TELEPI-IONE 8506' Iwor meets seller with Guardian Want Ads. Dial 8506 ask for classi- fled ad taker, for quick nsullg, who mimizeliomt 0 "Covers Prince Island Like The Dew”- 'WEATH Charlottetown 35 and Cloudy with Intermittent rain. much cooler, and winds 15. low-Isiah d 18 PAGES :Hicer Killed, Two Soldiers lniured In Egypt OTTAWA (CF)-The army an- nounced Friday night that a Cana- dian officer with the United Na- tions Emergency Force was killed Friday in a traffic accident in Egypt and two Canadian soldiers were injured. Dead is Lieut. Charles Van Straubenzee. 25 - year - old officer with the 56th reconnaissance squa- dron. Royal Canadian Armored Corps. His wife. Sheila. lives at Vernon. B.(.'. c - The soldiers, whose injuries were described as not dangerous. were identified in the cable re- leased by the army only as Tpr. O. Kruger, Arvllla. Alta.. tiie driver and L. Cpl. C. F. Jette, Calgary. I The accident occurred near Ra- (an, Egypt. when the ferret scout car in which the three were trav- elling rolled over after hitting a B sandy patch on the road when the driver served to avoid a native crowd. The dispatch said Lieut. Van ltraubenzee was leading his troop back from a desert patrol on the Israel-Egypt border to the unit's alntenance echelon at Rlflh. m-----:m 3900.000 CRUSADE NEW YORK tAPl-Evangelist Billy Graham's Girl-week series of meetings here is expected to cost 3900.000. budget figures at his New York crusade headquarters show. This would make the meet- tngs, starting next Wednesday night, the most expensive crusade The following list of graduates of St. Dunetan's University was re- leased for publication yesterday. take place at the University on May 14. when the graduates will be addressed by the Most Rev. Patrick J. Skinner, C.J.M.. D.D.. Archbishop of St. John's Nefwound- land. The Baccalaureate Sermon will be given at the Solemn High Mass to be held in the College Chapel on Sunday Morning. May l2. at which the Alumni and old friends oi the graduates will be expeclally welcome. BACHELOR OF ARTS Edward Joseph Bair'd. Webster's Corner. Anne Marie Surge. St. Peter's 3Y- . Mary Gertrude Cameron, Sum- merside. Gerald Desmond Connolly. Hal- ifax, N.S. - - Jean-Claude Desrosiers, Luce- vllle, P.Q. . Arlene Mary Ellen Dowling, Charlottetown. ..I-lenry Urban Gaudel. Tignish. Francis Elmer Hammill. Lower Freetown. James Elliott MacAulay. Charl- ottetown. Edward Joseph McCabe, ions. George James Mullally. Sourls est. - - James Arnold Mullln. Charlotte- town. W that Graham has conducted. Jean-Paul ltousscl, Rivlere-dis The Commencement Exercises will N Graduates At Saint. Dunstan's University Loup. P-Q. Gaston Joseph Roy, Armagh. P. ..'Tl'l0Il'lll Francis Iwift. Mlnlo. .13. Bernard Earl Walsh. GeoflG- town. MAGNA CUM LAUDE John William Trainor. Albany. BACHELOR OF SCIENCE John Francis Conran. 5!. -l0l1n'l Newfoundland. George Brian Doyle. Charlotte- town... Thomas Vincent Grant. merside. Kimble Peter Jay, Mount stew- art. .. Jean Guy Lemay. Shawinigsn . .Q. Surn- Falls, P .. Gerald Joseph Monaghan. Char- lottetown. Geraldine Estelle Sullivan. Mon- tague. CUM LAUDE Thomas Joseph Ford. Franconla. New Hampshire, U.S.A- Cathcrine Ann Gillis. Alberton. James Stanislaus Noonan, Sum- merside. BACHELOR OF COMMERCE Leo Basil Doiron, Charlottetown. ..Siephcn James Fitzgerald. Gan- der, Newfoundland. lsan Holland Paul Gillies. Halifax, N, . John Joseph Augustine Revell, Charlottetown- Dictator Of Colombia Resigns Under Pressure BOGOTA. Colombia (AP)-The four-year dictatorship of Gen. Gus- tavo Rojas Pirillla collapsed Fri- dys on the rocks of his greed for new power. New bloodshed accompanied his downfall. Soldiers advancing be- hind tanks and wielding rifle butts stampeded a crowd of joyous dem- onstrators b c f ore the capitol. Thirty died in the panic. Rojas turned his presidential powers over to a flve-msa.,miil- tary junta headed by Md.'-Ben. Gabriel Paris. Cristsnto Csrdlnla Luque. whose opposition helped oust Rojas. ap- pealed to the people to support the junta in the name of patrio- ism. The church warned that Commu- niats were interested in creating new disturbances. Paris. as president of the junta. promised on his honor as an offi- cer that popular slecttons will be held next year. Rojas' surrender capped a week of demonstrations and violence in which more than 100 persons lost their lives. He went down under pressure from opposition of the Roman Catholic Church. the business com- munity. the political parties ol the country-and the people as a whole. BLOODLESS COUP Rojas. a 50-year-old ai-my man who c o m ma n d 0 ii Colombia's wile wanted. another tss..ctart- lnl next year. but the constitution forbidding a ident to succeed hlinsal'. stood in his way. To get around that. he handpicked a con- siitutsnt assembly which last Wed- nesday suspended the constitu- tion's provision for a popular elec- tion and handed Rojas a new term extending until 1962. This tradlt' " democratic re- public of more than ll.000.000 re- fused to accept the assembly's ac- tion. Political leaders and officials of the armed forces were in session Thusday night and into the early hours of Friday. At 3:30 a.m. the news Rojas was out began to spread by telephone. An hour and a half later auto- mobiles filled with shouting men and women. many in pyjamas and dressing gowns. converged on the centre of Bo ota. - OF I HIITY "Liberty!" was the predomin- ant cry. There were also that a civilian be named presi- dent. Tragedy marred the celebration at 8:30 a.m. Thousands jammed ilglfsa Bollv in front of the cap- 0 . Suddenly an officer turned to his soldiers and ordered them to clear the plaza. Tanks rumbled into ac- tion. VISITING AND local army of- ficers are shown above examin- Ing plans of the forthcoming sum- mer program to be held at Camp Gagetown. N.B.. in which the Ith Illnala 'Regimeat (Charlottetown) will participate. ..!'rom left to right are: Major Vl.G. Holmes. C.D.. of the lat Air- borne Signal Squadron (R.F'.l Barrlefleld, Ontario; Lt.-Col. Keith I. Johastoae. E.D.. of the its sig- nsls Regiment; Lt.-Col. 0.M. Vill- lugs. C.D.. Commanding signals Officer. Bsstsra Comrnaad, Hali- fax; and Major rs, ' ” F 0, lie. lth signals ' ' C WN. CANADA SATURDAY. MAY ' Westville Seeks To Save Coal Mine HALIFAX (CF) - A delegation from the town of Westvllle Friday asked Premier Stanfield to help keep the town's only goal min, OPCPIUHB in the face of dwind. ling markets. The Drummond mine of the Ace. all C051 C : is threatened glib '" leg ' inn " e group laid, and ”we're not fighting for the mine, we are tight. ing for the life of the town of West- ville." Delegations from the town have met with the premier several times before in an attempt to get a new seam opened in the town. A group of local citizens have. formed a company and plan to be. gin working a seam from the sur-. face. But this new seam likely won't reach a high production for aome time. The Drummond mine now em- ploys l00 men, and Friday's dele- gation sald they were on a four- day per week basis. If the mine is to continue. there should be enough markets for a five day week, the group said. Premier Stanfield said the gov- srnment will try to stabilize the orders the power commission has four coal. get a price high enough to permit improved wages for the men. N.S. Premier Wed Friday HALIFAX (CF)-Premier Hob- ert L. Stsnfield was married in a quiet ceremony Friday to the daughter of a Nova Scotia Su- prems Court justice. Mr. Stanfield. whose first wife died three years ago in a high- way accident. was married to Mary Margaret Hall. daughter of Mr. Justice W. L. Hall. The cere- mony. performed by Rev. H. M. Dewolfe of First Baptist Church, was at the Hall home. The 43-year-old Progressive Con- acrvatlve premier. who came into power last October when his party upset a 23-year Liberal regime. has four children who had been cared for by a housekeeper at the spacious Stanfield home in the city's south and -- Apart from very close friends are wedding was a sum: until it was performed la the afternoon. fax when the vehicle left the high- way. At the time Mr. Stanfield was taking part in a political con- vention at Sydney- He was first married in 1940. Civil Defence Exercise Opens AHNPRIOR, Ont. (CP)-lmag- lnsry enemy aircraft were ident- ified approaching the Northwest Territories Friday night and at if p.m. ADT a general alert was flashed to civil defence control posts throughout Canada- Exercise Co-operation l. affect- ing 3.000 professional and vol- unteer workers from coast to coast. was entering its crucial phase. Most Canadian centres already had been theoretically evacuated of .. lal - ” ti The ll p.m. warning. flashed as the enemy was tracked by the DEW (Distant early warning! radar line making for the Canadian heartland in two parallel groups The group said that coal should ' 11. 1957 UNPRECEDENTED ACTION Russia's Parl J. D. Smallwood, REAR ADMIRAL Roger E. S. IRCSC Kent. during the annual ln- left. Lieut. Bidwell. C.B.E.. C.D.. R.C.N.. spection of the unit carried out in Commanding Officer of the Flag Officer. Atlantic Coast. chats H.M.C.S. Queen Ciiarlotie lastrses Cadet Corps. and Lieut. J.H. with youthful members of the night. Accompanying the Ad-.Myers. Area Officer. Sea Cadets. Charlottetown Sea Cadet Corps.lmiral on his inspection arei Guardian Pluto Local Sea Cadet Corps Inspected Last Night Kent. and Cuinmander John N. some sections of the country and how many very young boy; there Kenny. C.D.. R.C.N. fill. Com- would be initiated in other areas -- -- :3 stated Rear Admiral Roger E.S. q.,.,n.,,d.,'ck .0 gm. Am...” 33...! mnilfegring .0 the ,. N'a'Vy mdwelh C-BE" C-Du RON-' '91" W9" 0" hl5.3”"V3l- '.as a whole. Admiral Bidwell not- lowing his inspection of the local Other officers of the Sea Code! 3 ed that with satisfactioh that the S" Cadet Corlm RCSC Kent. 'Clorps olnh parade lngludedz Lieut.-Navy was now am, to m.onmh..y which took place at il.M.C.S. fy'"',y nd”g'pt:'iL"f yllg'iP”V9 V0l' "We have a ceilinl 0'' WIDDDWEI. Queen Chazletgtmasto or. cxi-mg” gidwgll:-p&d Izggcns-I ;l.1Ed smccilglng on rriiglneyhcnd 3 " ac e on - e- a w .” t Memorial Field. the inspection ”"'"" ”” V01”! men Wl'0fssid.q WY parade was transferred to the '"'d"" "'9 dim" 0' Om"?! Following the completion of the ''I am quite impressed to see A1 The premler's first wife. 109 downtown naval establishment I ll” 7,""0"9 ,C'd9l Ci'"”P5- lnspectionto the Sea Cadet Corps. formerJovc0FrI1eeofVInc0uVH'- due to the imminent threat of 'M0-St 0' "We officers devote. reception for me .ami.-.1 mi died in the family car near Hali- "in. their days to regular jobs," the M, 3”" W" held hi the W,” This was the -sixth consccutiveiAd'"l”l "Pl"l"9d- "","'-3 1"?" room of H.M.C.S- Queen Charlotte. time that Admiral Bidwell has-SP8"? any Or two night! I Weekibletinguished guests preach in- inspected the city sea cadets. lnl'"lllHn8.. adding that they we-rc;dud,d Hi, uonm-V LL Govunor gddltlon to being Flag offlcergloffercd little Incentive other thank-r.w.L. p,-ow", Ham A. wy Mlm, Atlantic Coast. the Admiral. their interest in youth." l...,,. p.-...,;,, 0; pm Hi, Whose ” ” iei: ll in Halifax. The Admiral said that it wasrworship. Lt. Col. J .D- Stewart hloiiiies Ctggmigggirntigeg: Ct;fmMiai:;i&l the! Navy's inten:ion to efxpand this 3 D.S.0., Mayor of Charlottetown. - - c c r t . . . . . . . N3: commander. Au-mic sub-;gs!r.g'fll'Z.?'JL5".r”l?..l"il'Zl.?.l;?.llf.Z2'lSl 3.635 .l.”.'.l.f 353; 0" '"''i”'l '" "'9 l"5l"'”''l9" l btiiyfsmoflelellzvelhulindwlivllrleclve ryfeclliilslll Mlillld (fllllllglesflfvll-lll Lgitc. "9" Admin" Bldwe" W” 5"eet'l'I'his had already been done irilPollce' ' L. y lh . . . .. several hundreds miles apart. called for complete evacuation. 1 it was estimated that the main attack would fall about 3'6 hours later. . .. A supposed mcssage from the prime minister was " cast” to the country advising that the population had been placed on the alert "to withstand the attack of aa enemy motivated by the evil ambition of world domination." 5th Signals Prepare tasstb-rainslsaossassii lIneIm'aLt.-CoI.KdthMJoha- enact be svseousbssuwl". close. no end stator rs Jes- coi.-.:.l. mmo.. cea- at-. l:.n.. s i.C. "' """' """ fl: oaosrrsurron assumes lfu.I&th se!rl-.AlsrpeoetrIsadurnptreor- day snug-ls Ie the gaalsatlos will be required for is its runner snsrsra. officials addll umpire p Gagetowri wireless. there h currently a very large line program being carried out in Cali) Gagetewn in support of the fin requirements for the summer. is which all avail- able llnsass from the lth signals will be sad. The final eernmoatcettons. which I! to he resource eflestln naught Airborne will simulate the field. -1- sauna a in. :r....."'' ::.'.-"'.:'s'.. til. -'" 2.- eeuirnast i ' ""' ' Equipment to be med includes tstnlssss. P.M. leaves For Quebec Home OTTAWA (CM-Prime Minister dayforhlshomelsaoebeccity. Helsscheitsledtaaddressaa cadet Guard of Honor in charge of l P.0. Lynn Gallant. Lieut. .l.D. Smallwood. Commanding Officer Make M'Ilio s O G P' l' eluded Licut Geddcs. Flag Officerv P to the Admiral. and Lieut. J.li. TIMMINS. Ont. lCPi L Cniiedilhe western and Northern omgrlo Myers. Area officer. Sea Cld9l5-tStafe3.ow-"ed cornpgnies pmmojulegs of the 2.200-mils line from Lieut. .l.D. Smallwood. and Sub.- l prom or 3, 25.000300 He'll -l-H- MOP”! Of the RCSC even sbeforcmwleesternangasi has bclihe rights of Parliament during gun to move eastward. CCF leader last year's uproarious pipeline de- Blockade Eases ernment of a shameful subsidy of meeting in this gold mining arcs sypm-;y ((39).- cape 3,-gum-3 private interests in the extending near the route of the pipeline in wars; ice hlnckadg m so year, of treasury and for the building oflsupport of Murilo Martin, of RCSC Kent. was in charge of the parade. and conducted Admir-ll Tm band or qiC'H's' und" B”d' - ing the trans-Canada natural gas: :lL:ee:'n'e"x;v'3:;'real an lo be wmi M. J. Coldwcll said Friday night. hate in the Commons and said it In the second of eight major now is devoid of any liberal prin- is ”dcfiniir-ly easing" and ships can move in and out of Sydney Reply I 0 Mr. Low ed with a general salute by C Id ll Ch U S F' O we urges . . lI'mS al Bldwell on his tour of inspect- ion. The inspection group also in-l master it. lvo Cudmore was in . '"-"d'" i- 9'99"” have mm" PW” Sloth The socialisllesiier also charged ythe government with trampling on Cape Breton Ice ection campaign speeches. Mr, cipli-gr. Coldwell accused the federal gov- Mr. (Toldwell spoke at a public harbor without the aid of ice-I breakers. s transport department 0'l'F.AWA spokesman said Friday. I The last vessels to leave under? Icebreaker econ were the British coal carrier Wallsend carrying coal to Montreal and the Nor- wegian frcighter Malmanger. They followed the dllberville out Friday morning. (CPI-Prime Minister. The Icebreaker Saurcl left heret Friday morning to aid the Rexton He challenged Mr. Low to name St. Laurent said 'Friday that So-lany Canadian priiy councillor- iament Asks End To Nuclear Testing Appeal Directed To U.S. Congress, U.K. Parliament MOSCOW (Reutcrst - Ru55ia'j parliament Friday issued a direct. and unprecedented appeal to the United States Congress and the British Parliament for an imme. diate end to nuclear weapons ksts. Ending a fourday session, the Spreme Soviet recommended at the same time the setting up of an inter-y-iliamentary committee of the three atomic powers to work out means of achieving "the complete banning of ' tests and atomic and hydrogen weap- ons." The appeal from the l.300-mem- her body-which invariably gives rubber-stamp approval to the decl- aions of the real Russian bosses -came after Foreign Minister An- drei Gromyko warned that the So- vlet Union will not unilaterally cease its own ' weapons tests. SPEAKS T0 WEST "if you go on. we go on." Ithat an increasingly large part of told the West. But he admitted the nations resources is going into the production of mass de- struction weapons. And the pokesman for atheistic communism lnvolked both divinity and Satan in his description of the West's attitude. He said the West- ern powers are afraid--"like the devil fears Christ"-to stop tset- Ing nuclea weapons. - Gromyko c h a r g e s that the United States "keeps the world on he PRICE tional agreement unconditionally banning atomic and hydrogen weapons. Russia would continue to manufacture and improve nuclear weapons and "to strengthen our defence potential in every possible way. "Those who stand against the cessation of tests are for war," said the blank-faced beetle-browed diplomat. ' HISTORIC SESSION The Supreme Soviet appeal cli- maxed a history-making session which approved government plans for a vast scheme for reorganiza- tion and decentralization of Ru!- sials gargantuan industrial Ina- chinery. Britain and the U.S maintain the nuclear weapons problem can only by handled in the framework of foolproof international inspeo- tion to guarantee that any agree- ment banning or limiting the man- ufacture. stockpiling and use '0! thes eweapons is honestly ob- served. Gromyko said a British proposal to give advance notice of nuclear tests through a registration sys- tem with the United Nations would only "lead to a false position to some degree by legalizing atornta tests and creating obstacles to ' outlawing such weapons." ” l-le ridiculed arguments that i ' some as losions might alclpe de- 1 tcctlon if a ban on tests were ' adopted. Gromyko expressed hope that "reason will win" at the disarm- the brink of war." In the absence of an interna- MIDLAND. Out. (C?)-Ontario's Premier Frost Friday gave his firm endorsement to Progressive Conservative leader John Dieteti- baker as the two men joined in condemning the federal govern- ment's tax treatment of the prov- lnces. They appeared together on plat- forms hers and earlier at Barrie. where Mr. Frost described the party's national leader as "the -man who can find a just solution to the problems." "i have no hestiatioa in endors- ing the cause of this great Cana- dian. John Dlefenbsker." he said. Here. the premier said that the Conservative ncmiers of Nova Scotia and New Brunswick. Robert Stanfield and Hugh John Flem- ming. are "solidly behind" Mr. Dlefenbaker. Mr. Frost said the federal - provincial lax arrange- Inents are niggardly and unfair and will push heavier taxes onto real estate. A vote for Liberal can- didates .lune lo was a vote for in- f creased taxes on farms and homes. SIMILAR THEME . Mr. Diefenbaker followed a sim- ilsr theme. He said that "tinkering" by the St. Laurent government has put municipalities in a position in which they are unable to carry out their responsibilities. More and more taxing power was being centralized at Ottawa l"tn the detriment of our federal .. and to the denial of the constitutional responsibilities which rest with Parliament." The second major theme of his afternoon speeches. as he trav- elled through Simcoe North and Simcoe East constituencies. was the bitter pipeline debate in the Commons last year. . Running for re-election in Sim- roe East here is Liberal W. A. Robinson. who was deputy speaker of the Commons during the pipe- line battle. Ontario's Premier Gives His Firm Support To Diefenboker Kent. Saint .lohn. N3. rrelghter. which reported engine trouble 20 miles west of flat pain? at the en- trance to Sydney harbor. The transport department ice- bnsker N. B. Mciean is sta- tioned It Corner Brook. Nfld.. in case she is in but the water following his I1-day ton west. he attended a cabinet meet-l lag and cleaned up an assortment. of other accumulated duties. t Salary Ioost For 7.000 Civil Servants o'l'l'AWA (CF) -- Tbs govern- ' outside the harbor. there is free a ice for five miles Goose Stops celled manoeuvres heroine of Canada goose. A spokesman of the In ralla jet air force wing said C! In professional i seen. effective! May I. la dollar terms. the Increases eaeaslly i all bombing and rocket straf- ing of the target island of Gian in the Baltic was stopped cial Crcdtl leader Solon Low is these include several Progressive still not telling the truth about the part Canada played in Britain's withdrawal from armed Interven- uff in EKVDL tents of the telegram but he could There is no more truth in his state whether Mr. St. Laurent was new statement than there was inatelllng the truth. his previous staternen ." Mr. St. , Laurent said in a comment issued C5”-I-ENGE 53' his office. , Mr. St. Laurent said that Mr. He was replying to Mr, Low WM. Low still has not accepted that stated at Brandon. Man, Thu.-.. ('hIllt'M'.4'. GI! lllllht that a telegram which At Brandon Thursday night Mr. Conservatives -- to read the tele- grams in private. The privy coun-' clllor could not disclose the con- COIIPLED WITH SPEAKER Mr. Diefcnbaker coupled Mr. Robinson with Speaker Rene Beau- doln as he described the debate as "the Pearl Harbor of Canadian ldemocracy." Mr. Robinson had No-r Accfjpfgn ;"abl.v assisted" Mr. Beaudoin last ihfay 31. During the pipeline fight till! Speaker had allowed a debate during the evening on some pub- lished criticism of the Speaker'- rulings The debate Internipted Mr. St. Laurent seen last fall to Low said the original news report 5,.-,.,..ed.ng.. M. 9,, pqpgun, 1,5,! Man0QI.lV.f8 '5: IAntholriy Eden. then prime of his Victoria statements were ia- mm". "SUMO Britain. was the major accurate. He added: . --I Wm, you cm,” M" .5 5-rocKHo1,M (Apr .. 1-1.. mar in the pulling out of Brit-, . . But i did say. and I re-y M.-I paw, .1-mg, mum p.m..) Swedish air force has our. and France from their lnti-r- pest. that it was a telegram from 4..., ho... the gimmbi, 7., .11, V!'l'tll& la the Israeli-Egyptian dis- : the C a n a die a prime minicierl m.,,,g,.d "M MIN 9,, spake, F 9- . g which more than anything else - up 5,, "mm. of common, V” '1, M1 39- Lllfent I reply was the caused Britain and France to ter- Md- htest in se.serlee of charges and minute their ertlvltiesln Egypt! N". (5,, Jun, rhgpnk p-,1. Minter"-. srgcs arising from s and that the prime minister ('tH.Ild;d.y,.4h' spam. Mmumug an "ad. "reported to have been easily set the minds of the Csna- the pram", ,,,m;,,K-5 deb.” Md ! r. bow at Victoria lest dial people at rest on this wholeum, h.,n',i,m ""5 "mt an Huh 0 matter by divulging the contents:", an but u, '5," me u", after the wld goo-we was found ' . . in be hati-hing six eggs on top m :r':.':m'f.'.'"'''' '" P'""' "N" line debate had been interrupted. 0' I Fl"W- III Itltsraa contains a llfeat Heloemended out Mr. St. Lsor- J" s''''''' ''''',,,,,''':',f.' ” "i uyhelstheflrstofherhind g... "i. duhmwolmumcht um nonunion teno- IINMII ll 0'" '"'- "'0 It& as not veetigattng whether the Ictorie ' th amp of the corn- Inealld. "Standing orders are apt to ruurne target practice satil I: smell birds are able I Ch I the ue.' ' IAJGQITKK &t.I4ww-lthtelhagaliewlboutflrltt - Ir. Dlefeabakefa inaior erttt """ 59'” M d that News report was accurate. wam Ii! rneutlfzis Jr st. lw:WM';n was .e'lsrn.Haowcv'e; was at Trade Ins- ' ' , . f Mr II telllj er owe aftldthf III Que-ca - in. nu. he as. - 1 l ament talks now under way in London. "Parliament. and Howe - my friends. there can be so Parlia- ment with l-lows." At one point, the 61-year-dd party leader indirectly refined far the first time in th lothesgeofltrisne Laurent. 75. He did it in mentioning Increase in the 340 old sion this year. st. Laurent gets III Pension." he said. " S is enoudi." He added that Trade - Hows, Agriculture Minis -- lner and Revenue Carin also receive the - -- At Barrie. he said Mr. . - eat claims the Liberal the party of unity. Prince Edward Island's Premier Mstheson had - the federal tax-sharing - - provinces as giving no to the fiscal need or tax ability of provinces. Libs mier Campbell of Manila fomier Liberal premier - Nova Scotia had made the criticism. "Unity? Where is the unity in that statement?" Mr. Diefenbaker asked. , When Mr. St. Laurent went to ,. Winnipeg recently Premier Camp- bell and members of the Mani- tobs cabinet had not turned out to welcome him. "Where was Premier Campbell and the members of his-cabinet? In the word of scripture: All he- gan tn make excuse." in the comi g election there was no point in eectlng Liberal meni- bers who had been "voiceless Ciph- ers who carry out whatever they are told." -Five Killed At 4 level Crossing i STE. THERESE. Que. tCPi 4-. . Five persons were killed Frid sight when their car collided w a CPR train at a level crossing near this community is mllu north of Montreal. All the victims were said to be horn Ste. Monique. a villaga seven miles west of here. Three were tentatively identified as Mr. and Mrs. Marcel iilleurewx. both if. and their l'1s-year-old son, 7 Andre. Police said the other two had been tentatively identified as a Mr. l.'Beureua' brother and hi fiancee. y the train lavolved was a two- nnit diesel passenger trah. wssnotthougbtthatasyofhl passengers were injured. The level crossing is es the, CPlt's north-share lies between Montreal and Ottawa. NATO MEETING PONTAINEILIAU. I r s a co f ) is but his sewn IAN h a - 1'-