R We Guardian Four Canrtdiansiixiiboard Freighter Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Maxims of a Mere Man Well done, soon done. PRICE 12 PAGES , , . i Sinks ln Raging ' (President Oil Italy Inspects Guard Honor Guards, in the fastest official in- spection ever recorded here. was the first time men of the reg- Glovannl Gronchi. president of' Italy. reviews a 100-man.guard of honor on his arrival in Ottawa. Two Policemen Killed Israelis And Syrians The 68-year-old president breezed through the inspection of the 2nd iBattalion. Regiment of Canadian O Clash Ai Sea OfGalilee Sunday JERUSALEM (AP) - Shooting between Israeli and Syrian forces flared up Sunday in the northeast corner of the Sea of Galilee. A United Nations spokesman said two Israeli policemen were killed. The Israeli foreign office accused 1 r Syrians of s "wanton attack." Official Israeli sources said, the Syrians opened fire when an I!- raeli police launch went to help an- other launch which went aground on the beach while on a routine in- spection patrol. investigation by...t.lte,-,.IJidted . Na- tions - sponsor mixed armistice commission. team of UN truce observers went to the scene. police were returned. the gravest concern lest tension in ; ating for w the region be heightened following i repeated Syrian aggression." said the Israeli foreign office spokes- m on. Israel asked for an immediate ed Syrian - zlsraex ian gunposts last Dec. killed 56 Syrians. Six Israelis were killed in that battle. Israel claims the Syrian border tn.tho,-ud! ' I cast" of tbi, narrow strip of -beach, owned by llsrgel but actually a no-man's an . Sundnyls incident occurred in the gion where Israeli forces. retali- ltat they said was shoot- ng at fishing boats. attacked Syr- II and "This wanton attack must raise re . ' -Ilsa watimvl imcnt had acted as guards of honor in the Capital. (CP Photo). Leave For Mar. Economic Council Keith MacKinnon,- Vice nesident for Prince Edward Island leaves today for Halifax. acompanied by several other members of the org- anization. to attend a meeting of the Maritime Economic Council to be held at Dalhousie University. Halifax on March seventh. Other members scheduled to at- tend the conference include Alan Holman. Paul Gallant, Donald MacDonald. Lincoln Dewar and Frank Curtis. Owing to other en- gagements. some of the delegates may not leave until tomorrow. Atlantic Crash Loivpoiv (AP) - A U. s. an In Damascus. on official Syrian statement declared the Israelis were fired upon when they tried to land armed units during darkness for the purpose of "spying" near the village of Mnsadla. The Israeli foreign ministry said the two bodies were returned to la- raei Sunday night after the Syrians handed them over to the UN of- ficials. Also returned were the two police launches seized by the Syr- ans. N0 SYRIAN CASUALTIES Israel still listed as missing two other policemen reported wounded and capturedby the Syrians. Syria and its forces suffered no casual- es. Israel earlier had threatened counter-mean cu unless the four Tourist Finds Large Diamond MURFREESBORO. Ark. (AP)-- A Texas tourist found a lhlkcarat diamond Sunday at the nearby crater of Diamonds. the only dia- mond mine in North America. The estimated value of the stone to 515.000 According to the rules of the mine. Mrs. A.L. Parker of Dallas will be permitted to keep all but 15 per cent. of the appraised valua- tion of the diamond. She must pay the 25 per cent to the manager of e mine. . Mrs. ILA Millar.' wife of the manager of the mine. said she thought it was the largest surface diamond ever found in North America. It probably is a sliver of s mo-carat or ll)-carat diamond. the said. Tourists are permitted to roam the mine. which lsnlt bein worked. to search for surface lamonds. They can keep any they find that are live carats or ess. Larger dis- Inonde must be shared with the management. The stone found by Mrs. Parker ll 1'55 inches long. about it inch wide and about 16 inch thick. Mrs. Miller said it was a blue - white . Coming Events ”” Card Part: Newton School Mon- dl! March th. solve their wheezy aid raisin . cud p 3"," puk-Hm. to, h n a Vtlr or so. ey ' ave -- . put their antique vehl leaf :::::'m".)' um um. 0' Tom" through a roadworthln iest ,. bush! 5&0 Clearance Sale advertise- 'ln the Middle wall lsnopshtrs I:0. x Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd said Sunday "time is running out" East and "the trouble is getting worse rather than better." Addressing the Indian council of world affairs, he said the situation in the area is "bedevilled" by the friction between Israel and her Arab neighbors. - . I "One of the most worrying fea- tures" was the large-scale supply of arms to Egypt from the Com- munist bloc which threatened to upset the balance Britain. France and the United States had tried to maintain during the last five years. Lloyd met with Prime Minister Nehru for A second time Sunday. During three hottrs of talks they were understood to have discussed possible British-Indian moves to- ward an international disarma- ment formula acceptable to both Russia and the United States. The British minister, heading for a meeting of the Southeast Asia Treaty Organisation in Karachi. Pakistan. arrived in New Delhi Friday night after being delayed folur dhours by rioters on Babrein ran . 1,000 IN BIOTS More than 1,000 demonstrators in the British-protected territory in the Persian gulf held up departure of Lloyd's plane until they were dispersed by police wielding bay- oneta and firing tear-gen shells. Bahrein has since been quiet and there have been no arrests of Time Running Out In Middle East NEW DELHI (Reuters!-British only road to the island's airport. wrecked two buses and caused some slight injuries to police. scale to government. Will Discuss Stronger NAIO OTTAWA (CPl Gronchi . larg The demonstrations were notisearch lane, Hgd steadily gun. considered essentially anti-British. day 0",? me ":3 250 miles mum. They are believed 10 ha"? been west of Iceland in a waning bopo organized originally on a small or finding survivor-3, embarrass the Bahreln Most of those - Strengthen- ing of NATO in the non-military field will be discussed today by Prime Minister St. Laurent and visiting Italian President Giovanni This subject is likely to loom e at the next meeting of the Force Globemaster carrying 17 persons crashed in names in the stormy North Atlantic early satur- day at the same spot where it al- most ran into disaster a week ago. Two bits of wreckage-a flame- scarred oxygen bottle and a shat- tered piece of smoke plywood-- picked up in the area where the giant military transport sounded ills last frantic S p S were the 'only traces found. i Lifeboats. rescue ships and aboard were air force personnel. The plane-I G 124-was flying from Iceland to Goose Bay. Labrador, and New York with its ultimate destination Warner - Robbins air base in Georgia. E-don And Mollef Plan Conference PARIS. (AP)-French sources said Stutday night Premier Guy Mollet's meeting with Prime Min- ister Eden will take place in Lon- don, probably next Sunday, Mol- , mverutnsilt-lomslutlon. crown .-compan to lively as that on a loans to prair Storm But All 60 Rescued Plan Broad Changes In Housing Deal OTTAWA (CPt-Broad changes in federal housing legislation. in- cluding a boost in payments for city slvm clearance, were indica- ted Saturday by Works Minister Winters. He gave notice of a bill to pro vide payments to municipalities. totalling up to s25.000.000 "to as- sist in the clearance. replaldlng, rehabilitation and modernization of blighted areas." Officials have said this will per- mit. slum areas. cleared with fed- eral ald. to be used for stores. of- fices and factories. At present. aid is given only if the cleared area is used for housing, city beautifica- tion or municipal structures. A brief outline of other proposed changes in the National Housing Act were given in Mr. Winters' notice of a resolution which must be adopted before the bill is in- tr d s' in Parliament. One change would increase the size of home improvement loans Fear War Danger Greater P I o 0 LONDON (API - Criticism of British and American policies in the Middle East sounded in Brit.- ain Sunday in the wake of the firing of the British commander of Jordan's Arab Legion. The criticism crossed party lines as fears were expressed that the danger of war between Jews and Arabs had been made more acute by the removal of the steadying influence of Lt.-Gen. John Bagot Glubb from the service of Jordan. Sir Robert Boothby. an out- spoken Conservative member of Parliament, a ss a iled what he called ”cavorting" foreign sec- rctaries. and declared in a news- paper article that Selwyn Lloyd and U. S. State Secretary John Foster Dulles should spend more time at their desks. Dulles is on a tour of the Far East and Lloyd guarantees to 5200.000.000 from Sl25.000.000. is visiting key Middle East can itals. Both are on their way to I Hot Debate Looms In House Over Gas Pipeline Financing OTTAWA (CPt - Controversy over fi 'al arrangements for building the trans-Canada natural gas pipeline will produce one of the biggest political contests of the present sessions of Parliament. Financing of the 2.200-mile. 3350.- 000.000 line from Alberta to On- tario and Quebec will be discussed in the Cprnmons durin debate of ' "i lie I build a north- k in the. line. A ern Ontario. resolution preceding introduction of the bill likely will be. pre- sented to the House before the March 10-April 0 Easter recess. Debate is expected to be as but to rntlf uarantees of bani farmers on farm- stored grain. That measure. on by Parliament last week. government WII fought through I20 days of debate during five weeks by opposition parties who wanted cash advances instead of loans. AUTHORIZE! SPENDING The pipeline lcgisla" would authorize the federal government to spend up to Sl30.000.000 on the 675-mile northern Ontario section east from the Manitoba border to Kapuskaslng. The stretch is esti- mated to cost Sll0.000.000. The On- tarlo government would put up one-third of the cost. not exceed- ing 35,000,000. The crown company, to be known In Northern Ontlrlo Pin Line crown corporation. would leased to Trans-Canada Pipe Linea Ltd.. which will build the rest. of the line. The company would also have a purchase option. The controversy will be over Trans-Canada's roposal to build the line with niteri States and Canadian capital. The company has yI0l'nllCd to offer 51 per cent of the common stock on the Cans- dlan market. although the govern- ment has received no direct under- North Atlantic Council, tentatively scheduled for May 4 in Paris. Italy. as well as Canada. has long campaigned for fuller im- plementation of Article II of tile North Atlantic Charter. This ar- ticle deals with co - operation among the 15 NATO partners in non-military fields such as trade and cultural relations. Italian Foreign Minister Gactano litlarlino. accompanying Mr. Gron- chi on his three-day visit here, in- dicatcd in an interview that Can- ada. Italy and the United States time. MISSING BOY FOUND east-central Toronto home. let accepted a British invitation for such a meeting Saturday-for "an exchange of views"-'-but no date or place was fixed at the m.:;m TORONTO (CPt-Kenny Bell. 0. missing since Friday afternoon and object of a 100-constable police search, was found Saturday. He was discovered by another boy in an automobile parked behind taking to this effect. The government's gas pipeline policy likely will be supported by the Social Credit party which wants to see Alberta gas moved east. However. the licy is ex- pected to be opposed by the Pro gressiv. Conservative opposition mainly on grounds that the project will be dominated by U. S. intu- eats. POSITION CLEAR The CCF party already has made its position clear. it wants the line built as a federal public utility. CCF leader M. J. Coldwell said in the Commons Jan. 12 that pres- ent plans will place the pipeline under the control of predomi- nantly - American companies. He said the government is "bartering away another of the opportunities to develop the vast resources of power and energy in a manner Trade Minister Howe has said that with. few exceptions all the Canadian oil and gas producing companies are offshoots of U. 3. firms and that Canada must avail itself of the experience that has been built up on this continent in distributing natural gas. While the official opposition is ex- ec-ted to oppose the present plan. Carl Nickle. Progressive Conserva- ' tive member for Calgary South. has indicated he will support the government. In a recent speech in Calgary he said he does not sub- scribe to his partyfs indicated sup- port of a Canadian - financed scheme. LABOR OPPOSED A small offshoot of the Conserva- tlve party-the .Pro esslve Con- servative Student cderatlon-is echoing CCF policy. The federa- tion at a meeting here last week- end urged public ownership. This policy also is supported by the Trades and Labor Congress and the Canadian Congress of La- bor. In a brief to the Gordon eco- nomic commlssion the two labor organizations said the present plan is "a gigantic giveaway of a price- less and irreplaceable natural re- sources." Deadline for Trans-Canada to complete financial arrangements for construction of its section of the line is April 30. However. the Alberta petroleum and natural gs conservation board has cxten the deadline under its gas export permit to Nov. iii. The federal deadline was set by the board of transport commis- sioners. The board said Thursday it has received no application for an extension. Under Trans-Canadt-'s plon gas would be purchased at Emerson. Menu. by the Tennessee Gas Trans- mission F may of the U. S. The U. S. company now is seeking an import permit from the U. S. fed- eral power commlsslon at Wash- ington and is meeting considerable opposition from other American gas companies and power and fuel interests. may press for increased on Article II at the next Atlantic Council meeting. He said the meet- ing could be one of the most imit- any of the rloters who blocked the fill ever held by NATO. LONDON (Reuters)-The owners of 1.500.000 British laloplea are en- gaged in a life-or-death stniggle to every year if the Home of Corn- mons passes a road traffic bill now in the mill. I may of the driver! at tbrvio use models do not want them. They do not prefer to use a clutch ego of slot-rlr at mesons. was that ."just about" works and ti ' Guardian today g wbmntcalmztaotrhlgg dzystnctm. Bu: ucfllllvtlwghl ltmlhmrahlz frequent trade-ins in new in ....?.t.'... iauu"" of re-o.""un-' mime: otiiei?'i'r't33r'I'.i.. attached r - CfIvlICVito"tbeoId "lntbesameway NUIIII tmigannheumemen gontobattei-ea carpet slippers and best-up arm- chairs. Uldd III trlllld Hll. Ill Owners of British Jolopies Dog Catcher Important Rabies Scare In Ontario In Life-or-death -Struggle. venerable Vehicles would ected. N01" WORTH FIXING What the owners is would wotiid be whether than can be a standard of nggtwort The! IF! Quin nwernment. an of in ores owners of cars more than to years old would have to submit them in annual roldworthy tests or pay a fine of 1120. An estimated l.il00.00tt be at- : in mm? cue! the costs of repair bills much greater than the totll value of the auto or we its scrap , M0Ml'lfI organizations h a we doubt! W the expense own fig- . Thai from two to three per cent ants are attribu- able to hush. ceased dogs . ronomo fCP)- low: due catcher, often the R of local Jokes. took on new cc to- day as many southern Ontario mu- nicipalities started campaigns to round up stray dogs as part of an intensive drive against the spread of rabies. ' some communities now are call- ing them canine-control officers. In addition to the establlshmeii of vaccination clinics in areas where cues of rabies have been Md reported. several communities or trouble 0'”lItting up a country- wide Iyllth of testing stations worth it. and wood: uniform btaess. torendodllo dered all dogs tied up and warned stray dogs would be impounded. In Kitchener an order is belu issued requiring all dogs in the city and neighboring Waterloo be tied up following reports of roles. BOY Bl'I"l'EN DY COLLII in Hamilton officials said unil- wadulll If II preventive p planned as yet. up for 14 hours a day. , At Kin City. north of Toronto. Stephen ooper was given a rabies inoculation after his dog died of unknown causes. The boy had been bitten by the collie nine days ago. in Toronto no ables cases wen reported but of cials were watch- ing the situation carefully. In suburban York township. north of the city. stray dogs were being rounded up and in some dio- tricts school chi- dreo on the dangers of III!- At Oshawa veterinarians re- ported being swamped with vaccin- frnm owners. III DOGS VACCINATIZD be shot. Digs were ordered tiodtdren thodlo-the been Cochrane last fall. Free clinics from three Id district families were tovrecelvo Pasteur sntl-rabies tree I. The children had handled a dell! fox which was killed by a pet collie when the fox tried to attack the children. The fox's head has been sent in Hull. Que.. for examina- tion. The collie has been placed uddr quarantine. From Sturgeon Falls. in miles west of North Bay. the head of another fox behaved infected with rabies has been not to Hall for examination. A dog which attacked fox as it wlked from the bush has been placed in our: line. Apprnxlmatcly ssmo dogs have been vaccinated in the province ".1 since the disease flru broke out: ten move from place to piece as tho disease is reported. la'oetbusOstortonvcen- Ono estlmato placed the eumhc d it I Oatuh at 3.3. consistent with the welfare of all."' u.K.-u.s. Middle Ea,-,i Under C meeting of the Suullicast Asia Treaty Organization in Pakistan. ''It is a mistake,” Sir Robert said, "for foreign secretaries to spend half of their time cavorting nothing but loss of prestige." Sir Robert insisted "Britain and the United States must produce, without further delay. a joint pol- icy for the Middle East which they failed to achieve in Washington.” He referred to Prime Minister Eden's recent visit to President F.isenliower. Hugh (laitskcll. leader of the Labnr party. told a political rally "the government has completely failed in match up to the new sit- untlon in the Middle East and the 5 01.0 0 danger of war there is undoubtedly becoming more acute." Meanwhile. dispatches frotn Jor- dan said 15.000 marchers. waving flags and banners, cheered King Hussein in Amman Sunday in the biggest anti- British demonstration since his dismissal of Glubb. Boys and girls joined the throngs. shout- ing "long live the king" and "down with imperialism." Older demonstrators fired shots in the air in their enthusiasm. Al Jihad (holy war), no Amman rcwsp er. headlined its news story, x(!8S0l'lS for Glubb's dis- niissalemnney wasted, corruption encouraged people's morale under- mined." NEWCASTLE. N.B. (CPI - St. Joseph's University took top hon- ors in the New Brunswick regional drama festival for a third time when the 1956 event ended Satur- day night. A polished production of Moi- iere's ”l'Avre." the story of a miser. won the praise of adjudica- tor Pamela Stirling, the Calvert regional trophy and S100 cheque, and the hiacLaren trophy of New Brunswick's lieutenant - governor. The best actor award went to by, hond lat. Argon in Moliere's "le Malade Imaslnalre." Presented by Sacred Heart University of Bathurst. Ella Murray won the best ac- tress sward for her performance as Vi Vining in the Sackville theatre Guild version of Lesley Storm's "The Day's Mischief." Release Names Of Crash Casualties OTTAWA. (CPI - Air force headquarters announced Sunday tihe names of three of the four Canadian airmen killed near Ben- field. France. Friday when their Sabre lets crashed in .a four- plane mid-air collision. The airmen were F0 John H. Adams. 24. of Winnipeg, F0 Fred- erick Karl Axbell. 24. of London. 0nt.. and F0 Edward Walters. 24 of Kelowna. B.C. Name of the fourth airmen will not be released unt-il next-of-kin are notified. KILLED IN CRASH KUALA L U M P U R. Malaya Royal Air Force transport plane central M a l a y a. Saturday. St. Joseph's University Wins Top N.B. Honors In Drama Gerald Belanger who portrayed the I The threeday festival concluded with a presentation of Racinelc "Andromaque" by Notre Dame d'- Acadie College of Moneton. St. Josephls University became eligible for invitation to the Domin- ion finals at Sherbrooke, Que.. May 14-19. Eight of the winners in 13 regions will be invited to com- pete. St. Joseph's had no entry in last year's New Brunswick festival but won in 1954 and 1953. earning a bid to the Canadian finals in the latter year. "RecordrPofalo e ” Movement For February 1.239 rail cars of potatoes left the province during February. This is 273 above last year. 504 above 1954. and 513 above the average of the last five years. Total move- ment from the province this season now exceeds 8.000 cars. This suggests that no'problem will be encountered in marketing all the P.E.I. crop thii year. How. ever. New Brunswick appears to have a definite surplus. and the Island grower knows that no great price increase can be expected while N.B. potatoes are in surplus supply. This, in turn. makes last week's announcement of the cancellatiion of the Italian order for 175 cars of N.B. potatoes of greater concern to us. It shows the -effect that United States farm policies can have on our exports. It was suggested that the Maine Tablestoek grade of 2V4 inch to 4 inch might have to be tightened a (lleuterst -- Seven men are bel suited in about 400 rarloads going lleved to have been killed when a to the starch plants each week. crashed in the dense jungle of about two weeks later than usual . A helicopter coming on the market. leaving sighted the burned out wreckage that much more time to dispose little more. but at a recent meet- ing their Board decided against any change. The present grade has re- The U.S. early crop will be of old stock. The "Mirage oi VATICAN CITY (AP)-The Pope warned Sunday against the "mirage of false peace" which he said for "militant materialism" means only a truce. The pontiff. now 80. spoke to ambassadors and ministe a to the Holy See from 42 nations gathered to give him birthday greetings. Militant materialism is the term the Pope usually uses when refer- ring to communism. He told the diplomats the forces of militant materialism "orient themselves in I direction which does not lead and cannot lead to peace. "Formulae like 'natlonal untty' and lsoelal progress' must not be abused." the Pope said. "For mil- itant materialism the time of peace is merely a time of truce-a pre carious truce which awaits only the social and economic collapse of other ples." He sat states which follow a policy based on respect of the lib erty and dignity of men "preserve an internal solidity against which mtlltltant materialism will break ii "9 g.. I ACT IN VAIN "It is in vain." he said. "this ttter before tbs a false pun tosbowtbeway lnestsbl economic lntheuchaagoof experiences. "May those who heed such I voice do so with a prudence all reserve inspired by an acute care lam) try to mice eyes the mirage which to maintain a spiritual order." The pontiff also eaumd Pope Sounds Warning Against these (forces of militant metals! minutes I 5! rclttm False Peace" concern that the "second technical revolution" of the present age may im ril the spiritual and moral vii ues of man and his society. "One is often inclined to char arterize the present period. not without some degree of com- plarenry. as 'the second technical revolutinn.' and to see in it the perspective of I better futun which that would seem to imply." the Pope told the diplomats. Picked Up By U. S. Nciv.y Transport SEATTLE (AP) - The Orient- hound freighter Washington Mail broke up and sank in a raging storm in the north Pacific Satur- day but all 60 persons aboard-in eluding four Canadian passengers I-were recsued by a U.S. Navy transport. The scene of the nightmare ex perience was 700 miles northwest of here in virtually the same spot where the freighter Pennsylvania broke up in the same fashion. un- der the same conditions and sank with loss of all 46 men aboard four years ago. The Washington Mail carried a general cargo of flour and lumber for Oriental points. Plunging and wallowing in the 20-foot swells raised by a 30 to 50- knot wind. the Washington Mail. a 7.943-ton freighter belonging to the American Mail Line. broke in two at the No. 3 hold at 4:36 p.m. Apparently there had been some warning because the ship's master. Capt. Dudley A. Durrant of Seattle. had sent an S 0 S 12 minutes ear- lier. saying the ship was in dis- tress. ' SANK AFTER 30 MINUTES Four hours sailing time away the General Freeman. a navy trans- port bound for Adak. in the Aleu- tians, heard the call for help and Burned toward the freighter's posi- on. Thirty minutes after the forward portion of the ship broke loose it sank. leaving the remainder of the Washington Mail tossing aimlessly about and in a sinking condition. The capt;:. held the 51 crew and nine passengers. I eluding two Roman Catholic missionaries on route to service in the Orient. shot-tie-after-0'-9-.ns.'. M -r A r - Thus he gave it: -"abandon ship" order and everyone took to two lifeboats. The lifehoatl bobbed about like corks and were visible only a short distance because of snow hen the Freeman steamed to the pot at 0239 pm. The after portion of th ill-fated ship rolled over and sank. only a scant few minutes after the per- sons aboard had taken to the eta. The Canadians aboard were Miss lvy W. Withers. 46. of Vancouver. Vernon Lester. 45. and his wife Phyllis. 41. of West Vancouver. and Brother Charles Lebel. 38. of Mont- real. He was travelling with Brother Chutes Govserl-. 50. of Ar. llngton. Va. ' Continued on page 1. col. I , . Prom. Villa on To not tfltltv. ltorutuutr Athletes (:1 Stout 2 "5 TORONTO. tCPt - Tempera- tures issued by the Toronto pub- lic weather office: Two Brothers Die In Fire MONTREAL (CF)-Two young brothers. Wayne Barr. 4. and Ron- ald. 2. died in a fire Saturday in their basement home while their mother was shopping at e neigh- borhood store. Assistant director Armand Dur- etie. in charge of the ting operations. blamed the fire on matches with which the children Mil Max Nitiht D37 Vancouver . .. . 34 62 33 I0. .2 I .i P 2. 3.. 3 IT at M 2 II .. 3” I9 31 as I . 32 - 3 .. St. John's . . .. 28 31 apparently had been The mother. Mrs. oual Barr was about at the store only. id in ' - ma mdeodbon es were scarcely found in believed the chino. Inhyxlatha. i ii at 2 iii , E .5 i&ls ti 3 ii: is '53: abulrd the floundering hulk Iinl.ll