ofa Mere Man 7! i';4',V: is I long day. 9 an CANADA, TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 15. 1955 E o P ED HIGHWAY PROJEC Church. State Problem Bole Up In The U..l(. LONDON (Reuters) - Pressure mounted Monday night in Britain r III ' " lnn into "' separation of church and state. A cler an. speaking in St Paul's athedrsl here Sunday. questioned the right of British prime ministers. who need not even be Christians. to have a de- clslve voice in the nomination of Church of England bishops. Two newspapers of different po- litical affiliations applauded Can- on George L. Lloyd for proposing the freeing of the church from state controls, The en ire problem may come before P rliament today. Labor member Stephen Swingler said he will ask Prime Minister Eden to set up a commission to investig- ate church-state relations and the question of whether Britain should continue to have a state church. I-lope Wanes As Search For Ship Survivors Continues HALIFAX (GP)-Iearcls planes dronad over a cold. (ICU III Off northern Newfoundland Monday. looking for some sign of seven men who sailed in the little coastal freighter Mabel Dorothy. They found none. - Meanwhile. at Port aux Basques in southern Newfoundland. a bap- picr story was heard. Four crew members of the 35-ton coaster Mary and Wes told of escape in a dory when their vessel sprang a leak. They were picked up by an- other host. The lrunt. lor the Mabel Dorothy centred five miles southeast of Hooping Harbor. when in. gun Kettle of Grand Bay, Nfld.. cap- of the 140-ton motor vessel was tall! and Owner of the Mary and found floating Sunday. Alrcrjftf Wes. said his vessel began to leak flew through snow squalls that when lllt W8! Pounded by 8 40- ”The United States November potato production report again shows an improvement from our viewpoint -- that is, it is again reduced for Maine (58,200 to 65.- 873 thousand bushels)." states the manager of the P.E.l. Potato Marketing Board. "Prices in Eastern US. are reported up by a full lo cent a 1b., in the past ten days. The New York Mercantile Exchange (which we could call a In Grand Bank veteran seamen said they thought the Mabel Don Dtlly came to grief soon after she sailed. probably on reefs toward the northern tip of the island. An RCAF Lancaster from Tor- bay. Nfld.. searched the offshore Groaia and Bell islands and the coast of White bay to the south on the chance the men might have reached land in the vessel's two dorles. Long absence of any report from them made this a slb-n hope. POUNDED DY GAL: At Port aux Basques. Wesley loughby Riggs. chief . Grand Bank; Garfield Lawrence. second engineer. Bay l'Argent; Thomas Bolt. cook, Grand Bank: Henry House. seamen. Bay 1'Ar- gent; Thomas Jensen. seaman. Harbor Breton. All but Lawrence. House and Jen- sen are married. VETERAN SAILOR . Capt. Ralph is a veteran deep- sea mariner who has survived sev- eral shipwrecks. During the Sec- ond World War his motor vessel Helen Forsay was sunk in the Carl- bbean sea by gunfire from a Nazi submarine. Two of his Newfound- land crew were killed. Second engineer Garfield Law- rence, 19. was in his first year at flected this price increase also, having riscn on November deliver- ies from 51.51 on October 10th to 82.05 on November 9th. "Maine growers continue to send a lot of potatoes to the Starch Plants which are operating under a federal subsidy. It gives you a picture of the size of their oper- ation to note that in one week 87.2 cars of potatoes were processed by Stock Market for potatoes) has re- ed Further Reduction Noted In Maine Potato Estimate season's total over LEO cars. In the same week. Island firrns ship- ped a total of 397 cars. "Movement from P.E.I. has been heavy, with an estimated 2 mill- ion bushels now moved. Refriger- ator cars have been in very heavy demand. and while almost evuy shippe has been crying for more cars. the fact that they have not been available may have kept our domesti markets from being glutt- ' '.Since the release of the United States July production estimates. the potato outlook both there and here has been very discouraging. However. in the past four months the 11.8. estimate has been reduced by loll; million bushels (4 per cent), and Maine, especially, has taken steps to remedy their situation by diverting many of their potatoes to starch. Their success. so far. made visibility poor. but the search mllean-hour sale. gun on. They had almost reached Port FAMILE. ANX-mus aux Basques with 50 tolls of coal from North Sydney when the situa- In the Newfoundland south coast tion became serious. He said the town of Grand Bank. home port of men worked the pumps until ex- fhe Mabel Dorothy. anxious faml- hsusted. Then they radioed for liss lslzaited for news. But hope was help and took to the dory. wan g. Capt. J. T. Hardy of Port aux Capt. John Ralph of Grand Bank Basques heard their call and took sailed the Mabel Dorothy out of his vessel Mack Mariner to their Roddicktnn. 50 miles south of St. rescue. Besides Capt. Kettlc llel Anthony at Newfoundland's llortil- picked up the skippers father. Er- an tip. Nov. 3. He headed for nest Kettle. and Emmanuel Lo- North lydney. a five or six days' mond. both of Grand Bay near VOYIIE. Port aux Basques, and Reuben Sunday. after 11 days of silence. Anderson of Rose Blanche. 30 miles plans for a search were made. Be- east. fore it could be started the motor The Mabel Dorothy also had an vessel Lillian Richards: reported all - Newfoundland crew. Besides wreckage off Hooping Harbor, M Capt. Ralph they were: Herbert miles south of Roddickton. Hollet. mate. Grand Beach; Wil- Prince Charles Enioys 7th Birthday Observance LONDON (AP)-Crowds outs Buckingham Palace Mond sea. He followed the calling of his father. drowned before his birth in the sinking of the fishing vessel Partsnna on tlr Grand Banks with loss of 26 lives. All others in the crew are vet- erans of the sea. The Mabel Dorothy, a former fishing boat. was owned by For- ward and Tlbbo. Ltd. of Grand Bank. She was built in Lunenburg. NS. 25 years ago. She had been carrying flour from North Sydney to northern New- foundland ports. stocking up before the winter ice closed in. returning with general cargo. The freighter wasdamaged in a grounding at Fogo in northeastern Newfoundland last summer and had made only two trips after be- ing repaired and rebuilt. RETAIL SALES GROW OTTAWA (CP)-Sparked by a growing consumer demand for motor vehicles. dollar sales of Can- ads's retail outlets showed sharp gains in September and the first nine months of 1955. The bureau of statistics reported Monday that the starch plants, to bring this City Consumer Price Indexes O'l'l'AWA, (CP)- only slight movements were recorded in the 10 regional consumer price in- dexes between Sept. 1 and Oct. 1. the bureau of statistics said to- day. Changes nowhere exceeded .3 per cent. Four city indexes-St. John's. Nfld.. Halifax. Saint John. N.B.. and Montreal--were lower, that for Edrnonrton-Calgary was un- changed, and indexes for Ottawa. Toronto. n” ipeg. Saskatoon-Re gins and Vancouver were up. The indexes. based on 1949 equalling 100. show changes in retail prices of goods and ser- vices in each city. They do not indicate where it costs more or less to Eve kl one city than an- other. The Oct. 1 indexes. with Sept 1 figures in brackets: St. John's. 104.8 (105.1); Hali- fax, 114.9 (115.2): Saint John. 117.8 (118.1); Montreal. 117 For Insurance DENVER (AP) - A 23-year-old convicted Denver forger who was allowed to work off the remainder of a bad - cheque debt - in his mother's restaurant after she paid off most of it to keep him out of prison admitted Monday that he rigged the dynamite bomb that blew up a United Air Lines plane. killing the mother and 43 other persons. One of the victims was Mrs. Alma Winsor of St. John's, Nfid. Authorities said the son did it ior insurance money-a policy he had taken out at the airport before she boarded the plane at Denver, but ironically invalid because she had not signed it. SIGNED ADMISSION U.S. attorney Donald E. Kelly said John Gilbert Graham. con- ids prince born in 1948 when Britons ay sang still were on food rstiona and the an bmhd, " to .1, ch bl, Id sales by 10 trade groups rose 11 (ll7.1)' Ottawa 117.7 (117.5): Tu- sanction and restaurant worker... bloiililpyboy u-hoysomeda; will bi bloolckadeteiiieenei-ill? the Rum" P" W" l" Stlmmbel '0 31-"3" '”'””t' Ii” ”1”” Wl'"”l”3- termed A playboy by probation 0!- melr mat Royal presents are owl"), 388.000 from 01.008.314.000 last year- 1166 (116.5); Saskatoon-Regina. ac...-,;,..h.,d signed I -(W,-men ad. a” went, but Pmce Chm; For the nine mon 115.3 (115.4): Edmonton-Calgary. mi5s1o.,.-- Prince car a rl ea smiled and st "ill "WY ldvzinnffduo v.d b t uh "u. to 09.258.563.000 ITOIII 33.7w. 115.2 ,iIi.5.3l' Vancouver. 113.5 Graham waived 3 hearing on 3 -.'.:......."....:...;-la .-r.:"r'.:'.l'.'.?:.:l.t:: -...-..r.r........ to il'n:'-l:i'aw”""'?' W .. . W. was anxious to get at -the ice cream and cake. It turned out to be good, too. French chef Ronald Aubrey baked a special frosted sponge cake decorated with seven candles. The Queen and the Duke of Edin- burgh kept their royal calendars free for the occasion but they might as well not have bothered. The Queen and dubs were little more than onlooke - at the fee- tivitiee. 'i'lle young prince showedl himself in full command and had? two dozen of his juvenile friendsl at the palace to help him cele-3 hrate. ' The day began early for the young prince who is heir-apparent to the throne. Charles was up earlier than usual and the first to wish him "happy birthday" was his sister. five-year-old Princess Anne. who proudly handed him her present. GOT PRESENTS The young prince got presents. when he was unable to supply 5100.000 bond; ' The sabotage charge carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison and 310.000 fine. Kelley met with state prosecu- tors to consider whether the slim defendant should he turned over to them for prosecution on murder charges. punishable by death in Colorado. l A decision on further prosecution will be reached within 40 hours. Kelley indicated. "One element in breaking the case." Kelley said. was an air flight insurance policy for 337.500 on Graham's mother. Mrs. Daisy King. Fill agents. who arrested Graham. reported he look out the policy at the Denver alrpnrl shortly before she boarded the ill-fated plane for Alaska. The Queen Mother was pree- ented with "Black Beauty." the story about a horse. at a book-fair at the Royal Festival Hall. after she had inquired "can I order one? I used to love that book and 1 would like one for my 5aIDdCh"' dren." Charles can read fluently as well as write well and speak a smatter- ing of French. : CONDUCT LUNG TESTS RICHMOND. Va. (AP) - The Medical College of Virginia has announced a series of experiments conducted there in the past is months indicate cigarst'smoke has no harmful effect on the lungs of mice. Dr. Seymour .1. xroshover. who supervised the two-year-tests. said no sign of tumors appeared in the lungs or other subclltsenous ”':""..':.' "”.l'l?.'ll.'.'"f if. ""3: an to a sat ns ”rel:i:ively Curl;-Sidevvalki Asphaltirig A Discussed By City Council said it was his understanding that when such paving was done on the orders of the Police Committee for the purpose of widening the street or to alleviate a traffic situation. it should be done at the City's ex pense since the property owner did not ask for it and in many cases would prefer grass in front of his home. John The matter of whose responsibil ity it is to pay for the paving of curbsidewalk asphalting brought forth some serious discussion at the regular meeting of the City Council held last night. His Wor ship-Mayor Stewart presided. (klun cillor Keefe was gabsent from the meeting. T The Mayor asked Coun. Mc Cormac what plan was being earrl ed out by the Slrcct Cnmlniitee in regardln charging for paving between the curb and the sidewalk. He noted that a good deal of Ilrls work had been done this year and wanted to know the Council's opin- ion on this matter. His Worship said that he had been approached by s numb of people who wanted the work done. On the other hand. Coun. stone pointed out that a property owner for purely personal reasons might request that paving of the area between the street and the sidewalk. in which case he was in favour of the individual paying for it. He suggested a proviso which would allow for the property own er to be reimbursed if the Police Committee should decide to pave air ncur Lnngmont, (”nln.. 11 min- utes nftcr leaving the Denver air- port Nnv l. Sabotage was sus- pcclcli umllcrliaiely as witnesses The l)(l-613 plane blow up in the has been encouraging." Admits Blowing Up Plane 0 On Mother SAINT JOHN. N B. (CP)-A Saint John native and his wife were among 4-1 persons killed in the Nov. 1 crash of a United Air- lines plane in Colorado. it was learned Monday. Mr. and Mrs. 1''. Stewart Mor- gan were returning to their San Francisco home. Mr. Morgan was a son of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick W. Morgan. now of Vancouver. lie had frequently visited an uncle. Walter R. Stewart of near- by lngleside. while hi the Saint John area. I .I- Winston Mayne, former Sen ior Research Officer with the Army's Western Command and the Tactical Air Command of the RC AF at Edmonton. has been posted back to Ottawa by the Defence lie search Board to take over, next month. as. Director of Operational Research for the Navy. A native of Emerald.xP. E. 1.. he is a son of Mr. and Mrs. George 11- Mayne. Mr. Mayne succeeds P. D. Wilson who is being posted to another DRB assignment. vice in 1046. Ottawa Closing Gaps (By H. L. Jones, Canadian Press Staff Writer! U1'I'AW.A. (CP)-The federal government Monday came up with a new financial formula to speed the cloa- lng of gaps in the 4,600-mile Trans-Canada highway aid make a hard-surfaced, coast-to-coast road a. reality by 1960. Works Minister Winters announced at the opening of a federal-provincial highway conference that his gov- ernment is ready. under certain conditions, to pay 90 per cent of the cost of construction of vital links in a paved highway from St. John's. Nfld., to Victoria. The 00 - per - cent contribution would be applied to federa1ly-ap- proved gaps in the Trans-Canada route up to a maximum of 10 per cent of the total mileage within a province. It could apply to routing where no assable road now exists or to transcontin- ental road which is so poor it could not be incorporated in the Trans- Canada system. Trans-Canada AGREEMENT RENEWAL The works minister also pro- posed: 1. Renewal until 1960 of the To Aid there should be a boost in the fed- eral contribution for other sections of the road built to the 22-24-foot standard width provided for '! the highways agreement. MARITIME5 REACTION Prince Edward Island and Nova Scotia delegates were more or less in agreement. New Brunswick termed the offer a basis for con- sultation but still felt the highway should be paid 100 per cent by the federal government. Newfoundland was prepared to accept the fed- eral offer. The Navy's new Operational Re search Director is a forlner Carle- ton College faculty member. having headed the mathematical depart- ment there following his return from overseas Canadian Army ser- He joined DRE in 1951 as Chief of the Statistical Analysis Section of the Operational Research Group. and for the past two years has been posted on the Army-Air operational research assiggent at Edmonton. NEWS IN BRIEF Trans-Canada highways agreement -now operative with all provinces except Quebec-providing for a 50-50 split on highway costs. The dollar-for-dollar split would con- tinue in the new agreement on all work other than that to which the 90 per-cent-formula applied. The agreement expires in December next year. 2. The scrapping on its expiry in December. 1956, of the agree- ment provision by which the fed- eral government psys half the cost of all "prior construction"-rroads built originally between 1928 and December, 1949. which were lates- earmnrked as highway links. Mr. Scotia the RIOTING FLARE! NICOSIA. Cyprus Cypriots' struggle for un '5f9.!.Nllllll1!I,-. ': I , I WANT PAY BOOST encouragement. NEIIRU NOW SC NEW DELHI (AP)-Prime Min- ister Nehru Monday celebrated his 66th birthday. Future Of N 7 NICOLET. Que., (OP)-The fu- ture of this south shore town he- came a matter of grave concern Monday. its 5.000 residents still .. " ' hat the City was ass-zun the whole block at a later data. reported (he craft exploded in stunned by Saturday's disastrous mm from "mummy ma up."-r large amounts of cig- believing i ""5 mom” n wind”, cud. aret smoke. ing the full cost. Coun. Johnatone Coninu on page 2. Col. 5 flight. llanttlidellde thaatlmtgtik mllllltgfde 13:: where the Royal Family spent the weekend. Charles had ice cream and cake on his mind and happily set out with Princess Anne for the part at the palace. A crowd waiting outside su- enaded him on arrival. The Queen perty damage. Official b o d i e s concentrated their attention on two main prob- lems: The safety status of the area immediately around the giant crater into which six build- ings slid; and assured prevention of a similar or worse catastrophe. and duke came a few hours later- lust a few minutes before the party got der way. Flags fleiinfrom all public build- Coming Events Denceendcalaparvl I-Isstlehoolllov. . it Dance llonahaw nu tollltt. Btlfll Orchestra. The extreme view was that vir- tually the whole town might have to be moved further inland Prom the Nicolet rivecn. A closed meeting was held Mon- day of provincial. municipal and a ligiols auilhorlties who talked ment engineers. Aerial photo- graphs of the stricken rlvnr-frnnl area were studied. A few cracks appeared Monday in the area near the crater but they were not believed to indicate an impending new slide . SEARCH DEIJRIS workmen a n d police still (Reuters) - Men of a mountain, village ad- vanced behind a "wall of women" to stone British commandos Man- day in one of the worst days of island-wide rioting since the Greek ion with OTTAWA CP)-The Civial Serv- ice Federation of Canada. repre- senting about 70.000 employees, asked Prime Minister St. Laurent Monday for a salary insease a universal five-day work week and overtime pay. They received little over the situation with govern-l PIRATE! T0 BLAME engine room -waeopea. EN lthtrra noun” VlA Shannon and Gender. Nfld. SIR WINSTON HOME ranean holiday Monday happy to be home. icolet Now Matter Of Grave Concern Imay be condemned M. unsafe. .l'l'he post office and a bhgkneer !the slide were ordered eelosed lsatllrday. The Roman Catholic 'cathed-ral next to the Diilop's Palace, is still considered in dan- ger. The S0:-oom Christ-Roi Hospital Monday was without wetu. it-s mains having been broken by the landslide. Supplies were car- ried to the instlt.l1.l0i'i by truck. Estimates of loss and damage ranucd as high as 3l0.000.000. This Iigllrc Includes !il.000.000 in property loft ml the edge of the precipice and now considered vir- tual-lv worthless The estimate was made by Mayor Ubald Car- nu. prn-M.'lvnr Roland Moral and inwn councillor Aninnlrl Fnrcler. iimlrlro Bolsvl-rt. Liberal mem- her nl Parliament for Nicolet-Ya masks out the damage eetlmofc at t: 000,000 in Boisvcrl. who went to Quchoc tr. talk widh provincial au- thnritics. said he had hero in touch also with Prime Minister St Laurcni and was hold an- aincors from the public vlcrks vic- narimcni and geologists were be- ing sent here. I SUVA, Fiji (AP)-Belief that the "ghost ship" Joylta may have been attacked by pirates wen further substantiated Monday night with the discovery that a sea-cock in the LONDON (Reuters) - External Affairs Minister Pearson took off at 9 pm. GMT (4 p.m. EST) Mon- day night aboard sn RCAF plans for Ottawa. The plane is travelling .LONDON (AP) - Sir Winston Churchill flew back to the London mists from his two-month Mediter- Winters said difficulties in finding a reasonable basis for evaluating this work had been out of propor- tion to the sum involved. Provincial reaction at the con- fcrence, being attended by all provinces except Quebec, was var- ied. But most provinces said that aside from the 90-per-cent: formuln 41: Speaking of Works Minister Winter's announcement yesterday regarding the Federal Govern- ment's offer in connection with tin completion of the Trans Canada Highway. Premier Matheeon slid he was not prepared to express a concise opinion until he had re- ceived the full text from his re- presentative at the conference, Hon. George Maclfay. Minister of Highways. The Federal Proposal is to pay 90 per cent. of the cost of certain uncompleted gaps in the TCH up to ten per cent of the total Provincial mileage. The Premier said that, in the main. it looked like a good pro- position and the Island would wel come it, providing. as the Min- Two Years For Theft of Bag of Potatoes SAINT JOHN. NB. (CP)eTWo Saint John youths. James Lon- don. al. and George Mclvor, 18. were sentenced to two years in penitentiary Monday. The two pleaded guilty of steal- ing a bag of potatoes froln a super market Nov. 12. POWER DIS RUPTED TORONTO (CP)-A severe elec- trical storm caused a half-hour power failure in nearly half of Tor- onto early Monday and set burglar alarms jangling throughout the) city. Toronto police cruisers were kept on alert after the power fault touched off dozens of alarm sys- tems. The Ontario hydro electric power commission said the failure was caused by the fall of a high- tension line between Toronto and Ottawa river power plants. Under the 50-50 split cost agree- ment signed in 1950 with all prov- inces except Quebec and Nova federal government promised to spend up to a maxi- mum of" sl50.000.000 in meeting half the provincial highway costs up to December. 1950. Nova Scotia signed the agree- ment in 1952 but Quebec remained outside. claiming there was insuf- ficient protection rights. Quebec is not attending the conference. but has expressed in- terest in the pa being kept informed. Mr. Winters said that on the basis of 10 per cent of the highway coming under the new N per-cent forlnula. his government would pay the higher rate on MI miles- - highway, broken down as follows: Newfoundland 61 miles: Edward Island seven; Nova 21: New Brunswick, 3. 141: Manitoba 31l' Alberta 39 Premier Interviewed On I" it New Highway Proposal- lsier's statement says, "use ince has the right to designate areas which they want done the pmposal. Prince Edward land will have a total of .'IIv Trans Canada Biilw would normally entitle the ten percent could include bridging of the Hillsborc him! would be of considerable advant- age to the Province. agreement reached with thg lid- eral Government last slum 2-3 of the cost of h was to have been at! by tawa. This in itself we d represent a substantial saving. WHEN A Person is EN1'eRPmslnr. true-r SAY He's TORONTO (CP)-Minimum and maximum temperatures: B.C. for provincial eedingsandis " . Prllltw past 1.: H Underasl , C tlthridge Ot- Mln. Max. 12b ' gory '!'nudIc. nolus searched through the debris or. . f llllawsonvor. lo 0 - buildings, trees and masses of H E d M190" -- -- - - ; earth that piled up when the slide Denies 6 Vet VOCa e Victoria .. ... 15 Parry sale at Simpson-Bears C let go with an omninous roar. o ' Edm'""” '- " 13” F” 'i E ”'”l”ck' uwuond ” Into the water and n-luck weflli W Calury M m M ' i uh East tehlulcllool. h g 8,, mmm. mcmnu S,m,,d. ar mime: .. ".19: B090! Lila. la. wlllllllll i 9” Pwmn d uh” bulwpia ”f'””' OTTAWA (CP - Ai Vlce-Mar- "We are keen, anxious and wlll- Toronto IO Tuoeisa ail. 9 llW'l'- ;"”.:;,"";";",',i" '”"”"lT'” 0”" shal John Plant, rlenlgs that he in: to take them (the Russians) ottnwa 1 ...ss PP" W”” '"'”a- . c an 5"; "W?" M" M has ever advocated war with the on a;:yhf.Ill'1'e ll'I;.V Iillack '13- Montreal .. ... ... I5 ;. -- - IWU , - -- ' w i ll on w ,. .9 CT ”l.' in huh, a ma” B””m' ”'y'"'"'d "wk Rilflsmllllil first public statement heist SIC perils ollfnihelin any- M ' E It In hum" Try" 5'9"" 'o'- m"."''' mdhm WM "p' ince he lost his Job as chief of one else who wants in take us splat John N. '” .& w"”3("' "Ni wit 3" '5' 'sca'd'"g'1Gb"MlI';'::I IICAF l('(lIlIllCIli services for his on." Monclon H: n M Dudgsswuy Tummy mu six-month-'old 'ao.ano( smiiurs. Hmnpiniilkmiinyl speechlblmimm: "AP Mam” "U" ' iiiiiila ' ii l souls - tlso asll. Music H L" 2- "9 H 5. "'3' ' '" - r ' -- -- Jean sand. , eager to be ...... resented He said in his latest statemult am, y ,, gg ll”"l9 "593”'l"' 9"l"'"' Mrs. Iaeeerd suffered a frae- 93". If not rnlsquoteti. W that as a serving officer he has a 'y.rm.-mu. ,. ,, ' an in Du; an Legion llall. WW 19' V599 ll" P0”? I": He told the Canadian Owners sacred duty 10 Ill! Country to let st. Johnts .. I2 ,0m-n..,...- ::.'.t'. ...."-'”..'3:..l:.'.'::i.::..:.l.; :,::'..”i.??.:f 'l:.: :.'L'.'. 2:: ......-.x. .... -... ' i ' ' oe by the wrecking of his home advocated war were a "bit off rule and stamina to meet the weather office says colder H 1? de meet- and is finding of embody of his me... ,(,ck,,,,-- enemy if he should attack. from Prairies is coming lus ' ' infant son. Th tom and hydrogen bombs run was a long way (mm at ward Mlrltlmtt WM! rm-rigs; e ' it A 23.; 3 K: ollles aims. one y'ear old. sung cnulde d.est1-oy all life on eargl. ygcallgs war. he nddedmlt vs; m there :3 zohlgitk - -' . i . . M " , , O I VOCI DTQDIP PSI Wmd. WeIiP93&e I T ' i ” ' : . '0 iriiidlaiaa Is :.hlimt'iiui1n"'r4l:st- tlrsi"l'ir'i”lreli.i'r'."wlillin.i'":ndmi'nxl:u' a means oiyprcventlns war HH- "'" real A sonnet Dr. slolrara Polr- um war should occur." he said. an Vice-Marshal Plant said a Resume! forecasts: I-(:33: l lsrfasa part at all nose torn of! Air Vice-Marshal Plant. now speaker takes a chance if he Norther! N-vsleetle sea Plies um. . . - . 1 chief of are nears Air Materiel tries to be interesting. It was no Edward Island: cloudy with also -. .. . . Q 8 win continue to . . . . A mane slash...” m Pm... .,..,,.,.m, sncnornmsara Command. was quoted The wonder he was a devotee of air ly scattered saowflerrles; w '1”; "n,.-ug gnu-lmqr.ui..fumi u the esiihe through the sprawling 8aalratche- Reports were awaited mom pro- Canadian Press as telling Av- power. There would be NM al:.h'”ll ""'l"'9'l '3: ....p,. - 3 . "V ml...-,.g.nn highway, is part of as federal feeds for construct N1 wanrlver . mshis a sasllst- xinilual dtiwtlfggilnmazf mg m &a"t'lr:,lnnV,gl;iie2I'.s Association at Tar- t:!l!lll.g".'wrnn. u with him if as I let m Gil-sown .” gr -5. DQ ml. 0 the vast conservation proiect that ion of ellaoat mo miles of roab at In sovernment P 003- ll" ' g" -