tnaxfamrora More Men; 'An evil conscience breaks many a neck. - 1: races, Hall & Stavert Foundry Gutted By Fire Yesterday A fire which started at ezao in the Hell and Stavert on Elm Avenue last evening complete- ly gutted the 60-foot wooden structure which his located some distance from the street in a lot between 104-109 on the Avenue. Besides the building. the loss to the firm is chiefly in its patterns most of which were stored in the loit.oi the building. at one time used by Home Bros. for stebling horses. Later it was acquired by A. 3. Block and Son as a piece for curing end storing hides. Hall end stavert purohaasad the building about eight years ago. The cause of the fire is not known but it is reported that the casting of metal had taken place yesterday afternoon and it is pos- aible that a stray spark may have amouldered for a. time to break out after workmen had left the plant. The loss of patterns to a foundry is a very serious one and win at. dect the output oi the machine shop which Bell and stavert oper- ate on Pownal Street. It is of per- tlcular concern at this time of year when they are rushed for a large number ci orders from fishermen end others. i A newly built mill room at the west end of the main structure was not affected by the blame which gave firemen dialculty in fighting because there were no openings in the upper pert of the building. to which the fire was mostly confin- ed. There wet insurance coverage on the building and its contents. Nfld. Storm Loss Reported Heavy By Stewart Mecneod Canadian Press staff Writer OARBONEAR. NIld., (GP) - Whole waterfronis were wiped clean of wharvcs end buildings end in some spots stores were washed to sea in Newfoundland's worst storm in history. striking Sunday and raging most of Monday and Tuesday, the lash- ing scas sent water thundering 200 feet up steep cliffs and against the wherves and fishing stages. Everywhere along the coast there were scenes of almost unbelieveable demese. some spots were ' still isolated Tuesday and damage reports are likely to keep trickling lntoyst. John's for days to come. I toured the fishing villages and outports of conception Bay Tues- day. Here's what I saw: The winter coal supply of Charles Marshall lapped around in stul angry sees and the building that housed it was floating in thousands of pieces. HOMES MOVE A mile down the road, Thomas Peckhem saw his coal and shed disappear the same way. Both men felt their homes move under the pressure of pounding waves. Separating the two men was a 1.000-foot stretch of highway, loaded with rocks, sand, tin cans, timber and everything else the powerful seas could muster thmush the once strong looking breakwater. A 40-foot stretch of the paved highway was torn into huge hunks and heaved like pebbles across ne'u'by railway tracks. In the centre of town. a ware- house et the rear of a supermar- ket was torn to bits by the seas which sleppe.d against it most of the day. Only the roof and one (Continued on Page 5 col. 1) British Ship Has Hole In Hull, Listing ln'Atlantic HALIFAX (CP)-'-Crew members of the leaking British freighter Le Orille stuck to their ship in the stormy north 'Atientle Tuesday hi hi as anothe gait stood byte gt a aid.iLnee e . Gales and giant seas punched a hole through thelunderwster plates of the 7.047-ton La Orilla and water poured in. Her master reported in e suc- cession oi succinct messages that his ship was have to. taking water in the No. 2 hold and was starting to list. He made no mention of abandon- ing ship. The Israeli freighter Tel Aviv raced to the scene and marine Ladle here said she was standing y. The United States coast guard cutter Bluejecket also sped to the spot from her base at Ar-gentle. Nfld., end the salvage tug Founde- lion Josephine II sailed from Hali- faxv At last reports the La Orllla had a 12-degree list and there was a danger her cargo would start to shift. The La Orllla carries so crew members. Her master is Capt. T. L. Bradford. SAIL! FOB. PORT . Capt. Bradford's first message reported a 12 degree list and said he would try to return to Halifax. Two hours later he said he was steaming in e northwesterly direc- tion toward port and there was no change in the degree oi list. Coming Events "Card party Mt. Albion Legion Hall Jan. 12th. Lunches. "Osekonole card Party. lest wiitahire School tonight. "Come to card "party in ltanley Bridge, Friday. January 14. "Long Creek Hell, Rovers hockey sauce, canteen, Jan..lBth. , "Auction and Dance. Vernon Hell. January 17th. New iloor. "Dance. Mount Stewart Memor- ial Hell. Thursday. res ldvortlec-A. Canteen. Burns orchestra. "be at Mt. Ryan Hall. Johns- ton ltivar. Wednesday. January me. Add llIeer's Oreheetre. 2 daid United church An- nual . nureday. January nth. I p. in. - "Dance. Thursday evening. South gustloo nail. pains llelaesle "Community sum it Ilereli to- Tha Ia Orilla. owned by Burlee Marks Ltd.. of London, sailed from Halifax Sunday on route to Le Havre with a general cargo loaded The storm t at crlpp ed British ship wee e same one that thundered against the Newfound- land ooeet Monday. wreaking ha- voc among wharves and fishing gear at st. John's and hurling breakers of 200 feet against the perepets of old Fort Amherstr near the capital. . Le. Orille's last-known position 290 miles south of Cape lR.ace. Nild.. put her astrlde the North Atlantic shipping lanes. La. Orrlla was launchehd in 1042 at sunderland, England. She has at various times sailed as the Cheltenham and Empire Envoy. 0 TT A W A (GP)-Immigration dropped 30 per cent in November, the sixth consecutive monthly de- cilne, the government reported to- day. The number of new immigrants arriving in Canada dropped to 3,864 in November. down 5.252 from the 13,918 in the similar per- iod last year, the iipmigratlon dc- pertment said. This reduced the total for the first ll months oi 1964 to 146.773. down l0,u6 from 157,638 in the previous year. The flow oi arrivals showed de- ollnee from virtually all areas. In November. the numbers arriving from the United Kingdom do- creaeed by 25 per cent to 8.199 from 4,261. Those from northern Europe de- cllned in the month by to per cent to 2,114 from 4,262. The flow from the United states showed a three- per-cent increase to I50 from I32 but the total from all other areas was reduced by 43 per cent to 2.492 from 4.561. Among national groups. the de- es Sein.t..-lohp. N..B.nauq.,;l:la,lii';a:;- 0 Immigration Dropped 38 Per Cent During November Founded 18 cost”K"”E"i'ii”iiiilm'i5mlil1ii"' nsroiurn sEI av INVAIJERS: MOBILIZATION ORIJEREII Returns Froin Russia BERLIN, (AP)-A Detroit man back from slavery in the Soviet Union expressed the belief Tuesday that eight U. S. fliers shot down off Europe in 1950 may be alive in Soviet prison camps. John H. Noble. 31, spent 9 1-2 years in Soviet captivity. As a prisoner at the Vorkute. slave la- bor camp he witnessed the 1853 revolt there. He said the slave la- borers need "only a spark" to ilare into open rebellion. He declared the forced labor brigades are real.- less, have rebelled in the past and are likely to do so again. Noble said he had been told at Vorkuta. that the American air- men were held in a. Soviet pruon. He called it common knowledge at Vorkuta that some Americans who came down in the Baltic see. were in captivity. A, U- 5- NBVY privateer. a. four- engine plane. disappeared over the Baltic in April 1950, with 10 men. Noble also said that while he was in prison he had heard a ru- mor that Lt.-Gen. Vaaslly Stalin, son of the late dictator. is in M05. cow's Lublalq. prison. Noble described to reporter-g his four years in the notorious camp at Vorkuta in Arctic Russia. where the temperatures once hit 72 degrees below zero, and added quietly he lived through his ordeal only because of "confidence in God." Noble said 100.000 men were in- volved in a strike which set off the giant rebellion at Vorkuta in July. 1953. He said no inmates were shot on the spot. and 50 or 60 executed later Another 500 in- no 0 my Dies Stiddehly ' NORANDA. Que. (GP)--John W. Mackenzie, 52, a mining engineer in northern Ontario and north- western Quebec for the last 21 years, died Tuesday oi a heart at- tack. Mr. Mackenzie was born at Syd- ney. N.S., and attended Sydney Academy there. He received his bachelor of science degree from Mount Allison University. Sack- ville, N. 13.. and graduated as a mining engineer from the Nova Bcotle. Technical College. Halifax. Italians. Germans and English. English immigrants dropped in the month to 1.990 from 2.628 last year; Germans to 1,370 from 2,290; Italians to 1.571 from 2.696: He- brews to 98 from 286: Poles to 122 irom 301: Dutch to 299 from 852; Austrians to 156 from 398. The number oi Chinese coming to Canada increased slightly to 206 from 194. To Build Big Plant TORONTO. (GP)-Ethyl Corpor- ation of Canada, Ltd.. Tuesday an- nounced plans to build at sarnla, Ont. a "multl-million-dolla.r" plant to manufacture "Ethyl" anti-knock compound for gasoline. It is expecl.ed'that the plant will be in production early next year and will employ about 150 persons. MOhiT'R.EAL. (cr)- The Royal Victoria Hospital opened a beauty shop Tuesday for 1 women pat- -Moscow Regime On A Powclerkeg mates were wounded in the first minutes of the blowup. Noble said the strike in the coal mines-there are at least 50 in the area-and on construction projects was organized by followers of L. P. Berle, deposed police chief who was executed later by a. Red Army firing squad. The slightly built American told how he and his father, Charles Noble, a camera manufacturer, were trapped in Dresden by the war and compelled to work for the Nazi regime under "local govern- ment." In 1945, the advance guard of Russians arriving in Dresden ar- rested the Nobles. The elder Noble was released in 1952. Meantime, John was sentenced to 15 years, though never tried, and was trans- ferred to Vorkuta in 1950. The charge, he gathered. was that he and his father received American officers and soldiers in 1945 and had American food in their home. Series Of-Breaks Reported In City Charlottetown Police have re- ported a series of breaks in the City during the early hours oi yes- terday morning. The first involved a C.N.R. freight car on track three at the railway depot. On in- vestlgation. watchman Fred Doyle discovered a second break in a C. NR. express car from which a. ver- iety of articles or goods consigned to mainland points was missing. This is the second night in a row that railway cars have been tamp- ered with. A transport truck 0 ned by Cecil Greypi. O'Leary w oken into some time during the early hours of the morning while it was park- ed at 241 Dorchester Street. Mise- ing from the truck were two cases of tea. and two cases of lard. Sgt. stems Webster at 2.25 a.m. with his personally owned police dog was able to locate the cases of tea in 9. yard off Dorchester street. At nine a.m. yesterday morning police received a report that Doyle's service station on Grafton St. cast was entered during the night by breaking the lock on the door. A quantity of clgarets. chocolate bars peanuts and potato chips were mining in this instance. Last night a man was taken into custody in connection with the service station break and will ap- pear ln police court this morning. In addition to the above, Mich- ael's warehouse, Dorchester Street. was entered at approximately the same time and a washing machine taken. At 12:45 this morning Sgts. Lund and Webster located the missing machine on Dorchester Street but not in a. residence. Safety In Air DENVER. Colo (OP) -Seventy- their way to manoeuvres in Alaska par:-ichutcd to! safely Tuesday in two separate air accidents involv- ing huge C-il9 Flying Boxcars. The pilot of one plane was killed. The men were part of in 3.000- strong paratroop force being flown from Kentucky to Alaska, a 4.300- mile flight, with Edmonton one or the main stops. One hundred planes were involved in thepperation. Thirty - four paratroopers and three crew members parachuted to safety when their C-ll9 crashed lents--believed the frst such hos- cllnes showed up particularly ior (YITAWA (OP)-All parties in the Commons Tuesday com- mended a government- roposed boost in supplementary w ter un- employment insurance. but op- position epalrers said the govern- mem hes not gone far enough or weelr. TWO PROVISION! Iltopqyqpg -"Ill a"5.m R l , nigh-.a., A nlght.'l'w enty cash prices: also -lee ,now worth 080.00: Admis- Iloil seals. w"Danee. West any Hall. grgaubal service are to y -getouatgihoa boom 1.. o. Isumeets n a so hedge noon: urrey fiver. 'lhuse'dey.- Jenualy rub. it. at. "Annual meeting oi the King- "W 75116 I Tililfldlih 1511- 0 insurance bill-to ro- 2. A minimum N days oi sup- 13- 3 put. eber lerrett. Sec- via. an estimated, 010. , e lemetuery benefits a year. Mie- " . l iraebelr more lit"l.eneflia to urngria dgaseotleetego s new A special min i the ese-eppes assured very can In upwe s. Fan ' ' and pauses. in presenting the em. lie. 0 I field in last fast enough in fighting unemploy- III at. si-hm for the three o si- tfoti groups. debating Labor in- later Uregg'a high-priority maes- uro on its introduction. said the government should take action to m be ore Jobs available. 6 t u by unanimous agreement. the '” Rout! so fhgedsy. Jen. - 4.-c.a..m-M-...-.--... . . -- - - House interrupted formalities of the throne speech for its introduc- a pilot service in Canada. Boost In Payments Commended -Qiui'ck Passage .For Insurance Bill - tlon. The government is hopeful oi adoption late this. week. In that case. its provisions would -become effective from the start of the The provisioh .ere:, 1. Increasing e supplementary benefit payments to equality with regular benefits. The supplement- eries-paid between Jan. 1 arid April 15-to those whose inormal benefits have expired now run to between Q7 and I1 per cent of normal. said that on the bails oi last yr ter's unemployment supplement- ery insurance would cost 022.000.- ,heve serious unemployment again and burned after takeoff from Stewart air force base in Tennes- 000 annually compared with 312.- 000.0o0.a year ago. The money will come from the insurance fund, with no increase in em- ployer-employee contributions. Mrs. Ellen Fsirclough (PC- Hamiiton West). Labor specialist for her party. said she welcomes the bill but it should have been considered at a 1954 fall sitting oi Parliament. NOT FAR ENOUGH "The overnment has not gone nearly er enough in supplying lobe." she added. "There is reason to expect we'll before the situation eases. We want more in bland assurances that live can-sit things out. every- Weother Delays Search For Men HALIFAX (CP)-Poor visibility Tuesday delayed an RCA? Lancas- ter's search for nine Eskimos adrift on an ice pack in Hudson bay. RCA!" search and rescue centre here said the search craft would spend the night at Coral harbor on the Southampton islands and re- sume the hunt at daybreak. The Lancaster ilew irom Torbay Nfld.. to Coral harbor Tuesday. It carried food and a dinghy to be dropped ii the men are sighted. LINESMAN ELECTROCUTED SAINT JOHN, N. B. (CF)-A 28- year-old lineman. John J. Goggln of Saint John. was electrocuted Tuesday while working at south Musquash. The New Brunswick electric power commission em- ployee was on a pole when lie struck his head against a high ized quickly for action. however. The Costa. Rlcan government said a small rebel aerial force- presumably from Nicaragua - seized the town. Another source said a force moved out of San Jose Monday night in trucks and cars and began an uprising against the government of President Jose Fig- uei-es. Seized was Villa Quesada, a town of 3.500 about 40 miles this side of the Nicaraguan frontier. Figures said the town was taken over by a rebel force that landed there, in light planes during the morning. SAYS RELATIONS Bllolgl-ZN At the United Nations in New York, Rev. Benjamin Nunez, Costa power wire. i By EDDIE GILMORE LONDON (AP) - There are good indications that the Russians are going to use nuclear explos- ions on a scale unmatched in his- tory to blast out a central Asian sea that may change the weath- er nf Europe. . Western diplomats have brought back reports from Moscow that the Russians are planning to cre- ate such a sea as part of a long term program to change, the physical surface of Siberia and the wasielands tn the south. Last autumn the Soviet council Probe Background Of Three "Youths . c . ' .,.., - yo .---.I,. Held For Miirifer - MONTREAL (C-P)-- Police Tues- day lnvestigated the background of three Montreal youths who have been charged in connection with the shooting death of a 44-year- old Roman Catholic priest, Rev. Al-ired Quirion, neer Brandon. Relatives oi the teen-agers were expected to leave for Brandon within a few days,'police said. Inspector William Fitzpatrick. acting chief of detectives, said he has no law previously. They are identifi- ed as Claude Paquln and Gerard Yvon do Tonnancourt, both 17, of Montreal and Guy Ferragne. 18. oi suburban Riviera des Prairies. All three are Roman Catholics, and police said two oi Ferragne's brothers are priests. One--a mis- while the other is serving in Chile. received the new of her one United States perairoopers on , mg. , . The pilot. who held his crippled ,2 ' plane on a straight course for the it one will get a Job. It is an ex- tremely serious aituetien.", arrest. 71 Paratroopers Jump To Accidents see. emergency bailout, was reported to have stayed with the plane as it plummeted to earth moments later. One paratrooper was admitted in the base hospital with minor in- juries. The paratrooper: aboard were members of the 503rd airborne li'l- - iantry regiment from Fort Camp- bell, l(y.. the same outfit involved when 33 soldies parachuied to safety as their plane made :1 forced landing near Mnnl.. earlier Tuesday. Replying to Mrs. Fslrclough. Mr. Gregg said he doubts ii fell passage of the bill would be e made it any more useful to we - era this winter. Michael Starr (PC - Ontario) sald.the Jen. 1-April ill period should be extended. He suggested a May 15 deadline, saying there is much unemployment b e t w e e it April 1!: and that date. Mr. Gregg said the question of extending the duration was studied. But the soundness of the seao.ooo.oon insurance iund.erstersd into it. The fund was to be kept ectuerlelly sound. J. Wilfrid Duh-eehe (PC-Quebec West) recommended that the pe- riod during which supplementary benefits are paid be extended to May 1. I v immediate knowledge oi ' I the youths running afoul of the g sionary to Africa-is at home now . Mrs Ferragne. who had a total oi 5 11 children. wept bitterly when shsr : son's ' Two airmen were reported miss- Miles City, I Rican delegate, said after a tele- Russians May Use Atomic. Blasts To Create New Sea of applied sciences in Moscow published an outline revealing plans that an area in Siberia larger than North America would be irrigated and criss-crossed by a system of canals and dams. MILDEB WINTERS This, said the Soviet experts, would change the weather in Si- heria, making the winters milder and summers warmer. Western meteorologists say this probably would have-, a profound effect on the weather throughout Europe. Returning diplomats also report Soviet plans in diyert two of Si- berlais big rivers. the Oh and the Yenisei, hoth oi which flow north oi the Arctic ocean. They said Russian scientists .havo,pI'-lueSs1&vreg,ggledJh9Y, ho 9 to be able to fun e these lwaie - ways .tlow southward, forming a central Asian sea. The diplomat: said nuclear lex- ploslons, in which the Soviet erm- c.d forces could test their atomic and hydrogen weapons, would he used to blast out the tremendous land areas necessary to bring all this about. prrrvtr-"v.zw-2 . Brandon. (OP Photo). SAN JOSE, Costa Rica (AP) - A Costa Rican town on a direct invasion route to this capitav city has been seized by an airborne armed force, officials said Tues- day. Costa. Rica's available armed manpower was mobil- There were no immediate reports of actual fighting, Origin of the force was not established, but the foreign ministry said a break in relationsbetween, Costa Rica and neighboring Nicaragua appeared imminent. also making winters milder thereuygl. ..?..:....:.-A--- phone talk with Eigueres that dip- lomatic relations had been broken with Nicaragua. Nunez said "enemy forces" had crossed the border from Nicaragua and a bat- tle was presumed to be in pro- ress. He asserted the attackers were backed by Costa Rlcsn Com- munists. Reports here said' the force at Villa Quesada might possibly be combined Nlcararaguans and Costa Rlcan exiles opposed to Figucres. Communications with the town were cut. Truckloads oi helmeted troops moved through San Jose and there were machine-gun emplacemcnts at strategic points. Airports also were guarded and big oil drums were placed on some runways. Domestic airline flights were grounded. but international traific moved normally. The announcement by Figueroa capped long wrangling between his government and the regime in Nic- aragua headed by Anastasia som- oza. Last week Costa. Rica com- plained to the council oi the Or- ganlzatlon or American States - made up oi representatives oi the 21 American republics-that it was threatened by invasion from Nic- aragua. The council. which had appealed to both sides Monday to do nothing to aggravate the dispute. went back into emergency session Tucs- day in Washington and voted un- animously to investigate the quar- Seek Floor Prices For Form Products WINNIPEG (CP) - The Inter- .ru.n,vi 91-1 at ;WU.iofI.' tC.0uuc.i1 will iiisk u&'&pW&l priced" '76! agricultural products in its an- nual presentation to thex federal government Jan. 19, Jake Schulz. council chairman. said Tuesday. He said the "council wants sup- port prices to bring agricultural products into propenrelatlonshlp with other goods and services farmers must buy. Priest Fatally Shot . Rev. Alfred Quirlon, 44, of St. Edouard, Alta., found shot to death Sunday in his car five miles east of G Police said the Quebec-born priest was shot three times. Father Quirlon was retumlng to St. liklotaeaet after taking a group of seminarians to are holding three men in connection with the WEB Wlnni ROI? niooung... r' , '!B!0llQ Mrs. e. edloins Mc- Qga:gy1s,,i,.p:.a w of houses joined tog er. lh t maximum temperatures: i es.-km . Prince Edwardislendia . . Like.ilii:-Doug S est: Agent: - "9 of - For roblems Atlantic Prove. OTTAWA (CP)-A Halifax Libe erel suggested Tuesday that t federal government establish: , special agency to deal with re- glonal problems of the Atlantic! provinces. S. R. Belcom. member for ,Hali4V' Viax, said in the Commons that research could provide some on the answers to problems faced by, the Atlantic provinces economic council. At the same time, Mr. Belcona said he is convinced that the gov- ernment should set up an Atlan- tic development unit through either the individual or joint of- forts of the Bank of Canada and the Industrial Development Bank. Speaking at the resumption of the throne speech debate, Mr. Balcom said "the federal govern- ment ought to have an agency whose primary and principal in- terest is the regional problems oi the Atlantic provinces.” Royal commissions or interde- partmental committees had been set up in the past to study re- gional problems but lack of con”- tinulty lessened their usefulness. Mr. Balcom indicated one, prob- Iern federal researchers should (Continued on Page 2 col. 4) Post Guard On Mecorrlay Home wasmnoron. (AP) - Policy. posted a guard about the home of nator Joseph Mccerthy Tues-. ey after his next door neighbon reported she had received a. tel- ephoned warning that "we are go- ing to blow up Joe Mccarthy to- - night." . Reporters talked to the neighbor, Mrs. George W. Ennis, after friends .oiuMcOerthy told of the phone; ca . t Mccerthy said 'he believed the warning came from "some crack- pot. a one HALF rue Wokka DOESN'T KNOW How THE OTHER HALF-'1 Keeps r ALNE -1 .AND IT DOESK in-T,c.o.iaz .-A TORONTO (CP)-Minimum arti , Min. Mal. Dawson .............. 5b 7 . Vancouver 32 .19 Victoria .. . . 38 44 Edmonton 10b 1 Calgary - . db 9 Regina . 2 4 Winnipeg . lob 13 Toronto 2.1 29 Ottawa lib lo .. Montreal . ii 17 ' Quebec . . . . . .. it 11 Fredericton 30 31 Saint John .. 24 32 Moncton .. 29 32 Halifax .. 31 35 " Charlottetown .28.. .31 Sydney . . . . . 32 38. ' Yarmouth .. 30 38 i St. John's 31 as l. office here says e northerly few of air that has persisted since the first of the '” continued over- the forecast district Tueede Skies were cloudy and there were snow- ilurries in the tern regions. but they were idely scattered in the I western reg one. Forecasts: Cl .eseemerrIee: nus; . g winds 30: low-high at Charlotte- tewe II and Il.. Bay of Gaeleun New Brunswick: Cloudy with snowfiurries in wid- ely scattered beauties: ve mild. north-winds let Houston and I8. Fredericton 22 and 80. Saint John It all! 80. Iidniundsten lb and 25. canapballtoe 22 and at. Bay of Fundy: North winds in; widely a e a It a r e d enewilurries. vieibuity lo miles lowering oe- egalonaily in ilurries to five miles. ntlnuieg mild. A High tide today at uberlettetown at a a. in. and us 9. ' Sllhnlldb min. nuaiaesrtaaa ' , smrheetoeeyat'l.ua.aa.eed seuataatpae, ii .HALIFAX (cry - The weather - .;.-'T-:.-r (ii, '.. l iii