--;M',...-..-.-.-r. fl 663., A i I I g-;--' 9-w......... i l COMPETITION WINNERS Above is the curling rink that the Charlottetown won the Matiicson and llacbiillan Monday. This fink defeated competition as the Tenth Annual foursome skipped by Dr. Wendall r Confederation " ,' ' opened at MacDonald in a match that wasis Curling Clubiforced into an extra end of playrllurke, second: Joe Saunders, a before it was decided. Left topead. igiit they are: Doug Cameron. kip; Dave Walker. mate; Arti Guardian Phou" OBJECTIVE STATUS U N Officer Feels Being Canadian No Hinderance By JACK BRAYLEY nearly four years ago Gen. Burns Canadian Press Staff Writer has not been able to take his an- EL BALl.All, Egypt tCP)wllun-i nual 30-day leave. The most he niu- iiif' United Nations Enierg-iiiias managed is 10 days at a ency Forces demands a is'I.U(lIL'(l stretch. neutrality and an international Now he has no time for recrea- outlook. But lilaj.-Gen. L. W. tion. His only relaxing has been Burns says he feels very much a a first try at skin-diving in the gamma”. Red Sea. He tried some spear- ”,-Xtlvr all. being a Czmniiian istfishlng but says ”I guess no fish no disadvantage on this job," sziysgwould say I fired in anger." the patient Montreal sapper. '"lt'sl in his time in the Middle laast well documented that Canada has nobody has taken I shot at him. no direct or selfish interest in this Once his car was stoned by youths area - other than seeing that a in Jerusalem. He receives crank peaceful settlement is reached. letters from various countries "And both the Flgyplians and 15- i criticizing him and offering weird raelis know this." solutions, but he also gets many He talked mildly. under the,letters of encouragement. glare of a single dropllght that lit TOUGH PROBLEM his austere office in the school- Burns has a keen appreciation house UNEF headqua tug in this that the problem is deeper than Bedouin oasis, Armed Yugoslav. . invasion. border skirmishes. a test mosphere. though each follows his tainly hostile on most points. Indian and Canadian guards were.-.0! arms on duty outside. BUSY WORK SCHEDULE The evenln interview was a break from 12-hours - n - day. seven - days - s - week work Ichedule. Even as it continued he ulgned papers and rcplirased tele- grams. Gen. Burns is scrupulously vigi- lant about the objective status of himself and his 10-nation force but doesn't worry about the dominant role of Canadians in his civilian and military staffs. His chief finance officer is Char- lei Poudriere of Victoria. His in- formation officer is King Gordon of Winnipeg. His secretary is Mar- lon Warren of Hamilton, Ont.. and most of the other girls from the UN New York secretariat are Ca- nadlans. On the military side. all his key administrative troops are Cana- dians. handling mine - lifting. road restoration. communications, transport. supply. repairs and air transport. Ills base commander is Col. Mike Dare of Camp Borden, f)nt.. and his chief air officer is Wing Cnidr. Art Byford of Brandon. n. The stocky 59-year-old general looked around at UNI-ll-' confor- ences and decided things were confusing. DESIGNED OWN UNIFORM "Combatants. occupying troops and even the referee were all turned out in virtually the same cut and color of uniform.” he says. "I decided to do something about my own uniform.” Now he wears a blue-grey. Am-i erlcan-style air force uniform as the basis and has a big UN hat in- I and sovereignty. All it-ound his headquarters. 40 miles south of Port Said. is evidence of economic blight and sub-standard living conditions e- overcrowded mud huts and ignorance. As I waited to see the general. a pair of slim and graceful Bed- tlulfl women. their black robes re- lieved by jewelry across their veils, came to n waterhole. They filled their heavy earthenware jugs and washed their feet in the same water. Traffic around the hole included smelly camels, donkeys and water buffaloes that turn the ancient ir- rigation wheels. Except for this and other ones. much of the area is desert where wandering tribes. unchanged in life and progress since Biblical times, find a bare existence. A modern school amid the date palms. bare of facilities. is a start by EZYPI to educate some of its people. NEBTIW are the battered living quarters of Burnsis staff. A for. mer British Suez security post - the canal is only a few hundrgd yards away - the Nissen-hut-type buildings were holed by the ad- Vlincinil Anfllo-French force and scarred by demolition by the de. Parting Egyptians. Living is hard. Cllll.l.Y AT NIGHT while it is almost summery by day. a chill creeps in from the desert at night. The Reneral has a plain, singln room that hasn't even a porch entrance. lie messes with the troops of all ranks. English is the dominant language. with anything from a Finnish to an Indonesian accent. Gen. Burns says that the insist- P - CHIEF Jhc lnh" He says morale is "tci--. down when his advancing col- umns reach frontier positions in the desert and the monotony of waiting for a settlement has to be borne. A program of rotation leave to rest and recreation centres at spots like Cairo and Beirut-the Indonesians likely will go to Mecca-is under consideration. ”wc meet problems as We come to them." says Gen. Burns with a grin. 'We've had plenty." Incidents have been few and the 1 ' i own policy strongly and is cor-Egyptian government and peope NOT DISCOURAGED "I cati't say it's encouraging but icililics. I'm not discouraged," says Gen. "” B . bod d - - .".,'.;'.sa5 J; .,iyfj:i;?..”w"y '"” pCanadian Officers To Visit Fort Bliss It's been like that since Burns arrived on the first plane into ggggodafgcr m”18A:iIl'PU1'lFW8l': OTTAWA ice) Thirty-five .Y 9 fl 0 ' "13"? Canadian army officers. includ- force. Wli)th a small nucleus of his mg three. generals and (iv; brig. .!'lf.Ct-9 0 597V" 93'" "'3' SW39 adiers, will visit Fort Bliss, Tex., Emlelans he began orsaniz-iii; IIIS-.Peb. l2-in to acquaint themselves OTC . Observers say the Kenefillisile equipment. army headquart- ?.'iEiLifiJl"””.ii”"l?i..'ll.il5 ”i.”.2l'lZ i ";.. ”':'.”"""” M1"”.”',.. mountable problems. He has n w..,er,,”fr,if.'E5,ie',':,' Jzhnegggu; guiet bat effective way of getting ingham command” 0; (ha 1" Klgfmsigiietiamp M” W. "F a"i((.;'aflBdlIal1 l1flfBlllllil'y'lI)'I3;lSl()IflC Misti.- . . . . I M It ' ' airstrip cleared and soot. his furctw (..:.rnim3nd; clad ;(a,e.,Gi:.n. N892: lll.;:n:tFt(I)Wlllg to almost divisional. rrey Walsh, quariermaster-geu- "We had problems.” says the gtneral. "transport and supplies had to catch up with the tioops i" the HE” S”'"9 l"”' 'iVi'iii manner of Central Ontario area: without tents and wiili tcw rations, i .ig 11' B .10."; commander of 5” kw" ""9 "'9" i4”V9”lm0n15iNciv Brunswick. area: Dollard i" W995" "'9 l"'0E”""- livlenard. commander of the 3rd ”This is where the Canadians' ("hurry 3 rt 5 .4 ,; Arthur E. stepped in and we started to huildi with a purpose and get uiganized. roperly." WAS ADAMANT i The gent-ral's quiet but rom- mandlng voice was behind everw eral. The brlgacllers are Frederick A. Clift, personnel; Michael S. Dunn, com- fantry brigade. Refrigeration Repairs To All Makes stage of the build-up. When the Ylliloslavs pulled up at Ismallla for the night. their transports boil- ing from (I fast trip from the dis- embarkation point at Port Said. the commander was there to tell them to cross the canal to takei advantage of withdrawals. i "We'll move first thing in the: morning." said the tired Yugoslav command i'l'nu'll have to go rleht nnug". said the general. and they did.i "Vrr shell-pocked ground that war almost impassable and suspected: of being mined. . g"The willingness and co-opera-I ttnn live had from all contingcntsi are remarkable. Their unity of. rmrnmc and friendly inter-unit re- latlons are wonderful. You'd think "1P.V'ri all been hand - picked for APPLIANCES SALES & SERVICE MOTORS Rewinding and Qepdn ELECTRICAL ” Repairs ' Palmer Electric Phones 8548 - ISM have offered fairly close co-opera- tion in clearing roads and restor- iing communications and other fa- 'with United States guided mis- director-general of army Wrlnch. commander of the 1st 11:- lige 6 The Guardian The GiuardianpPage 7 A 1-onouro (cm: The Cana- dlsu Construction Association was told Monday it must reduce the cost of houses so more families in the lower-income groups may me bouseowners. V. L. Leigh of Victoria, chair- man of the CCA's housing com- mittee. uid the industry must mslntnln a high volume of res- idential construction despite ris- ing costs. - The committee's report said that in 1965 more than half the loans under the National Housing Act were issued to those with an- nual incomes of 35,000 or more. Last year the number of NHA loans dropped and the proportion of those going to people with an- nual lncomes of more than 35,000 increased. (At Ottawa Monday. Finance Minister Harris announced that iulhorilative, 21 volume set. It Construction Association is Told To Reduce Cost Of Homes the interest rate as new NHA loans will be increased to six per cent from 5'6. effecttfe today). Mr. Leigh said provisions of the National "ousing Act should be broadened so that more Cana- dlans could have better housing conditions. His report uid that prices for lots in many ones have risen several thousand dollars during the last five years. HOLD CONFERENCE The ronstnictlon industry last year carried out a volume of more than 80.000.000.000 rep- resenting roughly so per cent of Canada's gross national product. To keep housing construction near high, the CCA recommended hold- ing a conference with govern- ment and financial institutions. A. Turner Bone of Montreal. A treasury of knowledge is yours once you get this easy-Io-own. rnplsy, Biology. Engineering. Business. Biography. and thousands of other subjecu. bolls new and old. Now, no more need your children's day-lo-day questions go unluwered. Young and old alike can he informed and posted on the lhinp happening piesldent of the Canadian Con- eoven Science, History. Grou- Wanfs To Marry Lonely Stowaway By JACK BEST Canadian Press Staff Writer VANCOUVER ICPJ - Several girls have offered to marry a stateless and lonely stowuway if that will save him from being de-' ported, his counsel said Sunday ight. John Taylor, one of two lawyers fighting a deportation order is- struction Association. said in his report the predominant feature of Canada's business life last year was the Bank of Canada's credit restrictions. Mr. Bone said while he person- ally believed that runaway infla- tion would be disastrous. the present ”bul'den is borne un- evenly py different parts of our economy and it would appear that some more selective measure- will have to be devised. . .” The CCA psCIldellI. said the housing section of the construc- tion lndustry has been the most sued last Friday against Christian HIMII. 15. said the girls ”seem to be running a competition." At least five have offered to be- Wm9 willed to Hanna. be ad- ded. though they have never seen him except in newspaper pictures. one phoned to make application today for his admittance as lg!” fiance. Hanna. who has no passport or citizenship papers. spent the weekend in custody in the immi- gration building here awaiting bearing of his appeal by a three man board today. He left from the Norwegian freighter Gudvelg at Port Al- bernl. B.C.. Thursday after being aboard 15 months. At least six countries denied him permission to land after he stowed away at Beirut. Lebanon. ORDERED To LEAVE He was led off the freighter by Donald White. 26-year-old Van- couver lawyer who had obtained A court order on his behalf. Mr- White later applied unsuccessfully for a writ of habeas corpus. and a oneman board of inquiry ruled seriously affected by credit to- 'rte-it strlctlons. Photos!-pl-. "taupe! Picture your family on top of the world. Veutvodnunodslbstgitlovsvoshsyeu bully. Ilmsisus -esvwuoetlh. fans, ndueuyfrleads. You can bsfpputtlom sun they bun TIII ILLIIITIATII LIHMV IICTCLOPIIIA ll ttw AVAILABLE ON THE EASY-TO-BUDGET 300K-A-WEEK PLAN -with purtliose oi rific” but he anticipates a let-' Volume I lgmeet 723 slgnia. lfis shoiilder straps t-arryj9'"'9 0" English as a basic inn- n broad gold hand. his lapris liove jguagc is one main reason why light blue tabs stttridcd with a row . Canada was asked to substitute of stars. and his buttons carry the Iadminlstrafive forces for the And so easy with fsst-rising TREMENDOUS. VALUE-PACKED 666 PAGE IOOK IIIITIIIIIIIIW letters UN. Ills trousers have a wide black stripe dawn the side. Queen's Own Rifles. "We would have liked to have Fieischmanrfs Active Dry Yeast . . . s trees that will 88.95 VALUE that Hanna would have to return to the Gudvelg. scheduled to charts. an co-bl leave Port Alberul late today, Mr. Ta).or se . 1;.-sun. Minister Pickersglll has been :1. lowing fiances of Canadian cm. zen; to enter the country "from almost everywhere in the worlds: 0! the live girls who have n1. fered to sponsor Hanna. were found after investigation :9 be "frivolous." Mr. Taylor said. The other two. however. appeared to be motivated by worthy int” tlons. One of them said she would ap pear at the immigration building today to formally make lppllca. tion for Hanna's admittance as her fiance. Mr. Taylor said Hanna. along in the immigration building, knows nothing of the marriagg offers. ASK TEST IAN MELBOURNE (Reuters)-Aus tralia's biggest trade union, ths Australian Workers Union. Tues- day adopted a resolution calling for an immediate end to British atomic weapons tests in Australia. OMINION GOODWILLD OFFER. THE ILLUSTRATED HOME LIBRARY ENCYCLOPEDIA HANDSOME 21 VOLUME SET during this alosnle n;eIAIl this vast asnounl of material has been classified so that is is easv-ttrlisul and extremely easy-to drawings, snaps and with the text. opening up new vistas ofeneillag, thrilling Iusow ledge of the world around us the-ufl"...bysnsIiIng ttudvhvnnffn yous. His only concession to his rr-c-. the Queen's Own." he said. "They . hri d d f " ord as a (iommnnwcnith fizhtin-z'Were in a position to be self-con- "8 em." 3 or morc' A0aoelIa4lt'It&Jue 84.0-' 'tvlfI uuiumf Vslm 2....smnm II . TUE man in two world ivnrs--inrltirlingll taincd with all their own services Phase!" NQAIA OIIIOIISSIONALIOVIIIS X command of a Canadian corps in and gear. gnu”; mun, nus 1 9. nu" Italv . i: six rows of decorations 'This wasnll the case with the ,, V I0”?! ff” gal set out in Canadian nrd;-r, 1' other lcontrllhuton. who could give A aiurfg" fer, ' . ' After the ,nnd Word War e U! Olly nantry. T id 1. r". i i ' l ””" ”” i ) became deputy minister of vetor- slon It was necessalymlg cniiiilnutiif 3 7 H B E E i V n""..' u . ans affairs at Ottawa and say: he 0D('raiinn.I in English so we had to W wt 88 E "-7 O" " A "nun 3”- was content "doing a job that pre- ask Canada for the fine adminls- i 33'; ' '.&” "..' mm Wan ' sent:-d a real challenge. coping trative troops we've got now." 'I. In on U-Ind! square calm anditirimtilwgaylgdigotnd. "T X” . "”' 'uE with the problems of rehabilitating says that doesn't 'mean Ca- Pen, molt 5,5,”. ,,m. I. "ma g U 2 .-ervlcernen." He also got no ans are all st head anon asuuogpum 5...... "tangled up” with one of his great wliieldincg pens and cmsntlg: sup- av mqgqsm I n.m,m.m.. 5 Z V M i ' '"'I'' .. m personal Interests -- the '.' ited p es. anadian suppers l the V 1 ' Nations Association-and soonmbe van of most take-over iiprgrnilions Dmi;'.:'m'.' Adl"D'7y"" g . 1”. N ' em. in. ...n.....i p.-...inem. But behind the Israeli withdrawal. ' "P "'7 let stand to amino. THIN :3 e - he was happy for the hours he DELICATE POSITION GMIPTHII with stir well. Stir the lukewarm i had try for gardening and do-lb Mnl;ir:tMm::'t&henter El 'Arish be mitt: mixture and I M - projects. trees was Maj. Hull-bonus: R:'.'i:'I'tiAI. DINNER Don Morgan of lhitlsad. Out. A Van-spoonvu.i'le . The story goes that he went to Royal Canadian Dragoon who H,” .,,,,,,h,.,.. 2' NEW, Y mp. ' dinner one night with Exfe-inst made arrangements for the Bgyp- ahwgm C0 9 mg main Minister Pearson who had tlsns to take over the civil nd- , ""' 2 Y vm'uM”- H . m 5. v.hi,'3.,,. rmne from .im....gu.... in mfnlstrntionoftIIetnwn.'l'hetalre- "'P"""""" e cc-pl-any-ans-ssauaquslus e Irundouvrvcolnsnnhnuuug 0'" 70' -l""Ifl0NIIII'0IU0'- mini-it (there n in. decided over III? demonstrates up dell- 93:.-I"D0-000' -I--. ..a.a..... am; 9;. .. on ya! v-1 03-0 of tin." in a median to-pervl cae postlonofGen.lu-ns nd "”""" n...,...4.g..g 0'00 INHIII UH!!! flu in Iqeslnt gs&T'3"0N' u "hlt;".brb;-'euln their relations w.fth . Sifldzmm-ulngrodughg S '.u.i......ri..i:,:p::': Y".' col, 'nCY5'mIAMhT”Q”h. i m: . 7005' ,. '9 Emul-n vroinsnna. x "'""" menu and as and col as ' ':.a: at ' ""' T" the takeover all g ” blended-about I dun. & ....,ma.... .... O.?Utml&IUOHO- ...1I”':.jm" 5-: " Find who pm Cover. lot . qgqg Ls. E rfsulneveruptosmfnefru sums. and u '23 , d :2”; draft. not doubted h b&- my OI- gvj about H6 bun. Ida be 0 . 2; namely list can 375'. :3 about 35 sis-on he and - -- . "'”'""""'” A E " ' AV ILABLE iii illilllililliliiiilllilllllillilillilllill - NOW at ' gt.:2v'ca..ir i v' .1-we t or .. . ,3”,-. ' t