e A Maxims of a Mere Man Nllltneh ageathnalseni YICI PICILI'I II II 'T1e PAGIB British E Called May 26 LONDON (CP) - ls Anthony Eden has called a general election for May 3. The announcement: came Friday night in Edens first radio broadcast u rime minister. '11.. mt gener election was held is 0otober.19'1-Vi”.-'3' Oollervative party "Nit "10 LI- por part out of office. The Con- servative government was not con- pelled to call an election until its tlve-year term of Parliament ex- pired next year. But Eden said in his brief broad- cast that uncertainty at home and abroad about Britain's political future would be "bad for Britain's influence in world affairs. bad for trade and unsettling in many ways." lie added: ”I believe that it is hi-tier to face this issue now." READY AND 1-JAGER The Queen has agreed to the dlshf'illllil"ln of Parliament May fl. Eden said. The new Parliament will be summoned June 7 and the Queen will open it ceremoniously June 14. The Labor party already has geared its campaign macluncijv for the election. It decided last month against expelling left-wing rcbel Aneurin Bevan for fear splitting ranks at the start of an eii-ction campaign. Hie Labor party's goncral sec- rclary, Morgan Phillips. com- mented a few minutes after Eden's of at leclion haa represented h Parliament fee the last 80 years. - TIME ll PROPER Quarters olose to J”. the III IV IVIRVIODV Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dow I wa ea-runner, arm; 10, 1955 govern- ment said hiday night one reason Idea has decided to all an early election is that now h the best time from a diplomatic view-which he knows so well as a former foreign secretary. There may be chances soon for negotiatin high-level talks with Russia. T us could best be ap- proached by a British government backed by a fresh mandate from the electorate. Clement Attlee. former prime minister and leader of the Labor party who is touring Canada. and Herbert Morrison. his deputy now in Germany. have been told of the clcction decision by telegram. Tour Behind OTTAWA. (C Pl - Fisheries Minister Sinclair will visit four Scandinavian countries en route to the ninth annual meeting of the International Whaling Commission, opening in Moscow July 18. He also hopes that after the commission has completed its business he and his executive as- sistant. Alistair Fraser, 32. for- Arresi Follows 100 MPH Chase Over Maine Roads MACHIAS. Me. (AP)-A 50-mile they are checking the source of the meat. chase from a U. S. customs sta- tion on the Canadian border. ofte 100 miles an hour on fog- dimmed roads. and a suspicious woman meat buyer added up to an arrest Friday. Joseph G. Caissie. 20. of Fitch- burg. Mass, in whose car police Fisheries Minister Plans Iron Curtain merly of Vancouver and Prince Rupert. I. C.. will be granted authority by Russian officials to visit Soviet whaling stations on the Siberian coast. The 46-year-old globe-trotting minister will be the first member of the Canadian government to travel behind the iron Curtain. Mr. Sinclair in 1950 toured Europe attempting to collect debts owed by a number of countries and last year visited southeast Asia before Prime Minister St. Laurent's round-the-world trip. VISIT SEVERAL CAPITALS Mr. Sinclair and Mr. Fraser are scheduled to leave Vancouver July 8 by air for Amsterdam. They will spend two days each in Copen- hagen. Stockholm. Oslo and Hel- sinki before arriving in Moscow July lil. - Mr. Sinclair plans to attend all meetings of the one-week whaling Defer Decision On TV Station For P. E. Island of governors television station in Charlottetowml Island Broadcasting Co. Ltd.. operators of radio station CFCYJ TV station. Sforf Trains Across Causeway; Canadian National time handed dismissal notices to . 100 men. . The new layoffs at Mulgrare, OTTAWA icpl-The CBC b0ardlMounties searched Friday i.. MULGRAVE, N. 5., (CPl--- 'llltry l . R3l'yVDyS,foi- abandoning a car under very Stlrled mil"-S BCYOSH "19 (ran-'”l1SllSpiL'lflllI circumstances because. causeway Friday and at the same after all. you do not just up and reason (11 all." Point Tupper and Port Hawkes-isomclhiug For Blonde An DARTMOUTH. N. S. (CF)- for a it thought iii the fugitives. said RCMP in s p e c to r Edward Iiiartin said iiou-roiiimittaliy: 'We want to question these people run away from your car for no. ”Whcthcr the car vtas stolen is 1 can't say because . Mounties Scour Woods d Companion descriptions of the pair. However, the girl was reliably reported to decision on anF'ald"ff d,9f'3'"d Byoung blonde and her male com- be in her late teens or early nos PP 108110" ml” 3 panion while others examined the and pflntario-licensed car the pair aban- doned in headlong night from a plaining: atrol aii's ' ' . proposed a station on channel 13lpTh,mR(;Mpi"ghume Challenge with a power of 21 kilowatts vidm knpw ma Kimmy of and 12.5 kilowatts audio. It, would pm (hey nearly gidcmeppod nmsp be lrince Edward Islands first questions concerning the l)lV.E1lTC main roads in the Dartmouth rii.-;-,lVood. a tcchnii-at sergeant. free? James ,affair that began late Wetiiicstluyitrict Thursday night at one poiiitifrnm 71 lltlllhlm nilc 0i f'-3l”K0- iiigiit vilicn the man and woman,in the search. Dogs were heinglTl"'i-ATED IN PI-IXNFT roared away from a police squadlused by the constables poking car at 00 miles an hour and i8l(?F-lllPllUEh the wooded stretch where shock and WM IIWIYM in "18 D1811?- lelfjt their automobile by the rotad-lthe pair abandoned the car. si e. the man not much older. Martin parried questions by ex- ”There are certain angles that we prefer to delve into. in our own little way before we say anything more." Police erected roadliln-.-ks on all Big Airlift Of . Troops Planned l largest tmop airlifts ever under-l iakcii by the army as part of at mass. THREE INJURED WHEN u.s. FLYING BOXcAll LANDS WITH ENGINE AFIRE AT SYDNEY. N.S. Bybon ManKnnde SYDNEY, (GP)-A hug! United States marine transport plane slithered off the end of the Sydney airport runway as it made a forced landing Friday night, sending three men to hospital. The plane came in with one engine stirs in dense fog, lunged 300 feet from the end of the runway and plunged nose-down into a ravine of heavy mud. One crew member was trapped inside for two hours, but was freed by crash crews working with erowbare, hacksaws and axes. The plane carried 11 men. Rescue workers had to c U: ?'m lhrntlih the sidc of the big CY-ltlling and he thought they had transport to pull 37-yr-ar-old G Fhllanded in the ocean. Bransiord of Georgia lsaid: ”Some people got all the luck and some aren't in if: we're of heavyllucky to get out of it." lie appeared in A state The plane, stationed at Cherry by Dr. .1. C Young before beinglPoint. N. C.. left Quonset Point at talmii tn lmspltnl 33:15 p. m. AST for Argentia with Also TlKl'1lV,l to hmpital were a general cargo of 5.000 pounds. um Ki-evli (hm-llii. :u. of Spring-&The landing here came shortly field. xllx”-' . the pilot hclicvctllafter 7 o'clock. -iffctmu ch:-st inlurics, and Joel D. Brrant. 24. of Pnrfsmmlflt. OHENGINE Anxz with a lulcic-rl log l Crew members said the port en- The plane did not burn but res- gine cylinder head exploded. cue uiiricix ("Illli'lEf ihroiiizh to touching off a fire in the engine. Wood hail to work without the aid The pilot tried to feather the propeller and douse the flames training exercise will be ca,-nmtliif 2lt'(ll.)ittll(7 tori-lit-s liccziiise of announcement: "We are ready conference. He hopes to leave ,Raynor's and eager." Eden. former foreign secretary who a u c c e e d e d Sir Winston Churchill last week. made his broadcast fi'oin Chequers. country residence of prime ministers. lie drove there from London after dis- cussing the three-week-long news- paper strike with Labor Minister Sir Walter Monckton. STRANGE CAMPAIGN Unless the wage strike of 700 electricians and maintenance men is settled soon. politicians will have to plan on one of the strang- est election campaigns in history. They would be unable to reach the piibllc through the national news- papers which reflect party view- points. In the present Parliament. the Oonaervaiiva government has 310 sup against Labor's 294-a ma rm of 18 over all other parties. There are also six Lib- erals and two frish Nationalists. Three seats are vacant in the 625- neat chamber. Undnr I recent redistribution of parliamentary boundaries. there will be 830 seats in the rle'w'House of Common five more than at present. Churchill, now vacationing in licily. will be one of the candida- in. He will campaign in Wood- ford, g London suburb which he Coming Events "Danae. Vernon lnlf. April lath "Danae Cambridge half, Mon- day. Awil 10. Good music. "Dance in Bonshaw hall. Satur- day. April is cancelled. "Starting to clean gab April Iftii. Ira MacDonald, vehead. "Cleaning grain until May 14th. Arnold Beer. Clyde River. "Showing at Mt. Stewart. Fri- day and Saturday, Adventure Drama. Destination Gobi. "Regular Slttsrdny night Dance. It. Petar'a Kali. Measere Orch- esfra. "Cleaning grain H May 10th. Come early. Everett Gallant. oys- Ier Bed Bridgl. "Rummage Sala Hearts Hall on Saturday, April is, 2 pm. by group 4 of Junior W. A. "Kinlrora hall, aee Iummerside Players present their play Kinkora lull. Tuesday, April Nth. Good apeolaltiee. Curtain 8:!) pm. "Dance. West loyalty Hall Wednesday. Rome McKenzie's t.).re1l;as'.trn. Canteen lervice. 0.80 "Reserve Thureda . April the zlttlt for the play " ere Comes Charlie" in St. Mary's Hall, Souris. hi aid of Souls loepital. "Noise Dame Almnse Cake lale this afternoon at I o'clock -1iolman's China Department. at I to I weeks for O manng 1. E i MacPiaii. New llaveennfen H "Chicks. White Leghorn or Whiie Leghorn X.Dan-ed k Cross. Sensational layers on low feed consumption. Iagllnrna ml per cent non-broedy. Phone nu. Chick Hatchery, sat. Herbert. "Buying Pigs and Feeder cattle Monday at Fredericton. Tuesday Brookneld 9 a. in. Milton. 10 char- lottetown Market Square. 11 York. 1 ii. In. Bedford 2. Trac:die 2.8). W. art 8. Powniil . Vernon River . Paying 815.00 air for lood s over 10 the. sac . 311.00 said they found four forsquarters . of beef. pleaded not guilty in ' municipal court and was held in S2.2il0 ball. State troopers began chasing an automobile they said raced '- through the cutoms station at Calais Thursday night. Several times the troopers almost cor- ncred the other car. Finally in Harrington. the pursued vehicle allegedly rammed a patrol car and sped away. Nearly two hours later deputy sheriff John Holland of Harrington received a call from a woman who said a man acting suspiciously had offered meat for sale at a I" Siberian coast visit, providing the l- sion meets annually to deal with establish- I m,c' along the iron Curtain to stop ridiculously low price. Caissie's arrest followed. Authorities said Flood Level A! lenucevilie Down BEAUCEVILLE. ma. (GP) - Flood levels dropped here Friday as the pounding waters of the rain-swelled Chaudiere river slow- ly smashed past an ice lain two miles below Beauceville. Water spilled through the breach and rushed past St. Joseph de Marie de leauce. forcing some families from their homes. flood- ing : few cellars. but causing little damage. SECOND IN MOVIES UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. (AP)- Jspan has become the world's sec- ond largest producer of movies. a United Nations publication reports. The United States still is frst. The April issue of The Courier. pub- lished by the UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organiza- tion (UNESC0l. says Asia has ad- vauced rapidly in the motion pic- ture field although most film im- porting countries still obtain 50 to Beauce. Vallee Jonction and He. later General Agent, CNE 0.1!. Hodgson (above) takes over his duties today as General Agent. Canadian National Express Charlottetown in succession to Mr. Marcus Calder who recently pau- ed away. Mr. Hodgson entered the ser- vice of the Canadian Express Company in 1010 and fear years was taken on Rte staff as a clerk with the reorganized com- pany under the Canadian Nation- nl Express. In 1933 he was pro- moted to cashier, a position he retained until his present ap- pointmeni. Eric Wilson has been temporarily advanced to the pos- ifion of cashier ending perman- ent arrangements. determined by bulletin. BUS PLUNGE KILL! 4 LIN. Austria iReuiers)-At least four persons were killed and 15 others severely injured when a bus narrylng 60 persons overturned and fell into the flooded Dambach river between Windischgarsten and Moscow about July 23 for the necessary permission is granted. The 17-nation whaling commis- conservation through merit of quotas and other methods. Canada's whaling industry is not large but she has some operations bury bring to 209 the total whoscllrankly, 1 don't know." .ll.'ii'tiu ad- work will end May 14 when thelded. He said the ilC.VlP was try- CNR ferries stop their trips across;ing to trace its ownership through the strait of Canso. Ontario motor Vehicle aiittiorities. One of the boats. the Scotia 11.3 , . already has gone to Borden, P.E.lF('RMsH FEW ”E1t'”L5 . Police refused to furnish detailed :SocioI Credit Party .The notice to the second group of employees was signed by dis- off the Pacific and Atlantic coasts. trici superintendent, L. G. Sterling of New Glasgow. Makes Election Plans Potato Situari The potato story has been one of excitement during the last three weeks when the price here men from 31.25 per bushel to 83.40 per bushel last Tuesday and then came to a definite lull. reports a spokesman for the P.E.I. Potato Dealers Assoclationi This rise was the result of various conditions reducing the supply in the larger consuming market of Canada and sparked oi by the heavy frost in the Southern States. The front u re- ported as the heaviest in fifty years and bit the potatoes and fresh vegetables that were due to go on the market in May. The condition of the roads here and in New Brunswick and Que- bec restricted volume -movement and the dealers were quick to sense the possibilities of advanc- ing the market and did so to the utmost. They were strengthened in this by the lack of holdings of potatoes in the warehouses which were far below normal for this time of year. At the same time the price of potatoes in Maine advanced from 31.00 per bushel on March 25 to 32.50 per bushel bulk on April 0. There was a corresponding in- 00 per cent of all feature films from the U.S. If GEORGE BOULTWOOD BONN. Germany (AP)-German military experts are urging com- plete revamping of NATO strat- egy to prevent West Germany be- coming a battlefield again. A campaign for a new plan to stop Russian tanks at West Ger- many: eastern border received new impetus Friday. The influ- ential weekly Soldaten Zeitung (Soldiers Newspaper) threw its weight behind the idea. The West German press is be- coming iucreasing', critical of present NATO plans. These call for highly-mobile Western forces to steer Russian divisions into areas where they can be atom- bombed out of existence. )his. German critics say. would make thickly-populated West Germany a battlefield twice. To prevent this, they urge that the new German forces man a strongly - fortified anti - tank line any Russian advance into West Germany. They. want Western divisions kept in reserve to drive the Russians back into East Ger- 'ron'oN'ro (cc) - A Penetangg uiehue. 0nt.. plumbing contractor was abducted Alice Nssbitt and bargained for lime in exchange over lbs. M over I0 lbs. for l n-may bone cells to MrI.'Nesbiit on P. Welland. D59 llld bit. 37. Knud ..'orgmgeg.s lo mu . deihwsontijed 125.000. but the girl was of Vietortai Capt. James Plomef. . Philip uwruee osuu, as, told safely near her borne Dsc and bar. 4:. of wtiuitpol: Int! 3 It More" tonllhfi a crowded he had done shorl before Odesse was ar- Capt. Paul n. Taylor. osc. 44. of M" imo 01I1&'INP-l'Il- "a-terrible when he ulled reg at gunpoint. No money Victoria. mg: .l mllcl II hchnicoloh the one gm mg . ear wll paid. Legion of Merit in the degree as u if ueins Esther Wll- March se. In court oitem admitted msii- Ingionnalre - C-pt. male: 0. - "M r Mature. Walter Pid- "rd hate to in! at mother ing the two phone calla but denied Kill. DSC. ll. of VMGHI "4 "Vi" 1" "Million boner Mermaid". going map that ii " he harming the girl. Throiigh counsel Vancouver: Ind COW 5- 3- - 1'"p'"d by the true story of se . Oleeae wt een l fol- he said he was "throwing Iihnnelf Fraser-Harris. DEC Ilfl Mfr N lmhlnsbesu Jhtssbowlstovlowln convictionlt lion. entlIesnerd0”P"”"”-" efmltfaxaadottawe. - Wcheu for-fhewholo Achargsofkllnnppigwaallr Noins-iiin-otnsitostuunni- osssniiisanm-actress-ssissese ""'"v-'lIs Iarepeat.re- mime. up was present but trims eltIeCI1IllI3""""'”'W 3;"!!! In mtrhberefpeo ni. Nesbltt girl. daughter of odesse. who use out in 010-W ""1 membgdf.” c"”,fi" Ins . .iissseseonnysium-sss.iessens.ciseuse- -unison. - Kidnapper Gets Years Rosenau in upper Austria Thurs- day night. many after the Red assault has been cut to pieces by the Ger- man defenders. COST ills JOB One of Bonn's top military plan- ners. former Col. Borislaw von Bonin. has been fired because he advocated this system. The de- fence commiasion said he d been ”disloyal" in seeking he support of former generals for the plan. which had been turned down by Allied Commissioner Theodor Blank. Since then some newspapers have supported von Bonin. Adelbert Wicnstein. a former staff major and now military comment i for the influential Allgemeine Zeltung. wants the en- tire NATO plan lor 12 German divisions. a technical air force and coastal navy scrapped. DBASTIC REVISION He proposes instead: Air and naval defence left en- tirely to allied forces: s 150.000- man German force of volunteer- to. man a massive defence potti- tlon along the iron Curtain. based lawyer, was held nearly fofir hours after bci Pulled ""0 I cl? as she walked ome from school for l h. ON (u3i1llUlIT'l MERCY crease all across the U.S. potato Critical Of Present NATO Plans Germans Want Siraiegy Revamped on fortification of neutral obsta- cles with 15.000 anti-tank guns in concrete positions. and backed by four German armored divisions for immediate counter-attack. The proposals. which have a powerful appeal to public desire not to surrender any territory to the Russians. differ considerably from present Western thinking. At one time the Western armies in Germany were expecting to fall 7 Canadians May Wear U. S. Decoration OTTAWA fCPl-The Queen has anied permission for seven ansdian navy officers to wear the United States decoration of the Legion of Merit. the defence de- partment announced Friday. The decorations were awarded by the President of the U.S. in recognition of their services while commanding Canadian destroyers in the Korean theatre. The awards: Legion of merit in th Commander - Cmdr. Mad ink, DEC, 30. of Ottawa and e degree of E. T. G Hall ax. rmer commander of the Huron. w executive officer of mice flWllllS. trllnlns hue near Digby, N.s. Legion of Merit to the degree of Officer - Commodore Jeffry V. Brock. D80. DSC. 41. of Van- couver and Winnipeg; Capt. Rob- By Spokesman For Dealers NIVEHVILLEI Mun. tCPi---Na- tionai organizer Ortts Kcimetiy of, the Social Credit party said Thurs- day night the party is prepared to run a candidate in every fed- eral conetituency from the Great Lakes to the Pacific in the next on Reviewed out mls summer Mu." newly 700 the danger of touching off a blaze. with chemicals but failed. members of the Royal Canadian, Iinciiieers will be flown to Camp, Gzuzetoivn. N. B. Units based at Cliilliwack. B (' and Esquimalt. B. t'. will be an , lifted by RCAF C-lift aircraft. They will join the concentration of more than 10,000 soldiers at Gaftefown during July and August for the army's first peacetime div- isional exercise. The army said Friday the en- gineers will build bridges.-roads and field defences such as bunk- ers and underground command posts. More than 100 vehicles. in- cluding 15 pieces of heavy mn- producmg areas. The movement of potatoes from Prince Edward Island to date is 6.650 carlnads by the ferry against 6.500 to the same date last year. and our stocks on hand are esti- mated as 1,200 carloads against 2.000 at this dale last. year. Gen- erally speaking, the holdings in Canada are away down from a year ago. The Florida aebago potatoes now starting to move are report- ed to be about the same volume as last year in spite of a I) per cent increase in acreage. The California crop, which is due to move in quantity is late May and June. is about ten days later than normal -- all of which adds up to a good market for, the balance of holdings in this Province. MARITIMER PASSES OTTAWA (CPl--George David Finlayson. 72, federal superintend- ent of insurance from 1014 until 1947. died Tuesday. A native of Merigomish. N. S.. and a graduate of Dalhousie university. he joined the federal department of insur- ance in 1907. He was instrumental in setting up a pension plan sev- eral ycars ago for ministers of the United Church of Canada. brick to the Rhine .Now they have been strengthened sufficiently fol make a fight of it between the Elbe and the Rhine. Tuesday Gen. Anthony C. Mc- Auliffe said U.S. forces now pro- pose to fight "for every inch of the ground we hold." But German papers found cold comfort in these remarks. saying McAuliffe was still saying in ef- fect Weat Germany would be devastated by a massive land battle. general election. ready to contest all of New Brun- N. S. Teachers Plan Nova council decided 'l'hursday to form a credit iinlon for its more than 3 election of two officers. president in 1. Q, may be anticipated,- J. Frank Glasgow of Sydney for his third successive term. Mary Usher of- Dominion as sec- Eastern Psychological Association retary. ' Opens Modl l'1.smomm Governor” Harold Mitten (extnme 1 yard Island is seen reading the Speech from the eunsiueuatllosasorroivaftai-noon.seeother,piotureuI nae ilve. chinery. will be freighted to He mid I m,n5muem.y me”, Ifiagetown from Camp Petawawa. ing candidates could be put upl0'"- "if they called a federal election to night." Social Credit also would be l.ANf)Sl.IDE ;E&.FlVE NAGASAKI. Japan (APi - A landslide Friday killed five persons and injured five others in the Goto islands. some 36 miles west. of Nagasaki. . swick's seats, onc-half of Nova Scoiia's and one-third of Ontario's. he said. First Older Boys' Model Parliament Opens Here Model Governor. was replied to by a Parliament to be conducted in the good number of the boys in at- Province got under way inst nightl tendance. Since nobody knew in the i.cgislatire Asseinlily The what the Speech from the Throne whole procedure was carried out contained until it was delivered. with a marked similarity to par- the boys. of necessity had to speak ent governing bodies. ciinipletelwithout the aid of a script. Two with the arrival of the "Lieiiten-. members of the Provincial Legis--' ant Governor." Sergeant-at-Arms. lature who were present for the Speaker of the House etc. (Continued on Page 1 col. 4) David MacDonald. a third year -m The first Older Buys' t (1 nt of Prince of Wales (,'nl- H ' iegeeis Premier for the sessioiis DQSCflbC OPQTCMOIIC and 1)avtd Stewart is Speaker. The following is the Cabinet: In Memd cus” Deputy Premier. Malcolm Mac- PHILADELPHM MP) gg TM Ra" .Ch"ry Vmleyl Mlmsl" "(New York scientists described Fri- Devotional Affairs, tiordon Mar-Ida), favorable imenecuml mm D", Heath; Physical Affairs, Wcndclil 0 am, h n mud by 3 F M-Yhewi Sftclal Nialnh NlP'5,l:-iilai iiemcoxiaigiil xflirtually halfuof Hansen; Temperance AffalrS.. the brains of each of three mental Alan Dunbar. Provincial Secret-lpmlemsp ""33 Al”””"d" Fl”'k- Drs. Alexander Tolor and Adam The Speech from the Throne do Mllnl. of the (Tolitmbia-Presbyter- ltvered by Rev. liarold ltiitton.l;,m Medical (-em,-EV said um pg. acting 83 V-he Parlmnlenl-'5 Llviients. one male and two females. 'C”'T-"H"-C:”'”CC:' between the ages of 15 and 10. all had a history of extreme ner- vous and mental dlsorders--irien- tnl rr-t.1rfl:ition. uncontrollable sci- ztires and behavior dlffucllics. The doctors said data indicated that ”in scvcrely retarded patients of this type. no loss in intellectual status o('t'ui'! when an abnormally- fiinctioning cerebral hcmlsphere is rcmnvctl . . .If anything. a slight but significant post-operative gain Big Credit Union KEiN'TVll.l.E. N. S. (CP) - The Scotia Teaclic-rs' Unionl .700 members, Other business included the re- Their remarks were in an ad- lnd dress prepared for the annual Crew mcnilicrs 5:-itl they had donned parzicliutes and were toss-1 lint: nut cargo in lighten ill? plane been -hi,-n she made the landing with .:'Yl&ll')lili)' f'l(Nll to about 300 feet. l SEA OF TOMATOES Crew chief Robert Brubaker. 2.1. of Warren. ind. said crates of scious as rescue workers tomatoes were crushed in the land- to get him out. Master Sgt. H. Whitaker. 35. of Haveiock, N. C.. recalled he had in a similar crackup at Brunswick, Me, four weeks ago when his plane was forced down in a snow storm. Wood was caught in the plane by the arm but remained con- battled Proposed Canada Council Hits Constitutional Snag By Harold Morrison Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA, iCPl-- The proposed Canada Council has hit a con- stitutional snag and will not be cluded in government leglslat on at the current session of parlia- ment, it was learned Friday, in fact. the key Massey com- mission recommendation to ad- vance Canadian culture may be headed for the same fate as that of Mackenzie King's Canada Medal-an unending government plgeonhole. l Four years ago the Massey com- mission, headed by Rt. Hon. Vin- cent Massey. now govemor-gem erel. proposed the 15-member council be set up. armed with fed- eral funds to provide 10.000 uni- versity scholarships and to assist painters, writers. musicians and others in pursuing cultural ef- forts. Prime Minister St. Laurent took the aOCOn1l'nEnfl8ll0II under per- sonal review. Last November be publicly proclaimed the govern- ment in favor and in a speech be- fore the Humanities Research Council of Canada said he hoped to have something positive to re- port "before too long." JEALOUI OF RIGHT! Since then. it was learned. there has been criticism from uniden- tifiod provincial quarters-prom umahly Quebec----that the council would be unconstitutional; would operate in the field of education- a provincial responsibility under the British North America Act. There is possibility Mr. St. Lau- rent may attempt to iron this out during the federal-provincial fil- cnl conference expected next fall. He meets provincial premiers here April 26 to fix an agenda for Meanwhile the council idea is pigeonholed Because it is shelved. awards of the Canada Medal. in- trndiiccri by the late prime min- ister Mackenzie King in 19,43. are unlikely The Canada Medal was to have been a high ttnnndian honor be- lcouvcntinn Parliament ) 1 the first Model Boys' Parliament to be held in Prince Ed- Boy' if rone at the opening ceremonial of the stowed on Canadians and persons from other countries for di. Here meeting which will -Barter! Film Lab. guished and meritorious service it was to have filled the honors gap caused by the government practice of barring Canadians from knightbooda. But an Canada Medals have yet been awarded. HONOIII SEEKERS Now the Ganasln Rodd M wrapped up win the Canada Council lnvolven politics and the usual eompetititn among -aonae persons for high honors. 'l3ne government view is that if I bestowed the Canada Medal on some persona and not on others working in the same field is might accused of political favoritism. Two yearn ago an-. It. Laurent indicated in the tnnmona one solution would be hqre awards made by the Oanadn Council when set up. Now. w& the Oounolfa future dlTdm0d. III nsednl'n also is derb- en 5 7 1 '1 I A. sttovtw. , , I ' TORONTO (CF)-Minimum and maximum temperatures: Min Max Dawson Vancouver .. Victoria Edmonton . Calgary . Lethbrtdge Regina Winnipeg .. Toronto . Ottawa .. Montreal Quebec Fredericton . Saint John .. Moncion Halifax .. Charlottetown . Sydney Yarmouii . St John's Nfld... HALIFAX (CF -The Dominion weather office here says a disturb- ance ia moving aoutheastward from Maine. Back of it the cold air will push across the entire dil- trlct. giving clearing and colder weather. ' Regional forecasts: Northern Nova Scotia: !s'::S5?St3'S8C3:i3H!8l 3: 333323231 'ii36!3SE3 with shows in ,&e morning. claaurglngkinf I colthr. or unday: . Prhee Edward Island: lglonli with a few : : IR.- eaet winds 15. new at Clio- lettetewn I 0. outlet for : St. John river valley: Cloudy with showers clearing in the afternoon; cold; northeast winds I5. bow-high at Moncton and Fredericton I! and 40. Saint Join as and 40. Outlook for-Sunday: lunny. Iigh tide today ' at channe- fown at 5.10 a. In. and 4.1! p. 3 Sun rises today at I3 n. 5 Z IIIIQILI.