Maxims of a Mere Man No small art is it to sleep. :4 PAGES Arriving at Summerstde yester day morning the big 4-engine DC- 4 (above) became the property of Maritime Central Airways. and the third such large aircraft this Maritir company has purchased Tm BOYS SAVE PACKED TRAIN LONDON (AP) - Two boys sped along a railroad track in the Lon- don suburbs and flagged a packed commuter train to a halt Friday just before it reached a wrecked bridge. A truck had crashed into the bridge, cracking the parapet and twisting the tracks where the 14-foot-high span crossed the road. Coming Events Cardigan Tea Party. July 2.5. I-lall, Dance in Vernon River Tuesday. June 5th. Dance Kelly's Cross Hall Mon- day. June 4th. Vernon River play. BelfastHall Monday. June 4th. Dance in Bear River South School. Tuesday. June 5. L.0.B.A. Rummage sale. Rich- mond Street. Saturday at 2.30 p.m. Lobster supper served at Sea- shell Inn. Victoria, Sunday. June 3rd. . Iat- timo- Horse Races; Haaelhrook. urday. June 3nd. o'clock. Delicious fresh lobster served at the Orient Hotel, Victoria. every Sunday. Regula Saturday night dance, St. Peters Bay Hall. Al Blanch- ard's Orchestra. Weekly Dance. Fort Augustus Hall every Wednesday night. Burkes Orchestra. Our p l a nt business will be closed t o d a y Saturday only. Parker Jewel, York. ltuamnago sale Saturday. June 2nd at 2 p.m. in Holy Name Hall in aid of Basilica Altar Society. For best results book your clover seeds with us. McGulgan a. Boyle, Hunter River. Dance in Mount Ryan Hall every Saturday. Rollie MacKen- ale'a orchestra. Dancing 9 to 12. Easter Monday players present "where's the Fire?" South Rus- flco Hall, Monday, June 4th. 3.80 Auspices C.W.L. Grand Bingo. St. Andrew's Hall. Mt. Stewart. Monday. June 4th. 0.30 p.m. Two special prizes. jack- pot 335.00. door prize. Showing at Mount Stewart. Fri day night at 9 o'clock and Satur-" day at 7 p.m and 9 p.m "Ma and Pa Kettle at Waikiki." Bowlers dance. St. Mary's Hail. Souris. following presentation howling u " . Wednesday night June 6. Cliff Peters Orchestra. Attention farmers -- Timothy and clover seeds in stock. Get Muir requirements now. P. L. Morris. Shur-Gain Feed Service. Kinkora. Charlottetown and Sum- merslde. ' in V ' High School Auditorium tonight for one show only. doors open at 5.30. Bl! 3-hour show that the whole family will want to ace. Reserve Wednesday and Thurs- day. June tau: and lith for con- rert in Crapaud Hall. sponsored l).V St. John's W. A. and Princess Mary Lodge. Trinity Y. P. U. play. North River Hail Wednuday. June 6th. M5 p.m.' Sale of candy. Pro- ceeds to Hall Fund. Only this week left (today and Saturday) on our clearing out sale - numerous bargains still available. If you have cedar shingles booked. please take de- livery this week. J. F. Morris. lllnkora. Buying pigs Monday at Freder- icton. Tuesday: Brookfield I a. It. Milton to. York 1 p.m.. Bed- lord 2. Tracadie 13. Mt. Stewart 5- Pllquid ll). Fort Auluatus 4. Water-vale ON. Vernon River I. Pownal 5.3. Wednesday: New Glasgow I am... Wheatiey River 19- chaos Garner ii. New Haven .ni.. londaw 1.9. Deiable 1. 3 's Ones I. Emerald I. Clif- Kjhs cattle L A 5- On. an LI. a pair for good c.&'.'? ....--.'...'r..::.-2 x..... .,... m..-.,.,,g...,,..(,;,.,.. H , ; g 77:0 uardimz CHARIXYFTETOWN. CANADA. SATURDAY JUNE 2 1956 , ”'f'3V I NEW 4-ENGINE DC4 ARRIVES FOR MCA for the rurpose of expanding their Director of Maritime Central Air- transporta'Eon service into the far ways. was on hand to complete north, and for use on trans-atlantic uosslngs. Captr' charter the transfer of ownership from Captain Gil Slmard, chief pilot of Carl "urke, Managing Quebecair. former owners of the big aircraft. M.C.A. will be taking delivery of their fourth DC4 sometime early next month. (Photo by Wotton) REPEATED SCENES OF BEDLAM ..By ALAN DONNELLY.. Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP) - A government closure motion limiting debate on the semi-final stage of its bitterly- fought Z85 Pipeline legislation was gammed through the Commons Friday amid chaos never before seen in Icrliament. Opposition shouts of ”dictaior- ship" and ”fascism" rang through repeated scenes of utter bedlam. CCF leader Coldweli at one point strode to the centre of the cham- ber and shook his list at speaker Rene Bea doin, demanding to he heard. On one of the day's many votes. the opposition took the unprece- dented step of refusing to vote- an action veteran observers said they could not recall ever happen- Pipelin Through x 9 ing before. OPEN REVOLT P The disorder broke out in the first minutes of the day's sitting beginning at 11 a.m. Speaker Beaudoin summarily ruled o..t of order a motion Thurs- day nlght by Colin Cameron (CCF -Nanaluo) to censure statements in two letters printed in the Ottawa Journal this week criticizing pro- ceedings in the three-week Com- mons pipeline flght. The Speaker refused to hear opposition mem- bers who were striving to speak and promptly called a vote on their appeal of his ruling. The disorder swelled to open rc- volt in the next two hours and again after the luncheon recess as the Speak ' put two more ques- tl us to a vote without hearing Progressive Conservative and CV? membc who were on their feel clamoring to be heard, Each time Speaker Beaudoin simply called for the division. The bells rang to call in members for the votes. Opposition members Illllled in the rhaml)er's Centre aisle around the mace. Mr. Drew and others strove i- speak. Most of their words wcr- drowned out by dcsk-thumping and noisy sing- ing from Liberal ranks. SILENT AND PALE At one point Mr. Beaudoin said he was taking full responsibility to his action. Much of thc rcst of the time he sat silcnt. his face pale. Finalig. just before fl pm.. the Speaker left the chair (l('Spll'2 oppo- sition protests and the House Covers Prince Edward" Island Like the Dew Closure Pushed overnmeni moved into committee of the whole. Awaiting the committee was a mo- tion mad - Thursday by Prime Min- ister St. Laurent to impose clo- backs A pipeline pmp953l' A" Sure on the committee stage 9, other nservatives and the CCF the pipelin- blllrthe second last voted i the minority. The same stage before its Commons passage Committee chairman Edward T Applewhaite immediately put the closure m- ion to a vote. lie in,- nored Donald Flcmi g IPC-Ton onto Eglinton) and others who tried is speak. ”Have we come to fascism hcrc completely" Mr. Fleming cried to the chair: .n. ”You are abdicat- ing the proper function of the chair." The closure motion was carried 144 to 51. SEVEN VOTES The Liberal majority was backed PRICE 5c by the Social Credit group and Carl Nickle (PC-Calg' ry South), who line-up pt'cvailed on each of the vol-as-thcre were seven divisions during the morning and afternoon. After closure was carried the F iii). arcd to so out of the re- peated opposition protests, They lh n launched into repeated attempts to have the proceedings declared out of Ul'(l('l'. Procedural wrangling and votes occupied the remainder of the afternoon. Tvlrursday the opposition won a major tactical victory when they fought off for the whole day the taking ' J vote on the closure motion. 7 .. REPLACED BY PRAVDA . EDITOR Molotov Quits Post As USSR Foreign Minister MOSCOW (CP) -- The Supreme Soviet Friday accepted the resig- nation of Soviet foreign minister Vyacheslav Molotov. the official Russian news agency Tass an- nounced. Dmitri Shepilov. 51. editor of the Soviet Communist party newspa- per Pravda and a rising light in the Soviet hierarchy. has been named to replace Molotov. During last autumn”: foreign ministers' conference at Geneva. Soviet sources had unofficially pre- dlcted that he would replace Mol- otov. Molotov at Geneva confided to several foreigners that he was get- ting old and planned to retire "shortly." BEFORE 'I'ITO'S VISIT Molotov use and has given most of his life lb the Communist cause and many of those years to carry- ing out the policies of the late Joseph Stalin. under attack from the Communist" party recently for his promotion of the” cult of pers- onality." In addition to his post as for etgn minister. Molotov was a first deputy chairman of the Soviet Un- ion's council of ministers. A Mos- cow radio announcement did not indicate whether he had stepped down from this post. as well. (The Associated Press said. however. the wording of the announcement indicated ' ' tov had kept his other job.) - The foreign ministry shift came on the eve of the arrival of Presi- dent Tlto of Yugoslavia on a visit to Moscow. Molotov was one oi the Soviet leaders under Stalin who at one time denounced Tito as a renegade from communism. (Western diplomats speculated the Tito visit may have been a motivating factor in the timing of Molotov's resignation.) Shepilov was named a secretary of the central committee of the Communist party in February. 1956 at the conclusion of the party's 20th congress at which Ni- kita Khrushchev denounced Stalin. Simultaneously Shepilov was elected "a candidate member of the praesidium of the central commit- tee-the most important group is the Soviet Union. Shepilov in 1949 attained great authority in inner Communist party circles when he became the chief of the propaganda and agita- tion section of the party's central committee. APPI-JARED INSECURE Molotov's position had appeared insecure since he made a public recantation last October in the magazine Kommunist for mistak- enly stating in a speech that only the "foundations" of socialism had been established in Russia. He was upbralded for thus implying that fuiiacale socialism had not been established. Friday's announcement said: "The U. S. S. R. supreme Soviet (parliament) pracsidium has ac- ceded to the request of the first deputy chairman of the U. S. S. R. council of ministers. V. M. Molo- tov. to relieve him of the duties of foreign ' lster. Molotov long has been a master in the use of "uyet"-the Russian no. With a deadpan air of confi- dence. he pursued the Soviet line in Moscow. Paris, the United Na- tions and other world centres. Blandishments. friendliness, per- suaslon. anger and the cold shoul- der alike were powerless to move him when it was against Soviet policy to compromise. one of the most durable of Rus- sia's leaders, "Old Bolahavik" Mol- otov was a leading figure in the 1917 Communist revolution and later served with both Stalin and Lenin. founder of Russian com- munlsm. He survived successive changes of leadership and sewed as chair- man of Russia's council of minis- ters (premier) from 1930 to 1941, when the post was taken over by Stalin himself. It was while Molotov was pre- mier that the Soviet Union signed a non-aggression pact with Ger- many before the Second World War. French Army Combat Team Near Victory Over Rebels ALGIERS (AP)-A French Army combat team Friday closed in for the kill on. a big Algerian rebel band trapped in the "gates of iron gorges of the Biban mountains southwest of Boogie. French dispatches said more than 100 rebels had been slain or captured since the troops launched the roundup Thursday. Powerful mechanized detach- ments of the French 7th Dlvison. supported by air units. were re- ported tlghtening a ring of steel on some 400 Arab nationalists in one of the biggest pitched battles of of the it! - month - old uprising. French casualties were not dis- closed. Victory would give the French complete control of the southern edge of the disrupted Soumman valley on the fringes of the Grand Kabyiie. a favorite rebel haunt. Helicopter-borne troops pitched out in the sun-baked gorges. sup- plementing a deadly fire from mo bile artillery. French. headquartus said the battle raged unabated throughout the day. Far to the west in the Oran de- partment. newly - called French Army reserves underwent a bap- tism of fire in an attack on a rebel unit about six miles from Laurmel. Fifteen rebels were reported killed in 24 captured. French casualties were said to be two wounded. In Algiers. sullen Arabs pulled a general strike in the Casbah- the native quarter - in protest against the French clampdo .. on nationalists said to be hiding out there. French police watched the move- ment of Arabs in the Casbah war- liy. fearing a violent outburst. By late afternoon. some Cashah shops reopened and tension eased some- grenadea on nationalists holding what. Pick Up Two Jail Escapees AMHERST (CF)-RCMP said they picked up two Quebec jail escapes early today after chase on the outskirts of this north- em Nova Scotia town. they said they arrested Gerald Potvin. 25. of Rob . Que.. and Joseph Marson. 30. o Drummund- ville. Que.. when their car plunged into a ditch. The car was reported stolen earl- ier in earny Sprtnghili. N. 9.. police said. Constables in a patrol car were said to have chased the pair several miles before the car ran off the highway. At one point they ran through a police road- bl Ir. gcearch f the two began Thurs- day in wooded area near South ampton. zs miles from here. when two men jumped from a car after being stopped by police mills I routine highway automobile check. Police said this car bore Massa- pides but a pair Striking Men To Demonstrate SHERBROOKE. QUE. (CF)- Striklng workers from four Quebec province mills of the Dominion ' Textile Company will stage "19 first of a series of demonstration: tonight. some 3,000 workers from Mills in Sherbrooke, Magog. Drum- mondville and St. Gregoire will attend the rally. Workers struck at Drummond ville April 1. Mnsos May 8. Sher- brooke May it and St. Gregoire May in. Negotiations for a while lncrezse have been proceeding lot more than a year. A union spokesman said the rally will call iubllc attention to what R described as the justice of the workers claims. it would all! mow that laborers want to heel: the parse during the dispute. Other rallies are planned for lung Ind Drammondvilie. IDIJD POOTING ..a'.'a.'&.-'f'..?t.'."..l".'."... 1'33? aaadsnd H.R. Doane Charter I Accountants. have an- nounced t day the promotion of and Company. Mr. G. Douglas Dennis. C.A., (abo'e) in the position of Man- ager of the Company's branch at Moncton. N.B. Mr. "ennis is a native of Mona- ton and moved with his family to Charlottetowr in 194i. completing his education at Prince of Wales College. He joined the firm late in 1949. and was admitted to the A A institute of Chartered ants in 1965. Que':n's University. He is a son of Mr. and Mrs. .l.G. Dennis of this city. and his wife is the daughter of Mrs. W.J. Cudrnore and the late Mr. Cud- more. He takes over his new dut- and he and his wife plan to move to Moncton ---: next week. late In June. Maritime (Art I Ass'n Meeting AMHERST (cry - nu. bell of Saint John I. . " ted president of Association dtaritt the annual 5- n was ronortod to mm", ha. rm"! have suffered a weak spell in his Provincial vice - .1". "Q. NC!!! and ckly recovered. How- New Bnmswick. jg. CFC. Q. udoin said he had McNair. Fredertctai Nova la. W bees ll: merely exhausted. w. E rth Peggy's Cove; There was no doubt hr was Prin sickened and disgusted with the Runta.ClaarIottdnwI. tlestmeothehadrecetved in the 'fl!!I9t-'l'!0If1-IlI'l.RIttlsa- shanba:bItIswaadete1-mined demo of luhlls. ll.l., and to use ltdn-oogh. Opposition mem- rre-nurer. PM. Ala issue .1 -an -said he has brought it on llW'- '9 M C in cactus on completing his training and study courses from . DeGa . re Edward island. Victor WILLIAM JOHN DRAKE Death Last Night Of Well Known city Businessman The d eath of William John Drake. well known Charlottetown businessman occurred at the P.E. Island-Hospital tats.) nlahtitoh knvlng several moat s' of poor health which eventually required his entering hospital about three weeks ago. He was in his 83rd year. A son of the late John Drake and Sarah Godkin. Mr. Drake was born in Charlottetown on July 23- 1873 and following attendance at School he took up residence in Massachussetts for several years where he was engaged in building construction. On April 30. 1896 in New York he married Abbie L. Judson, form- erly of Alexandra. by whom he is still survived. On return to Charlottetown Mr, Drake became ' d with his father and later conducted a re- fall meat business which be con- tinued to successfully operate for many years. during which time he traded extensively with New- foundland in the shipment of live cattle. For 25 years he also con- bv . successful and manner. Possessing an amiable and ' friendly disposition. Mr. Drake en- joyed the rupect of a host of re- ' ddants in every part of the pro- vince. an integrity and great lib- cality characterised his dealings v'tii all cl satisfactory ducted an ice business in a hlgh- ghir Howe Hints Of Retirement BULLETIN OTTAWA (CP)-Trade Minis- ter Howe said Friday night the Trans-Canada natural gas pipe- line may be his last major undertaking for the government before he retires. Drew Announces Notice of Motion Against Speaker OTTAWA (CP) Opposition leader Drew Friday announced no- tice of a motion to Censure Com- mons Speaker Rene Beaudoin on three points of "unprecedented ac- tion." The motion asked the Commons to resolve it no longer has any confidence in the Speaker for: "1. Improperly reversing his own decision without notice and without giving any opportunity for discus- sion. "2. Repeatedly I ' to allow members to address the House on occasions when the rulaaprovtde that they have the right to" be heard. t "3. Subordinating the rights of the House to the will of the gov- arnment." the highest distinction possible at the hands of his Masonic Breth- ren when he was elected Grand Master ti 1927. Previously he had been Worshipful Master of Victoria Lodge No. 2 which he jioned in 1909. In addition to holding the highest offices in Alexander Chap- ter. Royal Arch Masons. Prince Edward Preceptory Knights Temp- lar. and Albert Edward Lodge of Perfection in the Scottish Rite. He was also a member of Gulf Coun- cil. Cryptic Rite, and a past Pra- sldent of the Sons of England. He served as Grand Treasurer and a member of the Benevolent Fund committee for many years. In 19? he was appointed Grand Representative for New Hamp- o Surviving relatives in addition his wife are one brother Richard. residing at Cornwall. P.E.Island, one daughter. Mrs. Hamm Mc- Canneli. (Marion) and a son Floyd. both residing in Charlotte- town. Anothcr son. William. who resides in Edmonton, Alla. visited IIIOI !'rsm'"”ly. Mr. Drake achieved ly Charlottetown for a week recent- AIMED AT SPEAIt ER BEAUDOIN Angry Demonstration Of Rebellion In Commons OTTAWA (CP) - An unprece- dented opposition demonstration of rebellion erupted in the Commons Friday. Wild disorder reigned for 30 minutes. it was aimed at Speaker Rene Beaudoin, who refused to hear Progressive Conservative and CCF members on points of order and privilege. Though the storm had been brew- ing all day. it burst suddenly and without warning as the House re- sumed its pipeline sitting at 2:30 p.m. after a two-hour morning meeting. AFTERNOON SESSION WORSE Throughout the 11 a. m. to 1p. m. 'sltting. the opposition. fighting the pipeline legistation to the last ram- part, had been getting angrier and angrier with the Speaker. Opposit- ion leader Drew tried to censure the Speaker but his motion was rul9d...out otorder. . . Later, the opposition. in an in- direct censure action. refused to vote at all on a point raised by the Speaker himself. But the morning bedlam was nothing d with the after- noon outburst. As soon as Mr. Beaudoin took the chair he put to a vote a ruling by chairman E. T. Appiewhaite, while the House was in committee. that Prime Minister St. Laurent's pro- poeal to shut off debate on the semi-final stage of the pipeline bill was in order. IGNORES PC MEMBER Davie Fulton (PC - Kamloops) was immediately on his feet with a point of order. Normally, points of order and privilege take pre- cedcnce over other House business. But Mr. Beaudoin kept reading the motion. ignoring Mr. Fulton, who stayed on his feet talking. This in itself is open rebellion. because when the Speaker is talk- ing other members must take their seats. Then Donald Fleming (PC-Tor- onto Eglinton) and Stanley Knowles (CCF -- Winnipeg North Centre). two others who have apc8l.'lle3dEd the opposition attack on the gov- ernment's pipeline legislation. also rose and tried to make themselves heard. ”You have no right to sit in that chair." shouted Mr. Drew. SRAKES FIST AT SPEAKER The division bell began to ring for the vote. At that moment. CCF leader Caldwell, his face red with fury. strode from his front-row seat down the centre aisle of the Commons to a spot in front of the Speaker's mace - symbol of parliamentary sovereignty and democracy. He shook his fist angrily at the Speaker but there was so much noise it was impossible to make out of what he was saying. Liberal Eden Accuses Greece Of Using Foul Propaganda NORWICH. Eng. (AP) - Prime Minister Eden Friday accused Greece of using propaganda "of the foulest character" to stir up terrorism in Cyprus. He said the governor of Cyprus, Field Marshal Sir John Harding. and British troops trying to re- store order in the strife-torn Medi- terranean island colony have been subjected "to the most scurrilous attacks by Greek press and radio." He added:'"It is certainly con- trary to the whole spirit of NATO that one of its menlbers should ALMOST HEARTBROKEN By HAROLD MORRISON Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP)-The opposition almost broke' the heart of Speaker Rene Beaudoin ln' the Commons Friday. Never before had a speake 's words aroused such fury and re- bellion from the opposition. Never before had a Canadian Fr ' been faced with a motion of cen- sure; a motion that could mean his downfall if carried by the House. At the height of one tumultuous scene, angered opposi ' mem- bers stormed the aisle separating the two sides of the chamber, gathered around the mace. symbol of authority and democracy. and polndttng directly at Mr. Beaudoin m . "Puppet! Dictator! Garroilng of Parliament!" It got so bad for the 44-year-old director of House order and pro- cedure that at one point he drag- ged himself from the chamber ultlli Whit I reporter thought were fears” ab was. He denied that he had ' wsarsr-a.m. which they described as Friday." On Monday the Quebec lawyer. Speaker since 1953. may have to listen to a full-dress House debate on a motion of censure against him. of which Opposition Leader Drew gave forrnai notice late Friday. The full fury of the Opposition was aroused when early in the day Mr. " d' announced he had made a ”serious mistake" in pro- cedure Thursday on the hotly-con. tested pipeline bill. BAD T0 WORSE Things went from bad to worse early in the day. The Speaker ruled out of order the motion he had received Thurs- day night from Colin Cameron (CCF-Nanairno) that statements in letters published by the Ottawa Journal were derogatory to Parl- lament. Thursday night he had virtually directed Mr! Cameron in propos- ing the motion. The two letters re- lleclcd on the conduct of the gov- ernment and the Speaker. Friday. he decided members had brought the criticism on themselves and that the comment was fair and reasonable under the circumstan- ces. Mr. Beaudoin wean further. Re ruled that he erred in allowing dia- rusaion Thursday to wander from "Black Beaudoin Badly Shaken this House and before the country for what I am doing." he said. When he asked the House to up- hold him in his decision to revert back to Thursday's business. the progressive conservative and CCF members refused to participate in the vote. His decision was carried I42 lo 0. But probably the thing that hit him hardest was Mr. Drew's con- sure motion. Carlins Head For Formosa HONG KONG Reuters - Three Australians today drove their ca- nary-yeilow amphibious jeep "Hail Safe" into the china see here on their way to Formosa. 470 miles away. Ben Cnrlin. ls: wife and his ro- driver .ld chirt mate. Bnrry lion- lcy. ho - to rcnch the island by Wednesday on the current stage of a round-the-world tour. T h e y plan to drive overland to Keeinng in the north of the island and then take to the sea again. on route to Okinaw and Japan. From .7 .9!!! they intend to make the Pacific crossing in July to re-..ch Alaska in fine wcnlher be- fore driv' .g on t Montreal. Before the "Half Safe" left to- that day she already had travelled I3.- Ili miles by land and soon by sea since leaving Ilslifaa several 3&3. seek by radio propaganda of the foulest character. directed from its capital. Athens. month after month. to stir up terrorist activity in the territory of another." Eden said while the Athens l broadcasts continue "there can be no confidence. still less friend- ship." Britain several times has pro- tested the Greek broadcasts in diplomatic notes. But this, was Eden's most outspoken criticism of the Greeks to date. PREPARES NEW MOVES Anti-British partisans. demand- ing union of the island with Greece. have taken an ever in- creasing toll of British lives on the island in recent weeks. Britain is reported preparing new diplomatic moves to settle the issue and some form of NATO regime for the is- land fortress is one of me idcas now under Whitehall consideration. Eden. addressing a meeting of Conservative supporters. said he wants the whole world to know there can be no question of Britain yielding over any essential element in the defence of its legitimate and vital interests. He added: "Our country's indus- trial life and that of western Eu- rope depend today and must dc- pcnd for many years on oil sup- l plies from the Middle East. "lf fever our oil resources were impcrillcd we should be compelled to dclcnd them. The facilities we need in Cyprus are part of that defence. We cannot therefore ac- ccpt any doubt about their avail- ability." SUMS UP He summed up the situation this way: "No Cyprus-no certain facilities to protect our supply of oil. No oil-unemployment and hunger in Britain. it is as simple as that." "The Cyprus question." said the prime minister. "is not and never has in-en essentially a colonial . question nor one between ourselves and Greece alone. It has far wider implications. it is international. ”A relatively small minority of terrorists is directing its savage attacks against Cypriots and Brit- ish alike. "A few days ago some pistols and a mask were found in the buildings of the bishops-ic of l 3 slammed their desks cov- ers in unison adding to the uproar. Mr. Fleming pointed his finger at the Speaker and shouted some- thing that could not be made out. Then Mr. Drew and other mem- ers rose and joined Mr. Coldwell in front of the mace. The division - bells kept cianging. i The Liberals began singing. only half-heartedly. Some appeared stunned by what was going on a few feet in front of them. SPEAKER WHITE-FACED They sang two new songs- There'li Always be a Pipline and line-as well as Home on the Range. Pack up Your Troubles. Tipperary and the French folk song A St. Malo. At ne point they burst out with Hail. all, the Gang's All Here. -What the Heck do We Care Now. began singing Onward Christian i Soldiers there was a volley of op- position cries of "Shame. Shame." Mr; Beaudoin sat: white-faced in the Speaker's chair. straight ahead. - He did not try to restore order. Opposition members, including Harold Winch (CCF - Vancouver East) on crutches. kept milling around in the centre aisle. Hands on hips. Mr. Coldwell kept staring at the Speaker. E Hi You Cliff Jtisf Mitt: Qsoo tops! Wu Must Do if EVERY DAY 9 .ll'lIxV(tWIliflillliillIiw' TORONTO (CP) Tempera- tures issued by the Toronto public weather office Friday night. Min Max (Night) (Day) Dawson 35 66 Vancouver 54 62 Victoria 52 59 Edmonton 61 85 ) Calgary 57 81 ' Regina 45 90 Winnipeg 36 72 Toronto 41 52 Ottawa 60 70 Montreal 65 75 Quebec 50 67 Fredericton 51 73 Saint John 45 65 Moncton 5! 83 Haiif ax 45 55 Charlottetown N 78 Sydney so - - Yarmouth 40 so St. John's 40 56 HALIFAX (OP) - The weather office here says a disturbance is moving eastward across Quebec and cool air following it is ex- pected to reach this district to- ers as it arrives. By Sunday the weather is expected to clear. Regional forecasts: Northern Nova Scotia. Prince Edward Island and eastern N. I. counties: Variable cloudiness with a few showers: cooler: southwest winds 15: low-high at New Glas- gow S5 and 12. Charlottetown so aadCl.MeacteaSOaadt5. Saa- day: Sunny and cool. High tide today at Charlottetown at 4.24 a.m. and ti p.m. on Sill- day 5.07 a.m. and us p.ln. at Paphos. Ballistic tests have proved that one of these pistols was used to shoot a Greek civilian and a Turkish policeman. tfhadalnwbfcli "How can areas some as at- Rastico today at 12.1! a.m. and HMS a.m. on Sunday at LN a.m. loslyrefuse hi8sad but We've Been Working on the Plpe- . .When a small group of Liberals .f A looking If- Iy.slvlng widely scattered show- 3-