. - Buyer meets seller with Guarb , . dials Want Ads. Dial 8506 ask for classified ad taker, for quick results. ......---i--- Canadian Ass'n. For Retarded Children Formed ronoaro (GP) - L. H. Hall -' .2-no ':: (.5 an a - in :3;-d ofpdirectors of the Canldl-II Association for Retarded Chlldral. Ths directors, reprelclllllll In 10 provinces. are charged with de- veloping by AD?” I ””0"5l .1111) for legislation. educa on. rehabilitation. research. lnlllhr tlons and home care for Canadas 13.000 mentally retarded thud”!- It was the first annual conven- tion for the association. wtlaich rep- ;-uani 70 groups across a coun- try. Hall said in a dinner gpeech than are m.ooo retarded couver ' - C. Kit hen of Halifax third vies- presideent and Ir. L. some of Norwoood. IIIII-. lNllIl'U' pmvincuiainotnnsn? ,”'f" e...... as... H 2 ,IL ".'i'.:'."”.;..-..... in "and Hirsch, both of Halifax. New Brunswick: Mrs. L. J. Gen- det. Moncton; and II. I. Count: of Lancaster. Qusbteicnznall and G. D. Sutton Use Sub In Mercy Voyage During Storm animzocx. Scotland (C!-ll-A WEEOKAGE OF 7 Passengers Escape When s x 1956 PONTIAC Drew At Guelph Car is Wrecked At Hampton For The Weelr-End Seven persons were taken to the Prince Edward island Hospital shortly after eight o'clock Satur- day evening after a 1956 Pontiac sedan in which they were riding reportedly ' nt out of control abouts quarter of a mile West of Hampton on the Trans Canada Highway..Several of the seven have critical injuries but all are to survive. In hospital are, Frank Millar. Victoria. lie is suffering from s broken shoulder and a broken pel- vis. Edward Bonar from Cape Breton. Nova Scotia is in critical condition with third degree burns. Mr. Clifford Sherren. Hampton. has a fractured shoulder. head lacer- ation! and internal injuries. Mrs. Clifford Sherren is suffering from GUEI-PH (OP)-0901' 8 DIW- Boscusission. Tihelr 13-year-old son. lg9r:'J:."go”;':r:'gv': P3; PS: Geelargewgaennllgi frll')ll:llllll)l37(llkl has lYlV0d 59" sallmlly l” 599ml l-M chug mum mg daugme, ' mm wedrend at the home of his father- has facial lacerations. a liroken l l”il”'- Edward 'l”lm”P' fwm” collalr bone! and a broken leg. She geirihe New York Metro- is s so suf erlng from shock. - c0m""3' Since all of the occupants of the! W” 9"" W” duh” 9! inf car are in hospital and not avaii- fl” 1”” T”"m”' will 3”, for quuuomng, n 1. not plial where he was treated for as- known who was driving the carll"""f”- H9 '""W"””'d ll" "'3" which ll believed to have rolled "ll" 5' Pl"Yw:':d"h ";:m'l"f:-1 over several times after cutting off Pin" Dfew ' Ff "5 M 0.. several fence posts and mining is '"'k' "” dwlslm 9". ' Wslt la rest in I field. The vehicle which lend by Wm! Mime? - '3" is owned by Miller, was travelling l "l "mu ' l” h wmplmb "' toward Crapaud at the time of the .”""d' accident. (See 0ihI' picture on Page 18). BOMFARD REL POSITIONS LONDON 1 AP--Tlhe admirall-V Conservatives Meet Today To Plan Successor To Mr. Drew M(gP).-Ali.-lat. thew V Commons members are, , , here fin today's caucus to . plans to choose a succusogfos Hen. Goons Drew. I The 02 - year - old Opposition leader announced his decision to retire because of ill health Sept. 21 and last week party offl- clals began arranging a series of meetings to pick a new party chlbf. - Little is expected to come from today's meeting except the choice of an acting leader for the pm ll" in the Commons. This likely be lion. Earl Rowe. member for Dutferln - Simcoe. He. previously had acted as Conservative House leader when Mr. Drew was so sen NATIONAL CONVENTION Actually. Mr. Drew's resigna- tion won't be officially accepted until , when the party' 10 - member national 'eirecutlve meets here to set the date and venue for a national convention to pick a new Conservative leader. Most prominently mentioned a me n g Conservative E Wtassgootli ioa lsrael havi agreed to lnstrud Saturday announced that two Australian destroyers bombarded Communist rebel positions in Ma- laya. The shelling was carried out by the Tobruk and Anne on the east coast of Johore. the an- nouaeesnant said. .. cnpassvdtee. rt-sintc1'rost' '-at v- vs - ' Ontario” also has been , A possibility as Mr. Drew's sooeeeaoruliut he has al- tiinounced he has no intu- of leaving the provincial for tbe federal political field. CHARLUITE MENTIONED Outside active political clrclm is Dr. Sidney Smith. president of the University of Toronto. lie is reported a possible candidate for the lea ip, too. liven Ottawa's oolorfu Mayor Charlotte Wlrlttim has been mentioned for the job. man: lift! of the possible can- s as s as yet vcn in- dication of his fnteuti'olns. wlillzh 1 ”"....'2'.'.t. P.'.t..'?":L'.."”."l'h"”' ”” N" - " 7”” maryconcern. The French and 5”" ”'c""'' "''”'l"3 ”m'ml, Elf-lltlali governments believe the accepts Mr. Drew's resignation. gum nqw 3 he is still the party's leader in name. , but the leadership contenders are c?:rain to Iggtln emerging soon a Tnesd a meeting. after the vets. The national, executive almoc am certainly will choose Ottawa er Winnipeg as the scene for the na- tional convention. althm To- been hen route and Montreal have 3'3.".'a7"..”2'&'l.?' 43.5: a. Jordan, To Complain To PARIS (AP - Britain and France seem to have come to conclusion that the attempt to wrest the Suez Canal from the hands of Presidt Nasser of E ymhas run into a solid - b lr-the American presidential election. ' who wins the election is not the This French-British conclusion eornesaalcolthcllnaiions seeking settlement of the Sues ls- nue have indicated they will join nnally Monday in launching the Inc: Canal Users' Association. SCUA is intended to push for multi-nation control or the watts- 'r".”' is ".13.. lIl'.”ili'3'g'.' U. N. Re Israel i..'.7... PLANS SUSPENDED 'l'he SCUA nations. while rean- tng their own -means of running the canal. will also note that major Western shippers have sim- misled plans for a mass by-past of the canal in light oi Egypt's smock operattu DAMASCUB (AP) - Syria. L0 barion. Jordan and Egypt have de- cided tocanplsintothiUNSce- nrity Council against "Israel's re- cent repeated aggression agaiin Jordan." Syrian foreign ministry The four Arab powers bordering tbeirUNdelsgatestofllstbecom-' '1'..”;':..?”.:2.?.E"':”5.3'L'i.li.':'.": W W "W W W M" an "Covers Edward Island Like 11.. Dew” CANADA. MONDAY. OCTOBER 1. 1956 HUNQARIAN riisuiisit. mcrunso Two More Join Mystery,- Red Conference BLACKPOOL, Eng. (Reuters)- The Labor party opens its 55th annual delegate conference today with an all-out attack on the gov- ernment over its handling of the Suez Canal crisis. Party chief llugh Gaitskell will signal his first leadership appenh ance at an annual conference by moving an emergency resolu- tion i ii the governmentis methods. This resolution was prepared Sunday as 1.200 delegates replen- cnting the 6.000.000 - member op- position party crowded into this west coast seaside resort for the week-long convention. Socialists of all shades. from right wing to extreme left. expect the conference to differ sharply from most of its post-war forerun- ners. KEY ISSUES Sin th party met I Yelr ago, cigar! ittlee. former Socialist for 20 years. stepped down in prime minister and Labor leader favor of Gaitskell. who at 50 years of age, is a generation his junior. In the same interval, internal dlssensionnsk which dhad split thm: Labor ra s - an according some " l "-ts lost the party the 1955 general election-appear to have been h under control. .3" "it. 't.''..."”.. ”r...' '?'"i.'.'l an, winger. remains the .geat impoli- idlerableandwlllos IIOIKIU ue. ' The so-yeaiaold Welshman. 50- the and Thursdby fasted hyclattskellina contest- .'""".'."!!l!.'.'""” in conference here "Wednesday , mostly on the Sues issue. When the talks were over they could announce was that ey had agreed on how to handle the case behire the UN security agree Council -- a debate from which they expect no result because of the Russian veto. Russia he been supporting lent h in The tiniest of force as aid from the picture. French and quick to start a military bulldw after Egypt seized the canal July 8. it seemed highly unlikely they ever seriously considered moving against Egypt without U. I. sup- U. K. Labor Party To Attack Gov't year. is standing for the post of honorary treasurer, which carries a seat on the 28-strong national executive. the party's governinl committee. THIRD ATTEMPT it is Bevan's third attempt to gain the treasurship. He suffered an overwhelming defeat in 1955. when Galtakell won by 5.475.000 to his 1.225.000 votes. Bevan now is opposed- George Brown. a hard-hitting for- mer cabinet minister and -non- Bevanite. Meanwhile. Gaitskell himself faces the biggest test of career. Though elected leader of the parliamentary socialists. his appointment has still to receive the formal endorsement of the delegate conference, which is final arbiter of policy in the Labor party. PREDICT VICTORY Many Socialists predict a tri- umph for the new leader. who. they argue, has added consider- ably to his stature through his stature through his performance on the Sues Canal issue in Par- liament's recent emersellcll IN sion. La claims it was the opposi- tlonm ujh GIllIkEll -- WlIlClI made the-government decide to refer the issue to the United Na- ti ns. ?l'he canal issue-which will he discussed in the confereilltu opening session-gives Galtskell a p late ladxfllo. l opportun to put himself :3;-uedaeisively iii the rank and I Blame Elections For U.S. Lack Of Support -On Suez rt. powbat the Britons and French now want is to threaten Egypt with new. stringent economic sanctions unless President Nasser s to international control of the canal. At this time all the United States is saying is ll!!! Egypt will inevitably lose interna- tional trade and co-operation as ltmg as Nasser refuses. But as for sanctlons-that ls. concerted ecoir omic punishment - the United States just isn't having any- The French and British are that the icture ml! mg after the U.p 8. election. They feel that once election do! lg past. there would be no need to fear the immediate political ol- iect of decisive action. B. C. Merchants Fighting Gift-Stamp Sales Scheme VANCOUVER (CF) - A large group or British Columbia mer- chants have combined to flllll "I0 gift-stamp sales promotion plan. The group, mah up of chain- store firms and associations of retailer-3, gays such stamps al- ready are in use in Eastern Call- ada but are contrary to "the in- tent of the law." They are sold by United States promotion firm! to retailers who give them to cus- tomers with purchases. Use of the stamps to obtain gifts from the promoters is possible because of, legal loopholes. says Manager it. C. Boulton of B.C. Retail Merchants Association. one of the member organlratlons. "Our job is not only to keep these gimmicks out of B.C. but to have them outlawcd nation- ally." he sald. '”'l'he code needs tightening up." The group has declared the stamps "bad for both the retailer and the customer." against Jordan Arab-Israeli tmistlce and Secretary General flammab- border '.'S.."iI WASHINGTON IA!)--The 3- cesser to the lot, I-C reosueb SPEED IN THOUSANDS OF MILES Fantastic Plane Forecast alrsraftdulnoltoysarsap. Iver sonic barrier. which on Uh from air. To reach the speeds attained M )(-l and aimed at la the X-ll 57 World War shipping at a cost of Grand Admiral Karl Doenitz ' Out Of Prison BERLIN (AP) - G;-.nd Ad. miral Karl Doenitz. who took over from Hitler as me last fuchrer of Nazi Germany was re- leascd today from Spandau prison. Doenitz, now. a sick man of 65, completed a 10-year term as a war criminal. The steely-eyed admiral was the last commander of the Nazi fleet. He negotiated the surrender of Germany after Hitler committed suicide in a Berlin bunker. Doenitz, whose submarine packs sank l5.w0.000 tons of Second thousands of Allied lives. told his jailer before leaving that all he wants now is peace to end his days. He suffers from high blood pressure. Of the seven top Nazis jailed in Spandau in 1946 by the Allied war crimes tribunal at Neumberg. Doenitz received the shortest sen- tence. He is the first to be re leased after serving his time. Mrs. Doenitz took her husband directly to the home of friends in West Berllnls Llchtarfelde suburb in the American sector. Doenitz has expressed no intent st in the cries of Neo-Nazi splin- ter groups who want him to aa- sume leadership of a new rightist movement in Germany. Pay Tribute To War Dead In Italian Campaign CASSINO. ltely (GP) - Thon- sands of Commonwealth soldiers Sunday returned to Italy to pay tribute to their Second World War coinradu who never left. , At ceremonies near this little vlllase that 11 years ago was a bloody battleground, Field Man shal Earl Alexander of Tunis un- veiled a memorial to 4.008 British and Commonwealth soldiers who have no known graves. They died durins the bitter Italian and Sicil- ian campaigns. - Leading the Canadian contingent wepe an officer and 15 senior non- Canadlan Infantry Brigade group commissioned officers of the and in West Germany. All are veter- ans of the Italian campaign. Canada also was represented by Pierre Dupuy, C -" t r sailor to Italy. and Ma). - Gen. Michael L. Brennan. army adju- tarit-general. Among hundreds of p" here was 73-ycarold Mrs. B. F. Newroth of Woodstock, N.B., who got a Job to earn money for the trip to visit the grave of her son. Sgt. S. A. Newroih of the Carle- ton and York Regiment. OFFERS THANKS Around the new memorial. flower-banked white crosses mark the graves of 4.80 more Com- monwealth servicemen who fell in the same campaigns. Nearby. at the foot of the slopes of Monte Casslno. is a large weed - grown area which is the ruins of the old town. Some 5,000 citizens of the newly- bullt town lined the ccmetcry's wire fence to watch the ceremony on the ground they donated. Earl Alexander, former gover- nor-grneral of Canada and Second World War Allied commander in Italy. thanked the Italians for their "generous and freely offered gift" of land. Referring to the men who served under him. he said they came "from all the King's domlnlons. united in a common loyalty and a common cause." Mrs. Newroth. a widow. said she took a Job looking after an elderly relative to raise the money for the trip. "it meant 24 hours a day. but I saved every cent," she said. "l'm an old-age pensioner and my family said i shouldn't come to Italy. They said i was too old but I feel fine and here i am." The pipes of the Scots Guards elrlrled out a lament as 24 glam oimmonwealth flags fluttered, ro- vvellng the it marble column which form the centre piece 1 the memorial garden. Suggests 2,000-Mile African Oil Pipeline GWANDA. hutherri Rhodesia. (Reuters) -9 A 2.00 - mile tran- Afrlcan .gdlee was loony becoming cloudy wltli efewshewers in noon. clearing In the evening. Low-high 40 and 65. LONDON (AP)-Premiers Nik- olai Bulganin of Russia and Erna Geroe of Red HBBKIU loiued President Tito and Nikita Khrush- chev at their 111, ' Yalia conference Sunday. A '”' broadcast made it apppear the ting wasi only a happy family gathering. But West- ern diplomats are sure the meet- ing is concerned with deep con- flicts within the Soviet bloc. The Yugoslav president is be lieved playing a key role in a Communist bloc struggle for power erupting from the down- grading of Stalin and softer Sov- iet treatment of' its East Europ- ean satellites. It was presumed Khrushchev would use the occasion to try to erase one source of trouble-the friction between Yugoslavia and Hungary. Geroe's rise to the premiership In Hungary last. July was a sop to Tito. Geroe displaced Motyaa Rakosl, s Stalinist who took a leading role in ousting Tito from the comlnform eight years ago. SUPPORT NEEDED Geroe ordered a large-scale re- lease of Titolst Hungarians, whose imprisonment was a main source of friction with Yugoslavia. The two countries still have economic the utter- Af Yalfaigil Western Diplomats See Deep Conflicts In Russian Bloc Western or i p l o in a t s believe Khrushchev is concerned, primar. lly, with getting T'ito's support for his dc-Stallnizaiion policy. Reportsxto London diplomats indicate Khrushchev is locked in a struggle with old Bolsheviks in the Soviet hierarchy. Former ftrelsn minister V. II. znr Kaganovich. two old Staliaista are said to feel Khrushchev has , b, weakening thesovietposb tionemong satellites. TITO NOT HAPPY Tito is supposed to be unhappy about a letter sent by Moscow to soviet Iltdlites warning them a g a i n at embrac ”Titoism"- that is, his asserted opendenca of Moscow - too wholeheartedly. The letter also said Yugoslav Communists are not true Marx- lst-Lenlnlsts. A Yugoslav spokesman has de- Yalta as ideological in character. Western dents w e r e barred from going to Yalta and the Soviet press kept mum on the significance of the eeting. Tito's departure for the Sovid Union was completely unheralded. He put aside his known dislike of air travel to fly back with Khrush- scores to settle. chev. NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) - Niel osia was a dead city Sunday night. The island's capital was silent, sullen and tense under the mom drastic curfew ever imposed by British authorities. The Greek quarter was shut down. Streets were deserted. wur- dows shuttered and doors locked. Police loudspeaker vans toured the area warning: "Stay indoors. Anyone seen on the streets is it- able to he shot." The stringent curfew was im- posed in the wake of the worst week of anti-British vJ0lEllCe by Greek Cypriot extremists since they ' k ” their , ' bombs and bullets 18 months ago. Nine Britons. including a woman, Nicosia Is Dead City In Curfew Molotov and Deputy Premier Le- T gonetoofarwlthhlsaonerap-7 scribed the Black See can at ,1 1 5 . Z... ,. .-V i wounded during the was. slain by three Greek reprisal murders. One Greek Cypriot was shot to a non-political minder. SUSPE of Nicosia. six Greek and two English language newlpllltrs sus- pended publication because of severe restrictions. Authorities will allow food stores and-markets to open for an hour today to permit residents is get provisions and water. Tire curfew was imposed Friday after EOKA gunmen shot down of three British police sergeants in ledra street - known as murda mile. Two were killed and tin were slain and 17. Britons third was wounded. PORT LOUIS, Mauritius (Reu- ters)-Princess Margaret enjoyed the sun on a secluded tropical beach Sunday and went swimm- ing in an exotic lagoon protected from the Indian Ocean surf by a bar of white coral reef. The princess wore a pale blue bathing suit and white cap as she splashed in the clear blue lagoon. It was her first 'free" after- noon ashore since the East Afri- can tour started a week ago. lot the island colony's officialdorn ac- companied her to the specially- preparcd beach at 14 Chaland for a picnic lunch. Police patrolled the approaches to the beach-normally an army leave centre- and policewoman trained as lifeguards were on duty nearby. Earlier Sunday the princess drove through cheering crowds to the morning service at St. Paul's Church of England at Vacoaa. THOUSAND! WATCH Thousands of brightly - dressed lslande is lined the route of her 0- cheer as Princess Has Quiet Day After g Unruly Greeting From Crowd i stepped ashore. ' Constables flailed away with their batons. A number of the crowd had to be carried away on stretchers. Record crowds packed into the enclosure at the Champs de Marl race course later in the attempt to get near her. Again crash bar- rlers were broken down and pollen hadtorushtatorestoreorder. St. Laurent ls Now A Great-grandfather OTTAWA (CP) -Prim Min- ister St. Laurent has beconu a great-grandfather. He's proud of it and pleased. But he can't re 1 ember the exact date of the event. He said Saturday his first Kl!”- grsndchild-e girl-was born OI Sept. 5 or 0, he couldn't remem- ber whlch. She was doing very much she weighed at birth. He said he hasn't sea her in what was officially described as - nil it 1