Maxims of a More Man I!s&lthdwasIs'gatisjfedtpwflli Wu: Qiuu rue s-severe was-ass "D1163 um gnMUNl.)STON. N. I. (OP)- g.. la-na Thibodeau. of nearby llppkr Seigas. - at - year - nld gir-flier of five. has been sentenced . be hanged June I for the govember murder of her IIlIbInd- ii my debated only 4! Iilniitu ggmrdy in returninl I aiilliv vor- diet and Chief Justice A. E. Mich- end of Fredericton handed down the first death sentence in the his- prv of Madawska count!- Chief Justice Michaud told the 3m he "concurred fully" Vlth an-ir verdict and would forward his own recommendation of clem- ,...i with that of the .lury'a to GmIrl'lOl'-GInCl'Il Vincent Massey. in the longest trial is the ....iniy's history. 11 dam. It wit- ,..u-: were called. Joseph Charles Tiilbodeau. an. owl of shotgun wounds h his Up- yr Se-igas home NW. 5. He was m. - "Tint. Thibodeau. standing j the prisoner's box. show no grioiioii as Chief Justice Michaud. ggieakinl in French. imposed the with sentence. he appeared the some black suit and bet she rose throughout the ital. MONTREAL (OP)-The conduc- tors shouted "ail aboard." the green lights lashed on and two spanking new "name" trains pulled out for the west eoast on schedule Sunday to add another chapter to the long history of Canada's railways. vanadian Pacific's "The Cana- dian” was the first away. leaving Windsor station at 2 . in. EDT. Canadian National's dnental” rolled out of central station at 1:25 p.m. EDT. The shiny luxury trains, which will chop one night from the 8.000- ll1llP run to Vancouver. pulled out sniid pageantry and fanfare from the flag-bedecked stations while oiiicials beamed. They are due in Vancouver Wednesday. An identical CPR train left To- ronto at 5:15 p. in. EDT for Sud- buiy where it was to join the Montreal Canadian as one train.- The CNR Super Continental from Montreal was scheduled to Join its Toronto mate at.Ca reol. Ont.. to rontinue as one to ancouver. The CPR Moutreal- Vanco vet run is 2.881 miles while til! line stretches 2.930 miles. MAJOR FACTOR niesei power is credited as a niainr factor in the faster sched' ule. one locomotive being able to mllke the run with aegli e serv- icing as compared to steam lee- riniritives. T0 MARITIME! HALIFAX -- Another milestone at the progress of railway trans- portation between the Maritimes and Montreal was marked with the departure at 10:05 am. and the arrlvel at 0:15 pm. (sland- Time) here Sunday. ii an n time" performance. of the "Oman Limited" of the Canad- ian National Railways from and Asli Commission Probe of Dosco MACE BAY. N.s. (OP)-Mine -nlii here passed resolutions during the weekend calling for a rnval commission to investigate tlir Dominion Steel and Coal Corp. and sent protests to federal and llrnvlncial gov... ments on the an- Ioiinrcment of the planned clos- iiir of No. 1-B colllery here Mav .11. Al the same time Tom Mac- Larllllin. president of District 3 of the United Mine Workers. de- nied. that the union ever gave ronsldfrnllon to the closing of (hr mine. Coming Events "fiance. Vernon Iall. Monday, Aiirii 25th. "iirrikinole. Mt. Albion Hall. -V"i"la.v. April as. "VlscMillan's lead Cleaning ant at Cornwall now operating. ' "liming Dance. ltanley Blldsr. Tuesday. April ssiii. Rollie llai kon7.le's Orchestra. m”.krll.v's cross Players present Am: fl-M'l play in Crapaud Hall. l""'lau May 2. Curtain s:so. Mother Of Five Sentenced To Be Hanged June 29 Three statements allegedly made to police by the illiterate young mother and signed with an s were admitted in evidence. One. dated Nov. 9. had been ad- mitted et the preliminary hearing last November and read h open eourt. It quoted Mrs. Thibodeau as charging abuse from her bus- band and saying she shot him after attending a night mass Nov. 8. The statement also included a reference to intisnata relations with another man "less than once I month" over I six-year period. A n o t b e r statement. allegedly made between 10:45 a. m. and 12.30 p. m. Nov. I. said she was going u p s t a tr s after returning from mass when she heard a gun- shot. lshe went to a nearby home with two of her children and told the neighbors. "I believe he just shot himself." The statement said her husband had talked about be- ing discouraged and had often threatened to kill himself. In the other statement. timed 4.40 p. in. Nov. 6. Mrs. Thibodeau was quoted as having decided to kill her husband while she was re- turning from mass. "1 was at the end and I could not stand any more," this state- ment said. NewTrainServiceToWesr Cuts Time Of Long Run to Halifax on her new fast sched- isle of approximately 21 hours. which has been made possible by the introduction of the diesel- electric locomotive. Four N. 3. Boys Killed Saturday SAINT JOHN. N. B.. (CP) - Traffic accidents in New Bruns- wick Saturday claimed the lives of four persons. Three were boys under 13. Dead are: Blaine Price. 12. of Blackville. about 1) miles from Newcastle; Joseph Bourgeois. 34. of Barchois, near Sbediac: Charles Robert Wright. ii. of Stoney Creek. near Moncton; and David Black, 6. of Point de Bute. Price. Bourgeois. and Black were killed when struck by cars. Wright died when he fell beneath the wheels of his father's three- ton truck. - Young Black. along with his '5 two brothers, was attempting to bitch I ride on the rear of a trailer load of logs and ran out from behind the trailer into the path of an oncoming car. No in- quest will be held. Boy Survives Full From Sixth Storey NEW YORK. (AP)-- Nine-year- old Ernest Meringo tumbled off the roof of a six-storey tenement building Sunday and survived. A clothesline at the third floor broke his fall to the sidewalk. TO OPEN DOG SCHOOL UNNA. Germany (AP)-Franz Wittmann. 92-year-old German dog trainer. goes to Canada next month to train dogs to lead the blind. He will open Canada's first school to train seeing-eye type dogs. at the invitation of Canadian societies for aiding the blind. .5". t "Soc Peters Road Variety Con- , - Peri iii lllillview Hall, Wednesda . APl'Il 27ill. lmrniiii my f'Tl)I'rc will not dance h Hun- A glilligr Masonic Hall. Monday. mlrrli 9-W. Music by Di-iiron Bro- T "Kini. ll. Wed llliil 27ili.. Klsilrtiirs Playelilts wll f;I'"W'nnlwiheir three act play. Cur- "(Iorrsn hart Pl on present H Pd Acre l'arm"?yCorran Ban i "la Monday. April &th. ' es lAitlc i i.'i'.' Mlllfln Hall. Woman's Insti- slmnsors film show. Tuesday. Nth. 0:8). Admission free. of cakes and fee as-cam. storewillsonintsncerr bun.-an all thethouaanda Covers Prince Edward island Like The Dew OTTAWA. April mlSpMiall- Gratification that the question of tariff on United States potatoes coming into Canada will be referr- ed to the Tariff Board for study was voiced by J. Angus MacLean, Conservative MP for Queen's. speaking late Friday evening on the budget debate. Mr MacLean said many prim- ary producers iss the Maritime Provinces would be pleased at this move and also at the budget prosposals to reduce tariffs on agricultural spraying machinery. eviscerating machinery for poultry and certain ingredients of poultry feed. It is a matter of pressing importance. he told the Commons. that some protection should be given the Canadian potato grower if at all possible. The Queen's member expressed concern at the continuing growth of Canada's large cities and said that there are important reasons why this trend for larger cities to grow even larger should be re- versed in this atomic age. lie re- minded the House large cities can be wiped out instantaneously by H-bombs. In Toronto. Mr. Mac- Lean said, it takes 512,000 a day just to meet the cost of workers at the A. V. Roe Company to get to their work. in Montreal. it has been calculated that traffic de- lays cost 380 million a year. He felt that the trend for larger cit- ies to add to their size should be discouraged by federal authority. Two-thirds of people living in United States cities with popula- lions more than 100.000 had said they were dissatisfied with their Troubles For BERLIN. (AP)- East Germany said Sunday that if the West con- tinues to withhold recognition of its Communist government new and "greater imunveniences" will be clamped on Soviet-surrounded West Berlin. Dcputy prime minister Otto Nuschke said current harassment of West Berlin would not have be- gun if the non-recognition policy did not exist. l-le specifically named the sharply increased road tax on Western trucks as one of the present harassmcnts. It was the first time since the tax was imposed April 1 that East Germany has conceded the meas- ure was being used as an attempt to gain governmental recognition. Previously it has said the in- creased taxes were needed to keep the roads in shape. The Western Allies have always contended-and the Bonn govern- ment has agreed--that East Ger- many's Communist government was formed illegally and hence . -.,..,......,.,.,... ., . g .. t l -- disnshoreoftheNiagaraRiver undertbe way of life. Mr. Macl.ean made a plea for reduction of governmental ax- pendituraa hi order that the Can- adian taxpayer may get full value for his tax dollar. Even the cost of dying in Canada is excessive at the present time. be said. It was regrettable that the Minister of Finance had not sought fit to remove the sales tax on coffins. hesrses and flowers. He also urg- ed the Government to remove the sales tax in purchases of equip- ment made by municipalities in order ts give he much-needed re- lief. Conservatives Win Jop Voting 1 TOKYO (AP) -- Conservatives won a solid victory in Japan's pre- ferctural assembly elections but left wing candidates also racked up surprising gains. returns showed today. Democrats. Liberals and Inde- pendent Conservatives captured 1.800 of the 2.618 seats in Satur- day's balloting for Japan's 40 as- semblies. the equivalent of prov- incial legislatures in Canada. That was eight more seats than they held before. Lefiists of var' ious '---es-including 10 Commu- nists-captured 590 seats. That was an increase of 170 seats for these parties. Most of the gains by both sides were registered at the of Naiionali sis Reieci Offer To Negotiate Formcsa Issue By Lionel Tsai TAIPEI. Formosa. ilieulersl - Nationalist China Sunday selected Communist China's offer to nego- tiate a cease-fire in the Formosa straits area as two special envoys of President Eisenhower began secret talks with Chiang Kai-shek. George Yeh, the Nationalist for- eign minister. condemned the of- fer of negotiations extended to the United States by Communist inside or outside the United Na- tions "which would imply recogni- tion of any Communist aggrassors' gains. including, those of the Chi- nese Communists." ”A cease-fire proposal. without taking into consideration the dis- tinction between an aggressor who should be punished and a victim of aggression who should be pro-' iected by Justice. is tantamount to encouraging international aggres- China mainland. A state depart- -ment spokesman however. refused to comment on these reports.l C The Nationalist foreign minister rejected Chouls offer in a state- ment issued by the official Central News Agency. l Republic of China will never sit at the same table with representatives of a Soviet puppet regime." Yeh said. Yeh said the Nationalist govern- Chme” Premier Chou EH31 n.meni is opposed to any proposaltsinn.” he added. the Bandung Asian-African ference Saturday. Though con- stipulated that Nationalist must be represented at any negoti- ations, Yeh said his would refuse to deal with the Com- munists. Soon after Yeh issued his state- ment. Admiral Arthur Radford. chairman of the U. S. loint chiefs of staff. and Walter Robertson. ss- sistant secretary of state for Far Eastern affairs. arrived here by plane. They met Cblang almost immediately. An official communique issued afterwards said the meeting was devoted to "exchanging views" on ihe implementation of the United States-Formosa mutual defence treaty. AROUSED SPECULATION (The sudden departure of Bad- ford and Robertson from Wash- ington Thursday aroused specula- tion thai Eisenhower was sending them to try to persuade Chiang to evacuate his island strongholds of Quemny and the Matsus off the independents who had runrwithout support of any major party. Communists Promise More West Berlin has no standing. " CAN SUIIVIVE "We can survive these childish policies of ignoring political real- ities for quite a long tlme." Nuschke declared in a statement published by the East Berlin news- paper Ncue Zeit. It has been proved in recent times that the German democratic republic East Germany is a sov- erelgn state with which one must reckon politically. S ''If Bonn (the West German capital) and West Berlin hadn't fallen into political folly through American orders. then they could have spared themselves certain unpleasantness. and in the future they would avoid still greater in- conveniences. "A significant event in that con- nectlon is the establishment of the higher road taxes for the strongly increased interzonal traffic. and particularly for the strongly in- creased transport traffic to West Berlin." Ony-Hu s Remain Oi Famous Tourist Boats NIAGAR.AFAl..Ll,Orit.,Anhourafterfirebroke outentsielargsrotuieuaidsottbe Roi-seduce FalIFriday,thestsier-etnscturuet completely destroyedbyfin. Here -noke still lsbillowlng from the boats and. as can ofspec-tatioi-sisvet'ituringcioee.'I'l'nflneist-iginstedinthelargerllallattheldt, waseprsparisigtbehoattsrsiannssrnravel. 1. Filling Worship 1 With Television LONDON (Reuters) -A Cana- dian warship is being fitted ex- perimentally with tcievision as a new method of communication at sea, 4: was announced Saturday by a British firm manufacturing television equipment. The com- pany refused for security rea- sons to give the name of the Can- adian ship. A television camera in the op- erations room will be focussed on the plotting chart upon which the movements of enemy aircraft. surface and undersea craft as well as of friendly ships will he re- corded. Five points in the ship will be equipped with receiving sets where officers will have an immediate picture of the tactial situation without having to depend on tele- phones. HENRY susss: risan MEMPHIS. Tenn. (APl-Henry Busse. 61. orchestra leader and trumpet player credited with orig- inating the muted trumpet. died of a heart ailment here Saturday. Busse was a former member of the Paul Whlteman orchestra.' the: American state department liasl China government Eden Sees Willingness Of Reds To Negotiate By STANLEY PRIDDLE LONDON (Reuters)-Prime Min-l The declared viilliuguess of ister Eden thinks statementsichou to discuss the Fiirniiisa crisis Saturday by Communist Chineselwlth the United Slates was wel- Premler Chou En-lai and Rus- comed by other official quarters sian premier Nikolai Bulganin arepas a sign that the Communist lin talks at any level." "significant" indications of will-!Chlnese government might be a- ingness to negotiate with theidopting a more coiicilalory at- West, an authoritative source ' tiiude. said here Sunday. But Britain fully supports the Bulganin told Western reporters American view that .VaiiUll?llSl at a reception that they ”must Cliina must be a iiarl.V '0 any ask the others" when queried mijnegotiaiions about the fate of the the possibility of a Big Three Formosa islands. meeting with President Eisen- hower and Eden. Hf? said he lirid already given his opinion---an ap- parent reference to a statement March 26 when he said he took a ”positlve attitude" toward such talks. Chou Offers To Meet U. S. Chou meanwhile told the Asian-ll" Dlr9C'l' Talks A1fricaIri cnufci;euc(- at l;.l.'lnduiig BANDUNG, 1na(me5ia,iAP)- 1 -51 ls 00"" FY W35 W5 lllll Y0 Premicr Cliiiu En-!.'ii ill R('(l (' iiiiii negotiate with the United States repealed Sunday that he is riliady on the Formosa issue. to enter into direct negotiations ' with the United States to ease ten- ” UDY STATEMENT3 sion in the Formosa area but in- Eden and Foreign Secrctarytsisted that Peiping will not give Harold Macmillan have. studiedlup its fi'ights" to bring. reports of both Cuiimunist stale-lgliheratmn" of the Nationalist- msnts. Eden. the source said. eld island. found them ”significant." l Chou spoke at the closing pie- The US. state department's inlry session 0i the first reaction was that Bulganlnl Asian-Afric conference. had only restated previous Rus- sian stands and that his remark was not a major diplomatic over- ture. Reports received in London of: H Bulganinis remarks differed lnlm"-S8" NjlFl5- . emphasis on whether h, w," ,3, Chou. like other delegation lead- fe,-ring in , gig your meemmyers. had five minutes to sumgup 'of heads of govei'nments or nor-iA';1 lr'1'”'Sthm '3: n”'"l.h595s'”;" mal diplomatic negotlalions. i " 5 0 9' "W5 9 W sad i But the foreign office here tooklN”l';!le'd'"d 50”!" KW" 5l"0"'dlb9 gmem - sly h 1 k im 1 "as soon as possib e" ,5 mrn::m:,a,e,:3l?.ugang”ms; thrnugh peaceful negotiations with italn would "be glad to take partfach MM" war with the United States and would like direct talks on the For- .--- He repeated his statement of Saturday that China and the U.S. should negotiate settlement of the Formosan issue. But Chou added that any Wash- ington - P e i pin g negotiations Socialists Win In Lower Saxony HANNOVER. Germany fAPi - Complete official returns today 55” we” ,G9l'm3"3'.'5 ""l"93'”lChina of its sovereign rights in mament Socialiia a victor in the nu, ubemuon or -raw," p-or. popular vote over Chancel or Kon- musli- rad Adenauera 'Christlan Demo-I Chm” pmwul for "sommnn. crats in Sundays Lower Saxony (continued 0,, pan ,4 our 3. state election. gree affect the exercise by the Communist people's republic of Mist unite Cana- Iie hmom tourist- beseen. noneol where workmen ihe third-largest state of Westl The chancellor! may yet snatch; victory mm tie eat. however. if he can organize a new cnalitioni government with other rigl-it-wing: parties. ,l The Socialists failed to win a majority in the new parliament of, VATICAN CITY fAPi - The ”eT'.:';j”l,';,M ruled Low" Saxony Pope Siiiiilny urged the worlds for the last four years in coalitionls"'9"""::. mhbeuimii lucfhen 0' with the refugee party but therelmnnkgin m ll 'd” an "" "d ""2"." was no certainty the latter would "if ';.r d" M 9" men m . "M m" align with the Socialists again. ” , "l ' The chancellor waged an agreii- 'wM l" "Wm Wll" "ml" ”-S9 "l sive campaign for mm.-01 of ghe'f8lSPl)' taught science to minke stale parliament which elects five.'"9" INN the "El" v-j"h- "'0 members to the federal gnvern-lpnl” '””'l- Tl"'Y 3" l'k9""l '" meni's upper house. Five Christian l5""'" 9'3"” M" M mm" "" me Democrats in the upper federal "W" "l "W h""""' "Wei Th?-V ho", (mm Lnw". Saxony wnuid are the -obstacles on which men ennui, Adenauer M the ,w,,.”,;rd,istumhle in their search of truth. majority he needs for several The pontiff spoke at it plenary pieces nf rearmamnrit legi:lnlinn.lssu-mhly of the poniiliral Acad- Conservative Division in. piB.C. Appears Widening Iy STEPHEN SCOTT Canadian Press staff Writer leader. denied Saturday he made any deal to support the Social Credit in B.C. about 29-nationjweeli in blazing desert heat with- ?" Hi5 out drinking has been solved. words carr ed special import after the statement he issued Saturdayfh saying Red China does not want' "mp "should not in the slightest tie-s Teach Nature's Splendors FITGIE CDLONIALISM ISSUE AT ASIAN-AFRICAN CONFERENCE SETTLED WITH COMPROMISE Stresses Requirements Oi Canadian Potato Growers (By Harold K. Milka) BANDUNG. Indonesia. (AP)-After hours of dead- lock. a sub-committee of the Asian-African conference produced a compromise resolution Sunday condemning colonialism "in all its manfestationa.” l The nine-nation sutlrcommittee, given the task of after the final plenary meeting of the 29-nation confer- ence was scheduled to start. The resolution finally agreed upon named neither Western ooloriialism. which many Asians condemned. nor "Communist colonialism." which Prime Minister Sir John Kotelawala of Ceylon, among others. had assailed. The text nf the compromise re- so,",m. i.:..;..:.. 3...r..i.rn.;".i.;..;..-.... countries-India. Pakistan. Cey- 33' l l TUCSON. Arts. iAPi--The mys- iiery of how eamels work for I Ancient lore said the camel's was filled with water. Wrong. The hump is solid fat. I Modern Inre said the camel ldrank great quantities of water land stored it in one of his mul- tlple stnmarhes. Wrong again. The camells unique ability turnsi ifllli to hr the result, iif half a dnzelli lextranrdinary gifts not shared by any other animal. Dr. Knut Schmidt-Nielsen of Duke University directed a year'Il study to determine how the ships of the desert survived. The work was done at Bent Abbes. 500 miles within the Algerian Sahara. Therey the temperature often reaches 140 degrees. . Dr. Schmidt-Nielsen reported. ',his findings Sunday to the Unitedi 'Natinns Educational. Scientific land Cultural Organization's com- imitlee an arid zone research. iTlie group completed a two-day lmeeting here Sunday. I Camels donit store water. In- "The Asian-African conference ion! gm-mm Ind Indonesia- quid discussed the problems of depend- decide. 5,.-He,-I Bu,-ma-, pumm- cnt peoples and colonialism and U N" mid ,l,;..5paper men 5, ex. the evils rising from the subjec- Denim , Cnnferpnm wnuid he hard :2”: ”.'..?::::::-2'" :l”:.."".?.::'r:i an I) . I 4 (ll an F' Cl 0 . r ' v rotvri-znnsci-1 AGREED '13Q.i::.T;"N::;f.'.lded by Egwmm "Subject to what is stated in the ANOTHER COMPROMISE "'”m'i'l"l l”"'3l1”'ph'- ll" '59"l"' A sub-committee on coexistent-s 9"" h” "greed: also reached a compromise. A re- ”l- 1" derlaring that mlnnlallsm solution which it worked out fol- in all its manilrestatirins is an ei"ilg10..-ed these lines; ivliicli sliiiuld spcedily be broughi' L Viewgd -iwm, dew c,,m.,.,-n '” 3" 9'"l- the present stain of iiiternaiioiial "2. ln affirming that the siibjii- rcomimled on peg, 14 COL 3) gallon. domination and exploitation constitute a denial of fundamental . . human rights. is ciintrary to thelchlld Kflled In charter of the United Nations and - ' is an imiicciiiieiit tn the promo-:NoVu scoha Acclden, of world peace and co-opera-i HALIFAX ICPK g. Tanavearnld 3 "3. ln declariiig its support oll Ella MCNl'” 0? Flew” N" S" 3"” ithe muse of fl-eedoln md rude” killed Sunday in a two-car collison pendence for all such peoples and "'31 5?” mm" 3d”".5 "'3 ml" "ll" -44, in (-airing upon the powergicr ch-Ildren.lo hospital here. ' riint-crncri in cram freedom and Y'"l"'0 53'df'31'5 d”V9" b-V FT" iiirlr-itcmlniii-es in such peoples." Mc;VniI of Piclou and Ernest H? The conference adjourned with- Of Halifax. CYl38hEd 0" I 19W" out deciding definitely whether the stretch of highway at Lam: Sid- Asian-African countries would hold ing. about 40 miles from here. a similar meeting next year. Con- None of the injured is consid- ferenre leaders said it had beeniered in serious condition. Y t Y I d Go Without Water So ve MURRAY smcualn. stead they vonserve overy ditnn lin body tissues as if life depend- ed on it. It does. Excretions are virtually Most animals gulp lots of water in hot weather to keep body tem- peratures close to normal. They keep cool by evaporating water from their skin in sweating. or from their tongues in parilitil Camels avoid both. They never (Continued on Page 14 col. 3) Scientists To TORONTO iCP.-Minimum and maximum temperatures" Min Mal eiiiy of Si-it-nce The academy opens a work of study today. his .'l.000-word speech. the longest he has given since a grave collapse last December. the Pope traced the great progress of sci- Edmonton ence in all fields in the last cen- Calgary liiry. and tiescrlhcd scientists as Saskatoon iiitcrpreicrs nf rrcalinn. .llcgiiia NOBLE MISSION iwliluipcg "Your life. conser-rated as it is Toronto . to the stiidv of natural phenom-loitaiva sna." the Poiic said. ”enables ,vriul.'Vionirr-al . in nhseitio FYPl')' day more rlnsely Quebec .. and in inir-rprcl the wonder: which Fredericton .. the Most Hirzh ha-: inscribed onlsaini John the ro.-iliiy nf thing: in very Mnm-ton truth. the rroaied world is a man-.liallfax ifestailrin of the wisdom and good- Charlottetown no-as of Grid. for all things have Sydney rereivt-ti their existence from Him Yarmiiiilh . . . . . .. and reflect His grantletlr. St. John's. Nflrl , . . . .. 26 ” "S: (in ii ti vnil. Tl” '”' ”"" " d d M i uAl.irAx if'Pl - Tho ui".'IIltI'V llicrcfiire. ranks among the most g nnlile, for you should no. in (office sI.Vs it is m'l5ll.V rlnudv nv-r jsen.-so. the dist-overers of the in- ”" Mfmllm" 3"” "'9" if "W light rain reported from a few ientinns of God. it pertains to you . In in,H.p”,. th, hmk M nnturn M localities. A light noriheasierly Dawson . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Vancouver .. Victoria sd:s3l::'tis3::.':;:.'!L'88 atone:-1.-ice:-:2:-zest. lsmoothing over a bitter dispute. was held in session long ' between the national leaders of the Progressive Conservative Party the British Columbia Progres- si e Conservative Association ap- peared wider Sunday. The quarterly council meeting of the association lsturday took this action: Endorsed by a vote of 40 to 2 a brief submitted by the executive which charges the national leader- ship with agreeing to support Social Credit provlncially in return for support in the federal field. Decided to contest every seat in the next federal and provincial elections in BC. despite the new federal association set up in the p;-Iovince by the national leader- s p. Instnicted Deane Fiaiayson. pro- vincial leader. to demand a Dun- ialoa convention when he attends the satlosei eaeentivs lieetiu h the east h Hay. DINIII DIAL KPPICDL vicroaui fCPl - The divisinnl Mr. Drew termed the suggestion "absurd" and said there is "not the slightest foundation for it." The meeting also heard Mr. Fin- layson charge that action of the federal leaders are wrecking the party provlncially and nationally. He iiaid' the national leadership delayed an executive meeting in the hope the B.C. association would go broke and fold up. IACKED DOWN The brief endorsed by the meet- ing charges that the national leaders backed down on promised support of attempts to unify the party in BC which has is troubled with dlssenaion since 1 2. l!.C.'s three federal Progressive Conservative members of Parlia- ment split with the provincial asso- ciation last year when a quarterly council meeting passed a vote of nsaftdasee h Mr. Drew's Inad- as-ship. The national rite now has backed a new rel associa- .dcscribe its contents and to draw the consequences therefrom for the flood of all. "Become. you who interpret creation. teachers eager to reveal its beauty. its power and its per- fectinn so that they may be en- joyed by others." Two Killed uf Crash of Jet HAMILTON. ((715).. An scar T-33 Jet training plane crashed in a field Sunday about four miles north of the RCAF station at Mount Hope. and five miles south of here. RCAF officials said the two men aboard were killed. piane. on a routine training flight with a pilot instructor and a student. apparently plunged to be field while coming in to land at Mount Hope. Names of the men lrilied were I Ottawa. George Drew. la- ls-at hepasssve Isasuvin uosial.c.andhse j. withhold pending notification of nut-to-b. flow of moist air from Nevi-foiind- land will continue over the dis lrict today and skies will remain generally cloudy. Fnrccasis: Northern Nova Si-otla. Prince Edward Island. eastern N.B. conn- iiea: Cloudy with little change in temperature: light winds: law-high at New Glasgow 35 ad 47. Char- lottetown 33 and II. Moot-low I and 4'1. St. John river valleys: Cloudy with a few clear intervals: little change in temperature. it t winds; Fredericton II and Edinunston as and B. Day of Fundy: East winds II: cloudy with a few clear intervals: visibility is miles; temperature near 0. E High tide today at Charlotte- town at 11.50 s.sn. and 18.10 p.n. p. in. suimnmiiie Ids eighteen ute- stes later than Charlottetown sun rises today at Lia ..'.. udsshattipim