IELEPHONE ssos h . . 9 I Wu-mu BsIYIr meets seller with Guardian i own”. wnhynhmmm .. Want Ads. Dial 0506 ask for cl ' .I.'T-' fied ad taker, for quick results. oak - "Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew" 12 PAGES ' . OWN. CANADA MONDAY. FEBRUARY 4, 1957 LT. COL. A. H. PEAKE, C. D., WELCOMES OFFICER CADETS The first group of a proposed annual class of officer cadets was officially welcomed to the P.E.I. Regt (17 Reece) at the Charlotte- town Armourles yesterday by Lt. Col. A.II. Peake. CD It is the established policy of the lieg't. that before becoming an officer candidate it is necessary to serve in the ranks. All the above group have served more than one year in this capacity. FRONT LEFT F. J. Weatberby, M.A. Rcardon. Capt J. D. Mac- Intyre, Adgt. Lt.-Col. A.H. Peake. C.D. W.A. Henry .I.B. Ports,: BACK R.E. Morrison, W.L. Mc- Cardle. ILG. Coffin, W.W. Reid. l(.B. MacDonald. R.K. MBCLEOU Also in the class are l(.S. Mac- Kcnzie and J.B. MacLean. Guardian Photo Will Hear Complaints On Fruit, Vegetable Imports OTTAWA (CPI-Complaints will be heard at the annual meeting this week of the Canadian Horti- cultural Council that fruit and vegetables are being imported into Canada at distress prices just at a time when sirnllar Canadian prod- uce matures. The council which represents most Canadian market and truck gardeners is expected to seek an early meeting with the cabinet to present views of its membership on tariffs and other problems being considered during the three day meeting which starts Monday. The council's tariff committee met Sunday. The tariff committee is expected to report to the council that Cana- dian fruit and vegetable producers face stiffer COIIIDGI-lfiun now than atany tlmeduringtbelastn years. In a report prepared by L. R. Stephens of Keiowna. B.C.. the tariff committee says nearly every council member has asked that the council bring the problem of low-price import "to the attention of the federal government In the most forcible manner possible to the end that some effective correc- tive measures may be instituted immediately. . . ." MAJOR OBJECTION "The nature of form of the com- petition to which our prod - ob- ject most strenuously is imports at (dlstress' prices at the peak or clean-up of American harvesting which frequently collides with the commencement of Canadian har- vesting. "Under these conditions the American producer may have re- CGS"SaureI Calls For Aid In Gulf Ice; Baffin HALIFAX (CP) - The new imirographlc ship Baffin. carrying special ice demolition personnel. is expected to reach the Bay of Islands off south ewf after the Saurel asked for aid when boiler water began running low. cutting down her ice-breaking strength. his new divers. ports and a helicopter to the ICQIII. Naval officials said shes. ngcgofnelllsieandontbssoutheast Sails To Help and our stern is hove up on the ice. If we could get going I think we could make it." he said. "Gale winds would help us. otherwise Iwe will have to be cut out of the no." He said the Saur-el's fuel supply was adequate lo, the trip to Cor- ner Brook. supplies were trans!rred to the Saurei in Port Aux Basques. Nfid.. three weeks ago from the Henry W.StonesndtbeCodray.Slobice . CNR forced the motorvossels The aouthward through the forma- ons. . She was to deliver supplies at Communities along the northwest Daniels Harbor to Flowers Cove at the sonthyantrsncs to the Strait Labrsdu shore from For-teas to Bad . Serious Fire May Mean-End Of ceived a premium price. or at least a good average price on a large portion of his crop. but his clean-up sales canset the market price on a very large portion of the Canadian crop of the same commodity, and prevent any pos- sbillty of the Canadian producer selling any portion of his crop at premium prices. or even benefit- ting to a normal extent from a short-crop condition that might ex- ist in Canada. Mr. Ste ens lists apples. apri- cots, pea es. plums and prunes among fruits on which Canada has graduallga reduced tariffs on im- rta which now are being umped distress prices. usually about thejtime the Canadian crop comes to market. " - His report on onions says Can- dian tariffs have been cut about 90 per cent to about It Per cent between 1981 and 1056 while the U.B. tariff on this com declined from about 147 per cent to about 50 per cent but is still about equal to the price at which U.s. onions were sold in Canada. This constitutes "virtual prohibi- tion" agalnst Canadian imports. ONION SITUATION iJ.S. onions were sold last 9011' in Canada at prices that prevailed during the depressed thirties and the declared value of imported C- lons was codslderably lower in re- cent years than in the years im- mediately following the Second World War. "If these figures do not indicate 'dlstress' selling and a threat to this branch of primary vfodlwli than we question if any ind in Cansda has a case. In an interview. Mr. Stephen: said many growers favor the type of protection recently won by the textile industry whereby imP0I'lv- crs cannot use an artificially-low value for duty purposes but In gccept an average valuation NC a six-month period in the counif! t ri in. 0 "?l'hlel six - month time limit wouldn't be r Mlble I" am duty valuation on market ace." he said. "We would prob- ably have to take a previous year or two years." Husband Faces Murder Charge BADDECK N. .5. (cm-woods man Donald Murdock Mariet- fll. we; charged with murder"lat.a Send I in the Tlyliilllllgz death of his wife. , who would have bad this month. arrested Ia Jl?"i.”l.:l”pouu in vii”-3 ICTIIII I1 IMIT Baddsd Jordan's King Warns of Reds AMMAN. Jordan (Reuters)- Klng Hussein of Jordan wanted his premier Saturday of the dan- ger of Communist penetration in the Arab world under the guise of nationalism. In a message. he called upon the premier and his cabinet to take necessary steps to eliminate Communist propaganda and to carry out the laws of the country in fighting communism. The 21-year-old king said "cer- tain principles contrary to our principles and beliefs have started penetrating our country." Unless checked. these would lead to Arab principles being re- placed by a materialistic ideology he said. Reports Steam Fromsiream. And. from Not From Volcano 1rsANcoIs'. Nfld. (CP) - A modity Government geologist flew down from St. John's Saturday and ex- plained that steam pouring from a cliff-face four hundred feet above this south coast fishing village was just from an under- ground stream. not a volcano. Cliffs rise eight hundred feet above the valley. and when the steam began coming out of a hole in the rock about half way up last weekend, everybody began to '0”! that it might be a volcano letting ready to spout lava. People got together and sent a telegram off to the Legislature representative. Fisheries Minister John Cheeseman. asking for an investigation. He arranged for Dr. tnualrd to come down in a helicop- Dr. Baird looked things over and said there was nothing to get alarmed about. He said there I II a strong stream nowlng inside the cliff, and it kept at about 45 de- ui grees all year round. There was what he called a talus slope. a sort of natural pass- ageway from the stream to the hole in the cliff face. This has been the coldest winter in years with Iem cusses down around sero last week. when the warm damp air from the stream passed up the tales slope and hit the icy air outside it was like breathing on a cold morning and steam started to gush out. BRAZIL MINI-:s' Nickel and cobalt are found to- author in some Brazilian mines. RESOLUTION -PASSED LATE SATURDAY 9 U.N. Issues Tenders Called For Big Georgetown Wharf Project 1 OTTAWA (Special)- have been called this week-end forl reconstruction of the wharf and frost-proof warehouse at George- town; a project which will involve the expenditure over the next few- years of S1.300,000. Actual recon- struction of the Georgetown wharf in its first stage will cost an estim- ated S250.000. The tenders will be received up to February 20 and an award of a contract is expected early in March. T.J. Klckham, Liberal MP for Kings. told the Guardian that the Public Works Department decid- ed the large expenditure was fully justified on two counts. First is the fact that Georgetown is open Tenders for shipping later in the season than other harbors in the Prov- ince and secondly that it is the port used for an exceptionally large volume of shipping, notably potatoes and pulpwood. Mr. Kick- ham said that the harbor when completed will have all facilities for even the largest type of ocean- going freighiers. The new wharf proper will be 847 feet in length. will be 134 feet wide for the main section and 195 feet in width at the shore line. The shore portion of the wharf will extend 155 feet on the west side and 225 feet on the east. The frost- proof warehouse to be built in con- junction with the wharf will be 321 feet long and 66 feet wide. has been decided that the wharf will have sheet steel pile walls and concrete anchors, with fill of stone. Arrangements are being made to construct one side of the new wharf first. so that ample space will be available for ship- ping even when the work is pro- ceedlug. It is anticipated that the job of the wharf proper will be completed within 13 months of its LUI mencemeut. Apart from the wharf proper and the frost-proof warehouse, there will be office buildings on the wharf 36 by 16 feet and special fuel tanks to refuel shipping. Mr. Kickham said that he ex- pects Georgetown marine traffic in increase appreciably when the Following extensive borlngs. it reconstructed wharf is completed. Prime Minister Blows Out 75 Candles In Seven Huffs QUEBEC (CF) - Seven huffs, into the swing of things by de- seven puffs and Prime Minister St. Laurent blew out the 75 little red candles on his Z)-pound birth- day cake. The 1,400 Liberals cheered. - It was a big party. a sumptuous party in the Cha r ntcnac Hotel Saturday night with almost every Liberal bigwig from across the country in attendance. Chef Christian Hits estimated they consumed about 900 pounds of roast beef. it! bags of small brown potatoes. 40 gallons of con- -norrisnecnd--IT --ofVgr&r beans. Each of theirs also: m about two of wine 1 the 810-s-plate thmm. But i appeared to be more than just a party to help the prime minister celebrate his 75th birth- day. The speeches savored of eiectioneering. Mr.:-.,St. Laurent previously had hinted at a , sslble June vote. Political observers were wondering whether this was the kick-off on the general elec- tlon campaign. About 3,000 persons turned out In bright, chilly weather to greet the prime minister and his wife at the local railway station at 2:!) p.m. EST. Many thousands more lined ,streots of his Que- bec East ridng as a motorcade of some two dozen cars escorted him to his home. The prime minister was visibly moved. At the station mayor Wil- flrd Hamel welcomed him with "joy and pride." Mr. St. Laurent said it was one of the biggest demonstrations he had ever seen. His voice broke. GUARD OF HONOR lle inspected a 40 - man guard of honor from Les Voltigeurs de Quebec of which he is honorary colonel. He posed for the photog- raphers with ."Bonhomme Carna- val" - a man disguised as a carnival snowmui and with seven pretty contestants for local carnival queen. He also kissed some of his grandchildren. stand- ing nearby. The bfg event was in the evel ning. The Liberals fined the hotel lilllflllet hall to overflowing. Thc.V' cheered and landed their leader. Trade Minister Howe. who had (Illietly celebrated his own 7l.Ii sometimes along with manganese. birthday just two weeks ago. X01 . om comes AT. CRUCIAL TIME OiIFIow o Europe Down scribing Mr. St. Laurent as the greatest Canadian leader in his- wry. The prime minister. he said. was a man "in the full sweep of his powers" who, "God willing. will continue to lead our party and this country to even greater tri- umphs in the years to come." The crowd broke into a lusty cheer. For a moment, Mr. Howe was the central attraction. They stood and sang "For He's a Joly Good Fellow." Mr. Hows a high inomest for the. csbinet's Duncan MacTavish of Ottawa. president of the National liberal Federation. didn't get up with the others when they gave Mr. Howe a standing ovation. But he rose for the "Jolly Good Fellow" song. Then Veterans Affairs Minister LaPointe. speaking in French. got. the spotlight back to Mr. St. Laur- ent. expounding argument to show that the prime minister had great political wisdom. He said it had been written that Mr. St. Laurent was the llpersonlflcatlon of Cana- dlan unity." URGES UNITY And with that Mr. St. Laurent pitched into a 60-minute. English- and-rcnch speech on national in the 1953 election campaign. He urged the people of Quebec in show more backbone and stop worrying too much about the fu- lure. There was an expanding pliace for them in a growing Can- a a. He talked of sir Wilfrid Laurler and Christianity and warned against sectlonalism. against per- sons who tried to profit politically by pitting one Canadian region against another. ile said Canada could only gain the bright eco- ecsned nomle predictions of the Gordon Veonnrtfntonv -nest-19' iirtlrr year! through unity. Yet he could see no permanent unity between French and English. "One should mt believe. how- ever. that national unity will some day be achieved fully and for all time. As long as there are'be- tween us differences arising from our ancestral traditions. as I hope there always will be. unity shall be one of our main concerns." There. were gifts. both visible and invisible, for the St. Laurents The prime minister got the 75- candle white blrthday cake. Mr. MacTavIsh spoke of an oil paint- ing of Mr. St. Laurent which the Liberals had hoped would be ready for presentation. The artist. been taken ill. The painting would unity -- one of his favorite topics be ready laicr. Three Canadians Included In 20 Victims Of Airliner Crash NEW YORK (CF) - A Miami- hound airliner crashed in names just after takeoff Friday night and exports struggled through the weekend with the grisly task of identifying victims. . Of the 101 persons aboard the Northeast Airlines D06. 3) died, including three Canadians. two wnmcn and one man. all from Ouebec Province. Scenes of terror and agony were described by the BI survivors, so of whom were taken to hospital. The plane came down in a snowstorm on Rikers Island just I2 seconds after takeoff. i . . , hanged Acadia Coal Company's Mine '.:'I..r..':t"-'.A'”;':M""; ""' svnmw (CP)- new and Be .1... "'""'" biases that VMIINGTON (AP) - The soul: wt real . ri ch” 3...,” and..." 3”", my la .g.r,.-N. . ;':.'H::",.:,u "and traahatlantfc "oil lift" has ,auv'I'ilgeha'v's.prosrsIdlIlliiacc.iiigiIlaIIt:.. a serious su 4 Ire X ""l&lI &”f'i "'Sf"am" 'h..”ib .I'a.?Haill.IINIT!!'cnIollll.lshtlaIretrII:Il. um-mneosmsstst1susuaa'”" ""”""'- """"”'”'” 'iu arsenic AVIMOI I-0' ' - j Ii!-ml2!!AIIA - 'Iaveesvetapes. Tasartal-target tooms iriitai.-no. ifs sad as as Gd N. B. MCI! sauussieauwom: mm. to use m u'3iuae on -hmmnd , Mi. , tr "fishl"oiifirmaversCdIlhmvQ theU.S.tn rsr.oot-tiontoietancsnasiaaristus DIelOIO8LIfOInHfQ iIsunauus.maenu;tuinunn:'.tsis........gc.-..i.t. .""'” if” "" ";,",,,,”',,,,,.,'i """ awn ,”" ”"" suoourrssn it.l. can-tau 'al"1o...""'i'i:"n"il'"a'egne all: mun-an ""s.i..'l:?..”'...".-..1'"".'"' he! ' Zznnnsld. forced”; ":5-u. I H. gr:-ed bodr:'uII-resrdl Bern as-lose seller-3' versus European m:1ls.iut tau”: mac: HM" "nn'"am':6nut':'unhaauu"s'&,:":':-'3'?-sdflmhv-sf: xl'&hfl'W"I-ll:p”m':mi;nI:w':Ie;m.elaout.l'::ne.":l'i:Im: :::e;e::hvebemsededsffmd The ;&p "'3'" an l.”'””'uo'h"h"-.1. . NNIVOG mo" Tleflrelsofsuchsserioll Nllwllrollinlsdr-wlv-on - '"'N,'”,'; IItll'loI"s oil and gas db sssuaiael wcueni Europe hasp 'm..g tbema.nintheniiddia.QC'dccfittcdIdays.Ift.he .. crackdowahlI&h&diaMarch as -t '.."':'..E.5..'”.'.'.:' &.'ii.1"a.."" I ,5 "Is -I-rs-cal we I": b using the di uni 'sh;:dlsweeI- are :55. r:..' " r.''' '3: have i wanna use i stats . the as C- Officials at Bellevue Hospital Texas. officials unease ompl of problesn IZONSTANT FRICTION move the extra oil. - This brings on meta: use of friction. - The "majors." essentially the group which is operatiln the H lift. have extensive overseas Idd- Inga. They export. import. refine and own plpellns:m'I'he independ- s. in-spc' I llll hostage hem! fmrntis: oIwXQ majors still are morgue i'('pUI'lOCI Sunday that the Canadian victims have been ten- tatively identified as: Mrs. Olive .loy Anderson. 84. town of Mont Royal. Que.: Joseph Les.-artl, 48. St. Georges-de-Bauce Que; nml l.cssard's sister Mrs. ric Blanche Giroux. 35. of St. Georges-rlc-llrnuce. The Canadian survivors were Mrs. .indcrson's husband. Hart- ley. 35. and Sam Dubrovsky. 56. Montreal. Dubrovsky was re- leased from hospital Saturday after trvntmcni for contusions and a swollen clu-st. COULDN'T SAVE WIFE Anderson su'frrcd first second and third doarrc burns and was placed on the critical list. Swaihcd in bandages and speaking with difficulty through swollen lips. he told of swinzllll an axe frantically against a jam- med emergency rxil door in an attempt to save his wife. They have five children. all an- der 7K years of site. said Mr. Anderson, manager of a Montreal insurance office. He said that amid lcaplnil. 5981'- ing flames he saw it ”crtIck' the planes fuselage. ''I- held out NW N804 I" "ll wife but It was too late then.. "I fell from the plane into flam- ing gasaline on the snow. I rolled Mrs. Lllllas Torrence Newton. had of ' this. However. there were reports New Orders In Egyptian-Israeli Deadlock First Reaction From Israel Indicates Task ls Difficult UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. (CPl' The United Nations assembly. after a debate which lasted until midnight Saturday night. passed, two new resolutions which in ef- fect give Secretary-General Dag Hanunarskjold a mandate to try again to break the Egypt-Israeli deadlock. The first reaction from the Is- raeli capltal indicated that his task may be difficult. A foreign ministry spokesman in Jerusalem said Israel's cablne had decided to keep troops in the two disputed areas still held by the Jewish force because "no guarantees have been obtained yet for def- inite stoppage of Egypt's belliger- ency and sea blockade of Israel." It will be the secreiIl'y-gen- eral's task to convince both Israel and Egypt that the UN interven- tion provides the best prospect for a solution of the old dispute. Hamrnarskjold S1: n d a y sent copies of both resolutions to the Israeli and Egyptian govern- ments. He invited members of the Israeli delegation to meet with him today, and meanwhile was reported marking time on con- crete steps to carry out the as- sembly's pl posala The first resolution called on Israel-for the sixth time-to "complete its withdrawal behind the armistice demarcation line without further delay." It was passed with only two dissenting votes-from Israel. as was ex- pected. and France. which with Israel also had voted against a previous resolution calling on Hammarskjoid to report on the withdrawal. Seventy - four coun- tries voted in favor. while Luxem- bourg and the Netherlands ab- stained. Hungary and South Africa were absent. , i Tbeiscoond reselntfm. the word- ing of which received varied inter- pretations during the debate. passed 56 to 0. with 22 countries including Israel and the Soviet and Arab blocs abstaining. Its con- cluding paragraph "requests is secretary-general. in consultation with the parties concerned. to take steps to carry out these measures and to report. as appropriate. to the general assembly." CANADIAN SUPPORT Canada. who had dropped out as s co-sponsor of the two resolu- tions after Henry Cabot Lodge of the United States differed with External Affairs Minister Pearson over the wording of the second one's final draft. voted in fava both. Pearson. speaking in the assem- bly ahortly after the vote, said that while Canada "had some doubts about the language of the (second) resolution as best suited to achieve" its purpose, be called on the countries to back it ttto give the secretary-general the an- thorlty necessary to disc these new responsibilities and bill- form this task which is of such vital importance to peace and the United Nations." - Speaking to reporters after ad- journment he expressed satisfac- tion that Israel had abstained on the second resolution rather than voting against it. This gave hope that llsmmarskjold might be aide to reach a basis of negotiation with the Israeli side. However. Israel's Ambassador Abba Eban told the assembly that his country still is determined 0! stand fast in the Gaza Strip and the Sharm el Shelkh area on the Gulf of Aqaba until she is certain that her interests an firmly guar- anteed. Some interpretations of the HI! proposal are that under it Israel should withdraw immediately from these areas, with the UN Emergency Force moving in be- hind them and remaining between Israel and Egypt until a perma- nent sei 'ement has been made. FEARED DEFEAT That in a general way was the wording Pearson had attempted to get into the second . solution when he was working with Lodge on its early drafts. Lodge. how- ever. decided that such lwordlng would not get a two-thirds mater ity in the assembly, and settled C the rather vague wording that achieved the purpose of getting tin soviet and Arab blocks to abstain. Had they voted against it. it would have been defeated. leaving the already tense situation liable to explode again in battle. With its passage. llammarskjold is given-in some views-wide dia- cretlon in the terms of his tlatlon with the two dl Pearson told reporters that the secretary-general had told. him "not to worry aboutthc Interlin- tations." Thus the indlcatona are that B will go ahead on his own without feeling bound by the wording of the resolution. Its key paragraph calls for the placing of the UN force along the line-without mention- lng Gaza or the ulf of Aqaba- "and the lmpl tics of othm measures as propshd in the see retary-gcncral's report. . . ." In that report Jan. 24 Bunmarskjold had suggested that the UN force move into Gaza and Aqsba. after an Israeli withdrawal. as well as along the armistice line. . Egypt. while voting for the res- olution. accepted it with reserva- tions. Foreign Minister Mahmoud Fawzl told the assembly that Egypt's consent to the entry. sta- tioning and deployment of the force was ”an 'ndlspensable pre- requisite." . WASHINGTON (AP) - Britain and the United States. whose rela- tions were chilled by the Suex crisis. pledged anew Saturday aims. That was among the points their "solidarity" in defence listed in a joint L mmunique on the series of talks held by De- fence, Secretary Charles E. Wil- son and Dc'ence Minister Duncan Sandys. . The meetings. the official an- nouncement and the subsequent informal remarks of Sandy: seemed to show that some warmth is returning to the Brit ish American relations. damaged by the British-French attack on Egypt The communique. issued as Sandys departed for home. also said that "the possible adoption ihy Britain or certain American lweapons was explored. and this lmatier is being referred to the two governments for further con- isittration." .' TALKED OF MISSILES Officials of the two govern- ments declined to elaborate on that one of the main topics in the talks concerned Britain's desire to acquire some American guided missiles. including anti - aircraft weapons and short range born- Briiain, U. S. Proclaim Their Solidarity In Defence Plans lfurthcr that Wilson and Sandys l be this subject of warheads. STABILITY ESSENTIAL The communique said the two defence chiefs agreed that prior- ity must be given to maintaining military capacity in a high state :of readiness and that "this must Iinclude convcntlonsl forces as well as nuclear power." It said recognized that financial and economic stability is an essential foundation of military strength and that due account must be taken of this in considering what a country can contribute to the common defence eff ."' This patently touched upon Brit- alnls new economic troubles and reports that she may whifile down her armed strength. Sandys emphasised to reporters that there has been no idea that an agreement should be reached between the two nations on re- duction of British forces. UP TO IIIITISII "The Question of any redaethl in the British defence e&I." it bardment use nuclear warheads. Sandys. in talking to reporters issllce which cook!- 3