m Maxims of a Mere Man Easy hard reading. . Tt?FXEss ' K, couin nssraov .,WESTERN sscuiurv Dulles, Pineau To Come ToGrip,s.Wii'h NATOCrisis WASHINGTON (AP) - French yo.-cign Minister Christian Pinenu wit state Secretary John Foster Dulles will come to grips here Monday with a three-way crisis in the North Atlantic Treaty Or- gnnization. lf unchecked. the NATO troubles could destroy the security at the West and lay it open to fu- ture Soviet aims. - The NATO crisis. which under- lies the Plnesu-Dulles meftings, miisists of three eleme ts of dtlllgCF to the West. These are: 1, The crisis of strategy-this question is being raimd more and more by Western leaders. As Prime Minister Eden put it in a speech this week: Why should we.-atcrii European countries con- tinue to spend Sl2,0t)t),0o0,0t)o a your on defence, in r-tordance Coming Events iiaiico. Lot 65 Hall.)Tuest'lay, June 19th. Canteen service. ('0mc to opening dance Morell llcar ilail. June 20, 1956. ”Lolister supper in Elmira hall Wednesday June 20th." Dance Iona East School lilonday night. Dance in Vernon school, Wed ncsday June 27. llegular dance Friday night, Crapaud Rink. Burns' Orchestra. Regular Dance, Bonshaw Inn. Tuesday night. Burns' Orchestra. Dance, refreshments. Kelly's Cross hall, Monday night, Jun: 18. every Good music. Dance in Vernon River Hall, Tuesday. June 19. Webster's Orchestra. Picnic Immaculate Conception Cllilurch grouzls. Wellington, July It . Dance Fortune Hall on Tues- daly. June 19th. Chaisson's Orch- CS fl. Card Pally. Spring Park Hall, lllonday 8:30. Prizes and tourna- nient. Don't miss Wheatley River I act play in Stanley Bridge Hall tonight. w-.....a.... Lobster supper Morall Village Parish Hall, Wednesday. June 1!. starting I p.m, Dance New Zesland School, Thursday 'night. June 21st. Chais. sons Orchestra. Fanningbmok Variety Concert in Morell Hall Monday June 18th. 8:30. Dance after. Dance Mt. Stewart Mu-no;-:31 Hall Tuesday night. Rom. Mgo. Kcnzia's Orchestra. L053”? sllliller Little Pond School Wednesday. June ma. Sllllper served 5 to 0 p.m. Dance in Mount Ryan Ball ev- ery Maud . Rollie MacKenzle's orchestra. Dancing 9 - 12. Annual meeting of Central Committee in North River Church Wedllnlllay. June 11. at ll o'clock. Dancing at the White Spot, Dun- tlnlfnase. every Friday night. Rollie MacKenzis'a Orchestra. Dance in Mt. Ryan Hall to- lllilllll. 9.30 to 12.3). Rollie Mac- kcnue'i Orchestra. Barn Dances Garfield Mac- Pliee s. Brookfield. T h u r s d a y. gaanteen service. Burns' Orches- Dancing Rollaway Club tonight, from 9 till 12.30. Music by Jackie Doyle's Orchestra. Adm. 50c. tax and table included. Pantry Sale at R. T. Holrnan's store, Charlottetown. P ri d a y. grins 29th. Ausplces C. W. L. Lol' .1. v '('onio lo the Chicken Supper in inrli Hall. Wednesday, June 27th. ;'llI(lmPer starts 5 o'clock. Price Central Queens No. 1 District W. l. Convention will be held in llnrrlnston l-lall June aotn. ses- sions at 2.15 and B. Borden Players present "Aunt Minnie From Minnesota". Scarle- :'t;Wt:v flail June 21st. Sponsored The district convention of West Queens will be held in North Granville Hall Tuesday. Juno 1! at 1 pm. ' r Unlined sosd Wllll cash enclosed. postmarked Hunter River. Please forward name. Arthur Vsssq. Vmwn lllvc plsyorn resent Play "Civil service" in arcing- lon Hall bfondsy. June is . Cur- tain 8:8). - solo of lunches. Regular dance. st. M . --ll! 3.illf"'ciii'”i"l-';..!'.i"3'.'.".'.i.' in. Games. with a I00-division plan laid out! in 1952. when the real barrier to Soviet agresslon grow is the United States' hydrogen bomb power? MANY APATHETIC 2. The crissi of purpose-in I speech at New York April 23 Dul- les said the United States was willing,'to consider proposals to broaden NATO's work. The response has been disap- pointing. in the view of some state department officials- Eventually some new political tasks undoub- tedly will be given the NATO coun- cil which meets in Paris, but the Allied governments are apathetic just now: 3. The crisis of support-baclo ing for the alliance is declining in some member countries. For example, Greece has found its claims on Cyprus far more urgent than the continued security of .he Western alliance: the dispute has caused a' grave split between Greece, Britain and Turkey. In Iceland this spring the Parliament passed a resolution calling on the government to get American troops out of the NATO-United States air base there. Worry in Washington over the gcuning prestige and power of NATO has produced one firm can- viction among some of Dulles' top ndvioors. This is that the United States itself will have to provide a far more imaginative and dyn- amic leadership in dealing with the NATO crisis that it so far has prcluced. A week ago Canada's External Affairs Minister Pearson came here to confer "with Dulles on NA'r0's future. He is -one of three Western foreign ministers assigned to work on the problem and report back to the council of the alliance at Paris next fall. Pearson hoped to obtain a fairly clear definition of what the United States would be willing (-0 do within the llrnits of NATO. . All Pearson got from Dulles. on this point however, was a gener- alized statement that the United States would be willing to go as far as any other country would go. having due regard to the spe- cial responsibilities of the United States all over the world. That put it up to other.countries to say what they would like the United States to do. But they are wait- ing for the United States to set the course. Fine Turnout Of Scouts & Youth had its day yesterday when all Guide Companies. Brow- nie Packs, Scout Troops and Cub Packs of the Charlottetown dist- rict held their annual church par- ade to five of the principal City churches. The parade led by the district Scout Band and the P.E.l. Regiment Band formed up at tho Charlottetown Armourles and pro- ceeded along Kent Street past the City Hall, where the csulute was taken by the Deputy Mayor A. waltlren Gaudef who was accom- panied by James Fullerton. City Clerk. -. in charge at the saluting base was Brig. W.W. Reid. Provincial Presiden of the Boy Scouts As- sociation. Also at the saluting base were Nlrs. Harry Cudmore. Pro vlnclal Commissioner. Girl Guides: Mrs. Alan Macbiillan. Deputy Pm- vincial Commissioner. Girl Guidss: and Provincial Commiscliam-. Boy Yesterday Girl Guides M Scouts Association. R.C. Parent. The parade was under the com- mand of Dr. C. Fisher. District Commissioner Boy Scouts Association and Miss lphigsnie Arssnault. District Commissioner, Girl Guides. The impressive turn- out reflected great credit on their organization. Each group" was pre- ceded by its own color party and after passing the saluting base those attending services at St. James. St. Peter's and the Holy Redeemer churches broke off at Great George Street to Fitzroy and continued on to their respective churches. Those attending Trinity United Church turned south on Prince Street and those to this Baptis Church turned north. Those in charge of the parade last evening were very appreciat- ive of the excellent work done by the City Police and the local Army ST. JOHN'S. Nfld. (CP) - An estimated 35.000 pqopld fled to the c o u ntry Saturday as the year's first civil defence exorcise brought 30 minutes of mock war to the Newfoundland capital. During the half hour pretended raid two Lancaster bombers ping puffs of leaflets. Radio cars patrolled the streets. halting traf- fic and directing eotrianl in- ers treated slmulstod cssusltlss at three stations. Hamil bombs exploded into puffs of smoke 500 feet in the air. Civil defence director Peter Cashin declared the exercise I success. He said he stlnratad about 0,000 cars left the city, carrying about half the cityla 70,- 000 population. He said the exercise was held to correct mistakes in civil de- fence teclrnique. one mistake. he said. was calling the raid in the afternoon instead of about 9 I.m.. when outgoing holiday traffic would be heaviest. STREETS NEARLY CLEAR The evacuation figure was boosted by the number of car- owners who took advantage of the first Saturday store closing of the summer for a weekend in the country. A dozen radio cars. which pro- vided all communications during the exercise. reporting streets ncnrly cleared of all traffic, di- rected two ambulances to sim- ulated casualties. The "victims" were rushed to emergency posts and from there to civil defence Queen Returns From Visit To Sweden LONDON (AP! Queen Elizabeth returned by plane today from her visit to Sweden. The Queen had delayed her departure from Stockholm for nearly two hours to watch corn- pleflon of the Olympic equestrian 35,000 Flee Sf. .lohn's As Civil Defence Exercise Held roared low across the city drop- only doors. St. John Ambulance work- also lug MR. GEORGE G. IARTEI Naval Veterans) Ass'n Formed George G. Barter of Charlotte- town was elected as the first pre- sident of the newly formed Main- brace Naval Veterans Association in Charlottetown at a meeting held at the L.P.U. Hall on Satur- day night. The organizational meeting was addressed by Rudy Gaudet of Moncton, national president of the association, R, A. MacKen- zie of Camnbellton, N.B., and Wendall Doyle, president of the Campbellton Branch. The speak- ers gave an outline of the aims and ambitions of the association the first members and the in- stallation of the principal officers. Other officers elected wero: Emmett Coyle, vice-president: Henry Turner. secretary and ond meeting will be held in the near future to discuss the loca- tion of club rooms and to form the various committees. Pearson Finds Khiushchev Has Summer Palace BROCKVILLE. 0 n t. long way to go to match Com- munist party secretary Nikita Khrushchev. He told a Liberal party rally: "1 have I little three-roamed cottage in the Gatineau hills. CANADA. MONDAY. JUNE 18. 1956 wAs roman PAL or HITLER and assisted in the enrollment of Douglas Parker. treasurer. A sec- (CP)- When keeping up with the Jon- eses extends to summer cottages External Affairs Minister Pear- son sald Friday night. he has a MILTENBERG, Germany (AP) Socialist rloters were stopped by tear gas Sunday when they tried to break up the founding conven- tion of Otto Strasserls new nation- alist German Social Union. At least five persons were in- jured in fist fights b ween Strag- ser followers and left-wing dem- onstrators who sought to enter I meeting hall where Strasser. a former crony of Adolf Hitler, pro- claimed his new party, which calls for a "vermany ”indepcnd- ent of Wall street and the Krem- lin." Police riot squads quickly quelled the disorder and sealed off the meeting hall. The demon- strators, standing in front of the hotel where the meeting took place, shouted in chorus: "Out with Nazi Strasser." A Strasser follower fired the tear gas. Strasser, 59-year-old doctor of economics, broke with Hitler in the early 1930's and eventually fled the country. He returned in 1954 after 23 years of exile. much of the time in Canada. During 15 years in Canada he lived in Paradise and Bridgetown. 1N.S. He had just begun to speak when the demonstration began. He demanded that Germany be a neutral, anned country. part of "a fireproofcd wall" of neutral Riots Flare Up As Organizes H is countries stretching from Sweden via Austria to India. Strasser disavowed East and West, claim- ing there is "a deep-rooted ident- lly between Americanism and Bolshevism." DISCLAIMS NAZl AIMS Strasser disclaimed any ident- ity with the Nazi aims of Hit- ler. He said he split with Hitler bec;.'.ise he wanted the Nazis to nationalize heavy industry and large estates but that Hitler re- fused because he needed money from the industrialists. Addition- ally. Strasrcr said, he opposed Hitler's ltleadership cult” and One-Pill"!!! System and insistence on the theory of the German Covers Prince Edward island Like the Dew master race. He spoke out sharply against conscripted armies in West and East Germany. Such armies, he said. would be under foreign com- mand and would result tin "a frac- tricidal war on foreign orders." Strasser condemned the recent award of the Charlemagne "Euro- pean unity" award to Sir Winston Churchill by the city of Aachen, Germany. He called the award "a perverted spectacle" and said it was given in a man who once called the Germans "in people of 65,000,000 murderers and crimin- als.” Stating that President Eisen-' hower once boasted (in his mem- oirs) that he never she”: hands with id in in PRICE 5c Strasser A New Party a German officer, Strasser "We laugh when one tries to present us these men as allies today, calling on us to join them in a crusade against the new huns. Yesterday we were the buns. Today the Russians are the huns." The delegates cheered wildly at almost every sentence, overhead hung a giant emblem showing a crossed hammer and sword above to cars of corn. Thus far the Strasser move- ment has attracted little public notice. Unol'icially the West Ger- man government at Bonn regards him as sort of a crank without much political power. U. S. Vice-Consul ls Killed By Bomb In Nicosia NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) - A bomb thrown into a restaurant Saturday killed U. S. vice-consul William P. Boteler and injured three other Americans. British authorities seized three Youth! for questioning. British troops who swarmed on the scene about I minute after two bombs were lobbed through the open door of the little Soho restaurant seized the three youths during a search of sur- rounding alleys and streets. No official word was given out on the questioning of them. British authorities imposed I rigid cur- few on Nlcosia's Old City. Boteler. :8. of Washington, was seated at I table with a party of five other Americans, all civilian radio employees of the state de- partment. The two bombs landed almost directly under Boteler's chair and he caught the full force of the blast. STAGGER8 T0 DOOR Ho staggered to the door where he collapsed across the thrash- Pgovogt 15:1, ld.l-lswastahsntopnritish ----. ””"" "' ”""Tf” ”' 3.02.2. i:..n"wl "ti 2.": ?---.- ---w - - itt!-Ttt-;1n?l1ll'lf' . ii A" -VP-'”l" '"'''”a' me: name lain; not fall and 1. B. headquarters. which served as a hospital. Tho city returned to normal sftertheallclearstap.m. Cs . M. P. lfusgravo. federal liaison st. John's had I similar exer- yoar in which an as- finsnilld 85.000 were evacuated. Mair Cashisi said no other major at 1 were planned hero this year, but said he was considering a quick surprise exer- cise d buaiauo hours some- time this sonata.- cook on” Iran Reported Boffer HALIFAX (CP)-The Maritime amateur radio network says Joos r l'B' are. was feeling "murdi better" unday after a week-long bout with sea sickness. Four French-born adventurers. who hop! to drift and sail to Europe. said no assistance was needed but Martina might be sent ashore if I ' ship would take him. The sailors were unable to givs their position for tho second day Sunday because of in. There was no wind. they said. They were 840 miles east of here Friday. Messages from the l'Egars were relayed to H by I ham operator at St. ' at Mi- queloa. JUNGLE CIIASII KILLS NINE KUALA LUMPUR. Malaya (AP) - An RAF transport plane with nine persons -Ibonrd crashed Friday in the Pcrak le. A search tinny which hoe ed its wsy'to the scene Sat- an-dpy said there was no sur- vlvsn. The plane was drovnlns forces. suppliostofllnllllwlrllv llcan lenders point out what they b 'ieve to be I stroll! I'll Cll President Etseabvwor intends to See Strong Signs Eisenhower Plans To Run In Nov. Election WASHINGTON (AP) - newt rmvoul to compress the pro- arood dfour-day convention into res Iys. If it acts on such a proposal Ines. cook Iboard the 30 foot bib party leader. Capitalist," he added. Soviet government Plan conference In Ceylon. Kiledlia A GoodNewsl'o SACKVILLE. N-E tell her their new-born baby's life is out of danger. Bis car hit a bridge on the city's outskirts At the nearby Amherst hospital. where her baby was born Thurs- day, was in a state of shock. Otherwise liar generally good. diste total blood t. necessary. Mr. doctor sped to Halifax with the WI! y. The infant responded to trans- fusion: and the father was on ma way to tell his wife the good news when a tire on his car blew out. His passenger. Roy Der-otte of Middle Sackville. was injured but not severely. AP Foreign News Aiialyi Behind Soviet smiles. sharp struggle appears to be develop- lng in the Communist world to- day. it seems headed for I crisis-one of the Kremlln's own making. W The struggle arises from di st of opinion among the lead- ers tbo Communist party the latlei. primarily over econ-' omic po cs. Eventually the contest is likely to have one of two results: Tho soviet regime. as the ruler world communism. will N711 N harsh Stalinist methods of con trol-the one - man dictatorship mw being piilrtied-or It will lib- as-aliu the rodent and cndangsr party rule. The soviet lsadersip set all deliberately to loud world on- sions. but with the id&' of lathe - ittunsdottfdbeapllacnwith no rooms. "But then. hello anmcommlllllt 'm oval I Mr. Pearson was a guest of the last autumn while en route to at Colombo E (CP)--I "F were at the doctors said Mrs. Girouard had been told of the tragedy and condition was Her six-pound baby was born with an Rh factor and an imme- Girouard and I and from rodents czonndfs who ofiotbestalln The condition of two other An- crlcsnl at the hospital was de- scribod as serious but not Fl"- They w Jock Bone. 33. Chevy' , 1141.. wounded in the Ilndtlors and legs. and James bag 20. of Los Angelu, suffering wounds. Jamal colon-ion. 8. of Bern- ton. PI.. the third wounded Am- orican. was released from the hospital. 'vlng treat- ment fosgf b fragments in the arms. I- Char-1911. Groff. ll. of Wash- fngton, and Donald P. Mulvq, N. of Fl&hlng. N. Y.. who also table. were troatsd for shock. - U. S. Sfool Firms In Wage Deadlock , NEW YORK (AP)-A deadlock oped Friday hetwoon the "big " steel firms and the United Steelworkers of America in negoti- a on s new contract. The union rejected wage and other" proposnalsnby 0.3. Steel. "' as "on- tirely inadequate." "Big Three" spokesmen replied that to meet the union demands would "touch off. another ruinous round of inflation and undarmine the business of, companies." The impasse appeared to knock out proviouslyoxpnsood hopes by both union and mouagamut for lmposins of over-all lending operations. The HOME BUILDERS PROTEST On Tig OTTAWA (CP) The govern- ment is standing firm on its tight- money policy, though a storm of protest is beginning to well up from Canada's house builders. High-placed financial authorities say the Bank of Canada will not how to pressures to reduce its record high interest rate. It likely will make no reduction. unless the United States takes such action first, they said. - And Works Minister Winters has stated in the Commons the gov- ernment does not contemplate any direct steps to increase the flow of mortgage funds for housing purposes. In fact, the only increased aid the house builders may get is through the chartered banks them- selves and other 'lending institu- tions. Whlle the banks generally have limited the flow of loans at the request of the Bank of Can- ada, authorities here said the cen- tral bank gave no orders as to which category of loans were to be reduced-. . . -. nQn.v at saunas i "MI banks had tightened up on mortgage lending as one measure stronger controls on view here is that the banks now are firmly in the saddle in direct- lag and maintaining this over-all control and that it may loosen up on mortgage loans while tighten- ing up on other lending fields. other the banks will do so remains to be seen. Governor Jamal Coyne of the Bank of Can- ado told investment dealers at St. Andrews. N.B., Thursday that every month during the so-called restrictive period. bank loans in- creased. But he added: ". . . It seems probable that the rise in total bank loans will slow down before very long. . . . some cstegories of loans may decline while others go on increasing." A high rate of house-building is one of the elements in Canada's economic boom. Last year Canada completed I peak 127,500 new homes and carried over 79.700 un- completed houses into 1956. The carryover was 11,000 higher than the year. WORLD TRENDS Home builders were planning an even more ambitious program for 1956. Titan the axe fell. World inflationary influences gave rise to higher interest charges by central banks in and North Amer ica. Last A , the Bank of Can- lda cllmaxed a sales of rate rises on only settlemosit. Sharp Struggle Appears Shaping Up in Guarded phrases In the Soviet pre-' and in leaders' statements indicate the struggle is between those who represent the mono- lithic party apparatus and the technocrst. concerned with econ- omics as well as , The pro! reflects contest. There are i ences to pubic com consurnt goods. sec-saw t refer- about '&s corno yea.u to main the U. I. B. R. I bettsr show window for Red philosophy. invariably such state- units are balanced by reurencc doctrine that boavy Eustry must come before all elhsee, to MIX! the Sovietrglllon 1 mi ht& err on eI . The gstalhiltpovloctrine still is expressed by Nikita Khrushchlv. first secretary of the pl-rtv Ind chisf downgroder of Stalin. Dsstructld of the Stalin myti smash: a series of dilemma!- fho mums Stalinist! nil in foreign pol- icy. dieopt as Stalinism means no-Inn rule In a mistaken so tadsnch countries as Yul- csgqms ldadershlv in R1. Stalin was bad ba- K 0 UPI Golda. d World by boosting its interest charges to But Stalinlsm is good because it means Soviet world power. All this produced both confu- sion Ind boldness in the Soviet Union itself and certainly in the satellites. In parties abroad. con- fusion reigns and leaders mark time to see how the argument comes out. it would be difficult to arrive at a man-by-man breadkdown of the Soviet party split. it could arnountto division between Khrushchev and Premier N. A. Bulganln. Though Khrushchev is the chief de-Stallnlaur. he also represented stsllnlsrn in the su- per-industrialization drive. Bulg- anln spent much of career In economics. They appear to have reached I temporary solution- two-msn rule. The destruction of Stalin was I gamble. it might onuolidate the woman dictatorship by offering aconttsstwfththpadhutlt has tended to raise attacks on communist pqrty policies gen- orally. Canada Standing Firm 1i-Money Policy chartered banks to a record three per cent. The chartered banks were clearly advised to trim their lending sails. Protests followed. The Toronto Metropolitan Home Builders Asso- ciation appealed to Prime Min- ister St. Laurent to increase mort- gage funds. The shortage was causing a desperate situation. it said. Builders were being thrown into idleness. At Edmonton, a National l-louse Builders' Association official said construction activity will drop to about one-half the 1955 rate if more mortage funds are not made available. In the Senate, Liberal Senator A. N. McLean, a former banker, said credit-tightening and the boost in interest rates may have serious effects on the economy. The Bank banks can make term loans to home Lutlders. "If we want to drive the country . socialistic, we couldn't do anything more effective than forcing good small borrowers back into a posi- tion where they would have to pay more than double the bank inter- est rate for their small require- ments." LOAN VALUES DOWN Last month, federal authorities I estimated housing loans for 1956 may drop between 15 and 2) per cent from last year's peak. In the first four months of 1956. mortgage insurance issued by the government's Central Mortgage and Housing Corporation dropped to 13,000 housing units from 15.300 in the similar 1955 period. Value of loans insured decreased to of Canada, he said. virtually nul- lified legislation u n d e r which FREDERICTON (CP)- An ar- duous but quiet campaign is climaxed today with the election of a government to administer the affairs of New Brunswick for the next five years. Nearly soo,ooo of the province's more than half-million residents are eligible to vote in the 25th general election since Confedera- tlon. The polls open at 9 a.m. and close at 7 p. m. ADT. Standing at dissolution w a s Progressive Conservatives, 33, and Liberals, 16. Three PC seats were vacant. The heaviest vote is expected to be polled in Saint John city, which has the largest number of voters in the province. The 32,000 eligible electors, who sent four Progressive Conservatives to the 52-seat legislature in 1952, have their choice of 12 candidates rep- resenting Conservative, Liberal and Social Credit parties. SOCREDS ENTER is Social Credit. bidding for mem- bershlp in the legislature on I large scale for the first time. en- tered 18 candidates against full slates of 52 Liberals and Conserv- atives. Two independents are see seats in St. John and York counties. The New Brunswick election Is the first provincial content since the federal government approved construction of the trans-Canada ,', " but that issue is expected to have little effect on New Brunswick voting. Saskatchewan ari Quebec go to the polls Wed- nesday. Premier Hugh John Flemming carried his rampaiizn for rc-elec- ' fn 'r'fnrnis throughout the province during an ll-day harri- storming tnur. besides offering his program for a new m d t through newspapers. radio and television. Liberal lender Austin C. Taylor stumped thri oh the province in I nine-day campaign for election .. s130,7l9.000 from 81t6.825,000 last year. Are EIigible.To.Go To Polls In New Brunswick Today of his party which was defeated in 1952 for the first time in 17 years. DEVELOPMENT ISSUE Principal issue was industrial :-velopment. Premier Flemming told voters his government sought a new mandate "to continue what we have started" and said that the Liberal party would "wreck" his hydro - electric development program if elected. Mr. Taylor criticized the han- dling of contracts for the 350,000.- 000 Beechwood hydro - electric project. attacked Mr. Flemrnlng's ” with ' do- ing business with the government and said the Conservative gov- ernment had not lived up to its 1952 campaign pledges. Both leaders have predicted victory. Mr. Taylor estimated his party would win "36 or 37 seats. Premier Flemming forecast an increase in representation over the 36 seats won four years ago. One of four Social Credit mem- bers of Parliament directing the New Brunswick campaign said the ill candidates in the field could form a balance of power. "forcing the government to legis- late for the people or resign." The campaign was quiet with s minimum of heckllng at party 82ND BIRTHDAY Rt. Hon. Arthur Meighen. Can- ada's only living former prime ” t . poses for his birthday photo for the Toronto Globe and Mail. Mr. Melghen was 81 June 16. Ha stlll.walks more final two milu such day from his home to his office on Toronto's Bay street. Mir. Melg-hen. I Conservative. was prime min- ister during 19M-21 and served briefly as government leader in 193. He left political life after his defeat in a York South by- election in 1942. (CP Photo) FRENCH MINISTER DIE! P.-this (AP) - Jacques!- Dumeanil. 74, a minister eral Cabinets before the Second World War, died Islday MIN following a heart. attack. He WI! navy minister in tho lllirriot inet of 1924. minister of in the Tardieu Cabinet in If and air minister in tho Laval Cabinet in 1931. . 1 Mun Milli loin. tuiiiis out to an A lioivi HUSBAND! rallies. Voters may choose one of three ways to vote under the u mplica- ted provincial electoral system. They may use party ballots hearing only the names of the partyis candidates: delete one or more names from the party ballot and substitute the name of an- other party's candidate, or write their choices on a blank piece of paper. SMELTING prom-:ri:n' Britain pioneered the cation of coal to the smelting of iron ore from the 17th century onward. Injury To British urcosui, Cyprus (AP)-A for- est are Sunday night in the Tro- dos mountains of northwestern Cyprus spread death and Injury among 2,000 British troops hunt- ing rebel extremists. Greek Cypriot sources said i! to 15 Britons had lost their lives lighting the names. A British official said several soldiers were reported killed when they were trapped by the fire and many others were in- lured. A British public information of- floor said the victims "are being taken to hospitals all ova the place." cm. of the fire was not defu- mined. Previous fires have been Forest Fire Brings Death And On Cyprus" Greek Cypriot movement for unit- ing this British colony with Greece. ACCUBE BRITISH other sources accused the Brit- ons of starting the fires gh The British faces in l;'rldsy on wha&fhfoy believed was t e hideout . underground gr-cck Cypriot guerrilla loaders carelessness and by morta fire. . TORONTO (CP) - Tempern turcs bulletin issued by the Tor- onto public weather office Melton at 9 p.m.: (Night) (Dd! Dawson Vancouver Edmonton . . Calgary Regina Winnipeg Toronto rs assesses: Fredericton . Saint John .. Moncton Halifax Sydney . . . St. John's . HALIFAX (CP)-The weather oflice here predicts a northerly flow of cool air with just cw moisture to cause cloudy skid most regions of the Marltlrbm Regional forecasts: H, Northern Nova Scotla. p Edward Island and eastern N consoles: Cloudy 7 seeacoassasa :aasa3aa High tide today at Ch town at 6:16 am. and 7:33 p. - Runtico st1:46 am. and 2:! let sighteu bloiaoiosloio. esslag,tsnslnl.TIlIeu!d.bow- ovsr.rolso Iislosscor eeiiu-suona night and smock id-bums. trnopsw med flronnrtsro. ad; the -outofhnrklt thonurdnborrssde dry ha-Hkuduosuo iancuirloumn codslyuu:nsni.oossQ '..;'...s.-...,.,..,.- .. . . t .. C-..-o-mini-u -2