MONDAY. TI-IE GUARDIAN. CHARDOTTETOWN DECEMBER- 14. 1953 conciliation Board To GctiLiiway Dispute case )lON'I'R.llAL. (GP) - A contract diqsute between Canadian rail- ways and 150.000 of their nO1'i-Up- ergung employees will be placed in the hands of a federal concilia- tion board. Prank H, Hall, spokennan for unions representing the workers. Thursday said the decision to ask for a. conciliation board was reach- ed Wedneday when discussions with the railways broke down for a second time. In Ottawa. Labor Minister Greg: said he. will act. quickly to estab- lish t-he ctmciiiation board as soon as a formal request for one is re- i-eived. The unions are asking for so- oolled "fringe" benefits such as longer vacations with pay, sick pay allowance. overtime pay for Sun- day work and an increased num- ber of statutory holidays with D0-39 The railways estimate the dc- manda would cost them 380000.000 annually. Involved in the negotia- tions are the Canadian National. Canadian Pacific, Hamilton and Buffalo and Ontario Norlihland railways. Seveiilneii unions, rep- resenting all categories of-non- operating employees, are involved in the discussions. Strike Threat Direct union-raiiivay negotiations broke off about two weeks ago. The appointment of two federal concilla.'nr5 followed. but new dis- ciissiions failed to break the dead- lock. A strike threat was placed before the railways Within the last few days by .1 union not involved in the contract negotiations. The Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen (Ind) an- nounced that 94 per cent of its membership voted in favor of strike action to back demands for settlement by the railways of a Jurisdictional dispute. The imion claims it should have the right to represent firemen who temporarily move up to the rank of engineer. At present the men are represented by the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers. In a statement Thursday. spokes- men for the ONE and CPR said: "This is purely H. matter of rep- resentation between two railway unions. and is not within the power of the railway managetment to ad- judicate" To introduce Bill Calling For Naiional Flag OTTAWA. (CF)--Fiona Arson-l aiiit ll.-Bnnnventiirel plans to in-l troduce A bill in the Commons next week calling for the adopt- Wife Pleads for Reium Of African Eng KAMPALA, Uganda, (Reuters)- Damali, the young wife of the exiled kabaka tkixu) of Dugsnda, has sent a. cable to Queen Elisa- beth pleading for her husband's return to his oountry. Kabaka. Muteaa II. banished for refusing to co-operate with the colonial government, now is in Britain. The cable, published Iihursday in the Buganda newspaper Uganda mmtpya, was sent to the liner acmas the Pacific. It. read: "I, mbagereka (queen) of Bugianda, and subscribing sig- natories, loyally and humbly im- plore Your Majesty's intervention Gothic, now carrying the Queeni Westerner Wins 25th Wheat Title For Canada In U, S. Crowned new wheat king at the International Livestock Ex- position in Chicago, Fred W. l-Iailworth of Taber, Alts., is a in the matter of the banishment of my husband, the kabska of Buganda. ”Our countzv is grief-stricken Majesty's interests in the protect- orate as I whole but bring fur- ther untold misery on the Eugen- da. people." Self-governing Buaanda now is ruled by a regency council ap- pointed by the British colonial governor. FreigRi:s"Tog Be Floating lGrain Elevators MONTREAL. (OP) -Freighters will serve as floating elevators for 2000000 bushels of grain here this winter, the first time in many years that such a step became necessary. Congested grain elevators from Quebec to the head of the Great Lakes forced the search for ad- ditional storage space and the freighters provided the answer, of- flcials said Friday. Usually, the freighters are empty during winter moniihs. Oilicials said they are bringing in extra ships and the largest winter fleet in some seasons is expected. Huge prairie crops during the last two years, in addition to marketing difficulties, caused the storage problem. ion of A "suitable distinctive na- tional flag for llannrin. He said in n sialnninnt Friday Nov. Creamery Builer Prcdiiciion i that he realizes .1 resolution he- preiienied inst W:-diicsday, ail.-1 t.i!i:iiiarlxflI1i;1rMheagfiftiirll I131 -?wcni.:ii OTTAWA lCP)"'P”du9ll”" 01 House and Ronnie cninmitiecs.lllllplimery him!" i" Cm”d5 d”'" W" "M "W hf.” way 0! angling November totalled 16,065,000 pmnrmnz H” pmhlpm ipnunds compared with 15,422,000 Han”, H", Mw hm. Mn Arsmwin November, 1952, the Bureau oi atili. who joinrid in a vote of ad- journment on his resolution, said the bill would reach the floor of the l-loiisn nnvt week. says Icareicesgnoss causes 95 Per cent Traffic Accidents M()NTRi5Al., ICP) -- A safety expert said Thiirsday of all traffic accidents are causuti by human negligence. llt.-Col. Howard M. ety director of the Transportation coniniission, said experiments shr-wt-ti that most traffic accidents could be avoided. He spoke to a service cliih luncheon nit-etliiil, milled to launch a aafn-drivini: r.'in1p:IiiKn. in it move aimed at rNllli'li1K the. traffic foil, the ffgiir-hec got.- ernmt-nt will mntliicl drivinl tests for nlilnmohiln licence hold- ers. Due to start TIPXY week, tho tests are mid in be ns scvore us any in the i-rnrld. Col. Bakvr fonts are responsible for A H-- latively ilmnil pnrcontiiKP "7 ill" mishaps. and defect! in roads cause. even 9 smaller niinihcr. Traffic iiccidcnis could he trav- PII to the link of irnffir rind driv- ing knowledge on tho part. . drivers who have the ability bii' just. never bother in qualify them- selves for tho viniiszcrniis task they are undr-rtnkiniz.” Lack of driving skill was an- other reason. Some driver! know all the theories hnhind the mechanical operation of an ailin- mobile, but lack the prover mu” ciilar and mental to-ordination required for practical operation. In the wake of his speech came the report of A McGlll University psychologist. who has studied drivers and traffic problem. The report said any effort to mass screen drivers and sort out those prone to accidents in doomed to failure. The tests planned by the gov- ernment include 30 questions on the highway code and machines designed to check eyesight, nerve-muscle co-ordination and reactions. Bukcr. sni- Mont real snid mnciinnical dc-: ,lslncn he Statistics reported Friday. production Mi to l0.3li9,00 pounds i Margarine lvcmber rose from last )'car's corresponding to- tal of 9,119,000. but the cumula- tive output for the first ll tmonths of this year declined l 05,862,000 from No- to 96,666,000 a year newcomer to the International, .whose Reward variety of hard lred spring wheat was selected as lthe most nearly perfect of hun- and it is ourgprofound conviction dreds of samples entered in the that the continued exile of the competition. His sample weigh- kabaka will not only imperil Your led 65.6 pounds to the bushel, which, judges said, was very high. Hallworth's victory marked the 25th time Canada has won the ,wheat crown of North America. If. 5. farmers have won the wheat- championship only six times in the 31 years the grain show has oper- ated as part of the International. lssueD:iailed Siaiemenf In Marcoiiefgase TORONTO, tOPi--The Canadian Amateur Hockey Association Wed- nesday issued a detailed statement elaborating on its Dec. '7 decision Quebec Frontenacs is Quebec Cit- adelles' property. Citadeiles are a Quebec entry in the Junior A division of the On- tario Hockey Association. Fronten- am play in the Quebec Junior Hoc- key League. with Citadelles last season, M-arcotte has been playing this season with Frontenacs des- pite an unsettled injunction ap- -plication submitted in Quebec Superior Court. The issue was decided after a six-hour CAI-IA meeting at which the Frontenac club claimed there had been misrepresentation by the Citadelles in two respects: that Citadelles had entered into a con- tract wiiih Marcotte that he would be. able to attend l'Acadamie Com- merciale in Qiiebec City, and in a subsequent contract the succeeding year had promised that Marcoite would play junior A hockey. The CAilIA said that while Cita- delies were not able to arrange for .Marcotie's tuition at liAcada.rnlc lcommerciale, "every effort wns lmnde for this at other institutions but the player was not cooperat- ive." . Evening (flnaaea "It was noteworthy that when he iefitered into a contract with the -club in the suocecdim: ycar with ago. . , Stocks of creamery butter :1 the k"9wled3e Mid R'p?111m(M (It ms I-my 1 Hmmmud M szjgsvmo parents, no mention it a evei viris pounds. down from Nov. 1 hold- ings of 91,614,000. but up from last. year's corresponding total 95 For .7-ant,gll6.2I'i(i.flflfl pounds. Stocks of mar- sznrine at the beginning of this month were up to 2,999,000 from i2,TI4.000 on Nov. 1 and 1,907,000 at the same time last year. iDrop; diigiiah Re Gouzenlto i l l, OTTAWA, (GP)-Amount of pub- IIC money spent on behalf of Igor Gouzenko may never be rmde pub- lic, it was indicated Wednesday in the Commons. A. M. Nicholson (OCF-Mac- kcnziri placed a question on the iorder paper some time ago lak- ing for "the total expense in- lciirreri by the Canadian govern-l ment on behalf of Igor Gouzenko bacame a government iivarti." Justice Minister Gorson told the ii-fnuae .he. had spoken privately to Mr. Nicholson and he hart agreed to drop the question. l Golizenko ,the fonner Russian lembnssy cipher clerk who exposed lthe Soviet my ring in ms, in liv- ing under an assumed name in an Ontario town. He is the R.C.M.P. forgot To Use Exiinguislier LIVEPOOL. tlleutarsi-A nil- ar aanitud Wednesday it "never occurred to him" to get. a fire ni' - when he saw flames and smoke aboard the 21,000-ion Canadian Pwifls liner lmot-an of France. burned out in a dock fire last January. Charles Francis Evans, chame- hand in the ship's stoke-hold, also told an omcial inquiry into the tire that if it had occurred to him he would not have known where to find an extinguisher. The inquiry. which has been alt- ting three dayu. heard that work- sra went about their id: ovar- mailing the lint. thinking a fin below desk was unimportant. Iytbe time tiiq tot Ietiomtha fhmao had tater: too strong a an the lily. which eventu- a Oanadianl lcitiun and has freedom of move-i ment although he is guarded by lmade as to any. educationril advan- tages," the CAHA statement said. "During the present season. al- though the school term cmnmtnced isetpt. 2, the. player had not eu- lrollcd at any education iiisiiiuiioii Piintii Oct. 30 and during: lK.'ovciri-bar lhad attend.-d approximaicly three hours weekly of evming classes only." In connection with the olalm he had been promised he would play junior A hockey during the 1952- 53 sensoii, the contract actually liirovided only that he would be paid "for pariicipaiiviii in Junior A classification" at a stated salary, 1 the CAHA found, 1 ”This salary was paid through- Vout the seasoii, and the player was that goalie Jacques Marcotte oil Icarried as a substitute tzoalkeeper, lfrrr the junior A club throughout lihe. season, and uilien he cem- .menced in play as goalkeeper for ,the Junior 8 team in December. it. was not because lihe club Cita- deliea was threatening to discip- line. his services but because club officials and the player hlntself miisldered that. the eaiperience lwnuld be valuatble to him." should move as rapidly as possible ' mama 8131- I ' I in mm” "3 g 1 - Drew Sees Too Release Report ..:.r.' or... ......::'".. ""0" "MI! .,,,,,:”,,j”;;;;;;'jd last year. For the nine-month period. than were fewer fulures but more money involved. has the nine-month period. sword Found an looms. i'mn.. (OP)- The M he blliuveatheaword-slit the Vikings:-o-to sutbelr;:i'o,reoordof Much Profit From On Bankruptcies believed to be of the Viking era. The sword was discovered at All- llk. Labrador, some time no but c on-rawa, toe)-A total of an ism vnre1.ll'i failurd. compass Newfoundland museum -riiui-my nrms went into bankruptcy dlll'- with ma in one name too: per- Innounced Giloovtn of I Word. in: the third quarter of 1953, in- lad. but total IIIDIIIIEII-1101' UP volving defaulted liabilities of aa.- neat-Lv Mm int cent to 03.04-- 0'l5,000, the Bureau of Bi-atistia 000 OTTAWA. (CP) Opposition leader Drew sugiaated Thursday in the Commons the government 1- m-kins too large a profit out of Northern Transportation Co. - Ltd.. a crown-owned company which serves the Northwest Ter- ritories. He also suggested that the num- ber of elected members of the tar- ritories council be increased from three to five. Mr. Drew was speaking on a government resolution, later pas- sed unanimously, proposing amend- ments to acts dealing with the territories. A bill outlining these amendments was then introduced and given first reading. Mr. Drew said that total assets of Northern Trans- portation Co. were 33,583,000 and the profit 3444.940. Last year, the company had lent w00,000 with- out interest to Eldorado Mining and Refining Co.,-.pnother crown. owned company. I The Progressive Conservative leader said a "very reasonable" profit would be the "wise course" for N o r t h e r n Transportation, which moves goods along the Ath- abaska and Mackenzie rivers. Tak- ing a smaller profit would pre- vent hardship for users of this "essential" service, though he acknowledleti that the chief user was Eldorado. Frye: Self-Government Mr. Drew said the government 1. in 151 Cln-istimu shop 'tll alter 5-yet have a lo- llcloua, nutritious dinner on he table by 0! It's easy-AND ECONOMICAL-wlien IMII pantry II stocked with these wolldorftlnl good-tasting foods for Jilfy-quick made. And these fine food: for smile-armlnute meals are our very special SUPER VALUE! Ill this week. Fill your pantry and refrigerltor with those time-savers and save money in the bargain. I I BARGAINS GALORE OAKLEAF CHOICE-20 oz. CORN, Cream Style. 2 for 29c BANQUEYF - IN OIL for S'mile-3- .lWf.ifIf8 Meals toward self-government for the territories. Though the popula- tion now was too small for the territories to become a province, perhaps a similar status could be worked out for them in time. Increasing the number of elect- ed members on the council from three to five-there are also one. ' PASOO FROZEN 6BANGHJr7IC1i' SARDINES. 3f0r -- 15': "39 23 - iii: Resources Minister Lesage said VVESTMINSTER it. l':3.l..".l:”"31..:.”?. roim TISSUE, 3 mus .. 25c "Oi" NEGESW been decided to have elected rep- resentatives. It was a difficult problem hcrause. the population was so scattered. The number of voters was extremely small com- pared in any federal or provincial constitiicncy. The Hoiise also gave third and final rcadiiiiz to It hill changing the name of the resources and de- -s KELLOGG'S - 8 oz. CORN FLAKES. Zfor .. WHITE GRANULATED SUGAR. 10 lbs. . . . . . . . We 3-00 - DOLE - FANCY - 20 oz. oaxmar 20 oz. TOMATO JUICE 2 TINS non velopment department to the de- STOCK ' FOR partment of northern affairs and national resources. The bill now ..,,," UP VRTADRINS 2098 to the senate for considera- 3' ' A ' ' ' NOW! SERVE OFTEN lion. -. British Tleht Members also passed it resolu- tion preliminary to a hill dealing with Canada's 1942 loan of 3700,- 000,000 to the United Kingdom. The bill ratifies an agreement signed last August. under which .'li150,000,000 still owing on the in- terest-free loan will be paid off diiriniz the next. five years. Final reading was given to ii hill to amend the Children of 'War Dead (Education Assistance) Act under which children of deceased A sxx N WE HAE LOTS OF 12 TO 18 LB. OGILVIE - SILVER CAKE MIX. the heifer kind, pkg. 33c CLARK'S - GIAN'I'v-SIZE - 28 oz. PORK It BEANS. Tomato Sauce . 21c OLYMPIC-15 OZ. 'I'INS I BEEFSTEAK & GRAVY, iin 35c DEEP IIIASTID veterans receive financial assist- ance to take college or university l courses. The bill extends prn- TENl'?l"YEM"'No R m.0P oz. visions of the act to about '25 UIASTY ,.., PEACHES. Ziins 35c FOR A .WHITER WASH RINSO. large size, ,2 pltgs. . .. 69: children previously denied assist- ancs. RoyalICliNrei'i Receive Gift Of Ancient Coins LONDON. ffleutersl - Princess Aline, 3, today received it 392- year-oid crooked sixpence, and her brother, Prince Charles, 5, a groat four--penny coin-both minted in the reign of Elizabeth I. The coins were presented to the royal children by an antique fimi in Kent, in honor of Queen Eliza- beth II's six-month tour of 14 Commonwealth countries. Tow-headed Princess Anne, who loves nursery rhymes, was de- lighted with her bent slxipence be- cause it goes with the verse about "A Crooked e1xpe'r.cc". when she is considerably older the sixpence could mean even more to her. Elizabethan swaina used to bend a siicpence and give it to their sweethearts as L sign of true love. Charles: g-i-oat bears the dates 1558-01, and represents the daily were of one of the seamen who sailed around the world with Sir ' ttivi riticiaii FOR STEWING LAMB. limited quantities. FRONTQUARTERS OF LAMB. extra special. lb. CHOICE JUICY TENDERIZED ROUND STEAK, per lb. . CHOICE SLICED BACON. lib. pkgs.. lb. ROUND BONE-BLADE SHOULDER ROASTS. lb. 0' . urn iutcr t ' extra N!!! I u iiigirxciiiiiis. eacii 5 35c WITH ENVELOPES XMAS CARDS. plig.cfl0 25c nannm more XMAS SHAPES o 'Ieeoeo . i '- I CliNlSlMAS CilNllliS XMAS QUALITY CRANBERRIES. lb. Francis Drake. sizes FUR-LINED GLOVES. and PANTS. OVERCOATS. GREB and BOOTS and SHOES. RUBBER Ci III ilk. I 1 BARGAINS! BARGAINS! if HURRY! . HURRY! IIIIRRYI TO THE A x. at n. sronu. SURCOATS, ZIP-IN and TOPCOATS. Large Heavy MINER RAINCOATS. Boys' and Men's PARKAS and STATION WAGON COATS. SWEATERS, STANFIELD'S WOOL and PEN- MAN'S fleece-lined UNDERWEAR. New WOOL SERGE, NAVY PANTS--All HEAVY Memos 15iliiiirs;ii"iv6iiiE;"ii5iiis.s"i:i AIRFORCE and ARMY new and used JACIGLTS 200 Used Boys' and Men's BURBERRY, RAIN and JOHN PALMER Work And a full line of Men's, Women's and Children's FOOTWEAR 111 Richmond Street " I 25c BIKINALOW--BOX rA LEs. In iiiciiitlii liccmlisia. 19c .'.'&.....u':”. 69; SELECT CAWNS ' AV CIIOCOIA S 31.9 ff 3.. 29 MOIRS STAR212 . NO.1CO0KIE('3 ca on V' C I Lismls LOWNEY'S .. OLD FASHIONED 5ggAsSMIX.'1.R)S. 65c XMASCREAMS. 2llis. 75c . THIS SMI AT CHARLOITITOWN ST ONLY OPEN WIDNISDAY UNTIL 5:30: OPIN H AY NIGHT UNTII. 9:30. SHOP AND SAVII v ONIONS. 5lb.litig tic I ll . I t- t ' and Dress