Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dow Maxims of a More Man Assuraneslatwo-thlrdsel Iioosu. U PAGE Signs 2 Baffin Island Men Sale HALIFAX V25!)-A.hi'la.4Illdo inc; iggshipand their dogs were Ii II N". 50" I! II - fl'e':l! tracks and an abandoned The "Hm" "ll-'n'l'd Wm "ll Md Ma mud h northern ra of travel shown by the tracks Um? mud g M un t Lila the pair probably would reach Baffin .J wd man Dorset or a nearby lake missing since an. the frozen meat Wednesday or Thursday. WN. OAICADM WENHDAY; IAI3 3. 10! " UNEMPLOYMENT OEBATESPARKS MOTION OF NON-OONFIOENOE IN FEDERAL OOVIT OTTAWA. (GP)-Two oppoaltiori parties Tuesday wastes may still be alive. Britt radar. an amateur radio "The Hudson's Bay man re- ported the also: all indicated the Churchill Sees Reds Not ”"' c”"ll"'” Portion Of Maine Potato called for the overthrow of the federal government opcr-tor him rick-d "P I new men were In aood health and able cause of rising unemployment. sage from the manager of the Hudson's Bay Com post at Frobishar Bay a g the men are believed safe and making their way back to Cape Dorset. The manage said kimos had reporlOd finding racks in the mow Indicating Donald Baird of Twillingate. Nfid-. 22-year-old com- pany employee. and Ootoke. his Eskimo guide, were making good fo!tiravel without difficulty." Fader sa . Baird and his guide left Cape Dorset Jan. 15 by dog sled for Froblsher and were expected at the RCAF base at Goose Bay. Labrador, Feb. 7. Nothing has been heard of them since. Frobisher Bay is just inside the Arctic Circle on Baffin island. Cape Dorset is 25 miles northwest. By RANALD I. MACLURKIN LONDON lReuters) Prime Minister Churchill said Tuesday the West's superiority in hydro- gen bombs would make it "ill advised" for Russia to start a major war within the next three ur four years. Demands 2515 TORONTO (CF) c- A jaiigiing telephone Tuesday delivered a ti3.000 ransom demand to the heartbroken parepts of an eight. year-old girl missing since Fri- day. Police said the call. from a man who spoke slowly and clear- iv. was probably the work of a crank. William MacLaod, stepfather of missing Judy Carter. demanded to hear his daughter's voice. The caller told him to have 515,000 by Tuesday night if he wanted to see the girl alive. Meanwhile police. working amid a flood of misleading reports. checked lead after lead. A girl was reported on a street- car with a rough-looking man about 55. She was crying for her mother. Police checked rooming houses through the west-central area where the two left the car. Mayor Nathan Phillips offered I 8500 reward Monday bn behalf of the police commission. Th! lirl disappeared after trhool Friday. She was reported reading comic books at the home of two schoolmates until 6 p.m. when she was sent home for her SUDDOT. S A child was reported scream. his in an east-central section but police checked the area. even to the garages. found. nothing. she 'I'" W" -f9lI0l'l't!di-at ta streetcar HOD and in two restaurants but Parliament At A Glance I: ins: CANADll,AN i-iu-:ss "vxiliiItonENV?st)F;M::ll'N Q55; -if neimronfldence in the govern- "WIII on unemployment. calling situation "grave," yl..1bor Minister Grill said lhe --ncrnment is willing to deal with ”"l”l.”i'”" .l"”":" yin eausn con- "'”jl but is no crisis. U t r Leader Coldwell said fed- Itfilllncgcsnonwemploymegg have 0 ll ; ur . uiciit to illzrease (uni. prifll, int" Minister Howe predicted 'l' I" .:rI'l government will suffer ”” IISCBI year its first budget ll" yjil in eight years. I -riiue Minister St. Laurent said it it ill contact the premiers within lrlw iicxt pack on setting a date eaufederal-provincial fiscal con- hcnator Nancy Hodges (L-Brit. (clumlns) said Canada's di- Pl lwi l 1'!) it ,00O Ransom For Little Toronto Girl nothing developed. MacLeod. a day laborer. hasn't the call, home. Higher Freight Rates On Cars To Mciritimes MONCTON (CPI - Rand it effective the Marltimes. automobile freight bills. of shippin car from NV 526.76. fr' gtolls would in u to purchasers ba ufacturlng points. REVERSE STAND The 72-cent figure is appllca' ' Continued on Page 2 Col 5 Possible Sites For A-Bomb Stations server says Sarnia is one of the sites being considered for Can- ada's first atomic-generated pow- er plant. it says others are Chalk River said he will try to meet the ransom demand. Police said the family that kind of money. One report said the money was avail- able but did not name a source. Police. saying they will disregard continue to question known sex perverts and scour the shabby neighborhood of the girl's Mathcson said Tuesday night new rail freight rates which became March I will tack be- tween 5350.000 and 3400.000 a year onto the cost of shipping cars into The secretary of the Marltimes transportation commission said the new class rates will add from 31 to 72 cents per 100 pounds to He said this meant that the cost one type of low-priced lndsor to a point in the Mai-itimes would be increased by It was likely that the heavier PM-IE4 on p but Mr. Math- eson said they also could lead to the wider use of truck-transport in getting automobiles to the Atlantic provinces from their Ontario man- The 31-cent rate will apply from Oshawa. 0nt.. where General Mo- tors has its big assembly plant. 0 II shipments from Windsor where Ford. among others. has its plant. The board of transport commis- sioners met Tuesday with railway officers at Ottawa. The meeting was called by the board to discuss technicalities arising from the new equalized class-rate plan which is effective across the country with the exception of rates within the SARNIA (CPI-The Sarnis Oh- The 30-year-old prime minister in a House of Commons a lasting 70 minutes. announced Britain has started manufactur- ing her own H-bomb. He also said his information is that the Russians have developed a type of bomb of only intermediate power. But within the next few years there was ”every reason to be- lieve" they would develop more advanced weapons and the means to deliver them on North American targets. The only coun- try now able to deliver a full- scale attack with l:l.bombs at a few bours's notice was the United States. CRIJSHING RE'l'ALlATl0N The prime minister said the Soviet government should be con- vinceu that a surprise attack by them would cause immediate and crushing retaliation. "All these considerations lead me to believe on a broad view that the Soviets would be ill-arl- viaed to embark on major ag- gression within the next three or four years." he said. "But if. at the end of that time. there should be a supreme con- flict. the weapons which I have described would be available on both sides. "it would be folly to suppose they would not be used." DETERRENT5 STILL NEEDED The answer to the H-bomb peril was a bons-flde system of gen- eral dlmmamcnt. But short of ,I.re;-ll: trti-mrslw Illfl. ; sal agreement. there walwlitny one sane policy for the free world in the next few years - "defence through deterrents." Ho disclosed that British scl- entists have made important ad- vances in atomic weapons. "Although the Soviet'a stockpile of atomic bombs may be greater than Britain's. our discoveries may well place us above them in fundamental l e." be said. Churchill opened a two-day de- bate on defence with what was af- terwards widely halled by pamg. Pope Observes 79th Birthday VATICAN CITY (Reuters)-The Pope today marks his 70th birth- day and the lath anniversary of his election as spiritual head of the world's 450.000.000 Roman Catholics. All Vatican offices will be closed. White-and-yellow papal flags will flutter in the 110-acre sovereign state of Vatican Cl . Ready For H-Bomb War mentarians as one of his greatest post-war speeches. He spoke with deep emotion and struck char- acteristic poses, often hooking his thumbs into his vest and survey- lng the House over his spectacles. FEAR FOR YOUTH The elder statesman asked: "What ought we to do? Which way can we turn to save our lives and the future of the world? "It does not matter so much to old people. They are going soon, anyway. - "But I find it poignant to look at youth in all its activity and ardor. and. most of all. to watch little children playing their merry games-and wonder what would lie before them if God wearied of mankind." The prime minister tapped the red dispatch box at which mem- bers of the government speak and declared: Continued on-Page 2 Col ti Senate Committ Ry SEAGHAN MAYNES, WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Congressional battle over tariffs ieopens in a Senate committee to- day with cabinet ministers lined up to defend President Eisenhow- er's low-tariff trade bill against the assaults of powerful protection- ist forces. The billethe heart of the ad- mlnlatration's global ”more-trade- less-aid" program-survived by only seven votes a determined protectionist drive to cripple it in the House of Representatives Feb. 18 Now it faces a crucial new test In the Senate" when its opponents, under pressure from domestic in- . g are ready with a series of restrictive amendments. Senate finance committee hear- ings today will get the'adminis- ........-.....3.:.... New Director Of Experimental Farms Service OTTAWA lCPi CDr. Cyril ll. Goulden. 58. famed cereal breed- er and chief of the agriculture department's cereal division. Tuesday was appointed director of the federal experimental farms service. fie succeeds Dr. Edward S. Hopkins. 65. who has retired af- ter 35 years of service with the department. Native of Brldgehead, Wales. and raised on s Yorkton. Sash. farm. Dr. Goulden helped produce such wheat disease-resistant va- rieties as Renown. Regent. Coro- natlon and more recently Sel- kirk. as well as these oats vari- etics: Vanguard. a ti But the official celebration will take place March 12. MIG lath an- niversary of the Pope's corona- mm. pm M, and Port Hope. where atomic tion. when Cardinal Benedetto :i--.-.-...... .1... b'.:" ,,'ff;'.', :,:,.,l;':3 plants already exist. Aloisi Masella, um relate to be minim-y tvmence. Defence Production Minister created a prince of t e church by w,d.”d.' Howe said recently the propos- the reigning Pontiff, will officials The (tmumom Wm 'cmmdm. Wig ed reactor will probably be in at n thanksgiving service in the late ' -- led - - or reg southern Ontario. . Vatican's Sistine chapel. ;l"1:l0s.g:aII:m 0:: t-unemployment. gs-:31-:;'.3VlNG PRECEDENT (CP)-For the first gt").-; ltyrhlstory the Welsh flag flew .3. hfmnm "idly. The green dram; If Has bearing the Welsh Jnk ' was raised under the Union 0 teiebrate St. David's day. Coming Events "St. Andrews Hail Mt. stew- "lv Vlflety Concert..Mai-ch 17. "Mai-shfleld W. 1. cake sale I. A. McDonald's. Iaturday Ht). Game. III. Albion Illl ..;:.';.:-.-:- ...'".'n. .l'.'.'." 3”3I0f 10500. door prise. ' m"C;-I .1; may coat.-t am - ggguagy, Mitch at I e'elbck. h”Atfantioa llt. ltowart straw- "! order your boxes IMVIII1. gm! crates for use sow. xeasetl Iv. Mt. ltawart. CIIOC W313-Ta”-'.'. "'l.'.ui.l”"Nh:..'?.;'.E mm as: NEW YORK United States dollar dropped to be- first time since 1952. the deciin in interest rates Canada. its rate on loans to banks to IV: ly his credit. and , creasing amounts robably . coos-ding oredlt 52 ER 2.; iii .l;r.'I: lifii (CF).-The Cana- dian dollar's premium over the low one per cent Tuesday for the Foreign exchange dealers at- tributed the drop-from a pre- mium of more than (W; per cent .in January to Tuesday's rate-ti: The Bank of Canada Feb. 14 cut per cent from two per cent. That Retailers Expect Credit Buying Will Be Continued OTTAWA (OP) - Retailers ex- POOI 90091! to beer llimnl litany: . . to the tenor of discussion Tuesday as ea Canadian Dollar Declines meant American investors would get a lower return on money placed in Canada. It was largely the influx of American capital to Canada that gave the Canadian dollar its strength following abandonment of exchange control in 1050. One New York dealer said the premium on the Canadian dollar has been pricing Canadian goods out of export marloets. duced value will make Canadian goods more competitive in the U.S. market." he said. i One speaker declared: of future income." He concluded. however: customers in an 'onon. "The re- . ' Rep Ajax. Exater. Garry and. , ! resoniative 4 Group Charlottetown throfuh the Centennial Comm arlottetownlldtdlaatnigtiawhldiwaseisolargely Pictmedahoveldt.W. F.AlanStewart,1st Queen's. May .1-lame. 2nd Prince, Lt. Col. F. J. Sto , Chairman Printer, Dr. W J P. Maofdlllan, 5th Budget Deficit OTTAWA (CP) - The federal government's first budget deficit in eight years was predicted Tues- day night by Trade Minister Howe. While there has been much un- official speculation that Finance Minister Harris will announce a 1954-55 deficit. it was the first time a cabinet minister made the pre- diction. ”For the first time since 1946," Mr. Howe said in the Commons. "is net defecit is indicated." Giving a review of economic conditions during a debate on un- employment, he advanced these reasons for his forecast: "Tax collections have lower. . . . "Even though incomes of most Canadians rose. the personal in- come tax has been reduced. is drop of two per cent during 1954. as comps at with the your previous. "Sales and excise tax collections were also down five per cent, though total domestic sales . . . remained firm." ee Hearings been trationls case from treasury sec-I retary George Humphrey. com-l merce secretary Weeks, and the agriculture undersecretary True D. Morse. I Crop Diverted To Starch PRESQUE ISLE. Me. (AP)- U. S. No. I grade and having a minimum diameter 1) Agriculture Secretary Ezra Taft Benson has ordered a diversion program for the 1964 Maine po- tato crop now in storage, potato industry sources here said Tues- day night. Benson took the action "to fault- itate the tiiversiun of ltivier-grade potatoes into potato starch and potato flour. so that grading and marketing of better quality pota- toes to consumers will be ex- pedited." I The news was greeted joyiiuslyi by Maine potato growers. who. have been plagued by poor prices and a crop severely damaged by. unfavorable weather. g Benson said the duration of the. program will depend on market-i lug developments. I CROP Loss , Payments for diversion with be made at the rate of 25 cents per hiinrlrcdweight for spuds meetingl The hearings were expected toil last two weeks. The unanswered lquestion was whether the commit- fee would accept the bill as sub-I mitted unaltered by the House. or Improved Train Service Follows Correspondence Between Premier & C.N.R. Following an exchange of nor- respondence with Premier A. W. Matheson. in which the Premier strongly iivsed. muons other things.-the placing-of . a sleeper car from Charlottetown to Mont- real on the "Ocean Limited" in connahttlon with its proposed im- proved rall service. the Canadian National Railways authorities have announc d that this connect- ion will be incorporated in the new service to be started on April 24. In a statement issued yesterday from Montreal. Mr. J T. White- fore. general passenger traffic manager. C.N.R.. announced that five hours and twenty minutes will be lopped off the travelling time from Montreal to Charlottetown and three hours and five minutes off the elapsed time between Charlottetown and Montreal. "The record Montreal-Charlotte town train schedules will permit more convenient arrival and de- parture times for Prince Edward Island travellers." Mr. Whiteford said. ”Tlicy will also be ii boon to the thousands of summer visitors to the Island. Through sleeping cars will be "Ocean Limited" between Mont- real and Moncton and in trains Nos. 80 and 40 between Moncton and Charlottetown. The present service:-is. time Express" eastward and the "Scotian" westward. Travellers to Prince Edward Is- land will leave Montreal at 0.30 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time and arrive at Moncton at 2.3) p.m. At- lantic Daylight Time and in Char- lottetown at 10.50 p.m. They will depart from Charlottetown at 9.1) a.m. Atlantic Daylight Time (0.20 Standard Time) and will arrive in Moncton at 3.tQ p.m. and reach Montreal at 8 s.m. Eastern Day- light Time. The new elapsed time from Montreal to Charlottetown will be 24 hours and it minutes. The present runs are 29 hours and 40 minutes eastbound and 26 hours and 40 minutes westbound. Brief reference to the new schedule was made a few days ago in the Legislature by Premier Malheson. who indicated that the improvement will provide. for the first time. s twelve-months sleep- er car connection with Montreal. The arrangements will naturally requlremen of two inches. No direct potato purchases will be made. up to 45 per cent of their crop has been lost because of shrinkage. They have longlsought a federal return for them. A marketing BETEGIUEM Pl'eV9m5 11Nl9T5l19d government is willing. at the com- Continued on Page 2 Col. 1 ICNR Authorized To Cut NS-NB Train OTTAWA ICPI--The board of transport t'0flllIllSSl')nEl'S has an- thorized the CNN to discontinue certain I)lISh8llQ9l' service in local areas of New Brunswick and Nova cilia. U.S. iiariif Battle Resumes Today amend it before sending it to the Senate for final action. As of now it would extend the tariff - cutting Reciprocal Trade Agteements Act-which expires next June-for three more years and authorize the president to no- gotiate additional aclective tariff reductions up to 15 per cent over that period in return for similar I. cessions from other trading na- tinns. A major threat is a heavily- bsckcd protectionist move to broaden the bill's "escape" clause which permits domestic industries threatened with Increased foreign competition to seek tariff protec- tion from the tariff commission. Now the president has power to 'g be clommisalodathigher tariff recommendations. N.B. Budget Speech: Last Night; Surplus Forecast FREDERICTON (CP) - New Brunswick's provincial tax struc- ture remai d basically hanged in the 1955 budget presented to the legislature Tuesday by Hon. D. D. Patterson of Saint John. provincial secretary-treasurer. No new taxation was introduced. The three per cent social services and education levy. better known as the sales tax. is removed from text books used In universities and business " . Reduced one cent last year. this tax remains effective otherwise. ' The budget forecast a ma.ior change in safety responsibility legislation and advances in social services. Mr. Patterson said a bill will be introduced which will raise the S50 operated year round in the "con- isist” of the new faster scheduled Charlo n's, necessitate different car ferry Continued on Page 15 Col 5 I At Centennial Dinner ltlee honoured the members of the Legislature at a dinner attmded by budriam and professional men of the city. J. D. Stewart, Hon. Forrest Phillips, aieaker of the ttetown Centennial Committee, Hon. A. W. Matlieson. rge lav tile, so. King's. inimum accident figure to S100 Barter”: Fihn Lab. As the Commons opened a major unemployment do- bste. the Progressive Conservatives moved a motion ,, want-of-confiderice in the government and the romptly approved the resolution. Labor Minister Giegg denied that the government it- uation is deteriorating, as Progressive Conservatives con- Mal" 'p"d 5'0"” "Y W" tended. Admitting the number of jdbless is up from a year aszo, he said the increase is due mostly to growth in the labor force and that the number at work increased in the diversion program to help get a last publishgd fig...-pg. Mr. Gregg also said the federal ing federal-provincial conference. Services Board officials said Tuesday that vihere scnice is discontinued. local re;;idciiis will be served through bus tmnspoi-t. In New Brunswick passenger service will be eliminated between Campbcllton and Daliiousie. in Nova Scotla. authority has been granted to discontinue cer- tain passciigcr service in the fol- lowing areas of Pictou County. be- tween New Glasgow and Pictou: New Glasgow and Sunny Brae; New Glasgow and Hopewell; Stel- larton and Hopewell: I-lopwell and Pictou Landing: New Glasgow and Pictou Landing; Stellarton and Piclou Landing; Hopewell and unny Brae. DEMAND PROSECUTIONS LONDON (AP) e- Members of Parliament today demanded pros- ecution of several British civilians mentioned in a government report charging communist torturing of British prisoners during the Korean war. The report named Alan Win- nington. Chins correspondent for the Communist L o n d o n Daily Worker. Mrs. Monica Feltoii. left- wlng woman lecturer and writer; Jack Gaster. a leader in the Brit- ish Communist party: and Michael Shapiro. London staffer of the Daily Wot-ker...Il. .t.hey. yialted the Communist prisonericamps. or more. This means that when damage in an accident does not come to 8100 it need not be re- ported to authorities. and those in- volved wlll not find it necessary to prove financial responsibility before their driving privileges are restored. MAY REDUCE FEE In the same connection. the bud- get speech sald it is expected that the dollar fee charged holders of driving permits for the unsatisfied judgment fund will be reduced. if not eliminated. in 1956. depending on the number and size of claims on the fund in 1955. Mr. Patterson's third financial review since the Progressive Con- servatlve government took office late in 1952. the budget forecast a surplus of 318,509 for the fiscal year ending March 31. 1955. with revenue at SS3.IB.'i.f)82 and expend- itures at 353.164.5713. g For the fiscal period ending March ill. I956, it predicts an es- timated surplus of 538.221 with revenue of s53.7os.si-i and exiWN'l' lturcs of 553,667,591. record levels for the province. Special services include a bill to be introduced by Labor Minister A. E. Skaling of Saint John which will provide for a mnntlily allow- ance of 540 for workmen or wi- dows of workmen who contracted silicosis in the course of their em- ployment in in June. I. 1948. The estimated cost of 517,000 this year is to be paid entirely by the province. NEW P()l.l(W' Under a new policy adapted in regard to mentally handicapped children. the province will make a grant of 550 per child. in be Continued on Page 2 Col 3 v.....;.Is;.:i;.. Visits Cruiser OTTAWA. (CP)- It was like being home again for William A. Bailey. 62, when he stepped aboard RMGS Ontario at Sydney. Aus- trails. in a release Tuesday naval headquarters told about his visit. Mr. Bailey. who lost his parents in the Halifax explosion. was in- vited aboard the Ontario. on a training cruise in Australian wat- era. by CPO Gordon Fraser of Victoria and Vancouver. He said he is the mini living membe of the first Royal Cana- dian Volunteer Reserve stationed at Eaquimalt before "I guess you could say I was for life." he said. New Brunswick priorl the First World War. At Jutland injuries re- fereed as-mar climate of Australia for his health. Detag aboard the (htas-to was "alsnt-t bone to discuss the problem of taking care of able-bodied jobless who are without unemployment insur- ance. . N0 REQUESTS The central government is pre- pared to do this. he said. if the provinces request it. so far no province had done so. though it was a primary responsibility of the provinces. Earlier in Tuesday's sitting. Prime Minister St. Laurent said he looks for such a conference ”as early as it can conveniently be arranged" and that he expects to communicate within the next week with the premiers. The unemployment discussion regarded as the top domestic af- fairs debate of the parliamentary session to date-developed from figures released by the govern- ment last week showing jobless at a post-war h h. The bureau of statistics es- timated 382,000 persons were out of work and looking for jobs in late January. compared with the previous high of 318.000 last March. At the same time. 509.582 persons were looking for work through Natlo rial Employment Service. against the high of 569.006 in March. 1954. LACK OF PLANNING Mrs. Ellen Fairclough (PG- Hamllton West). Progressive Con- servative opposition critic who pro- posed the no-confidence motion. accused the government of "lack of constructive planning" on em- ployment. CCF Leader Colriwell. after hearing Mr. Greg give gov- "s defence, said the ouse would be justified in supporting the Fail-ciough amendment. Mrs. Falrclough said Canadian unemployment is not a matter of statistics. It was a matter at frightened men and women. of cold bodies and hungry stomachs; of fear gripping the working peo- 6. They could not eat such things as the Kifimat aluminum develop- ment. Quebec-Labrsdor iron ore, Alberta oil or the St. Lawrence Seaway. ins is CREAT TORONTO (CP)-Minimum and maximum temperatures: 3 3' Dawson .. Vancouver Edmonton . . Calgary . Saskatoon . Regina Winnipeg .. Toronto Ottawa Montreal .. Quebec .. Fredericton . Saint John Halifax . Charlottetown . Sydney Varmoiilh St. John's HALIFAX (CF)-The Dominion weather office says aunny inter- vals are expected in all regions on Wednesday. Snow is forecast to spread into the western regions Wednesday evening. Forecasts: Prince Edward island and New Brunswick: Wednesday variable cloudiness. snow beginning in the evenlllt mild: west wilds I be- coming light in the afternoon. low- high at Charlottetown .18 and II. Fredericton. Saint John and Male- toii 30 and 32. Edmnndston. Chat- ham and Caaaspbelltea II and I. Bay of Fundy: Wednesday west wlnda U becoming south is in the evening: cloudy: snow beglnIIhI3 Wednesdu evening: visibility znaasaexssagsgggagg aas:2aaeaas.assee; I being mu .