l i TELEPHONE 3505 Buyer meets ‘-ant Ads, tied ad taker, sel Dial 22 PAGES MR. JUSTICE ARSEANAULT (right), who with foresight and enthusiasm many years ago Tourist Association Director Stresses Value John Fisher, Eexecutive Dir- Ief with .Grardian 8506 ask for classic 1°‘ Quick results. Denartnun. on“. dedicated his spare time to tourism as a special feature of the Province which is how shapl Of Industry stay just another 15 or 20 min 'ector, Canadian Tourist Associa.-lutes to buy 5 fried egg sandwich, 232.2: iiszzsshz if consumed an Tourist Association at the Char-lira 625300 dozen eggs’ 7500” l°a' lottetown Hotel last night sug-lves of bread and 1z0’oo0 pounds ,, . ,, iof butter. Don't ever let a fann- %;::“*.:‘....*:..:‘;.2§.:.“ :23 *:.‘:.:‘....i2.::-r ma-ast- ’ does not mean anything to him." to give it just that in a stirring .. . admonition to the 150 active __.Spectacula'r attract'°n5’___ex' @1110 @rtar:uIimt "Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew" \|l!hlaI'ug¢...‘°$nd(n.—“ wt?‘ ing up to an achievement, chat- ting with his friend Mr. Joh Fisher. - pensive beaches and fancy re- sorts are not important. What tourists want primarily is com- fort,- a change from what they are accustomed to, pleasant sur- roundings, and some amusement. Above all they want service. Since everybody benefits from tourism, everybody should play the part of the host. “We like a smile of friendship, a helping hand, We like information and advice on where to go and what to do.” Mr.‘ Fisher described several- (Continued on page 5 col. 5) members present. I “People in general ’tlnnkl;..of, Canada as 13 young it -."ye,E-1 we have a history an a heritagel which is deep rooted in a long! past," Mr. Fisher said as hencrljsr l ‘b . ' - . .. gEle§‘rIataionl;unl:T:linlg,f p(l::l:‘et:e I’.I’:Sl Hadley Terlmck °‘ R“sfi°° summer. Stressing the worth- H31‘h°“1’ had 8 h31'F°W 6803134’- while things which should a "act ,from drowning yesterday morn- Canadians, Mr. Fisher .pointed' North Rustico Fisherman Narrowly Escapes Drowning out that until recently more than one quarter of all adult Canadians had never been in any province beyond their own. The Know Can- ada Better campaign is designed to encourage Canadians" to tra- vel more in their own land, to observe and appreciate their own country in all its beauty and _ magnificence. “Altogether, Canadians travel «ling in the United States and ‘other countries took more than ‘one half billion dollars out of ‘-Canada last year. They spent far more abroad than foreigners did in Canada. Canadians spent .$400 million in the United States and left $328 million in this c_ount1'-y. Comparing .the popula- tion. the spending overwhelming- ly favours the United States at the receiving end.” ‘ ’ Mr. Fisher dwelt at some length ,n the value of the tourist busi- ness merchants and dispensers of the necessities of life, stressing 1' example just where the far- er enters into the picture." Let c give you an example," he ging when he became entangled- 1in the lines while setting traps off Cawnpore. Only the presence ,of mind of his fishing compan- iion, Arlie Doucette, and the fact ‘that another fishing boat was near at hand, .can account for his being alive today. Trelizick's arm got caught in the line as it was payed out from the moving craft and he was thrown into the chilly waters of the Gulf of St. Lawrence. Dou- cette, who was in the boat with him, noticed his mate's predica- ment and quickly threw a lob- ster trap, overboard. Hadicapped by the weight of .his heavy fishing clothes, the lfisherman managed to grasp the .floating trap and hold on. How- ever, it was not until a second boat manned by Ernest Pineau and Angus Jarvis came along that it was possible to pull the man to safety. The resuce was carried out on a very choppy sea. Suffering from shock and ex- iaid. “About 7.5 tnilljon Ame,-1.1posure, Trelizick was taken to cans came into Canada by car to stay for more than two days Rustico Harbour. Dr. J.R. Mur- chison of Hunter River was sum- last year. If each one of -those! visitors had been induced tot moned and administered first aid treatments. Latest reports are that ‘Mr. 'I'relizick is little the worse for his harrowing exper- ience. Getting caught in the fishing lines has been the death of many jority. .U.K. Averts Rail Strike ernment beat down a parliamen- tary censure move on the London us strike Thursday night a few hours after it intervened in a threatened walkout on the nation- alized railways. A move by the opposition Labor party to censure the government in the bus strike was defeated 320 to 253, a 67-vote government ma- Earlier, government interven- tion in the rail dispute caused an immediate postponement of a de- cision on whether to call a 500,- 000-worker strike next week. Labor Minister Iain Macleod asked chiefs of the three railway unions and Sir Brian Robertson, head of the lines, to meet with him today. The unions decided to accept the invitation and postpone their decision on striking until they learned the minister’s views. The Labor party pushed its mo- tion to censure the government for its handling of the bus dispute and accused the govesnment of wanting a '‘showdown’’ with the unions. Prime Minister Macmillan de- nied this. adding he was “certain" the Labor movement was “far too sensible" to challenge the government. Macmillan said British products must compeiie in world markets and called for general understand- ing that “to pay ouselves more amount of output gets nobody anywhere." Fail To Form Gov’t. In France PARIS (AP) —— President Rene Coty tried desperately but in vain Thursday to find a politician who would face up to the job of form- ing France’s 25th post-war gov- ernment. He was still trying Thursday night. Four men dealt themselves out during the day. The confused situation that at- tends a French cabinet crisis veered toward chaos, reflecting cross currents in a National As- sembly now ‘made up of 16 part- 1eS. First, ex-premier Rene Pleyen, 59-year-old middle noader, had to give up as premier - designate after 16 days of striving. He formed a tentative -cabinet but it fell apart. Coty approached others in an effort to break t-he_ crisis that came when the assembly toppled Premier Felix Gaillard April 15 in disapproval of Gaillard's North African policies. LONDON (P.euters)—The gov-I ltwo major factors which con- in wages or profits for the same. One after another Coty called politicians to Elysee Palace. All listened, then offered their ex- cuses. a lobster fisherman and it is most fortunate in this case that help was available when it was most needed. Altitude Record Goes Back To US (AP) —- The 35,000 feet, made a climbing turn United States snatched the worldito 40,000 and went into his steep altitude record back from France climb over Mojave, giving the en- with a jet fliglht to 91,1249 feet—-igige t;ull)ei}ower.h d. g int the 17.28 miles, t e air orce an- us ore ea in o 'nounced Thursday. ’ lC1imh-—3t' 3“ 3113153 Of aDD1‘0Xi7 Mai. Howard C. Johnson. 38,,‘mately 45 degrees—he was going piloted a Lockheed F-104A Star-ia litttile over twice the speed of fi hter to the new mark Wednes- soun . 'd§y above the Southern Californial He experienced 2-7 G5-09.31"‘? desert town of Mojave. He topped three times the pull of gravity—— by more than two miles theiwhen he pulled upward. He had height of 80,190 feet—15.19 miles. —claimed for a French experi-E . . mental Trident lsere-06 at Istres, , 30103 032 miles 8“ h°“_1‘- The en‘ France, last Friday. Itire flight lasted 27 minutes. The French flight had exceeded “I W85 trying I0 get 10 90-000 the mark of 76,928 feet, or 14.57 mi-les, reached last April 16 by a U,s_ Navy Grumman F11F-1F. “No particular sensation," re plied Johnson, operations officer LOS ANGELES lnumber," Johnson said. no trouble controlling the plane” At the top of his climb he was‘ CHARLOTTETOWN CANADA. FRIDAY, MAY 9, 1958 WEATHER Cloudy with showers ending in the after- -noon; little change in temperature‘ south winds 15. Low-high at Ch’town 50-55. NOT MORE THAN FIVE CENTS Firemen's Union Will Seek Court Injunction On CPR Death Early This’Morning Of Well Known Business Man The death occurred shortly after midnight at his home. 103 North River Road of Mr. Alfred Pickard. one of Charlottctown’s most successful businessmen. Almost fifty-eight years ago Mr. Pickard started a coal busi- ness in Charlottetown and from ' a_ modest beginning expanded his business interests to include a large sales outlet for farm machinery and heavy duty con-. struction equipment. . Thri-ft and honesty were the tributed to the phenomenal suc- cess in the business world of this mild spoken man who in 1900 I rented a small porton of the wharf from Col. A. G. Peake toi begin his coal business. . In spite of pessimistic pre- dictions of competitors who told! him _he would be out of business!‘ within a year, Mr. Pickard ad- vanced rapidly so that 12 years after starting. he purchased the? entire wharf from Colonel Peake. His «financial ability led to his being selected as_a member of i the Board of Governors of the: Bank of Canada. _The late Mr. Pickard during his lifetime was active in the community life of the City where he served as president of the Charlottetown Board of Trade. He was a past president of the Board of Trustees of the Prince Edward Island Hospital. In politics he was a strong. sup-l THE LATE MR. PICKARD porter of the Liberal Party. A lifelong member of Trinity United Church, the late Mr. Pickard served on the. Board of Stewards and’ the Board of Trustees. Surviving are his wife, one son Walter, manager of A. Pickard Farm Machinery and a daugh- ter. Alfreda, wife of Loran Mac- Lennan, City. Agriculture Dept. Makes Appt’s. Several new appointments in the Department of Agriculture were announced by Hon. Eugene Cullen following a Government ~meeting held yesterday. George R. MacNeil of Inver- ness. N.S. has been appointed poultry fieldman. He is a gradu- ate of MacDonald College. William Sterns of Charlotte- town, a graduate in Horticulture from MacDonald has been named to the position of Horticultural Fieldman. David Ward from Moncton. N.B. also a graduate of MacDonald College has been appointed an agricultural economist. Theodore Sabine of 0‘Leary has been made a dairy herd im- provement promoter. Mr. Sabine has been the artificial insemin- ator in the O‘Leary district. Ruth Burke has been appointed stenographer to replace Sheila Delory who has resigned her pos- lion. Two Ocean Li-ners Dock At Halifax HALIFAX (OP) — Two ocean liners arrived in Halifax Thurs- day to disemibark 1,717 passen- gers. . ‘ The Home Lines, Queen Fred- erica and the Italian liner Sa- turnia are fro-m Mediterranean ports. The longest passenger train ever operated in Canada — a half- mile, 26-car GNR special — will carry most of the passengers to destinations across Canada. Teacher Students May Now GetUpTo$8OOAssistance Students of grade eleven who are desirous of continuing to grade XII with the intention of ob- tainirig a firstc lass teacher's li- cense through the Nornial Train- ing course at Prince of Wales College may next year and there- after obtain a loan of $300 from the Provincial Government as as- sistance to them in taking-the course. This was announced yesterday by Hon. Keir Clark, Minister of Education who stated that the new loan is not in any way affect- ed by’the existing $500 which is made available to teacher train- ing students on the basis of two fifths grant and three fifths loan. ON EQUAL BASIS The new loan is intended for; students who are not within thej areas served by ‘the senior high* schools of the Province. Mr. Clark explained that sincei grade XII was made the mini-l mum academic standard for those seeking teachers‘ licenses, some of the rural parents unable to take advantage of the advanc- ed courses offered by the senior‘ high schools have intimated that their children have been put at a 3 disadvantage. “This new loan is, gitended to resolve any differ- ntial that may have arisen from 1 this Act." Mr. Clar said. The loan shall be without in- terest and shall be repayable af-1 ter graduation from the Normal was stipulated that the student, Training Course at the rate of , .-SR2 Trapped Men ' SHARPLES, W. Va. (AP)-— -An, underground flood trapped 22 coal miners Thursday but officials Save reassuring word for their safety a few hours later. The accident occurred at 2 p.m. EDT when a large pool of rain- Water collapsed the roof of the Boone County Coal Corporations No. 2-A mine. The company issued a state- fnent nearly five hours later say- his mine superintendent Russell Ward had reached a point within 150 feet of the break. Ward said it appeared all the men had an excellent chance for survival. There had been no di- Feet communication with any of the trapped miners. The company's general man- 3861‘, R. F. Wesner, said it might Fellulre several hours to pump Water out to a level low enough Reported Safe Much of the water quickly ran out of the main entrance. But enough stayed underground to block passageways at lower lev- els and cut off all avenues of es- cape. - The 22 miners constituted the entire work force at the time. The mine employs an average of 389 men. The mine is in Logan County, about 44 miles south of Charles- ton. The accident occurred about 2 p.m. EDT Thursday w-hen a body of water accumulated by recent excessive rains broke through the roof of the mine. The operation is known as a slope mine, bored into the side of a mountain with passageways leading in several directions. Wesner said a large body Of water had been accumulating at for the men to escape. He said air in the mine was good and could last several days. ‘The water had accumulated he-1 "10 I refuse pile in a ravine.’ 90 by excessive rains in the last Weeks, the pool attained a ‘lelghi which the roof of the mine °°“1d no longer support. The Point of the break is about elevation of 74 feet above the. ‘-000 feet from the main entrance, , and the work force was trappedi W0 3.000 feet farther back. a refuse mile. about 2,000 feet from the mine's main portal. The portal and passageways in that direction were completely blocked, cutting off access to the underground passageways ‘mm the main entry. ‘ A surface crew was working 4,000 feet beyond the break at an portal. Sliai-pies is about 44 miles south ; im-peded lworkers to extricate the victims. of Charleston. of the 83rd Fighter - Interceptor; Squadron. Hamilton Air Forces’ Base, Calif. ; DEEP PURPLE SKY i The sky at extreme altitudes is‘ "sort of a dark purple," Johnson. said. ‘‘it gets darker the higher you go.” highest airplane ascent from take-off to landing. described the flight: Heavy Toll In Train Wreck RIO DE JANEIRO (AP)-—Two tightly packed commuter trains collided head-on in a rainstorm Friday night and Brazilian news agencies reported more than 100 persons were‘ killed. The crash came. near Man- gueira station, about 10 miles north of Rio de J aneiro. The Meridional news agency said more than 200 were injured. Apparently through a signal mixup, a south-bound train had been switched onto the track of a north-bound train and neither could stop in time. Reports from Mangueira said cars were strewn along the road- bed and many had been crushed by the impact. Tangled wreckage the efforts of rescue Others have flown higher in ex- perimental ships released from mother planes, but his was the made At a press conference. Johnson He flew to Santa Barbara at $100 per year. -feet because it's a good roundlMUST FINISH COURSE i Should the 'period of study or‘ HON. KEIR CLARK the period of teachinglservice re- quired, be not completed, the as- sistance received by the student shall immediately become dueisoual apologies. and payable. A change has been made in the method of awarding the Teacher Training Grant. Previously it must teach two years in order to receive the full benefit of the grant. Now the teacher may have half the grant awarded by teach- ing one full year. ' Great Future Forecast For By FORBES RHUDE Canadian Press Business Editor TORONTO (CPl—A great fu- ture for the coal industry, both in Canada and the United States, was p r e d i c te d Thursday by Thomas Kennedy, vice-president of the United Mine Workers of ‘America. in an address to the Canadian Progress Club. The following reasons were given by Mr. Kennedy in support of his prediction: Increase in population: expan- sion‘ of industry; increased coal consumption by electric - energy industries; increased use of coal in the chemical industry: the “un- certainty of gas and oil supplies ‘and the cost factor involved in these fuels:" and the possibility of increased export. “Last but not least, coal in my judgment will continue to be the basic industry for supplying the heat, power and energy needs of North America." Mr. Kennedy addressed a meet- ing which featured the Bitumin- ous Coal Institute of Canada, an organization formed by Ontario /Coal Wholesalers in -January, 1957. SEE HUGE DEMAND Mr. Kennedy said despite re- duced production in 1957 and in 1953 to date. “experts in the fields of energy and raw materials are convinced that tremendous de- mands will be made on coal and coal technology in the yeai‘s to come. V “The extent to which coal will be able to meet these urgent needs," he added. “will depend to an important extent on future technical accomplishments based on coal research. I “Europe is doing more work on I this subject than we are in the, United States or Canada.Russia is probably doing more research and development work than all other countries combined. “If we had a national or inter- national emergcncy we would be on a coal economy over night. It is, therefore, essential that mines be kept in proper order and that miners be trained to be avail- able to meet the needs of any necessity." Quoting widely from a state-; ment by Harold J. Rose of Bitum- inous Coal Research Inc. of the United States, Mr. Kennedy made the following points: Accelerating use of electricity, accompanying population and in- dustrial growth, will result in fur- ther huge increases in demand ‘Canadian Coal Industry for electricity and most of I"... can best be provided by coal. NO COMPETITION YET The cost of producing nuclear power will have to be reduced to a fraction of its present cost be- fore it can compete commercially with coal in the U.S. energy mar- ket. The a l u m in u m industry. hitherto tied to hydro - electric sources, is building three new plants near the vast coal supplies along the Ohio River, a'nd. by 1975, as much as 60 per cent of the power consumed by the U.S. aluminum i'ndusti'y may be based on coal. This. however, will de- pend on technological advances in power generation from coal. Metallurgical operations for other non-ferrous metals offer im- portant potential use. About 100,000,000 tons of coking U.S. iron and steel industry and this may increase to 180,000,000 ions by 1980. ‘However, much re- search will be needed. As reserves and production of natural gas and petroleum dimin- ish, and their prices increase ac- cordingly, huge quantities of syn- thetic pipe - line coal will be needed. -' Nixon Given Petition Will MONTREAL (CP) — The fire- men's union is to seek a court injunction today restraining the CPR from going ahead Sunday with. plans to begin laying off firemen from freight and yard. diesels. A spokesman for the Brother- hood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemezz (CLC) said Thursday night that a. petition for the in- junction was filed May 6 by Guy Merrill-Desau-lniers, a etitioner for the union. It is to e heard at 10:30 am. EDT today in the service court of the Superior Oourt of Montreal. HOLDS UP SCHEME The injunction would hold up the CPR scheme to lay off about 75 firemen until after the present working agreement expires May 31. The spokesman said the petition asks that the CPR be restrained “from implementing on May 11, 1958, t-he new rules contained in the notices dated March 31, 1958, until Ma.y 31, 1958, termination date of the current collective agreement as amended by the memoranda of Jan. 18, 1957, and until and unless all proceedings mentioned in the industrial rela- tions and disputes investigation TORONTO (CP) -- The Globe and Mail says the railway run- ning trades and the non-operating unions have made it clear to fire- against the Canadian Pacific Railway. The ffireniervs uleclfto go‘ on strike against the against a railwaydecision to re- Rough Welcome LIMA, Peru (AP)—-Jerring Per- move firemen from’ diesel loco- , motives in yard and freight oper- i ations. I Says the Globe: men they will not support a strike uvian students stoned and spat], “The railway brot-herhoods upon Richard Nixon at ancient i w‘ereAready.to support the fire- San Marcos University Thursday.,‘ me“ I“ Seekmg 3 ‘-'°mPr°m1-5° b_“t Ogle Stone grazed the neck of the firemen have been told in , _ positive terms that if it comes to the U.S. vice-president. Another a showdown the other unions will his secret service escort Jackl remain on the jo ." ;Sherwood in the face, chipping a The Y19WSPaP8l' Says the 0Ih€‘1' moth unions regard the firemen’s case “Nixon get out!" shouted thel ES 8 loftt Ciusfi a.“dla'; attelsnpt demonstrators. Lima reporters_ ° res” 9° n° °g1°a 1’ ogms ' described them as Communists or] It adds that the running trades Communist sympathizers. | The vice-president finally can-. celled a talk at San Marcos, say-l ing he feared someone might be? badly hurt. It was a day, Nixon said, that: '‘will live in infamy." ‘ R a B u OFFICIAL APOLOGY ‘ 0 Nixon told a press conference ’later that Foreign Minister Raul. OTTAWA (CPl—Tht’: Canadian i Porras gave him official and per-: Construction Association Thurs- ,1. day called on the federal gov- The Communists “think theyiemméhl l0 take greater Steps :won a victory," Nixon said, "but| towards more home and road- lthey suffered,‘ as time will tell,l building. la great defeat.” It describes housing as “Can- “When one of the demonstrat- ada's most serious social prob- lors spit in my face . . . he spitilem" and said “our roads prob- ion the good name of Peru and,lem is greater than ever" now ‘ the ideals of the liberator San I that there are twice as many ve- Martin.” jhicles for each surfaced road mile He said there is no question I)UI.(aS there were 13 years ago when that the C o m m u n i s t s have the trans - Canada highway pro- selected Latin America as a ma-;ject was started. jor target in their international‘ The association, which repre- UrgeMoreHome, policy." Traffic Toll Down In March ‘sents about 1.150 construction ;companies of all types. said in its iannual brief to the government II. can fill the physical need, but there must be federal programs, . in co-operation with the provinces, I to make the money available. OTTAWA (Cp) _. The death; The brief was submitted to tbll from traffic accidents across'P1'im€ Minister DIe_fe0'baker am Canada during March was re—1m9m*h9FS Olihe 9301093 , cpuced sharply below me iota} ofl It suggested that everything pos- a year 931.119,-_ 1 sible be done to enable Canadians The bureau of statistics sagdiwith Incomes of less than $5,000 Thursday traffic deaths in the 3 N981‘ I0 0W“ the” 0W“ h°m°5 month declined 21.5 per cent to. year - earlier figures in brack, cts, included: Newfoundland 4_ (31: Prince Edward Island 0 4.0); ‘ Nova Scotia 9 (13); New Bruns-; wick 12 (9): Quebec 33 (44); and‘ _ , , MONTREAL (CP) — Final ac- Ontario 72 I98». lcounting has established «that at ‘least $3,350,000 wasystolen in last weekend's burglarylof the Brock- ville Trust and Savings Company. ,Only $1,100,000 has been re- Is Sentenced For Wounding 2 ‘covered. HALIFAX (CP* —- Forty - one- The figure, announced Thurs- year-01d Walter M111?!‘ W35‘ 560- day by an official of the trust tenced to four years in the Mari- | company, makes the robbery one time Penitentiary at‘Dorchester.lof Canada's largest. Previous ,coa1 are required per year by the , N.B., Thursday on charges ofl speculation said the a m o u nt 000 worth have been .rec0Ve,.ed_ ‘might go as high as $10,000,000. _ . ' The results of the careful sort- to the owners. for breaking, entering and theft. . ing and counting were announced N0 MENTION OF CASH as police continued a roundup of known safecrackers in the Mont- official of cash stolen with the real area._At least 11 suspects bonds. were questioned by police in their placed this figure between $20,000 _ _ 1round~the-clock search for the cul- and $60,000. M1081‘. 3 Halifax man. Was lOuIldlD1‘llS who burrowed through a wounding Joseph Landry, a Hall- fax janitor, with a jackiknife and He was convicted by a Supreme Court jury of woundingt-he jani- tor who surprised him looting the Montreal Line Insurance Com- pany office in Halifax last April. guilty of stealing $68. ‘ii "ai..‘."°’.‘2...ii"’i.‘;‘ ‘.Y‘f3L~°ii‘.::e‘s‘T"‘»\~:=n’ Announce Results Of Check . In Brockville Bank Theft Be Heard In Court At Montreal Today act have been followed and ful- -0 filled.” It asks that "in due course the said injunction be declared perm- anent,” and also asks court costs against the CPR. INCONCLUSIVE TALKS The announcement of the un- ion's plans to seek the injunction followed two days of inconclusive talks at Ottawa among the Cana- dian Labor Congress, the CPR and Prime Minister Diefenbaker. CPR president N. R. Crump ‘Thursday turned down a union proposal to postpone the strike un- til May 31 on the terms that the company keep employed as fire- men all men—about 3,000 — now employed in freight and yard diesel engines until they normally would move out of fire-men’: jobs; and that a second dispute over so-called “arbitraries” for diesel firemen in mountain work be negotiated. The strike would be put‘on again failing successful negotiations by May 31. The union spokesman said the petition for the injunction was made by a union petitioner be- cause unions themselves do not possess the legal personality nec- essary to sue or be sued before the courts. (Claims Firemen Will Not Receive Support In Strike and non-operating unions have do cided against a public statement in order not to jeopardize the bar- gain-ing position of the firemen. Strike Worries union sched- CPR Sunday to back its stand FREDERh0Tb‘N (OP) " 11- 6-’ Greenlaw, chairman of the potato committee of the Canadian Hort- 'icu'lt~ural Council, Thursday re- quested federal government ac- tion to prevent a strike against the Canadian Pacific Railway by the firemen’s union. He said a railway tieup would have an “ad- verse effect” on producers of per- g ishable products. ., As an example, Mr. Greenlaw said in a telegram to Agriculture Minister Harkness, 2,000 carloads of New Brunswick potatoes along CPR lines could become a total loss if a prolonged strike oc- curred. ilding and recommended federal assist- ance in the construction of feeder water mains and trunk sewers as one way of reducing costs. The association's brief. pre- sented by President H. J. Ball of Kitchener, Ont., recommended a national highways policy that, in addition to pushing construction of the trans-Canada highway, would help the provinces build better provincial and regional roads, ac- .. ____ ,. ‘ _--,..,__....,.,...._....—,-.. -._.- -. - . cess roads, parkways and the like. RUBBER WORKERS STRIKE SINGAPORE (R e u t e r s) - Twenty - three thousand rubber workers staged a one-day strike Thursday to protest a cut in wages. The wage cut was blamed on falling rubber prices. ,\ NASSER AT STEEL MILLS SOCHI, U.S.S.R. (AP\ — Pres- ident Nasser of the United Arab Republic left for a tour of steel mills at Zaporozlie Thursday af- ter a two - day holiday at this Black Sea health resort. V . foot thick vault wall to get at the Brockville company's safe. The officials said $2,250,000 in bearer bonds — which normally can be cashed by the bearer—- were stolen. Police recovered $500,000 worth of the bea-rer bonds when they arrested Rene Martin. 23, a resident of Montreal’s Rose- mount district, last Monday. Registered bonds valued at $1,- 100,000 were also stolen, but $600,- These bonds are worthless except No mention was made by the Published reports have The loss was ("riveted by insur- tceilinz and then through A tuo- ance, the officials said. xv‘