' TELEPHONE 8506 Buyer meets seller with Guardian Want Ads. Dial 8506 ask for classi- fied ad taker, for quick results. 12 PAGES UPWARDS OF 700 Girl Guides and Brownies gathered at the rally held last night in ullull of the moth anniversary of Lord Baden Powell. UPPER LEFT is seen a portion of the crowd who were at Prince of Wales College. UPPER RIGHT. Winifred Anne 99 TODAY Mr. Van Clure Gay who cele- brates his 09th birthday. on Satur- dly. the 23rd February. Mr. Gay is at pr-sent Ill in the Prince Ed- ward Island Hospital. His numer- ous friev throughout the prov- l"c9 "9 5" honlns for his recov- GW. Mr. Gay has his gun all shin- ld up for the coming shooting sea- son and his fishing tackle in read- "WSS. so he says. TV Sales Down, Radio Up in T956 OTTAWA (CP-lsales of televi- lion sets by producers declined ""951 13 Per cent last year from 1955 but radio set sales rose more than 16 per cent. The bureau of statistics reported Friday 598.149 sets were sold by TV producers compared with the "N'0l'd 734.957 in 1955. All geo- graphical areas reported declines. The value oi the sales dropped to ;l)Z!:i.li59.49l from 8234.Bi4.M8 in a.. Radio sales rose to 700.416 sets from N930! while value rose to Macmillan, Patrol Leader of the First and Third Charidttetown Guide C whose ” tim- for the Centena y Camp in Swit- zerland next summer has been accepted. Miss Macmillan started as a Brownie at St. Peters and after three years flew up to guides Baden Powell l Prince of Wales College audi- torium was filled to capacity last night by a most enthusiastic group of Brownies and Girl Guides who with their leaders came together to celebrate the 100th anniversary of Baden Powell and the birthday of Lady Baden Powell. Of course a birthday celebra- tion w ul not be c mplt with- out cali: and con the - centre of the stage was a large cake with a single candle which was lighted by Provincial Com- mission for Girl Guides. Mrs. Evelyn Cudmore. Mrs. Cudmore in a short talk to the girls reminded them that the day was "Thinking Day" for Brownies and Girl Guiders. She felt that those associated with the movement should be giving thought to the great traditions ytrihlch have been handed down to em. WORLD SISTERHOOD Chief among those traditions is world-wide sisterhood. The Com- missions told the girls if sister- hood could be better developed throughout the world it would do much to relieve the tension aral fighting which now prevails. She termed Girl Guiding as one of -the finest youth movements in the world today. She said it! prea- ented perhaps the greatest chall- enge which can be made to wom- anhood. A feature of the evening was the presentation of the Gold Cord lo Lone Guide. Beverley Ann MIC- Gregor of Graham's Road. The receiving of the Gold Cord is the highest achievement which any Girl Guide can attain. IIIGII ACITTEVEMENT The presentation was made by Commissioner Cudmoro who while noting the high achievement of this Guide said it signified in gen- eral that Mlss MacGregor an all- round person. There are 100 Lone Guides in s4s,:m.ssa from uiarms. . . Thesesirlsbacaosetheyaremc its Guardian. She has been a Guide for iia years and in 1955 received her First Class badge from the hands of Dominion Commissioner for Girl Guides. Mrs. Nesbltt. She is a student at Queen Charlotte High School. LOWER. LEFT. Two Brow Guides And Brownies Observe 00 Anniversary close to any In J company of Guides carry out their work on their own with instructions from Mrs. Osborne by mail and radio. The achievement is all the more significant when this is taken into consideration. Some of the Lone Guides came from as far away as St. Peters and 0'Lcary. WARRANT PRESENTATION Presentations of warrants were made to the following who have qualified in Brownie and Girl Guide leadership: Mrs. Kimball MacKay. Brown Owl for the 15th Ch'town Pack; Mrs. Martha John- ston. Tawny Owl for the 15th Pack; Joan Rogerson. Captain. 7th Ch'- town Company; Miss Esther John- ston. Lieutenant. 7th Ch'town Company; Miss Mary Chandler. Brown Owl. 8th Ch'iown Pack; Paula Raymond. Tawny Owl. 8th Ch'town Pack: lilrs. Esther Wal- ters. Tawny Owl. 7th Ch'iown Pack. Another leader. Rosita Cro- ken of the 8th Ch'iown Pack has qualified as a Lieutenant and will receive her warrant when she reaches her llith birthday. These leaders were given in- struction by distrlct commission- ers. Mrs. Joseph Rodd and Mrs. Cyrus Pickard. Tl-IE B.P. TRIBUTE Deputy Provincial Commission- er, Mrs. Alan Macmillan spoke to the Guides and Brownies of the Baden Powell Tribute She outlined the theme of the tribute which is "Better Homes of Today and To marrow". The girls were presented with tribute badges which means they will. during the coming year un- dertake a three point program. The first will be a personal trib- ute which menns they will try to be a better person in every phase of their activities. Secondly they will attempt a prolec! of at least a month's duration. Thirdiy they agree to icnrn more about the life of Baden Powell. After a musical program in which a number of groups partici- pated ihe meeting was brought to a close by Evensong and Taps. Arabs lniroduce Measure On Sanctions In Assembly . Um-rszo Nimbus. a.r. (cry The Arab statu' long sanctions resolution El P will ill 9;: i l'-'l:.' '35: expressed H0 gun. MR Secretary-General ii. iii .-5 , 3 ' 2 iiiri-ll fliifzlf 5;... ill Charles Malik introduced Q Arabl . solution following llam- clalnll "Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew" -nies from each Pack make their contributions at the Baden Po- well birthday cakc. LOWER RIGHT. I group of leaders who received their warrants in leader- ship in the various Brownie Packs and Guide Companies. FIRST REFUELING SOON GROTON. Conn. (APJ-The nu- clear submarine Nautilus travel- led 60.000 miles on a lump of uranium "smaller than a light bulb." her builders said Friday. The submarine soon will be re- fueled for the first time since she started out on her first journey Jan. 17. 1955. ANNOUNCEMENT CHARLCYPTETOWN. CANADA SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 23. 1957 ISSUED JOINTLY Ailaniic Premiers Siress Consuliaiion Obieciives WEATHER Sunny with a few cloudy periods by evening; mild; light winds. Low-high at Charlottetown T5 and 35. Shed On Farm Fire of unknown origin yester- day afternoon destroyed a large barn and shed on the farm of Mr. Roy M. Young of Earnscliffe. Be- sides the loss of an almost new barn. Mr. Young lost a consider- able number of cattle, a horse. pigs. hens, feed. hay. oats and straw. and also several pieces of machinery. The fire was discovered about 1:45 p.m. by Mr. Young on his return home after a visit at a l Fire Destroys Large Barn And Ai Earnscliife neighbor's house. Owing to the rapid spread of the fire. entrance to the barn was made with diffi- culty and only a few of the thirty- three head of cattle were saved. Efforts by a large number of people to bring the fire under control were without avail. and only with great difficulty were they able to save the house. which was endangered for some time. The total loss is estimated at 310.000 or 812,000, partially cover- ed by insurance. Reiurn To War NEW YORK (API-Union lead- ers Friday ordered 45.000 long- shorcmen back to their piers from Maine to Virginia at 8 a.m. to- day. They have been on strike for 10 days. The back - to - work order lfrom headquarters of the striking nter- national Longsho cmeu's Associa- tion find.) was held up most of the day for a tabulation of a New York vote on a proposed new con- tract. Late ln the day. ILA President William V. Bradley set the return to work deadline after it was an- nounced that New York dockera favored the new contract. The vote appeared to be the final obstacle to resumpt' of dock work. Contract deadlocks in Baltimore and Norfolk were set- tled overnight. All other ports 45,000 Longshoremen In U. S. k This Morning had come to terms earlier. The strike. which began Feb. l2 as a renewal of last November's government - interrupted nine-day walkout. has cost an estimated 530,000,000 in losses to shippea and industry. STUDENTS THROW STONES SOLONIKA. Greece (Reuters)- Two pollcemert were slightly in- lured by flying stones Friday as thousands of students demanding self-determination for Cyprus de- monstrated in front of the British Consulate. Demonstrations also took place outside the United States consulate in this northern Greek city. The university. schools and stores were closed while 10,- 000 students paraded. OTTAWA ispeciall-in debate on the farm loans Bill Friday J. Angus MacLean. Conservative MP for Queens. suggested that part- time farm appraisers be engaged by the Farm Loans Board to shorten the period between ap- plication for a loan and appraisal of the farm concerned. He deplor- ed the long delays in the past and felt that taking on part-time ap- praisers would help close the gap. Farmers in Prince Edward Is- iand and other parts of the coun- try. Mr. MacLean said are being caught in a price squeeze. being Complains Farmers Caughi In Unfair Price Squeeze forced to pay to.) prices for equip- ment fertilizer and other needs and receiving relatively low pri- ccs for their products. it would be a great misfortune. the Queens member said. if the farm loans board felt impelled to raiseits interest rates. The princi- ple of low interest rates on farm loans is not merely commendable but essential. he said. In this connection Mr. MacLean said he had known farmers in his province who had secured mor- tgages on their farms at a rate of seven per cent. With this LONDON ineuiersi -- Britain Friday night demanded that Ye- men withdraw its forces which penetrated the Aden l'mu-ctoratr A note handed to the Yemeni Thursday. charge d'afiaircs in Lumlnn said Yemeni forces crossed into the British protectorate and altacked a fort at Ncjri Maizcr. it added that "they wcfc supported by ar- tiilery from inside Yemen." The note said Britain demands "the Yemen iznvcrnmrnt should immediately cease this aizgrcsslon and withdraw their fumes from Aden Profecinralc territory." Within the last 24 hours. holh sides along the imubled. border have charged ihe other is Plan" nlng major attacks in a dispute that has smouldered for years. Following alleged arms shlP' ments last year from Soviet bloc countries and Egypt to Yemen. teaslos has nominated sharply HIM marsk.loid's speech. He . - p. approval in t - "Wills "PW" "W ''''''l''''' dlloftzllzggfclwhllrlhrfollilds ernmeut m-i'1'i3'lia'”n-3".”-54'1 other members of the UN." an "mm," up 0, me Arab." ing to two omen, as ” the! Approved in principle were the the Middle East debate Iii let bill to wit the scopegof federal '-'...':..c.; ii: x.-.:":.:.-- srluso MILK :::::-.:: ....-'--'-......m in y. a Theresolutionwas h measare incl-ea benefits AfghaniaSt.l'a:;nlndno:e;ia. lraq. In wmgg bsnon. - - without ras o The resolution R191 0 CONCORD. Va. iAPl - levy on farn-sers' grail reqneusbytheauelIIHyll'lt- DIlf!lnanW.D.Evansisnot ras-Itoevaenatellsyptallaiai :'y':overthe50lallonsof lleaaebuisiaesscon me mbiy tofview with grave milk. He used it to mm" .M..,,,. Na”... 1.;-gels failure to It 3:: a fire. iln mcl-"outlaw Jmmim you-as . 5 slster- n- aw. rs. ' u .M . Then it caned for ilk acttsa: J. Wright. , Inaaeam iato t-3'71 i. condemn lsrael for not win hewnashloarlingy zdng-lk ' nggun d natural w rccclv 11'' as 1 human history. sure!-"'"'”'” 0: &mi'eaenwT:nha3veer;lm':c; far-n-lsCsOsbassl(z&3ist'l.ed mt. IVE. If M - inaaeetolrasltlkest llgalusofiniilziniosalios up any; gag a Request all states to any The rain was carried mm asaaaassa a biased a is he the house and poured onto the l E E l Britain Demands Yemeni Withdraw Peninsula. In the last two months. British troops and British-led local forces have clashed with Yemeni regu- lars and other groups in the rug- lled mountainous area. Royal Air Force let planes have gone into action. bombing and rocketing hostile Yemenis in sporadic incl- dents. Each side repeatedly has ac- cused the other of responsibility and many diplomatic protests have been exchanged. Dlhlomatlc efforts to arrange talks between the two sides to set- "9 "'9 dllvuie so far have failed. high rate some had been paying interest for 25 years and still had not paid off the principal. if farmers under these condi- tions could have secured a loan at a' low interest rate they would have been able to pay off both interest and principal in the 5 years. Mr. MacLean obtained no answer from government benches as to whether the Canadian Farm Loans act was operative in New- foundland. Freetown Man On Directorate Bank of Canada OTTAWA (CF) - Appointment of Austin A. Scales of Freetown. P.l-:.l..- and Anselme Samoisette of Montreal to the 15 - member board of directors of the Bank of Canada was announced Friday by Finance Minister Harris. Mr. 508128. president and man- ager of island Fertilizers Ltd. and Scales Hydro - Electric Co, Ltd. fills a vacancy created by the recent resignation of H. B. Srhurman of Summerside, P.E.l. Mr. Samoisette. mayor of Laval. sur-le-Lac. Que.. replaces A.s. McNichois of Montreal who has reached the retirement age of 75. The two new directors were air pointed to three-year terms start- ing March I. Mr. Harris also an- lnouncrd I appointment for three- year terrms of W.A. Johnston of winnipeg and lf.A. Russell of 8. Johnls Nfld. Parliament Gives 2nd Reading To Two Bills in OTTAWA (CF) session. giving second reading- Parliament Friday Session iario seat of Welllngun-I-Inron. SPLIT CREATE mass The Museums discussion he came heated when Douglas ling. ness 4PC-Calgary'Nort.hl already appointed to be directors. He said the government went ahead with the appointments over protests by the P? f stitute of the Civil service and by of the Will Hold Conference Each Fall HALIFAX (CPi-The premiers of the four Atlantic provinces an- nounced jointly from the four provincial capitals Friday that. "recognizing the need for continu- ing unity and action in an attempt toward solving the ovcr-all econ- omic problems of the four-prov- ince region." they will hold an annual conference in the fall of each year. The first will be held this year. It is their hope, the premiers said. that the Atlantic Provinces Economic Council will hold its an- nual meeting at the same time and in the same place as selected for the premiers' conference. The statement added that the premiers would have an earlier meeting late in April or early in May of this year to discuss the . ommendations made to them by their continuing commi we and decide upon appropriate action. The continuing committee, charged with the task of laying the groundwork for this sprl3 conference. met here sever weeks ago. ' The decision of Premiers Mathe- son. Smallwood. Flemming and Stanfield to hold an annual con- ference on the economic problems of the region is a history-making step, said the Atlantic Provinces Economic Council in a at tement released Friday. UNIQUE IN CANADA At no time in the history of these provinces have the pre- miers set the psttern for such close consultation on a continuing basis. and innootber partof Canada is there evidence of such unity of purpose." the statement says. "We in the Atlantic Council. speaking for business and indus- try tbroaghout the region, are de- lighted with the strong leadership displayed by the leaders of gov- ernment. To have unity of pur- pose and action within business and industry is. in itself. an im- portant factor. but to have this unity extend through to top gov- ernment levels strengthens im- measurablcy the position of the - provinces in their approach to 1 building of a sound economy. "The Atlantic Council pledges its full cooperation to the pre- miers' conference in the continu- ing study of economic problems and in all action aimed at pro- moiing the welfare of the Atlan- tic region. - "The " welcomes too. ill! suggestion that its annual meet- .-s it . n. n. n. ransom 1-mur Created Prince Of The Realm LONDON ilieuiersl - The Queen Friday created her husband, the Duke of Edinburgh. a prince of the realm and settled a controversy over his title which has broken out pcrimiically during the last 10 yrars. Just uhat the queen's husband should he called, and his exact status. has been a source of argu- ments. historical research and speculation in British newspapers since he married the heir to the throne .'N'ov. 20, 1947. Four yours ago. one newspaper carried .1 running controversy in ii: lcttvr--Io-the-editor columns on vheihcr it uas incorrect to call the Qucrn's h u s b a n d Prince Plllllp. it finnllx nos decided that only "the llukc of Edinburgh” was cor- rect. nlthnucli the official London Gazctlc itself slipped up once in in M54 uiwn the duke gave uis approval in the Royal Society of Art in cu-liar a presentation medal reading: "Prince Philip. presi- dent." WON'T CHANGE STATUS Heraldic experts were ouiclr in point out that ailhr.uifi1'll1C. dukc himself might prefer this title. it was not technically correct . k Although more have bccn "V queens who have ruled l-inclanrl In: their own right. the slain: of line. queen's husband has rwvcr been: established by law. Under English practice. a man's rank. llfIlll(P a prince does not alter his status. Canada's Petroleum Reserves At Record c,q1,a,sgy lCP' - Reserves oil petroleum in Canada rose to an . a new coal mine at Westville. N3- lnv the Dominion tsel T tion of that daily output presents It has no effect on the succes- sion to t& throne. nor does it mean that he becomes prince can- sort. the status given by Queen Victoria to her husband, Prince Albert. it Is a courtesy title. and in the House of Lords he will Silll be lower in rank to the royal dnI-:es- Cornwall. Gloucester. Kent. Wyli- sor. in practice. Prince Philip vlslls the Lords only on formal occa- sions. One of the royal duke-.3 is his son Prince Charles, 8. the Duke of Cornwall. Authoritative sources said the recommendation that the duke be given the new title came from Prime Minister Harold Macmillan in recognition of his services to Britain and the Commonwealth which include the world tour he has just completed. ing be held at the same time and in the same place as selected for the premiers' conference. and every effort will be made to com- ply with their suggestions. Two Children Die In Alberta Blaze HALCOURT. Alta. (CF! -Two- children of Mr. and Mrs. Douillll 'wm.- died Friday night when VI" Ideslroyed their two - mom 10! cabin home in this Granule Pral- rie district town about 200 mile! northwest of Edmonton. y Two-year-old Yvonne was killed when trapped in the burning home, Her five-months-old sister Lucy died on the way to lI05P'"l- OTTAWA (CP) - Premier Stan- field of Nova cotia and s ltlman Sdelqration from the Pictou County coal arse conferred for an hour with two federal cabinet ministers Friday on the question of opening No decisions were reached. but Works Minister Winters said after- uarfls that the federal and Nova Srniia governments hope-lo ob- tain as soon as possibl the views and Coal cnmpnny. which holds s.long-lerm eraliy agrt-' i" that a mine on the property - the Black Diamond coal seam - could produce Mm tons a day. "Both federal and provincial governments feel that consump no insugerable problem. The big cost factor would be the openiq of the mine." FEDERAL AID BOUGHT H. B. nIcCnlloch. Liberal attended Milk as . 1948 in culling” him "l-f.R.l-I. , Prince" Philip. u e of Edln- f 0 ' bu'l:li: flixiuululi lirvllir Olll. again . - New Coal Mine At Westvillo is opposed to any competitor fal- ing over the lease. The company was not seated at Friday's meeting. tremier Stanfield told a re porter "We came here to im- press upon the government the seriousness of the situation con- repre- fronting the area and particularly ' the towns of stellarion and West- ville. EXPLORATION AGREED "We dressed the importance of ' , ff ted ll l'- 3 :1:?,';'” In "M M -y H m” l lease on the property. opening a coal mine at Westville Giving the duke the liile of Mr. Winters said it was "gen- if that is at all possible. it was ill E. i or