Maxims of a Mere Man A sense of humor is a saving grace. - t I . . 7719 G"ztaI-dmn W--cw-d . I 1 Island Like the Dew WN. CANADA. SATURDAY, APRIL 14, 1956 12 PAGES . Board Suggests Pay Boost Holidays For Rail Workers v OTTAWA (CP)-Unions battling the railways for heavy contract concessions Friday won backing from a federal conciliation board for a t60.000,000-a-year part of their demands. Observers here considered tbl board's report likely would be re- jected by the railways but eventu ally accepted by the unions. if not fully at least as a basis for negoti- TENSION IS EASING U.N. Secretary iMaking - 1.3 nnso TABLE AT CANADIAN CLUB DINNER LAST NIGHT 3'; AIJVOCATES PATIENCE British War-Correspondent Talks.On Far East Problems "It is I first class job if we can keep the world out of war until the end of the Century and then hand it over to the next generations as a good place in which to live". said Mr. William Courtenay, O.B.E.. M.M.. British War correspondent and world citizen. speaking at the final season's dinner of the Prince Edward Island branch of A ' t ion of Canadian Clubs last night. Dr. Frank Macltinnon presided. Taking as his subject "Recent Developments in the Far East". Mr. Courtenay by the use of maps surveyed the long front from Cey- ion through Malaya, Singapore. Indonesia. China, Hong Kong. For- mosa to Japan and Korea. In giving the British viewpoint he felt that Communist China should have a seat in the United Nations. The other countries of the world could than deal with China on s more equitable basis and at the same time, point out to the Chin cse' that u a member of the United Nations they had a certain oblig- ation to fulfill. In other words they would have to show their sincerity by action rather than by words. FORMOSA SHOULD BE HELD The speaker was of the opinion Federal Bldg. To Be Finished By Sept. 27 OTTAWA, (Special) - Target date for the completion of the Federal Building at Charlotte- town now under construction is Septcmh 17 of this year. Works Minister Winters said in the Com- monds Friday. "By the end of March." he added, "81 percent of the new blinding had been com- pleted nnd pold for." Mr. Wlnterf statement on the Charlottetown building was made in reply to questions asked by J. Angus Mncbean, Conservative M.P.. for "ueenl. Coming Events Card pin-ty Msrshlield tonight. Luncheon and prises. starting at Regular Saturday night dance. St. Peters Bay Hall. Manners. Or- chestra. , North River nun: tonight woll nknto 8.!) to 10.30. pm. Admission as and as. See "Where's The Flre"-Ver- non River hall. Tuesday, April 17. Gfood specialties. Time 8:30. Dance 3 er. "Aaron Slick From Punkln Cree " three nct comedy by Y,P. U. Hunter River. April i8th. M5 p.m. Grind Bingo St. Andrew's Hall. Mount Stewart. Monday April min. I p.m. two special prizes. door Cleaning Timothy. wheat. and oats until May nineteenth. Please make appointment. Wilfred Pick- ering. Clint on. Fmncrsi We will be cleaning srnln daily also sweetened beet Dulp in stock. P.L. Morris. Shar- gnll Feed Service. 12 Lower Queen fare- Door Showlng at Mt. Stewart Friday and Saturday-"so This In Paris" -Technicolor musical comedy. dc- nictlng the adventure of three nil- orx on lepve in Paris. Yol-k Concert next week Two nights only-Wednesday and Thun- der April it and 10. Two bonus of fun and music. Tickets avail- able at door-do and 25 cents. Come early Burins Plll Monday at Freder- icton. Tuesday Brookfleld 9 n.m.. Milton I0. Railway Wharf ll York l,p.m.. Bedfbrd 2. rm- ldin LI. Mt. Stewart I. Powncl 4.8. Vernon River I. Paying OII '53;-l.rEwlplgcoverl))hc I OI IIIIKIII that American policy in not allow- ing Communist China to take Form oss was commendable. At the same time he thought Chlang Hal Chek should withdraw from the smaller Islands off the Chinese mainland. noting it would prevent the Communist forces from obtain- ing a military as well as a pro- paganda victory at a later date. "Trade is a great healing balm between nations", said Mr. Court- easy. "and it is the hope of the British that trade will begin flow- ing between China and the count- ries of the Western World." He said the attitude of the United States was understandable in not wanting Chins in the United Nat- ions because the Amcricans had suffered and lost most heavily in the Korean War. Mr. Courtenay explained that we cannot understand fully recent dev elopment in the For Eaztnunlcsa we understood first what U oom- munists were after. All that the Commonwenth and America were trying to achieve was to "frustrate the knavish communist tricks" and protect the people of SE Asia and train them for Independence and freedom. DRIVE THE WHITE MAN 0UT.. "What the communists want is to drive the white man out of Asia for good". said the speaker. "This is their goal. They desire to drive the British from Malaya and Slnga pore: turn the French out of Indo- China: terminate American influe- nce in the Philippines: grab Form- osa and use it as a base to be a nuisance across the Pacific: and they fought the war in Korea to use the airfields of S. Korea from which to bring the threat of Com- munism to Japan while she was weak down and out". He warned they were out to grab those strategic materials like oil. rubber. tin. quinnlne of which we were bereft in World War II when the Japanese took these territories. "They want to take over all the industries ports. harbours. etc.. built largely by British enterprise and British capital in the last I50 Trying Test Of Potato Flakes WASHINGTON. (AP) - The United States government will run a test to find out whether peo- ple like a new potato product- potato flakes. The flakes challlk to mashed potatoes when mixed with water. how much of a market there is for them. They will get their test in a northeastern city yet to be de- signated. a department of agri- culture announcement said Fri- day. The state of Maine-where II lot of potatoes are grown-will cooperate in thc test with the castcrn utilization r e s e a r c h branch of the department of agri- culture. The government wants to know ist years; take them over for good and take them over for nothing. That was the charm of it to the communists and that was the chall enge in it to us", he said. No C0-INCIDENCE "It was no mere coincidence Korea", continued the speaker. ntion" too rapid demobilization. America cut her forces in Europe down (Continued On Page 2 Col. 5) that they launched three cam- paigns amost at the same time in "Malaya and IndoChfna from 1948 to 1950 - the idea was to stretch us down the immense coast just when we had completed our demobiliz- "Alllour troubles spring from a Slalemale In Talks On Pulp Mill for N.S. CHESTER. Pa. (AP)-Explob story talks between Nova Scotia officials and executives of the Scott Paper Co, about the possibility of construction by Scott of a large pulp mill in the province have reached a "stalemate". a com- pany spokesman said Friday. "Not much progress was made." said the spokesman. "The whole thing is extremely doubtful." The proposed plant would have cost an estimated l35.00.000. In the Canadian party were Colin Chisholm, Nova Scotin min- ister of lands and forests; G.W.I. Creighton deputy to Chisholm; W. T. Dauphlnee, ministe of trade and industry; John Bigelow. Dauphlnee's deputy. and R. If. Burgess chief provincial forester. The group conferred with Scott Paper's executive vice-president. R. C. Mateer. EDMONTON (CF) - Flood waters from melting snow swirled through 2 suburban blocks Fri- day. causing an estimated 5750.000 damage and prompting the evacua- tion 20 families. James Stone mayor of the water - logged suburb of Jasper Place, said the situation appeared to be under control although 50 workmen labored to reinforce a dike holding back water a half- mile wide. Two schools were closed. Town officials estimated that about 50 dwellings were flooded by water which reached a depth of two feet in places. The officials said damage would probably reach 3750,1150 wtih roads accounting for Astronomer Thinks Life Elsewhere BERKELEY. Calif. (AP)-An astronomer said Friday man now must accept as a fact that life exists elsewhcre than on earth in the forms of beings with mental equipment of some kind. I Dr. Harlow Shapley of Harvard University said at or press confer- ence reccnt findings of biological scientists which show only hair- line differences between living and non-living things make this conclusion inevitable. Here to deliver a lecture at the University -of California. Dr: Shapley said at least 10.000 gol- axies like our own Milky Way can be seen with the largest telescopes and that countless thousands of others probably ex- Thls makes the odds over- whelming that astronomical sys- tems resembling the sun and its planets exist in great numbers. and equally likely that in some of them conditions are favorable for the origin and evolution of living things. Dr. Shapley said. Something resembling earth conditions must exist elsewhere and must have given rise to con- scious beings cvcn though they Flood Wafers Swirl Through Sul:url3an- In--Ed about one-third of the amount. Flooding in the town. which has no storm sewers, started Thurs- day when temperatures hit the 60- degree mark, the highest so far this year. About 50 men worked heavy equipment to clear drainage ditches and reinforce the dike holding the big body of water. More than 5.000 sandbags and 12,000 cubic yards of fill were used to reinforce the dike. Officials appealed for more help to relieve tired workers who bat- tled the water day and night with- out sleep. Production Climbs MONTREAL (CP) -- Canadian newsprint production climbed to 6.190.647 tons in 1955 from 5,984,207 tons for the previous year, as the industry operated at 102.1 per cent of rated capacity. Canadian shipments to the United States were 5.070.211 tons. an increase of 195.000 tons. Ship- ments to the domestic mnrket totalled 430.444 tons, a gain of 10.- 000 tons. the Newsprint Associa- tion of Canada reported Friday. Federal Treasu OTTAWA (CF)-A Scottish im- migrant who not his fir:t fool of Canada by working as a lumber- Jack. miner, farm hand and rail- wayman. Friday was named chief of staff to supervise federal spend- ing of a S4,75t),000.000 tax pot. David M. Waiters, zi native of Crieff. Scotland. is described by some of his colleagues as a "cannv Scot who puts the screws on spend- inc." He will take over the slit.- 500-a-ycar post as secretary of the treasury July 1. succeeding John J. Dcutsch who goes to the Uni- vcrsity of British Columbia to heart were not earlhlings. the fnculty.of economics and po- MONTE CA R L 0 (Reuters)- Prince Rainier banned llhotogmvh crs from his palace Friday night after one of them thrcw himself. in front of the prince's car. forcing it to stop long enough for others to Emlgtograph the prince and Grace c l.v. . The incident happened as the prince and his actress - flnlncet were leaving his sister's vllln where thev and their families had lunch. From the crowd of some 50 photographer. one run out and jumped in front of the car. forcini it to stop. Flashbulbs popped. the Icowllng prince wheeled the car around and continued down the (I. will the while Grace kc!!! lllllllnl radlnntly. W. m"'.ii"'.'ilii"u'y" 733--1' u' I!- TRICKED BY PHOTOGRAPHERS Rainier Bans All Cameras curls fender. ISSUES STATEMENT Back at his palace. the prince is- Iucd this statement: "There are limits that good ho- hsvior should not pass-for then it become indlscrcet. "Some of you in order to get. I sensational plcture today. did not hesitate to indulge in intoler- nble practices. But the excesses of the few oblige measures to be taken which hurt the entire profession. "Access to the palace is there- fore forbldden to photographers henceforth. only two official photo grcphers will be odmltt ." UNDER STRAIN . When he arrived It the villa of Princess to. the Kelly. Obviously under strain imposed by wedding preparations and the clamor of publicity. the prince told them: ' "This is private property; if you don't go away. I shall call the French police." The luncheon was a family 8'' fair. The prince's father and mother. Prince Pierre de Pollgnnc and Princess Charlotte. and Grace' parents. Mr. and Mrs. John 3. Kelly. and his sister and brother- in-lcw, Mr. and Mrs. George B. Davis. attended. During the lunch detectives pa- trolled the roads and paths around the red-roofed villa. The gates were pcdlocked. Friday night. lhe couple dined with the Count and Counts: Ooflccrso CAMPBELL, c.J, RES-APPOINTED 0'l'l'AWA. (Special) - Hon Thane A. Campbell. Chief Jus National Library Advisory Coun cil for a further term of office expiring December 31. 1969, ac cording to the Canada Gazette other members named with Hi sity of Ottawa. Commission New Carrier Today once... V ,5-I.s.,1igh -Hllldt-gmotvgts"-V-N dufy. . She'll be with traditional navy pomp an ceremony. - The 60.000-ton craft. the big gest and most powerful Forrestal class. second longer. stronger engines. From her waterline tops of her mast she effeciency. blocks in length. She'll men. FORMS NEW PARTY SUDBURY. Ont. tCP) - A 58- year old hotel operator at Monet- vilie. 45 miles southeast of here, says he is organizing a new fed- eral political party-the Veteran's party. N. George Green. a First World War veteran, said he de- cldcd to start the new party be- cause of dissatisfaction with the present liberal government. Scottish lmmigrant ls ry Secretary llflcnl science. The 45-year-old Mr. Deutsch held the rank of one of Finance Minis- ter llarrls' three Si5,000-n-year us- slstant deputies. But that spot will not ho filled and the number will drop two. TWO ASSISTANTS But the 48-year-old Mr. Walton. the present assistant secretary to the treasury board. uill have two assistants among his 90-man staff. both of them wartime officers and both elevated from division chief- tnlnships. They are: Gordon W. Stead, 43- yenrold. Vancouver - horn naval commander who runs the civil division of the board: and 52-year- old R. G. MacNcill. native of Petltcodiac. N.ll., and wartime and works section. The treasury board, which Mr. complexities. controls fcdcrnl ex- penditures. With fcdeal spcndlnc growing steadily over the years and now at a peacctlme high. tho treasury job is getting tnuchor. Mr Walters added in an interview. And that is Why lherr is the nccd of two as- sistant secretaries instead of one. Married and the father of three sons. the new treasury secretary came to Canada as a 17-year-old Youth. went west to work in Al- mincs. forms and forests. and then moved to Ottawa to be- come a railway scctmn man. He joined the federal civil serv- ice in 1930. worked his way through Queen's University. swung up the civil service ladder to the point where in 1951 he went to the fi- Mncc d artment as finance of- hcrnme assistant freon- Nsllt. Antotnct Ill'c0.l'IdftIfUDQVIhMlu walddo Q-icreuryhlttt I tice of Prince Edward Island, has been named as a member of the Lordship for a further term on the Council are Miss Elizabeth Dafoe of Winnipeg and Rev. A, M. Morisset. 0.M.I., of the Univer- NEW YORK. (AP) - The MW ever built. is the navy's second of the But the new vessel. I push-bub ton mammoth of power and split- is slightly swiller and driven by to the stands higher than Niagara Falls. She is about a block wide and about five carry about 100 planes. and her steam-powered catapults can put four of them in the air in 00 seconds. The carrier will have a crew of about 3.500 officers and army major. who runs the defence ' Wntters described as growing in 5 CAIRO, Egypt night that Dag Hammarskjoldls pence mission here has quieted thci Israeli-Egyptian frontier. A United Nations spokesman. said the secretary-general is mak-: ing some progress toward keepingl it calm. . Late Friday night there had been) no report of any border incident. since Thursday afternoon. Both sides handed I-Iammarskjolti l written assurances they wonldl refrain from, hostile acts. 1 An air battle Thursday and an: exchange of fire across the iron- tier of the Gaza strip followed the pledges. Then hostilities ceased. - TWO INCIDENTS Israel charged there were two new Arab incidents Friday. but neither involved the frontier with Egypt. An Israeli army spokes- . man said a child in the Jewish sec- - tion of Jerusalem was wounded by - a shot from the Arab-held quarter. 5 Israeli workers also were reported fired on in the central Jordan river valley. Hammarslriold held no unsched- uled conference with Foreign Min- ister Mnhmoud Fnwni. He will see Fawai again today before meeting again with Premier Gamnl Abdel Nasser. Hnmrnnrskjold sent a message to Premier David Ben-Gurion of Israel asking assurances that Is- rael had given order: to quit shoot- ing, across he border. He said E t had fuuedfita orders. thins-'the.r rib Inntla dorm- io:g meet. R . . - ing: on the commissioned today problem -of pulling troops of both sides back from the frontier. OIIIGINATED IDEA Nasser originated the idea last summer and it was endorsed by the UN security council. Troops of each side would withdraw 500 met- res (slightly less than one-third of a mile) from the demarcation line. Unconfirmed reports said Israel had agreed to such a withdrawal in principle. It had opposed the idea previously. Hammarskjold will take the ten- tative plan witll him to Israel. lie leaves Cairo after today's meet- ings Ior Beirut, Lebanon. TIIIN OUT TROOPS UN and Egyptian technicians also examined a proposal to thin out troops in frontier areas. Conservative e s t i m a t e s say three - fifths of Egypt's entire AUTOMATIC PILOT EBIIS AUCKLAND. N.Z. AP)-A Pan American Airways Siratocruiser veered nearly 140 degrees off course while flying on automatic pilot and stranded its 54 passeng- ers temporarily today on a sun- .mamler of Allied forces in Europe. Progress On Peace Mission . . (AP) - Thcrr urmcrl forces now are in the east- were growing indications Friday on) Si frontier. nai desert near the lsrat-li,(lu-ate a currt-spuiuiing buildup in Israel. lit-ports ll'Iun tho ulllcr side in- NATO General Retiring In Dec. AUGUSTA. Ga(AP) - Gen Al-been misquoted. And liagerty. in response to a question whether that situation had anything to do with Grunther's retirement. said here: "Absolutely none at all.' fred M. Gruenther will retire byl the year's end as supreme com-1 President Eisenhower announced Friday. To succeed Gruenther - who asked to be relieved-Eisenhower chose Gen. Lnuris Norstad. a bril- liant strategist and the first air force officer ever picked for the top NATO military post. Nomination of Norstad, 49. now air deputy to Gruenther was rati- fled promptly in Paris by the North Atlantic Treaty Organization council. James C. liagerty. White House press secretary, said at Eisenhow- ers Augusta vacation headquart- ers the 57-year-old Gruenther-s close personal friend of the presi- dent-is retiring from the U.S. army and as commander-in-chief in Europe "because of personal reasons." fie did not elaborate. NO PERSONAL PLANS In Paris. however, Gruenther told a press conference he had no - inns; nonrrnngeme-nt in mi d for other employment. He added there was "no ulterior mo- tivc' behind his resignation. He became NATO commander in 1953. He said he is stepping out to make way for younger men and new ideas. Gruenther said he is not retiring for . asons of health. Hagerty said Gruenther - like Norstad, a brilliant planner and strategist-will leave "toward the end of this year." The press secre- tary added that Norstad probably will take over at that time. Earlier this month Gruenthcr touched off a storm of criticism in Holland and Germanv over a re- port that he had said his forces would have to give up Western Germany in the event of war. But a ezoolzc-smnn at Gruentht-r's headquarters said the general had Four U. S. Ships For Mediterranean WASHINGTON. (AP)..1lhe U J. PIUS CALLAGHAN B. I. S. Elects New Officers J. Pius Callaghan. B.A., C.D.A.. was elected President of the Benevolent Irish Society at their 131st annual meeting held in the club rooms in the Whelan Build- ing Friday night, There was a large attendance. In submitting his annual ad- dress. the retiring President. Thomas McAvinn. after two years in office. reported the Society in a flourishing condition both nu- merically and financially. Other committee clmirmnn re-l porting were: Property. Eugene Kelly: Charity. John Condy; En- U. Navy said Friday that a divis- ion of destroyers (four ships) is. being sent to the Mediterranean-. but a spokesman denied that tluw move is in connection with inter national tension in the Mideast. In answcr lo a qucstion. the spokesman said that the destroy- baked airstrip in West Samoa. New Zcaland air nfficials said the big ship went off course during a five- hour flight from Nandi. Fiji. in Canton island. and made an emer- gency lnnrllnc in Samoa. Y the combined efforts of the char- Fridoy morning almost com- pcrtments prevented any serious ly gutted the two opartments,dama e to the store itself. which connected to the store of Mr. .Ios-- suffe qah Jnbour. ID Elm Avenue. Onlyidamsge. or division "is being assigned in the 6th Floor to provide a bromi- cr training base in the arch and; to provide for occasional cruis ing in the Red sea and the Ind- lcn ocean.” APATMNTSGUD only smoke and water Mr. N.S. Tnuoel owner of tho) lamina no-In-in rm Fro 00- building said um an origin of thol tcrtainment. Will Smith; Play. J. T. Doyle. Other officers elected Wore. Patron. Thomas Flynn tre-clect- rd): lst Vicc Pros. lviugcnc Kelly- ?nri Vice Pros. Chestnr Donovan: Secretary. Everett B Bcatzan. ire-clcctcrl): Sgt.-at-Arms. Jnllll Walsl1.'rc-clcrlcdl: (ihicf liar- shnl. William McCarron: Door- kccpcr. Jamrs Thisllo tro-rlc('l- 5 3. Followlnt: the clot-lion. llic offl- rors were dilly Installed by Pal-up rick R, u..'r-mic, Paq Fresidonl ation. mendations of the three - operating employees such as they L teamed up in majority recom- However. the majority recom- man board-not binding on the dispu- tants-did not dispel the possibil- ity of a strike of the 150,000 non- staged in 1950 for nine clays. Filing of the report with the la- bor department here left it open for the 16 unions representing most of the personnel who do not actually operate the trains to start taking a strike vote next Thurs y. N0 VOTE INDICATIONS However, there were no indica- tions of the calling of such a vote, The 100-man general conference committee of the unions has been called into session at Montreal for Tuesday. and employee spokesman said Friday they would have noth- ing to say until it considered tho board report. The companies also had no com- ment Friday. spokesmen indicat- ing there would be no statement until next week. The companies in the concilia- tion board hearings flatly .ejecteI all union demands. Their repro- sentative on the three-man board- lawyer Paul S. Smith of Montreal, -also recommended no concert. slons to the employees. l But board chairman Eric 'l'ny- ' lor. Toronto industrial. relations consultant. and union nomlnel David Lewis, T on: nto lawyer. O- D? mendations calling for on 11-pen cent wage increase becoming ef- fective progressively over the next 14 months and for part of the health - welfare and holiday dc- onnnds-of the unions. IIALF OF DEMANDS On unofficial calculations. the majority findings added up to a package of 19 or 20 cents an hour for the employees. They are look- ing for n 3lH:ent package includ- ing an 18-per-cent general wage boost and an eight-cent-an-hour company payment into a health and welfare fund. The majority recommendations appear to give the unions come- what better than half of what they have demanded. Chairman Taylor and Mr. Lewis suggested the raise: be spread out this way: Six per cent (about nine cents an hour on the average) to take effect as of last April 1. with half of this retroactive to last Jan. 1: a further two per cent (about three per cent (W2 cents an hour) taking effect June 1, 1957. This adds up eventually to i6'ri cents an hour. The majority rec- ommendation was that the com- panies put in another 2V: cents an hour for a health and welfare plan be negotiated later. Employees would contribute 215 cents towards the plan. under the recommendations. They are look- ing for a n rlbutory scheme. In addition. the Taylor-Lewis recommendations would add two paid holidays annually to the five now given the non-op group. The unions asked for three. luv WOMAN CAN KEEP A stem; ABM HEK: W2 9 7 HALIFAX. (CP) - The Halifax weather office says a band of light showers and snowflurries west of the Maritimes is moving eastward and weakening. cloudi- ness will be variable and a few widely scattered shlwers may I occur in the western hlnritimu i' today but elsewhere little change . . is expccled in the weather. Forecasts: Northern Nova blaze had not been determined. He estimated the damage to the build- ing alone to be between two and three thousand dollars. Edward Island. counties, Bay of Chalenr: winds. Low-high at New Glasgow II and 43. Charlottetown I Id lemon :2 and to. Sunday: Ii. gliilgzlaotlde today at Char nndny Bummer-dd! otes later than Scotll. Prince 3 eastern NJ." with a few cloudy lltervnhx In - A (Is dingo In umpantue: light av. Monctn so and II. car A to M i I . I.DI. I ' tides V 1