The SS Cape Breton Miner unloads its first cargo of Nova the Toronto Scotia coal at FIRST CARGO or coAcumoADEn F. . generating plant of Ontario ydro. The station uses 440 tons of coal per hour when all eight units are generating at capacity. Miner carries 22.000 tons in each cargo from Cape Breton mines. (CP Wirephoto) Stock Prices In New York Show Advance During Week NEW YORK lAl’l»~The' stock market last week stemmed a retreat from the record high of May 7 by making its first ad- vance in four weeks. The recovery was on the lightest volume since the week ended last Aug. 10 when 18.042.- 010 shares were traded, This week's total was 20.158.810. shares. Analysts considered covcry mainly technical. The Associated Press average of 80 stocks advanced 2.4 to .1040. thn sharpest rise since SJ. the week ending May 9 The Dow Jones industrial average advanced 3.36 to 809.39. Wall Strcct chartists linked much of the market's perform ance to the action of the Dow Jones industrial average. This reached record closmg high ot R1017 on \lay 7. The market worked down irregularly since then. Monday the Dow sank to 800.313itist above the "magic 800" level \\Ill(‘h it topped amid ‘ great fanfare on Feb, 28. This time. the RM line proved in he a support icvcl from which ! prices rebounded ‘ ADVANCES SHARPIA‘ The market advanced sharply although on low volume. Tues— ; day. Wednesday and Thursday. A mild and irregular decline enr‘cd the trading week Friday. The three straight days on the i upside were the longest winning ‘ streak sincc five days of rising prices ending May 7. i The low volume reflected I lack of enthusiasm and therei the re- .set by news of a court suit in ‘ were plenty of analysts who predicted that the average would sink toward 800 in the Dow again. If prices weathered the test. then the next upside move might have a greater fol- lowing, they said. Of 1.512 issues traded this week. 759 rose and 589 fell. ‘ Texas Gulf Sulphur was up- i Ontario involvmg its mineral- rich territory at Timmins and the stock took a net loss of 1% on volume exceeding 1.500.000 shares. General Xerox rose 6%. chine and Foundry Motors gained 1%. American Ma- 1%. Cerro 41A. Zenith 21/4, Control Data 17's and Pan American World Airways 11/2. NEWS ENCOURAGING The background included en- couraging news. The price of aluminum ingots was raised and unemployment in the U.S. fell in mid-May to the lowest level in more than four years Manufacturers were reported optimistic about increases in their sales. Business spending 1 for expansion was slated at rec ord levels. The most active issues on the New York Stock Exchange were: Texas Gulf Sulphur, oft 1% at 48%, on 1.504.600 shares; and Sperry Rand. off 1 at 14% and Radio Corp.. up 3/4 at 31%. The most active issues on the American Stock Exchange were Syntex, off 7% at 67% on 568.500 shares and Webb and Knapp. unchanged at Vs. ‘ ierritories Council Ends Quiet By PETE McNAUGHTON OTTAWA tCPI—The council‘ of the Northwest Territories t has been prorogued by Territor- i lcts Commissioner B. G. Sivertz ‘. been after one of the quiet- eet. sessions in its history. Two motions which had been I expected to result. in lengthy' debate were not discussed. One was a motion by representative Robert Porritt of Hay River which would authorize a re- quest to Northern Affairs Min- ister Lain: to drop plans to di- vide the territories into two dis- tricts—the Mackenzie and Nun- ossiaq. ‘The sewnd motion. intro duced by Dr, Frank Vallee of Hamilton. would increase mem- bership in the council to 18 from mine. Five of the members would be elected from the Mac- henzie area. three from the Eastern Arctic and five more Would be appointed by the cal-I- t. Included in the motion was a proposal that the commissioner take up permanent residence in the Territories. Both motions are expected to be brought up at the next ses- sion of the council at Frobisher Bay during the first two weeks of November. Commissioner Sivertz Friday gave his assent to 15 hills which were given third and final read- ing earlier in the day. BILLS PASSED ost important of the new it. ~Legisiation increases to h maximum of $75 a month od lire assistance and allow. ances for blind and disabled persons. —An ordinance which will perm-it more big game hunt,- ting in the territories. particu- larly in the Mackenzie dis- trict. -—An ordinance allowmg mu- flil‘ioaivties in the north to enact bylaws to permit activi- t i e s. int‘llldln“ commercial Sunday sports, which are pro- hibited under the Lord's Day Act. -—A bill authorizing Commis- otoner Sivertz to enter into on with the Centen- nial commission concerning territorial n a r t i cloation in Canada‘s 1M7 centennial cele- brnflon. ,--An ordinance authorising o bigot 3210.000 from the fed- .gmmont for the pur- 7 of granting first-mort- " ‘. housing loans, A mat Session Earlier in the two-week ses-i sion. council approved at 1964-65 1 budget of $8,015,321 in capital! and operating expenses and I 5842.055 in supplementary esti- es. 100,000 GATHER WHEAT PEKING (Reuters) — More than 100,000 Chinese including soldiers. schoolchildren. office .and factory workers have lmobilized to help bring in the :wheat harvest in the Peking I area. mmunist party a newspaper Peking Daily rev 1 ported Friday. 3 TYPHOID CASES DROP * ABERDEEN (APl—The num- flber of persons in hospital in the typhoid epidemic which broke .out in this Scottish city things {weeks ago dropped Saturday ifor the first. time — by one. lThere still were 393 confirmed Ecases in hospitals. But the num- r of suspected cases dmp lto 51 from 52. : 47 Pm Be sure to check your f numbers before Wed- t needay. You may be a winner. MON.-TUES.-WED. SPECIAL FRESH GROUND HAMBURG oc N0 DELIVERY UNLESS WITH AN ORDER I10 “the Guardian. Charlottetown, Mon. June 15, MOSCOW tAPl—The Soviet-cal situation_ A separate peacev Union and Communist Eastttreaty would have meant. East; Germany signed a 20 yearGermany-encircled West Berlin.‘ ‘for which the West now holds friendship treaty Friday. but Moscow solely responsible. i stopped short of sparking new international crisis over Ger< TREATY FALLS SHORT many find Berlln- _ Khrushchev announced the- CautIOUSly. Ij"l‘€mlt‘1' Khi‘USh' treaty to a cheering audience of chevchanacterized the met as 6,000 in the Kremlin Congress‘ contributing to “peaceful resu-‘Han. While the treaty said one lation of the German question." of its punpnses was to “make He warn“1 that the issue 03" easier the conclusion of a Ger— "absoluteLV unexpectedly PI‘O'.man peace treaty." it appeared voke a catastrophe." to (an short of what visiting} it 1 l- - Th. treaty specifically said Communist chief Wa or i I iSoviet obligations under thelbnicht of East Germany. iPotsd-am agreement with the wanted. " iwesh Slgfled after “19 second‘ The treatvv said the two sign- |World War. would not be af- tfected This treaty concerned U.S. - Soviet - British - French in Germany ‘ers "consider West independent political unit" . .not a part of the West and Fn- , Federal Republic. Berlin an ‘ and ‘ ‘ ‘ 5 statement presumably. - \ ms Western Anions Antone x. Bern" “mm” as they are said the treaty provided that . In addition. the Kremlin fore- warned the U.S. Britain and the Russians and East Germans would regard isolated West Ber-l ance. ‘lin as an entity to which "thei The three Western Allies. after . competence of the ‘ urgent consultation. judged the 5 man Federal Republic does not." pact to be short of a Secondlextend.” Uibrieht may have: War peace treaty and.wanted a full - blown peace thus has created no new criti- l treaty. for he said: The Cape Breton Germanico-operation and mutual assist- Ruyssia And East Germany Sign Friendship Treaty “There is no other way ofl ensuring peace now than by‘. normalizing relations betweeni the two German states. dis- armament and the signing of at peace treaty by the victoriousl powers and the governments ofl German states." I DENOUNCES PEKING Khrushchev‘s obvious caution. in announcing the pact could be .’ a reflection of his other troubles in be Communist camp. nota— bly with the Communist Chi- nese of wanting World war to spread communism but relying} upon the Soviet Union to win-i such a war for them. ‘ Ulbricht told the Kremlin au-i dience the treaty of friends\n,, ance “firme guarantees the in- violability of the German Dem-i ocratic Republic frontiers 333 one of the main factors of Eu-‘ ropean security. I Khrushchev and Ulbricht de—l livered a familiar denunciation , West G9r-‘of the West German govern-t Khrushchev said West! “revenge - seekers"' ment. German were covering “aggressive de-ip signs with the fine slogans ofl Roosevelt, De Gaulle Friction Seen In Former Secret Papers By HARODD MORRISON WASHINGTON (CP) — The late p re s i d e nt Franklin D. Roosevelt at one time accused Gen. Charles de Gaulle of stir- ring up trouble between Arabs and Jews and other elements in Africa and charged that de Gaulle’s disturbances were be- ing financed by the British gov-. ernment. U.S. state department docu- ments made public h re dis- close that in 1943, at the height of the Second World War. Roose- velt urged Prime Minister Win- ston Churchill that Britain and the U.S. break with de Gaulle. But Churchill wrote back that while he was no more ena- mored with the French leader an was Roosevelt, “.I would rather have him on the (French liberation) e o m m i t t e e than strutting about as combination Joan of Arc and Clemenceau." These and other wartime ex- F. 5‘ granting all nations the right to self - determination." But that principle. be said, does not ap- Q‘ A O O m H 3 n: = '< n: :l D. =‘ A: ll :1 9. E’ :1 N to do with German unification. changes involving the . allies were published by the state de- rtment as part of a continu- , ,part D ing policy to disclose secret his- torical documents 20 years old. O '1 more. A department spokesman em- phasized that while the papers may report wartime friction, the events at that time have bearing on current interna- tional relations. On May ii. 194, Roosevelt wrote Churchill that the atti- tude of “the bride”—-hls refer- flee. to Gaulle—was ‘well night intolerable." "De Gaulle may be an hon- est fellow but he has the mes- sianic complex," he- told Chur- c ' . ‘De aulle is without question taking his vicious prop- aganda staff down to Algiers to stir up strife between the vari- ous elements. including the Arabs and Jews. He is expand- ing his present group of agita- tors who are working up coun- ter - demonstrations and even riots. PEOPLE CATCHING ON' 'Unfortunately. too in a n 3’ people are catching on to the fact that these disturbances are being financed in whole or in by British government funds." Roosevelt added that if the French people behind the libera- tion movement knew as much about de Gaulle as did Roose~ velt and. Churchill, ‘they would continue to be for the move- ment but not for its, present leader (de Gaulle) in London." In exa s pei'f-tion, Roosevelt added in other secret ex- changes that de Gaulle should head for “to the oasis or some- where" or perhaps go to war. Finally in one exchange he said: 'I do not know what to do with de Gaulle. Possibly you would like to make him governor of Madagascar." De Gaulle at one time headed the seven-member French na- tional committee backed by the British government. go to French North Africa where Gen. Dwight D. Eisen< howcr's forces had landed the previous November. it's TRADE ’N’ TRAVEL TIME at ii illiiniiiiimlll ,filllillllllillllllllllli. \ . 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