Covers Prince Edward island Like the Dew 16 PAGES TAX-SHARI 77te'Guara?ian Z & CHARLDTTETOWN. CANADA, WEDNESDAY, JULY 25. 1956 DENY cvpnlor CHARGES Briiish Take Newsmen On Tour Of Deleniion Camp NICOSIA (AP)-Greek Cypriots Tuesday charged British author- ities with heating and torturing political detainees. The British authorities 'PI'0l'nDi-ly denied mistreatment in detention camps. They also labelled as "un- true from beginning to end" Greek allegations that conditions in the cgmpa were like Nazi concentra- tion cam?!- The exchange developed during .3 unprecedented tour by British and American newspaper men of Kokklnotrimithla detention camp, nine miles west of Nicosia, known as Cami! "K-" The newspaper men were in- ymd by the Britons to inspect the camp for the first time since it was established last December and were permitted to talk freely with political detainees. The Na- hour tour at times was taken over by inmate leaders who heatedly protested detention without trial and living conditions in the camp. it is one of two on Cyprus where the Britons hold Greek CYP- riots suspected of aidins 9" D8?- tlcipating in the violent campaign of EOKA extremists demanding union of Cyprus with Greece- Under the island's emergency rag- ulationts tsuclh persons may be held withou r a . The tour was intended by Brit- ain to refute charges of Athena radio last week that Camp K is like Buchcnwald and Dachau of Nazi Germany. ATHENS CHARGE!) Athena radio also alleged the in- mates were housed in "miserable livinS conditions and lack of any care." ' The newspaper men. who were permitted freedom of movement in the camp, inspected huts where the detainees are quartered 16 to each. Some buildings were of 000- crcte and brick with corrugated roofs. The correspondents saw no evidence of undernourishment and the camp commandant said that "The quality and quantity of the food is much higher than English prison food." A three-man committee of camp leaders complained to the corres- pondents oi camp conditions and demanded freedom. Principal spokesman was Mich- ael Pissal. general secretary oi the right-wing Cyprus Trades Ulr ion Federation. He" charged the detention was "contrary to all human rights." "Why are we here?" he asked. "Have we committed any crime? We beg you to convey to the people the question 'Why are we here?"' PLAGUID I! MICE Replying to questions he said the inmates do not get enough food and claimed the Athens ra- dio claim of miserable and dirt! housing was true. He said the in- mates catch M mice a night ill the huts. Plsaas conceded he could speak without restraint or fair of punishment. lll'l'i5Il VISIT OTTAWA (C?) A- 17-man group of directing staff and stu- dents from Britain's Imperial De- fence College will arrive here Aug. 3 to begin a month-long tour of Canada and the United States. army headquarters announced Tuesday. After Aug. 10. the! Will visit Halifax. Sept-lies. Que. Al'- vlds. 9lIe.. Quebec City and Mont- real. Impromptu Parachute Jump ls Thrill For Girl Glider Pilot CAP-DE-LA-MADELEINE. Que. (CF) - People who tllink para- chute jumping is "crazy" I?! merely afraid oi the unknown. says green-eyed Lorraine Smith. Miss Smith. a winsome 23, had "the most wonderful thrill" Sun- day when she hit the silk for the first time, in.an unscheduled lurnli on the eve oi the national wear- ing championships here. Tuesday. the Shem-oke. Quc.. lass recalled with a smile that ale made the jump on lmmllli d. "i really didn't know what to expect. I thought. perhaps I'd keep my eyes shut tight like a kid diving into water for the first time. "But no. I stepped from the wing oi the Tiger Moth at 1,500 feet cool as could be and found myself singing-in such a thrill- J”-ns Wly-high in sky. IWOOSII. SWOOSII "l though-my. how wonderful. "'Aiiar the parachute gave its first jolt on opening, it made a WWI! soft soundsgwoosh, swoosh. it was peaceful. almost tmnicai." He charged that camp guard threw stones at huts while the in- mates were alseep and called the detainees names. He also claimed one inmate was bayoneted and tower guards turned ns on de- tainees playing volley all. Pissas charged that British se- curity officers took inmates on sev- eral occasions from the camp to the mountains, heat than "near death" and returned them with their backs badly bruised. Camp commandant Tim othy O'Donnell denied mistreatment oi beatings in the camp. O'Donnell showed the correspon- dents concrete floors of the living quarters to refute Athe'ns' charge of earth floors. He saidilb Athens claim the prisoners were ill fed was "perfectly untrue" and said the authorities tried to meet the detainees desires on food and the food menu was prepared by the inmates themselves. See Signs Of U.S. Steel Strike ls Moving Towards Seiilemeni NEW YORK (AP)-Steel negot- iators started bargaining again T J y and there were signs al- most immcdiately that they might be entering the final stage toward settlement of the 24-day country- wide United States strike. Steel company and union offl- cials issued a statement reporting "progress" after only a few hours of the new talks. The union also ordered its in- ternational wage policy commit- tee, which usually passes on con- tracts after negotiators reach set- tlement. to stand by for a meet- ing Thursday. Marilyn ls Hit With U. K. Press LONDON (CF) - Is Marilyn voluntary wit, and an engaging Monroe newsworthy? The answer, broadly, is a thund- ering affirmative. Marilyn has been in town only a week or so. but already she holds much of the British press in thrall. The 30- ycar-old actress, here with play- wright husband Arthur Miller to make a film with Sir Laurence Olivier, is rating as much news- paper space as Russia's "two years," Nikita Khrushchev and Nikolai Bulganin. received on their visit last April- I But there's one his execution- That venerable institution, the Times, hasn't printed a line on Marilyn. and Fleet Street is mildly amused at its detachment. While the tabloid Daily Mirror proclaims "We saw Marilyn first and we're proud of it." the Times. individualistic as ever. prefers such items as a three-column story entitled: Some Notes of a Watermill Collector. The Tlmes' blind eye for beauty, glamor girl variety. has not gone unnoticed. Francis Wil- liams. who writes a weekly col- umn on the foibles of Fleet Street for the New '" tesman and Na- tion, says he is sorry about the omission. After all. he lay! lflle Tlrnes is still a newspaper. in- deed, according to some of its readers, still the greatest newspa- per in the world-and I think a newspaper ought at least to men- tion an event which . . . has some place in the social history of our time." 11 Marilyn grlcves, consolation is close at hand. Some serious papers have given her the careful attention they might bestow on a thinkpiece about Atlantic union. The Observer. for instance. de- votes its weekly profile occIlPl9d usually by- prime ministers and such international statesmen as External Affairs Minister Pearson of Canada-to a diagnosis of the Monroe myth. It says an innocent. almost in- ment of power-less craft through the air. She plays the piano but admits she has little time to study music. settles for radio and the opera. A solo pilot on gliders. she also has taken training on powered craft and likes it despite the hor- rible noise of the engine." Lorraine said her parents and two brothers. one, Kent. a mem- her of the RCAF. first considered acceptance of all the facts of life are as much responsible for her success as the "appalling bio- graphy, the vital statistics and the radiant beauty." The Observer is also intrigued with her "little girl's voice," her "wide - eyed, soft - featured baby face and . . . sort of innocent paganism." Columnist Winifred Carr. of the Daily T' , discussing the way Marilyn wowed cynical Brit- ish journalists at her London press conferences, says it wasn't just glamor or physical propor- tions that did the trick. ''It was the way she broke all the modern rules for getting our man and played the lovable baby- girl role to perfection that won them . . . The way she took a deep breath and nervously licked her lips before answering ques- tions in a halting. little - girl voice . . . wriggled in her chair and raised her eyes to the ceiling when thinking hard . . . clapped her hands to her mouth when thinking out loud . . ." The sophisticated correspond- ents of the weekly magazines also capitulate to the charms of the sex - bomb - turned - intellec- tual. The columnist of the Spec- tator concludes that she is "as in- tclligent as she is pleasant as she is pretty." "A great success. this Mrs. Miller, and I'm sorry for all those readers of the Times who Clashes Mark British Auto P-lani Strike BIRMINGHAM, Eng. (Reuters) Striking British auto workers clashed with non-strikers Tuesday outside factories of the giant Brit- ish Motor Corporation. Both labor and management claimed victory as 23.000 out of 43,000 workers-1.0!!) more than Monday-ignored picket lines in Birmingham. Coventry, Oxford and Llanelly. Wales. But leaders of the 1.30.000- memher Transport and General Workers Union Tuesday ordered Britain's doc k ers. mechanics, truck drivers'and bargemen not to touch the corporation's pro- ducts. As the boycott enveloped the ports and inland waterways. the cabinet received a report on the situation from Labor Minister lain Macleod. Transport Minister Har- old Watkinson was also called to 10 Downing street for consultation. The strike, now in its second day, was called in protest against the mass layoff of 6,000 workers by BMC becaus of falling home and export orders. The union claimed they were fired without sufficient notice or compensation. POLICE CHARGE PICKETS Worst clash between strikers and non-strikers occurred Tuesday at the Austin plant in Birmingham where mounted police charged a mass picket line to clear a way for trucks and workers trying to enter the factory. Clothes were torn, but no one was hurt. Hundreds of export cars began to pile up on dock wharves all over England. in Liverpool alone, 200 cars worth nearly 3300.000 were held up. In Southampton, Austin and Morris cars remained unloaded. Another 200 cars des- tined for Montreal stayed on the docks when longshoremcn" refused to load them (into ships. Despite union claims that the strike is nearly it!) per cent ef- fective. the British press claimed it was.a "fiasco." The Times, the Manchest Guardian and The News Chronicle all agreed that union leadership had been ierioualy. alarmed by in- ability to get more support for the IIODDIIEC. .' ., . The Mancheste Guardian said: "The fiasco of this strike is that official trade union leadership has suffered since 1926." Report Swimmer Injured In Fall ROCHESTER. N.Y. (AP)-Wet ley Strublc Jr.. who last Satur- day swam handcuffed 12 miles across Lake Erie without mishap, went to hospital Tuesday after a fall at the University of Roches- ter swimming pool. Struble, who was not swimming at the time. said he slipped and fell at the edge of the pool, lacer- ating his right hand on a metal railing. A hospital spokesman said his condition was good. The 30-year-old swimmer has given no indication if he will accept the challenge of Capt. Clif- ford Stlnebring, 55, of the Niagara haven't been allowed to learn of her arrival on these shores." Falls, N.Y., police department to a four-mile race in straitjackets. JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Two Canadian Army officers sent to Palestine as UN truce observers lay in serious condition in hos- pital Tuesday night with wounds ripped by a land mine explosion. The United Nations sent a call to Canada for the wife of one of them to come to his bedside. Truce headquarters reP0l'i-ed 8 transatlantic call had been placed to the wife of Maj. George Alfred Flint, 44, of Outremont, Que.. al- though Canadian army headquart- ers ln Ottawa said earlier it un- derstood both wives were in Pale- stine. Flint and Maj. Marcel Breault. 37, of St. Hyacinthe, Que.. were severely injured Tuesday when a land mine exploded as they were investigating alleged infiltration of the Mt. Scopua demilitarized zone by Jordanian troops. Investigation of the accident- both Aral..s and Jews agreed the mine was one planted during the i948 Arab - Israeli War - was started by truce supervisor Maj.- Gen. E. L. M. Burns of Canada as his countrymen underwent sur- gery in a Jewish hospital. WOUNDS "VERY SERIOUS" A hospital spokesman said Flint was the first to be operated on, for a stomach wound. He con- firmed that both officers were "very seriously" injured. There was a sharp conflict in the Israeli and Jordanian versions of the events leading up to the explosion, in which one Jordanian officer accompanying the Cana- dians suffered leg injuries. The Israeli spokesman said the truce observers arrived on the Two Canadian Truce Observers Seriously Wounded By Land Mine Blast On Israeli Border tion. scene after Jordanian trops pen- etrated the zone and occupied a house there. refusing Israeli po- lice demands to withdraw. As the Canadians arrived, the spokesman added. more Jordan- ian reinforcements the area." into men hit the ,land mine as they approached the house. He said other UN observers, who arrived on the scene later, pcrSll8dG(l the Jordanians to with- draw from the demllltarized nec- ,,,,, MATH AWARD SAY ISRAELIS FIRED The Jordan version said while a Jordanian national guard patrol was passing near Mt. Sco- pus it found an uncovered mine Congress has announced that Hat- and a hand grenade near barbed W L0V9- East Royalty. has re- wire inside Jordan territory. , when me pat,-01 app,-oached The this fall when Mr. Love will be mine. Israel; Hadassah Hospital entering the Honours Course in guards opened fire, The pain); Mathematics at. Dalliousle Univer- fired back and one Israeli guard 8113'. was believed to have been wounded. Jordan. the said, lodged a complaint with the mixed armistice commission and College. He is the son of Mr. and panied by Jordanian police. left on the ill-fated investigation. Flint a paratrooper and a mem- ber of the regular army, was as- S e signed to Palestine in January dd P of from the 3rd Canadian Infantry u Brigade at Camp Valcartler. Que. Breault, a militia officer. came ML to Palestine in 1954. He enlisted as a private in Le Regiment St. Hyacinth, in 1933' was comm”. terday afternoon at the Charlotte- nioned in 1942 mg gel-ved in north. town Golf Club of Mr. George G. west Europe, during the second Wood. prominent Charlottetown World War. spokesman honour standing in Science in the He has two daughters. The Canadian Mathematical ceived a 5400 scholarship tenable Harry Love graduated this spring with the Anderson prize for Fourth Year at Prince of Wales Mrs. J.H. Love, East Royalty. The death occurred suddenly yes businessman at the age of 52 Death was attributed to a heart MONTREAL, (CP) - One man was burned to death Tuesday when a two - alarm. explosion- rocked fire destroyed a three- atorey building in central Mon- 8. probably the most serious reverse "9 1 Nine firemen were overcome by fertilizer Council Elects Officers AMHERST (CPl-Harold Stairs of Fredericton T u e a ti a y was elected president of the Maritime Fertilizer Council. other officers elected at the an- nual sesion: F. P. Smith of Hall- fax, vlce-president: Ian Rankin, Charlottetown, Lloyd Horton, Moncton, John Gacey, Saint John. N.B., John Clark, Sackville, N.B.. J. E. Mulligan. Truro, and E. T. Goririg, Nappan, N.S.. directors; J. E. Mclntyre Moncton, secre- tary treasurer. J. E. Shuh. field crop director for Nova Scotla, told members grass offers "immense opportun- itics" in the Maritimes for beef- raising and milk-production. One Man Dies In Montreal Fire trlct. smoke. The victim was id tifi d as ber f tn Shirley Goldner of Mdiytresl. 0 ye": on e execuuve 0! Police grapped inh thehbasement of the uidins w on t e fire broke out onlc Lodge in Charlottetown he was The building housed the importing t f firmlof I-icrdt and Charton Inc. M" H 0 that Lodge In 1937 nd Go dner's body was found two hours later near an iron-grilled gfsafs 1: (gags! Igzrlijg iizindow at the front of the build- Anglican Church ' g . was this year was president. Fire officials said the blaze started when an the basement of the old stone building in the heart of treal'a downtown shopping dis- plosion rocked Mon- Heavy smoke, caused when the flames reached stocks of perfume stored in the basement. covered a large area of midtown montreal. Traffic blocked for more than three hours. More than 75 policemen were called to handle about 2000 T h r e e ambulances were called to the scene. spectators. attack. He passed away before medical aid could reach him. The late Mr. Wood was born at Port Au Spain. Trinidad in 1904. He was the son of the late James Wood and Grace Nash Wood. in his early life he was employed for a time with the Bank of Nova Scot- ia but later went into the food brokcnase business for himself. An ardent golfer. he was for a Illliu. the Charlottetown Golf Club, and As a member of Victoria Mas- fn 1948 became Grand Master of Surviving are his widow, the former Kathleen Burke of Charl- ottetown and three children: Joan, nu: wmnsn Cloudy with widely scattered showers. A few sunny inter- vals. A little warmer with light winds. low-high 60 and 75. Aim -ls OTTAWA (CP)-The Commons Tuesday approved the principle of the government's new tax-sharing plan with the provinces after a cabinet minister said its main purpose is to improve the lot of less-wealthy provinces. Citizenship Minister Plckersgill, day debate, said there would be no need for tax arrangements tax-raising capacities. provincial purposes country he only purpose of this bill." John Diefenbaker not give the provinces enough. TAKE "HALF-LOAF" lord. denying the alternative? a half-loaf is better than onne." arrangement was reading-approval on a vote of 128 to 45. The Liberal majority was sup provinces-and by -two independ pointe. Progressive lsocial Credit parties voted l t. FIRST LIBERAL VOTE Poor Provinces speaking near the close of the lla- with the provinces if all had equal "It is not the business of this Parliament to raise revenues for except ,to equalize the situation across the said. That is the (PC-Prince Albert) reiterated the Oppositionlsaiisfied-' stand that the five-year tax plan, to take effect next April 1, will ported by the CCF party-which had urged . better dea1 for the cause of the exigencies of their Conservative and vet PRICE 5c To -Aid to collect money and hand it over to the provinces. That was the important reason it was more con- venient for taxpayers to pay to only one tax-collection agency. WOULD NOT HELP EAST The opposition's demand for a larger provincial share of the tax fields would not help the Mari- times and other less-wealthy prov- inces. The larger the provincial share, the better it would be for wealthy Ontario and the worse it would be for the poorer provinces. Mr. Pickersgill. refering to pro- vincial premlers' claims that they will not get enough, said: "Until the chips are down you wouldn't expect any premier to say he was The Conservatives were wrong in saying no premier had accepted the plan. Premier Smallwood of Newfoundland-which Mr. Pick- ersgill represents in the cabinet- He said the federal government had 9nd0PB8d ii in 8 SPEECH 11! has taken the position of a feudal March. when he said it was in the provinces a chance to negotiate terms. It had said the provinces did not have to central government could share accept the offer. But what was the money with poorer provinces. the interests of Canada to safe- guard federal revenues so the Mr. Dicfenhaker said the federal '-The provinces are powerless to attitude at the last tax conference resist, believing as they must that this spring as arbitrary. The measure would put hand- The bill to lxnplement the tax cuffs on the provinces for the next given second in ppjncipb. sion. There should be more fed- five years. limiting their expan- eral help in the way of education . and highway grants. "If the vassals must accept bo- . financial situation . . . then there gut m , m b e rs. Rm"; pounm must come a responsibility on the Beau”, and remand G1.-am, L3. part of the federal government if Canada and the other free nations are to take their part." Fishermen End The vote was the first in which Ross Thatcher, who switched Mon- 9'Day BOYCQH day from independent status to Liberal ranks, voted as a gov- YARMOUTH, N.S. (CP) - Her- Emmeni Supporter. The n ember ring fishermen in the Yarmout.h- for Moose Jaw-Lake Centre, who Wedgeport area tied a nine-day left CCF ranks a year ago. was boycott of major buyers here loudly applauded by his new party Tuesday, agreeing to sell liming colleagues. at 82.75 a barrel this year and The new tax formula would pop negotjatg on pm,” in 1957, mit taxpayra to deduct '10 pet- The fishermen boycotted Ni- ceut of federal personal income tlonai Sea Products, Vita Foods tax. nine per cent of corporation and Lelllanc Fisheries when they income and 50 per cent of succes- refused to pay 33.00 a barrel. sion duties to cover provincial lev- ies in those fields. could levy taxes at higher rates. The boycott which started on Provinces July ll, threatened to affect about 150 fish plant workers. Herring but with resulting double taxation. fishermen at Wedgoport. rather Mr. Pickersgil stressed the than accept 32.50 a barrel for other major aspect of the propo- their catch, dumped it overboard. sal - unconditional equalization payments to the provinces based buyers pnjd s3,oo (0.- Mrs. John Brown. Charlottetown: David. a mining engineer, Calgary and James. 1: Lieutenant with the Royal Canadian Navy at present aboard H. M. C. S. Sussexvals now on a Pacific cruise. Also surviving are two sisters: Mrs Lemuel Mac-Dougall, City and Miss Margaret Wood with the Bank of on per capita income from the a 10-9-5 share of the three taxes. from Grand Mann, The payments would bring income the same price. in less wealthy provinces up to the average of the two highest- ex-men to Ontario and British Columbia. The plan also provides for stabilization of provincial revenues. Nova Scotia in Montreal, Funeral arrangements have not Yet been completed. provinces were equally wealihy.y there would be only one jusiifi- B cation for the central go-asnm;-nil The minister said that if all " Of the more than 340,000 Indians MOST INDIANS living in the United States, about one-fifth are in Arizona. AIR VIEWS ON TAX SHARINGW-I During the boycott, several area I m a l l of herring and a boat N.B.. Paid mount The new agreement allows fish- sell independently. Many have already announced they will make a change in deal- or s. About 12 fishermen from Wedge- port, Kelley's cove and Yarmoutls ar negotiated with herring deal- ers at a meeting Tuesday. crazy." "it is just that people are afraid of what they don't know." Lor- raine confided to a reporter. r: wur calu.-:l.i.-zss , "lihink there's too much in' the papers about try "I l people esc th ngs themselves they understand that it is often not the airplane or the parachute.-'s fault when there is an . ” '. It is because the person himself was not careful." Lorraine belongs to the sher- brooke Gliding Club. an outfit with small but keen membership which in winter months repairs and builds new gliders for sum- mci-'ilying. now has some five hours solo on wars. saw professionals do i r stuff. Her sudden interest in para- chute jumping came when she ...1L3."' ..".:"...'""”". gm: i. '3".:.' w a 's in jump from a seism- ibea I'll be a.de to at the adventures a "little. flylng accidents. ' ends of tests comprise the sum- mer quarters of more than 10.000 an of the first Canadian Istan- Camp Gageinwn. N.l.,--'l'hous1 ground longer." she declared Division now - utMAN's' VIEW or ARMY cam- for regiment) of Canada. above. is an ""””l'i " RCISE MORNING AR." example of the immaculately kept the tent line of the it battalion, the llaeh watch ilqal There are more than sass- Ilhludlletiheniaihulrlbnheia-susectioa(NetionsiDelessePio of the Ne-repis River. The have placed their gear in of their canvas homes for OTTAWA ICPT Two New Brunswickers clashed in the Com. mons Tuesday over the federal tax-sharing proposals to the prov- inces. Thomas M. Bell (PC St. John- Albertl started the ball rolling by accusing the federal government of forgetting the Atlantic prov- inces. A. Wesley Stuart IL Charloltcl replied that under the scheme the federal izovernmeni would cnilcci 37,000,000 in New Brunswick and pay back Si9.000.000 to the provin- cial govornment. That was not a bad deal for the province. Turning on Donald Fleming who had been needlin-z him. Mr. Stuart described the Progressive Con- servative member for Toronto Eg- linion as one of the few remain- ing "dyed-In-the-wool, flag-waving Tories left.” STATEMENTS "CRAZY" At one point Mr. Stuart said two-thirds of the things Mr. Bell had said "were crazy." Later, he said. Mr. Fleming. despite Con- servative challenges for an early election, would prefer it if the clection were not called until 1050. "The Tory chances are nil." "That proves you're crazy," re- plied Mr, Fleming. Mr. Bell quoted figures purport- ing to show that New Brunswick. with an income far below the na- tional average. was spending more than the national average of any other province for education. "We are trapped in that re- qseci." he said. The tax burden in his province was the heaviest of any province. Conditions in the pay statutory grants to the prov- incea, such as proposed- by the New Brunswick government. Finance Minister Harris inter- jccted that the question of statu- tory subsidies is somcthing quite separate from the proposals to share tax revenues with the prov- inces. "These smoke screens don't mean anything to me." said Mr. Bell. THE Liberal government marlc olectlon promises that became election corpses in the Marltimes. Mr. Stuart replied that no Con- servative government had ever paid subsidies of any kind to the Maritimes except a "20-cents-a- day dole" during the depression years. New Brunswickers Clash He charged that with Premier Frost in Ontario a federal Con- servative government would not do as much as the Liberals for l other parts of the country. Opposition leader Drew, while he was premier of Ontario. had "scuttled" the 1945-46 federal-pro vincial conference bec au so he would not share any of Ontario's wealth with other provinces. "That's false and you know it." said Mr. Fleming ' Mr Stuart said that although the Liberal government pays 9) per cent of Trans-Canada High- way cnsts in New Brunswick. it is impossible for Liberal friends to get construction jobs without I letter from a Conservative mem- ber of the provincial legislature. OTTAWA (CPi- A new flurry of speculation about the possibil- ity of a cabinet shuffle arose in parliamentary quarters Tuesday and there was some suggestion that Prime Minister St. Laurent may make some apnouncem t immediately the current session ends, possibly about Aug. ll. An- other report was that he would not. make them until the fall. However. the general theme of the speculation falls in line with previous reports that Mr. St. Lau- rent, 74. plans a realignment of his cabinet as a prelude to a June. 1957. general election. The latest reports are that Agri- snlt of "making poorer and rich provinces richer." ASK! FOR GIANT! Atlantic provinces were "perilous culture Minister Gardiner. 73. and serious." may be offered a Senate seat Opnosins the federal fiscal pro though there are no Indications posaln. he said they have the re- that he would accept it. A Sas- poor provinces katchewan seat was made vacant II. called M sue kind of ar- stated he will run for re-election Calder. But Mr. Gardiner has New Oiiawa Speculation On Cabinet Shuffle Possibility ONE OPENING At the moment. there is only one cabinet opening. Hugues La- pofnte holds the dual portfolio of veterans affairs minister and post- master-general. Mr. St. Lanrehl has stated illls is only a tcmpob any arrangement. he Ottawa Citizen. in a front- page story on the speculation. says that a "possible addition in the cabinet" might be Maurice llourget. parliamentary assistant to Works Minister Winters. The paper also says that "MCI senior posts may be in store It Fisheries Minister Sinclair. au- scnship Minister Pickersgill and State secretary Pinard." There also has been speculation for many months that External Affairs Minister Pearson will quit the cabinet to succeed Lord la- may as NATO secretary-general. nacssnni plenty Ottawa would as ion a his constituents want But the reports are that that may not take place In some modht inv- Q; ....