Maxims "of a‘7 More Man To serve the public and to please it is impractical. at is .1oraans . ‘. VOTE OF CONFIDENCE SCHEDULED SATURDAY '7 \\l; The Pa‘ WN. CANADA, WLanie|’s Cabinet Toliliers PARIS (CP) -— Premier Jose h uniel decided early today to at e the fate of his harassed govern. ment on a vote of confidence in the National Assembly. In an .11. night session. deputies on all sides attacked the Laniei government's lndo-China policies. Laniel'a decision to ask for a formal vote of confidence. in which defeat would force his resignation. came after the assembly turned down by a vote of 324 to 259 con- aderaiiion of a government-backed resolution on the Indo-China ques- lion Thus rebuffed. Laniel irnmedi- nu,-ly asked for suspenslo of the session. lie and his ministers went directly into a full-scale cabinet mecting at Elysee Palace to form- alize the request for a vote of con- fidcnce. Laniel survived the last confi- c.-nce test on May 13 by the scant margin of two votes. Some of his support seems to have melted away since then and there tirre doubts that he could squeeze tltrough again. The vote is scheduled for Sat- iirday and heiore—then Lanlel hoped he could scrape up enough <ipport or convince enough de- puties to abstain to give him an- other reprieve on Indo-China. Laniel‘s decision climaxed a day in which he also received a set- back when six Socialists bolted their party to hand a setback to the government-sponsored Europ- can Defence Community. ANOTHER MOTION The National Assembly. at the end of the crucial lndo-China dc- hate. refused to give precedence to a motion in favor of the gov- ernment proposed by Conservative dnputy Maurice Freydet and dis- sident Gsulllst Felix Raingard. The motion read: “Anxious to do iothing that might compromise the efforts in favor of peace at Gen- us. the assembly taken note of the government's effort to bring about a cease-fire in lndo-China nn honorable terms and decides to oass on to further business." 'l_'hree other motions hostile to lie government have been tabled. Defence of the government's policy on the unpopular Indo- China war--and his own role as chief I-‘rcnch negotiaior‘at the Geneva far east confcrencc~came from Foreign Minister Georges Bidauif. After leaving Geneva to take part in fhe debate. Bidauit told the assembly to overthrow the government if it thought "any other French negotiator can do better on honorable terms" in finding a way to end the 7 1/2- vear lndo-China war. '.'iN THE SPOT Rt-cont newspaper reports said . ._.:_.__:______ Coming Events "Dance in Mtiivlew l-fall. every nlday. "Dance at Sandy's, Friday. June 11. Burns Orchestra. "Abegwelt R. B. P. Friday. June 11th. "Hampton variety concert King- liiiil i-1.-ill June 10. United W. M. 8. "Hampton concert at Kingston is postponed until further notice. "Come to Stanley and ace wneatley River Play to-night. "Dance. Cardroaa School. Friday night. June 11th. "deeds! store open daily. also Monday and Thursday evenings mill 9 p. in. Arthur Vesey. "Dance in St. Andrew's Hall. Mt. Stewart. every Thursday. Good music. Canteen service. "Bingo, North Ruatioo. Thurs- fl-*.V. ii p. m. Good prises. Jackpot inrl frecseout. "Carleton players present their I-act play. "Aunt Jerushy on The Warpath". tn Afton Hall Friday. June 26th. "Buying until Friday. good pigs over 30 lbs. Paying highest market Dricu. Wellington ucNeili at Son. Bunnin as Bell's Wharf. "Benefit Dance for Stella Maris school. North Rustico. at South Rtistico Hall. Thursday 10th. Rollie :1icKenaie'a Orchestra. Canteen oer- re-_ Kingston. "Hear Mr. and Mn. Funk Remrei. of Kulpahar uiuion. India. In areadalbane Christian Church. .Fhriday_ June llth. I p.‘m. slides own. ‘ ' "Tonight. Crapaud Hall, play "id variety concert. directed by Dr. Peter MacDonald. Repeated in Iid ef Lilbrary. Buoy good music, food comedy and I good laugh. “Monthly meeting of Kingston Fr-nch. Canadian region at Char- meugoyn. 'I'!suraday June loth. rm mil attendance "Aren't mi ?W'h i “’°“!ii°d!'a,:“0i°° caustic II’igW“Ali'Ed "We matinee mutt Spinney‘: Ranch as Where? Afton Hall. V’-“°“I.. ~...".‘.‘i..‘.t°.'.....”"“':...'i"" A on Home wmnurs Institute. '9'!!! pigs a't_ Fre°¢‘l:lrict'oa . ‘ UP I D II "Q - a pair 1.-.£I.eeeli.Iilfbs-overt! .‘ - _ fee in between. plus ' - . extra for pigs delivered _. Kaud Jergsasea. g i that unless Bidault produced posi- tive resulta toward an liido-China settlement quickly at Geneva, the Lanlel government would be overthrown and he would be out as foreign minister. Pointing out that peace depends on the maintenance of a balance of power, Bidault said France could not stand aside if the Un- ited States and some Aslastic countries felt that a Communist victory in Indo-China would dis- turb the balance of power and threaten their security. He did not name the Aslastlc countries. Should Geneva negotiations fail. he said the government would have to be prepared to deal with the situation. especially in insur- ing the safety of the French ex- peditionary corps of 216.000 men American Scientist By Bob Joyce Canadian Press staff writer MONTREAL‘ (CP)—— A Western psychologist Wednesday criticized Russian scicntlau for depending too heavily on experiments on an- imals and following too closely the theories of Ivan Pavlov. Professor Gregory Raxrsn of Queen's College(. Flushing. N. Y.. said Soviet. scientists are counting too much on analysis of condition- ing ln animals to interpret higher mental processes. Dr. Raaran spoke at the inter- national Psychologlcai Congras at a meeting where three Russian scientists, a Briton and an Ameri- can delivered papers on recent ad- vances in condltloning—the train- ing of animals or persons to react instinctively to a. certain event. Pavlov, a former giant of Rus- sian psychology. was the scientist who first presented a full theory of conditioning. His work laid the foundation for later studies both in Russia and the Western world. AUDITORIUM PACKED It was the first time a group of Russian psychologists have at- tended an international meeting in several years. Professors E. N. Sokolov of Moscow. E. A. Aspara:- Jan and B. M. Teplov spoke to a packed auditorium of 600 delegates front all parts oi the world. All three got a warm reception from delegates and after the meet- ing Western scientists said they found the papers highly intorestliig although they did not think they revealed any startling theoreticizi developments. The Russians recounted work they had been carrying on behind the iron Curtain. Dr. Asparatjari said he had found that a dog could be taught to react in different ways with different persons in the same experiment. He took Pavlov‘a baaio experi- ment in which a dog was trained to associate the ringing oi a ball with the arrival of his dinner. so that any time a bell was rang the dog's digestive Juices started to act as though the food were really there. ANOTHER REACTION Dr. Asparatjan said he found a dog could be led to associate the Job Prospects For Groduetes Bright 0'l"l‘AWA.. (CPi—-Job prospecfo for this year's crop oi 11,000 uni- versity graduatea are bright. the labor department said today. The department said starting salaries are slightly higher than in 1953 and it seems that the great majornty of graduates will find Jobs in their professions. Starting pay is highest for grad- uates in medicine. dentistry and engineering-—respect.iveiy uni. $406 and $315 I. month. The engineering figure is an average. with pay ranging up to $351 for petroleum engineers. ‘ Will Cut Vlheaf Prices Again if Need Arises‘ OTTAWA (CP)—'I‘rade Minister Howe asya Canada will make an- other cut in wheat prices if a further reduction is needed to maintain world sales. He said in the Commons Wed- nesday night that the government will make no fetish of keeping prices at current levels if they interfere with ex . Canada currenty was providing about to per cent of the world wheat moving in International trade. l-le did not believe Canada could obtain a greater ahare of the world market under present conditions. In! Canada will atteumt to con- tinue to maintain that proportion, even if It meant a further price cut. ..____.———————- JOINI TIADI .'l'AIJI TOKYO (Reuters)-l‘orn1er -lap» anese finance minister Tadaharu Multai will go to London to join in coming British talks on trade with Communist China and South- east Asia. a government spokes- eeoflivlbr shiaeru Yoshida on a world tour until it was booty!‘-|l|¢<I “If V0“- Iil Til Id . Iluhli. he more I1 I Cevlorr—dsr 3 train tbe.U:i’ted Itatu. had ‘shod ,l'I@ICf Y. C O . "'""" '° ' M IAION there. OPPOSITION Cl-l'.l‘ICA!4 The case for the opposition was stated by Pierre Mendel-France, left-wing radical and a leading candidate for the premiership should the government be re- placed by a left-wing coalition. He charged that U. S. planes capable of carrying atomic bombs were already on their .way to Indo-China and that some mem- bers of the assembly feared Bld- ault wanted U. S. intervention and an extension of the Indo-China war. Bidault‘s speech appeared to have strengthened Laniel's chan- ces by leaving the impression that no other French statesman could do mitt-ii iiettcr at Geneva. Critical of Russian Research Al Psychology Conference ringing of a hell by one person with an electric shock to his paw and with food when someone else rang the bell. It was a. long meeting going well past the normal two hours as a four-language controversy went on in Russian. English. French and Spanish after the formal speeches. Dr. Razman's attack. couched in a biting tone, however, drew only quiet, dignified replies from the Russians. Professor Asparstjan said soviet scientists don't maintain the conditioning process itself is important to human beings, but they do believe Pavlov was aided in understanding what happens in man's brain by these expcrimcnfa‘. That was why they had worked on Pavlovian lines so much. Awarded $30,500 Accident Damages MONTREAL (OP) — A widow and a mother. both of nearby Pointe Claire. have been awarded a total of 030,500 in a Superior Court judgement for damages re- sulting from a 1952 highway ac- cident In which two men were killed. nesday awarded $27,500 damages to Mrs. Lionel Lavigne. mother of three who lost her husband, and $3,000 damages to Mrs. Emile Quellette. who lost her son, Ed- mood. The men were killed when struck by an automobile driven by Jean Brunet while they were making a pilgrimage on foot from Pointe Claire to St. Joseph's Oratory here. Six Arrested 0 Kidnap Charge MONTREAL. (CF)-~Police re- ported the arrcsf. of six men Wed- nesday on a kidnapping charge after they allegedly tried to kid- nap an adopted aeven-year-old boy from the St. Euscde school play- ground. Pollce said the child's father. n friend from Detroit and four private detectives were invoivcd. Police said the child was adopted several years ago after his par- ents moved to Detroit. The appeals court last year set aside the adoption as it was not possible to adopt a child while its real parents were living. po- lice said. The foster parents took out .1 writ of habt-as corpus to have th: matter brought before the civil courts and were awarded tempor- ary custody pr.-nding a hearing. Gold Oulpul Down OTAWA (GP) -— Canada’: gold production slipped by 10.000 fine ounces to M9300 in March, down from 379,224 in March last year. Output. for the quarter by re- glona: -Newfoundland-Nova Scotia 2,161 fine ounces: Quebec 228.074; On- tario b43.004: Prairies 50.093: Brit- ish Columbia 64,508: Northwest Territories 14,241; Yukon 134. Mr. Justice Claude Prevost Wed- . Founded 1 Disappears From Birthday Party PORT MOUTON. N.S., (CP) —Volunieers directed by police pumped the water from dozens of wells Wednesday in the search for little Tony Roy who disappeared from his backyard while playmates helped him celebrate his second birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Roy said they thought Tony prob- ably had wandered off Tuesday afternoon and became lost. The RCMP enlisted the aid of more than 300 citizens of this Nova Scotis. south shore C0mm1mlll' to pump backyard wells. scout along the nearby seashore and poke through dense woodlands. The police dog Prince was bl'0u8ht from Truro to help look for the tot. Seek Removal Of U. S. Fox Peif Duly MONTREAL. (CPI — Paul L. Reinhardt. of Burlington. Wi.s.. said Wednesday that fox farmers in the United States will try to have the duty removed on pelts imported from Canada. Mr. Reinhardt. executive secre- tary of the American Fox Breed- ers Auociaiion. said this was agreed upon Tuesday at the annual meet- ing nf the Canadian National Sli- ver Fox Breeders Association. U. S. fox farmers agreed "to work to the end that duty be re- moved." The present duiy is 37 1-2 per cent of a pelt‘s value. There had been a period of de- pression in the industry_ said Mr. Reinhardt. but now fox pelts are bcomiug scarce on the world mar. ket. The removal suggested by U. 8. producers will apply only to Can- ada. The view was taken that both in production ocsts and in a geri- eral economic sense conditions are much the same in both Canada and the United States. Mr. Reinhardt said it has becn found that “the tariff is in fact not needed; it is something of A nuisance." Hove~7.500 Names On Petition For Clemency VANCOUVER. (C P) — petition. bearing 7.500 names and seeking clemency for William Wakefield Gash. l9. sentenced to hang for the bludgeon-slaying of Frank I-‘itsch last Dec. l0.‘hsa been sent to Justice Minister Garaon in Ot- tawa. Gash was convicted March 18 of murdering Pitsch. 45-year- old golf ball ahaggcr. on a city golf course, I-le is scheduled to be hanged June 22. HALIFAX. tcei—‘a Nova Scotia educator was named Wednesday to the chairmanship of a federally appointed committee which will see if broader vocational training would help combat unemployment Education Minister Henry Hicks announced the appointment of E. K. Ibrd. director of Nova Scotla vocational education. to head a special committee of the Canadian Vocational Training Advisory Council. The committee will study ways the federal and provincial govern- ments are encouraging industrial development to beat. unemploy- merit, the relationship between vocational training and unemploy- '12 THURSDAY, JUNE 10, 1954 in the heavy water industry plants. He spoke in the Commons in op- posing a government bill giving the government continued power to screen seamen on Canadian ships on the Great Lakes and upper St. Lawrence river. Mr. Drew said dangerous men should be kept from the inland waterway. But it should be done by judicial procedure and any de- cision by the minister of labor to deny seamen's cards. as proposed in the legislation. should be ap- pealable to the courts. All three opposition parties op- posed the bill to continue for three years the screening powers excr- cised since 1951 under the Emerg- ency Powers Act. which lapsed May 31. The main criticism cent- red on the bill's provision allowing the cabinet to draft regulations im- plementing the measure. "UNDESIGNATED POWERS" John Dieienbaker (PC — Prince Albert) said the government seeks “to have undesigned powers to do undefined things for anticipated offences not yet committed.“ _ Justice Minister Garson replied that the government intends to re- new the order in council which ex- isted under the Emergency Powers Sees SmaI|wood's Optimism Liability ST. JOHN'S. Niid.. <ct>i—w. J. Browne tPC—Si.. John’s Westi said Wednesday the Liberal party's greatest a.sset—"the unfailing opt- imism of Premier Smallwood"—- may have been the province's greatest liability. ' Speaking in the budget debate. Mr. Browne said the "government has failed in regard to economic surveys and there can be no doubt that some of the new industries are in great danger. The premier himself told us the birch plant Ls prostrate." The government. he said. has spent. 3600.000 on a water-power sttrvcy which the federal govern- ment would have done if asked because "it was in the terms of union." "The gypsum plant. cement. plant and birch plant were unsound from the start." he said. and agreements between the ‘operator of the birch plant and the government were not being carried out. l-le said that although he understood the theory of decentralization "it looks as if these industries were scattered for political reasons." "1 know of no government that speaks so lightly of millions." N. S. EDUCATOR HEADS COMMITTEE FOR STUDY OF VOCATIONAL TRAINING rational training might relieve un- employment in “depressed" areas. The committee will make a pre- liminary report to the council at the semi-annual meeting in No- vcmbcr. Committee members are Deputy Labor Minister W. E_ Wilson of Manitoba, W. H. C. Seelcy, assist- ant manager for administration of the Toronto Transit Commission; Gustave Poisson. deputy social welfare minister of Quebec; 0. G. Cushing, general secre(.ary-treasur- er of the Trades and Labor Con- gress and A. W. Crawford. the fed- eral labor department's director of training. A National Employment service representative will be add- ment and the degree to which vo- ed la tor. The Opposition leader called for aimed at rooting them out and barring them from indus- tries vital to the country's security. O'I'i‘AWA. (CP)—Hon. George Drew said Wednesday that known Communists work in Canadian uranium mines. and in large hydro-electric specific legislation _._..__._..._—.—.———-——-- Act. Opposition members who ob- jected that that was not spelled out in the bill should take the gov- ernmcnt's word it would be done. The main object was to prevent sabotage of canals on the Great Lakes system. Denial of pet-rriits to security risks was a small price to pay lfll‘ protection of one nf‘the continent's most vital freight routes. The measure was_ given. second reading~approval in principle- following a vote of 139 to 76 in which Liberals were joined by three indcpcndcnt members. Raoul Paulin. Bcziuce. Fernand Girard, Lapointe, and Paul Gagnon. Chi- coutimi. A Progressive Conscr- vative amendment to limit the life of the measure to one year was defeated by a standing vote offil to 37 with all three opposition parties voting against the Liberals. During the debate and later clause—by-clause discussion. these (Continued on page 15. col. 2) Funeral Procession On Friday Evening For Late Bishop Boyle The following is the order of the funeral procession of the lite Bishop James Boyle. The remains will arrive on the Borden train on Friday evening and will be conveyed to the Ben- ncssey Funeral Home. The route of march will be from the C.N.R. depot to Water street, up Water to Great George to St. Dunstan) Basilica where the par- ticipanu .ts-i~-shhr procession will disperse. The order of the procession is as follows:-— 17th Armoured Regt. Rercr Band; Rochiord Square School Girls;e Notr Dame Convent Girls‘ Ladies of Basilica and Holy Re- deemer Parishes: Queen Square School; Men of Basilica and Hoi:,' Redeemer Parishes: Benevolent Irish Society; Knights of Colum- bus; Altar Boys of St. Dunstan‘; Basilica and Church of the Most Holy Redeemer; Clergy: Guard of lionor of 4th Dcgrce Knights of Columbus; Pail Bearers: H91"-"31 Chief Mourners; General Public. The hearse bearing 1-its Excel- lent.-y's remains will continue to the Funeral Home from where they will be transferred on Saturday '0 the Residence. In case of rain on Friday even- ing. the above arrangements for the funeral procession will be cancelled and only those who can attend in cars will be expected to attend. Funeral Service Most. Rev. Joseph Gerald BCl‘l‘.,\'. D.D.. Archbishop of Halifax. will be the ceiebrant of the Mass dur- ing the funeral service at st. Dun- stan's Basilica Tuesday morning_ The funeral oration will be deliv- ered by Most Rev. John R. Mac- Donald. D.D.. Bishop of Antigon- ish. Among other high ranking churciimcn expected to be prescnt are Most Rev. Norbert Robichaiid, Archbishop of Moncton; Most Rev. Camille Andre LeBlanc. D.D.Bish- op of Bathurst; and Most Rev. A. B. Leverman. D.D., Bishop of Saint John. Many other members of the Canadian Hierarchy who will be unable to present will have representatives here. The Apos- tolic Delegate. Most. Rev. John Panieo, is on an- official tour of diocucs just now and is not ex- pected to be able to attend. LONDON (Reuters) Author Somerset Maugham. poet Edith sitweu and Canadian - born news- paper man Beverley Baxter are amon those listed in the Queen's birth ay honors. Maugham. 80-year-old novelist and master of the short story. was admitted to the select band of companions of honor. This order. whose 05 members include Sir Winston Churchill. carries no title but ranks high as a mark of re al favor. r. Sltwell was named dame of the British Empire. She now will be known as Dame Edith sltwell. A ighthood was conferred on the -year-old Baxter. a native of Toronto. new a Conservative mem- ber of Parliament as well as a drama critic. A new vlIcount—Lord Seulbury. One of the new‘barons is lit Oliver Harvey. until rccentiy British ambassador to ‘France. His successor in Paris. Sir Glad- wyn Jebb. was made a knight grand cross of the Order of saint Michael and Saint George. The other barons are Lord Cooper. Lord Justice General of Scotland. and the Earl of Dundee. Lord Dundee only a short time I Kniglstlsood For Beverley the human heart. was made a 'knight. OTHER. HONORS Others honored by the Queen include: Sir Russel Brain. neurologist who attended Sir Winston Church- iii last year when the prime min- ister was suffering from nervous ago was a commoner -— ll. J. {mime .b,.mm..,_.y,_ §¢c9;\’r'EIt|£'!enui:i‘e}vrreild)‘eJEfl:f"I5arMamC‘h'L' “(red CD931" Beltiy. copper His new title is one of is collcc ion "“"°' "‘""°"'I"' "M "V" in Dublin surrounded by oriental he has gained recently. He first established a claim to the lapsed viacountcy of Dudhope. and then to the earldom of Dundee. But neither. being Scottish titles. gave him the right to sit in the House of lords. Now as a United King- dom baron he can do so. Arthur Dealtin. trade union leader. was made a member of the Privy Council. Russell Claude Brock. so. sur- geon who became the first man paintings and manuscripts (knight- hood). W. Linton Andrews of the York- shire Poat. one of Britain's most hard - hitting newspaper editors fknighthoodi. Prof. Arnold Hall. 30-year-old director of the Royal Aircraft establish in e n t at Farnborough (knighthood). Gerlapd Moore. M. pianist and noted accompanist who has shared ever to operate on the inside of the concert platform with most of Baxter the \\'nrl(I'a greatest artists (com- mander, Order of the British Em- pire). CAMERA MAN NAMED Tom Stobart. cameraman who climbed Ever:-st with last year's conquering British expedition and was mainly responsible for the color film of the feat (officer. Order of the British Empirci. Mra. Doreen Archer-lrfoubion. 52. horsewoman who deputizes for the Queen at rehearsals of the annaul trooplng of the color ceremony. was made a mcmbcr of the Vic- torian Order. an honor reserved for personal services to the sov- ereign. Mra. Archer-Houhlon puts Winston. the police horse Her Majesty usually ridea. through his paces at the military parade re- hearaal.-. Nineteen of the new knlghthoods are overseas awards. eight of them for Australia. which the Queen re- cently visited on her Common- wealth tour. . Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew PRICE 50 Drew Urges Reds Be Tosse uli OE Vital Industries POSTAL LAW IN OTTAWA (CPI —- State Sede- tary Pickersgill said Wednesday that the sole purpose of a new change in the postal law is to end discrimination against Canadian publications and put them on the same footing as United States competitors. He made the reply in the Com- mons to the repeated assertion by CCF‘ members that the move will enable some Canadian publishers to save money while getting around Ontario's law against liquor ad- vertiking. Legislation putting the change into effect was passed and now needs only royal assent before be- coming law. It allows Canadian publications to have more than one mailing point and still benefit from low second-class postal rates. At present they must mall issues at. the point of publication to bene- fit from the low rates. CRITICISM FROM CC!‘ Main criticism came from Stan- ley Knowles (CCF Winnipeg North Centrei, who repeated his charge that the bill's main pur- pose “is to facilitate.a firm in its desire to get. around a provincial law." As an example. he said that MacLean'a magazine. one of sev- eral which had asked for the law, now prints in Toronto and trucks copies to a publishing office in Montreal to get around the on- tario law against mailing liquor advertising in Ontario to Ontario subscribers. issues going to Ontario still must be mailed in Montreal. Mr. Pickcrsglll said Mr. Know- les‘ statements were utterly mis- leading. PICKERSGILL DEFENDS CHANGES IN COMMONS DEBATE "The sole reason the govern. mcnt brought in the bill was that American publications are allowed four places to post. in Canada and Canadian publications are uni isirly discriminated against by be- ing limited to only one." Opposition Leader Drew also de- (Continued on page 15. col. 2i N. S.—Premier Shuffles Cabinei HALIFAX. (CPI-Premier I-lac< old Connolly announced a cab- inct shuffle Wednesday that sent i.. \‘V. Mackenzie to the highway ministry and gave his lands an forests and agriculture portfolio] to llaf‘l(-I')(’l'l(‘I1f'1' ‘ Colin Chisholm nf Antipznnish. The announcement was maria at one of the premier‘: regulal press conferences. Mr. Mackenzie. 56, succeeds the late premier Angus L Macdonald in the highways and public works rr.inistr_\‘. Mr. Macdonaid toolf over the portfolio last. year when Merrill Rawding was defeated at the polls. Mr. Mackenzie. member fol Gushorough. was first elected N the legislature in 1945. Mr. Chisholm. 35, is a farmin rxpcrt. and was elected to f.h House in 1945. His double-hs'rrels led job makes him responsible fol agriculture and marketing ans the twin portfolio of lands an forrsts. Mr. Connolly calls Chisholm "an injection youth into this aging government: appointment of which I'm fast becoming all example." GLACE BAY. N.S. (CP)—'I'om McLachlan. a coal-digger for 30 of his 45 years. was elected to the presidency of the Maritimes‘ big- gest union Wednesday and immed- iately appealed for unity to save the coal industry. McLachlan. boss of the United Mine Workers (CCL) No. 1-}! local at Glace Bay, defeated vet- eran unionist. Freeman Jcnkins. 41. who had sought a fourth four-year term as president of District 26 and its ll.000 miners. The president-elect said “there are two ways of running an in- dustry: By direction or by co- operation" and he believed the latter would help lick the produc- tion and marketing problems that have brought a crisis in the coal industry of Nova Scotla and New Brunswick. Jenkins will remain in office until St-pi. l. His 12 years as chief of the big coal union was exceeded only by the late Dan Willie Mor- rison who headed District 2ii for 14 years until he was misled by the dapper Jenkins in 1942. WADMAN TRAILS McLachlan polled 4.572 votes against 3.733 for Jenkins and 34.1 for tail-ender Charlie Wadman. the prcsident of Caledonia local, who at no time stood a winning chance. The entire District 26 executive was re-elected with the exception of Jenkins. They included vice - prcsident Steven Dolhanty. secre- tary - treasurer Mickey Higgins. international board member John H. Delaney and sub-district board R.C.A.F. Airlift To Korea Completed MONTREAL, fCPl—— The last. of the RCA!-"s 426 Thtindcrbircl squad- ron landed Wednesday at Mont- real‘; Dorval airport. to end Can- ada's mntrlbution to the Korean airlift. The squadron completed its part in the airlift without lot: of plane or cargo. Preshyieiiah; Boosf Budget IORONTO iCPi---A lo-per-cent increase. In the budget for the gen- eral funds of the Presbyterian Church in Canada waa adopted Wednesday by the 80th General Assembly. The estimates for next year were raised to sl.i00.o00. compared with i9M‘s al.000.000 budget to provide from $100,000 to li26.000 for repay- ment. of borrowed funds. plus an additiorial amount for contingen- clea. W. J. 1-iyrie of Westmount. Que. told the commissioners that they must. go back to their congrega- tions prepared to raise an addi- tional 60 per cent. of the sisanoo which was contributed to budget funds in 1063. ' ‘- New President of Maritime Coal Miners Union Urges Unify To Save Indusfry m c m b e r s Dan Joe Macisase, Douglas MacDonald, Frank Munro and Howard Tatterie. McLachlan is a former presidefl of the Nova Scotla Federation Labor. l-le takes over the guldsnrd of union policy at a period deb crlbed by Mines Minister Malcolm ‘Patterson as "the most critical 1‘ history“ for the coal industry. IIEDER Alli A Iriiiiltii iuiainsisti IN Business TORONTO tCP)—Minlmum aifi‘ maximum temperatures: _ _ Min. Mai Dawmn 36 , - Vancouver 51 Q Victoria 51 Q Fidmonton 48 CI Calgary 43 (3 Regina 44 53 Wiiiiiipcg (6 an Toronto ll‘! 70 Ottawa 0 1] Montreal 5.8 ‘I5 Quobec 53 9'] Saint. Jolm (2 Q1 Monctnn (4 55 Halifax 45 53 Fredericton 42 Q (‘harlnttefmvrl 40 (1 S.vdnr.v — 41 Yarmnuth 44 .Q St. John's. Nfld. 40 41 HALIFAX tCP) — The weather office here says the tendenc U. brighter weather is clog tq continue on Thursday and It will he murh warmer at most places. Regional forecasts: New Brunswick: Sunny gm] much warmer: light winds: low. high at Moncton 45 and 70. Fred; cricton 45 and '15. Saint John {I and 70. Edmundaton and Cam boll- tnn 50 and 80. p‘ Prince Edward Ialuid: Vlrlablq cloudiness: warmer: light north. easterly winds: low-high at Clar- loftefowst 43 and 10. Bay of Fundy: Light winds: v iahle cloudiness: visibility 10 mild‘ warmer. l-ifgh this today at flsarlottetowl at 5.32 a. m. and 6.20 p. in. Summerside tide eighteen mine utes later than Chariot-tetiown. sun rises iodsy at |.3I__a. !. and ‘ acts at 7.60 p. In. .4 i. t i L