I tstsruous ssos UVYOI moot! seller with Guardian W zsnt Ads. Dial 8506 ask for classi- fied ad taker, for quick rgguhg, I who wttmsniio "Coders Prince Edward Island Like The Dew" WEATHER Allainly sunny; warmer; 15. Low-high at Charlottetown 35 and 65. westerly winds to PAGES QUEEN INSPECTS MOUNTIES Inspector John Downey of ot- tawa accompanies Queen Elizabeth as she inspects members of the RCMP musical ride at Windsor, England. The Mounties are tour- ing Britain performing their musi- cal ridestai llurse shows. CP From AP Battle With Ice Continues Off C.B., Nfld. Coasts IYDNEY (CP)-The battle be- from 20-foot thick ice off the tween ice. ships and men contin- ued Monday off the coasts of Cape Breton and Newfoundland with ships and men gaining slightly. Though entrances to the Strait of Canso and Sydney harbor were jammed with floes. a moderating wind sleckenel the ice on the east 5 coast of Cape Breton. Shipping was able to enter and leave St. John's. Nfld.. Monday without difficulty, though a string of heavy ice lay between the shore and horizon. Last week. several ships had to bypass the port. Two small icebergs moved away from the capital after threatening to camp in its narrow entrance. lce lay across the mouth of Con- ception Bay near St. Johns but further north Trinity and Bona- visia Bays were free. TIGHT To SHORE Beyond the bays. Arctic noes lay has tight to shore as they were in Janua;m.- Meanw e. th sicebreakers lau- rel and d'lbervllle tried Monday to break through ice off Sydney harbor and the lcebreeker Mont- calm was dispatched from Que- bec Sunday to help clear the northern approach to the Cause Itrait. Three CNR ferries were freed Cape Breton coast Sunday. The freighter Master Nicky. which will Mexico. was aided into Louis- load 10.000 tons of rails for bourg. N.S.. harbor Sunday by the icebreaker Edward Cornwallis. She had been held by ice several ays. The lcebreaker N.B. McLean left the Sydney ice fields Sunday for Bay of Islands. Nfld.. where several freighters are trapped. Seasoned mariners here said the ice is the worst in to years. It has thrown Newfoundland-N .. Scotla ferries and freighters off schedule since January and even forced transatlantic liners to de- tour. WARSAW POLAND (AP) -The story of a big riot. which seems to have had military overtones. came out ,of the garrison town of Jero- alalt. . The i riot appar- ently was the result of the arrest of a soldier for drunkenness late last week. The police station of Jaroslaw. near the Soviet Ukrainian frontier 170 miles southeast of Warsaw, wesreportedstooedbyamobof several hundred persons. The po- lice responded with tear gas. More than 1.000 security men-- tmops and reserve police - were Freak Cold Wave Hits Crops In Britain, France And Italy LONDON fAPl -- A freak cold snap gripped Europe Monday. Snow fell over much of the con- tinent. There was heavy damag to crops in Britain. France and Italy. The northern Yugoslav city of Ljubljana had a May snow for the first time in 58 years. Widespread damage was re- ported in Italy. In the rich Po Valley north of Rovigo, hall de- stroyed so per cent of crops. Radio Belgrade reported "great damage” to crops in Yugoslsvia. where the snow lay 10 inches deep in places. Many telephone lines were cut- In France, the frost damaged fruit trees. which had been well advanced due to a hitherto warm spring. Outdoor cafes of Paris were deserted. Potato crops were damaged in parts of southern England. Fruit growers were advised to take spe- cial precuatlons to protect their crops from cold temperatures Monday night. Prague Radio said the parks and gardens of the Czech capital. famed for their May blossom. were under a carpet of snow. The fields and forests of Bohemia. Moravia and Western Solvakla were also snow covered. Diefenbaker Says He'll Be Canada's Next Prime Minister SHAWVILLE. Que. (CPI-John Diefenhaker said Monday he thinks he'll be prime minister of Canada after the June 10 federal election. , lils prediction was made at a luncheon at nearby Bristol. Que.. during a day-long tour of Pontiac- emleca 1' minve in the Ottawa alley. had that effect maple syrup." The party leader made no ma- jor speeches during the day. His only big address was scheduled even without ii i is iii; 3 E it :;E .3 isih I .1 arise Riot Flares In Polish Town called in to quell the dlstubence. three recent agai two a military prosecutor and one un- der the clvll prosecutor. TOO MUCH LIQUOR The dispatch gave this account: dances was "the main cause.' ness. other soldiers and some closed in on the poll cestatlon and dows. Seven of those were iauled. Lomsa. near Warsaw. dren. At Lomta, protest brutality against two brothers. Everything Going Well On Mayflower Plymouth. England. The little Ieillng vessel the Canary islands. everything was going well- SlO0,000 Fire At New Glasgow Details printed in the Warsaw newspaper Szpendar Mlodych sug- gested it was the most serious of t oat Communist state authority. It said investigating commis- sions have been set up. one under The sale of too much liquor at Trouble started with the arrest of a youthful soldier for drunken- young civilians described as hooli- gens sided with the prisoner. They, hurled stones through the win- A police appeal for calm and order was lgn or e d. The rioting mounted. A number of soldiers were hurt. The police loosed their tear gas. Nineteen persons. includ- ing an army sergeant major. fi- nally were taken into custody. There have been other incidents in the last five weeks at Star- garl. near Ssesecln. and at More than 40 persons were in- jured in a fight with police at Stargard during protests over the eviction of a woman and four chil- p e a I a n t s marched on police headquarters to what they called police PENZANCE. Eng. (AP) - The Mayflower ll. the pilgrim replica ship bound for the United States. reported by radio Monday night that she is sailing straight west for the first time since leaving was about too miles south-southwest of Cmdr. Alan Vllllers said his speed was six knots and that CHAMLYITETOWN. CANADA TUESDAY. MAY 7. 1957 ' I 1 Whole Shoreline Of.rP. E.l, Now. f is Free Of Ice condition are good around Prlnce' Edward Island. reports Capt. Angus Brown after a flight Monday. He saw a large number of lobster boats busily putting out their traps afterlthe long delay because of storm conditions. George Bay is still full of heavy ice. No sealers are trying to get through to the Strait of Canso. A number of small ships on the Nova Scotia side are trying to get through to, Northumberland Strait. Exceptionally heavy ice is seen on the east coast of Cape Breton. Both Sydney and Louisburg are blocked. The lcebreakers Saurel and D'lberville were escorting a ship from Sydney harbour. The N.B. McLean is escorting a ship into Corner Brook. Nfld. Conditions have improved there but there is still heavy ice on the west coast of Newfoundland. The steamer "track is in very good condition. although it has observed in the steamer track. One The steamer track is in very good condition, although it has narrowed down to ten miles at St. Paul's. Five ships were observed in the steamer track. One freighter was seen trying to go through heavy ice into St. George's Bay. Nfld. Numerous whales were seen in the stea track. P.E.l. Not In C-D Exercise OTTAWA (CP) -- About 3.000 cvil ” ' ' a from ltaly's G.ov't Mob Thr USSR Pr JAKARTA. lndonesa (APJ lsoviet President Klementl Y. Voros ov on his arrival Monday for a s te visit and police had to use tear gas to disperse them. A 21-gun salute greeted Voroshi- lov at the airport. where he told welcome a that "imperialists" are endangering world peace. But out- side the presidential palace later, a near riot developed amid shouts of "better go home than give this man a hearty welcome." Posters carrying Voroshilov's Icture were ripped up and it was touch-and go until police went into action. On his arrival from a long visit in Red China. Voroshlov said at the airport: "At present, imperialist forces are pursuing a policy which in- creases world tension by an arms race in nuclear eapons. "imperialist forces are tending to hamper co-operation in econ- omic and cultural fields through- .. Demonstrators threatened to mob eatens esident out the world." MISSION OF FRIENDSHIP He told the crowd oi 100.000: "We have come to Indonesia on a mission uf friendship." To prepare for the Soviet pres- dcnt's 12-day visit. local author- ities had issucd instructions lllal. the city be cleaned up. prvatc houses painted and ordered men in the streets to wear ties. The national radio had exhorted the population to give the Soviet president as hearty a welcome as lng his Russian visit last Novem- ber. Many, however. seemed crit- lcal. "Why invite people here when we are in the middle of an econ- omic and political crisis?" asked a businessman. Sukarno has rejected criticism that Voroshilov's trip is untimely. He has invited President Eisen hower three times to visit in- donesa. across Canada will participate May 10-11 in the first all-Cana- dian national CD exercse, it was announced here Monday. The exercise. called Coopera- tion I. will be directed by Maj.- Gen. F. F. Worthington. federal civil defence co-ordinator. from the federal control centre at the Canadian Civil Defence College, Arnprior. 0nt.. 10 miles northwest of Ottawa. All provinces except Manitoba and Prince Edward Island will Participate along with 12 CD zones, 65 m-unicipalties and ther rural areas. The exercse will have three objectives - to train control cen- tre staffs at all govtrnment lev- els, to test national CD and inter- headquartu. communications sys- tems and procedures. and to study problems which might arise in the implements ion of a na- tional survval plan. ncludlng its impact on government depart- ments C M totes syeer parate ldl reho athl this year are holding separate na- tional CD exercises. Anthony Eden Visits Ottawa UITAWA iCP)-A chipper Sir Anthony Eden arrived here Mon- day for a ldday stay to convalesce 'at the residence of an old friend. Governor - General Vincent Mas- sey. An indication of the extent of his recuperation from surgery April is in Boston for in bile duct ob- struction was that no doctor will be in attendance on him here. It was learned that Lady Eden. who accompanied her husband here. will keep in touch with Dr. Richard Cattell of Lahey Clinic. Boston, who performed the opera- tion last month. Dr. Cattell will supervise the convalescenoe by telephone. Officials said an Ottawa doctor would be summoned immediately if Sir Anthony required direct care. ANGLO - CANADIAN TRADE OTTAWA ICPl - AngloCana- dian trade talks opened here Mon- day. Brlilsh and Canadian repre- sentsllves to the continuing com- mittee on trade and economic af- fairs. established by the two coun- tries in 1918. met in camera. Tdks are expected to last three days. I Opposes Acce For Supplying The tender of Tip Top Tailors to the amount of 31,142 for supply- lng- the City with ill police uni- forms was accepted by the City Council at a special emergency meeting called last evening. Anoth- er tender accepted was that of W. G. Barbour to supply a truck of over two-ion capacity. The tender was for 84,900 less a 32.000 allow- ance for a vehicle now in use by the City- In the case of the police uni- forms tenders were submitted as follows: Tip Top Tailors. SL142; T. Eaton Company. 81,002; Hool- ay's Men's Wear. 5i.2)4.50; Moore and Mcllaotfl. H.145; Hender- Eoaaadcudmore. 31,188.91. ' i Tenders for the city truck less trade in were received from W. G. Barbour. 82.900; 1''. 1!. Mc- Lalne. 33.390; Dowd Motors. (-3.- 18l.25; Stewart Motors. 33.78194. Before the motion accepting the Tip Top Tailors was passed Conn. Johnstone said he thought when there was so little difference bet- ween the Tip Top tender and that of Henderson and Cudmore that consideration should be given to the local firm. OTHER FACTORS Coun. Johnstone said there was a great deal more to consider than the fact that a firm paid taxes in the City. He reminded the Council that local firms take act- ive parts in the various City cam- paigns and give liberally to them while the lowest tenderer in this case had not been known to give in any sizable amount to the maj- ority of the City's charities. Coun Johnstone felt that the contribution of time and money rendered by Mr. Roy Cudmore should be taken into consideration. Mayor Stewart concurred with Coun. Johnstone. His Worship re- called the recent hospital cam- paign in which Mr. Cudmore gave a very substantial donation. He noted at the same time that Tip Top Tailors had given nothing. '1 know that the tender com- mittee is bound by the terms of reference in the tender but when local merchants are involved. i think I would take a long look before making a decision." said pting Tender Police Uniforms Mayor Stewart. Coun. Foster said Coun. John- stone's remarks would infer that the tender Committee should. ra- ther than looking for the lowest bid, try to ascertain how much the bidder paid to various charit- ies. He said he could forsee great difficulities if this were taken as a criterion. MUST FOLLOW REGULATIONS Coun. Geudct said the items re- (erred to by Coun. Johnstone were worthy of consideration but felt the Committee could not be ham strung by such regulations. lie rs- gailed that thecnuncil last winter ad had considerable discussion regarding the supplying of oil for the City- He said the B-A Oil Com- pany which pays only a fraction of some of the other oil companies in taxes had received the contract simply because they had sub- mltted the lowest tender. Coun. Nicholson. the chairman of the Tender Committee. said the committee had taken into con- sideration all things such as quality of cloth and so forth and these things being equal to the others. The committee had no alternative but to accept the lowest bid. When the motion to accept the Tip Top Tailor was put to the meeting. Coun. Johnstone register- ed the only dissentlng vote. Coun. Gormley was the member absent from the Council. Plen Atomic Arms Unit For Formosa CANBERRA (Reuters)-A U.S. ' weapon unit will be based on Formosa. the Nationalist Chi- nese mlnlster to Australia. Dr. Chen Tal Chu, said Monday. Chen. in a written tatement to the press here, said the American and Nationalist Chinese govern- ments declded Monday to base a US. unit equipped with Matador tactical missiles on Formosa "as a deterrent to Communist aggres- sion.' He said he was told this in a cable from the Nationalist Chinese foreign office. A President Sukarno received dur-l Senator McCarthy Funeral Is Held In Washington PRICE 5c y Has Resigned After 22 Months In Office l Premier Sengi May Continue i Until New Gov't. ls Formed . . . ROME (Reutcrsi-'l'lic umzit-r- The cabnet split followed a split W 5 ' - i . lstUr:W”E:;dT0?:EJ (::)R M iii.” ale centre cabinet hcatlcd by Prc- formed by the late Alt-dc de Gas- lh ” "5 P , ' - t M" rmcr Antonio Segm rear.-m-ti Suu- per in 1948. It has ruled Italy 5' "med Wmday "' fuller-91 day night, 22 months afu-r 11 took ever since. , pageanlry. Seventy fellow senators. many government officials and hun- from Wisconsin. i in the Senate, Rev. Dr. Fred- erick Brown Harris called for an end to the controversy McCarthy and the investigative- lmethods which made him one of pthe most bitterly disputed figures lm American political history. I Dr. Harris. a Methodist clergy- pman who is the Senate chaplain, i said; "This fallen warrior through death speaketh. calling a nationl of free men to be delivered fromi the complacency of a false secur- ity and from regarding those who loudly sound the trumpets of vig- ilance and alarm as mere disturb- ers of the peace." In like vein. Msgr. John J. Cartwright. eulogizing McCarthy as at a pontifical funeral mass. said the senator's anti-communist role will assure him a place in the hall of fame "as history un- folds its record." McCarthy died of a liver ail- ment last Thursday at the age of 48. St. Matthew's Roman Catholic cathedral was jammed to over- flowing. There were no flowers- only the flag-decked coffin before the altar. At the Senate chamber service- flrst of its kind since 1940-22 of the Senate's 49 Democrats and 38 of the 46 Republicans were in at- tendsnce. Two planes carrying McCarthy's family. congressional delegations and the coffin took off for Green Bay. Wis. Arrangements were made to carry the body from there to his hometown of Appleton for in- terment. "Four Remanded in Ottawa Street Fight Death OTTAWA (CF) - Fou era were nemanded " manalaughte charges in the street-fight death of a l7-year-old and pollc esaid other youths in- volved in the Friday night fracas may be charged later with dir- orderely conduct. In police court Rcne Delorme. lit. and Vincent Tamarit. 17, were remanded for a wek on man- slaughter charges arising out of the fatal heating of Rene Jodoin In a street fight outside a west- central Ottawa church. The two others charged with manslaughter are juveniles. 14. and 15 years of age. They ap- peared before juvenile court judge Alan Fraser and also were re- manded lor a weke. Meanwhile. an anonymous per-; son telephoned the Ottawa Jour- nal and said 23 teen-aged boys and a number of girls have formed a "vigilante" group and vowed to avenge Jodnln's death. r teen-ag- " o HAITI EMERGENCY OVER PORT AU PRXNCE. Haiti (AP) Haiti's army chief has declared the state of emergency ended in ihls Caribbean Negro republic. But. country -wide economic paralysis! showed no sign of easing. A wave: of strikes which forced out three six months ended last Friday. but industry and agriculture remained badly crippled. ill. I wild toss min at thssststuncslllas. '-.l..C.N hpertferaperlodoftwndag. Lt.-CIndr.'l'.. ..theshtpwlll hvo&IIaasmberof"aew recs-sttstmnlI.I aevaltraialager C ilk. as. This nuosri wut VISIT citaatorrsrowu wIbeiIe&Ihd&gerj taesereeeataI&tenbeaaeh.': --v ::.:-..w CV7. m n.&-& &r selracth in helicopter dreds M p I 1. d g . yd lmnjhanded the rcslgnntiuris ' p in m I P”l59"3 "9" 5 10"" Pf'l.'Sld8fli Giovanni Grunt-in. the Communist partyls bid for g 9 "M-T3 9i We 15” 59"3i0F Flushed and feverish from a lmul power and have tied Italy ilrn:-ly oi throat infection. Scgnl left his to the Atlantic pact in close friend- ship with the United States. 0lfiL'E'. Sr-gni. 66-year-old prufo.s.-or of BLOCKED REDS ll) sickbcd to tal(e'th'.' abrupt step. The government. formed in July The centre parties have blocked The coalition came into existence W97-1955. was composed of 15 Christ- because De Gasperi insisted that inn Dom-icrats. Segni's own party; his own huge Christian Democrat four right - wing socialists, and party should not rule on its own. three Liberals. It also was sup-1 ported until recently by the R-epub--K llcans in parliament. Gronchi asked Scgni i 1 although it then held a majority n Parliament. He felt the Italians ihad to be accustomed to democ- and the racy after 20 years of Fascist dic- cablnet to continue as carctakersztatorship. untl s new government can bei. formed. De Gasperi. who died in 1954, iassociated the much smaller non- Giuseppe Saragat, 58. vice-pre-'.Catholic demolrratic parties. the ruler and leader of the right-wing: right-wing socialists. Liberals and 30CiEliSlS. announced on Suntiayilicpublicans in the his party's withdrawal from the i coalition. government. But his anxiety to prevent all power falling into the bands of The right - wing ministers said his own party is not shared by the mddlc-of - the-road cabinet his successor in the party leader- lacked further "momentum toward ship. Amintore Fanfani. reform." The cabnct was formed nearly two years ago as a stop-gap gov-l ernrnent. lt Ed a precarious life! in Parliament where for some time i it had a majority on paper of onlyi one. i Fanfan has made it known that he arms at getting an absolute majority for his party at the next elections. due next year, and also has indicated that in that case the party would rule alone. with him- self as premier. AGED ADMIRER Prime Minister St. Laurent chats with Mrs. R. A. McGee. 93-year- old widow who uses an old fashion- ed ear trumpet during their con- versation at Shaughncssy Military Hospital in Vancouver. Mr. St. Laurent paid a visit to the hos- pital while in Vancouver on his I Mr. St. Laurent. plied: "Oh. I think he's just love- Iv... election campaign tour. Mrs. Mc- Gee's husband was a government house scout in the Riel rebellion of H185. Asked what she thought of Mrs. McGee re- CP Wlrephete No Coalition Low Says, But Would Co-operate With Gov't. VICTORIA i(,'l'i-Social Credit Leader Solon Low said here Mon- day that there is absolutely no possibility of a coalition between social Credit and any other poli- ical party. Mr. Low was rnmmcnlng on re- ports from Vancouver which quoted him as saying there wouldi be a coalition if Liberal or Pro-i gresslve Conservatives went back! with a minorty government afteri the June 10 electon. 3 "l said tin Vancouver- there is no possibility whatever of i a coalition. We would. however.. give careful consideration to co- operating with a minority govern-i ment to give stability to govern- ment until it was wise to have another election. CIITAINLY no COALITION "But. we certainly wouldn't co- alesce-wfth any party. "We would co-operate only on a temporary basis for the good of 52 country." He said the Social Credit had the choice as to which party they would support. "It's a choice of being shot or he said. "Their pol- are almost the same." i that ; - rally in Vancouver Monday night. At a press conference launching his campaign in Toronto April 25 Progressive Conservative Leader John Dlefenbaker said it was his goal to restore the two-party sys- tem in Canada and attract support of voters who have previously backed the CCF and Social Credit parties. He added that there was no question of coalition whatsoever.” pal... lniurzd In Jot Crash CHATHAM. N3. (CPS F-U Sabre M from the bale here crashed about a 1 out of the airfield at noon Ilea- day. The pilot. whose name wm withheld. was lnkrred. Tnealrforeesaldhedidnst rii out and was In me plane when it struck the grood wab approaching the field for a lead- inst. New Housing . Starts Decline to; OTTAWA lCPl - lhl