Wednesday. W. N. Black. agronomilli illustration Stations (centre tore ground) explains to a group of Coming ...,,Eventsv Bingo, iIooe'-"itiyeri Ihoisht. Cardigan Tee Party. Jill! 35- Keilg!'sAt..jresp'tea party. July 1.1- Reiiet3v:e-”-'l3IWj.l..'5th. for 'Tiinish' ilcnlc. ' Brae Parish picnic; Tuesday. July 31.: h ' I day, July I. altinkora Picnic Saturday. July Barn dance Garfield MecPhee's Thursday. Burns Orchestra. Regular Dance Bonshaw Inn. Tuesday night. Burns Orchestra. Corran Baa Picnic. Wednesday. 5'13"” 1- ' frightened about the massive re- country against the Poznan lnsur- reuliielldgsd "are being disposed of 3”" ""' m" Ka”"' m" ..".i'.i'2&” that they in: gt Gui: Keegbrkue in Polish factories q'riiey'"ahow funeral" and big mm w'd'”'d”' I” it dare to speak." reported a West Communist propaganda campaign Dance soy German by ., wsrcbrgen igsuvergyiguicggig wednudn" um &"n"iji runners , ii:-ut:d out to reb- Dance is Dixon's Barn 1"rideya.g gh.'nqa. aingualiave 93- set elavat , is-isles, . I :- . , -. W I 4..-iaiaordszaarda C ' iusht. July 5. . , . .'l.”.". ff P: ' vi i;' Hall. North noati'eo. wotinudu. July 11. Dancing at south Itustico every Thursday night. Rollie Macl(en- xie's Orchestra. Canteen service. Inning:-out Variety Concert in horse alley lisii Friday. July a. Dance after. Ice cream festival. st. Mark's Anglican Church, Rusiico, Thurs- day. -ill! 5- Movie "Abiea' Irisli Rose" Cor :a;io Ban Hail. Friday. July 0. Movie "Ablea Irish Rosa" St. "l'e”resa'e Hall, Sstuiuiay, July 7. Movie "Abies Irish Rose" Ein- :r;ld Hall, Tuesday. July Ill. tiPlcnle immaculate Conception C.-iliiurch grou '.s. Wellington, July st. Mary'n Parlshirchicken Sup- . Wednesday. July 4. at the carer Club Hall, Montague. -. Dgcing at the White Gpot evuy gri ht. Canteen service allia use 's Orchestra. w-our Hall i hastra. I Dancing at south ltuatico l t. Roili Ma ;Ia'a-ogohzstrmia. Cants:n i . .em.wl;,ai:Kehlaii.eI'js ware. Canteen service. 0:8 I I l-'crt AIIJIII cdnesdar Tr Pole. lie Exp We US. from BE!tLIIt'(AP: - lted Tuesday rough scores workers into court in the first of a series of mass purge trials in Poznan. ' The courts were set up espe- cially to baggie participants in the an ggsrlslng in the industrial city of gime iiirhei people of Poznan are so But there was no and a Communist informant ar- riving in Berlin denied this was the case. He said: "The Polish government be careful. They will observe all the laws and correct procedures because " world is watching Poznan. The Communist. who is not a withheld. He said he toured Pos- an during the latter part iievolt and spoke to senior Poillll the "secondary" violators amour the hundreds of workers arrested. arnnieot is holding two workers- OTTAWA ( CF) Trans-Canada Pipe Lines Ltd. will be able to build the western leg en prairie section this year. or whe- ther construction by the steel strike Mr. Commons Friday eds has enoull nine miles the iineis western section .,.i oland rebel d freedom confirmation must they know the whole asked that his name .be of the reported the Warsaw gov-l act Pipeline rlt On Schedule x Unless the prolonged. shed strike is lne this prime star flows in the Com- ( CCF-As-, vWUllld DO lllikd guppugg, um had. informed the that Tr tobuildlpitems berta toswlmiipeg. , government place -a temporary on selective warehouses needed Officials c o nfirmed Tues- as PBZNAN TERRIFIED I Polish Reds Open Series Of Mass Revolt Trials "Matiya and Wilgaah"-as ring- leadera of the revolt and they will be among those persecuted in "political" trials." lie claimed that mew of the workers arrested have been re- leased after interrogation. Meanwhile, the Red Polish rt.- threw the whole weight of their propaganda machine into whipping up popular feeling in the steel nllllctl 0"M3l5- day that me an order has been The trials which began Tues- day, the informant said. were for u n m be mg” the freese if ortlefeeee D" FARMERS SEE PERMA4 NENT riisruitt farmers the effect pf coinbliiatlons on p are at the farm of W.. . ifertlilaer buildings can be seenin the ermenent hp . . The field in which the Johnston experiments are being onducted is on a steep slope and after 25 U.Si.i To Defence Steel wasiinvo.-ron (AP) - The freaae order will apply only to has decided to freese order in The order is designed to freese critical steel iterna for deface , d . principally contractors of the defence department and Atomic Energy Commission be- cause of the steel strike. The fraese is eoxdpected to only a short perl . possibh no longer than two weeks. Dllrisu this period defence can acqulro or put under order such items as stainless steel tub- ing. carbon plate and alloy bar in the quantities they need for the foreseeable future. PIIOTECTS DEFENCI WORK , This will be aii-ned:at assuring that necessary defence construe the and production to on as long as possible with steel stocks on hand and that nondefence man do not acquire needed Iefuda in last for contractors halfway Special exemptions are to be- ailowed to non-defence users to get small quantities of the stud can on re, urgency. ...i'.f'”1." te It was elnpliuised (ii That the tin! ".,."- A i weekly e. 8!. i 'v . g V . . I ',m” c'5'n'a-i”,r3":i'-'l”o:eii-R-u'i"m"i-'?'3' MenialExamInat,t6n For Model um rm-ur-n-n.w . ..'v . a . ' "v W 2:; ..., ,:-"..;-r:; In Shooting Death Of Husband - 'l"'I'ii'iv.-..-:.-9 ' rd. (OP)-p-An aaracuvothuranuaiishthuinauiiutleti "Danae dei-dun Legion an as for-oaie model'who the irisser. Not!-Ins ind-lush ,?;?i”'l'h-l'.t”.”e.ifl'l'i'3.'.w "cm years of unbroken pasture land the forage on it was seen to be of ex ceilent quality. (See story on Page 2). ..Guardlan Photo. German news agency. "SHOW" FUNERAL i In Poznan. the Communist ad- ministration put on Tuesday what travellers leaving the city called a "show" funeral for soldiers, po- lice and Communist officials killed in the uprising. An estimated 200 to 300 Persons died in the fierce street fighting and travellers said most of the reezefi curtain finished steel products and thataftera-ill-dayortwoweeir period after. defence supplyw not all sizes and shapes, and (2) mm: satisfied. the remainingrxailahliz i be freed -general be ter Tuesday he helped Cunmlmu Inland arrange for the select 1.000.000 barrels of cement in Canada. Poland was among the Iron curtain countries which in the current crop-year ordered" a total or ;omd..Ad90il0,000 bushels of Canadian t. Funds for some of the-lhht were provided by the fcCQIl- Iuvernment under credit deals". The crop year min July 31. -7 ” DEAL: agricultural commltteejiis depart- ment would be willing to help an- other of the purchasers - the he Soviet Union-transact business in Canada ”if we can." But Russia was ina "peculiar position." A state organization fixed prices and terms of exports. Under a three-year trade agree- ment with Canada. Russia agreed to buy a minimum or 14,800, bushels of Canadian wheat an- nually and to boost this to 18,500,- on if Russia was able to make an gland Sells . illion Barrels Of Cement on-pawl tcri,-.-H Trade Mlnis- Mr. Howe told the Commonsthis country. Mr. liowe said he did not know what sales Russia had made. But vius sure Canadian wheat sales to that country will rise to the maximum ”anyway." Russia was paying for the wheat in dul- lars. CASH WITH CCF He touched on the Communist 000 trade picture as he clashed with CCF members on federal wheat- seiling policy. The CCF main- tained Canada should embark 0" Covers Island Like the Dew; ., x anada On an - called "giveaway" to boost Canadian ex- States scheme ports. , Both Mr. Howe d George Mcivor, chairman o "the Cana- dian wheat board, said such a scheme would lead to disaster for Canada. The United States, under lv80V- emment subsidy plan. gave some wheat away, said portions for local currencies under long-term loans and exchanged some when! under barter deals. ' The CCF plan would wreck the any headway in selling goods to a program such as the United Canadian wheat marketing scheme in one year, Mr. Howe said. Barter meant the exchange of goods at unrealistic prices. though Canada asks payment in dollars, she will sell almost as much wheat this year as the U.S. under committee study, said Can- ada has pulled no punches in in- forming the U.S. what it thinks of the American program. Amer- ican government officials were in sympath y with Canada but were under congressional instruc- tions to sell more wheat. riiicnsa e at e Mr. Howe predicted that even Mr. Mclvor. whose board was G63. - General Ends Tour. V Of Miaritimes MCADAM; N.B. (CP) -e Gov- ernor - General Vincent Massey ended his eight - day Maritime tour Tuesday by paying an im- promptu visit to this York County railway town on his way to Mon- treal. Earlier in the day Mr. Massey inspectedthe Atlantic Biological Station and a lobster factory.at St. Andrews. a seaside resort town about 80 miles south of here. On Monday be officially opened the new Vincent Massey High School at St. Andrews in a light rain. A thunderstorm accom- panied him -Sunday while he in- spected the lomo men of the 1st Canadian Infantry Division from Camp Gagetown at lilissville. Bright skies favored him satur- day however, when he received the freedom of St. Andrews and visited Deer and Campobello ls- lands in Passamaquoddy Bay. In Nova Scotia. Mr. Massey visited Halifax. Brldgewatar, Liverpool: Iiockeport. Shelburne, Yarmouth and Dlgby. He also made brief .atop-overs in Month ton and Saint John. N.B. - Mr. Massey inspected the cadet corps. cubs. girl guides and iuownies here before rejoining his train which is scheduled to arrive in Montreal-today. F i”'"- i'''” r A K LaPoite bolt of M wiped Wt out lbetmaster - General in of . -V of so am. 0. said the ma; would higve to wait the farm-of. Elmer ward hen MSW! ID” .0"'''- 5 V. ,m.m. Th. lire hfacbeaa made it clear he loss. which several val- 3&1” Rbmum l" "'3" 593"” hie i he had iuaeyoughg, contracts renewed. provided g,.5,.ng 4 wwud. that the con actor was giving All Prime LONDON (OP) - m .Tu siaaidf -n-angrriea'ts.'I .u2..uf::;'i?.'.,lu..f.o..ait'Z 3815014 P8 die But defenei India are! 100. Tull 3' Regional Mit-tistepgi-.ipsp' Times days th:”Prirne Vtirrawa ) - rah than-ai J t p ' have 'no rep- tives R lest i ' ' of the ten of the i . a lsieaid the government's chief in III Moiidly meeting lredsrictoa will be in any coe- t A proposals involving federal hen f.r'red the new holder could have the mail-carrying lob being once op- of and for competitive bids. OTTAWA, (Special)--Mail deliv- ery contracts and particularly those for rural routes should be awarded by tender and should not be permitted to become a part. of the contract holder's assets. J. Angus MacLean, Conservative MP for Queens told the Commons Tuesday. He was opposing an em- endment to the Post Office Act introduced toilegalize a process whereby a mail courier can re- commend his successor when giv- ing up the route. It had become common practice for a holder of a mall contract to choose his successor. often a member of his own family. "Con- tracts", said Mr. MacLean. "may be handed down from generation to generation without ever being put up for a tender. "It seems to me." he said, "that at the present time it may not be the practice that will apply gen- erally. But nevertheless in pass- ingthls bill, we mare making it is for a practice to creep in w ' mail contracts are sonic- thing to be, inherited. not to be won by submitting the bwat ten- der." e 0bw'..V':d. The V Queens Meirlnber . I it " i Hfiu man-who tendered for the contract some risk, whereas the trans- not have to tender and mortly become eligible for a raise iapey. good service to the public. He was doubtful of the wisdom of permitt- iiu a contractor to recommend own successor. . Till "THIN EDGE" lfembce of all three oppo- sition parties criticized the fact that once a contract was truis- lt renewed repeatedly without the Cage W. Montgomery (PC-Vic- RUSSIAN OUSTED WASHINGTON (AP)-Col. Ivan A. Bubchikov. assistant military attache at the Sovit Eernbassy. ay was reported to have been. thrown out of the Unitedi States on a charge of espionage. State department press officer I Reap said Bubchihov had declared prsona non grate. - ITALY TIES YANI5 Posr orricr ACT AMENDMENT S Queen's Member Opposes Mail Coniracis System toria-Carleton) said the bill "the thin edge of the wedge by appear." He and D. R. Mlchener (PC- Tsronto St. Paul's) moved an amendm: t which would permit contracts to be transferred, but required that they be thrown open to tender as soon as their four- year term expired. Mr. Lapointe said he could not accept the amendment. He said that in most cases an- other man would not accept a con- tract unless he had the right of having the contract renewed with- out being opened for bid! after a is which the tender system may dis- brief period. If no one could be found to transfer the contract to, the post office had to make costly temporiggr auangements. Mr. chener said that argu- ment was not valid. If no one could be found to take the trans- ferred contract. then bids for it could and should be called. The opposition amendment did not come to a vote during the aft- ernoon sitting. After some two hours of debate, Mr. Lapointe agreed to opposition members" re- quests that debate on the bill be postponed while he sought infor- mation they askad on the extent or the transfer practice. French Frigate At eight o'clock- this morning the French frigate "l.'Avanture" is scheduled to dock at the Railway Wharf for a five day courtesy visit which will end Mopdey morn- ing. The frigate is serving in the lug Officer and extend the servic- es of Queen Charlotte. At 9.30 the Commanding Otlfer, harl- otte. Commander J. N. X will make his official chll upon the C. 0. of the "L'Aventure". Shortly In Charlottetown Today western Atlantic oavfishulss 'pro- ' Arrives make his official calls upon the, Premlar,' Mayor and the Lieuten- ant Governor and these calls are scheduled to he returned at noon. Thisaveaing Cdr. Kenn! oftieivror the loaf Naval its. retina endhea-the-heevasr mus. - .. i V I-tgdjaervlayes '1hafFreaeh-flidlb ,' 2.--..... - ---W t T we liufiiodiatelyafterilie mph , .ve.i..;u.. um; ”::.:.v.,'-':".:;.:;. no-.n "- 3::-W '...."'.”".-....T-..t...- -. c o car pro- coed aboard to visit the Command- of tiive”co'i:ma g.0fflccr and of- ficers of ”L'Aventure" at. Govern- ment House. Saturday evening the Chief and Patty Officers and men of Queen Charlotte are entertain- ing their counterparts from the ship at smokers in their respective after the C.0.ofthaahlpwill IIICSDEI. Close To The Al By THE CANADIAN PRESS A record flow of c wak- ers during Canada's lutii birth- day hoiiday eat the stage for a near-record number of fatal acci- dents.- A Canadian Press survey shows that from 6 pm. local day to midnight Monday at least 95 persons died violently - only one less than on the blackest Do- ' i Day holiday last year. 33 drowned and seven died in mis- cellaneous accident . Thirty were killed in 1955 high- way accidents, 60 drowned and six died in other mishaps. oN'l'Aiiio man im Ontario led the grim toll this year with 4! deaths-at highway deaths, 16 drownings and three miscellaneous. Seven persons died Vicanzii. rtaiy um .. AVI- cnaa court has handed out the. mu terms from an ltaliani to American soldiers. serving with the North Atlanticl Hasty Organisation. The cases were handled hnder the "status DC.- a- -I I p piwhichrnaycerneoilefthe of forces" agreem n bet u Italy and the United stataawee i 'l . 1 s&,uuraaum.aeuc...t eetaaatrarf-dteaaeueri-.ao.v igeaadey. (inauspici- , ee.Qiaasai- duff Hldlight i i"'du'&u'h"wII union ad industry negotiat- jgl;HW IN 'u.s.' i.,.'Si'i:e.l..fSli1iiiiidown ls Fell , up i (ll III-TINGS arranged separate meetings II for Thitaday in an attempt oftlIastrikeandthemid- iwllldiitlte etad Co. with 3) plants and as many ' more clay mines acrou the D18. to revive bargaining. Negotiations reduced work. were broken of! six hours before day this week The company said su- he Ulrika started satui-day at three and am-day schedules are D . .planned for next week, bI- glcoeornists said the '8IIItlly A spolreaan said I in one horrible moment Saturday when a storm - ripped elm tree weighing ill tons, flattened their car. Quebec had 19 holiday fatalities. 12 on highways, six drownings and one miscellaneous. British Colum- his had the third-worst count-is accidental deaths. There were ' ng time until alter the Julylflvek statm rrgalillt late! 1.3: wor era. a uidown or duration of the strike. The federi rnediations iservlcelokl C5333!" "3 UP . Dawson 72 ' V ...... . . 7 Of Carmilua v?.".f.2:'.."' .......... .. .33 2'; Edmonton 52 70 is Completed Easily .3 3 eg no . . MONTREAL (CP)-The noon Winnipeg . 51 64 ton liner Carinthia. carrying more Toronto . . to - than soo passengers. completed Ottawa . 59 74 her maiden voyage Tuesday. Montreal ... . 63 75 The black-h lied v I, third of 9"e”'” -' ” 5' four Cunard Company g:l:':";:cth"" " l” additions .to the North Atlantic M ta" " - 5! H ran. swept upriver from Quebec 0””, '"m';.' i u pg 14' under sunny skies. She is tires "55 67,; third veaseltobearthenarne. Yydmyuftt jg "fr Jr mew” I" St. John's 4s 41,. tons. built in use. The escdnd. HALIFAX (CPV -Thewea launched is last. was sunk in 1940 omce says flrie -veatuar wll Harblson - Walker Refractories schedules by one Dominion Day Death Toll ls time Fri- out"; This year 55 died on highways, u, rivedtothe I-Time Record nine traffic. three drowning and one miscellaneous. Tiuvei officials said the ex- pected record number of holiday- ers was realized. although figures were not yet a allable, despite a severe storm which ripped through 0. Here is a bieakdown on fatal accidents in other provinces: Alberta-One traffic, one drown- ing. one miscellaneous, total ree Saskatchewan-Three traffic. Manitoba-One drowning! New Bnmawick - Two traffic. two drowning, one miscellaneous, total four. Nova Scotls-Four traffic. Prince Edward Island - Three drowning. Newfoundland-One drowning. Maiden Voyage by a German submarine armed merchant cruiser. The third Carlathia. which an- traditional as age when air travel once drew - -posed instead that the world an-so force in settling disputes. UN disarmament commis- position on disarmament and President Eisenhower-'s plan for aerial inspection. Gromyko resolution had Record High For Potato Futures ' York nierchantils exchange re- ported Tuesday that a price of 32.99 for 100 pounds of potatoes at: the Nov?ber contract was hlsi-est history of Maine potato futures tr Iliitilli H” 1.50!) has sunk I American led-laden.” ",. submarine chasars torpedo boats too derelict to be towed back to'Anicriean naval Yards. it was learned Sunday. The ships were sunk off Mun- mansk in the presence of the United States naval attaelid Capt. Leonard Morse. Russia Reiecis Wesiemiiippeal for Arms Plan UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. (A!) Russia Tuesday rejected a West- ern appeal to join in a new start on disarmament. The Soviets pro- on a treaty renounclng the use of nuclear weapons and any other Soviet Deputy Foreign Mlnlsta Andrie A. Gromyko put the Rus- sian plan before the 12-mambo! sion after blasting the Weatirla Western sources indicated the little prospect of getting anywhere. NEW YORK (AP) - The New Idine. Th ti-ading,unit..is oar-into! lsoscow (Routes-a)V-L aunt. - and-motcri C35 GQ We Nantes Se Iirurccitco HUSBANDS CAN Eiiiincisc fiiEiR onwsg atures issued by the Toronto pub- llc weather office: tlnue today. heina mostly with some cloudiness la the noon. TORONTO (cm - Temper- Min Max (Night) (Day) . . . . . . . . . . .. 52 .. I .. the -A,