......;,. Theendcnpnu I oxinta More Man the work. 12 . APAGESA e ttnvt .. -.,- c ., cash robbery-the Brink's job,-v lch netted the robbers 31.- no.2: .- -was "solved ursday. the In; ,1 mounced. i tithe, FBI said 11 men-all with ' . . .31 records-took p. in the ' .,,y of the money transfer of- .n Boston six years ago. i F3! announc 4 the arrest of six 1 an on charges of conspiracy to 1 lists federal laws-bank rob- be grand theft of government prop eri:'.i - Cl” the llth man is dead. to: ..-d men as: Adolph Maffle. 44, c of Milton; Anthony Pine. '40, Bos- iogt and lienrynaker. 49, of Nat- c . awatr hxavcu-non in. Jail in other cases. but charged with the others are Josepll -1.. (specs) ,o'iteeie. 47. of aton.' who is now' awaiting ex- ecution-fur d r. and Stanley A. Qusclora. 36. of'Bostou.. ”Thomas F. ,Itichardson,- is, of , visymouth and James 1. Faherty, 44; of Boston. are being sought. :The 11th man namediby the FBI was Joseph. 8; Bsnfield. 45, of . loston. who died a year ago. ' The announcement of the solu- Ion of the baffling crirnesatd it in -Summerside '1". ' 0, slob”..- pr” IOBDIN. KENIINGTON . or lisary Weds! stated that the list qarload of poles furl 'Iruro areexpscted to arrive S t- arday or Monday. Yesterday af- ternoon the Mayor and town noun- eil met with representatives of the utilities noun-d :2! discuss matters pertaining rur nea. Grades one to eight resumed at- tendance at the High school yea- hrday; after the restoration of,pow- yas morning althou um pf the classrooms are a I , I NEW SURVEY MAD! coun. Dr. H E. Clair, chairman the Water ehd Sewera e Com- mission and chairman of e Shal- ter Committee stated that a re- survey of the East and West Vlards and a portion of the Can-' tre Ward had been completed and it was found that the matter of Sailing accommodation for resid- ents without heated homes. had pretty well resolved itself. its said this was due to the restora- lionof wertomanyhoincasnd act that residents without heat in thtelirwhglmas, lave dtnadie arrangmen an an no- ghhors to move in with them. The original surv canted out on Sun- day showed at 52 families did not have heat in their home and vumldlinvetobecariedforttcold weather hrrlved. Conn. Clark said all persons still needing heated Ibal '' W cm '0 -- M eular home, a cold snap oc- No Information um I . .. . v p ' - it'- 3 tags. in (AP) '- The country's was "an FBI lob all the way." Because of that. Brink's Express may not have to pay any of the 3100.000 reward it offered for "in- formation leading to the arrc;t and conviction" of the robbers. FBI men cannot accept such awards. CLOSE ON TRAIL The FBI had been close on the trail of the arrested men for a long time. All but one of the ar- rested men were called before a U. 8. grand Jury here three years ago in an inquiry which failed, y Solvedt 1 :1 other men already were in .iy-serving time in other c: .i. Two others are sought and The FBI listed the six newly ar- North Qt-'ncy; Joseph F.- McGlnnis, 52, Bcvtlmz Vincent .1. Costa, 41, of Prmbrokve; Michael V. Geagen. 47, Repair Work? it . the linemen. task in , M . Wgldnih , vici . the . -For House On :.”..?.:5”.:”t:'.D"3""" it-its Vltebullf lines c""""""' '”' "" l '”" i however, ' r meats. Ma ' county jail in - Byrne's office. on the federal warrants. . The FBI announcement did not disclose who was the leader of the ll-man robber gang. The FBI said the robbery of the Brink's Express office in a down- town area of Boston near the north (rai ad) station was "the product o the combined thought and criminal experience of men who had known each other many years." PLANNED son man a "The gang spent more than a year in planning the robbery and they started a systematic tudy of the Brink's organisation after it moved to its present location on Prince street in Boston. V is Making” produce any indict- chussetta state police rushed 0'Keefe from the Iiampden 8prtngfleldr'Mass.. where he was serving frmonths on a gun -carrying charge. to The other six were held by fed- eral authorlties, or arraignment 'sdchian sppoin' Trouble Finding Woman For Job OTTAWA tCP) -- The govern Job. Prime Minister said Thursday. A St. York-number) accepting." getent woman on the commission. e did not identify the woman to whom the post was offered. Miss Aitken's question whether the government is considering sp- pointment of a woman followed a llllleatioil made 'Wednesday by Ann Shipley (L-Tlmiskam- w um Euusuza Sliipley,. first woman move the addresstln. reply to the hour the throne, -suggested or advancement KW one esennttawilllheatfltree hosnesstaithse. Mr. Ewen Nicholson, Chairman of the Red Cross Disaster Service Committee visited Borden and Ken stngtou yesterday to investigate the needs of these two towns. At Borden be found that. many residents are csrryina water from several hand 0 i , r 7 DIIIDPU. whtch have proved their worth many times over. Gordon Jay and one or two other men are helping to alleviagh the heating problem operated until the home is com- fortably heated. Because of the current mild spell. this once-a-day beat is of great value to residents of chilly. damp homes. It is understood Mr. A.P. Cerettl la endeavouring to bring in a gen- crating unit from Saint John to supply the Borden Hotel and a nearby apartmt house. i Mayor Willard Leand went to Charlottetown to confer with of- ficials of the Maritime Electric Co. to find out when power could be resio;e:l to Borden. He washa- lilnil 1 8 eVef&'i-hing possible is being done to have Borden ener- at the earliest pouible time. possibly within a few days. In. lfpnsington many residents are plagued with flooded base- ments and cellars with water ra- poriatl as high as the basement window in several cases. However Mr. Gordon MacDonald, Chairman (1 the Provincial -Atomic Tests This WASHYNGTON (AP) - A new series of atomic testa.wlll be held in the Pacific this spring. it was ' T by the '” l glues-gyd c tionT;:d thglal cip- ence ap h en . y wi e hnallsr asp 3 than the huge 1954 hydrogen blast. The announcement said that: 'fln the absence of effective in- ational agreement safeguarded by adequate inspection to Hmlt more control. of armaments. the United States government contin- ually endeavors to maintain the most modern efficient military strength for purposes of peace. "Pursuant to this course, pre- parations are under way for a se- ries of nuclear tests to begin in the spring at the Enlwetok prov- ing grounds. the of the important airrpoaes of this series will be the ther development of methods of defence against nuclear attack. "Air and sea traffic will be not- ified through normsl channels of the details of the control area well in advance of the commencement of operations . . Aid In Search HALIFAX (CP) - RCAF search and rescue said Thursday a single- engined Norseman aircraft is over- due at Goose Bay. Labrador on a flight from Fort Chlmo. in north- Qfl Quebec. K Four aircraft from RCA!-l sta- tions at Torbay. Nfld. Goose Bay and Bumrnerside. P. E. 1., were scheduled to begin a search at r ment has decided to appoint a women to the three-member Civil Service Commission but is having difficulty finding one to take the Laurent He told Margaret Altlten (PC- int the Commons that the vacancy on the commis- sion had been offered to a woman but she had "felt not desirous of He added the matter still is un- der consideratlon because the gov- ernment would like to have a com- in : Canadian parliamentary history to , eat would be a .: good start tow giving wome'n'f W903 ' l,Beffjerf; Than Expected A E W Ii . ccrs slot.-fa! -liEDERA7ll6N- Covers -island Like the Dew Criticism entreti On G Gov'l Having 'Af5ltiCUl.' Ficrns” ' N yesterdayat'7ti:a' -its Clla 't ' 'Johnatonn.B l,p Edward island Federation gotel w ' ft, eGcorggtllil(l:32l Colin Wnuglllmilfggt vi? '7" "M m'.”"" "M P'”””” as Agriculture annual meeting at Hamilton", Vice Presltienol I first Vic, President; ii,tand- 0!! I-lncoln Dewar. Secretary- '9'?-".f'l"' oyad supplyl ti) . The patrons of fluid mrllh dealers in Charlotte- town also enioyed amicable rela- tlons. MEMBERSHIP speaking of rnembershi in the Federation Mr. MacDonad said that the farmers of this province were in need of strengthening and ding their position in the econonw of the country. "Many organisations are folding up," he said and replacements might be found 'lu strengthening the lines of the Federation. 1). AA. MacDonald speaking on the potato market said that the crop started moving In Sept. and Oct. and has since been moving in large voltune, He said that his organization were also moving turnips freely. In December the egg and poultry plant was taken over and is now doing a good job. Title present potato market was no easy to discuss. Mr. MacDon- ald said, without touching a highly controversial matter. VALUE OF UNITY Mr. MacDonald spent two weeks in Florida and compared the situation with that of last spring. The situation was not very profitable to the farmers of Flor,- idn. Describing the movement of potatoes there. he cited the case of one organization which moved 3.000 cars in six weeks which brought the farmers M13 nct per hundred pdiinds. "This expert- encc convinced me. as I have told you before. what organization can do." Mr. MacDonald said. These potatoesnre. shipped early all over the eastern United States and into Canada. ' Discussing matters with prom- incnl farmers in Florida. Mr. MacDonald found that the agri- dawn. Weather over the air route is as "poor". cultural economy of the United OTTAWA. (pecial) M Marlin who in some Return To . 586 MS. Flood mos: :t'i.?.-;.':'...n-3..-.'. or. ':::'..m- Homes labia but rapair -4 glsfl g g Peak Past Epic are without electric ranges tggggr ins, i so e h t. VEl?:IlAl0TlllI at. an I crippling effect II. Mari-, llacattilsg of we many es can 8 under long d Jg held up when e -01)- ted control systems " -Q . B nu end vs:-"y umsi" good relation with the 110 men The floods and line failures have .. trains W - ..,,. in: Mac said was i tossed with the del ;e of credl buying which is prev lent in the U. S. A. where even lothlng. may be bought tvithoufa down payment and three rnodths time on the first payment. - Speaking of -.,the- quality of is- land potatoes aching Florida, Mr. Macpons iaid that the dealers there were well satisfied: Support prices in the U. S. A. were aiding the farmers in that country and also helping Canada. Another favourable motor is the new grading size increase to 2 1-4 inches. "Today the price is higher here today than at any time this season. but as to the future little may be said. With no control of any kind and prices fluctuating the way they are, .we are in the same position we were M years ago,” Mr. MacDonald said. "Our five years of build-up have gour- and what your Potato Marketing Board believed to be sound prac- tice then, is still the answer to much of our difficulty.-a Central Selling Agency." The nominating committee cun- ststing of Garden MucMillan. James Mclsaac and Louis Mulli- gan submitted the slate ' of new officers which was ncrced in. Those were: President. Archit- Johnstonc. 1st vice president. Colin Waugh.-' 2nd vice pi-cs.. granted drge .lsraei lie Condemned For i. Galilee Raid UNITED NATIONS. N.Y, (AP) --Britain. the United States and France urged the UN Security Council Thursday to condemn Israel unanimously for its Laltc Galilee raid which cost 56 Syrian lives. The West also warned new raids likely would produce stronger measures. The Soviet Union called for a canure vote, too. In addition. the Russians insisted Israel pay full ages. ' rda , Riley and , esllient l Archie Johnston: was ted to repre- sent the Federal as a Director on the Canadian Federation of Agriculture for 156.- Members of the. executive are Archie Johnstoue, liloyd Martin. colln Waugh. George Riley. Val- entine Mullalley, Eric Madson. Wallace Mallett. Roland MacDon- ald and D. A. MacDonald. Fin- ancc Committee members are; R. A. Profitt, D. A. MacDonald. Colin Waugh. Louis O'Connor and George Shaw. Archie Johnatone of Burlington was elected president of the RE. Island Federationiiuf Agriculture at the annual meeting of directors hdd at the Charlottetown Hotel yesterday. Owing to thc inclemency of the weather and travel conditionshthc attendance fell short of the usual. The deep interest manifested in Continued on page 2, Col." 4 Missionaries' . Bodies Found QUITO, Ecuador (AP)-A rarlio report received here Thursday night said a U. S. Air Force heli- copter has located four bodit-s in the Aura lndian country near the River Curaray where five Anu,-i'i- can missionaries dlsappea ul five days ago. The bodies have not been iden- tified. the report said. The bell- coptcr had landed in an attempt to pick up two bodies. sighted ear- lier in the vicinity, with the aim of taking them to Shell Mora for identification. Diary entries indicate the five missionaries, attacked in the Am- axon basin jungles of northeast Ecuador. were lured by signs of friendship from the savage Aucas. Soafish Catch, Western delegates stressed that they were not taking sides but were acting only to maintain (:0. They said they did of men- compenaatlon in a resolution tad up by Britain. -the United and France because they csald not find an astute system H" tletasnlnfng the GUitIenllCl0n- indicated they jt codder . But the rail lines ga- -00 ” uasm Id ugliest- 3'E&".7ay ditee:-:19!-0' sea 87 'ifonuymO&&iaN . may -.2 Returns Down OTTAWA (CP)-Canadhn fish- crmen caught laws Ie&ah and got less in return for thdr catch in the first it mt th of 13 than in the correspoadiu period a year 320. . .WAN'l'S SPY-NETWORK BONN (AP) -u Responsible offi- cials said Thursday Chancellor Konrad rAdenauer has asked 11 . lirment toE give l1llm'con.. o western uropefs srgesf. network. Theda officials said clen- . 4 H A til.-. ( . . since ann- -or ; 6. did not pub- lish Thursday news of a terrorist murder of a Turkish police get- geant in Cyprus Wednesday. OTTAWA (CP)-Opposition party leaders centred criticism on wheat two non-confidence motions. ented a motion stating the cabinet is not entitled to the Commous' confidence "by reason of their in- difference, inertia and lack of lead- ership intthe face of serious na- tional problems and their disre- gard of the rights of Parliament." CCF leader Coldwell added an amendment stating that one of the serious roblems was the govern- ment's Tailors" to provide cash advances on farm - stored grain equal to at least 75 pa; cent of the Canadian wheat board's initial payment for wheat. to alleviate "the serious financial. crisis" -fnc- lng Weatcm farmers and the Prai- rle eco . , I WHEAI" BEMOST A . . Although the Progressive, Con- an-vaii nsotlon did notnientlon me hm was fordmost in an by-Mr. Drew. Like Mr. all. be criticized the government's plan, begun last November, of loans on . , cash” advances . Should be: said made wi . g - Be an the lloans-tguaranteeiplan an course taken th the hope . . and would mbber-stamp the plan this n. - MI? W” 1"” Ww”r.".:s".ts w'ah&.w3wNW lrsuahele of hi he urged a tivl 0 h"hc,hded , . - -"inadequate. .. 'and.'. with” , tape from beginnin to md.”t-- . He said the governments at- titude is "remote, cold and un- sympathetic" in the face of a Prairie cash shortage which left LONDON (Reuterst -- Demands of British workers for increased pay to cover higher rents were intensified Thursday as talks on the claims, of about 1,750,000 men were held here. The workers are from four lty industries - railroads, building, road haulage and electrical con- tracting. They represent about one- fifth of the entire affiliated strength of the central union body. the Trades Union Congress. in addition. Ernest Jones. pres- ident of the National Union of Mineworkers. announced that the National Coal Board will reply on jFcb. 9 to mincrs' demands of 511 a week extra for 400,000 workers who arc paid by the day. . Eight hundred building worken paraded from Hyde Park to em- ployers headquarters in the Lon- don wesl end in support of their claim. The men. who carried ban- ncrs calling for "A Living Wage" caused a traffic jam in Oxford street but police drscrlbed the pa- ratie as ”or(l(-rly." They chanted slogans outside the British wn... -intensify Demands For increased Pay To Cover Higher Rent Costs buildtng'where the national joint council for the building industry was debating their claims. DEMANDS PARTLY MET The building workers got at least part d their demands. The council acted on an increase of one pun an hour in accordance with nevhss sliding scale agreements hosed on the retail prices ind-:x. Employers said that the agree- ment affected more than 1.000.000 men and would mean an annual asst to the building industry of 33'! the n2l0.Gli,000. It will add about 212 to the cost of a three- Iedroom house, they said. Negotiations on other demands, Eluding one for a further six- je-an-hour increase in basic 3:. are continuing. national union of railway- men, with 370,000 members, (lo- nsands a 10-per-cent raise and two other unions-the Associated Soci- ety of Locomotive Engineers and Firemen (70,000 members! and the Transport and Salaried Staffs As- sociation (00,000 members)-want a 736-per-cent increase. OTTAWA (CPI-A shocked cup- snultiple-dcath fire. A chill fear-a fear of death by fire-hung over the city like smoke in a wlndlesa sky. It is no exaggeration in say that Ottawa ls frightened. There seems Io be no explanation for the series of fires that have killed 32 persons. lssicluding 23 children. since Nov. In many of the cases. th cflre The bureau of &atlca estima- ltd Thursday that.iIa January- Novcmbnr cdclid 1.1, Onthe. b, . tpartment has so far been unable I: find the causes". - Controller Roy Donaldson. at the scene of Thursday's fourdsath tu- Ssno. said the situation is darn- ilgandtbattbereseernstobalo mtrol over it. Ottawa Dismayed As Fire Deaths Al -32 Since Nov. l8 ital woke up Thursday to anothc had was mdy talking about this and for some time. some parents are talking of sleeping so that there will be at least one person in the house awake throughout the night. Mint of the fires have occurred h homes where there were several children. The worst blaze, just be- fere Christmas killed five children 3 and Home-owners and landlords are doc lwlring tems and clear- Q h out nooks and cran- ies In their houses. said they plan to same room with their lights burning policies Thursday as they opened fire in the Commons on the gov- ernment's legislative program with Opposition leader Drew pres- PRICE 5c farmers unable to meet immediate living expenses unclfarming costs, NEED CASH ADVANCE Only a. cash advance program could bring the Western farmer out of his crisis. The advance of 75 per cent of the initial price should be applied to the quota a farmer could be xpected to "us. liver to elevators in the year. (The Canadian wheat board's initial price on delivery is based on 51.40 a bushel for No. 1 north- ern at, the Lakehead.) K 2 Prime Minister St. Laurent, who. followed Mr. Drew in the throne ity of providing cash advances on farm-stored graintbut felt it would tical spech debate, said the Vgovgr ment had considered the posslblt . do i at Policy Non-Confidence Motions Moved o 4 o ve and since wheat sales have mounted, in excess,ol fhosela ths: Period a Your previous; That meat did not apolrtuf that perio,d.,sioee..tlIey farm-stored -grain and "5 - ., t is afaituatlon . be faced as a fact." he said. , Earlier in the al&h&ihdO Minister Howe informed - e Corny mom; that the.governmQnt's pro- gram for wheat now is on theor- der paper. one of . the measures would Continued on page it. Col. 1 Yes, we cottcclvs-Q” aw Pnorssvsoa is we HABERDASI-ER? TORONTO. (CF) - Tempera- tures issued by the public wea- ther office: M88 Victoria Edmonton . Calgary .. Rcgirnai .. Winnipeg Toronto . Ottawa . -Montreal Quebec .. Fredericton . Saint John .. U8B838i:h.lHu:3:-E:g,E HALIFAX, (CPI-The r weather. office says a disturbance bew!& Cape Cod and Bermuda has HOV- ed northeast and is expectdd to continue northeast on Friday. to- tarsnlttant rain and drizzle an 'l.oruecast to continue in all reg- , V . ltcgional forecasts: . Northern Nova Scotla: -latch snlttent rain and drizzle: coa- tin extr mild; easterly winds 5. LOW-him NOV gets 3 and d. it