' TELEPHONE 8506- Buyer meets seller with Guar- dian Want Ads. Dial 8506 ask for classified ad taker, for quick results. -77:9 "Covers Prince Edward Island Like The. Dew” uardiarz WEATH light snow .endlng during morning; scattered snowflun ries afternoon; milder. high at Ch'tewn Low- 2O and 35. Well Known Newsman Dies SAINT JOHN. 143- (CP-!"r9d- prick D. McGuire. 61. I well known neuspaper man in eastern Canada for more than N Jf'll"- dhd 5'" Wednesday. III in recent weeks. Mr. McGuire came to Saint John TIIOMIIY HE iioitcton. when he Md 5993 0'” played by The Times enrl-Tr&- tlrlill for Vll'l0tll.DE1'l0l'-ll I3 79' porter, city editor and provinclll editor. He planned to consult a doctor here. registered at I hold jnfl died in his sleeP- liir. McGuire began his newspa- per career with the Saint John Telegraph-Journal during the First World War. He later became finan- cial editor of the Montreal Gs zette. He also worked for the Saint John Eveninl TlmG9rGl0b9- and Capital Free Press at Fred ericton. Born in Saint John. Mr. McGuire graduated from St. Josephs Uni- versity with a bachelor of arts degree in 1915. later obtained a bachelor o civil law degree and was admit to the bar of lb! province. 8-Inch Snow Fall At St. John's. Nfld. ST. JOHN'S. ,Nfld. (CP)-New foumilaiiders shlvered In the firlt full blast of winter uednesdsy 09 more than eight inches of snow swept down on this east coast city and temperatures dropped bwlow sem in northern areas. Plows made their first appear anre here as they pushed 8.4 Inches of snow off streets to clear the way for throngs of Christmas shoppers. Throughout the daytime temperatures were a chilly II do grees above zero. But this was far warmer than the Grenfeii Mission town of St. Antitony, on the northern tip of the province. There the tempera lure dropped to live below. A report from Indian House. Labrador. gave a temperature reading of 22 below. Police Widen Search For Trio In Montreal Brokeage Theft MONTREAL (CPI - Assurance that all possible is being done to l'l'0tr't clients was given Wednes- day by the stock-brockersge firm of R Most and Co.. followinil theft of securities whose value was placed as high as 8600.000- The police estimate of 900.00 hourzht from W. D. Benson. a lnior partner in the firm. a state- gcnr that this was "all wrong." Was ”suhstanttIi." ilmnwhile. po I i e e extended lair search from Montreal to NW York for at least one of three sus- sieri.-. 1-at mi-ca ml! lend '0 Cirn. Mexico and South America. Warraats have been issued for fin I! the three gugpecls. One I! I young delivery clerk of the firm; and hc”(w'(td ii, police to have-be g 3 t iirethetts. . ..'....? ""ii'...ii.-mo rairtendef clerk.'lI1IH-N 7”--for aha mus-no""'l-Mel-3"” STACKS OF MAIL in various stages of processing at the local post office. TOP LEFT. primary anrtatton clerks attacking a huge mound of cancelled correspon- dence. TOP RIGHT. Henry Mura- Record Was Set aghan wheeling one hour' apost- ing to the cancelling machine. LOWER carriers and assistants making final sortation of mail des- tined for city delivery. Guardian Photo In Handling Post Office Mail On Monday Hull cards and letters passed ' "the cancelling machine at the local Cliasi- Post Office on Monday oi this week. An additional 30,000 received that day were not put through until Tuesday; These totals do not in- clude correspondence originating In business and public offices us- ing a metering device. According to Postmaster J.J. Connoli . this was the largest volume 0 such mail ever handled in a single day by the Charlottetown office. From the beginning oi the present month until midnight Tuesday 577.585 pieces of "correspondence were forwarded to their destinations. This year all classes of mail are being processed within the con- fines oi the Post Office area. The new quarters in the Confederation Building are sufficiently commod- long to J t even the tre- mendous increase of each Christ- mas season. Customs mail receiv- ed during the day is sorted at night, and delivered the foilowinl day. In all 51 extra employees are engaged in this operation. This extra staff have been placed In all departments of the service-postal clerks. letter carriers. and rail- way mail clerks. Continuous street delivery is beimz maln- tained. and a double collection service from all city boxes ha! been inaugurated. FAULTY ADDRESSES Postmaster Connolly T090119 that his staff are experiencing the usual difficulties with incorrect and illegible addresses aggravated somewhat this Year by the 3'' signment of new numbers to many of the city's box-holders. and an unusual number of channel in addresses. culled by MW Id- Police learned many of the dll- appearance oi the securities. The firm Tuesday declared itself bank- rupt and was suspended by Ill! Montreal and Canadian Stock Ex- dlfI1'::esdgcig'nn to go into bank- ruptcy was "the only honorable thing to do" after a thorough study oi the firmis financial posltlui. lfr. Benson said Wednesday. A: the same time he said he and his partner. A. E. D. Tre- ..-..-. are doinl all ramble '0 see that "our clients suffer the least possible loss." There was mhavvrohmslgtggthatl everything was lost. However. re- gardless of the total of- iaecuritlea stolen there was sub- stantlal ya 'lon against 'any. such loss as the total theft llIli' .. lie said there is the brokcrsi blanket bond insurance. "bolstered f I aid would lose ditlons to the letter carrier terri- tory. ' ' The Postmaster and his staff are very appreciative of the man- ner in which the public responded to the request of the postal auth- orities to "mall early". Doing so enables the postal staff to process and forward outgoing matter in plenty of time to concentrate on the sortation and delivery oi all mail destined for city delivery. It is expected that this peak load will taper off during the com- ing week. Present deliveries will be maintained on Saturday and Monday. There will be no wicket service. courier service. or city delivery on Christmas day. C OWN. CANADA Are Elected To Security Council UNITED NATIONS N.Y. (CP The United Nations General As- sembly Wednesday elected Swe- den. Colombia-and Iraq to two yleiar terms In the Security Coun c . They succeed Belgium. Peru and Iran whose terms as non-pan snaaant. S238,375 Now In Springhill Fund SPRING!-IILL. N.st CP -- The Springhill Disaster Fund commit- tee said Wednesday 8238.375 has been received and 845,575 has been paid out to. families affected by the mine disaster Nov. 1. Relief fund official Stan Farris of Springhill said 38.500 has been paid out to men affected by the explosion which caused 39 deaths and left many miners jobless. Laval Reiects Federal Grants QUEBEC CP-Laval Univer- sity '-Vednesda, flatly rejected proposed federal grants to univer- sities on the grounds that educa- tion is an exclusively provincial responsibility. Msgr. Alphonse-Marie -Parent. rtounced Laval's decision shortly before leaving on a world tour. He is to arrive in Paris today by air. The university became the ii to reject formally Prime Minister Si. Laurent's offer of increased federal grants. A spokesman for the University of Sherbrooke in- dicated about two weeks ago that it will not accept federal aid. but titrated about two weeks ago that no formal announcement has been me . In Montreal. Dr. Cyril James. said the board of governors of McGill has not yet reached a de- cision on the federal offa. PM ANNOUNCED Prlnie Minister St. Lain-ent an- nounced in a speech at Sher- brooke, Que., Oct. 7 that the fed- double grants to s1s.ooo.ooo from ss,ooo.ooo. in a subsequent inter- view he expressed the hope that Quebec Universities would accept the grants despite objections of Premier Duplesais. The grants first were paid is list and were accepted by Que- bec universities in that you. They have been rejected since at the request of Premier Duplesais. The Premier has hinted that any university accepting federal provincial grants which he described as larger than those planned by Ottawa. In is prepared statement. Msgr. Regrets Laval Action Parent said the Quebec govern- ment objects to federal aid to uni veraities "insisting on the fact that in matters of education its Legislative power is exclusive." The Quebec government's oppo- sition was "absolute and unshake- hie." The statement added' "Laval University cannot. in- deed. lose sight of the fact that In educational matters the govern- ment of the province is the prim- ary civil authority. FRENCH FOREIGN THURSDAY, DECEMBER 20. 1956 PRICE 5c MINISTER SPEAKS Says Pressure F Party Led To Ceasefire Canada To Sell Sabres To Germany OTTAWA lCPl m Canada will sell West Germany 225 Sabre jet fighter planes for niurc than 375,- lll0.000 and train the German pi- lots for them. Defence Production Minister Iiowe Wednesday announced curi- cluslon of the agreement between Germany and Canadair Ltd. of Montreal. manufacturer of the 650-mile-an-hour Sabre. At Montreal. Cauadair officials said the sale of 225 Sabres is the largest export order ever recorded by a Canadian aircraft manufac- turer. Deliveries of the aircraft will be spaced over a year begin- ning next autumn. Mr. Howe said production of the aircraft will provide employment for more than 3,000 workers for about two years ”and will retain special skills within the industry while new aircraft programs are being developed-" GERMANY PAYS He was apparently referring to developme t of the CL-28 long- range maritime i connalssancc plane by Canadair for the RCAF and of the Iroquois jet engine for the supersonic CF-I05 Jet fighter by Orenda Engines Ltd.. Malton. Ont. Orenda engines now turns out the power plant for the Sabre. Germany will pay the cost of training its 360 Sabre aircrew in Canada. The German filers are expected to start their training next year. The external affairs department said Germany will relmb ac Can- ada for the cost of maintaining the NATO air training establish- ment ior an additional period of several months. This NATO pro- ggkbathq scheduled to be completed by the and of next year. Canada will supply Germany. I NATO partner, with about one quarter of its new air force. lim- ited to 1.350 planes. More Refugees Reach Halifax HALIFAX (CP)-Refugees from revolt-ravaged Hungary continued to stream through this Atlantic seaport Wednesday enroute to Canadian homes where they hope to forget nightmarish months of fear. I A group of 293 arrived early Wednesday aboard the Greek liner New York swelling to 413 the to- tal processed here before moving west in special refugee trains. Th first party of 120 arrived Sunday aboard the Cunard liner Ivernla. The liner Carinthia. with 105. was due early today. Sussex Airman Dies Of Exposure GREENWOOD. N.S. (CP)--LAC Thomas Thaxter of Sussex. N.Ii.. died in hospital of exposure here 'v'-'ednesriay after getting lost while rabbit hunting Tuesday. A party of RCMP and RCAF searchers from the air base here found Thnxter in the woods of Lawrencetown. NS. ..MANY IMPORTANT questions were discussed at the Queens County Federation of Agriculture meeting was one of the liveliest that the Federation has held and featured the keen participation of a large percentage of those pre- lproblems with I-ion. Mr. Cullen. REQUEST U. I. C. BENEFITS The question of fann labor was chief among a variety of problems discussed at the annual meeting of the Queens County Federation of Agriculture held at Birch Court last night. Mr. Archie Johnstone presided. Mr. Wallace Maliatt of Union Wwaa elected president for the ounty. First vice-president is Charles Jones. Pownal: second vice president is In Henderson. Clinton. Hon. Eugene Cullen. Minister of Agriculture recalled the time when there were no farm groups organized in the Province. He noted that the Federation of Agri- culture came into being as a result of the membership of these various groups. REPRESENTATIVE BODY "The Federation of Agriculture is a very necessary and import- ant group and I think that we should not lose sight of the fact that it does exist because of these member groups which were formed before the Federation came into existence. 1 would sug- gest therefore that as a means of increasing your membership and attendance at meetings that a greater concentration of effort be made within these commodity groups. stressing the importance of having a representative body for agriculture in general through out the Province," he said. Mr. Cullen made reference to a farm-labor conference which he recently attended at Ottawa. He said it was revealed that 60,000 male farm workers had left agri- culture for some other industry within the past year. DUTCH IMMIGRATION -The Mlnislc. said there was strong hope that a much larger lIluflll)Cl' of ilulcli immigrants lwoulti come to Canada in WASHINGTON fCP) - Prime Minister Nehru of India indicated Wednesday he opposes any steps to reopen the Suez Canal other than on Egypt's terms. He told a press conference that India is anxious to see the canal reopened but added that such a man must be "subject always to the sovereignty of Egypt. and we don't want. to ask for steps to be tgkgg which ntfenti that sover- ei nty in any any-" 51.,-oauild Indian leader. lean and alert. faced sun or an newspaper men at a no - holde- harred press conference which lasted fl minutes. to what hostile. with Iood humor and restraint. Nehru offered little In the way of "hard news" to breach the wall taenhower that ft. ha:rrsm.wn:lc.:d ti'hE.CIill,1,Ied m-rswa ton - rt-one Mints- ", .5, mm, us: by the working ts-r St. Laurent sate Wednesday espital of the company." khe is to learn that Laval At the same time he exyressedwniverdty not to ac magma at mofmgi; Supt srssts to federal gov. will sobstant - f,'.",lll”.-aeavsry are "wel ed- He told saiiowins I vsucsii" and steps have beat cabinet in. he knows ukengopsrevcufllylnhflroflmvlllnbg deaoldiaaire as ssceittss at trust osaassllud It " O III- are 01! "to union of disarmament. Americana being held by them might be involved. He made these points during the confc"ence. which was televised "live": 1. He plans to take up with Red Chinese Premier Chou En-lai the question of the detained Ameri- CIIIS. 2. He found, in his talks with Eisenhower. that U.S. foreign poi- Icy is "not as rigid as I thought." U.S. SYltlPA'l'llE'I'l(' 3 He also found. as regards the 0.8. attitude toward Indian neu- trality III the cold war. that "there h more understanding of if and . . . perhaps a little appreciation a few ofthefn !Iome- of it” 4. Staliaisln is dead in the Soviet Union, for ever. He believes that in the time Russia will he demo crallc in the sense that the people will run their government. 5. The United States and Russia "r&Ch 0. He has no "magic plan" for; Hsottling the Middle East problemi But he thinks Israel and the Arahi IlN0"l&different.-es. wbojotneystoottswa &week with Nehru Advises Submit To Egyptian Terms On Canal 'out on-the details of his talks with Eisenhower In their 24-hour farm Monday at Gettysburg and their discussions later at the White. illouse. NEED INSPECTION SYSTEM Discussing the Suez. Nehru said Egypt's ban on Israeli ships ap- peared to be based on its interpre- tation of the Idol convention gov- erning use of the canal. He would lrnarzine that the world court convention "and whatever inter- pretation they give should be ac- cepted " lie touched on these other sub- jects I Hungary There was no ques- tion nflndta "refusing to con- demn" the Soviet oppression of the Hungarian freedom movement. Disarmament: It is esgentigi that an inspection nygum in de. vised but "I do feel that after this ions argument about Gearin- unent the two main parties eon- rerned are remarkably near each other. actually. fgctugljyj wmt was put forward is not very dit- fcrrnt. and can easily be ironed WV. citmzasestataaiacstassaa P'orrnosaeIahsItabetbe"real article" X a map would show that Forms b not ulna. should be solved to interpret the. I957 and told the meeting that the Government of Prince Edward Is- land would do everything in its power to see that the Province got a good quota of farm families from the Netherlands. Mr. Donald A. MacDonald noi- ed that not. many of the single people who came from the Nether- lands still remained here. He had high praise for the Dutch farmers In recalling one incident, Mr. MacDonald said a Dutch farmer decided to buy a place of his own Minister o fAgricuiture arecliarlets Jones, Pownai; Mr. y Cullen, Ar- ciiie Johnstonc. Burlington; Ar- meeting held at Birch Court. Theiaent. Seen disscussing some farm thur MacRae, Royalty. Guardian Photo Labor Shortage On Farms Causes Serious Concern and after placing. an advertise- ment in the local newspaper he received 53 applications from peo- pie in different parts of the Pro- Vince. SERIOUS SITUATION Mr. MacDonald perhaps summ- ed up the general feeling ad the meeting when he said that dur- ing the past season. if It had not been for a very fine October and November a great deal of the crop (continued on page 14 col. 4) CPR Fire MONTREAL CP C The Broth- erhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen CLC Wednesday night said it "must reject" recom- mendations made by a concilia- tion board's majority report and said a strike vote will be called among its CPR members. 0'I'l'AWA (CP - Recommend- ations for a I2-per-cent wage in- crease for CPR locomotive fire- men accompanied by a reduction in the number of firemen em- ployed have been submitted to La- bor Minister Gregg by a federal conciliation board. The three-man board made the first investigation in Canada into railway claims that firemen can be eliminated on some diesel runs. and it suggested they be elimin- ated on diesels in freight and yard service. The board recommended. how- ever. that the railway discharge no firemen who has qualified as an engineer and who has three years of seniority as a fircmain. The long board hearings. which began last June and ended in Oc- tober. developed from a dispute between the CPR and the Brother- hood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemcn find. which has 5.- mo members on that railway. About 1,000 men vi-nulri be dis- placed from their jobs in the can under the company: propogai, SAVE MILLIONS The company has estimated it would save about 38,500,000 a year through the move. The CNR initially proposed the ll"?! Plan. but earlier this year aettled with the union without adopting it. Most of the United Weather Aids Search VANCOUVER tCPi Good weather Wednesday came at last .cIne to the fate of a Trans-Cam ads Air Lines plane which disap- peared Dec. 0. Up to mid-afternoon. none of , nearly 5 aircraft had sighted any- lthiag that could solve the fate of I persons aboard the lost plane. Atr condition were not the best for slosetn spotting of mountain Mites. crews reported moderate to severe tarbdeacc which makes llrlskytollytncioaetetke mountains. GIIAT INLET Saahich Inlet fl lmmwidthsixgu W" is It Mlle! has. with a maxi- . dian Red Cross l-rig bouiag men Reiect Report l Slates railroads also proposed it. but dropped it in .a general settle- ment with the firemen. In Canada. the union indicated to the board It was willing to make concessions on a wage demand for a general zs-per-cent increase but was prepared to go to a strike on the diesel issue. The majority finding of the three-man board-not binding on the disputants-was that the CPR in general established its conten- tion tha tdiesel firemen can oe safety and efficiency. The wage recom iuidations called for a seven-per-cent increase retroactive to last April 1 and it further five per cent-calculated on current wages-to take effect next June. The majority finding was deliv- ered by Judge J. C. Anderson of llelleville. 0nt.. board chairman Senator Arthur Roebuck, On- tario Liberal and nominee of the union. delivered a minority opin- ion which called the CPR's diesel propusal "ill-conceived and provo- cative." rom Labor - lConfidence. Vote Likely For Mollet PARIS lAPi E French Foreign Minister Christian Pineau said Wednesday the main reason Brit- ain and France agreed to cease- fire in Ezypi was pressure from the British Labor party on Prime Minister Eden. The foreign minister. defending his government's Middle East ac- tions in a three-day National As- sembly debate. listed three other reasons why Britain and France stopped fighting before obtaining complete control of the Suez Canal 1. Pressure from the' United States. 2. Pressure from the United Na- tions. 3. The threat of Soviet military intervention. This last. he said. was a more or less negligible factor. F I n e a u denied charges French-British-Israeli collusion the move against Egypt. But. he said, Britain and France understood that Israel would un- dertake a police action in Sinai and had co-ordinated their own ideas as to what to do when that happened. DEMAND CONFIDENCE VOTE Premier Guy Moilet will demand a vote of confidence on his foreign of in policy today and appeared as sured of it. Pineau declared was the Brit- ish government ich took the decision to cease fire in Sues and France found it "morally and ma- terially Impossible not to associ- ate ourselves with it." Turning to the future. Plneaa said "the test of success for the United Nations. will be the char- lng of the canal." ' . -Turning to the future. Pineaa said "the test of success for the United Nations. will be the clear- ing of the canal." I-ie said a three-pronged pro- ram to lessen Europe's depend- ence on the Suez Canal for oil is being put into operation. First. Suez Canal users are drawing up plans for two new pipelines. one across Turkey and the other across Israel from Eilat to Haifa. Second. huge tankers are being built for the journey around the Cape of Good Hope. This France will hasten its ex- ploitation of recently - discovered oil deposits in the Sahara Desert region of Southern Algeria. Strengthen Europe's Ring Of A-Defences ROME (AP)-Europols bristling atom defence ring has been bolst- ered by the arrival in Italy of the latest Corporal guided missiles. it was learned Wednesday. The long-range surface-to-sun face guided weapons can carry ei- ther atomlc or conventional war- heads. They have been set up by the United States Southern Euro- pean Task Force command in the strategic region around Vlcenzs. in Northern Italy. The Corporal can deliver a knockout atomic punch to a pin- point on the map many miles be- yond the range n' other "-7'll"'ll so far installed in this segament ot NAT()'s defence ring. TORONTO (CPI-A fight started at a Hungarian refugee centre in Ldowntown Toronto Wednesday af- ;ter one refugee claimed another was a member of the Hungarian secret police l Refugee centre officials called ;police who restored order and left with a Hungarian identified as Giorgy Boros. 42. a recent arrival to Canada. Later police Inspector William Brownlee said Boron was being held in protective ciutody. Planning Minister Nlcle of On- tario said he will Investigate the incident. At the police station Bacon said through interpreters: "I am not a secret police agent to the aid of searchers seeking a and I have never been ' Boron also said his home waslln Gyoer in Western Hungary. He 'said he fled from Hungary Nov. 9 ' and arrived In Canada Dec. from a refugee camp in Vienna. inspector Bmwnlee led the dc- tachment that went to the Hungar- ian centre. He said later: "I have never seen! such a mob. They were vicious They were flshtlns 10 lot at this man and we had a rough time clearing a path to him so we could get him out.” The Incident oecarred at the ref- 'l"9'W'W8ItFdioI1Itlrl1!flIe tkathettd. Tot-aisle Vancouver is- oatat-to never-urn-at and the cane ; refused to errneiwn or them Q. If! a building for-Ewho at-cuocS'1 1 1 Secret Police Charges Touch Off Fight In Refugee Centre If. was one man holding a rope and tstuo-usttssisseaau, Good Shepherd. a home for way- ward girls. At the police statlon' Boros an- grily ordered a photographer not to take pictures. Afterwards he de- manded the negative. He described the affair at the hostel through an interpreter: "A man stopped me in the hall and asked me my name. He asked again and I didn't like the tone of his voice so I asked him why he wanted to know. "He then asked if I was funi- lar with the secret police. I said no. He said I was and that he thought I was the min who ar- rested and tortured him back me. "That was who the others grab- bed me. and shortly afterwards the motive arrived. I was not hurt in the crowd.” l MM!!! the crowd at the centre others clutching their throats and minus sursiiag noises to simu- late an-sins. boros said his spine was tas- ted to 1948. leaving him crip- In the left leg. am not a secret policeman." ed."lcouldaotbeata ..-. a....,,... B . . :.r.ra; ,3.