the na- plosion of a third bomb. As in the two previous H-bomb tests in the Christmas island area, the third blast of a nuclear device took place at high altitude. the ministry of supply announced. The announcement said: "Minister of Supply Aubrey Joncs has received a report from Air Vice-Marshal W. E. Oulton. tumntander of task force. and W. R. J. Cook. scientilic director of the trials. that an explosion of a nuclear device took PING If I high altitude in the central Pacific todal. "This. the third explosion. corn- plctea this series of tests. The min- lsler has sent telegrams to Sir William Penney. director of the atomic weapons research establish- ment. and Air Vice-Marshal Oui- ton task force commander con- gratulating them and all their staff: on the successful conclusion of this operation." A ministry spokesman said Wed- nm.-:lay's blast was a hydrogen bomb. lirttainls first ll-bomb was ex- plotlcd over the Pacific testing .-trcat May 15. That one was in the mt-colon range-the equivalent of l.oo0.000 ions of TNT. The second if - bomb was ex- ploded May Ill. Scientists in charge of the tests said It generated ht-at estimated at 104130.000 do grces eentrigade. "I am delighted with my first vis- it to Prince Edward island and hope that it may be possible for my family and I to spend an extended holiday at one of your fine beaches." said Sir Saville Garner. K.C.. KCMG.. High Commissioner for the United Kingdom to Canada Famous H. B. C. Post Will Close K I YORK FACTORY. Man. ICP)- The historic Hudson's Bay Com- pany post founded here by Pierre Radiant: and Medard Groscillierl in 168! will be shirt down June 29 after 275 years of frontier trad- lull. I The company announced Wed-l nesday that lndinrs who have- traded at the post at the mouth of the Bayes River. 553 miles northeast of Winnipeg on the shores- of Hudson Bay. will leave the; area. l Because of the decline in gamel and fur-bearing animals in thel region. the Crt-es will go to Split Lake. near llford on the Hudson Bay line of the Canadian National Railways. Closing of the ”factory" will mark the end of an outpost that was a bustling trading. centre at its peak. For snmy years it was the headquarters of the Hudson's Bay lfounded only I2 years after the company was granted its charter in 1670. yesterday. Sir Saville is accompanied by Lady Garner. their ton-year old daughter. Geneve and first secre- tary of the High Commissioner's Office. T.D.R. Belgrave. They ar- rived In the Province Tuesday night by motor car and will spend two days before continuing their maritiime tour in Nova Scotia. Yesterday morning. the High Commissioner conferred with Pre- mier Matheson and made a courtesy call on His Honour Lieut- enunt Governor Prowse. He will call on His Worship the Mayor this evening at 9.15. Sir Saville assumed his present under Sir Malcolm MacDonald and Sir Alexander Clntterbuck, both as senior secretary and as deputy High Commission . He stated yesterday that his vis- it was both informal and informat- ive. "As High Commissioner to Canada. 1 am anxious to visit and become acquainted with the Gov- ernment leaders and the people in all parts of the country and 1 do not believe I would be doing my job properly if I did not make such visits." he said. The High Commissioner and his party will include in their Island tour today a visit to Souris where Sir Saville is anxious to see first position six months ago but is noihand the operations of the dragger stranger to Canada havng scrvedlflcet and the fish processing plant. 3i2,'QO0hI-ri"Seiriovus Po River Flood Creeps Higher ROVIGO, Italy IReuterst-Thou-'disastera in Italian history. sands of farmers camped with Immediately threatened is the their cattle on the tallest dikcs of .Dclta island of Ariano. enclosed thc low-lying Po delta Wednesdayl as the rain - gorgod river rose higher and higher. The muddy Pu Iwcacited the dikcs at two points and seeped through at several other spots. The level of the river at Pole- sella. 37 miles from the Adriatic, was only one foot below the hind! mark six years ago when 273 PCP sons were killed and 223.000 made homeless in one of the worst flood t:.-r....- ':-.:-....::.-tt aims?-rm i by the main channel and an arm of the river. ts 32.000 Inhabitants :tnd 45,000 acres of fertile farm- land are in serious danger. TOIL T0 PLUG GAP As the crest rolled down the delta ot the sea. squads of fire- men. police and hundreds of work- man and volunteers toiled all night in the glare of -" Jlights to plug a gap at Gutdarini on the arm of the river. and a breach at Con- tarina on the main stream. Meanwhile. most of the rest of Europe swcltcred in hot sunshine although thunderstorms in scat- tered nreas brought the mercury tumbling down. The situation was almost normal in Switzerland after floods last week in the alpine region. The railroad connecting 'l.crmat utith Visp was opcned after being cut by a landslide. Violent storms in the Bordeaux region of France caused damage to vineyards. orchards and crops. the hot and stormy weather over- the country. which sent the ther- momctcr to fill in Paris Tuesday. was likely to continue. wcather ex- pcrls said. The shortage of water in Vienna. Austria. was described as ”catas lrohpic" Wednesday by the chief of the municipal water supply of- fice. He said consumption rose in the last 24 hours. despite warnings more water than ever before in the city's history. . FLOOD! HIT l'K A six-day heat wave broke in Britain during the night with hemy rain and thunderstorms. Damage and flooding was caused in southern England. Sm iet troops helped to quell for- est fires in East Germany during the six-day heat wave there. West Berlin school children were sent home Wednesday as the temper- ature soared to degrees. But northern Norway was still held in the grip of cold and some by city officials. as Viennese used Donald Fleming ls Choice As Finance M Edmonton Mayor I I 0 Visiting Hero Mayor William Hawrelak of town last night and this morning at 10 o'clock will pay an official call on His Worship J.D. Stewart at City Hall. Mayor Hawrelak is at- computed by his wife and president of an unsuccessful Liberal candidate in the recent Federal election. Mayor Hawrelak will make of- ficial calls on His Honour. Lieut- Premier A.W. Matbeaon. I1 Seaman lost In Collision At Sea Off France BR!-EST. France Reutersl- Eleven seamen died in a blazing inferno off the French coast Wed- nesday after an oil-laden Ameri- can-owned tanker and a Greek , freighter collided in a pea-soup fog. Of 46 survivors picked up by res- cue shlps of five countries. 1) were lnjurd 10 severely. Another 24 seamen were re- ported not accounted for. The American tanker. the ill.- 500-ton Stony Point sailing under Liberian registry. was still blas- ing hours after the collision. but a Dutch tug had put a party aboard her. Radio reports from the collision site. 1) miles west of here, said the fire on board the Stony Point bre ch made by the crash. FOG HINDEES RESCUE All dead were reported to be from the Greek freighter. the 9.346- ton loanuis. The British destroyer Ulster ar- rived here with five dead and fl survivors from collision. Tan v . taken to the tal. -. The crews quit both vessels im- mediately after the crash. Thick fog. with visibility down to I30 fect. shrouded rescue operations and prevented air aid. Lifeboats of burning oil patches in heavy seas. Later, some of its crew boarded the loaunis and put out the fire aboard it. it then began makinl slowly for port. escorted by the French tug Rhinoceros. Showers Aid In N. S. Fire Fight WINDSOR. N.S. (CPi - Heavy showers poured down on flaming woods in Hants county Wednesday helping firefighters bring trol again. But the fires are far from out. Officials said there was ileneral nearly 300 firefighters are contin- uing lo battle the scattered out- breaks that spread over a wide area of the spruce and fir wood- lands. Nearly 40 pumps throw l0fi.(lfl0 gallons of water an hour on the flamcs, but provincial forester R. H. Burgess said several more Inches of rain is needed to bring the fires to a complete standstill. Some 10.000 acres of land have been destroyed already. and sev- eral cottages and sawmills have been eaten up in the path of the fire. No Injuries have been re ported A helicopter makes continuous surveys of the situation. reporting new outbreaks to firefighters be- low. The firefighters include about Edmonton arrived in Charlotte- two . daughters. He is immediate past l the Federation of ' Mayors and Municipalities and was ' enant Governor Prowse and on. an ared to be localize a ftof the- picked the shipwrecked men out: the . widewrud outbreak under cowl before the Liberal nomination run-. I l . ...s. -' Ottawa. l"rol:rcssivr Conscr- vatlve leader John Dicfcnbakcr waves his homburg as lit' leaves an east-block conference with VICTOR Y SMILE Prime Minister Si. Lrturcni who By John LeBIane Canadian Press Staff Writer solid shape Wednesday. While the victorious party leader cession of tlve members some clue to the makeup of the party's first cabinet in 22 years. At the same time, a high party informant said the key job of fin- ance imnister now has been prac- tically settled for Donald Fleming. member for Toronto Egllnion, who has been a Conservative handy- man in the Commons on a variety of affairs. Earlier speculation had beat that the finance post would go to J. M. Macdonnell. the partyis fi- nancial speciallst in the last three Parliaments. Mr. !VlacdonnelI's age-72-apparently has knoc' ” ltim out of the running. Mr. Flem- ing, a Toronto lawyer. is 52. EXTERNAL POST DOUBTFUL Meanwhile. there was no infor- mation on who Will get another key post-external affairs-to suc- ceed intcrnaiionally-prominent L. 3. Pearson. Best speculation at the moment was that Mr. Diefcnbaker - who was his party's foreign specialist before taking over the leadership -will take this portfolio tempor- arily until he can make a perm- anent cholce. No outstanding party member appeared in prospect. But there were candidates aplenty for other cabinet posi- tions. Among those seeing Mr. Dieteti- baker Wednesday were these: Maj.-Gen. G. R. Pearkes, VC, re-elected for Flsquimalt-Saanich in British Columbia and just about certain to become defence min- istcr. George H905 of Toronto Broad- vlew. former national president at the Conservatives and a possible trade minister. .lack Charlton of Ontario's Brant- Haldimnnd. likely minister of agri- culture. He has been one of the party's chief farm spokesmen. I told him the l.ii)oral govcrnmentl would rcstgn. ICP Wlrephotol was Wednesday night named the forthcoming Provincial ion in Ixt Queens as asscmblyttton. Mr. Wood was nominzticd by clit- l ton lncc. of De-Sable, John Trainor, -of Kelly's Cross. secondiug the l motion. Two olitcr nominees were also 'vcntion, described as one of the lnrgcst meetings excr Itcld Ill Hrradnllmne Hall. They were Al- lison Mznttc, and (.'r.tuiorti Sm- rlalr. both residents of Spl'intZlt'.'lIl. Iiollt mctt. ltowcvcr. withdrew ltltclr names front the convolution. uhcrcupon llr. Woml was de- l('lnt'cd nominated. .ilr. hlu5nc's nomination was moxcd by ltcg. Smith. of Springfield. and scrond- y c by Harold Mnylrcu of Ncwl j London. Bcrl Tl'0ii:(l(.Il9. from I Wostmorland. ntovrti llr. ciatr's nomination. ninth was duly 3 sccoudctl. Robert l)auwu. ll)islrrci Prc.sI(lt'ttt. ldurmg the meeting and called ltimn lMr Wood to 2IllfllT.'iS llw mcctmg lsubscqucnt to ills nomtnzttion. nth- oi t.'l.rp.tud. the l:iberalml3arty Nominates Candidate For Ist Queens lloward Wood, Victoria farmer.l. Liberal candidate to contcst lhc; by-clt-ct- - iNOWl.AN. BROWNE TICKETED George sxoulan of Nova Scotla's Digby - Annapolis - Kings. defin- itcly ticketednfor a portfolio. He is another prospect for trade min- istcr. but might wind up with the transport departemnt. W. .l. Browne of St. John's West, y beaten in that Newfoundland rid- ing in I953 after four years in T ' the House but who made a come- back June 10 as one of Newfound- land's tun Conservative mcmbcrs.l He is expected to get a portfolio.l lpossibly fisheries. William Hamilton of Montreal Notre-Dame - de Grace, proable postmaster-general. Gordon Churchill of Winnipeg South Centre. one of the main strategists of Mr. Diets-nhaker's run for the party leadership and for the prime ministry. He will he a tuinlstcr. but lhcrc was no. firm information Wednesday (lily F6. ship and immigration I ikelyg nister Mr. MacLean ls Mentioned Among Cabinet Prospects at Vancouver Tuesday as suggest- ing he would be the next trans- OTTAWA -('P- - John Diefen-;port minister. But he said Wed- baker's new Progressive Conserv-1 nesday that quotation was "bunk." ative federal cabinet began taking "bunk." i Douglas Harkness of Calgary .North. a leading western spokes- kept mum on his choices. a pro-lman of the Conservatives and a top-ranking Conservn-lsure bet for the cabinet. He has visiting him gave been mentioned as possible north- ern affairs minister. Mrs. Ellen Fairclough of Ham- ilton West. the Conservatives' leading spokesman on labor and social welfare matters through two Parliaments and just about certain lio be Canada's first women fed- eral cabinet minister. She is ap- parently slated for either the la- bor or the health-welfare portfolio. wick's Royal. sent his province in the cabinet. very likely as veterans minister. He has been the party's chief vet- erans' spokesman for several years. NEEDS QUEBEC MINISTERS Another caller on Mr. Dlefen- baker Wednesday was J. Wilfrid Dufresne. member for Quebec West in the last Parliamdnt. who was defeated June 10. Mr. Dufresne could be called on by Mr. Dieleabaker to take over a department since the party has only two experienced pat'iamen- tarians among the eight returned in Quebec province in the election. Mr. Diefenbaker will want about six ministers from that province Apart from Mr. Hamilton. tho other experienced Quebec Consen- vative MP is Leon Balcer of Trots- Rivlcres. president of the national Conservative party. Mr. Balcer also is a sure thing for a portfolio. Some prospective cabinet mem- bers who have not yet turned up in the capital include: Alvin Hamilton. provincial party leader in ”askatchewan. who took the qu'Appelle seat from the Lib- gestlon that he might wind up as agricultureminlster to succeed the , veteran James G. Gardiner from the same province. MACLEAN MENTIONED ht: portfolio. It could be citizen-yd Angus MacLean of Queens. P.E.l., who could become Prince Edward island's first cabinet min- ister in many years. The island province in the last two Parlia- ments has had only a parliamen- tary assistant, for fisheries. This time. the Conservatives swept all its four seats. and a full minister- ship could result, in between talks with the cab- inet hopefuls-which took up most of his day-Mr. Diefenbaker drove to Perth. 0nt.. about 60 miles from here for the funeral of Dr. W. G. Blair. who would have been his health minister had he lived until the leader presented his cab- lnet to Governor-General Massey Friday. Dr. Blair. Commons member for Lanark. died suddenly last Full- day. He was 67. . RU IN FINLAND HELSINKI. Finland lliPt-ln- tais Prime Minister Nehru ar- A. .1. Brooks of New Bruno-, certain to repre-& erals. There has been some sag-' F-lfl-I this t-ltalrm.tn. era, who spoke Ill support of ilr.' Wood were: Prrmtcr Mathcstin. Hon Gcorge .llat-Kay. of iitchways. lion I-Zugcne Cullcu. I00 army and naval personnel. district of Queens Liberal Assn:-I nfion. MR. WOOD OTTAWA iCPi-All persons ar- riving in Vancouver by plane from the Far East are being examined to determine whether they have partment official says. Minister N 7 7 Mlnl(lPF of Agruullutc. F, i. lrnrge. Q.('.. the sitting member. .etl i ilnthcstvn. and ilnlaml At Vancouver Marnnnald. prc-nlrut of the Ilnl MI". ilowsrd Wood was born inl Mimic nu. . fed"-I hum, de, Tryon. son of the late George and Martha iliattlyr Wood. whore no The omen; "id wednemu, mm attended school and farmed with ex N anti u.t- it-clcttmi for IlilWARll WOOD A second licrnt in N36. ki0NIiRl”.il i(ll"t WlIilrtcn1p- t-raittrm s'(IfIFivl In remrd highs in iiontrt-.-ti a -hip captain on the waterfront turltorr-d tn the know- lmlgo llt.'tI hell soon hr worrying 'rtvcd here Tuesday for a 48-hour 1-1'L1"o,V possmuc SPEAKER Vtsl; to a nationlvwhichf. liltttlntiil. Davie Fulton of British colum..”.'l" MPF ' 99'” " "9" "'3'- .bta's Kamloops riding. the party": .gi.chr,l.' ” "”'kl'"K ' W” M Sal" top specialist on Common: procc-i .:a"a" mu" "est dure. who might take over either .thc job of Speaker presiding of-l CATERPILLAR INVASION -fit-cr of the House--or of minister FORT FRANCICS. (int. 4CPl- oi iusticc. illllions of caterpillars are re- Iiouarri (irccn of Yatwottver lnorlod to have invaded this north- Qzmtira, for -mm-.1l wars the ('on- western Ontario town and begun srt-vstivcs'. -pct-taltst nu it-an-port.la systematic stripping of trees. Mr. Grct-n. uho flow in fromlhushcs and hedges. So far. gar- Vancouvcr Wt-tlncsday, was quotedl dcns have been untounched. Swelters lnmM"ontreal But Ice Will Be Worry Soon baein undergoing a number of mi- nor repairs for her northern voy- age which will cover about I0.-t tlflfi miles. She is scheduled to lit-are in about a month . g u ",9 enminguo,” "1. M, . mm”. his father before moving to VI('- ,1 t . hctcrt rnlhrr than the ”""'r flPPll'3I'"N" 0' 'l”'4"1SP0Ti ',',:','.wh,?ll.,:?u::;:?,..?:N" mm , ilry basis because Asiatic nu is Win in 192! lie is a prrvwornm i P "WI! 50"" I" I'M? Will "KIWI - . ... not It quarnntlnable disease. Only farmcr. speclnlmuu Ill both -cod Capt Flmtl.-. i Cxnrmt o' the "Ni "9"? -WWI-V Ti"? V n- """"i H Emu HM.” lalrrrnft pa-sengent are being ex- and talvlo sfnrk puinltvrs. and it itr-ltronlri rt'll-tlltr nmppon hi, the Ice brenkcrs N R .ilrLcan and "r ' amtned. Ship travel would give married to the former K.1liil'tll.il"tnl awl vwuuwri it araln uhtie 3l0"N”8l"':- i';;l".'"i" l'.Vii""lT3Pl"C . ' s t - . 71 ,..,. - surrey s In I . gal,-,5Tg Germmy ,Reme”i- the rltseasettmeto shn uup among Mgr-Quarrte. of Hamtpon He has u.mhmV .u zunumi not make Th V I -I" H d ' in v - . . , . ( .. .1 . Kl' w Me government xcsscs Vii Gen. Hans Spcidci. German com. v-I-;;t;ttg;;:mu::::g the axcqalaggemymiffzti-'n&.rL3man, who farm. villi! tcpzum v;Wlm v l;w mnmm '0 l M "unwed hy pmlmy . wmd rnandcr of NATO liarrtll fftlsrces lame" Ms received no mmrmmkm, av” wow K b y I h m..,h....,,., ....,n -1 in...” mind it frt-ighters under contract to deliver p:lu.,g:, par jxlthat a man who rec-emlv arrived I 1-,',...,. Ram..." ,7!h.,':;;.m:;i, (;. Pi-,0 3 km vmf tlw 1. .-t mt zntna to sItDDII;fwl0hAI'tliC bases. incl!-tdlnl t . ' I A t ' ' - . . c . -; the D . "no. V, former clue I 8 o . nr-E - - ' :l('llVit in at twmnuntty vsIlliiITF '” ' t IA.” . E ..M ray. Vancouver m-It-al offl- . . . t "Ill R"mmM'h Irrwzim M road In-lirof health. mid Inuviancnm-er WM (K .”P N" llrq film W. ." H i Since there are no dock facilities quartet: of t 0 sec in antrv.T""d” WM Mom qmm" Md t-umnnss-toner tnr Victoria in Iliad. Rpunpn :.n ox; i-, M "H. ,,.,....,,.r,, 9..., say an thg Briandr crnup here for talks with g i - V y r , . , - .. . R , f 0 throat washings are being cum-. tmlv my it I - W" ll I W in tiili" "W" ”"''l ”""r M" W " l."”,. R''".',,,, "W ':M:'," ,l',,"":','.lln.-at bv the provincial health In? sr:m.vn manor: .5. W... 1.... h. t....... lhc Icm landing barges or win mu: and ("M '2" l y F" ' boratorv and will he not to ()t- Will ltL0u. nmnvcpt M ,,,.,.,.,r, .,. ....l. fix ltlgll at 50 dump barges Thcy anchor up it: E"'"p" 1,...-gm: (unhg.-1951;. nririmnoal thnrgr. of attempted fifirppx that ll.'l( at l;tt"t-Ira. a mile or more from shore and KIMII IN WAQWION Minister Kisiti G Jones arrived IR!!! slid. Wednesdl! ins tires the st Hm teveitslkswhlclleaatauaytlvbuts. IM- open s "an no.1 No cases of the disease have murdcr. mu been laid ggginggllbout mo mum from the North lighter their cargos front sbi pio- beel discovered among plane pao- Beam. II). of Waterloo. Beam was Pole and the most northerly point 1 shore. WASHINGTON (AP) - Prime Indira arrlyinglnvaaeouvst. th charged June 1 with murder is reached In his suPPl.V mission- th sxuntaetioas tin cans. tcaotu noauruttu r HO Mtled that while connection with the NA) 31 rlflst are on a voine- slaying of Vin. Jugosta Taylor-.l,sgos its to there have been no 47. The new charge was laid in nfj "(Km mm”. gkgngpr-In" with the WW d "Usually the temperature aver- ;n.g..qm- K." the arctic run. a Ityear veteran with the par. molly the 53-venroid captain -transport department. mm is ai- rise or In the M&. Navigation in the Arctic is a has- srdoes proposition. said Capt. Ce- l::mF' N ways ice in some degree, an en- l The dlbervtlle B in windmill trerne rangsdtidss.soddea icebergs. and unchartered f'P6fS. However. our helicopters helps make things a lot easier." he said referring to the aircraft carried on the deck of the d'lberviIIe. "When the way appears to be blocked we go up int .1 look and always man- age to fold a way out." in the late winter and early spring. the captain and his ship are busy with ice-breaking opera- tions in the St. Lawrence River? SPRING ICE BAD "This spring was the word I've known since my ice-breaking co- rt-er began in ma." he said. "The golf was so full of Ice you could litcrally walk from Newfoundland tn Htpe Breton "In one tI'n-week peril! II; rred 41 ships trapped off sydney llonc In addition we were QK on in rescue otoc ioe-breelI'I- ihe Edward WIDQ Iiid q N.B. Mclzan. i "We steam fog ij' banish & M. i if :3. A 3