of as More Man Thepotwnstheketd,fb,”k. Island Like the Dew . i x. . A 12 PAGES - CHARID'ITE'I'0WN. CANADA. FRIDAY, JANUARY 20. 1956 , - , PRICE 56 Covers Edward Wants Freight Assistance I Tariff Help For Potatoes- OTTAWA (CPI-Federal freight assistance to hell) Pill Mafmme W tatoes into central Canada markets gnd protection against dumping 09 United States potatoes were urged in the Commons Thursday- Gage w. Montsomerv (PC-Viv torla-Carleton). who represents New Brunswick'I major potato lrowlng area, said in the throne gpeech debate that Canada's farm- Q1-g do not grow a surplus of po- tatoes. . . He said t at in fact consumption is greater an production but be- cause of government policy Mari- time growers have no access to central Canada markets. Mean- while. the U. S. was allowed to dump potatoes into Canada. ' U. S. growers had an advantage because they were closer to On- tario and Quebec markets and could produce more efficiently. But that efficiency was due to U. S. tariff and quota protection and the Canadian industry could become justedas efficient if it were pro- feet "The people of my constituency do not feel they have square deal," he said " have no protection whatsoever. The government should help pail rail freight on potato shipments to central Canada. A Confederation promise to the Maritimes had been that its products would be able to compete in Ontario and Quebec with products of- those big l1I'0V' inces. Mr. M 6 became in- volved in I cross-the-floor 01' change with Agriculture Minister Gardiner concerning the new fed- eral plan of aldto 1103830 Ef0W' ers. One of his statements also brought Speaker Rene Beaudoin into the debate. Mr. Montgomery said that for I time last year U. S. 110181093 smaller than Canada No. 1 ITEM were being shipped into Canada. He said that hotel restaurants of the publicly-owned CNR and even the parliamentary restaurant used potatoes smaller than the No. 1 grade. Speaker Beaudoin, who is re- sponsible for the parliamentary received I , ". . . a restaurant. said he wanted to as- W sure Mr. Montgomery that the re- f always buys No. 1 pota- toes. GBOWERS IN DOUBT Mr. Montgomery said New Brunswick growers still are not. sure what aid the government will give in its plan to divert about 2,000,000 bushels to starch factor- le s. He said growers have been told they will be guaranteed a price of S1 for 165-pound barrels of No. 1 grade. Mr. Gardiner interrupted to say the , t toes need only be garden- run kinds, to be graded after de- livery. Mr. Montgomery said the pro- gram is too late. The problem had been known last September. The program had not yet come. into ef- fect and it would end April 30. Last fall many farmers were forced to sell at a loss of about 90 cents I barrel. The program should have begun Oct. 1 to save them from such losses. Eisenhower Talks Like Man Who Will Not Be Candidate WASHINGTON (CP)- President Eisenhower talked more and more Thursday like a man who isn't going to rim for I second term in the White House. That's the impression he left with many correspondents in his first full-dress meeting with the Wash- ington press corps since he was stricken by I heart attack in Den- ver Sept. 24 last. Others felt he still was leaving the door open to I second term. While he did concede that he hasn't yet reached even I "ten- tative" dd e c i stop, Eisenhower's press conference comments indi- cated his thoughts. are running heavily in the direction of his health, the ca -regulated he must run in the future and the relationship of that sort of I life to his ponsibiiitles as president if the nlted States. it was I standing-room-only press conference. one of the gest, veterans said. in Eisenhow- er's three years lnpfflcc. Report- ers began 1 half. sealed and 99 siandees. LOOKS OLDER Eisenhower. looking ruddy but a trifle more worn and older than he did at his last press conference last summer, opened the second term question by reading a tele- gram to Republican leaders who have placed his name on the pres!- dential preference primary ballot taking place in New Hampshire March 13. i He said he has no objection to Critical French - A Session Opens PARIS (Reuters) -- France opened one of its most critical parliamentary sessions since the war Thursday amid reports of I ban-oom dispute that probably hold more political significance than the formal proceedings. The 595 newly elected deputies gathered for the inaugural meeting in the great columned assembly chamber. Afterwards in the mem bers bar, Pierre Poulade, leader of the shopkeepers' tax reform movment, was said to have been hustled from the bar by assembly officials. Socialist deputies told newspaper men about the alleged Incident. though Poujsdlst members late.-r denied the accuracy of the reports '3 Nffhd by Agence France tl;:)'::se and other news organiza- The reports. accurate or not. marked the bitterness of feeling ""0!!! the deputies. hunting for I new government in an assembly where no party has I majority, WINTIIS 1'0 BRAZIL OTTAWA (CF) - Works Min- ister Winters will represent Can- ada II specisl ambassador at the inqiiguration of the president-elect 0' Brazil. Juscellno Kubltscltsk, the external affairs department an- nounced Tbursda . The ceremonies will be held in It do Janciro Jan. I to Feb. 8. Coming Events such action but wanted to make it clear that this should not be con- strued as any final decision on his part. All those who voted in the Republican primaries, he hoped, would weigh "all the sibilities and personalities" invo ved. Then he came to this key para- graph: "It would be idle to pretend that Loses life In Home, Store Fire E , N, 3., (GP)- uh ThebodyolAlbe1'tA. Gavefo,41, was recovered Thursday from the still-burning ruins of his combin- ed home and grocery Itore It east Echnundston. ' The 375.000 fire started after M3. Clavetfe had gone into the collar lo tend the furnace. His son. Claude. 15. said that min; 3 ,3 hour soon after his father went into auaa.oitulia- ', .6Norr.&71G'- kw coafsrence room. When they I the he 9 saying "I11 59100390 all squealed in, there were in I!-ooouldue comlnurom the basement 11119 buy rail and turned in the 3 . arm. - His mother and younger bro- ther Jean. aged five. escaped in nimt attlreirudgi en ng throng: the cellar of Clavette's home at first could find no trace of the man. In I second search they iopnd him after four feet of water had been !ll'l'bPCd out of the botttom of the ore. Biting below-zero weather faced firemen as they fought the names. Cause of the blaze is not yet known. my health can be wholly restored to the excllent state in which the doctors believed it to be in mid- Septcmber . . . My future life must be carefully regulated to avoid excessive fatigue. My rea- sons for obedience to the medical authorities are not solely personal; I must obey tebtpcos eetmrouf.. I must obey them out of respect for the responsibilities I carry." He advised the Republican lead- ers that he would make his de- cision known "as soon as it is firmly fixed in my own mind,” Ind added: "I shall strive to see that it is based as to my best judgment on the good of our country." ccp Manon ls Defeated OTTAWA (CPI his -A M. g gy I . an " If noncon- fldence in the - varninant for its decisloiingainst . ding cash ad- vances td prairie farmers on farm- s . All three opposition parties and the four independent mem' . voted together against the Liberal majorl . The independents are a on, Chicoutlmi: Raoul auce; Fernand Glard, kites and Ross T” ” Moose Jaw-Lake Centre. The vote, first of the session which began Jan. 10, closed out the sixth day of the ne speech debate after a series of speeches dealing with western Canada's surplus wheat. WASHINGTON (CP) - The Unitedstates House of Represent- atives Thursday approved I 38,- 000,000 survey to determine the cost Ind economic feasibility of plans to produce electric power from the tidal waters of Maines Passamaquoddy bay. By unanimous voice vote, the House seat I resolution calling for the survey to the Senate, where congressional leaders expect it to get quick passage. The . lution already has passed the Senate twice and goes back now only for approval of technical amendments made by the House. The n ' ' , sponsoui by Maine's all - Republican House membership, calls for I "final" survey of the long-discussed tidal power project by the international joint commission, the Canada-U.S. body which has jurisdiction over boundary waters. Passnmaquoddy bay is In inlet washing on the shores of both Maine and New U. S. House Votes Approval For Pcisscimaquoddy Survey Canada already has approved the survey. No Canadian expend- lture- is involved. A steady parade of New Eng- land congressmen took the floor in Thursday's one-hour debate to endorse the resolution and detail the economic benefits that would fall to -the New England area through the provision of cheap electric power. The. discussion produccd only one dissenting voice. Represent- ative H. R. Gross. Republican from mid - western Iowa. adm- mented at one stage: "As usual, we are picking up the bill for the Canadian and the Brit- ish governments." Why, he asked. was Canada not "coming in and sharing the cost of the survey?" Chester E. Mcrrow. Republican from New Hampshire and one of the backers of the resolution. ex- plained that it would not be known until after the survey whether Brunswick. Canada would benefit. Gov'f ls Prepa On All Arms UITAWA (CP)-Prime Minister st. Lnitiant informed the Commons is otallalputpcrnlits eqnhnant. Bcntnhtboeommcntin milk, with recent dIyI by cor gov:-Irncnt approval I” Canad- mina- g vagina. il'.'.'""..2l..... Iii-.erPearIon replied that he has 1 ring Report 'Copier Fails To land On -Piciou Island I , (or)-A an hell- "””x- d:"two a. island in; no pounds of mail and mod- izng guppllel from New Glasgow. N. 8.. but was forced back by ic conditi ns. . m'1'fe copterowas called in by the post office! to ferry supplies to the island dim mu" off the northern Nova Scotia cpn.st,Jw1Ilc;l III! IIQOI lI01Ilv9d s nee an. . Limit eormnercial plane! "9" unable to land because of mud. Ice in Noruiumbei-land strait prevents traffic by 503'- A naval 9901195111311 "M "” helicopter will make another at- tem-pt Friday. Truck Driver Charged With Rope - Murder Jr., 23 - year - old truck -driver, Thursday night was charged with the rape-slaying of Lind! I-31'-"P" kl n. Fitton, father of two children. was charged with murder shortly before 9 p. m. EST. more than 13 hours after he was picked UP 101' questioning. The 13-year-old girl's body W85 found Wednesday night sprawled across a curb on a waterfront street corner. She had been strangled with her own scarf and raped. Police said Fitton told tb Linda had been in his truck be- fore, but not Wednesday night. He drives a red mall truck, similar in color to one reported seen in the industrial district where he body was found. Fltton was arrested about 7 am. Thursday. When police arrived at his house they quoted him as say- ing: "I feel weak." They also reported I city-wide search for is 10-year-old public school girl missing since midday Wednesday. Shirley Mcnougnll left her auntts home in the Rosednie district of central Toronto and van- ished. . , Police said they do not fear that she. too, may have q that Linda was near her weatend home after leaving I dancing school, on downtown Wellesley street, at 7:30 p.m.. that the sus- pect was driving his truck in the neighborhood of Linda's home at about the same time. and that he knew Linda and said she had been in his truck before, but not Wed- nesday night. -;r.-:i- I Urge Investment In Risk Ventures OTTAWA (CP)- - James Muir, chairman and president of the Royal Bank of Canada, Thursday urged more investment by Cana- dians ll'l risk 'ventures,,such as re- sources development, and suggest- ed means of encourlsglng this. Taxes, he said. are preventing many Canadian investors from un- dertaking such ventures and called on the federal government to cor- rect the situation. "We might encourage risk cap- ital in general by doing something about the present tax disadvantage on equity as opposed to bond fl- nancing," Mr. Muir told the Cana- dian Club. ronou T0 (CP)-Robert FlttonV I .. Securi-i,y Council Israel For Raid On Syria K , Blames- Two Tankers Due In Charlottetown This Afternoon Should weather conditions re- main as favourable as they have been in the past few days, the waterfront of Charliittetown will start to show some definite "act- ivity. Two tankers are expected to arrive during the afternoon from Halifax. The tanker sprucebranch is due with a cargo of fuc' and stove oil for the imperial Oil Company. The Irving Oil Company tanker lrvinglake sailed from Halifax at ten o'clock yesterday morning for Charlottetown also withla cargo of fuel and stove oil. Local officials of both companies f their ships in this afternoon. The Irving Company tanker See- konk which was cscorted out of Charlottetown by the CGS Saurel early this month, arrived in Plchou Wednesday and late yesterday was waiting for the visibility to improve to permit her moving up the river to New Glasgow. From reports received ice con ditions in the Northumberlnnd, Strait will now offer very little op position to any shipping headed for this port. East Point reports clear water in every direction and Cape Bear and Wood Islands re ported that the ice that had en closed those placcs was now loc ated over along the Nova Scotla coast leaving an open channel all along the south shore of the Island. This is the result of the wind which has been blowing from I northerly quarter almost steadily for a day and a half. It is consid- ered that even if a shift in the wind should come there is little chance that it will impede shipping to any great extent. Praises Rciilwqy After Storms MONTREAL - Round-the-clock efforts of Maritime Railwaymen to -L'..' P . of the No. 1 Branch, Canadian Legion, B. E. S. L. was held at the Clover Club last evening. Prior to the banquet the Hon. T. W. L. Prowse Lleut; Governor of P. E. I. was called upon by the presid- ent F. A.Rush to officially open the luxurious lounge room, which has recently been installed at the front of the building on the sec- ond floor. ' the two oldest active the South African-War were inim- duced to the Lieutenant Governor CENTRE. S. A. Veterans Meef Governor At-Legion Dinner A well attended annual banquet Immediately after the opening p 1 member .'I'. A. Rodd LEFT Ind.M:.. Hyde RIGHT veterans of evening was the president of the Legion, and the banquet was pre- ceeded by "0 Canada", two min- utes silence and grace. In replying to the toast: to the armed forces, Brig. G. G. K. Peake D.S.0. paid tribute to the effective- ness and fflciency of th local Naval and Army units, which, he said, h a ve balanced stren made up of old sweats and e younger generation. Also, it is the enviable record established by the veterans that those now serving in 'to. Table closfngtr arkshe ex- tended a general invitation to all to avail themselves of the oppor- Chslrman and tonstmaster for the turnity to visit any of the local units on any training night. ments that have been liary. line of the history of the Province tlcment. Mr.- L. W. Goodwin. in his re- sponse to the toast to the Legion, gave I resume of the birth of the Canadian Legion in Winnipeg on 25 November. 1925, and cited sev- eral cf . the outstanding achieve recorded since its inception. The toast to the ladies was replied to by J. F. Leigh- tizer, who impressed the thanks of the gatherlngtto the Ladies Auxi- , The past president Mr. Stan G. Bryant was their called upon to in- Col. I;..F. Mac aid2""E.'lt5 who chose as his subject 'a 'bris!'1int- going back to before its early set- Sirong Action Promsied It Any Repetition UNITED NATIONS. N. Y. (AP) The United Nations Security Coun- cil unanimously condemncd Israel Thursday for the Sea of Galilee raid on a Syrian outpost Dec. ll and warned that further raids would be met with sterner meas- uers to maintain the uneasy ar- mistices in the Holy Land. It was the fourth time in two years that the council had cen- sured Israel for a major violation of Israel's borders with the Arab states. The Arabs have not been censured by " decision but Israel has complained against hun- dreds of alleged border crossings by Arabs. Russia, which finally supported the decision as the best it could get for the Arabs. has vetoed two resolutions backed by the West. One accused Syria of illegal diver- sion of waters of the River for- dan and the other expressed con- cern at Egypt's blockade of the Suez Canal against Israeli ship- pins. Britain, the United States and France introduced the resolution adopted by the council at a three- hour session. The resolution said Israel corn- mltted a "flagrant violation" of the Israeli-Syrian armistice in the raid in which 56 Syrians and six Israelis were killed. ' COULD USE FORCE In addition. the council: . 1. Expressed grave concern at the failure of Israel to comply with its obligations. 2. Decided that if Israel does not observe its obligations in the fu- ture the council will have to con- Ilder what measures to take under the charter to maintain or restore rt "' if r .11!!! WII interpreted, in council speeche by several delegates in mean scum underehapter-Vii of the charter. This calls for econ- omic .pennlt.ies against a country, breaking off the diplomatic rcla-I keep the trains rolling and com- municatlon lines open during the recent storms and floods won high mendatiou from Donald Gor- don. chairm and president of the F " National " In I telegraph message to R.G. Hayes. vice-president and general manager of the C.N.R., Atlantic Region. Mr. Gordon said delays disruptions would have been much worse had it not been for the "re- lentless efforts" of the Atlantic Re- gion's officers and men. The text of Mr. Gordons mes- sage was as follows: "Please con- vey my congratulations to our Atlantic Region officers and men done to keep our trains moving and our communications lines open during the -recent storms and floods in the Maritime Provinces. Without their relentless efforts. frequently for long periods beyond the regular hours of duty. The de- lays and disruptions to train and communication services would have been more serious. GENEVA. Switzerland (AP) - A truck bearing smooo worth of gold bars was stolen here Thurs- day nlght in I daring coup by thieves who may have come across the French border. The gold, owned by I private Swiss firm. weighed 551.16 pounds. in bulk it was small. since it takes about I ton of gold to make one cubic foot. The gold bars had arrived from Paris by air in Genevs, interne- tionsi centre of banking and com- merce in gold, and were loaded on I track at the Geneva airport. No guards were provided for the consignment. it was regarded 8 Gold Bars Worth S280,000 Stolen In Daring Geneva Coup routine shipment and gold rob in the vicinity. bcries are so rare in Switzerland that guards ordinarily are not assigned for the transfers. The truck driver drove to his company's hCIdQllBI'i.I:sa and left the truck for a few moments. when he returned it had disap- pcared. A country-wide police search be- gan immediately. The truck was found empty ins lane near Geneva. barely I mile from the French border. Swiss newspapers reported tire marks showed the gold had been loaded into a car in the lane. A car with French licence plates was reported to have been seen pacts for the country's dairy indus- try and its present condition high- lighted addresses Thursday when the Dairy Farmers of Canada went for the outstanding job they have lnm 0"" meeting at the "Swim" from DB. Goodwillle of Ottawa, chief of dairy products inspection and grading in the federal agricul- ture department. 00,000.00) pounds this year or about 500,000,000 more than in 1955, he said. with fluid milk sales taking up the greater part of the increase. tion were expected to be at record levels. production of cheddar cheese may approximate 85,000,000. "and with anticipated h i g be r consumption Canada is likely to have export than was the case in 1055." POSITION CHANGED LITTLE be produced in record quantities this year, with the domestic mar- ket cream production and usage were likely to remain about the same as last year. dress. Gilbert Macmillan of llunt- ingdon, Que.. position of the dairy timer has not changed I great delali-luring the past year. However. the mar- gin between returns and operating Q ,. . smaller Dairy Industry Airs Problems SAINT JOHN. N.B. (CP)-Pras- lon's 14th annual convention. Optimistic predictions came Milk production may reach 17,- Butter production and consump Mr. Goodwillie estimated that less to He said concentrated milks may disappeared altogether." As a major group in Canada's economy, the farming industry had been "obligated to take loss while other groups have demanded and received more." While this applied to agriculture as a whole, no group had been "worse hurt" than the dairy farmers, Mr. Macmillan said. "This is the basic reason for the difficult position some of them are finding themselves in today." WARNS OF DANGERS H.A. Thurston, vice-presidcnt of the National Dairy Council of Can- ada, warned of the dangers of security through price supports. Drawing a parallel with lost cot- ton markets of the United States, he sold it "is not too hard to obliterate a mind to it.' The dairy ind u stry existed "solely because people desire to consume dairy foods. and will do so if they are available at invar- able prices. We should be ex- tremely cautious. therefore, in market if you put your continuing 'to expand. Ice Earlier, in his presidential ad- said the general is continuing to set and in some cases has Export Permits press showing lisrvsrds carrying military eapons and Ilked.EX- tcrnsl Affsirs M Pearson whether he would end his state- ment Tuuday that be Mr. Pear- son didn't know how I gun mount- hgconldbcputonanansrd ualified his earlier statement with 3!! remap: that he wasn't I milit- '7A;;ihieniu it can be done." ha I MONTREAL, (ca) -TrIns-CIn- ads Air Lines is planning the pur chase of four 150-Dlllclltf M Ilrcraft TCA Plans To Buy Four 120-Passenger Jet Planes trunporters, the competition from truckers was immediate and Il- Ierioun The disclosures came II the Gordon economic commission. in the midst (if its initial threuiay stay here, turned its attention to the future of Canada's major trans- put system, the planes and rail lines. can-r STAND COMPETITOR it leaned that 4 TCA. whuo optimistic Ibout the future. dill felt it could not best the economic bin-den blowltbinnyearsbutlf nchairnnchlscilgnntcd TCA the present policy of selling all MUST PLEASE TASTES N.B.. eastern V1ce.'yiESid0I'lt of sumers. the right to choose what we shall eat and the freedom to buy what we choose. And we do feel that we should be able to buy surplus but- ter at the lame price I! people outside our country who are Just as well able to pay for it as some of us are." "pleasing those YOU 39" W Mid meeting their tastes--not fighting for tastes-in essential to I healthy industry." The dairy farmer must realise that "he cannot afford to Vlt exert pressure to ban Product! which he thinks interferes with his products." Minister C.B. Sherwood said it has bbcome obvious that the agricul- um .33, turn! industry has not enjoyed the accepting policies which jeopardize the consumers preference for dairy foods. whether it is by dic- tating the price. the supply or any other factor concerned in markd- ing the product." Mr. Thurston said the problem of surpluses "will not,be mct hy dairy surplus production to the government at I fixed price. which is also the basis of the sale price to consumers." Mrs. v.13. Falkjar of Broukvillc, the Canadian said A consumers ion of Con- "claim Mrs. Falkjar voiced opinion that New Brunswlck'I Agriculture Society for the Prevention Cruelty to Animals an it such lhll win hmnalll DOGS BITING POSTMEN TORONTO. (CP)- Toronto dogs are biting letter carriers It the rate of more than one a week, postmaster G. 3. Lawrence said Wednesday. The postmaster took the figures from a bitten-carriers file which showed 88 of Tor- onto's 950 letter carriers were bitten during I955. Mr. Lawrence said the in- crease over the previous year might be blamed on an in- crease in the dog population, Or perhaps mailmen were loc- lng their agility. ' Although there are no offl- clal rules on how to avoid dogs with a yen for biting, mail carriers usually follow rules of thumb. "If you are bitten. holler blue murder. This frightens the dog and the householder. "Always look a dog in the eye-he masterful. Never pat a strange ring. He may not like the smell of your hand. "Keep calm." Debate Surplus Butler Prices OTTAWA (CF)-A Liberal and a Conservative disagreed Thursday in the Commons on what would happen if the government said its surplus butter on the domestic market for the low prices it charged in sales to Communist countries. Herve Mlchaud (L-Kent, N. B.) said such action would break the butter market. The public would hold off on purchases of non-gov- emment butter until it could be bought at the lower price. The floor price on butter-now talned to protect both producers and consumers. Before the floor was established seven years go, P to producers never knew what they would get for their butter and in weather . . :.."3.'2gS?l.:?'l'i”f..J? ”'"" "” man 1- - on -I g vsloping storm moving Earlier, W. M. Howe (PC-Web linglon-Huron) said low-price sale WIN mm in Canada of the surplus butter would help butter producers in south their opposition to margarine. SEEK BORE DIAL TORONTO (CP) - The Outer: 58 cents a pound-should be malii- H lions, or even resort to military action to maintain peace and sec- urity. 8. Called on Syria and Israel to comply with the armistice agree-- ment with respect to the demarca- tion line. which at one point, rung. within 11 yards of the Sea of Galilee. 4. Called for an immediate ex- change of all military prisoners. - Immediately after the resolution-, was approved, the council pres- ident. Victor Andres Bclaund who has devoted many hours - getting I unanimous vote, a pealed to Syria and Israel to c operate with the UN for peace 1 the Middle East. Most Violin: snow (in Have A sense or lluiflok 81 fit llusamps fies Pick 9 TORONTO, (CP) - TEW gasps issued by the public weather cc: ' Min Max Dawson gb 2ili Vancouver 4: on 8h 8 1: g . nah". cause I it appears more In-eciplatfsn Iron of the Invite. I”!- 4 fl 1 l