I 1! PAGII Federal o'r'rAWA (CP)-Canadians will mwIienightefAprillhow their federal tax bill ahapea up tor the comin year. , Finance Minister Harris announ- ud Tuesday in the Commons he plans to deliver his 1955-IO bud- gel at s p.m. EST that evening. The budget will net tax and tariff rates for the fiscal year starting April 1 and will show the basis .1 government spending for the ear. ,in his first budget since he took over the finance portfolio from l-ion. D. C. Abott last sum- mer. the 50-year-old minister also will show how government ac- counts balance for the current year ending March ll. EXPECT DEFICIT This 1954.55 'inanclsi statement is expected to produce the gov- ernment's first deficit in eight years. Former financb minister Abbott. low a justice of the Supreme Court of Canada. budgeted last Soviet Gov't Successo g To LONDON (AP)-Till. vernment chose Vassil insky's old job as I foreign minist . r The announcement, broadcast by lie Moscow radio. came four months to the day after Vlnhinslq. 70. riled of a heart attack in New York while heading the Soviet dd. eiurimi to the United Nations. Kuznelsov. onetime Ford motor company worker and ex-chief of the U. S. S. R.'s trade unions. had been a deputy foreign minister. iiis elevation to rank with Andrei Gromyko as a first deputy was one of three high-level promotions in Foreign Minister V. M. Molo- tov's bailiwick. Two other foreign office officials were raised to deputy ministe -. Both previously were members of the ministry's governing board- lts collegium. . ASIAN SPECIALIST one. N. 0. Fedorenho. has been sneclallilnii on Asian affairs. He attended both the Berlin and Gen- eva conference of 1964. The other. V. S. Semyenov. B an authority an Germany. He has been Soviet ambassador to East Germany and Ioviet high commissioner. The changes followed by It hours the announcement of the re- moval in disgrace of Gear 1'. Alexnndrov as minister of cidlure. Alexandrov was replaced by N. S. Mikliailnv. former ambassador to T Report On Salli Vaccine ANN ARBOR. Mich. (AP)-The success or failure & my laur Polio vaccine will be disclosed at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor Tucsdly. April 11. Dr Harlan Hatchet. president of the university, and Basil 0'- Connor. president of the National Foundation for Infantile Paraly- "'i Ti"-'ldIy announced arrange- sients for releasing the news. Dr. Thomas Francis Jr.. chief of the vaccine evaluation centre at the universltyi will release the ofhcisl report on the effective- ness of the vaccine in the light of s field ptudy. involving two Million children. made last spring. Coming Events "Dance in Millvlsw Hall Easter Monday. can i TlIilfSt'lll?V, and ulcmn -. sac d hmhltf Game. lit. Albion Hall r"('1eaning gag mg '3'" daily. miner Macponald. "baud. "Cards and erokinole. Wiltshlre :0 Thursday. March 24. lzhl p'. ('3-nizo North Itustico Wednes- va-Vull D-m. Jackpot 855. Door "R1-mm"-as sais. Christian Church Hall. Saturday. March Ith. Ill p. m. "Auction and Dance in Vernon l -Thur-dsv. Ifarcb son. ' "Why teem. a "Crspaud rink Wlnsloe 1m. by 3'31: Shore vs. s;sii-view. ssaie '"D-nce. wast -ofthe Inc a will m.;d.:c hotels '5 Vlad- ,,Mmo;:snus,nnsssuse Maxims of a , More Man Caution h the parent 1 IaMy- . ii audgei Speech April 5 April for a nominal u.ooo.ooo surplus. Iinca then. there has been an easing in the rate of up- ard surse of the national aco- ll my. on which the ” high budget spending was based. Mr. Abbott budgeted for the spending of s4.4so.ooo.ooo. just so,- 000.000 less than what he esti- mated would be taken in through taxes. It was the closest balance In many years. UNDER. Pllllllllll For the coming fiscal year. Mr. Harris has been under pressure from various directions to cut taxes and has - in his initial estimates for the year placed be- fore Parliament Jan. 28-started chopping expenditures. It has been reported that some tax cuts are virtually certain in the new budget. But where they Will lie and "how much they will llnount to are anyona's guess. The budget as planned by Mr. Harris will be delivered the day before the Commons rises April 8 for a 11-day Easter recess. Appoints . Vishinsky Pnlalldi former secretary of the central committee of the party. and former head of the Soviet Kuznctsov w o r k e d at Ford's Rouge plant in the Detroit area in the early 1930s as one of thou- sands of exchange students. He re- turned to Russia in INI. He A i the ' ' affairs field only after Stalin's death. He was made a deputy minister than and sent to China as Soviet am- bassador for several months. France Nears Climax On Porls Treaties PARIS 4Reutars)- The West's three years of effort to clear the way for rearrning West Germany approaches its climax today with the start of a three-day debate in France's Upper House-last major liI.tl:tdlI to ratification of the pro- But the government is so as- sured the treaties will be ratified that it is concentrating its en- ergies hi a different direction. gornpletely divorced from the de- a e. In fact, Hie debate itself is ex- pected to produce fewer fireworks than the antics of a husky. 34- ar-old store-owner named Pierre oujade whose anti - taxation mov eat is posing a serious tbre to the government. Premier Ed ar Faure Tuesday night put the inishlng touches to the "taxpayers charter," a series of tax reforms he will present to his cabinet today and to the Na- tional Assembly Thursday for de- bate the following Monday. START INVESTIGATION Meantime. police launched a full investigation into Poujade's activ- ities to determine what lies bdiind the movement which has swept the country and influenced many par- liamentary d e p u t i a s. Poujade claims tl)0,000 small businessmen throughout France are behind his campaign to stop paying taxes un- til complicated tax laws are changed. Labor unions and co-operatives strongly opposed the Pouiade movement. Details of the premier's new tax plans have not been disclosed but first reports indicated he will go sosne way to satisfy Pou,iade's objections to random examination of retailers' books by speci I tax In its place. aure tion. removing the necessity for in- tansive inspec ions. Pdovdo Complains Shortage of Cars LONDON (AP) - Pravda re- ported Tuesday serious shortcom- ings in the manufacture of Soviet automobiles. trucks and agricul- tural mechinery. It said Russian industry was even turning out ob- solete aad inefficient machines. 0N On Unemplo OTTAWA (CP)- Donald Flem- ing charged Tuesday the federal government has shown "complete evidence of irresponsibiiity' in meeting rising unemploym t. Th a Progressive Conservative member for Toronto Egiinton said in the Commons that unemploy- ment has become "a stark. ugly fact" with more than 600.000 lob- leas. Some unemployed men were deliberately deserting their fam- ilies so that their dependents could qualify for municipal relief assist- ance. ' Mr. Fleming. speaking in the sixth day of a spasmodic Commons debate on unemployment which started March 1. said the country still is waiting to hear a concrete government proposal for meeting the situation. "It is complete evidence of ir- responslbuity on the part of those who occupy the treasury benches.” N0)?-CONFIDENCE MOTIONS The debate. adjourned last Wed- nesday. resumed on two motions of non-confidence in the govern- ment. A CCF motion demands im- mediate fcderal acceptanc of re- sponsibility for care of all able- bodied unanployed and action on a long-term program of public in- t t and -- f de elop- ment to stimulate cmployme t. A Progressive Conservative motion in in more general terms. Latest unemployment figures re- leased Monday showed 613.439 job applications on file at National Employment Service offices at Feb. 17. The bureau of statistics estimated that at the same than 379,000 persons were without jobs and looking for work. Mr. Fleming said the federal government had the main respon- sibillty of meeting the problem. Yet it had not even prepared for present conditions. it should have made agreements with the prov- inces long ago. but it had dilly- dallied and lost precious time by refusing even to call a conference witht the provinces an unemploy- men . . VARIED FORCES C. W. Carter (IFBurin-Burgeo) said there are many. varied forces which cause unemployment and the federal government cannot be Par-ticles On LAS VEGAS. Nev. (AP) - An atomic cloud sprinkled light radio- active particles on Las Vegas Tuesday but authorities said there was no danger to civilians or to marines manoeuvring at the test s te. The medium-size blast. sixth of the 1955 test series on Yucca flat. sent up a towering cloud that was blown. directly over this city of 55,000 for the first time in five years of nuclear weapons experi- menting in Nevada. From 40.000 fast. the cloud drop- ped invisible bits of matter that gave geiger counter readings of 10 mllliroentgens per hour at Nellis air force base in North Las Vegas. The highest reading in town was 5 mr. normal is 2 mr. The Atomic Energy Commission termed the in- crease insignificant. Most fallout reported ofisite was 70 mr. on the air force bombing which is 79 miles from Las Vegas. The 500-foot tower shot was used by 2.000 rnnrines for the most elab- orate manoeuvres yet held at the AEC site. SHELTER IN TRENCIIES The marines ducked in six-foot trenches 3,500 yards from ground sero as molten bits of steel tower fell back to the ground. Ten minutes after the blast. radiation safety teams gave the okay and helicopter. began flying the atomic brigade forward in a simulated attack on an enemy stronghold. A 28-helicopter shuttle service moved nearly all of the Commons Resumes Debate yment Issue held responsible for all of them. its policies could affect only econ- omic forces within the country. He charged opposition members with making no constructive sug- gestions to meet the cause of un- employment. However the govern- ment had taken action in a dozen fields. including tax reductions. an easy-money policy and increases in unemployment insurance and other social security payments. It had increased public works Inns and helped support agricu ture. mining and fishing. To Seek Honing In Gulf Wafers HALIFAX (CP) --Mercury Fishehies Ltd. of Halifax will send two ships. a trawler and a refrigeration vessel. into the Gulf of St. Lawrence within the next three weeks to search for herring. The Nova Scotia legislature committee on industry WII told Tuesday the company hopes to establish a large- scaie fishing industry. The government is backing the project up to a miximum of 3367.000. The comps , plans to use north seas fishing methods in the gulf and the ishlps will operate out of Pictou and Cheticamp. The herring sea- son opons in mid-April. Guessing On By Fraser Wlghton LONDON. (Reuters) - Sir Win- ston Churchill Tuesday kept the world guessing on his retireme t plans but publicly denied he w being "pushed out" by his cabinet ministers. The 80-year-old prime minister made his first comments on the reports of his retirement-expect ed within two weeks-in a good natured exchange in the House range Just south of Yucca flat. u. of Commons. Atomic Cloudt Sprinkles Las Vegas hours. They were moving in to mop up -how close to ground zero was not disclosed-a"-r a simulated bombing attack by 22 marine Pan- ther jets. : There was the possibility the two-day manoeuues might be cut short. The AEC said the weather forecast was favorable for another shot today. If held. this would be the major blast postponed since March 14. and the marines would have to move back to Camp Desert Rock. I) miles to the south 2-yeor.Tenn For Theft of Automobile TRURO (CF) - Eighteen-year old Donald Dick of Sydney was sentenced to two years in peni- tengary today on a charge of car e Dick was charged with steal- ing a car owned by D. K. Carroll. Dick was arrested the same day in New Glasgow. 0 SIX YEARS FOR SHOOTING SHERBROOKE. Que. (CP)-U1. ric Ashby. 65. of East Angus, Qua.. Tuesdly was sentenced to six years in penitentiary for the nee. is shooting of Gerard Lemire. a boarder in the Ashby horns. Ashby. originally charged with murder. was convicted of manslaughter March 4. Lcmirc. 21. was shot while playing cards at the kitchen 2,000 men forward "-'ithin two Had Never Seen White Man- table iii the Ashby home. Explorer Finds New Tribe PORT ssoaubr. New oom- (Routes-s'i - A young Australian alpleru told Tuesday he IBHVIH I tribe of "the era and opened paths for them. "When waoprogrsssed toward their villages. we were surround- ed by hundreds of singing and dancing natives. men. women and children.” Kent said. ssmucao AND uuooan "We are embraced. hugged and pated. The hesdmea from the various villages vied with one another in their efforts to their pleasure." aat's eapeditioa consisted of himself. another Australian and several coastal natives. "Win more and more new- urivel. we would be re- te nabs m appearance the woman. who would gasp astosistinmt at our white nu DI Last year another Australian government patrol reported find- ing a tribe of fair-skinned natives deep in New Guinea's mountains. Kent's report included a de- scription of the ruggedness of the mountain htniers which until now have kept the natives cut off from the world. ''In this region there exists areas of ihdescrible roughness- weathered limestone with a con- fneionofisued saelesaad s laamreugh whiebthedrelnsp into wuewlta sa-angers. reported tribal wssfasewasai nestasnytmt. WN. OANADA. WEDNESDAY. MABQ H. IOU 5 Million Loss In Molton Airport Fire MALTON. Ont. (CP) -- Four specially - equipped teat aircraft and thousands of dollars in val- uable experimental instruments were destroyed Tuesday when fire raged through two hangars at Mal- ton airport. destroying one and severely damaging the other. i Total damage was estimated at Officials of A. V. Roe of Can- ada Ltd. which leased the de- stroyed hangar. said the fire will set some phases of the company's test program behind at least six months. More than 100 firemen battled the blaze fanned by 60-miIc-an- hour winds. There were no reports of injuries. Malfon is 15 miles northwest of Toronto. . Little Peewee Hos Coming Out Party PERTH. N.B. (CP)-”Peewee" had her coming out party Monday. With the arrival of spring she emerged from an incubator where she had been kept since her birth Dec. 9. Called Peewee by nurses, Lois Ann Gee now occupies a regular baby basket at Hotel Dieu Hospi- tal. The tiny girl weighed only one pound 10 ounces when born three months prematurely. She has grown to five pounds two ounoes. Visitors left coins in a box he- side the incubator and the fund Churchill Keeps World reached 3135. Retirement His answer to Labor member Emanuel Shinwell indicated he is enjoying the flood of conjecture about his plans. This morning. the Guardian said ” were believed to have told their chief they could not agree to work indefinitely "at the lessen- ing speed" caused by his age. Shinwell rephrased this report dur- ing the question time in the House to ask whether the Manchester Guardian report "that you are being pushed out by Tory col- leagues is true." Amid laughter. the prime min- ister replied: "He (Mr. Shinwell) really must not be led away by all the chatter in the press. He makes a mistake to indicate that he is one of those most promin- ently misled." SlCll.I' HOLIDAY AHEAD The brief remark failed to change the widespread belief among qualified sources that Mr. Churchill will hand over the gov- ernment to Foreign Secretary Sir Anthony Eden before leaving with Lady Churchill for a vaca- tion in Sicily around April 7. Tuesday night. the prime min- later made his routine weekly call on the Queen at Buckingham Pai- ace to discuss state affairs. in- cluding the issue of his retire- ment and the calling of general elections. some government Manchester . . . . a supporters seek an early election-probably (Continued on Page I col. 4) lnxing the These now call for the railways to Rail Carriers Reported Recommended For Better Deal On Agreed Charges (By John LeBIanc. Canadian Press Staff Writer) OTTAWA. lCPl - The federal royal commission on railway agreed charges. it was learned Tuesday. has recommended that Parliament make it easier for the rail carriers to apply this type of freight rate. The one-man royal commission of Hon. W. F. A. Turgeon gener- ally has turned down proposals for restricting the railways' use of the agreed charge technique. Main proposals came from com- peting truckers and from the Al- berta government. The report is expected to be tabled in the Commons in about two weeks. The investigation of Mr. Justice Turgeon, former Canadian Am- bassador to Ireland and now am- bassador to Portugal. lasted sev- eral months last year. It follow- ed complaints to the federal gov- ernment that fhe railways were misusing the agreed cha rge method of rate setting allowed under the transport act. SPECIAL RATES By this system. the railways may give a shippe a special low rate in return for a guaranteed proportion of his annual business. instead of tightening up on the railways, Mr. Turgeon is reported ommended re- regulations. instead to have I present get prior approval from the rail- way-regulating board of trans- port commissioners agreed charge can go into effect. before an The recommendations. which would have to be embodied in an amendment to the transport act to become law. would streamline the procedure for the railways. They would eliminate the require- ment of the transport boardls ad- vance approval and let the rail- ways put agreed charges into effect on 15 days' notice after filing an agreed charge rate list. Parliament At A Glance Tuesday Finance M i n i s t e r Harris an- nounced he will deliver the 1955-56 federal budget at 8 p. in. EST Tuesday, April 5. Revenue Minister Mccann said the Income Tax Act may be amended to make it clear income tax returns cannot be produced in criminal court cases. . . G. Hunter (L-Toronto Parkdalel suggested the govern- ment budget for a S400.000.000 deficit in 1955-56 and pass it on in income tax cuts. Donald Fleming tPC- Toronto Egiintonl accused the government of irresponsibility in its approach to the unemploy...e..t problem. Joseph W. Noseworthy (CCF-- York South) said abolition of sub- standard gold mine wages should be a condition of federal aid to gold mines. Senator Muriel M. Fergusson (L-New Brunswick! suggested a ommission study of Canadais di- vorce law. Wednesday The Commons continues debate op unemployment. The Senate 'wjll s t. TORONTO (CF)-The Canadian Restaurant Association will hold its 11th annual convention and exhibit- ion here March 28-31. All provinces will.be represented and delegates will hear speakers from both Can- ada and the United States. High- lights of the convention will in- clude a culinary arts competition. a menu contest and an idea centre. RCMP Commissioner Gives Opinion On Drug Addiction OTTAWA iCPi-RCMP commis- sioner L. H. Nicholson says drug addiction in Canada will be stomped out only if addicts are ”compulsor.'ly isolated or quar- antined” by the government for rehabilitation. He told a Senate committee studying traffic in narcotics that the menace cannot be eradicated by more rigid police enforce- ment or by legal provision of drugs to addicts. Commissioner Nicholson said Tuesday that as long as addicts are left at large "they provide the market for traffickers-- and by association encourage others suffering from similar personality, character weaknesses or instabil- ity to become drug users." "They also. as a corollary, im- pose a load upon society through their illegal activities and com- plete lack of productivity." he said. "i therefore feel-and i think this view is held by many it not most other police officials -that the only hope for the pos- sible rehabilitation of these ad- dicts and for the eradication of the drug traffic is that they be ompulsorily isolated or Quar- antined." 0 - Addicts should be released only when those qualified to JUCISC them are convinced there is real hope of rehabilitation. "One essential control to my mind." he said, "would be suit- able employment in an area far removed from that in which the individual lived whilst addicted." Commissioner Nicholson said his proposed plan would be ex- pensive. l-iowevcr. the present cost of enforcement. detention and the offences committed by addicts added up to a substantial amount. He said that addicts should be isolated for rehabilitation be- cause figures provo they are not anxious to be cured. A study of 2.009 cases shiiived not one case in which an addict. following his first conviction and sentence. did not return to jail either for a narcotic offence or for a crime usually associated with the attempt of addicts to obtain funds with which to con- tinue their addiction. Fisherman's Association Officials Welcome Guest Speaker Group of P. E. Island Fisherman's Association officials in attendance at annual luncheon meeting Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dow PRICE ls TABIO REPORTS WORST STORM SINCE IIRRICANE LAST OCTOBER: 70 MPH WINDS 1 (By the Canadian Press) High winds with gusts southern Ontario Tuesday in up to 70 m.iies an hour hit the worst storm since hurri- cane Hazel struck the area last October. Chief forecaster Fred. Tumbull. of the Malton weather office said, that at one point conditions were ripe for breeding a hurricane or tornado but did not materialize. The storm blew itself out over the northeastern part of the province. In three hours the storm lashed its way from south- ern Michigan across Windsor and Chatahm to Toronto. Downtown Windsor reported store windows broken and hydro lines down. Chaiham which had winds at 65 miles an hour re- ported broken communication and hydro lines and buildings toppled. WAVES CRUMBLED DYKES Three houses were swenl into the Detroit river at Lasalle, 10 miles southwest of Windsor. Pounding waves smashed through earth and sand dykes near the village. There were no injuries. Nine fishing boats were driven out of Erieau Harbor. south of Ciiatham and more than 400 re- sidents were evacuated when giant waves smashed a protecting dyke. Cottages and barns were swept away by rolling torrents from Lake Ontario. Gusts up to 54 miles an hour battered the Toronto area. Wires Blizzard In Central U. S. CHICAGO IAPJ A spring- shattering blizzard and cold wave lashed wide areas of the central United States Tuesday. Biting cold and blowing snow harrassed much of the great plains and midwest. A tornado hit in Ohio. Gale force winds tore a trail of damage across parts of Michigan, Indiana and Ohio. Floods plagued parts of the rain-drenched south. The storms were blamed for at least 11 deaths. Chicago had three inches of snow and winds reached a sus- tained velocity of 46 miles an hour with gusts up to 54 m.p.h. Winds picked up to 60 m.p.h. in Pittsburgh and western Pennsyl- vania. 10 m.p.h. in Indianapolis and 75 m.p.h. In Southern Mich- igan. Gives Support To Fluoridation OTTAWA (CP) -Dr. Don W. Gullet, secretary of the Canad- ian Dentsl Association. said Tues- day fluoridation of water supplies should be speeded as a means of combstting tooth decay among children. "Through It) or 12 years of scientific research in a number of areas it has been proved that dental decay among children can be reduced lby lluoridallnnl by as much as 60 per cent." he said in a submission to the Sen- ate-Commnns committee on health. ills remarks were included in a text released to the press in advance of presentation. "By scientific survey methods it has been proved that the ad- dition of the required amounts of fluoride salt to the writer has no deleterious effect upon the human body and indeed makes no change in the taste. odor. or purpose of the water itself," be said. erday who ted guest speaker seated left. Hon. W. J. Keough. Minister of Hsheries, Newfoundland. Hon. ene Cullen, ister of Natural Resources, P. 1'. Island. also seated. standing ion to nggn, An". (;.uu.ie,-' 14 Jack MacNeiil. Rustiso. M Presid;rit,g:l;ii-ray Harbor. Hamid J. Cormier. Tignish. Harvey Poole. Sourls. Hubert G. Gaudet. hards. secretary, Murray Harbor. (See story also on page'8). -Barier's Film Lab. and trees were swept down. A loaded truck was overturned by the force of the wind on the Queen Elizabeth Way blocking traffic. Eight men were rescued from two fishing boats in Lake Huron. blown into an ice field north of Bayfield Harbor. A group of men on shore rushed a boat across the ice and rescued the fishermen. Meanwhile. a heavy blizzard struck southern Manitoba bring- ing snow and sleet. Over 15 inches of snow is reported to have fallen. Three Missing On Lake Erie LEAMINGTON. Ont. (CPI-Om tario ptovinclal police said Tues- day night three men. including a father and his son, were missing on Lake Erie aboard a small com- merciai fishing boat. g The men were identified as Fred Fuller. (9. his son Everett. 23 and another unidentified man. All were from Kingsville. Ont. Police said they were afraid the host may have run into trouble in the storm-swept waters. Winds of up to 70 miles an hour Tuesday whipped the lake into huge waves that sent all hosts in the area scurrying for cover. A search party was being on ganized to scour the shoreline In case the men had fled for safety to one of the many bays that cut Into the shore In this area. police said. The lake was still too rough to send search boats into the lake. Just Because. Adm. Snows A Lo1'fA BACK- Bone. 00:9-tr1' MEAN SHE HA5 TORONTO (CF)-eMinimuni and maximum temperatures: Min. Max Dawson . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 13b J9 Vancouver 38 48 Victoria I7 47 3'” t . 2b 4 Calgary .. lb 3 Regina 2b it Winnipeg fl hi Toronto . . . . .. 38 46 Ottawa . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 25 34 Montreal . . . . .. 27 36 Quebec....... .... .. Ii - Fredericton .. 3 34 Saint John . 15 33 Moncion lit 29 Halifax .... .. I9 40 Charlottetown .. ' 17 no HALIFAX ((.'PlJi'he Dominion weather office here says a mix- ture of rain. snow. freezing rain and ice pellets accompanied by strong winds are forecast for all the district as a storm turns northward towards Quebec. Smith- erly winds on Wednesday will bring mild air to the southern Maritimes. Regional forecasts: Prince Edward Island: Over- cast: snow and freezing rain changing in the morning to inter- st Charlot- . . 3. counties. lower .. John river valle : Overcast; intermittent rain W nesday mor- ning; clearin in the evening: winds IS in the after- at Mont-ton and and 42. Saint John Upper St. John river valley. Bay Cbaleur: Overcast; interrnil- tent snow. ice pellets and freezing . . st and In use today at ca lotte- hwaatso.tls.m.sadio.si"p.n. smulos this Isia- utealshthaa . Iunrtsasate.Ita.m.asdnsh atl.Ip.m. '