rnsellons ssos Ivyar meats seller with Guardian Want Ads. Dial 8506 ask for classi- fied ad takes, for quick results. is Guardian "Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew" OWN. CANADA SATURDAY. MARCH 23, LI'l'I'LE WENDY GALE, 8 LBS., 3 OZ. Baby Born In Small Car In Snow Drift West OI S'side CHIEF DIES MOY. Scotland (AP)-Vice-Ad- miral the Mackintosh of Mackin- tosh. I wartime naval com- mander. died Wednesday night. He was 60. Lschlanlbonald Mackintosh was 29th chief of the Mackintosh clan and thus the Mackintosh of Mac- kintosh and entitled to wear the ltilt at all times. lie entered the Royal Navy in 1909 as a cadet. He was com- mander of the aircraft carrier IIMS Eagle when it was tor- Dedocd and sunk in the Mediter- ranean in 1942. He also com- manded the fleet carriers In- dginltable, Victorious and implac- a e. in Charlottetown August 10. 1955 be officially opened the Caledonisn Clubs 90 annual Gathering of the Clans and Highland Games. Ottawa Stores Fined 314,400 0'I'I'AWA (CPI - A year-long battle by Ottnwn gtm-gg B ' t "10 cIl!itel'a early closing by-law ended Friday with Magistrate Glenn E. Strike ordering nine ztgres to pay fines totalling :14.- A will of 1'! stores were glilflbd for Ii-lyinl Ollen after the P-m- Gilli-Ill hour during the yriad between Nov. 17. 1955. to 95- 10. 1966. The fines brought to 319.000 the amount collected by "'0 city in fines against the Ilfkil. PINUI by stores which 9Iā€l'"9d "'9 by-law was invalid if"! relected by the Ontario (.ourt of Appeals. The Supreme Court of Canada refused the stores leave to appeal. Appeals by eight stores in the 3'll"I8'S Bridge shopping plaza- ilncd 3100 on each of 152 charges "against the fines were turned down March 15 by county court Judie Peter MacDonald. Stores fined Friday had pleaded Kuiliy some, time ago but fines lilainsi them were not assessed until the appeal in county court Born while the mother was alone in a small Volkswagen car stuck in snow drifts on the highway be- tween the R.C.A.F. Station and the town of Summersidc at 6:05 a.m. yesterday morning and while the father frantically tried to locate a telephone to man help, the lovely little daughter of Flying Of- ficer and Mrs. Ken Davison weigh- ed in at 8 pound . 3 ounces. and is healthy and well. Proceeding on the five-mile drive to the Prince County Hos- pital in Summerside. the Davisons had departed from their home at the airport married quarters at 5:30 a.m. They were accompanied by an Airforce snow blower which was found to be low on gas. and which had to return to the air- station for refuelling. After waiting for some time. Flying Officer and Mrs. Davison realized that the snow blower might not return in time. and de- cided to proceed alone towards Summerside. previous reports having indicated that the roads to town were passable. on reaching a point between the Curran and Briggs Eleanors corner. snow drifts and stranded cars blocked- their way, and drifting snow anchored their lot and St. d A.F. station. With no other alternative. and because of the urgency of the situ- ation. Flying Oflcer Davison left his wife in the car as he waded through the snow storm to sum- mon help. On locating a telephone he contacted the R.C.A.F. base and sought an ambulance and medical assistance. Hastening back to the car he found that in his absence the baby had already been born. llnd be administered wh'at help he could to his new born daughter. He made both wife and child as com- fortable as drcumstances per- mitted in the limited space of the small car. before an ambulanc arrived on the scene bringing Nur- sing Sister Kay Arac, who per- formed the necessary medical at- tention. With the assistance of an R.C. A.F. snow blower. F-0 Davison turned his small car around a nd proceeded to the R.C.A.F. Station hospital. from where they were transferred yesterday afternoon to the Prince County Hospital where both mother and daughter are restling comfortably after their or- a e . The Dsvisons. originally from Toronto. now have three d '" . i clgaret smokers than among non- Cigarets Ancl Lung Cancer NEW YORK (AP) - A study (foul) of seven scientists reported Friday there is a direct relation- ship between cigaret smojing and lung cancer. "Lung cancer occurs much more frequently (five to 15 tlmesi among smokers. and there is a direct re- Iationship between the incidence Oi lung cancer and the amount smoked." the report said. Two sponsors of the study group. the American Cancer So- city and the American Heart Asso- ciation. issued statements saying they had not yet studied nor eval- uated the report. The tobacco lndustry declared the report "apparently offers no original evidence." It said the re- port relies heavily on statistics that have been "widely questioned by other scientists as to their sig- nificance." ISCONNECTION The report of the study group said in part: "It is estimated that on a life- time basis, one of every 10 men. who smoke over two packs a day will die of lung cancer. The com- parable risk among non-smokers is estimated at one out of 275. . . . "The sum total of scientific evi- dence establishes beyond reason- able doubt that cigarct smoking is a causative factor in the rapidly increasing incidence of human ep- idermold u.uClI'l0IIIB (cancer) of the lung." It said. however. that studies in- dlcate "that clgaret smoking can- not account for all cases" of lung cancer. U. S. Potatoes Move Into Ont. LONDON, Ont. (CPI - Produce merchants said Friday an over abundance of potatoes in Canada decreased retail prices this week. About 00 per cent of the potatoes sold in Western Ontario come from the Maritimes. Local and Prince Edward Is- land potatoes Friday were selling at 49 cents for a 10-pound bag. Six-quart baskets of PEI potatoes --about 10 pounds-w-"e going for 45 cents. The figures are down three to four cents last week Potatoes from Florida. North Dakota and Idaho. were selling at three pounds for 25 cents to four pounds for 29 cents. Brenda. 4 years. Linda, 3 years: car preventing a return to the R.C. 7:-pm Solution CAIRO (AP) - UN Secretary - General Dag Hsmmarskjold and scheduled a marathon meeting for today in an effort to find face- Egyptian President Nasser have saving solutions to Middle East deadlocks. They arranged for talks to be- gin in mid-morning Saturday at Nasser's resthouse in a park on the Nile eight miles north Cairo. These will continue through lunch and on into the afternoon. This second meeting between the two since the secretary - general arrived here early Thursday fol- lowed almost continuous sessions Friday between Iiammarsklold and Egyptian Foreign Minister Mahmoud Fnwzl. Altogether the two talked together more than 12 hours Thursday and Friday. Hsmmarskjold and Fswzi. both international lawyers. were seek- ing to thread their way through such tangles as the Suez Canal. the Gaza Strip and the Gulf of Aqaha. WANTS SOLUTIONS It appeared Fnwzi wants solu- lions which would make President Nasser co-operative in Western eyes without seeming to surrender in Arab eyes. On the Suez Canal. the problem was heard. One Missing Plane Found But Two Others Still Unreported HALIFAX (CPI Searches "re conducted Friday for three small planes missing in the Atari- iimes. one was found and ism-heetortweathers.wlthanr ill of four persons on hoard. will mittens today. weather. permit- MI RCA! Caneo found a civi- iInPiper1landlteloneoccn-' Pint. reported missing Iueeday on I flilht from Human. Bathurst. N.B.. to A single - engine civilian plane nrsons on board was Friday in the The at-year-old geologlat's wife had not become alarmed about his dlaa arance until Friday be- cause . Cherllon was expected to spend a couple of days in Mone- tan. However. he never the I3-mile. Ila-hour flight. Bad weather prevented plead from searching for the Aeronca rted missing Friday about I in ca aoudrwest of Knob Lake. The names of the missing and their destination were not imme- dgily available. search for the avenger was New Face-Saving and Wendy Gale. 1 day old. Found is to guarantee the rights of canal users without stopping on Egypt's sovereignty. On Palestine, Ilammarskjold is seeking peace within the frame- work of the I949 armistice. In one meeting. the pair talked with Nasser. Hamms slriold usu- ally had UN undersecretary Dr. Ralph Bunche with him. Since the UNEF ommander. E- L. M. Burns. par- tlclpated in the afternoon meeting. it almost certainly dealt with UNEF problems in the Gaza Strip and on the shore of the Gulf of Aqaba. In working to establish full com- pliance with the armistice agree- ment liammsrekjold is seeking to establish a state of non-beIllger- ency which in his view would take away Egypt's legal basis for any blockade of Israeli shipping in the Suez Canal and the Gulf of Aqaha. Egypt may not agree to that. On the question of the canal. Ilammarakjold is pressing for a broadening and modernization of tlon to provide for the fixing of oeximum tolls and for some kind of reporting to the United Nations. The 1880 convention called for keeping the canal open to all na- tions. On this point. lhe Egyptian- have presented no serious objec- tions as yet. A tougher problem is the setting up of some kind of users' organi- sation that would be recosnll-Hi by Egypt to negotiate with the Cairo government on ttlls. canal devel- opments and so on. Nasser is cool towards the sue: the 1888 Constantinople Conven- do Court Considers Fluoride Case UITAWA (CP)-Seven judges of the Supreme Court of Canada have taken under advisement the ques- tion of whether Metropolitan Tor- onto has the power to add fluoride to water it supplies its 13 consti- tuent municipalities. Argument was completed Friday in the Court on the contentlurr by Metro-the City of Toronto and 12 adjacent municipalities that share certain public utilities-that it has the power, and by hold-out Forest Hill. a fashionable suburb that says Metro hasn't. At issue was an order by the Court of Appeal for Ontario quash- ing a Metro by - law authorizing fluoridation. which medical auth- orlties advocate as a means of reducing the ' ā€ ce of dental decay. Forest Hill's first challenge of the by-law was thrown out. its ap- peal. however. was sustaincd in the Appeal Court. which ruled the by-law to be beyond Metro's pow- era. "FITAHIAMEPNI I YESTERDAY Friday. March 22. l957- . Health Minister Martin an- nounced federal willingness to boost permissible income ceiling: for needy. blind and disabled pon- ners. Alistair Stcwarl ICCF - Winni- peg Northt described the 86 monthly pension increases as it "miserable pittance"; hlr. Martin should get out. External Affairs Minister Pear- son indicated if Egypt dtwsn'i agree to UNEF control of inter- nal security in the Gaza Strip the UNEF may fold. Rev. E. G. Hsnscll iS('-Mark head) said special Alberta and Ii.C. government payments i0 their cltlaens spell the death - Inlay. March :5. 1957- The Commons debates hospital Canal Users' Association set up in London. IAN FRANCINN (AP)-A ser- that Earthquake Cau Damage At San Francisco OTTAWA. (Special)-An appeal to the Government to establish part of the Provincial Building at Charlottetown as an historic site and national shrine was made in the budget debate here Friday by Neil A. Matheson. Liberal M.P. for Queens. In particular, Mr. Maiheson wanted the chamber where the original conferences was held I ā€' to Confederation. to be preserved. The project of making part of the Provincial Building an historic site had been sponsored both by the Prince Edward Island Histor- ical Society and the Charlottetown Board of Trade. Mr. Mathcson said. lie had found support of the suggestion from prominent men in several provinces and had not heard a word of dissent from any- one. ii was of particular historic im- portance to preserve the Provin- cial Building in Charlottetown where Confederation was given birth. because the building where the pact was actually signed in Quebec City had been demolish- ed. Mr. Matheson told the house. It would be a crime. he said. to lose the historic building in Char- lottetown. SOCIAL CREDIT PROMISE When George Hahn. Social products of its farms. lie recalled that this winter. P.F..I. had once again taken top honors for its ba- con hogs. It was true. he said that while Island hogs did not take top places in the live classes. they scored heavily in exhibits of dressed carcasses. in connection with the feed grain for hogs, Mr. Maths-son expressed the hope that better quality feed grain would be shipped from the West in future years. FREIGHT RATE REVISION Mr. Matheson welcomed re- visions to the Maritime Freight Rates Act which will enable pro- ducers of bulk farm products to ship at less cost and compcte to better advantage in the markets of Central Canada. Despite the actual and promised reforms in freight rates. further action was essential. the Queens member said. He expressed the hope that fa- vorable results would emerge from the conferences of Canadian a nd 1957 ANNOUNCEMENT MADE AT BERMUDA u.s. Will Join In Military Phase Of -Baghclacl Pact SPEAKS IN BUDGET DEBATE Urges Provincial Building Claims As National Shrine United States officials on potato tariffs. This matter was of utmost importance. he said. to potato growers of the Province. Although agriculture is the ba- sis of P.E.l. economy. both fishing and the tourist trade are leading factors in the economy of the is- lsnd province. Tourist traffic would greatly increase he affirmed. if the survey now being conducted indicated that a causeway from the Island to the mainland was economically feasible and the causeway built. The Federal Gov- ernment. he said. was improving conditions for visitors to the Pro- vincc. with tenders now being cal- led for highway construction from Dalvay to Stanhope Beach on the Gulf Shore road. Mr. Matheson praised the gov- ernment for increasing old age and veterans pensions in the pre- sent budget. In conclusion he blasted the diet faddists who are condu ing s , mpaign against the use of whole milk. Pension Ceilings Credit member for New Westmin- ster broke in a Social Credit .3 rrr elected this year it would preserve the building for posterity. Mr. Ma- theson cracked back: "That will be a very long time. I'm afraid." The Queens member voiced gra- tificstion that the St. Dunstan's debating team had recently won the intercollegiate debating title. It was the second time. he said. that St. Dunstan's had scored top honors in the debating contests. in five years. On other occasions. the Charlottetown team had reach- ed the semi-finals. Turning to agriculture. Mr. Ms- iheson emphasized that the econ- omy of Prince Edward Island is based first and foremost on the New Outlet For Blueberries KENTVILLE. N.S. ICP)-A food company (Canada Foods Ltd.i be- gan processing more than 25.000 pounds of frozen wild Maritime blueberries Friday for immediate export to a food manufacturer in Chicago. The tinned berries. harvested last fall in the Parraboro. N.S.. arcs and sections of Prince Ed- ward island and New Brunswick. will be used by the American firm as an ingredient in blueberry muffin mix. A Special method of processing the berries was discovered by Kontvllie Dlant manager Ladislov Kollnsky. a naturalized Canadian ifrom Czechoslovakia. Mr. Koldinsky said the plant has an assured market in Chicago of 4.000.000 cans a year and within a few years the plant will be able in CXPOTI 5-000.000 in 7.000.000 tins g a ycar-the total Nova Scotia crop. i The Iilant has installed new ma- chmerv ca of processing I0.- 000 cans an hour or 100,000 cans a day if necessary. Technical ad- viscr Paul Bertland of Montreal said the equipment is the finest .of its type. I orrsws iCP)-A bill to pro- vide a mlnimdm wage of 31 an hour for all employees under fed- eral jurisdiction was introduced in the Commons Friday by Stanley Knowles (CCF-Winnipeg North Centrel. The House gave first haruee. The Senate sits. se which cut II lives. A pdatar working atop the Gol- Gate Elsi? E readins to the measure. s lniury, grrancisco Bey. Dr. Perry Byerly Are Rela OTTAWA (CPI-Health Ministre Martin Friday announced in- creases ln permissible income ceil- ings for the three federal-provim clal programs of pension pay- ments to the needy between 65-69, the blind and the disabled. Increases in the maximum pay- ments under those programs. from 340 to H6 monthly, were announced in last week's budget. These are conditional on acceptance by the provinces which share cost of the payments. ..Mr. Martin's statement Friday; means that. if the provinces ap- prove, the means test ceilings also will be relaxed. The ceilings are Income, including the pension. ex- set so that if a recipient's totdl cecds a certain level the payment is reduced correspondingly. OLD AGE ASSISTANCE Ceilings on pensions to those be- tween 654i9 - the so - called old age assistance - and to disability pensioners are the same and would be increased by the same amounts. Federal and provincial govern- ments split the cost of the pro- grams 50-50. The means-test in- creascs; Single recipients. from 5720 to 8840 a year; married. from 31.200 to SL320; married with a blind spouse. from 31,320 to 31.600. PENSION FOR BLIND Thc hlindncss allowance is fl- nanr.d 75 per cent by the federal govcx'n'..lunl and 25 per cent by the provinces. The income ceilings are highcr than for the other two sharcd programs and the in- xed Single blind persons, from 5960 to 31.080; single with one child, from SL160 to 31.560; married with sighted spouse. from 51,560 to SL680; married with blind spouse. from 81,380 to 31.800. Mr. Martin, speaking in the bud- get debate, emphasized the scope of the increased welfare payments proposed in the budget-they also include a boost from 340 to 346 in the old age security pensions paid to all at 70. increased payments to disabled and needy veterans and s 31 monthly increase in the fam- ily sllowance for certain age groups of children. He said the cost of the increases will total an estimated Sl32.000,000 a year. It would compensate 7V: times over for increases in price levels since the various pension and allowance laws were passed. Quads Have Compensation MONTREAL (CF)-Quads have their compensations. the William Munros of suburban Polnte Claire have learned. Following the births of a boy and three girls Thursday, the (am. lly of 11 has received gifts includ- ing a complete layette from the ladies auxiliary of ST. Joseph Hos- pital wht-ro the quads were born. Thcrcis also a year's food supply pledged by II chaian store. includ- ing 5000 cans of assorted baby foods. limos, and evaporated milk 40 dnzcn frrsh eggs. 16 pounds of crosses would be: bacon and 88 pounds of sugar. WEATHER Variahlacleudnaaqhtledlaljahs wtnda. lam-lllgle '0"'P0"N'0i Ilili Ch'tawn 20 and 40. Sunday: Sunny. By Officials TUCKEft'S TOWN, Bermuda. (CPI-The Bermuda conference site was used Friday for a United States announceme t of its will- lngness to join the military com- mittee of the Baghdad Pact - a step which Britain warmly wel- comed as leading to closer co-op- eration in the Middle East. President Eisenhower's press secretary, James Hagerty. mak- ing the announcement to corres- pondents here. said the decision did not come from the Eis- enbower-Macmillan talks. It had been derided upon at least two weeks ago but was conveyed only Thursday to the Baghdad Pact members and Prime Minister Macmillan. The announcement said the United States had advllsed the pact members of U.S. willingness to join the pact's military commit- tee if invited to do so. This would permit Washington to collaborate with other groups in a common t ' against Communist ag- gression- U.S. MEMBERSHIP LIMITED The Baghdad Pact. joining Brit- ain. Turkey. Iraq, Iran and Pakis- tan. was set up to counter all ag- gression. American participation would be limited to the military eommltt instead of full mem- bership-to cover only Commun- ist aggression. This announcement provided the biggest news of the day from conference headquarters where Eisenhowe and Macmillan held News Is Warmly Welcomed From Britain fence problems. The two leaders also conferred alone before lunch an undisclosed Tnatters. Britain's Foreign Secretary Sel- wyn Lloyd and the U.S. Secre- tary of State, John Foster Dulles, had a wide discussion chiefly re- lating to European matters dur- ing which Lloyd was understood to have expressed hope for United States and Canadian participation in a single European assembly. JOIN UNION? This idea. long favored by Lloyd. would be to merge existing Eu- ropean assemblies. such as the Western European Union. the Council of Europe and the Organ!- zation for European Economic Co-operation. into one inclusive assembly. With Canada and the United States already closely connected to this set-up through NATO and trade interests. Britain would like to see the North Americans sitting in such a European assembly. Canada's L. B. Pearson lolll has favored tension of NATO into fields besides defence. Dulles told the British foreign ministe he welcomed any moves toward European integration but hoped the idea of a common mar- ket there would not involve a high tariff union. Also discussed by the foreign ministe . was the question of Ger- man reunification. Dulies and Lloyd also held a brief talk on BED China but nel- ther side would c-lmmant on what a meeting Friday on common de- tha discussion Involved- I-leavy Ice Closes Harbor At St. John's Second Day In Row St. John's. Nfld. rafted chunks of bluish Arctic ice filled St. John's harbor and the sea beyond Friday. sealing off navigation for the second day in a row. "only hosts equipped to break through ice can enter the port." a harbor pilot said. "and those are not the ordinary cargo boats." No ships have arrived since Wed- nesday. Eight vessels arrived early this week after a 10 - day blockade forced diversion of other ships to open ports on the south coast. Nearby Bell Island remains cut off from shore by ice in Concep- tlon Bay and shortages of fresh foods there are considered acute. The island has a population of about 10.000. The wedding of moist. warm aoutheaat winds driving the ice hard against the coast of Eastern Newfoundland and chilled air over the icefields has produced its us- nal offspring-thick. dreary fog. IFLIGIITB CANCELLED Trans-Canada Air Lines nights were cancelled Thursday and Fri- day at Torbay Airport here. Air- lines officials were hopeful that northwest winds called for Satur- day will clear the fog and enable (CP) - Great ' long enough they will sweep cle Trinity and Conception Bays ant St. Johns harbor as well as drW"" lag the main icepack outta seaz- The Halifax-owned sealing ship Arctic Prowler damaged her rud- der hunting seals on the icefielda east of Belle Isle. She is heading for St. John's for reapris with a jury rudder. She is due here dur- ing the weekend. Other ships of the sealing - are believed to be killing in main seal herd but reports of t catches have not been race here since early this week. the St. John's-owned Algerlne Terra Nova claimed 3.000 each. LEFT HOMELESS SAINT JOHN. N.B.. (CF)-;g 1shes left in a wooden shed w blamed by fire officials today a Thursday night tenement that left a mother and her children homeless. No one was lured. Nineteen other persons 1 in the three-storey structure I damage was confined to the floor. 0I.D PRACTICE TCA to fly out the hacking of pas- sengers. If the northwesterlicl continuelGreek manuscripts. Abbreviations to save time and space were oftrn used In ancient 'ItY v I