Maxims of a More Man II PAGE -Mr. S.G. Pepp Tests Of P. E. l. Certified Seed Potatoes In Italy 3 the fall of 196! word was "caves! from Dr. D. P. Wilson Agricultural Counsellor attached at the Canadian Embassy in ppm, Italy that a test of form U. potato varieties. would be amt-d on in several sections .1 that counti-y. to determine lion best suited to Italian con- dittona. and further to determine whether any particular variety would break down to virus dis- use WITH! replanted. The Potato Marketing Board was therefore invited by the De- partment of Trade and Com- mpvre. tltiawa. to supply five var- ieties for this test. each variety ciinsistiniz of a 110 lb. crate. with the assistance of Potato New, Vital Phase Begins I n Civil Defe By ll. L. JONES Canadian Press Staff Writer ARNPRIOR. Ont. (CF)-A new sod vital phase in Canada's civil dt-retire program began Friday. one that could mean life or death for the man in the street in case of war. A class of 45 doctors from across the country. the first medical men to take a course at the national Civil Defence College here. grad- ttated with new knowledge of what to expect in nuclear warfare and it-ti.-it they can do about it. They were told by experts they could expect mess casualties in case of l-I-bomb attack and bow radiation victims might be saved. They heard of the dangers of food and it.-tier contamination and how It rnuld I1! met. Earlier this I week they were given the grim details of a nerve gas that can kill in 10 minutes unless the drug atropine is admin- lslPl'f-fl immediately along with IrIlll(lIBI respiration. A("r Al TEACHERS The doctors. representing every pmvince but Prince Edward island and Newfoundland and mostly from the country's big in- dustrit . will act as teachers of the medical lessons in their own oommunitlen. CD ufflcllll said ollmr courses will follow. and it "is ed event- nallrlo train - to provide a cross-Cantnia thread of medical personnel with the basic knuw-how to meet the prob- lems of the nuclear age. The men who ve thollessons were the cnuntrys best in their fields. They came from) Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd.. the fed- eral health department, the de- fence rest-arch board. medical unl- versiltes and hospitals. The tenor of their lectures was that. while the prospects iior sur- vival in ' . chemical or bi- olOlZi('al war seem pretty black. they areuit hopeless. With a co-or- (IllliilPfI plan. starting at the local int-I, murh could be done to save Coming Events "lIllt2lllBI' skala tonight. Crap- aud rink I to 10. "tiiiiue to the Variety Concert in Hampton l-lall. Wednesday. liar:-h 9th. at I o'clock. ”lit'.sri"-'0 Thursdly. March 17- lnr larit-ty Concert in Morell Hall "showing at Mt. Itawari Sat- ilriir-.v-"Csll me Madam”-Teclr nicolor comedy. "lilimnmite Sale at Trinity giuemcnt. Junior W. A. Saturday. P It! "llatslifield W. 1. Cake Sale this afternoon at 3 o'clock. I. A. MacDonald's. 'illtil'M2 Racing New Glasgow RHPF All horses welcome. Good ice. 1 o'clock Saturday. "Salvation Army Citadel Bean :1'l'kl'PF. -rueiitisy. March sui. P six 50 1.. km 5 .. "con Itippc served "R3-iitiinrl ivionuiiy Meeting of "iv it-rnon Branch of Canadian 1-Gslnri will be held at Legion Hall. March 7th. I olclock, "New Glasgow Dairying do. "'""I' MI-tins. will be held Wed-I 'r':l4I.V. March 0th, g I p. 3. in 0! Glasgow Ball . ”Dan ,Xw..g mnmioy. ndmlisyalb lall in Reports On Seed Certification Service. the following varieties. Irish Cobbler. Pontiac. Csnso. Keawick and Se- bago were ” i t " J . CANADA. IAIUIDAY KAI! I. 1956 Ind forwarded by Railway Expregg to. Quebec City. and thence by direct Steamer to Guam and on to Rome. where the samples were placed with the Italian De- partment of Agriculture. under- the direction of Dr. L. Fenai-. oil. In these tests samples were also included from New Bruns- wick. United Siafes. Great Bri. lain. Germany and France. "The P.E.I. samples were planted on June 1st at Sambuco which is located in the Province of Cuneo. in the Di Derrionte tcontinued on Page 5 col. 4) nce Program lives that otherwise would be lost. DOUBLE CAPACITY The final lecture was given by Dr. W. D. Piercey. executive di- rector of the Canadian hospital Association. He told of efforts to get every one of Canada's 1.300 hospitals to organize an individual disaster plan that could be ex- panded in time of war. It en- visages hospitals being able to double their patient capacity. The medical class also heard from a psychiatrist-Dr. J. S. Ty- hurst of McGill University-who said people adjust themselves fairly quickly to catastrophe, particularly if they have previous knowledge of what to expect. He advised that keeping people oc- cupied with useful tasks is one of the best kinds of mental therapy .in tlrne of emergency. 51.000 Reward For Fireman CONCORD. N. H.. (AP)aAbout SL000 of a reward has been raised for the family of A Boston and Maine Railroad fireman who res- Vice Admiral Lachlan Donald Mackintosh of Mackintosh. C.B., D.S-0.. D.S.C.. 29th Chief of the Mackintosh Clan. Muy. Inver- ness-sbire. Scotland will officially open the Caledonian Club's 93rd Gathering of the Claus and High- land Games at the Provincial Ex- hibition Grounds. Charlottetown on August 10 next. The colorful chief of the Mac- kintoshtclan. an associate of the Clan Chattan group. will come to Prince Edward Island from St. Ann's. Cape Breton. where he will be honored guest at the Gaelic Mod. He will fly from come from there to Charlottetown by automobile on August 9. veteran of two world wars. was an aide-de-camp to the late King George Sixth and his last ap- pointment before retirement in 1950 was Flag Officer, Germany and Chief British Naval Rep- resentative. Allied Control Com- mission. "The Mackintosh". as he is called by his Clansmen and the workers on his estates at May Castle. joined the Royal Navy in 1909. He specialized in Naval Aviation and has had a pilot's license for 25 years. Among his several decorations for outstanding niililary service is the Legion of Merit awarded to him by the President of the United Stains. I-lls senior decor- ation is Command of the Bath. His father was Chief of the Clan Chattan which includes such Clans as the MacPliersons. the Sutherlands. the MacGllli'vrays, the Shawn. the Farttttbarstins. the Davidsona and the MacBeans. cued an 18-month-old y fro announced Friday. a. Whlti , .i.l;l.l'”.ll””ii. mm 'c?.”'.fi dllln friends of mine" wh m bel did not identify, donatgg (hell money. ' l Whlttamore said his Canadian friends wrote that the fireman. his wife and their young daughter 'deserved" to be rewarded. In the thrilling rescue. B and M flreman.Loius La Salle. 22. of Concord spotted tiny Arthur Copp prostrate on an ice-covered road- bed Feb. 9. Application of every ounce of braking power by en. gineer R. 0. Turner of Worces- ter. Mass. failed to stop the freight train. with the train moving at about 15 miles an hour. La Sails raced along the locnmotive's catwalk. leaped from the front of the en- gine. scooped up the child and rolled down an embankment to safetv with the child. Whitternore raid he would write about 200 letters to promin- ent persons asking them to con- tribute to the fund. N--"fer Churue Cut To Manslaughter SHERBROOKIZ. Que. (CPi-Ul- rlc Ashby. charged with murder in the shooting of Gerard Lemire. was convicted of manslaughter Friday night by a jury in Court of Queen's Bench. Mr. Justice Louis-Philippe Cliche announced sentence will be passed March 22. Lemire, 21. was shot through the head last Dec. 18 while playing solitaire in the Ashby home in East Angus where he was a boarder. Ashby is 64 years old. -Demand ForC WAIHINGTON (AP)-A demand for curbs on stock market tipslers arose Friday after the Senate hankinglcommittee heard that one tip by altar Winchell cost buyers more than 81.m0,000 in about an or Presidsat. ldward T. McCorm- a televised tip by Win- the ho the path of a locomotive. it wast i::' 4 mm r-'..t-.;.:: Paine; in ' than atirre "A long needed amendment" was the descrigion given by Op- position leader . R. Bell to a bill to amend the Children's Act. in- troduced in the Legislature yes- terday morning by Premier Math- cson. Dr. MacMillan also added his words of approval to the measure which he said "would perhaps be the means of mending many broken homes." In introducing the bill. Premier Matlteson said that the amend- ment was occasioned by a court Women Killed In Accident ESPANOLA. Out. (CP) - Two young women were killed Friday and their husbands severely in- lured when (their station wagon crashed into the rear of a truck. head are Mrs. Frederick Bon- nett of West Ferris. near North Bay. and Mrs. George Numella of Callsnder. Ont. Mr. Numella was in critical con- dition st Sudbury. 35 miles west of here. Mr. Bennett is in hospital here. The couples were returning from Sault Ste. Marie. 0nt.. where Mr. Numella refereed two hockey games between the North Bay Trappers and the Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds. The station wagon tried to pass a truck on a highway and was forced against the rear when a car approached in the opposite di- rection. police said. urbs On Stock Market ' Tipsters In U. S. line on market information. He pointed out that nearly all news- papers supply financial news. He said that Winchell gave market tips almost weekly. and added that he didn't know of any instance where Winchell had misstated facts. He declared Winchell h d said that substantially the sam information he gave about Pant- epec on had been canted h news- papers. Mcoormiek was Friday's lsadoff witness in an injuh-y aimed at analysing the stock market in the Scotland to St; Ann's and will V Vice Admiral Mackintosh. a , light of an 10-month boom in Because of the large IlUHII)EIa of dancers and pipers expected to take part in the Centennial year Highland Games in Charlottetown this year. the Caledonian Club will start early in the morning to run off competitions. The nfiernoon will feature the more advanced dancers and pipers and a big pipe band competition. At night a mammoth Scottish concert will be featured. '" Amendment T.-lo Children's Act, Commend-ed--By" exit. i.,.,.a' ;.,,.,V. case which occurred last summer It was. he explained. impossible, undenthe present Act. for the Judge to hand down a decision that would discipline the offending party. It is primarily meant to give protection for deserted and destitute wives. Mr. Bell explained that under ihe present Acl..the definition of a "deserted wife" was not clear. As an example of a case in ques- tion. he rei'erred to a man who might leave his wife and family and although he was supporting them by paying rent and provid- ing the groceries. he pays no at- tentlon to them and spends all his nights in aduitrotis conduct. "This (Continued on Page 2 col. 3) - l shape." Gov'f Silent On Butter Price OTTAWA (CP) - The govern- ment didn'i answer ”y'es" or "no" Friday when asked in the Com- mons if it would maintain the SUDDDM price for butler at cents a pound wholesale. William Bryce (CCF-Selkirk) asked whether the support price would be continued as requested Thursday by ihe Canadian Fed-.1 eration of Agriculture. 1 ”Thai is a matter of govern- nounced in due course." repliedl Agriculture Minister Gardiner. Suggests N.B. Boost Christmas Tree Industry FREDERICTON. (CPl- A Pro- gressive Conservative back-bench- er said Friday in the legislature that the New Brunswick Christ- fnss tree industry could be ex- panded by establishing planta- tions on unproductive farm land. Iorne B. Groom tPC-Char -bite) said that unless rt-riain pro- ducers became more quality con- . oua New Brunswick trees would i bought in the United States j only as a last resort. He said demand for trees last year exceeded the supply. and sales could have been M0 or 300 i carloads greater. He said cost of setting out iplantations on unused farmland would be small. and trees could be pruned to a "more picturesque "In eight or I0 years the planter jcan realize a very good return on a small amount invested." Mr. Groom said. The other governmuit speaker in the budget speech debate Fri- day was Douglas B. Pettigrew (PG-Ilestigouchel who recom- mended the government consider transplanting the more prolific species of British lumbia sal- , ' 'Bruna k waters.g would "take some of the pressure off our hard-pressed silver salmon stock. and should lead- to a much larger east coast salmon fishery." Election Has Gone Wrong In Russia LONDON (AP)-An election has gone wrong in Soviet Russia where the Kremlin candidates us- ually get 99.0 per cent of the votes. Moscow radio said Friday that in a number of wards of the Rul- sian Socialist Federated Soviet Republic largest of the U.S.S.R.'s 16 republics none of -the candid- ates received an absolute major- lty. "Now elot-lions must be held." said the broadcast. Court Martia Second Sailo HALIFAX. lCPtOA naval court martial digging into a methyl al- cohol hinge on the carrier Magnif- icent six weeks ago returned a second conviction Friday and pre- pared to try two more sailors. The panel of four conimanticrs and a captain found P0. Maynard Johnson of Victoria guilty of ii- legally tonsuming an intoxicunt aboard ship. He was sentenced to reduction in rank from petty officer. lst class. to petty tifficcr. 2nd class. The court acquitted Johnson of s ' ” the noxious mixture to another seaman. lt dismissed Thursday a third charge that he failed to report the incident to his superiors Johnson had pleaded innocent to all counts. Capt. J. P. Dewis. the judge ad- vocaie. spent an hour summing up when the court convened after a midafternoon adjournment. The five judges deliberated 45 minutes before returning the guilty verdict and an hour and a half before de- ciding on the penalty. TWO MORE CHARGED It was learned. meanwhile. that two more sailors will be tried for their roles in the Jan. 21 drinking spree which sent 47 personnel to hospital. some of them danger- ously lll. All have since recovered and those not court-rnartialed or about to be have been disciplined by their commanding officers. I Convicts r In Binge The navy refused to name the last two defendants or discuss the rliarges that will be brought against them. The first man will face the court Wednesday. Johnson admitted Friday while testifying in his own defence that he drank poisonous duplicating machine fluid the day of the party. Hovtcver. he said he thought it was surgical alcohol. The navy said at the time of the affair tliai those involved drank a ltnixlurc of duplicating machine fltiid-which has a methyl alcohol base-and fruit juices. The peliy officer also testified that he gave a drink to a mess- niale but would not have done so had be known what the mlxliire contained. AB John L. MacDonald of Beav- erlon. 0nt.. was convicted Mon- iwslid such a move 07 day for taking an active part in the hinge and sentenced to twol years less one day imprisonment. lie also was dismissed from the service. . mrsaasr nv CANADA LONDON (CPI A The women's Voluntary Service which sends magazines to British servicemen overseas gets so many requests for information about Canada it has appealed to London branches of Canadian organisations for any "surplus" magtisines about the Dominion. - Quebec Extends Margarine Ban QUEBEC i('P' Quebec is ex- tending its four-year ban on mar-l garine to all butter subsiitutesi which ”imliaie the color and ap-' pearance of butter." l Friday Premier Dttplt-ssis an-, nounced that the Quebec govern- ment policy which wiil be 511. iment has moved to block the flow dustry. of ”spreads" or butter substitutes on the Quebec market by an or- der in council to be published to-; day. t Some of the spreads ntiw avail- able in Quebec are manufactured here but others come from Ontario and some United States points near the Quebec border. They sell for as little as 29 cents compared. with 61 cents or more for but tr.j The new cabinet regulation takes effect on publication in the Quebec. official gazette within a week. REVISE BAN I Stocks of butter substitutes mnyi be seized by police. Fines for man-l ufat-luring. offering for sale or pos- session for sale can go as high as 5500 for a first offence. 32.000 for, a second. The fine for individuali possession is from 52 to S25. i Margarine has been banned ini Quebec since 1949. In 1953 the act. was revised to include all dairy' substitutes made with vegetable oils But the cabinet was empow- ered to remove the ban from any product made largely with animal fats. Now. under the new reizulation.i the ban applies to any food pro- duct ”whit-h by color or by arti- ficial preparation imitates the color or appearance of butter.” Mr. Duplessis said the new regu- lation tightens control over butter stibslitules and protects "the higher interests" of the dairy in- Porliofnenf At A Glance By THE CANADIAN PRESS Friday Fred Zttplitny ICCF-Dauphin) tl('l'llSed the government of mak- lng a "shady and suspicious deal"; with four companies involving in- come lax ienilssions. Veterans Minister Lapoiute re- jertcd requests that burned-out veterans receiving government sl- lowanrcs be p e r m i t t e d higher over-all incomes. Stanley Knowles (('Cl"-- Winni- peg North Central argued corpora- tion appeals lo the income tax ap- peal board should be held in pub- to. Prime Minister St. Laurent. re- ferring to the Fred Rose case. said the government has given no re-. cent thought in propriety of Pall-' ceiling citizenship of a Canadian. Monday The Commons will consider gov- ernment business. The Senate is adjourned until Tuesday. British Comm Home Rule For Wales Bill By WALTER DAVIES LONDON (Reuters)--The House of Commons hes reiected by a vote I -to 14 I bill to give hbrne rule to Wales. Both Conservatives and Labor members Friday opposed the cre- ation of a Welsh Parliament with the same powers over domestic affairs as the Parliament of North- ern Ireland. Introduced by 8. C. Davies. the bill would have set up a 72- member legislature sitting at Cardiff. I It would have had power to veto laws from Wales passed by the British House of Commons. but would have no aiithorily over for- eign pollcy, national defcnlie or foreign trade. Meanwhile. Welsh MPs would continue to sit in the House of Commons. Wales has 86 representatives in the 625-seat Ilouse of Commons. MANY MEMBERS ABSENT Friday's small vote was due to the weekend exodus of MP3 to their coiislituencies. Davies argued there has been an uprising in Wales in support of the bill and it would continue until Wales was recognized as "some- thing more than an area or a region." g Some Welsh natitiiialist groups are anxious to keep the Welsh lan- guage alive and have argued that Wales has protiuced a culture of its own. separate from Enilllnfl But another Welsh Labor MP. ci:TifiiFd&"HodW Trude Deficit OTTAWA tCPi - Canada's in- ternational lraiisaclioiis and money last year pi'otiut'od a deficit of S-127.000.000. IIIP bureau of statistics said Friday in a pre- liminary estimate. The deficit compared with one of S43il.000.000 in the prevituist year. During 1954. the bureau said. the commodity trade balance im- proved by chnnsinii from a deficit of 557,000,000 to a surplus of S9.000.000. This wss largely off-set by a deficit on other current transactions. prim- arily caused by larger interest and dividend payments in the last quarter. i In trade. adjusted figures forl exports showed 88.029.000.000 com- pared with M.152.000,000 the year before. imports were 5.'l.0w.000.(ll0 compared with 91.80.000.000 .. Other current receipts were 81,- :ss.ooo.ooo while other current payments were 8l.73!.00o.0fl). -i ii ,ibigprobleinwashowtodrawa prices. Friday's ACtfOfl.SfffS Reports . S a. sense: TAIPEI. was speculaii I IOOCA I . witbinllit nilmoftbanedchiaa all psrtefroecbew "'a"" without was lie Security coo ations presumably would preclude The Nationalists claim .blownettt public disclosure even I such was Formosa (AP)-There true. on in press circles The speculation was stirred by hinktt-vessels which very well be abandoned without a fight. today that the Nationalists might reports Friday of a Red Einboat oftbs attack on ltsoteng. is ad in both: be If ed he Matsu insialaantast a I . I nd If 3.1 A'I'TA& RIPILLID aw! peculation Matsus Going repelled an attack on Knoleng by 40 Red gunboais and motorised could have been a su ply con bound for Foocbow w ch got course in feggy weather. I! the Nationalists do out the "III nIDI.,IWmIdDMMNOMD prising. The Nationalist press has Q... beeafull of assertions that neither from Naiictds in gotitisi : Plans Visit Behind Curtain ons Reiects W. H. Mainwaring. told the House of Commons Friday In a speech opposing the bill that no one could "build a nation on the basis of poets? preachers and musicians. ' Wales ceas to have a separate political exist nce in 1282 when the English over-ran the country. It was formally joined in England in 1535. tpueen Gives Princess Party LONDON flteuiersl -' Queen Elizabeth gave a welcome-home dinner party and dance for Prin- cess Margaret at Buckingham Pal- ace Friday night to celebrate her return Thtirsday from a month- long Caribbean tour. Princess M ar gs rot and the Queen Mother were welcomed at the palace by the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh, the Duke and Duchess of Gloucester and the Princess Royal. With a few close friends. they dined in one of the state apart- ments. Later. they Joined other guests for dancing in a palace ballroom. PREDICT8 ARCTIC BOOM TORONTO tCI't-An official of the department of external affairs says Canada will soon enter an era of Arctic development comparable to the development of the WPSI. Rtibrrl A. Phillips. speaking in the English Speaking Union of the ()n- iario College of Education. said Thursday night that within two or three decades Canadians will surge inio the far north. 1 OTTAWA ICPI--Fisheries Min-l isler Sinclair will become the flrsil Canadian ” t member to got behind the iron Curtain. ; The 45-year-old minister, iiilnrm-. ants said Friday. plans to go to Moscow for a July ill annitnl meeting of the International Wani- fhg Commission. Mr. Sinclair previously has been on the fringe of the iron Curtain area in a trip through Europe that carried him Intn Yugoslavia in March Storm Winter Still by THE CANADIAN PRESS March storms in widely-sepu arated parts of Canada have re- mintied Canadians winter still is not yet over. A Canadian Press survey Friday showed blustery weather in Qlits bee and the Marltlmes whne On- tario recovered from the effects of a sleet storm and the West endured sub-zero temperatures. Forecasts called for soowstormn and continuing cold in much of the Msritlmes. Lows Friday were it below use at lldmundsion. N. l., six below at Moncton. N.l.. and sevn above at Halifax. Gale-force winds. To Reds tbs Matsus nor Quemoy. guard- ing the approaches to Amoy would . This mi hi be true of the es- ttinaiatl .0!!!-man garrison on . But insofar as the es- lmo-man garrison in the is concerned. the asser- are strongly reminiscent of which receded the pullout and the Tticheas. buffet Quebec. ts nnmw IN ALIEBTA accompanied by heavy snow. were expected to Northwestern Albertl Friday re Prince I Like (By Franck W. C UNITED NATIONS, N. tions Security Council Friday Egypt to maintain calm and Covers dward Island The Dow as-penter) . Y., (AP)-The United Na- strongly urged Israel and refrain from more fighting along their tension-filled border. The counciiis feeling was summed up by its president, Selim Sarpcr, Turkish delegate, at the end of a 90-minute meeting during: ivliicli Gaza incident of last Monday The delegates held up further debate on the Gaza (-use until Maj.-lisii. E. l.. M. Burns of Canada. EN tiuce l'lllPl in Pales- tine. ran ii; to UN headquarters to make a personal report or. if he is held in Palestine by grave events. a full report can be re- ceived here. It was apparent despite the diplomatic talks that the mem- bers were shocked by the Gaza fighting which cost 39 Egyptian and night Israeli lives. While they did not say so specifically, the altitude of most of the delegates showed that on the ha-K nf pro- lfminary i'cbni'l.s, they hold is- rael responsible. SOUNDS KEI'N0'I'E The keynote was sounded by James W'dlISWUitll ill the united States who said that for almost a year a general impruti-nicul in the maintenance of stability and quiet on the borders between is- rael and the Arab states had prevailed. ”lf the border situation has im- provcti to the rxtenl that l have indicated -- the official report should make this clear-then re- sort to force is all the more to be deplored." he said. "In all of our experieuec in the council with the Palestine ques- tion. one thing has remained clear: it is that the use of armed force will not produce peace nego- tiations." g Sir Pierson Dixon of Britain said this was the most serious in- cldenl since the armistice was signed between Egypt and -lsflel lnl9-19. He said the evidence points to a Pl'emPl'lltnieAtI-'1!-IIBSII several members denounced the night. by Israel forces on Egyptians. Abba Eban. Israeli delegate. sat at the table during the debate but did not speak. After the coun- cil adjourned. a spokesman for the Israeli delegation issued the following statement: ”The main feature of today's Security Council meeting was the tendency of many of the repre- sentatives to ignore the entire background of the clash at Gaza. The clash was not envisaged in its true light as the culmination of a series of armed attacks. murders and acts of sabotage which have resulted in Egypt be- ing condemned no less thang27 times by the mixed annistice commission in recent months. . " Egypt's representative. Omar Loutfi. also sat at the table but did not speak. Marijuana Pocket Seised At Halifax g,t1,nrAx (cptehlerchani sea- man Clarence Mnllon of Sydney H victed Friday of illegally mg marijuana and 'sen- tenced to six months imprison- ment. Motion was arrested by "19 RCMP Feb. 25 moments after he and several companio landed here from their ship which had just put in front the West indies. Cpl. J. G. Skinner of the RCMP narcotics division said the marl- junna was found in a brown paper packet in Molloi'i's shirt 91 when he was frisked at headquar- ters. The police said laboratory - alysls showed If to be marl Illi- Provide Higher Payments For Burned-Out Veterans; Opposition Move Reiected OTTAWA (CPI--Opposition pro--- posals that burned-out veterans re ceiving government allowances permitted higher overall annual in- comes were rejected Friday by Veterans Minister Lnpointte. ' He turned down the suggestions during Commons debate on a gov- ernment bill to boost payments 10 indigent war veterans and allow them to earn increased tin-the-side income. The measure would inrremie 0!! maximum monthly payment in single veterans to 360 from 850 For married veterans. the in- crease would be to 3108 from 9.90- Permissible ceilings on over-all in- come go to 3840 from 37X) '0!” single veterans and to 31.440 from SL200 for married men. Opposition members have pro- posed that the ceilings be 51.200 for single men and 52.000 for mar- ried veieraus. They also urged that the allowance for married veterans be 3120 a month fit: first war to CHANCE Yooa LUCK is To Co 1'0 woRK 9 Togoivro tcpi-Minimum soil maximum temperatures: ADDITIONAL COST M:l. - Dawson Mr. l..'tptiiiiic. a licttlriiaiii-cnl- g unel in the Second World War.'said xfclligm" ' X16) ,3: the opposition: proposed CEllll1iIS- Fdmomo. ash 1 in line with Canadian Legion re- (.'algarv " lgh 0 qtir-sis----wniild increase the num-lR'PRiM- Nb 5. her of veterans f'P('Cll'lflE allow-lw; . 22b 1 an('f'S in 56.250 from -H.500 Tf:l:r:l':f ' """ " 21 2;, ,',"ilI'.',"'.l'TLTI",ff'E?..Tl'..”'. Ottawa 4 it llviniilreal A N Qticlwr . 3h I0 Fredericton 7b l? Est John 1 13 i950. luit neither he nnr any tilher.zl(f:l':g;l,n :5 Canadian minister has gone inln'(.h"hm"."." 0 D Rttssiau-dominated territory. gvdnmv H W The whaling rommissionfs Mns- iv-Hmhmh ' u M cow meeting will be its ninth an- st Jnhns - - g g H 12 M nual session The 17-nation com- misslon deals with conservation of iibe whale fishery through the es- tablishment of quotas and other methods. . Canadnls whaling interest is not large. but she has some operations off the Pacific and Atlantic coasts. s Indicate Has A Kick ported its coldest weather so far this winter. it was L5 below in the Peace River district. improved. A band of freezing rain. sleet and ihunderittonns moved out of the province after giving the lower lakes region a rough time. one death was attributed to the Ontario storm. Ernest Hill. 65, was killed at slmcoe when his automobile skidded on an Icy road and crashed into a parked truck. Lake Ontario waves crashinl on the shoreline near Hamilton broke a concrete breakwall and threat- ened to carry away small houses at Van Wagner's beach. some mall cabins were wrecked by the eight-foot waves in what residents called the worst storm since No- In Ontario the weather slowly HALIFAX (CPI-The Dominion weather office says another storm is expected to develop over the eastern United States and bring snow to the Mai-itimes Saturday evening. Forecasts: Prince Edward Island: Cloudy with widely scattered sitowflsrries little change in temperature: northeast winds ll. Lew-hlgli It Chsrlettetewa 15 and M. . outlook for Sunday: Cloud!- New Brunswick: Overcast: in- lermitlent light snow changing II the morning to widely scattered itnowflurries and Saturday events! to snow; little chan e in tempera- ture: northeast wi s I5. law-high at Moncton and Fredericton lo and an. Saint John to and 25. Edmund- ston five and II. Campbelltml seven and 15. Outlook for Sunday: Cloudy- Bay of Fundy: inds east I Saturday: widely scattered snow- flurries changing Sliurdlv 0"- ning to snow; visibility 10 mile! lowering in snow and flurries to as low as two miles: oolti. Blgh tide today at Chum!!- town at In a. in. and II I!- Summerside tide eighteen Inh- utes later than Charlottetown. sonrlsntodayatsmannl vember. 13. sets at 8.06 p. IIL SEGURITY Dllilflcli URGES ISRAEL. EGYPT. REMAIN CALM: GAZA INCIDENT DENOU Chief Of The Mackintosh Clan To Visit Island 4 . i