My ar- \ TELEPHONE 8506 Buyer meets seller with G: an-dian Want Ads. Dial 8506 ask for classi- fied ad take?» for quick results. 16 PAGES Authorized as second Clan Mai! by tho Post owe. Departn em. Ottawa Ellis @11®11‘JfiIib1i1It "Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” I .. f;~«.: , Sunny Skies, Colder Weather Follows Storm . . NEW YORK (AP)-—Sunny skies ‘ ' _ and falling temperatures Wednes- » ,_ day marked the aftermath of a short East Coast snowstorm, "the _ first of the new year. Snow even fell in Florida. V‘ The weather bureau forecast below-freezing temperatures for the northeast, with an anticipated 5 below zero in northern Maine. At least 35 deaths were attrib- 2 uted to the storm, which the weather bureau called one of the most intense on the coast of re- cent years. Most died in car acci- dents or collapsed while shovel- CHARLOTTETOWN CANADA, THURSDAY, JANUARY 9, 1958 PREMIER WIRES OTTAWA WEATHER Cloudy; a few snowflurries; much colder; light variable winds. Low-high at Chal- lottetown 20 and 25. NOT MORE THAN FIVE CENTS Requests Thermal Power Plants For This Province MINISTER MAKES STATEMENT ARClII'I‘EC'I"S DRAWING OF NEW BUILDING Excavation On Royal Bank To Commence At Once Excavation for the new Royal Bank Building will begin today according to the Bank Manager, L. D. MacKay who stated yester- day that County Construction Ltd. have been engaged by the general contractors to carry out this phase of the work. The gen- eral contractor for the erection of the building’is Eastern Wood- workers Ltd. of New Glasgow, N. S Mr. MacKay said the Bank was anxious to get this work under- way as quickly as possible in order to alleviate the unemploy- ment situation in the City. It is expected, he said, that with the exception of key personnel, local labour will ‘be used. OLD WALLS COME DOWN All existing foundation walls will be removed. The banking area of the building will be at two levels. The lower one will be at the same ievel as the existing basement of the old building and the main banking floor will be slightly above street level. Above the main banking floor will be a mezzanine floor. The third floor of the building will be let to ten- ants. Excavation‘ at the rear of the building will go to a depth of Maritimes Storm -Causes Damage (CP-)—A high - e.r§d,,g,gal,e with-J;pin«.‘and.- pow messedfup commtiliiéatloii V "eir'~ power hnes southwestern Nova Scotia W y, bringing rec- ord tides and some destruction. In Northern New Brunswick the storm carried up to a foot -of snow. It left clogged highways and huge drifts that turned to slush from the following rain. Yarmouth, N.S. was hardist hit by the 50-mile-an-hour winds that reached 70 in gusts. They wiped out the town’s communications and power for a time. Roofs of several buildings in the exhibition grounds were torn off.‘ Radio station CJ LS was knocked off the air when a barn roof slam- med into its main transmitter tower. The station’s emergency transmitter was also flattened. Farther up the coast at Bridge- water, N.S.. a tree was blown across power lines, disrupting ser- vice. As heavy rain belted down, sewers overflowed and threatened street flooding. However. the rain tapered off before the situation b came serious. Damage to fishing gear re- mained to be counted. Some lob- ster traps were reported smashed by heavy seas. At Freeport, N.S., on the Bay of Fundy, the gale smashed a fishing boat against a wharf, wrecking the boat. A scallop dragger snapped her moorings at Digby, N.S., and - up nearby-. _ _, boats broirm ' armouth County out-ports and some were damaged before their owners recovered them. A calf club barn collapsed at the Yarmouth County exhibition grounds, landing in a heap on power and telephone lines. Lurcher Lightship at the Bay of Fundy -entrance reported wind gusts of 85 miles an hour at the height of the gale. CAPITAL’S POWER OFF Parts of Fredericton, the New Brunswick capital, were without power for several hours when tree branches fell across the wires. At Halifax the tide rose 18 inches above normal, and this was pushed up several more feet around wharves where the swell and undertow met. A few wharves were flooded. During the height of the gale the freighter Canadian Victor—one of eight Canadian National Steam- ships vessels strikebound here—- dragged anchor and was being driven against the Dartmouth shore when two tugs took her in tow. In New Brunswick plows bucked huge wet drifts that remained af- ter the storm. Between six and 12 inches of snow came down, but the province didn't get as much damaged two other draggers tied wind as Nova Scotia. P. E. I. Not Affected Greatly By Yesterday's Severe Storm This Province was not affected seriously by the storm. At Sum- merside the R. C. A. F.’s meteor- ological station reported that, from 6:00 p. in. Tuesday to 10:00 | a. in. Wednesday 1.34 inchesxof rainfall was recorded. At Charlottetown the Depart- ment of Transport Radio Range officials stated that only .88 in- ches of rain ‘fell here in the] twenty-four hours ending Wednes- da'y evening at 8’oclock. Highest wind velocities at Charlottetown were recorded. be- tween 3:00 p. m. and 5:00 p. m. Wednesday. During this time the wind blew at 30 miles per hour, gusting at times to 40 m. p. h. No damage to buildings, shipp- ing or communications was re ported. Warm On Pra iries While Ontario And Quebec Shiver By THE CANADIAN PRESS Manitobans basked in near-. record temperatures Wednesday 85 a belt of warm air moved: slowly eastward from Alberta. V BY mid-afternoon the mercury at Winnipeg rose to 36 degrees,| only four degrees short of the rec-‘ pleasantly warm. Weathermen, however, said the ‘warm air—which made Clares- holm, Alta., the country’s balm- iest spot Tuesday at 62 degrees —is moving south, giving way to colder northern air. Ontario was mainly sunny and cold. Temperatures in the north- 0rd for the date set in 1902. A west were generally in the low Year ago the temperature ranged 20s. Northeastern and Southern from one above zero to 17 below. I Ontario and parts of Quebec In 1902 Calgary sunned itself in;ranged between 20 degrees and a record 54 degrees on Jan. 7 and ' zero. the following day Winnipeg hit! The outlook for today was “)9 40-dcgrcc high spot. 'l‘ucs<lay_mildci‘ in most of Ontario. Tem- this week. Calgary hcttcrcd its:pci'alin'es in Quebec were ex- mafk by two degrees and the fol-ipccted to rise Friday. l°“'"18 day Winnipeg warmed up: The lowest temperature re- l"“- _ corded in Eastern Canada was; 43 The_ Prairie proviiucs gencrally below zero at Nitchequon, Que., remained In I I uly sunny and! early in the morning. about ten feet below the lower banking floor. It is in this section’ of the building that thp boiler room will be located. In addition to this, the gon- tractor will h-ave to excavate for some twenty caissons which sup- port the main walls of the struc- ture. These caissons, or columns, are expected to go to a depth of 13 feet, a precaution necessary to obtain proper footing. FINISHED IN GRANITE Finished in grey granite, the building will present an impres- sive appearance in the business section of the City. The base trim will be of black polished granite and the spandrel panels will be of travestine marble An elevator will provide transpor- tation between all floor levels. The former Royal Bank build- ing on the site of winch the new building will be erected, has been -a landmark in Charlottetown for over 100 years. Last fall it was demolished and the banking ser- vices__ ere ,remov,e_d to the old Queen Square. LONDON (Reuters) A murmer of discontent was heard in the Conservative party Wed- nesday over the resignation of Peter Thorneycroft as chan- eéllor of the exehequer. ’ Some Conservatives claimed Thorneycroft’s resignation Mon- day has split the party ranks while others said his resignation would not lead to party revolt. Oonservatirve MP Geofftney» Hirst threatened to withdraw support from the government unless he gets “a more ade- quate and realistic” explan- Railway Unions Protest McTague OTTAWA (CP) A protest by non - operating railway unions against appointment of Hon. C. P. McTague as chairman of a con- ciliation board in their contract dispute with the railways is un- der consideration, Labor Minister Starr said Wednesday. “No decision has been reached as yet,” he said in the Commons -in reply to a question from Claude Ellis (CCF—Regina City). The unions have said they con- sider Mr. McTague, former war labor‘ board chairman and retired Ontario Supreme Court justice, unsuitable because of extensive business connections. Battleship King George V Starts Final Voyage GARE LOCH, Scotland (Reut- ers) — the 35,000 - ton, 17-year- old battleship King George V started on its last voyage from here Wednesday. The former flagship, one of four battleships to be scrapped as part of Britain's defence cuts, was towed to an anchorage off Greenock, prior to being taken up the Clyde River to a dismant- ling yard. In addition to playing a big part in the sinking of the German bat- tleship Bismark in May, 1941, the King George V took part in oper- ations against Japan and was ling show. There was 191/z inches of snow . at Fitchburg, Mass., and up to 16 Connecticut. had 11.3 V inches, the most in nearly 17 inches throughout Atlantic City, N.J., years. New Haven's 141/2 cut city. The storm tore down power ness firms. Hundreds of cars were aban- doned in snowdrifts. Parkways sharply curtailed. GALES TO 75 MPH Winds in gusts up to 75 miles whipped up deep drifts. New York _City got off compar- up the coast. Five inches of snow transportation seriously. For the first time in history, cluded snowflurries in its state as Lakeland in the heart of the citrus fruit area. The Florida orange crop had already been practically halved by a Decem- ber freeze. Snow now and thexi has hit the northern part of Florida and there have been predictions of snow in some local weather fore- casts but never before in a fore- cast for the entire state. Many residents of the southern part of Florida never have seen snow and just know what they read in the newspapers when the ies. . A sea wall gave way at Wells sort cottages. At Newport, R.I., a navy de- stroyer force prepared to put to sea to escape the storm. One de- stroyersuffered a gash above the . OIL HEATING Middle distillates, chiefly hoineflieathig.‘ requirements. ' Murmur Of Discontent Heard In U. K. Conservative Ranks , ation of the resignation. CONTINUE FIGHT? He also demanded an assur- ance that the government will continue the battle against infla- tion waged by Thorneycroft. Thorneycroft and two of his aides resigned because their colleagues would not back 'l‘horneycroft’s plan to keep government exmendituires at their present level. But Migel Birch, one of the ministers who quit with Thor- neycroft, said Wednesday the resignations were not a revolt against the government. COPPER PRICE CUT NEW YORK (AP)—A lead-ing custom smelter Wednesday cut the price of copper by 1/E cent a pound to 25 cents a pound. Other custom smelters are ex- pected to make a similar reduc- tion. Producers continued to quote the metal at 27 cents a pound. inches of snow was just half an inch below the 1948 record for that Connecti- lines and closed schools and busi- were closed or the rate of travel atively easy as the storm moved failed to i m p e d e metropolitan the Florida weather bureau in- forecast. They fell as far south north is having its w-inter miser-l Beach, Me., endangering 15 re- water-line in a harbor collision.‘ r almost one-third of Canadian oil OTTAWA, (Special)—-The Giant Argus aircraft specially design- ed for anti-submarine activities and recently unveiled at the Canadiar Plant at Montreal will be housed at Summerside, it was revealed in the Commons Wed- nesday by Defence Minister Pearkes. Mr. Peakes was answering questions asked by Dr. 0. H. Phillips, Conservative for Prince and John Pickersgill, Liberal M. P. for Bonvavista—'1‘willingate, Newfoundland. . A similar question about hangar facilities at Summerside had pre- viously been asked by A. W. Stuart, Liberal M. P. for Charlot- te N. B. In his answer about additional Refrigerated Sea Water For Fish Suggested OTTAWA (CP) — Pacific coast fishermen can spend _more time fishing if they store their catch aboard ship in refrigerated sea water instead of ice, the fisheries experts were told Wednesday. The sea water keeps the fish _-in perfect condition and doesn't cnush them as ice will, a report presented to the annual meeting of the fisheries research board said. The Vancouver technological station of the board reported that tria1s“on commercial vessels also showed the sea water system al- lowed the ships to operate at greater distances from canneries The report ‘said round sockeye and chum salmon were in excel- lent condition after being stored aboard ship for a week. They were still good after another 13 days in storage in refrigerated sea water at the station. Hallibut was sold from eight to 15 days after catching “in finest con- dition.” Similarz tests also were being made with crabs. Prince Edward Island’s Del- egation to the National Liberal‘ Leadership convention lea- ves here Saturday morning for Ottawa where the new leader will be selected next week. The convention opens on Tu- esday, January 14th, and runs to the 16th when the new lead- er will be named. The delegaton will be head- ed by Premier A.W. Matheson and will include the three Is- land Senators, the three form- er Members of Parliament and representatives from the var- ious provincial, county and dis- trict associations. The senators are Hon. Geo- hangar space at the Summerside air station, the Minister said: “A decision has now been reached to construct a cantilever hangar, a readiness hangar and an anti- corrosion hangar at Summerside, P. E. I. R. C. A. F. Station in Giant AircraftHangars For S'.side Announced order to house the new Argus aircraft. , He did not indicate what th( cost of the new construction would be. There were no details as to when the work would get underway. I King Dies In T NAIROBI, Kenya (CP) —Dia- mond king John (Thorburn) Wil- liamson, fabulous fig u If e of wealth any mystery, died at his Tanganyika home early Wednes- day. He was 52. Unconfirmed reports said the shy, aloof Canadian geologist died of throat cancer. Dr. ‘Williamson was b u ri e (1 near his jungle-skirted home in mine that made him the world’s richest bachelor. A brilliant graduate of McGill University, Williamson discover- ed and developed the world’s richest privately-owned diamond mine. But he spent much of his time in solitude. The unassuming scientist found diamonds worth $100,000,000 be- neath the clay of the East Afri- can plateau. Since 1955 he had flown to Europe and North America for medical treatment -and in June last year travellled to London to consult a speci ist. On his return six months ago, he became seriously ill and it was some time before he was fit enough to be flown back to his mine, His condition _b.ec worse two weeksago; ' ' THREE, TRIPS HOME A visit to Montreal last year was only the third return to Canada for the native of Mont- ford, Que., who left there in 1934 to write his great success story. Sir Ernest Oppenheimer, South African diamond magnate, died Nov. 25 at 77. The Williamson and Oppen- heimer interests reached agree- Island Delegates Leave For Liberal Convention Saturday rge H. Barbour, Charlotte- town; Hon. Dr. Thomas V. Grant and Hon F. Elsie In- man, Montague. The former members of par- liament are J Watson Mac Naught, Summerside; Thomas J. Kickham, Souris; Neil A. Matheson, Southport. The members of the legis- lature, in addition to the prem- ier, are Hon. Dougald Mac- Kinnon, Mount Buchanan, Hon. Eugene Cullen, Charlottetown; Hon. J. George MacKay,, Al- bany; Hon. Keir Clark, Mon- tague; Hon. E. P. Foluery. Summerside, F. A. Large, Q. (Continued on page 15 col. 5) Active Year Reported In Public Health Department’ An extensive and very active -. program has been carried out by the Prince Edward Island Department of Health in 1957, Dr. M. Lorne Bonnell, Minister of Health announced in a year’s- end report yesterday. Some of the highlights includ- 2" ed the official opening of Hills-~.,_ borough General Hospital for the mentally ill in East Royal- ty; the fact that over 35,000 do- ses of Salk polio vaccine were administered; the placing of an x-ray machine in the Prince County Hospital for taking rou- ‘tine x-rays of all admissions; the opening of an Orthodontic Clinic at the Health Department offices on Prince Street and the establishment of Poison Control Centres at the two Charlotte- town and the Summerside Hos- pitals. On the other side of the led- present at the final surrender. ‘ The battleship had been laid up at Gare Loch since June, 1950. OVERLOOKED BILL VANCOUVER rCP> Vancou- ver’s Fraserview eight-year old residential area’s 400 property owners will be billed by city coun- cil for $71,000 for improvements, that had previously been over- looked. ger, members of the Depart- ment and many residents of the Province were deeply grieved by the sudden deaths of Dr. P. A. Crcelman. Director of the Div- ision of Tuberculosis Control and Superintendent of the Provincial Sanatorium, and Dr. Harold Shaw, Director of the Division of Laboratories and Provinciall Pathologist. Dr. E.M. Found has‘ taken over the direction of the HON. M. LORNE BONNELL Minister of Health Division of Tuberculosis Con- trol but as yet no successor for Dr. Shaw has been appointed. DIVISION ACTIVITIES By Divisions, the report in- cluded the following events a- chieved by the Department in 1957: Public Health Nursing: The intensive immunization program was continued throughout the province from 1956. Along with the polio inoculations, thousands of injections against diphtheria, whooping cough and tetanus, were administered under the nursing program. Smallpox vac- cinations and re - vaccinations were also given. Home visits to mothers with new babies were carried out by the Public Health Nurses throughout the province and the rural schools were rou- tinely visited. Maternal and Child Health:— This section of the Department is staffed with one nurse with specialized training in the Ma- ternal and Child Health field, and she is assisted by the Pub- lic Health Nurses. Classes for expectant mothers are held weekly at the Health Centres in Charlottetown and Summerside. Visits to mothers with newborn babies in hospitals were routin- ely carried out. DENTAL HEALTH The opening of the orthodon- tic clinic will result in-a mark- {Continued on page 14 col. 7) Tanganyika, beside the diamond‘ remve Shy Canadian-Born Diamond anganyika MR. WILLIAMSON gerheads. years ago in. Equatorial‘ Africa. cattle. From that single find, William- son developed his mining prop- erty. PARLIAMENT in 5 A GI.ANCE By THE CANADIAN PRESS Wednesday A $50,000,000 ‘program to pro- countries through credit sales and Minister Gordon Churchill. Resources Minister Alvin Ham- ilton said almost $30,000,000 in federal aid will go to thermal power devtelopment in Nova Sco- tia and New Brunswick in the next two years. ' The Commons approved intro- duction of a bill to lend another $30,000,000 to New Brunswick for its Beechwood hydro-electric pro- ject. Jean Lesagex (L — Montmagny- l’Islet) questioned the soundness of the Beechwood project, on the St. John River, without water storage upstream. Finance Minister Fleming said the loan will enable New Bruns- wick to pay off bank loans by which it built Beechwood. The Senate met briefly and ad- journed with no business before )— or Thursday The Commons meets at 11 a.m. EST to debate the thermal power program for the Atlantic prov- inces. The Senate sits at 3 p.m. A. P. Erred On Man In Rocket Yarn NEW YORK (AP) -- Investiga- tion now clearly indicates The As- sociated Press erred Monday in using the p h r a s e “reliable sources” in its report that the So- 9 manned rocket into space. The investigation shows that No Immediate Prospect Of ment in recent years but the two diamond titans were once at log- The, Canadian, son of a lumber operator, began his adventure 17 ‘He found a diamond on shrub land where for centuries tribesmen grazed their ~ Scotia in the next two years, Re- vide wheat to Colombo Plan gifts was announced by Trade. viet Union had launched a Prince Edward Island has asked the Federal government to build thermal power plants here so the Province can share in the thermal power development program that is being offered to New Brunswick and Nova Scotia ‘The request was made in a tele- am sent yesterday by Premier .. W. Matheson to the Prime_ iinister of Canada, Right Hon. John Diefenbaker. The suggestion made early last year by Hon. Jean Lesage the then Minister of Northern Affairs and National Resources, _w_hose department would admimster such a program, was that the power for this Province could be carried by cable over the pro- posed Northumberland S t r at t Causeway if the latter project should prove feasible. Mr. Lesage suggested then that the power would be carried by cable from the tl:;rmal plant, or plants, that would be built to pro- vide power for New Brunswick and Nova Scotia. One suggestion was that one huge plant would be built on the Isthmus of Chignecto, or close by. It would be built near a coal mine where the fuel would Power Line From Mainland costs. In his wire to Mr.Diefenbake}'. however, Premier Matheson s_a1d in part, “Since there is no im- mediate prospect of getting a causeway, we should have plants for power development here." TEXT OF MESSAGE _ The text of the Prernier‘s wire is as follows: “In the past few days we have had an opportunity to study more carefully the thermal power pro- jects offered to New Brunswick and Nova Scotia. From the re- cord we can see that this offer could e extended to Prince Ed- ward sland. ‘ Since there is no immediate prospect of getting a causeway which would carry power lines from the other provinces, we should have plants for power development here. In the past four years the province has un- dertaken an extensive program of rural electrification and the load at the busy season is heavy. “Our power costs are very high. We have no rivers for water power development. Would you please consider this telegram as a request to have Prince Edward be available minus transportation Ottawa (Special) In an outline of proposed power demands in the Atlantic Provinces, Prime Minister Diefenbaker told the Commons on Wednesday that the Government of Prince Edward Island, by telegram dated Janu- ary 7, made‘ clear its desire to have the Atlantic Provinces pro- OTTAWA (CP) -— Almost $30,000,000 in federal assistance is expected to go into joint ther- mal-electric power developments in New‘ Brunswick and Nova ources Minister Alv-in Hamilton said Wednesday night. He spoke in introducing a gov- ernment resolution preliminary to a measure to provide federal aid in construction of steam power plants and interconnecting transmission lines in the Atlantic provinces. It would also provide subsidies on coal used for indus- trial power production in the area. Mr. Hamilton said first steps will be construction of a 20-mega- watt generator at Trenton, N.S.. and a 50-megawatt generator at East Saint John, N.B. ‘ He estimated the two projects will cost about $25,000,000. In ad- dition, federal subsidies on ship- ments of coal for thermal power generation would cost an esti- mated $1,700,000 annually. The power generators will be built by a federal agency and sold to the provinces on a long-term deal. Details have not yet been disclosed. TOTAL $105 MILLION Mr. Hamilton said eventually two thermal units likely will be .built in New Brunswick and eight Island included inthis program." Prime Minister's Statement ditional facilities to provide pow- er for the Island. ‘ He added that the Government f Newfoundland has also expres- sed its desire to have the pro- gram extend to that province. I Assistance in regard to specific projects has not been requested by either of these governments. gram cover the provision of ad- Mr. Diefenbaker added. Expects 3o MiI«|~ion To Be -~N.B. ~Byl96O whole program. He said the same deal is avail- able to Prince Edward Island and Newfoundland if they want it. So far, no specific request had been received from either province. While neither province might at present have need of’ steam power plants, they could get fed- eral help in construction of trans- mission lines on the same terms. No Date Set For Hospital Plan OTTAWA (CP) — No date has been set for the start of federal participation in a hospital insur- ance plan with the provinces, Health Minister Monteith said Wednesday. In reply to Commons questions, he said he has had recent cor- respondence with some provincial governments but "only about pos- sible changes in some of the regu- lations under the proposed plan. / /HEADED PLUMBERS MONTREAL (CP) —- John E. Bowler, 60, general manager of the Canadian Institute of Plumb- ing and Heating, died in hospital Tuesday night. Born and educated at Spencer, Mass., he spent much in Nova Scotia. The cost might run about $105,000,000 for the, of his life in the shoe business on the United States east coast. OTTAWA (CP)—-The Grits bear the Tories a special grudge. It’s all because of several miles of bunting. “That’s going to be pretty tough to get down," a Liberall convention workman remarked Wednesday as he surveyed the Progressive Conservatives’ leg- acy—row on row of blue bunting hanging from the steel rafters of the Coliseum where the Liberals will pick their new leader next week. Blue is the color of the Conserv- .atives; the Liberals go for red. while the non - official sources The yards and yards of blue bunt- quoted had proved reliable in the ing were unravelled and pinned past, they were reporting rumors to the rafters in December. 1955. in this case, There has been nolwhen the Conservatives held their formal denial of the rumors from convention which chose John G. the Soviet government. Diefenbaker as leader. The Liberals figure it would be JAYNE MANSFIELD wens HOLLYWOOD (AP)—-With pink- tinted invitations and undisgu-ised enthusiasm, ample-figured Jayne Mansfield has announced that she and weightlifter Mickey Margi- tay will be married Monday even- ing. This is two days ahead of the previously announced date for the actress said Tuesday that the we're so much in love." l the long-planned ceremony, but be expensive. too costly to pull the blue bunt- ing down and replace it with red. That would take two operations. So they plan to cover both sides of the blue bunting with red ma- terial. Since the Coliseum, home of 0b- tawa‘s annual fairs, horse shows and giant bingo games, is a fairly large structure, the covering may Tory Bunting Proves Tough Problem For Grits To Solve Liberal show in history, a three day affair expected to attract some 5,000 out-of-towners, includ- ing 1.500 voting delegates and more than 900 alternates. BALLOTTING THURSDAY The convention opens Tuesday but it won't be until Thursday night that ballotting for the new leader will be conducted. Top con- tenders for the post being vacated by Louis St. Laurent are former external affairs minister Lester B. Pearson and former health minister Paul Martin. This will be the Liberals’ fourth convention since Confederation. The last one, in 1948, drew about 2,100 delegates and alternates, so if things work out as party head- quarters figure, the turnout next ,week should set a record. Heartening to headquarters is the fact that demands for accom- modation are rolling in on a big scale. Mrs. Douglas Blair‘, head- quarters accommodation direc- tor, estimates she has supplied rooms for some 2,500 out-of-town- ers, but needs more accommoda- tlon. “We’ve just got to find another 150 to 200 rooms. We've used everything available-—hotels, mo- But that is just one aspect of,tels, private homes in and around ‘date was pushed ahead “because dressing up the Coliseum for what‘ Ottawa and l-lull—but more ac- has been billed as the biggestl commodation is required."