mine near Schefferville @ueen pauses at the en-,cial points out interesting parts of the huge Gagnon iron-|of the open-pit mining opezation. i in| She has just looked at a chart is the rim of the iron-ore pit and some of the mining machinery used. 5 (CP. Phote) ' @orthere Quebec as a mine offi-iof the mine (right). Behind her Fishing Insurance Claims Will Be Paid Expe taken to have | : ! : : t j : > g | ! e i Hi q af i i i i te ’ i | | : i i Lf Fa, t Hr An i ff o FF a | i : rr BE 33 | 4 | E 2 : i ; i i beh an : i : F a a : fi 4 i 2 a il SF g 3 5 BR c i B z - i : : |! Miners’ Aid Probe Seen ~ OTTAWA (CP)—Prime Minis- ter Diefenbaker said Tuesday he will look into the question of fi- » He was answering questions in the Commons from H. J. Robi- chaud ‘L—Gloucester) and CCF és) Hazen Argue. ee, i ditiously progress since April. Jet Crash Slays Five The B-52 plane, assigned to Boeing by the air force for the series of low altitude test flights, had been scheduled to fly 500 feet above the ground on a U-shaped course from the Dalles, Ore., to Malheur Lake and Burns, then turn north to Walla Walla, Wash. The company said the bomber failed to renort after passing over the checkpoint at Dalles. The low-level tests had been in Six Persons Die In Crash WINONA, Ont. (CP)—Six per- sons were killed Tuesday night when their car collided with a Canadian National Railways pas- senger train bound towards Ham- ilton from Niagara Falls. Identity of the victims was not immediately available but it was known they included two men, two boys and two girls. The car carried Ontario licence Federal Government of that, fisheries for plates and was in the date made it clear to fishermen ; Vince has been making # survey: . of Walter of that with the provision of in| ue aemage during Ge, P=M | amilton, an earpoyee of Cane surance benefits, they need not | 49.50 percent . Mr. Gor- | dian. Westinghouse: j look for future disaster gual naa Sf of She GPU lagi: “pee: tsa. end seneuneel-tt-e-08 cious few” of the fishermen ear- | sideroad near this Niagara Pen- Eugene Gorman, deputy min-!ried insurance on their gear. | insula town. VAN DOOS OF QUEBEC lo Famous French Unit QUEBEC (CP) — Queen Eliza-|world wars and the operations in, ranks on the Plains of Abraham, beth Tuesday presented colors to|Korea has gained itself a noble| where exactly 200 years ago a three battalions of the Royal 22nd/ tradition in honor, valiance and!battle was waged between regiment, famous “Van/ sacrifice.” |French and English forces for Doos”’: of . She said she} The Queen stood before the|the conquest of Quebec. entrusts them the colors ‘with SACRA Gicars: aad. cattebod bli . orn seers PUBLIC Relations defend them as your elders de- fended the old colors, without fear or reproach.” On the colors were names of French cities the Royal 22nd helped to liberate in the First World War. “What emotion, you must have felt in liberating these of your blood and what joy for them to greet the descendants of French people who, three centuries ear- lier, had left for Canada.” The Queen spoke in French. REPRESENTATIVE UNIT The Royal 22nd, formed at the outbreak of the First World War, was organized to give French- speaking Canadians a representa- tive unit. Regiment headquarters are in Quebec City. The Queen, who is colonel-in- chief of the regiment, said that although its past is not long, “‘it is glorious.” “The regiment during two ‘Hundreds Mourn For Storm Dead By GEORGE McNEVIN ESCUMINAC, N.B. (CP)—Hun- fdreds of mourners ovérflowed two churches at nearby Baie Ste. Anne and Bay du Vin Tuesday te pay their last respects to six wictims of New Bruitiswick’s ‘weekend fishing fleet disaster. * Meanwhile the search by beach- ‘ombing ground parties and ‘boats draffing nets continued for @ bodies still not recovered. ; Thirty-five men died in the vi- ‘ious Friday night storm that “scuttled a fleet of 45 to ‘60 sal- “mon boats. Eleven bodies were the howling gale subsided were missing. All event- K were accounted for from ; w the number of wrecked ‘that still dot the coast- 2 eer Muffied sobs and uncontrolled weeping punctuated the two fun- eral services. About 1,200 jammed into the 900 - seat Baie Ste. Anne Roman Catholic church for the funeral mass of Edgar Daigle, William George Manuel and Remi Martin, all of Baie Ste, nne. Hundreds more spilled out onto the road. The crowd was estimated as high as 5,000. The three caskets draped in black and gold were carnkping the small cemetery across from the church. At a nearby yard, Edgar Daigie’s three small chil- dren played unconcerned: Most Rev. Norbert Robichaud, archbishop pf Moncton, urged the mourners. to pray for the bereaved. He encouraged them to “hold strong” in the face of interpret speaker Rev., Swithun Bowers, O.M.L told delegates to the Maritime Conference on Social Work yesterday. Director of Ottawa University’s School of Social Welfare, Father Bowers said that social work’s historic mission was to act as a@ ever, Was made up of more than those who sit in the seats of the government—“It is the man-next- the woman-across-the- session was held in the auditor- ium at St. Dunstan’s University. EXPLANATION LACKING Termed Failure social work within our own pro- fessional group, to explaining wife after he made port safely C ers Comm Tom Lewis is embraced by his) ** - WELCOME HOME. mt Esouminae, N.B. His was one|viclent Northumberland Strait of the fishing boats caught by a! storm but he lived to tell the tale. OTTAWA (CP) — A public in- quiry into pricing practices by FERRY REPAIR COSTS LISTED OTTAWA—(CP)—The three CNR-operated ferries plying between Prince Edward Is- land and the mainiand have cost $1,174,926 for repairs dur- Argue, CCF House leader, said repair cost totalled $301,- 418 for the Abegweit, $526,. 851 for the Prince Edward Is- land and $346,657 for the Scotia II, in use since 1956 as relief service vessel as requir- ed. (Continued on page 5 Col. 3) (left), director tragedy. yesterday Bowers, O.M.1. the University of . gymnasium, yesterday Ottawa'With Father Bowers Pricing Practices Inquiry Is Suggested In CLC Brief large Canadian corporations} 4ay would be welcome, a Canadian Labor Congress brief said Tues- K also urged a study of what it called non - monetary selec- , tive controls designed to deal di- An inquiry also should be made! rectly with specific inflationary into ways and means of co-ordi-| pressures as they arise. nating policies of banking and! The CLC brief was read to the non - banking financial institu-| Senate finance committee, study- OTTAWA (CP)—Speaker Ro- land Michener Tuesday ruled out of order a Liberal motion for an urgent Commons debate on mass resignations in the CBC talks de- partment. Opposition Leader Pearson had moved that regular House busi- ness be set aside for a special debate on charges of “clandes- tine political influence” being brought to bear on the CBC man- motion made no charge that the government interfered with man- CBC. In the absence of such a charge, he could not accept the motion as a matter for urgent debate. “CLEARLY OUT OF ORDER” Justice Minister Fulton argued beforehand that Mr. Pearson’s . : 3 ii é 3 : aa ° é ak 1 Zz i Bg g Fs R Bea | g ‘ f i ae eg i & ge on licly-owned “Surely this to inquire into such affairs,”’ he said. + tions to benefit economic growth) ing inflation, by President Claude and stability, it said. Continued on page 2, Col. 4 He said that to him the im- Political Interference Is Charged By CBC Top Producing TORONTO (CP)—Most of the, has made their work impossible. top production personnel of the| At least 26 had quit at the Tor- CBC department of talks andj onto headquarters of the depart- public ‘affairs resigned Tuesday,|ment and the three - member charging “political interference” |staff at Montreal had joined erpoon. Jean = Dorgan, Ottawa, consultant in) Hirsch Institate and the Jewish social work with the mental \ ; , of the federal de-| Urata Mare tenes me partment of national health. ana| McKinnon, Halifax, deputy welfare; David Weiss, Montreal,| ister of public welfare for the Personnel them. Some of these said others were planning to quit but did not give names. The action stemmed from the CBC’s cancellation of Preview Commentary, a five-minute radio opinion program from Ottawa which followed the 8 a.m. na- tional radio newscast. I was car- Tied five days a week and feat- vred comments by newspaper men on parliamentary news. A statement by the Toronto group said: se “By removing Preview from the air ynder political pressure the OBC management, with the (Continued on Page 2 Col. §) As Barricad (AP)—A cut. An unannounced number of the rioting prisonerg were injured. revolt started Monday = ey Dear : executive director, Bares De’ Province of Nova Scotia. t agement of the publicly - owned | tf motion was “clearly out of of-|— der.” Liberals Lose Move: For Urgent’ Debate portant matter seemed to be that (Continued. on page 2 col. 2) Surprise == ls Claimed f f ! 4 , i L if ash Ri li f | : ; nt f l ; mentary events for e morning litical commentary. Klaus Fuchs Is Released LONDON (Reuters) — Klaus Emil Julius Fuchs, rated “the 3 He paid the debt in'9% years— from the day he was arrested, Jani 30, 1950, to his release Tues- day with more than four years knocked off his 14-year jail term for good behavior. ’ The 48-year-old Fuchs boarded a Polish plane which took him te East Berlin. The East German news agency ADN said Fitchs w&s _returning to his father, 96- year - old Professor Emil Fuchs, who lives in Leipzig. The slender, bespectacled theo- retical physicist, who handed in- formation to the Soviet Union while working on British, and American atomit weapens, headed for behind the Iron-Cur- - tain a few hours after being re- leased from northern England’s Wakefield prison. Prison Revolt Crushed e Smashed bnown as “10 North’’—from one end. Bars erected by the prison- ers were torn down by hand. Wiliam L. Fitch, 46-year-old guard and spokesman for the hostages, said the uprising wes — disorganized and launched on im- pulse by seven ring leaders. Fitch said he and the other hoe- tages—Rosendahl; Charles R, Ak len, 48; Melvin C. Jung, 57; and Leonard Appleby, 55 — thought they were going to be killed in the final five minutes “KILL THEM” : ot's kill them end get # ever age tH f ei el nelle Nae AIR i iriew ee Batre saa (fs Mi ns ae