4- Buyer meets seller Ads. Dial 8506 ask for taker, for quick results. TELEPHONE 8506 with Guardian Want classified ad {———— THE INCOMING TIDE sends water rushing through the West River bridge as the gap in.‘ the "Never has so much work been , accomplished in such a short per- i Iod of time,” was the way Hon. 1. George MacKay described his road and bridge construction pm- gram yesterday. The Highways Minister felt that i great deal of credit for the “splendid progress” could be at- tributed to an early spring break- up and “a group of contractors who are anxious to get on with the job.” This week trucks began cross- ing the West River Bridge and pl‘epa:l;%I’.l0]l:la8St8.'l'€ being mage to close e exi,5ti' ‘pg 51 _ 7 causeway on the south Engineers , have been taking stream velocity tam from a flow- , meter which has been placed in the “iitinam. High bulkheads of fill are being up at either end of the opening and when the rlghtimoment arrives two bull- dozers on either side will begin ; dumping the fill into the gap. This was manner in which the North River Causeway was finally closed. The whole oper- ation took ‘less than one hour. The Madowbank road from Cornwall to the Bridge has been widened and improved. It will be Pajaed this summer, Mr. MacKay sax . IIILLSBORO BRIDGE . Work on the Charlottetown ap- llmacn to the Hillsboro Bridge is fast drawing to a close but in '« . the meantime theconstruction of -I haul _road from Kinlock to the Bridge is being speeded up and as soon as it is completed, including ‘he separation of traffic at the‘ approach, the first fill will be Placed on the southern side. Resident engineer on the Hills- boro Bridge project is Mr. Alex S0_0tt._ During his service as CNR Division engineer here some l’8ans_ago Mr. Scott had the su- Dervision and maintenance of: the old bridge and it is -fitting that he Should be called to this work in the construction of the new. STANLEY BRIDGE Paving has been started on the stretch of road from Stanley to Farm Income ' Figures Given 0"1",l‘AWlA (CIP) —- Income from Ill“ Sale of farm products in 1957 gnsesmnated at $2,593,ooo,ooo, a Necliiie of 2.7 per cent from the mecedlllg year’s estimated $2,- the bureau of sta- Filfs lelfonted Thursday. 1’ °V1nc1al totals, with 1956 111 brackets, included: (‘aye Edward Island $24,509,000 535-000); Nova Scotia $41,- ($44,423,000); New Bruns- %be$44,813.om ($49,233,000); and 9 $337,915,000 ($389,499,000); L°ND0N (CP)—-Hopping to at- emtalmle European industrial canada’, 1mlm'Erants' an-d trade, Thursdas four Atlantlc provinces their finlgrt Opened an office for 31,,’ agent-general in Brit- Olperative venture by . E315 and two Progressive emwe governments was orated at a ceremony at 9 Provinces‘ four prem- c0mmI‘.g_e Drew, Canadian pant rssioner to Britain, lip. Wgbsofil -Tamer of Lancaster, will have‘ 9 agtntgeneral who grade ind the Job of building ' ’ “WY and a public rela- gratin. gt; premiers, flown here as tiianpbom Pd Beaverbrook, Can- ‘Dlpgahd t°“"~“W'Sl>aper magnate, r Wbport and spoke Alli ' . 12 P hauled " s°°°“d C1335 M311 by the Post Office Department, Ottawa Proiects Near Completion; Department Push es Work. Cavendish, thus completing the last link of pavement between Borden and the National Park. It is expected that this work will be completed before the Middle of June. Morrison and Macliae Co. Ltd. have the contract of constructing a new bridge at Stanley and the contract calls for completion by June 30. ' Mr. MacKay said he was more than pleased with the progress being made on the road between Wllmot and Summerslde. He said if the road was not completed be- WASHINGTON (or) —. mes- id e n t Eisenhower’: embattled have a fighting chance of getting through congress without being denuded in the process. » ‘A few weeks ago, the outlook for congressional approval this year wasdim. Since then, Eisen- hower has agreed to concessions designed to make the more acceptable to the protectionist ele- ments in Congress. This is the bill through which the president is asking Congress to extend _ the U.S. Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act for five years and give him authority to reduce U.S. tariffs by 25 per cent in return for similar concessions by other expoiiting countries. For Canada and other nations which depend heavily’ on the American market for their export sales this will be about the most important piece of legislative bus- iness to be handled by Congress Gov't Tightens 7 Lending ment has moved to take greater control over its direct mortgage lending. Works Minister Green said in the C‘ommon~s Tltunsday, under questioning by Lionel Clhevrier (L—Montreal Iran-rier) that “for the time being at least” federal funds for lower-priced homes are being loaned directly by Central Mortgage and ousing C01'lP01'8- - tion. Previously. 'this money was loaned out by private institutions such as the chartered banks, Ceremony Marks Opening OI Allunlic House In London‘ a of -their close ties with Britain. NOT STEPPING STONE _ Premier Hugh John Flemming of New Brunswick said he hopes prospective investors won’t mis- take the M-arit-imevs’ elffmit as 8 stepping stone to central Canad-a. “I think we should make it a toll gate,” Premier Alex Mathe- son of Prince Edward Island said. premiens Joseph Small-wood of Newfoundland and Robert Stan- field of Nova Scotia Stressed the importance of strengthening U98 with Britain. Drew promised “the closest possible cvo-operation” if hrs of- fice acrosns Tratalgal‘ S‘¢1'l1‘a1'e- The premiers fly to the BN5‘ sels World Fair next week. _ Thursday night they (111391 Wm‘ their host, Lord Beaverbrook. and Drew. causeway narrows. Seen crossing wa the bridge is _a large carryall en- gaged in hauhng fill for the cause- _ on the south side of the lbri ge. Highways officials yester- day. stated that in a short time the fore June 30 it would in any event have a timed top on it. PINETTE CAUSEWAY The Pinette Causeway is ra- pidly nearing completion and con- struction of a bridge over the south Pinette River will begin shortly. This bridge will be of the same type used at Montague. The Minister pointed out that these are only a few of the more important projects going ahead at the present time. In addition, a ‘large scale program of road build- ing and paving is going on if IEisenI1ower’s Trade Program May Have Fighting. Chance trade program now appears to throughout the Province. Ilhl-s year. The legislation still faces some major hurdles. It comes up for floor debate in the House of Rep- resentatives within the next few days and then must clear the Sen- ate. But Eisenhower is expected now to rally enough support to get approval of his two main re- quest-s—the five - year extension and the tariff-cutting authority. RENEWAL DATE The trade act will die automa- tically June 80 if Congress does "not renew it. If that happens, the trade agreements that the US. now has with 43 other powers will be frozen and Eisenhower will have no authority ‘to ‘reduce tar- iffs- on foreign imports. To avoid this happening, Eisen- hower has agreed to two major concessions, neither of which will be particularly to the liking of Canada and the other exporting powers. Both represent a tighten- — borrowers in whatever way -seems ing up of U.S. trade laws. Control trust comipanieis and so on. But a CMHC oflficial said that the private lenders have not always been directing the money as, the government would like. By lending the money directly itself, OMHC is able to select the most in the public interest. Another change, the official said, is that a would-be borrower who can show CIMHC he has been turned by two private lenders may apply for a loan from the goveiuiment agency in any com- munity. Eon SMALLER CENTRES Previously, this CMHC service was available only to persons liv- ing in comniunnisties under 55.000 population. ’ Parliament recently voted the government housing agency an additional $350,000,000 flor lower- priced homes. This action replen- ished funds that had run out about six weeks earlier. The OMHC ollficial said that in the interval, the private lenders did a heavy volume of mortgage lending themselves. Between these private funds and the $400,000,000 in direct fed- eral house loans already poured into the busviness by the SW91‘!!- ment since last year. the total volume of housing loans has been very heavy, the official said. With an additional $350,000,000 in federal funds now available, private lending agenci.es were not eager to begin offering new fed- eral mortgage money for. the lower - priced homes until they could see how the market digests the recent volume, the ocfiflrcial aid- “Covers Prince Edugard Island Like 7713 Dew” CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA FRIDAY, MAY 30, 1958 ‘gap will be closed and the whole flow of water directed through the - bridge opening. Quebec Group Will Alfencl P.E.|. Ceremonies QUEBEC (CP) — Members of Le Conseil de la Vie Francaise announced Thursday it plans to send! a delegation to attend cere- monies Aug. 6-7 at Miscouche, P.E.I., making the second cen- tenary of the einpulsion of Aca- diians from that area in 1758. Delegates of the organization dedicated to the puromotion of French culture in North America will also visit Mon-cton, N.B., the Magdalen Islands in the St. Law- rence Gulf, Cape Breton Island and Louisburg, N.S., where 200 years ago the British captured a powerful Fmench fortress. The del- egates plan to close their Mar- itime tour at Grand Pre, N.S., Aug. 15, feast of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary. BODIES RECOVERED TABUSINTAC, N.B. (GP)-'lhe bodies of William J. Grasttan, 34 a fisheries protection officer, and Gerrold Morrison, 35. as- sistant forest ranger, were found Thursday on a beach near Ta- busintac. They were drowned a month ago. while making a pat- rol on the eve bf the lobster season, when their boat was wrecked in heavy seas. charge of No. 4 platoon, salutes as she is introduced to the In- specting Officer, Col. A.W. Ro- LIEUT. KAREN Simmonds, 1111 I The presentation of certificates and awards to members of the No. 20 Queen Charlotte High School Cadet Corps will take place this evening at the cadet dance in the school auditorium. The presentation was sche- duled to take place yesterday afternoon as part of the annual inspection of the Corps, but due to the heavy downpour of rain had to be cancelled. died. The rain started shortly after -(9. Heavy Rain Interferes Willi Q. C. H. S. Cadet Inspection INSISTS ON FULL POWERS -x ISOLATED CASES A large delegation of truckers waited on Highways ~. lvlinister MacKay yesterday complaining that they were being offered rates conrsidierably below those set by the Government one week ago. Mr. MacKa-y said he was keen- lly disappointed that certain con- tractors or sub-contractors had seen fit to make suchoffers in View of the study that had been put on this question after some years of negotiation between the truckers and the Government. He said thenew rates had been estabished fior all Government contracts for the benefit of the truckers and it was thought that those engaged in this work would see fit to co-operate. Under the new rates, the truck- er is to receive 23 cents per yard for the first mile and nine cents per yard for each succeeding Price Support For Pulpwoocl Being Considered OTTAWA (CP) —- Consideration has been given the question of price supports for pulpwood cut ment has not yet reached any de- cision, Agrlculture Minister Harkness said Wednesday. He was replying in the Com- mons to Samuel Boulanger L- Drummond - Athabaska. Several members, on -both government; and opposition sides, have re-. quested such price support for pulpwood. some have suggested a price of $20 a cord. TOWN CLERK WILL ~RETIRE NEW GLASGOW (OP) - Miss Margaret Wadden, New Gas- gowfls Town clerk for more than 25 years, will retire Dec. 31. Miss Wadden will be placed on leave of absence beginning July day. I 2 Militia Group, at the annual in- gers, E.D., Officer Commanding spection of No. 20 Queen Charlotte lfligh School Cadet Corps yester- the beginning of the inspection but the boys and girls We_nt through their regular dri1_ls_ With the utmost skill and proficiency. The Corps was inspected by Col. A. W. Rogers, E.D., Com- manding Officer of 2 Militia Group. , Accompanying Col. Rogers during the inspection were: C2}?- tain William Wilcox and Major Wildfang, Cadet Inspection Staff, on farm woodlots but the govern- ' 1, Town Counci1-decided,Thurs- <1 mile of the haul. While the new rates do not become effective until the first 6! June, it was hoped that as many as possible would begin to pay on the higher scale immediately. The Minister felt -that the com- plaint received yesterday was an -isolated «case and the con- MONCTON (OP)-—Tendens are to be called for drilling of test holes and other survey work in timberland Strait causeway. Dr. H. Q. Golder of London, view Thursday the test holes would be sunk on both the New Island sides of Northuimlberl-and Strait and in the strait itself. Dr. Golder said he and his staff con-nection with a proposed North- Eng., engineer in charge of the survey, said in a telephone inter- Brunswick and Prince Edward had just moved into their head- quarters at Borden, P.E.I., and H'ways Min. Is Annoyed Over Truck Rate Cutting tractors in general would, as in the past, give full , -operation. Mir. MacKay exip ained that the rates set are those which the Government pays for road construction but noted it has al- ways been the rule that con- tnactors have complied with these rates. Seek Tender For Causeway Jobs details of the survey were not tixed as yet. \ “We have set no specific area for the drillinz ," he said. to establish the condition and for- mation of the rock and soil on both shores and on the strait bot- deep. “If we find thecauseawlary is stone quarry. We have found sev- enough yet,” he said. At Funeral Of change of gunfire between Israeli and Jordanian forces, will be bur- ied Saturday morning at Molas- car, near lsmailiia, Egypt. Mrs. Flint and the 47-year-old Canadian ofitlicefs two daughters will watch as his body is lowered into a grave at the Imperial War G r a v e s Commission Cemetery, army headqaurters said Thurs- of General Proficiency awanded I-Ieadquarters Eastern Com- lay. Col. Eliot's body will be trans- day afternoon. On the Inspecting officer's right is Cadet Major Dewar Harper, Corps Comman- der. mand, Halifax; Major Orin Sim- ons, C.D., Staff Officer of 2 Militia Group and Lieut.~C0l. F. S. Jenkins, E.D., Officer Commanding No. 5 Signals Regi- merit. PRESENTATIONS The presentation to be made this evening are as follows: First Prize for General Pro- ficiency, donated by the 5th Sigs. Reg’t., awarded to Cadet Capt. Dewar Harper. Second Prize to Cadet Capt. David Rogers. Prize for Best Lieut. on Par- ade, donated by Stli Sigs. Reg’t. awarded to Cadet Lt. Donald P.E.I. Chaplain » orrnwamcri ~ —- on .... .c’oi.. Gefonge A. Flint, killed in an ex- ,_ To Officicile Col. Flint camp at Raf-ah, Egypt, today. The body will be flown to Port Said Saturday where the family, accompanied by Swedish General -Carl van Horn, chief of statlf of the UN truce supervisory organiz- ation on which Col. Flint served and other senior officers will join the party. . . They‘then will proceed to the cemetery w h e -r e the officiating olergymla-n will be Capt. Leslie A. Dignan, Royal Canadian .Army Ch~apla«in Corps, of Port Hill P.E.I. He said drilling was being done tom. Dr. Golder said the would involve holes about 100 feet feasible we will need a large eral small ones but ‘nothing big poi‘-tad under-~off'i~cer« escort trom Tel Aviv, Itsruael, to the Canadian WEATHER Overcast with occasional rain and drlzzlt and patches of fog, clearing during thO morning. Low-high at Ch’town 47 and 65. NOT MORE THAN PARIJS (AP)-Gen. C‘harle;s de Gaulle agreed Thursday night to form a new French government, but insisted he must have full powers to head off civil war. President Coty gave him the task with the grave warning to parliament and the nation "that their choice was narrowed now to these alternatives: ‘ De Gaulle or civil war. The National Assembly major- ity would have to do a revolu- tionary reversal to accept de Gaulle. The Socialist party, second strongest in the assembly after the Communists, caucused Thurs- day night and adjourned until to- day. Spokesman said they would not reach a decision until Satur- day and this could prolong the crisis through the weekend. De Gaulle’s rigihrtists ideas and any spectre of authonitanian gov- ernment are distasteful to the big blocs in parliament, espe- cially the key Socialists. WANTS FULL BACKING His Paris otlfice quoted him as saying: “I do not know how to under- take the task of conducting the business of the state and the na- tion unless these indispensable conditions are given me with frank and broad confidence re- quired for the health of France of the state and of the republic.” The full powers he seeks would 8lDlDI‘08.|Clh. those of a dictatorship. He wants them to run tor a per- iod to be set by the National As- serdbly. He did not in accepting Ooltyls otfer how long he hoped to run the country single-handed. But _he previously had. made known that" he wants the National Assei ‘ally to adjourn for a full year. It was in an atmosphere heavy with strife that Colty warned par- liament and the nation that only de Gaulle now could save France from war. Within three hours, the general FIVE CENTS DeGauIIe Unclertakes To Form New French Gov't Presiclenl Says It's Now De Gaulle Or Civil War sped to the seething capital from his rural home for -the third time in a week. Here he received, and accepted, the chance to head Frances 26th post - war govern- ment. ~ The outcome still depends on the National Assembly. Fromer president Vincent Aur- lol charged de Gaulle encour- aged sedition in Algiers. That change drew a 62 to 29 endorse- ment from Socialist deputies, a key group needed by de Gaulle in his quest for power. Auriol, a Socialist elder states- man, made the charge in a letter asking de Gaullels attitude to- ward the military insurrectionists in Algeria and on Corrsica. This, and a reassuring reply from de Gaulle, were studied by Assembly. The general said his name had been used without his own involvement in Ailiger-ian de- velopmeuts. He pledged re-es|taib- lishment of discipline among the armed forces would be one of his aims. CAUCUS ADJOURNS The Socialist party ‘cuaucused a.-gain late Thunsdlay night and ad.- journed until today. Presumably this was to allow socialist leader Guy Mollet time to see Coty and etermine fully the latest views of de Gaulle. The Socialists said they would not reach a decision until Saturday. De Gaulle’:s comm»unique said that during his meeting with Goty he had indicated under what con- ditions’ he could assume change of the government “at this de- cisive moment tor the destiny of the nation.” Pa-rt of his program, de Gaiills said would be relfoiim of the con- stitultion. He said he wguld sub- mit a changed constitution to the country in a referendum. The c-han-ges would notably concern the balance of powers in the ad»- ministration between the Execu- tive and the legislature. and Francefis relations with its over- seas territories. (Continued on Page ll 00]. 8) , TUNIS (Reuteris)—French and Tunisian troops claislieid Thurs- Legion Hecicl Is gRe‘-elected \ EDMONTON — Dayid L. Bur- gess of Ottawa was _re-elected president of the Dominion Com- mand of the Canadian Legion here Thursday. The es-yearold man is beginning his second two- year term. Earle Burgess of St. Thomas, out. was returned for the fourth term as chiairm-an. 4 Rail Workers Die In Crash "POINT-E AUBA-RIL STATION, Ont. (CP)~Four rail workers died Thursday night in the splin- tered wreckage of a caboose as a fast freight smashed into a work train on the main CPR line near this community, 68 miles south of Sudbury. Dead are C. Dermot Buttineau and his «brat-her‘ Richard of Nobel, Ont., David Watkinson of Parry Sound, Ont., and Laverne Bushey of Nobel. . In ‘critical c’ o n d i t 1 o 11 at St. Joseph’s Hospital, Parry ‘Sound, is Raymond Monette of Carling, -Oont. Howard Snyder, 23, also of Carling, was reported in good condition in hospital and Melville Trio-key of MacTier, Ont., was released after treatment. CPR officials said an 11-car through freight, southbound fr-om Sudbury to Toronto, rammed the back of an eight-car work train. Two diesels and all cars on the freight were derailed as was the caboose filled with eight men, and steam locomotive pushing the work train. Consider Salt Cod Floor Price \~ OTTAWA (CP) — A federal floor price on salt codfish is un- der “very careful consideration” by the government, Fisheries Minister MacLean said Thursday. Charles R. Granger. (L—Grand Falls-White Bay - Labrador) had asked him in the C o m in 0 ii s whether a floor price for salt c-od would be established. Mr. MacLean said as soon as ,a decision is reached it will be (Continued on Page 5 Col. 3) announced. _\‘\:~( day and the Tunisian govern- ment then demanded an immed- iate Unlted Natimns Security Council meeting. Five hours of fierce fighting erupted at Remada, ‘ 150 miles south of Tunis, a government spokesman said. ‘most simultaneously with the an oun-‘cement the government reported it has instructed its United Nations delegation to call a Security Council meeting to French And Tunisian Troops Clash In Five-Hour Battle i hear Tunisia’! complaints against F-nance. An army spokesman said a French patrol lent the Ramada -garrison and tried to break thrlouglh a Tunisian roadblock about 12 miles away. He claimed French forces opened fire when the Tunisians refused to open the barrier and that government troops returned the fire. A French military spokesman: connirmed there had been an cident. He said there had been no casualties. QUEBEC (CP)--A full morning of sight-seeing by the president of Germany Thursday evoked a reminder of the Second World War and brought a surprise bouquet of forget-me-riots from a German woman who intercepted the official party on the Island of Orleans. Dr. Theodor Heuss arrived in Quebec Wednesday evening to be- gin a week - long state visit to Canada—t-he first ever made by the head of the German state. He is being accompanied by Foreign Minister Heinrich von Brentano, State Secretary Felix Von Eek- hardt, and -the president's son, Dr. Ernst Ludwig Heuss. Following a drive through city streets, the party moved to the Island of Orleans, a few miles downriver from Quebec. When they arrived at Ste. Petronille, on- the island’s western tip, an at- tractive woman was waiting. “I’m from the president’s home town of Stuttgart,” she told re- porters, “and I was afraid no one would think -to give him flowers- so I picked a bouquet of forget- me—nots." CHATS WITH HEUSS The woman. Mrs. Ruth Gillies, who has been in Canada eight ‘Years. opened the door of the President’s limousine before po- lice could intervene. Dr. Heuss was obviously Dleased and Mrs. Gillies sat on the floor of the back seat and code moved on. GermanPresicIent Given Bouquet port in the Laurentians, 15 miles north of Quebec, the president re- ceived an honorary degree from Laval University. . A state banquet tendered by Quebec’s Lieutenant — Governor Onesime Gagnon was held Thurs- day evening. The party is to leave by air. today for Montreal. Mr. Parker Mcicle Vice-President OTTAWA (OP) -- Harold H. Simpson of Sydney, N.S., is ill! new president of the 300,000-mem- her Canadian Home and School and Parent-Teacher Federation. Mr. Simpson was elected by ac- clamaation during the federations three-day meeting of more than 60 delegates. The sessions end to- day. . A former Nova Scotia Home and School president and for the last two years the national body's executive vice - president, Mr. Simpson succeeds Mrs. J. D. Tay- lor of Hamilton, Ont. Only other officer elected dur- ing this meeting was Kenneth Parker oi Charlottetown as east- ern vice—president. T0 EXPAND HOSPITAL SACKVILLE, N.B. (CP\-The board of trustees of the Sack- ville Memorial. Hospital Thurs chatted with the president: for day‘ announced a $135,000 eitpan. several minutes before the motor- sion program to add 16 rooms, a maternity wing and a Child- Following an informal lunch at ren’s section to the 32-room 1109 Manoir St. Castin at Lac Beau-lpital. . .r.~.'.~.*.:-.v$€.<Y;\:'-::«:':~:>.*.::~..-.»':>*:¢=-* ,.r...-"-Jr.-2:-rszrm-.. ..