rnepnous 8506 A Buyer meets seller with Guardian Want Ads. Dial 8506 ask for clas'si- 1 fled ad taker, for quick results. 16 PAGES o who maturation ”Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew" CHAR Hungarians To Arrive Tonight The first group of Hungarian refugees selected for reestablish- ment in this Province will arrive in the clu tonight via the Borden train. A total of 13 persons comprise the first draft chosen by the hu- mlgration Department as suitable for settlement in P.E.l.. according to information released yesterday by Brigadier W.W. Reid. Deputy Minister of Welfare and Labor. An indication of the variety of voluntary exiles from Russian- rlomlnated Hungary who luv. sought freedom in this country is Il10WII by the varied occupational categories of this small group. There is Tlbor Ugor, a lawyer, his wife and three children; tour nngle farm workers; one denial technician; and air mecbanle and wife. and a blacksmith. arrival the refugees wnrbe met by Brigadier Reid and Dr. 3-Q1:-I mcurgls. geputy lanrlster no: . 0 I more Co-ordin ' LT. GOVERNOR 1'. W. The Legislature opening of the Legislature yester- day as Governor Prowse read the Speech from the Throne. Special guests at the opening included Neil A. Matheson. M.P. For Queens County; Judges of the Su- preme Court. G.J. Tweedy and Mark R. MacGulgan; llls Excel- lency Bishop M.A. Maclzachern. Rev. A. Frank MacLean and Rev. Donald Campbell. Montague. After ills Honour had departed from the Legislative Chamber. the Bpeech From The Throne, was read again by the Speaker of tin House. lion. J. Augustin Gall PRO-FORMAL BILL" Premier Matheson introduced I pro-formal bill entitled "An Act Respecting The Administration of Votes" which was read a first time by the Clerk of the House. Thomas Cullen. A committee to prepare and re- port on select standing commit- toes was named as follows: Hos. Eugene Cullen. Boo. M. 1.. Bon- arlous nell. L.G. Dewar. ILI..A., A.A. gaflxue. M.L.A., George Kltson. They will name the committees on Agriculture. Public Accounts. Private Bills. Provincial Library, Engrosaiog of Bills. Contingent Ac- counts. Rules and Orders. Revis- ing the Journals. Public Buildings. 1.. while Major Victor Travers. Us- Prowse arrives at the Provincial her of the Black Rod (extreme Building to open the Legislature lem. stands to attention. Lt. Col. yesterday afternoon. The RECCE A.W. Rogers. E.D. aide to the Band is seen playing "The Queen" Governor is seed with His Honour. Many Attend The Opening Oi Yesterday Packed galleries featured thf Transportation and Communica- tion. Tbe first named on each com- mittee will be chairman and three shall stltute a quorum. The Premier announced the fol- lowing changes in the Govern- ment slnce last Session: Hon. Dougald Maclfinnon appointed to the portfolio of Fisheries; Forrest W. Phillips appointed Minister of welfare and Labor. Accompanying the Lieutenant- Governor. were his aides Lt. Col. A.W. Rogers. E.D.. Wing Com- mander A.G. Macmillan. Capt. J. J. Connolly. V.R.D.. and Private ant. secretary Surgeon Commander L. E. Prowse. lt.C.N. (R). - ll GUN SALUTE A fifteen-gun salute was fired from Victoria Park at 3 o'clock announcing the arrival of His Honour and party at The Provinc- ial Building. A group of high ranking officers of the three services were invited to join the Lieutenant-C gearty at thlle Legislati Cham- rs They were: Brigadier G.G.K. Peake. D.S.O.. E.D.; Squadron Leader ILA. Lutes, repreaentl Group Capt. G.H. Swetman. D.s. 0.. D.F.C.. C.D.. officer Command- ing R.C.A.F. Station. Summer. side; Commander .i.N. Kenny. R. THRONE SPEECH DELIVEREDA (Continued on page 2 col. I) TojAp.point Legislative A Committee On Education nointsnedef a select stand- wayproiectmandofarnngeme is ins committee pl the Legislature for establishing a frosen f I i 5 able production. other meat policies and activities are reviewed at considerable length, rnxrorspnszcn . Pollowinglsthefulltextofthe - session of the Forty-eighth General As. 5311313! Tr gh semblv of our Province. Federal Pipeline Loan Repaid With interest Ahead Of Time 0'I"l'AWA (cm -- The room: pipeline loan um blew on us. worst Commons storm in gang us repaid Tuesday. with upm. Trade Minister Howe nassec-as ii eeesing industry to handle veget- Speech: . "lib Speaker and Gentlemen force tlve : It hat Trans-Canada Pipe Linea Ltd. uraed over to the government 'a iotal of 350.7lI.Hl3.03. But lo the tilt. trouble followed the loan. The repayment-more than a month ahead of the gnvernmmt- S91 deadline-was In have been marked by a ceremony Tuesday mm at which comgeany oili- te turn over cheque to Ilrlllgiwe. But fog closed in "9? 1k capital and top company Officials were delayed at Toronto "ll!!! pine flights were cancel- grl'i'l til. i. i E is ill .2 "Our farmers have reason to be thankful for a bountiful harvest in 1956. The farm lands of Prince Edward Island have produced 0!- celient yields in all field crops. Exceptionally line weather dur- increasing employment as for those actively GIIIIIOG catering to the visitors in our Prov- ince as well as fu an ex- cellent home market for the prod- acts of our farms fisheries. Government views. the efforts of the E is- lllslliiit uur'l fa Nussnut; Joseph Frederick Gallant. has been missing since I y . He left his home at Johnston's Rt- 16, 8 ver .1 Rocky Point where he was em- Ployed by Thomas Murphy on the nu. He spent two nights with friends in Charlottetown. the ferry hav- ing stopped because of ice condi- tions. He left. saying he was going to his work and has not been seen since. Information should be pass- ed to Mrs. Patrick Tralnor. John- son's River or the R.C.M.P- Child Wanders Away, Drowned HALIFAX (CP)-Three-year-old Frances Mary Hughes drowned in the Northwest Arm Tuesday af- ter she became lost and strayed almost miles from her home. A witness who was unable to reach the youngster in time said she was crying as she waded into the Lwaters. looking neither left or I e CAMP QUABANTNED BRANDON, Man. 6CPt--Sevcn- teen membe n of the rmed forces at Camp Srilo. is m es southeast of here, have been stricken with infectious jaundice and o Quaran- iine has been placed on the mil- LOTTETOWN. CANADA WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 27. 1957 A ARAB SAYS CANADA BACKS ZIONIST POLICY 'Pearson's Prop Mideast Blasted By Redsi I OTTAWX (P)-Finance Minis- ter Harris said Tuesday that while the Progressive Conserv- atives kept harping on govern- ment waste they seldom make a parliamentary stand against any particular item of federal ex- penditure. The C.C.F. he said. favors ”high taxation A the distribution of wealth through taxation." The Conservatives, however, proposed further expenditures while critic- izing present expenditures. now about 35.000.000.000 annually. Mr. Harris spoke in the Com- mons on a government resolution to set up for the third straight year the special committee to re- view the spending estlmstes of selected government departments before they are studied by the whole House. TWO DEPARTMENTS He said the government plans to have the commit study the estimates of two departments, which he did not name. Earlier, Opposition Leader Diel- HALIFAX (CP) -- At least 10 sealing vessels will pull from nearby Dartmouth before Monday to take part in the annual seal hunt in the Gulf of st. Lawrence and off the northeast coast of Newfoundland. Six Halifax ships will take part i ill! the hunt. Till! TN the--Arctic Prowler. Arctlc Sealer. Theron, Theta, Tom. and Beater. he Arc- tic Sealer was scheduled to sail for St. John's Tuesday night to pick up a crew. Newfoundlsnders will also serve on the Theron an y 1, intending to go to Theta In kddition to the Halifax ves- One P. E. I. Vessel Included In Sealing Fleet This Season at March 5 and on the front until Harris Defends Spending Against Attacks By PC's enbaker sharply criticized the amount of government spending, saying it is "possible if not prob- able" that millions of dollars in unneeded expenditures are ap- proved by the Commons in a last- minute rusb each session to pass the government's spending pro- gram. He proposed an amendment to empower the committee to sum-i mon witnesses and documentsl charging that the only evidence psesented to it at the last two session "has been evidence which the government wanted to present." without those powers the com- mittee was ”a sham and a delu- sion." Existing parliamentary ma- chinery for examining govern- ment spendlng was "almost totally ineffectual." AMENDMEN REJECTED The proposed d t was rejected by Prime Minister St. Laurent who said Mr. Diefenbaker was suggesting in effect that sen- sels. the Norwegian sealers Tot- tan and Polarstar. the Curling from Grindstons in the Magdalen Islands and the Oral from Prince Edward Island. will sail from Halifax. Five ships will join the hunt h-om Newfoundland. They are the Glenwood. Ten) Nova and Al- gertne suit of St; John's: the Plac- eatla out of Trepassey on south shore and the hassle Marie out of Twilllngate. Before the hunt begins - seals are protected in the gulf until March lo-aerial surveys will be made of the areas. HALIFAX (CP)--A new Nova Scotia legislature opens its first session here today with Progres- sive Conservatives in the saddle for the first time in 23 years. Premier Stanfield. who led his Dirty to power in an October pro- vincial election. faces an opposit- ion of la liberals and one CCP member in the 43-seat assembly. The Conservatives. with 24 seats. have an effective majority of four after the speaker is elected. W. S. K. Jones. a Liverpool. N.8. lawyer. who represents Queens county, is expected to get the speaker's job. Opposition strength is expected to sharpen debate. The premier and Opposition Leader Hicks al- ready have exchanged verbal hrickbats over the state of the provincial tress . Mr. Stanfield IIYI Im.l&udefi t of more thing . in prospect nn blame's Liberal overspendlng. The ltsrveo-no. Duke Says Tour Was Made' Al "personal Sacrifice" TQNN (CF)-A bronsed and of Edinburgh. INDI- welcome- last Liberal budget called for a small surplus. Newt Nova Scotia Legislature Will Open First Session Today Controvery exists over Conser- vative dlsmissal of highway work- crs and liquor commission em- ployees and the premier's recent announcement of a go-slow policy on new school construction. INDUSBIAL DEVELOPMENT The government is expected to introduce legislation to set up a 310,000,000 indus” ' development urganiution to sup lement the work of the provinc trade and industry department. The development body was a plank in the Conservative elect- tion platform. Half the capital would come from individual. mu- nicipal, trade union and company subscriptions. A new tax agree t with Ot- tawa. negotiated by the previous administration. will name up for ratification 31. Despite indications of a busy session, Mr. Stanfield says he thinks the House will finish its . the city .lhc work in the usual six to eight weeks. HANY-SIDED ITI1. The duke was Imvdneld mamas: jaunt. shipwrigh mama" -acknowlcdgiag some of the ca- pacities conferred on the hke by Sir Cullum said that on every stage of the royal tour. laldsmrs patted one snotht on he beat chuckled. "Iooal bu ads The duke la a freeman in city. in his speech. the duke referred usriy to the places he had vie- it lor government officials he called before the committee to justify ex- penditures. e That could be done by the pub- lic acc ts committee. There was a vast difference between 'ex- pendltures--money already spent -and appropriations or estimate... He could only conclude that what the Opposition suggested was the system used in the United States, which was foreign to Canadian constitutional practices. Mr. Dlefenbaker's amendment got support from the CCF and Social Credit groups. A. Wesley Stuart (L-Charlotte) said that if all the recommenda tions of the Conservatives were adopted. 32.000.000.000 would be added to federal expenditures this year. Mr. Harris. rejecting the amend- ment, said no changes in the com- mittee's terms of reference are A Inna k L , had not worked the committee as it might have been under its present terms. Killer Sought In Hamilton HAMILTON. Ont. iCP)-Police late Tuesday were interrogating a suspect in the death of a young red-haired woman whose body. clad only in panties. was found stuffed beneath the steps of a house in central Hamilton. She had been beaten or kicked to death. Dr. H. L. Foster. the city path- nlogiat. said there was be evin- ence that the woman. identified as Jeannie Dean of Hamilton. had been raped. Her age was given variously as "about Mi." 8 and H. 'l'ha.body was discovered about I a.m. by Wallace Walsh, a serv- ice station employee. as the left the house next door for work. The woman's nose had been broken. her teeth knocked in and scalp almost torn from the s by the ferocity of one of the blows that killed her. Police said she may have been kicked or assaulted with an auto- mobile jackhendle. . The identification was made by her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Dean, who said Jeannie had not lived with them for l0 years and had. come home "only off and "She was an alcoholic and only this morning we had decided to give her one last chance and to assist her to rehabilitate herself. "We wanted to scrape up all the money we could to send her to a home to take the alcoholic cure," they said. Authorities believed she may have been slain elsewhere by someone who dumped the body under the steps. she had been dead about 24 hours when she was found. Completes Flight Across Atlantic SHANNON. reland (AP) - Songwritor Max Conrad com- pleted his 25th flight across the Atlantic in n Piper plane Thurs- dsy night and radioed all was well over Kilkee. Conrad. of Winona. Minn-. and Capt. A. ('. Lvlonkeyl Morgan. an rlsh frcc-lance pilot. radioed Shannon airport that they would fly on to Dublin in their twln-en- 'i""' mane wmmm nlimlllmlnirht t mcsss e sa 0 The r R .. took less than 12 hours and that they were nearly one hour ahead of sched- ule. They flew at ll:-0W '93 W0" ggggguyandgotaboostfrom winds. ' Nine of Conrad's MEN! hi" been solo. V ice Fields 5 Miles Off St. John's 81'. JOHN'S. Nfld. (CP) -ice fields sprawled on the ocean fl" off st. .lohn's Tue:-O E. VIIATHII Cenilnueusfreeslry lbtls European Del UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. lCP) -Canada's new proposals for set- tling the Middle East crisis were blasted Tuesday by Soviet and Arab delegations as the United Nations assembly debated sanc- tions against Israel. External Affairs Minister Pear- son made his long-awaited sub- mission after the debate resumed Tuesday morning. It came as the Arab delegations called more strongly than ever for the cutting off of all economic and military aid to the Jewish state for its fail- ure to withdraw from the Gaza Strip and the Gulf of Aqaba. The Canadian delegate laid down a four-point suggestion for achieving an Israeli withdrawal by offering her security against Egypt. An Arab spokesman called it a Zionist proposal. "Canada is definitely supporting Zionist policy and has been doing so all along." Farid Zelneddine of Syria told the assembly. sought to make out that Egypt was the aggressor and Israel the victim in the dispute. "To take this path is to take the path of connivance with ag- gression." the Russian declared. "it the United Nations cherishes its prestige it cannot, follow the path down which the Canadian delegate tried to push it." Other delegatlo , -' ly from the Commonwealth Western Euro the Peer- s tag a way out of the impasse with- out resorting to sanctions. However. American delega” sources circulated a report that the us. is working on a proposal lncorpoeadag of Pearson's ideas-to obtain of sanctions. No details were avail- able but it was thought a resolu- tion likely would be introduced to- day when Benry Cabot Lodge. chief U.S. delegate. is expected to address the general assembly. N0 U.S. COMMENT that it was theroughtudy comment as Clllldllll In P0035 and son pa posals; however. as point- raei's withdrawal without the use An American spokesman re- fused comment on the Pearson speech beyond uvlns "a carefully drawn pie: which re- I . Israeli delegates here withheld elr delegation head. Ambassador Abba Eben. was in Em"! Washington for further uuu with Dulles. (in Washington. Eben told re- he had discussed the specifically selnyssdensivefeg patches; cllangekstsnmeeaiure ssewsuius. law-high20end32. PRICE Sc osals For Commonwealth 8. Western oi egates Pleased the line Pearson has taken all through this 1957 session of the assembly. but with the additional" proposal of a , ' ' UN commis- sioner to take over in the Gaza strip following an Israeli with- drawal. Pearson urged that the UN take over "to the maximum possible extent" in the strip. including civilian administration as well as occupation by the UN Emergency Force. The other proposals: 1. Israel and Egypt should for mally pledge ”suupulous" ob servance of all the provisions Oi the 1940 armistice agreement. 2. Arrangements should be made with the governments con- cerned to deploy units of the UN force on the armistice demarca- tion line. 3. It should be "agreed and al- tirmed" that there. should be no interference with " nocent pess- age through. or any assertion of belligerent rights in." the Straits of Tiran or the Gulf of Aqaba. SOVIET VIEW Soviet delegate Arkndy Soboiev f-'UARAN'l'EE SOUGHT complained that Canada had Israel has regarded her force in the Sharm-el-Shaikh ares com- manding the gulf as her only freedom for her shipping out of Elath. her only southern port. be straits join the gulf with the But see. and Egyptian guns could command its llls-mile width. Pearson suggested again Tues dw that the UN force move into the Gaza Strip to provide secup ity. and went a step further by saying that the UN's taking over of civil administration also would benefit Israel. In view of the strip's status. ing to the sovereign territory of any neighboring state. any ar- rangement for the administration of the territory . . . must be con- sidssed I an interim measure pending final agreement" as is its proper disposition. Pearson But ”in this way. and perhaps should be of and such a manner to pmftd interests of the inhabltantl. both Egypt and Israel I 3: existing antlpathles or . . . ” duos new cltments of conflict. also gave Israel a however. "as an area not belong - Be in effect. that f she did not draw even an the terms be sus- gested might be adopted. 010 INF sanctions delegations g in to withdraw heir support. ' US. capital interpreted them as tending to ensure against the re- with Dulles. Israeli sources in the turn of Egyptian forces.) Canada's sillleations followed Looks Forward To Starting Weekly In His Home Town OTTAWA (Special) - Clarence Glllis. CCF membe for Cape Breton South and only sitting mem- ber of the commons of his party east of Manitoba. told The Guard- len Tuesday he plans to follow a newspaper career when he decides to leave the federal political areas. He proposes to start moderately with a weekly in his home town of Glace Bay. which will, as he puts it, "Give the other fellow's side." For too long, Mr- Glllis said, the people of Cape Breton have had to buy the one local daily newspaper there or do wi news. He conceded that the for- mer Glace Bay Gaselte had failed. but attributed the failure to faulty editing and inadequate manage ment. By correcting mistakes made by others in the past. Mr. Glllis feels he can easily make his new venture "A going Eves nowhels far advanced in biay planning. The Cape Breton CCP member is known as the foremost spokes- man of labor in Parliament and is MP l mu ishsouihcosly aso snlil n. fleerof ,5;iEil' lalll lull eggs; i3? ii i. ,li