Maxims of a" More Man As is the garden gardener. such is the M PAGII Founded 1871 WN. OANADA, THURSDAY. FEBRUARY M, IOBI moss; Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew .1 Seven Persons On Board i Police Plane Down In Arctic WINNIPEG (CP) - Heavy fog and ice crystals hung over the freezing barren lands soo miles north of here Wednesday. delay- mg the search for seven per-song thoard a missing RCMP plane. The plane. an Otter and be- iiried ski-equipped, left Churchill. 'llan. on Hudson Bay at 10 a. in. Tuesday. bound for Ennadal lake, 5;, w, T.. 290 miles northwest. Aboard were three mounted piilii-e i-rew members and four iaxxvllkltllb. imoii: lite crew members iden- lIllNl hy RCMP headquarters in miaiia was the pilot. Sgt. A Rt-auiriont of Winnipeg who. in the plane now missing. took part in :he rescue of three U. S. fliers iiho siirvived the Feb. 12 crash of About 700 Potato Cars Shipped To Potato Province during February has been very good with a total of about 700 cars shipped so far this month. stated Mr. D. A lllacI)on- ald. chairman of the Potato Mar- keting Board. However. the mar- ket has developed a weaker leiidoiii-y and there has been some price decline in Quebec and On- tario markets. For example Tor- onto is now paying 32.20 for Si-hagn 751:. 3435:: for tens and 3130 for paper Sills with the gen- sriil market condition very dull. Montreal is very weak at 82.10 for Capping Ceremony For PEI Hospital More than a hundred friends and relatives witnessed the cap- ping and candleiigbting exercises last evening at the Cundall Home when 19 preliminary students at the P. E. Island Hospital received the distinction of being advanced to the status of "Junior Students." Following the time honoured.cus- tom of 'ica5plng.'a'uthr-rstudente the vim: presented with Testaments from the tiideons by Mrs. Neil D. Machesn and took the Florence Nightingale pledge before key. M. D. Dunbar. The students receiving their caps are of the class which began their studies on the first of last September. They are: Miss lionalda Christine Mac- Kay. lligh Bank: Miss Margaret June rtlac-Leod. Grandvlew; Miss lilarcarct Elaine Williams. lnitetown; Mug Joan Melvin; Stewart, New Wtltshira; Miss Ruby Eileen MacPhee. Heather- iisle, Miss Carolyn Jean Nelson, Charlottetown; Mus Vivi; Claire Prowse. Murray Harbourp Miss Clara Elizabeth Sharam. Char- lotlelown; Miss Katheryn Bernice Sliepard, Lnuisburg. N. 3.: Miss lllildrcd Penelope Macliood. Char- lottetown: Miss Betty Ann Miller. llliifli-Il' Harbour North; Miss Flllflttv Margaret Ann Perry. East iirl.Vail.v; Miss Katherine Jean lllICl:C8n. Long Creek; Miss Mar- ian Fraiices Clark. New Wiltshlre; Miss Barbara Ann Macxinnon. cl""'"”9i0Wn: Miss Marjorie -lune Pirkard, Charlottetown; Miss Eileen Frances Robertson. Bar- Tlnlliun Passage. N. 5.; Miss Mary Janet Boll. Summerslde; Miss Bessie Alta Delaney. Albany. N. of fog and ice crystals. However, movement from this, Island 75's. New Brunswick ship- : I-41 Stratoiet bomber over northern Saskatchewan. The other crew members were identified as Cpl. R. L. Fletcher of Holmfield. Man. the co-pilot; and spedial constable G. E. Bart- lett. Churchill. Man.. engineer. Also aboard were an Eskimo boy and woman. both unldentliied. The other pas gers were be- lieved to be a ansport depart- ment official and a northern af- fairs department official. Their names were not immediately available. - An RCAF Otter was grounded at Churchill Wednesday by the layer five Dakota planed prepared to join the search from Winnipeg. A para-rescue team was ordered to stand by. Date In Feb. mcnts have been increased since their weather has become mild and Maine and New York State potatoes are coming into both On- tario and Quebec at price levels as low as 31.10 to 81.15 on paper 50's. It is expected that this easier trend will continue for some time as heavier shipment will un- doubtedly be made from those areas in New Brunswick, Maine. Quebec and Ontario where winter conditions so far have been quite severe and tended to restrict ship- lmenta to some extent. Students opening remarks congratulated the student nurses in the degree of efficiency they had- attained and the recognition they were receiving. In addressing the student nurses prior to the ceremony. Rev. Mr. Dunbar based his remarks on the words of Christ "Seek Ye first Kintdom of God and ...HiI Righteousness." He pointed out the neccssi” of thorough pre- paration and concentration in their chosen profusion of nun. in: which would result an Continued on Page 3 Col 5 Parliament At A Glance By THE CANADIAN PRESS Wednesday I-Iuen Argue (CC! Asalnlboial accused the government of a "call- ous" attitude in not increaslng' family allowances. Health Minister Martin said Can- ada spends more on family allow- ances than on any other social se- curity measu 2. Citizenship Minister Pickersglll said administration of the Citizen- ship Act in the Toronto area is un- satisfactory. The annual report of the Cana- dian wheat board. tabled in the Commons. showed a deficit of 826,- 766,000 on 1983-54 operations. Senator Walter Aeeltine (PC- Saslutchewan) said Canada is "away behind the times" in its di- vorce machinery. , Thursday The Commons will consider gov- b.Tlii-. meeting was presided over i N D Macbepn who in his eirnment business. The Senate will I t. Russian Scientists In Canadian Arctic Water . Dr Dave Mclatoek - (anaiiian Press Staff Writer .orrnwA. tCP)- Russian sci- '"”” doing research near the 5.. Coming Events Siam toiiigiit. East k;';,i(;fii3mpz-hrtty at East Wiltshlre ."l7i'"kin0iI Party. Wheat!!! '”"- Friday. riiimui-y ssui. "Rummnso lale. nun: Hall. &" Daushtere Group four. Set- IV. 2 p. us, "Cr:-naiici sung 1.-u., in ulflmtclowl COIIMIIIIII Ice 1'43: h "nder direouee eel klnilebury, OHC i... i:::.i:.ut..:u.”hs:: ,mu;lIs.in. rtntunulntho ma Provincial contest. dkete if ice fit. ' e.:Dundaa Y. P. U. Varlew Con- ;,b' CWIIMOWII Ball. Thin-edey. .m';"Iry 24th. at 0.! p. III. spon- chmhhhy Georgetown United "Cake sale 5 gain.- 9:n';eg' Imre at g”. m. &&C. on Friday ”"ha; an a nunun "Iv . Febru- "" nivci-iFa.l:us.ae.Ft7itintelitil north pole operated for a time last fall in Canadian watcrl. it was learned Wednesday. An authority here said this prob- ably will happen again as the Rus- slens drift about the central Arc- tic basin on floating ice islands. Ono infonnant said he sees no ulterior motive in the Russian re- search. For years, the Russians have tried to master an Arctic shipping route to help supply northern Soviet cities. The information on movement of floating Russian research stations is contained in e non-secret soviet Godkin. (Photo by Wotton.) Comes From U.S. OTTAWA. (CPI - The CM! bought 2.115.000 tons of United States coal and 515.000 from east- ern Canadian mines last year. Transport Minister Marler gave this information in a Commons reply to a question from A. J. Brooks IPC-Royal). Oil Refinery Fire At London THAMES HAVEN. Ell"llIIlt'l -- (Reutersl-A raging blaze which swept over seven oil reiinciy .;iur- qge tanks loaded with napthalcne was reported "as good as out" here Wednesday after 200 firemen hriad battled it from early morn- g. Early in the fire. one tank ex- ploded. injuring a worker. 8 Testify In Tug Sinking Probe At Sydney SYDNEY (CF)-Eight witnesses testified Wednesday at the opening here of a transport department in- quiry into the Dec. 3 sinking of the tug Roullle which went down with five hands off the Cape Bre- ton coast. The inquiry is being conducted before Judge A. H. McKinnon of the Antigonish county court. Three the witnesses were transport department inspectors who testified to the seaworthinese of the vessel. Capt. Herbert Bonln. master of the ill-fated Roullle. was on the stand at the adjournment Wednes- day and win resume his testimony today. He told how his ship ran into a ale-lashed snowsto ... off Cape key and began shippln water heavily. He said she wen under wlthiii five or six minutes. The five surviving crew mean- Continned on Page I col 4 British Army beri will he called todly. Has Plans- For Atomic Age Force IBUIWHD leaning. pfhe statement stressed that the army must not only Urllnili 1" under condition of the an- e age but must also easy! itself to fighting aumillu in iundee and llI0l'liCIIl:lh. mm. Imfm or 0 C0 nasal. estimated at Most C.N.R. Cool by WARREN WHITE BANGKOK. Thailand tkenters) -United States military power in the Far East now exceeds the peak strength of American forces there in the Second World War. the South t Asia defence con- ference here was told in a sec- iei session Wednesday. Informed sources at the eight- power" conference said state See- retary Dulles also declared the United States fully intends to help any Asian nation that falls victim to Communist aggression. It was understood high-ranking military officers attached to the eight delegations. from the United States. Britain. France, Pakistan, the Philippines. Thailand. Australia and New Zealand. would meet to- day to discuss a Communist threat in the two northern prov- inces of Laos. Indochina. The conference sources said Dulles told the other foreign min- isters that the United States now has 400 warships including her largest aircraft carriers in the Far East. He estimated naval Personnel in the area at 350.000 men. There also are 300.000 army men and 30 squadrons of air force planes including Jet bomb. ers and Interceptors. The United States. he said. al- so is spending s5oo.ooo.ooo to 2 Men Overdue On Arctic Trip GOOSE BAY. Labrador fCPl- Two Hudson's Bay company em- Dloyees are two weeks overdue on I trip by dog sled through wolf- reported Wednesday. Two Dakota aircraft. one from Goose Bay and one from Rock- clllfe. 0nt.. launched a search for thgdinza last Fridly. the air force The two men were identified as Donald Baird. 11. of st. John's. NfId.. and Ootooke. an Eskimo em- infested Baffin island. the RCMP b M Prime 3600,000,000 a year to support N South Korean divisions. On For- mosa, there are 300,000 troops armed and equipped by the U.S. Dulles said. according to con- ference sources. that his govern- ment is spending another 5500,- 000,000 a year in South Viet Nam. He said the situation is better there than two months ago, and American doubts about Viet Na- mese Premier Ngo Diem Dinh have been dispelled. Dulles was said to have been optimistic that South Viet Nam can he saved from communism. The American secretary of state said the greatest immediate threat to Southeast Asia is sub- Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Rogers, driving to their home at 446 Notre Dame Street. Summerside, at 12.00 o'clock noon yesterday had a miraculous escape from death when the Willys sedan in which they were driving was struck by an incoming extra freight train proceeding towards Summer- side. The accident took place at the Notre Dame Street railway crossing. The Rogers car was proceeding west and the collision took place just as the vehicle crossed the tracks- The impact of the collision completely demolished the right side of the car, tearing both doors off and dragging it some distance down the track before the train could be brought to a stop. Mr. Rogers was uninjured but Mrs. Rogers, who was on the right side in front, received the full shock of impact and suffered a fractured collar bone, a number of several head cuts and body bruises. She was also suffer- ing from shock but her condition last evening was reported as good. Mr. Rogers was able to get out of the car by himself and later entered the hospital for a checkup and found to have suffered no injuries. The engineer of the train was Mr. Frank Lappin and the conductor was Mr. G. A. SE'ArTOwStates Map Plans U.S. Proclaims Firm Policy version from within each coun- try": borders rather than aggres- sion from outside. One source of danger from aub- version. he said. lies in the great numbers of Chinese citizens liv- lng outside their country: bor- ders ln Southeast Asia. - British Foreign Secretary Eden said the aims of the Manila treaty are "to strengthen the cause of peace in Southeast Asia and the Southwest Pacific, to up- hold the principles of democracy. individual liberty and the rule of law. to promote economic Woll- lieing and development. and to co-ordinate the defence of the area." Probe Price Fluctuations Of Potatoes At New York wA5HlN(;'i'0N rAPi -- Maine members of Congress and agric- ulture department officials dis- closed wednesd , they are look- ing into recent extreme fluctua- tions in potato trading on the New York mercantile change. Telegrams to federal officials from Maine potato growers point out that trading in Maine pota- toes has hit the highest level in exchange history and ask an in- vestigation into the possibility of manipulations affecting the price of their product. Senator Frederick Payne (Rep. Me.) said he has discussed the situation with agriculture de- partment offlctals and with the Senate banking and currency committee. of which he is a mem- He said if slutly indicates such action is iict-cssai'y he may press for an investigation and legisla- tion to correct any flaws found in trading regulations. Officials of the agriculture de- parlmcnt's ciimmodity exchange authority could not be reached for comment Wednesday but a department spokesman said tele- grams and letters on the subject had iiccn iuriicri over to Douizlas Bagncll. deputy administrator, for study. VISIT RCAF BASE NORTH BAY, Ont. ICPI-.lit-nr hers of the Royal Air Force Flying College at Manhy. England. will visit the RCAF station here today. in a study of Canadian training Unemployment Climbs To Post-War Peak OTTAWA (CF)-Canadian unem- ployment has climbed to a'pnst- war peak and labor leaders Mon- day demanded goveniment action to halt the rise. Heads of Canada's two largest union congresses called for work- providlng measures after the gov- ernment announced an estimate of 362.000 persona out of work and looking for jobs late in January. This figure is an increase over the previous high estimate of 318.- 000 last March - normally the month of top unemploymentAand informants said it is still going up. Meanwhile. the labor department said that at Jan. 20 last 569,582 persons were looking for ivork through its National Employment lservire. harcly under the post-war record of 569.896 of last March. informants said that figure since has risen to around 600,000. Claude Jodoln. president of the 5l10.000-member Trades and Labor Congress of Canada. said a federal- provinclal conference should be called to devise ways of creating more Jobs The conference also should include municipalities and FRENCH HOUSE APPROVES EDGAR FAURE AS NEW PREMIER BY VOTE OF 369 TO 210 By Ilnrve By a vote of 369 to 210. post-liberation history. The vote ended a 19-day The majority which the assem-l bly gave Faure was much greater than he had expected. The only blocs of opposition came from Communists and Socialists. Mendesi-France and a few of his diehard supporters abstained on the vote. Even though Faiire was a minister in the Mendes-France government. Both Faure and Mendcs-France are members of the Radical Social- ist party. a badly splintered cent- rist group. Earlier Faure had announced a cabinet which included former premier Antoine Pinay and for- eign minister, Pierre Pflimlin as finance minister. former premier Robert Schuman as justice min- later and Gen. Pierre Koenig as defence minister. LEANS T0 RIGHT The cabinet has been labelled as one of the farthest to the right of the post-war years although Faure himself is classed a little left of centre. By ERACK cuany BONN (AP) - Chancellor Kon- rad Adenauer Wednesday threat- ened expulsion of the Free Demo- crats tFDPi from his four-party government unless they support the Paris agreement to Europea- nize the Saar. A political crisis threatened as the Free Demo- crate. the No. 2 party. replied defiantly. Adenauerla ultimatum was de- livered on the eve of a parlia- mentary debale on the Paris ac- cords to arm 500.000 West Ger- mans in Western defence. The Saar deal. unpopular among many West Germans. is among those accords. The French insist upon it as part of a package deal. Thomas Dehler. lhe l"DP's na- tional chairman. retorted: "The threat of the can only lead the Free Demo- cratic deputies to a hardening of their attitude. So ions II 1 Im chairman of the Free Democrats. our deputiel will remain three and will resist any and all threats." In a statement. the FD? said its deputies luv the Bundestag (lower house) "do not see any other possibility than to vote a- gainst the Saar agreement as it does not provide for a true tEuro- pcan' solution to this terrilnt;y'I status or grant it autonomy." RIOTING FEARED Adenauer's backers had hoped -until Wednesday-that some of the 47 FDP deputies would sup- port the treaty to place the Ger- man-speaklng border state under a neutral commissioner until the representalivs-s of labor organiza- tit-ins. TORONTO. (CPl- Reeve Marie Curtis of suburban Long Branch said Wednesday some of the vic- tims of the flooding of Hurricane Hazel last fall should he prosecut- ed for fraud. The rccve said in an interview some of the 146 property owners whose flood-damaged property was expropriated by the metropol- itan council for park land claimed payment for damages they did not Sees Storm,-Claims Fraud final peace treaty with Germany is written. which had been swept out into Lake Ontario during the flood. She said he described the house as ”a perfect little palace.” The township had coiidcnined the house as unfit for habitation.i Mrs. Curtis said She added that the ceiling of ”the perfect little palace was made in part of soft drink signs." In another case she said is fam- ily claimed 32,000 for damage to personal belongings. The 82,000 suffer. She said in one case a man pro-I gharp Rebuke T Churchi LONDON (AP) -In an apparent- softening of government policy. Minister Churchill said Wednesday Britain "should be careful" of what advice she gives friends and allies on the surrend- er of tlonallat offshore islands to Bad China. There is no question of Britain "14 vov m or being in 1 ad ilitarily being needed in the of the coastal islands. be said. Thus the Emblem does not fall on the ritlah government. Churchill spoke sharply to La- ” horitee who want the islands eur- dsgrenderedtolledchiaa in! bid to bring peace to the Formosa straits. Ills move apparen was di- rooted at smoothing tlah-Am- ierloaii differences on the offshore Islands. He warned against pree- ilgthetlnitedltatesteeferee and combat methods. o Laborites e s e. SCORNFUI. REFUSAL Churchill gave a written state-I ment to the House of Commons after he verbally described as "scornful" Red China's refusal to attend a United Nations Security Council meeting on Formosa. He turned down a Labor suggestion that he intervene personally with Red China's Premier Chou En- The Labor party's national ex- ecutive kept the controversy in the foreground by urging that Red China be given membership in the United Nations as a way of settling lie Far East csiail. In his written report on the Formosan situation, Churchill "There is a great dtfference.bO- tween the coastal islands of China and the island of Formosa. tested the price set on his llnll.1E' mlMSmooths U.S. Relations NOT INVOLVED "As there is no question of our being involved militarily or indeed of our being needed in the defence of the coastal islands. we should be careful of what ed- advice we should offer to our friends and allies upon it. And we must recognise the natural preoccupation: of other govern- ments who are immediately af- fected by the threatened attack from Communist China.” Churchill's remarks tended to back off somewhat from an ear- lier stand taken by the govern- ment. Foreign secretary Eden has said publicly Britain regards the offshore islands as belonging to Red China and has privately urged U. 8. State secretary Dulles to engineer an evacuation of the islands by Chinese Nationalist was collected, although the only damage suffered by the family was in a trunk full of old clothes. troops to help bring about a quick unwritten ceasefire. Britain has advocated gettin the Nationalists off the cons islands of Matsu and Quemoy as a way of easing the threat of war. In New York last week Dulles said they should be de- fended ae long as the Communists use them as an invading route to attack Fonnoea. WANT CIIIANG IXILID Laborls national executive--in line with recently proclaimed pol- lclee of their leader. Clement Attlee-adopted an all anthrac- ing Far East resolution which could lead to more controversy. In addition to favoring China's membereuy h the UN. the Laborltee went neutralization PARIS, (AP)-The French National Assembly Wed- nesday night approved Edgar Faure. a 46-year-old finan- cial expert snd lawyer. as the new premier. as the successor to Pierre Mendes-France who was turned out of office Feb. 5. Faure held the job in 1952 for six weeks Now he heads the 21st government in Francois Adenauer Cracks. Whip On No. 2 Coalition Party of Formosa and the Peeeadores y Hudson the deputies accepted Faure cabinet crisis. The right-wing tinge is supplied principally by the presence Pinay. a Conservative independ- ent. in the foreign minitary; Gen. Koenig. a follower of Gen. Charles de Gaulle. at defence; and Gaston Palewski. a close collaborator of de Gaulle, as minister attached to the premier's office. in his address of investilure. Faure pledged his government to work for speedy ratification of the Paris treaties for German raarma- ment. The upper house of the French parliament. the Council of the Republic. still must approve the treaties passed by the assem- bly. Faure was the fourth candidate to be called by President Rene Coty to end the crisis. Pinay, Pfllmlin and Christian Pineau failed in turn. Faurc was France's younyest lawyer at 19. and was the youngest post-war premier at 43. Even at his present 47. he is younger than any other post-war head of the government. Free Democratic waverers now may rally behind their party leaders in voting against the pact. Adenauer's Christian Democrats alone. however. have 144 seats h the 487-seat House. The govern- ment bloc also number 2'7 of the refugee party and 15 of the Ge- ma nparty. The Bundestag today starts a three-day debate on the vital sec- ond and third final readings of the treaties under the threat of int demonstrations. Federal authorities called 'I 500 heavily armed state police from North Rhine-Westphalia to reinforce this capital city's II policemen an the soviet sons rm- dio blared calls to the West Ger- mans to riot against the rearin- ament treaties. 5EcRETW- KEEP TORONTO iCPl--Minimum and maximum temperatures: Mu Dawson .. Vancouver .. Edmonton Calgary Saskatoon Regina . Toronto Ottawa Montreal .. Quebec Fredericton Saint John. Mom-ton Halifax Sydney Yarmoiith St. John's HALIFAX (CPI-The Dominion weather office says rain and snow will continue in most of the die- ti-lct today but slowly improving ' 'wv; is expected later in the day with clearing skies forecast -ihorn regions. Forecasts: i'rince Edward Island. eastern N. 3. counties: overcast: inter- mltteiii rain changing in the morn- tng to snowflurriee: colder with south winds is shifting during the mornlng to northwest 15. Low-high at Charlottetown and Moncton I and II. bower St. .Iohti river valley: Cloudy and colder; winds north- west l6; low-high at Fredericton 32 and 36. Saint John 38 and 38. Upper St. John river valley. Bay of Chaleiir: Snow changing In morning to anowflurriee: clearing aaaaeasrsansggggai sese:se:2a:2;33.c in afternoon: colder: northeast winds 1) shift about dawn b northwest 15. w-high at E6- niundstoa and Campbelltoa I and 3:. High tide today at Charlotte- town at 11.13 p. at. Sun rises today at 1.! e. I. and and the ailing sf Chiaiig. seteetl.IIp.m.