Liber ' By JOHN LaBLANC Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP)—Three Liberal members of the Commons indus- Oysters Job Ends In June HALIFAX (CP) — Transplant- tag of 10,000 barrels of disease- resistant oysters to Nova Scotia and New Brunswick waters from Prince Edward Island will be completed in June, the fisheries said here Tuesday. Operation Oyster began three years ago. The shell fish were transplanted in the Northumber- land Strait area fram Pictou The oysters came from the fish- eries oyster culture station at El- lerslie, P.E.1. PROVING SUCCESSFUL Dr. A. L. Pritchard of Ottawa, , said the project was prov- ing successful. ie enid the Prince Edward le-|'"% te tie hake wore. by. tholiec ‘disease about 1915 Those that survived are immune. - Prince Edward Island’s produc- tion last 'year brought fis$ermen $263,000. visitors are expected to see the trial rebations journed Tuesiay in protest at what they contended was an over- jong sitting. Their move followed a running fight between Liberal and major- ity Progressive Conservative committee members over com- mittee procedure, The scrap has been going on for about a week. Tuesday, the opponents batted around miscellaneous charges against each other including ‘‘ob- structionist” and “incompet- Finally, when the committee decided to sit well beyond the normal ~ adjournment time of 1 p.m., Alexis Caron (Holl), W. H. McMillan (Welland) end Charles Granger (Grand Faiis- bigad Bay - Labrador) walked ans eine “We had other things to ee Secret Talks Recorded At Big Four Meeting GENEVA (AP) — The Big Four foreign ministers agreed Tuesday pte plunge into secret bargaining ‘on Berlin and a summit meeting when they resume their confer- ence here Friday. Then they flew off to Washington for the funeral of John Foster Dulles. Christian A. Herter of the United States, Britain’s Selwyn Lioyd and Francés Maurice Couve de Murville thundered out of Geneva in the Constellation of ‘Gen. Lauris Norstad, NATO com- mander in Europe. Andrei A. Gromyko, the Soviet Union’s top diplomat, left two hours earlier in a tourist class ‘flight via London for the Wash- ington rites. The Soviet foreign minister and one aide will return Thursday in the same plane with Herter, Lloyd and Couve de Mur- ville. DUE TODAY Herter and the other two West- ington about 9 a.m. Fi left white - haired Foreign Minister Valer- jan Zorin to represent him at Tuesday's 89 - minute session of MG ey Ss de ee the conference. After that session, the negotia- tions on Europe’s most crucial questions were suspended for two days to permit the diplomats to pay last respects to the former American secretary of state. Before the ministers eonvened around ‘the doughnut-shaped table} Plains in the Palace of Nations, Gro- myko and Lloyd hammered out an East-West agreement for ne gotiations to begin in secret next Friday. The decision to resort to secret diplomacy came after 12 sessions of stalemated debate on the big issues. BOTH SIDES EVASIVE Both sides were somewhat eva- sive as to who initiated the off- the-record sessions. Soviet and American sources said the initia- tive came from Lioyd. A British spokesman said the agreement arose spontaneously. The secret talks will pivot around more limited objectives— an interim stopgap agreement in the explosive Berlin crisis and an agreement for a parley at the summit. committee lett ito Session in a body before % ad Canadian Tulip Festival being held from May 15-30. s Leave Committee To Protest Lengthy Sitting Iii beGwees, ft managed to ear frém the ‘Canailian and Catholic Confederation of Lafior that this 90,000--member body does not like Labor Minister Starr's proposal to increas employer - employee contributions to the unemploy- ment insurance fund by an aver- age 30 per cent. The Confederation suggested any replenishment. of the fund coding gape eaphalieer Byes federal government contribution. It proposed this go to 50 per cent, instead of the present 20 per cent, of the combined employer - em- ployee payments. be willing to accept the $20,000- iget the best men available for the new energy body. nor Mons FIVE CENTS © Chairman Is Selected For Board OTTAWA (CP) — Ian N. Me Kinnon, seasoned chairman of the Alberta Oil and Gas Conserva- tion Board, is the federal gov- manship of the new National Energy Board, informants said Tuesday night. He was due in the capital Tues- day night to discuss the job with the government and especially with Trade Minister Churchill, who will report to Parliament on the projected board's operations. Mr. McKinnon is understood to a-year post, at least on an in- terim basis. Informants say Prime Minis- ter Diefenbaker may have had these qualifications in mind when jin a Commons on the beard earlier Tuesday, he said the federal government hopes to Bomarc Said! © On Schedule OTTAWA (CP) — Development program of the American Bo- mark anti-aircraft missile is up to schedule, Defence Minister Pearkes said Tuesday in the Commons. He added that plans to include the Bomare in North American air defence ere unchanged. ee Heliyer ‘L—Toronto Trinity) for comment on a Canadian Press story which said Canadian plans to acquire the Bomare depend on United States action. The story added that the U.S. Army is op- posing further major investment of funds in the US. Air Force bomare program. The minister said his informa- ernment's choice for the chair-| MAJOR-GENERAL MEGILL OTTAWA — Prairie Command, This military entity will also re- port to Western Command head- quarters in Edmonton. Brigadier Arthur FE. Wrinch, EBE, CD, recently named to dir- tion doesn’t werrant any uncer- tainty concerning future use of the bomarc. | Major-General to fill the vacancy created by Major-General Megill’s retirement. vr.| 19 YOUNG LADIES GET DIPLOMAS The need of keeping Island nurses within the province was highly emphasized by Mrs. Helen Bolger, R.N., at the graduating exercises of the Prince Edward Island Hospital School of Nursing last night. ' “If each new graduating class would remain on the Island for at least'a year, the nursing ser- vice in hospitals would be great- ly stabilized,”” she said. GRADUATE NURSES < Seventeen young nursing grad- uates and two from the School of ‘aphy of Wales College. os Nursing graduates were Mary + Winnnifred Cairns, Summerside; Evelyn Etta Louise Coffin and Lillian Ethel~ Mehetible Coffin, Boston, Mass.; Gladys. Arlene Davison, Kensington; Verna Lenore Gillis, Point Pleasant; Glenda Jean Jamieson, Mon- tague;- Mary’ Frances Johnston, Montague; Marjorie Helen Mac- Millan, ‘Summerside; Maria — MacMillan, Alberry Other nursing graduates are Nancy Winnifred Lea, Chariotte- town; Merriel Elizabeth Palmer, WHERE-TO-FIND-IT Charlottetown mews ...... 5 Classified section .... 16, 17 Comics, features’ ......-. 15 Coming events ........-- . Finance, markets Fests. 17 Island news ... ‘3 WO ai iss ps sake 484: 8, 9 Woman's page ......---- 6,7 reports from Guardian news bureaus in Summerside, Montague, Alberton and Souris, and from special cor- respondents now appear on the Island News Page. Freeland; Heather Darrach Rodd, SEATED, Pleasant; Need Of Nurses Within Province Stressed To Class Of Graduates lottetown; Georgie Jerusha Etta Louise Coffin, Boston, Mass.; és BRIGADIER WRINCH Move Eliminates Prairie Command scour’ as wath the Coeeew ment’s new policy on national sur- vival, the national defence re- lease said. 80,000 To See APEC’s Show SAINT JOHN, N.B. (CP)—More than 50,000 are expected to attend the Atlantie provinces industrial exposition opening here today. It ends Saturday. About 200 exhibitors from the four Atlantic provinces have ar- ranged for booths to display their} wares. Atlantie cabinet ministers, premiers and business officials are expected to attend. Exhibits will range from silk stockings to the latest in stain- -|less steel, plastic and aluminum. The largest exhibitor is Eastward Industries Ltd. of Saint John with 10 booths to show its office and home furnishings and hi-fi record players. A machinery manufacturer will have a mural depicting develop- ment of the company from its beginning 125 years ago to the present. SCALE MODELS The New Brunswick [Electric Power Commission, a provincial government agency, will show scale models of hydro - electric ank’ 4if@rmal power generating units. The destroyer escort Nootka will dock at Pugsley Terminal on the waterfront where the exposi- tion is to be held and a cruise will be made. Other exhibits will include stainless steel, plastic and alum- inum products from Nova Scotia, dairy goods from Prince Edward Island, and paints from New- foundland. BRIGADIER PANGMAN EXPERT DRIVER FINED ANYWAY LEICESTER, England (CP) —Harry Woodford was driving home from the office, minding his own business, when an el- derly woman stepped in front of his car. With an expert swerve, he picked his way through the oncoming traffic while the pedestrian completed her crossing unscathed. A police constable, who saw the incident, praised Wood- ford’s expert driving and the motorist, mopping his brow, headed for his club to quiet his nerves. A few hours later, his nerves well and truly quieted, Wood- ford again was observed swerv- =e through the oncoming traf- we policeman who observed his second performance. was _— admiring. Monday Wood- ford appepred ip. court. ona charge of ‘driving under the in- fluence of drink. He pleaded guilty. Woodford was fined £75 and disqualified from driving fer a year. Labor Party Said Needed ANTIGONISH, N.S. (CP)—Don- ald Macconald of Ottawa, sec- retary-reasurer of the Canadian Labor Congress, said Tuesday labor must form its own political party to ‘“‘safeguard the progress we have made in the past.” He told a conference of “Ate lantie province CIC representat- ives that labor had no alternative but to become active politically. “Today there is not one aspect of the trade union movement that is not controlled or influenced by legislation or government policy.” Labor in Canada, as in the United States, had been the tar- get of a two-pronged attack. The first phase was propaganaa and the second was now being reached in ‘“‘anti - labor legisla- tion.” y Report remier Be ie sees Se ee re Island Members ‘Started’ Politics a ull EF : 3 fe ri = : f be ig ET iu a a7Ehii i iH ‘Vacationland Is Ideal For Traffic AtB Borden It is pointed out that (Continued on page 5 WITH MILITARY POMP By DOUGLAS B. CORNELL WASHINGTON (AP) — John Foster Dulles’ body lay at rest in stately Washington National Boston, Mass.; Marina Jemima MacMillan, Alberry Plains. STANDING, Mary Lou Vessey, Charlottetown; Helen Viola Shaw, “tr F FROM the, Merriel Elizabeth Palmer, Free-, Lillian Ethel Mehetible Coftia, Vex: Siibddicte then Snetatiten: Islan Hospital|land; Heather Darrach Rodd, st night were,| Harrington; Glenda Jean Jamie- Verna|son, Montague; Evelyn Summerside; Mary Winnifred Cairns, Summerside: Mary Fran- ces Johnston, Montague; Gladys Arieae Davison, Kensington; ae BBS Marion Carol Stuart, Belile River; Janet Roberta Waugh, Bedeque; Georgie Jerusha Waugh, Bede- que; and Nancy Winnifred Lea, Charlottetown. ohn Foster Dulles To Be Buried Today Cathedral Tuesday aight, and great and ordinary people from many lands filed past to bay him honor. Today the former U.S. secret- ary of state will be buried with service at the cathedral. President Eisenhower will at- tend. So will the chief of govern- ment of West Germany, 83-year- old Konrad Adenauer. foreign minister of nations bp. And TEast and West were flying the Atlantic and Pacific for the part- ing tribute to the man who for ix years was one of their num ber. All four foreign ministers at- tending the Geneva conference— including Andrei A. Gromyko of Russia—were on their way to the funeral. Dag Hammarskjold, secretary- general of the United Nations, was among the other dignitaries who arranged to attend the las rites. Raul Castro e ° * Said Missing HAVANA (AP)=<Fidel Castro’s firebrand younger brother Raul was missing Tuesday night on a flight in a light plane over south central Cuba. Raul Castro, who his brother as commander - in- chief of the revolutionary armed forces, had taken off at 12:30 p.m. with a pilot and three aides in search of a helicopter in which Maj. Luis Diaz Lanz, commander of the revolutionary air force, had crashed. The presidential palace an- nounced at 11:45 p.m. EDT that Raul’s plane was missing. The plane Kad had fuel for only one hour of flight. succeeded *