Among the more than 550 pas- ' sengers to arrive in Montreal early May 26 aboard the 20,400- lon Canadian Pacific liner ' V- RETURNED BY EMPRESS OF FRANCE and 1),. 5,13, Ln”, of char. the CBC has interfered with news lottetown, P.E.I. (C.P.R. Photo) ress of France were, Mrs. J. P. the private stations to carry the Canadian Press sum Writer... TORONTO (CP)-Radio and TV channels should be opened up to free competition. the royal com- mission on broadcasting was told Friday. An officer of the publishing- , broadcasting firm of Southam Com- ' pany Ltd. urged this and also said private stations should have free- dom from CBC control over the content of their air time. St. Clair Balfou , Jr.. of Hamli- ton, executive vice-president of the company, accused the CBC of a measure of censorship. though commission chairman R. M. Fow- ler took issue with him on this. COMPUISION INVOLVED Mr. Balfour, whose company pub- lishes newspapers in seven cities and has interests in two radio and two TV stations, suggested censor- ship was involved when a private TV station was compelled to carry the 11 p.m. news of the CBC. "I wouldn't have thought so," Mr. Fowler said. "When you're told you must carry the 11 pm. newscast, I'd say so." Mr. Balfour said. "I must look up the definition of censorship," the chairman said. In reply to question. Mr. Bal- four said he does not contend that items of any station but added there should be no compulsion on CBC's national news. Bowclter Paper Co. To NEW YORK (AP) - Bowates mill. Cut June Deliveries TOR: DISAGREES WITH CLC Chairman Fowler said that 'Wont Free Competition For Radio, Television ' that the CBC shouldn't cart! B a national broadcast service." "I don't contend that." hlr. Iai- four said. ”I don't want any centralized authority to say what any station must carry," he said. dealing ope ciflcally with news. Chairman Fowler asked him whether he feels there should he no control at all of programs on private TV stations. ”0nly within the law as it exists now for newspapers," Mr. Balfour replied. The brief he presented on behalf of the Southam Compaiw advanced this same principle. Mr. Balfour took issue with an earlier argument of the Canadian Labor Congress before the commis- sion that newspaper-radio-TV own- ership is monopolistic and should be broken up. PART OF THE PRES! MQNTREAJW M. ,g g ".1 would deny that our 9051505 uate of the AT'l'ny'Sd)S,0lK1l?eFAHpgTzCig- ls 11' any will 888111” E-'19 Public tice training program. Craftsman lmefest 01' l-Elli-'llI18 l-OWEN-I "W W.H. Gardiner, oi Cardigan P.E. creation of a monopoly." he said 1,, 1; e of a number of. teen- "Broadcasting, whether radio or "en w are making 03,89” go, televlswu. is merely a uewerrad- themselves in the Regular Army. dmonal and 5"'”n3"" m”'" M Pie. Gardiner enrolled as an Negro Vote Sought in -Congressiona By GEORGE KITCHEN Canadian Press Staff Writer WASHINGTON (CP) - The Re- publicans and the Democrats are quietly trying to woo an estimated 4.000.000 Negro votes which may well represent the balance of power in this year's congressional elec- tions. Both parties are staking a claim to the ballots of northern Negroes who. though not directly touched by the upheavals over racial inte- gration in the southem states. are nonetheless iniiuenced by develop- ments there. A key factor in the direction vot- ing sentiment takes will be the civil rights planks to be written into their respective platforms when.the two parties select their pnsidential candidates this sum- mer. The attitudes of those candi- dates toward the Negro problem also will be weighed before the Negro voters enter the polling booths. This is one contest in which the, Democrats stand to lose more lhanl the Republicans. The Negro vote has been largely pro-Democratic since the days of President Frank- i lin D. Roosevelt. Mrs. Roosevelt mass communication. It is part of mm, W 1 A , t 1 53 5;-.--75H :-cmo---- :::"......:: 2.. aslca y the same. during the two years he attended To deny publishers of printed A,-my E30015 he was gwen ace. 5!"! distributed Plllillclmolll "13 demic as well as military training. "Em to make use of the newer Since his graduation in July 1955 techniques is merely to prevent he 11.; peeu employed as 5,, mm. them from making use of newer ourer with No. 202 Base Workshop, and dlllefenl. techulquesto carry Royal Canadian Electrical and on their business in a chanzlnip Mechanical Engineers in Montreal. "what you really are contending is developing and improvingpworl " H1. pu.em,, Mr, and Mrs P”. Dummy TV Sets Fetching Paper Co. will out June deliveries in its North American customers by 10 per cent as a result of pro- duction losses at a major Canadian mill, A. B Meyers, president, said Friday. The reduction will be in addition to a 10-per-cent slash in newsprint quotas the company has had in effect since last January. Numer- ous other newspring producers have bccn rationing the printing paper in recent months largely because or inability to keep up with bur- gconing demand. Keyers said the latest reduction, which will affect 175 North Ameri- can newspapers. was made neces- sary by a fire Monday night in the power plant oi the Comer Brook mill in Newfoundland. PRODUCTION HALTED in a letter to customers, Meyers stated the fire has resulted in a loss of 3,000 tons of newsprint pro- duction. The huge mill normally turns out-1.000 tons of newsprint and 150 tons of sulphlte pulp daily on seven machines. when the fire broke out. pro- duction was halted. Since then, it ii.-ls been gradually resumed as burned-out wiring was replaced. 'In March, the company lost 6.000 tons in newsprint production dur- log a six-day strike at the same ..'2.:::f”:..:”i1.l'::3:"::::;;..i': High Prices In Australia I at Calhoun. 'l.'enn., and makes varl uus types of paper and paper MELBOURNE (CP) - Dummy products in many parts of the television nerlals-a sly trick orig- W0I'1d- inated in the United States and Canada in TV'S early days - are sprouting from the rooftop: of Melbourne and Sydney due to an acute shortage of sets in Aus- tralia. O O In W Joneses competition is keeping harassed householders out on a OTTAWA (CP)-Justice Minister l'"”""”'1 limb- Gauon wu 1-epm-t,d Sunday to in Television, which has lagged in in good common following .1, Australia. now is coming on with ope;-gtion F,-iday. such a rush that Australian set A nurse in attendance at Ottawa ""'""f”c '"”” R," hopelessly be" Civic Hospital said the 62-year-old hind c9”5"'"9lf e""""l- cabinet l inister spent a "very Dummy 8911815 '1!" bet?" the good" night, answer to this vexing problem. Mr, Gm-50.. 1. upecm-1 to M and while it may seem incredible in hogpgm go, lbw. two week, to an intelligent person, it has mum happtmild tbeforelbe l es doing a The operation. described '; an R9 ll 39"" 5 informed source as a seriousyone. ””mK busme" hf d" t aerl;1l5' was made to remove an apparent ”” dlsplaylng e "b”'" 9' his Y" source of 'ection. g:'tlsEe'.lmf”allg:l' wml everything ms-I-one AGE HUGE PRICE FOR. DUMMY The dummy,televlsion sets are Holland built more ships than so cleverly disguised. even to a all other European countries com- celluloid screen which looks like bined during the 15th century. the real thing. that they can't be The frantic keeping-up"'ilh-thee ls rick Gardiner, reside at Cardigan, P.Ei. STILL MERRY WORCESTER, Entzlanil lCPl-A practical Joker threw itching ,. der on Labor parly elm-lion agent Dennis Merry llurlllg the municipal election canlpuiun. "it kept me up to scroll-h." said distinguished from a genome set. And the prices people are pay- ing for no television would have bought a small home in Australia before the war. Prices start at 2185 Australian 3435 for a 17- inch table model - dummy, int ' Australia will have two TV WI- tems - commercial and state- owned. Melbourne's eommo i ' station will start transmitting test patterns July 16. Girl Dies from Head Injury GRAND FALLS. Nfld. (C9) - Eileen Power. ill. of nearby Wind- sor dled in hospital here Sunday oi head injuries received Saturday in the auto accident that took the life of her companion 25-year-old James Rowsell of Point Learning- ton. A passenger in the back seat escaped with minor injuries. ALL WEEK Save This AD , LEARANGE. SALE n FITZROY GROCERY CUT PRICES ON EVERYTHING! BUTTER, 2 lb. msmz xnrcuur 1.14 .. 11 oz. Size LARGE " SUPER SUDS 23: .. 16 oz. Prepared . . MUSTARD 21: Pkg. Libby's or Holly Hill King Cole TEA, Vzlb. Maple Leaf LARD, lb. Hereford or Helmet York ' Johnson's 25 Ills. st. GRAPEFRUIT JUICE; 20 oz. CORNED BEEF, tin OLD DUTCH: Qilns PEANUT BUTTER: 15 91- MUFFINS, 2 plugs. (Reg. 35c each) IAIY POWDER. 2 for voous roller TISSUE . 3 rolls I9: Catelll - (Reg. Price 226) SPAGHETTI, 16 oz. Wizard PINK WICK, bottl Kellogg's 63 13: 58: T7: 35: 25: 41: 33: 52: Weloh's Jenklm Cay and Maple Leaf DETERGENT 4 for 25: CORN FLAKES, 8 oz., 2 for (Reg. Price 29c) GRAPE JUICE, l6 oz. bottle STRAWBERRY PRESERVE. tin Chum DOG FOOD, 12 oz., 350? -ll0llEl.lVRY- - Pk9- Tlle Tlnrlornlnnvlfng Hrnrl and UK: Human Tour): helped solidify the Democratic-lp grasp on the Negro vote by hcr own treatment and association withl Negroes, whom she welcomed into' the White House. Have Your Clothes DRY CLEANED PRESSED ONLY I Contests Y Now with the broad advances the Negroes have made under the ad- mlnlstliailorrof Dwight D. Eisen- l'l0lNt?l'.Hp0llll('al observers see a posslblllly that they will move to. wards the Republican fold. Rellublll-all leaders are confident tllat Eiscllllnwcr's record on civil rights. coupled with the generally better and fairer treatment Negroes have received in the last few yeal's, Will produce a pro-Re- lllllllll-an trend this year, l'.lsenholvcr. as commander-im chief of the US. armed services, has almost completely abolished discrimination in the forces and le:,l5p'l,l5'5l9d "Dun desegregation in ashlulzlon. lie has appointed Ne- 3””"5,lU lllllh federal offices. Wllllc Eisenhower had nothing to do Wllll the Supreme Court deci- sion So!-1954 which banned racial rilsclllmuallnn in public schools, "W, llt'l'lSIUn was handed down (ll"'ll1H his administration, a fact that may tend to influence the Ncgrll voter. 1" framing a civil rights plmik. Refrigeration Rcpairs To All Makg APPLIANCES SA LES & SERVICE MOTORS Rewinding and Repair! the Democrats face the difficult problem of drafting one that will satisfy the Negro without at the NEW DELHI session of Congress. kept Tuesday, June, 5 1956 The Guardian. Page 3 WOMEN PRISONER! ITRIKE (Reuters)-India same time causing a revolt among ha! "K95 EKYPE W mlkl U-789113 the white Democrats in the south. inquiries about a reported hunger The Republicans are not wholly Slflke IND!!! WOHIBD POUUCII Pl'll' without criticism from Negro leanloners held in Portuguese Goa. ers, who feel that administration Pfilne Minister Nehru told Parlia- bills providing for study of the meat Tuesday. He said the cause problem of racial discrimination Of the hunger Strike W85 the res and for additional laws to enforce fusal of Porutugese authorities to Negro voting rights were i:lfro- transfer the women to jails where duced too late for action at this women prisoners are normally Merry. "We won three ncw scats."l at ELECTRICAL R"-E.w Repairs We also stock for your convenience a full line of P I - Poultry Supplies, Baby Chicks and Egg Cartons, etc. CLEANERS 3 mar ectrlti and anything you may require in dairy supplies- . ' Dial 7387 Phones 854: 8544 Milk and Cream Cans, Filter Disks, etc. p u If this Man were . . .YOU? and hospitals the nmletstanding heart and G00 human sooth are constantly at work. banging as-whopemdusickiobodlyandsod To provide the material basis for these tasks of mercy. The Solution Army depends cnnbdeody on YOI.l.. Ridiculous. you say. This man is penniless, homeless. fricndless . . . clown and Out. Mis- fortune, weakness or vice has brought him loss. Despair grips his heart. Yet . . . IF you were this man, you would know where to turn. To The Salvation Army no human being is hopeless. in its hostels, havens, homes Qvawmdecwic TH! SALVATION ARIVIY SRED SHIELD APPEAL l .3 l l