Covers Prince Edward island Like theDew 12 - mass Jordan Demands Recall Of Burns AMMAN. Jordan (CP)-Jordan Monday accused-Maj.-Gen. E. L. M. Burns of siding with Israel ind -launched demands that he be replaced as United Nations truce su in Palestine. . . Csnnonading which the Cana- llan officer has struggled for two years to stifle rattled again across the demarcation lines as the Jor- danian government charged that Gen. Burns has shown s biased attitude in favor of Israel. A UN spokesman in Jerusalem said the truce supervisory arson- ization in Palestine plans no change in its leadership, but the fact that Gen. Burns' contract with the UN expires next month apparently leaves the future in his hands. x UN Secretary - General Des Hammarslslold has suggested that Gen. Burns continue at the post e CANADA, TUESDAY, JULY 31 1956 uarafian TIIE WEATHER Clear with I few cloudy in- tervals; continuing cool; wes- terly wlnds I5. Low - high 50 end 70. . t PRICES; Britain Asks An I nternational the armistice agreement. he said. - Gen. Burns arrived in Palestine Aug. 19. 1954. ..?.'.i.'...?”"lf.”i'”22..1I.l':.i.,Z'.”'l.:l ii: Refuse Automatic Rigl1tOl ist Canadian Corps in Italy dur- i.':5..!lf..3:”?.l”..?l2:l;'. l”.:”...i.."? Appeal To Supreme Court Oi post as deputy minister of vet- ::?.':: 5'”1.':..2” .."."”'.':.'i'.nfi: Canada In Murder Cases East. OTTAWA (CP) - The (Worry fere with Coffln's death sentence. beyond the expiry date. the Com- T.:1'..!ltt..?'3...h.9.1”li..ll2:l; No Decision In Ottawa On Suez UITAWA (CP)-The Canadian iected the proposal on the around for the general to decide. RECORD DENIES CHARGE External Affairs Minister Pear- son. in reporting the UN request . ment Monday beat down an cp- position move to grant cow murderers the automatic no appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada. Justice Minister Garson re- , govgfnm n; 1, ind 1 g Egypyg that the provinces, which admin- ggmgfnhamg. 'g.:dm.': :9 "inn-. as the sulez 3.2;; but inn ister the criminal law passed by out is sufficient denial of any made no decision yet to send a Parliament. should be consulted dun um M '1" not 5.9,, formal protest over the action, ill the mailer- Arab- states bordering Israel to The Jordanian spokesman said 1 list of cases in which Gen. Burns is said tolhave shown is biased attitude is being Prepared for Prime Minister St. Laurent In- ” formed the Commons Monday Jmdu 1' nuyl" 0" om" He hslgid giiinadangiillshliie kept m A fully . . 6 amen "' i'''”''” '" ' "" '""""”" United sitwes talks on ther;li1tl;b- (PC - Kamloopsi durlns Com- The Liberal majority. supported by Raoul Poulin (Ind-Beauce). defeated by a vote of 67 to 32 t by Davie Fulton mons study of a bill amending em. Mr, 5:. Lauren: wn, rgplying cg Supreme Court Act and the crim- Opposition Leader Drew. who lnnl cod!- Among other things the bill, preunhum '0 ur. UN Ind that asked whether the government wmch was approved m prmciph has considered the advisability of E3”t' 5". nd Lennon hwe making a formal protest to Egypt. and given clause-by-clause study. been lniisoscbed to prepare. aim- The prime minme;-'5 reply in. would provide that applications '1” "''u' dicated that that point has been lllr le3Ve in nilllell in cnilllnl EUP9 lid 157391 W9” "'9 "m' .mdi.,d, Hg and he how; of no cases shall be made to five judges protest made by any Common- 0! the Supreme Court lnll-end wealth country except Britain” Howard Green (P("p-Vancouver CCF. SOCRED SUPPORT lmm" t” "'9 GT" 'mp' A" Quadra) said news reports said hatants in the new fighting as the immediate area of tension switched from the Jordan-Israel one as at present. Mr. Fulton. who received the hm" 'P0ll"'"'ll "id "'9"-' Australia. New Zealand and South support of all three opposition W" ””l""593 ”f '1" "M the Africa have indicated support of Parties. said his Proposal met One E3995.” b”ml”""Il" in” ''''”m' any stand Britain may take. Mr. St. Laurent replied that Sellnle - C ttlement of Kerem Avshaloin. of the recommendations of the committee on N0 13'9" 5"l"""" W" '3' Canada has not been informed capital punishment whlch made Ported. that the three commanweann its report is few weeks ago. The Israel-Jordan mixed armis- member. inw. taken that 1.30.1. The lawyer-MP said that if his lice oomniiuion Monday con- uon, proposal had been in effect a year iienined Jordan for an attack on H. mined that in. government ago the whole "messy. unfortun- a ahudi-en's home at the Malls has been in touch with Prime ate and deplorable situation" of Hamamisha settlement near Je- Minister Menzies of Australia. who the Wilbert Coffin CISI would not rusaiein eight days ago. The commission adopted an Canadian visit. He said Canada left for Chicago Sunday from a have Il'lIEn- He was referring to the fact Israeli resolution calling on Job was told that Australia is con- that 8 slnsle ll-W180 refused 30 den to "keep it informed of the cerned about possible interfer- Eran! Coffin leave in nllilenl bill that the Supreme Court was of 58 to 31, the Liberals outvoting The prospector was hanged Feb. 10 for the murder three years ago of an American hunter in Que bec's Gaspe peninsula hush. RAISE MINIMUM ' Other provisions of the bill. which now requires only the for- malily of third reading before being sent to the Senate. would: 1. Raise from 32,000 to 310,000 the minimum amount that must be involyed in civil cases appeal- able to the Supreme Court as of right. 2. Rehuce from five judges to three the quorum required to hear applications for leave to appeal civil cases and criminal cases not involving the death penalty. 3. Establish the office of deputy- registrar of the Supreme Court. The provision increasing the minimum sum involved in civil cases that are granted automatic appeals was carried on a vote of the combined opposition parties. limit of 32,000 is unrealistic be- cause of the present value of the dollar. It had been set in 1875. Appeals in cases involving less than 310,000 could be made after leave was granted. LIFE MORE IMPORTANT Mr. Fulton and Fred S. Zap- litny (CCF-Dauphin) said the boost to 810,000 was too great a change at one time. The Xamloops membe seized on the fact that civil cases involv- ing 3i0.000 could be appealed as of right to support his ssaEI.lI'I'leIll that capital cases also should be appealabls as of right. Mr. Garson said the presentg Three Canadian naval cadets avista Bay. Newfoundland; Leo 3. receive practical training in TRAINING I WIT MORTA nish, P.E.f. They were among a the Doiron. son of Mr. and Mrs. Bud- group of 50 RCN and RCN (re- use of a 60-mm. mortar at the olph Doiron, 304 Grafton Street. serve) cadets who recently com- U.S. Naval Amphibious Base at Charlottetown, P.E.I. and Henry pieted a two-week course in una- Lt.-Coi. J. E. L. Castonguay of , Montreal, chairman of the com- mission. said his vote for censure . did not imply that Jordanian authorities were implicated. "It is a call on them to take ' effective measures to find the cul- prits and to prevent recurrences of such incidents in the future," I l d' E if A d S ' t U ' BY ARTHUR GAVSHON LONDON (AP) - Britain and his many engage or under in France asked the United States Monday to back a plan for an way open to all countries in war and peace. The board would in- clude Egypt and Russia. At the same time Prime Minis- ter Eden announced a second re- taliatory slap for President Gamsl Abdel Nasser's Suez nationaliza- tion-the halting of all British arms shipments tot Egypt. On the other hand Egyptian customs officials at Alexandria announced without which are paid for in sterling. reloaded. EGYPT ro SHARE Meeting in . atmosphere of crisis, wth large crowds gather- rssidence and the British press Britain, France and the United states considered a plan that Deny. but assure international use of the waterway. British and French informants ternationai law." As to jail threats facing Britons international control board to 9mPl0Yed 0" "'9 C3331: Eden 58” guarantee that the .Suez Canal "we regard it as unacceptable remains an international water- that British wbjecg, should 5. ordered to stay or be kept as hos- tages." BLOW-BY-BLOW SCORE The London office of the caEl company said its 1.387 employees in Egypt were "cut off and sub- jected to compulsory work under penalty of imprison under martial law. This left the blow-by-blow score explanation since Nasser nationalized the the iming or the run on gxports canal without warning last Thurs- to Britain and the Commonwealth day 85 f0l10WS: Britain and France froze all Four ships bound for Britain Egyptian cash and assets. 85 Well whose cargoes of cotton and rice 39 fllllds Of lhe Cllllnl COIIIPBIIY. had been unloaded were ordered lll lh9lr blinks. Egypl announced she would The foreign office also received refuse to accept cheques drawn on. word that Egypt had cancelled its Bflllsh blinks lll il8Ymerl9 f0r tom. order to canal officials not to and f0"0W9d "P by banning 9!- accepg cheque, on London 0, ports to Britain that were paid Paris banks in )nyment of tolls. 50? in British Currency- Britain clamped on the armg e bargo. Sylillt restcitnded her orders. I m3 Wmd” the Pm"? mlnmervs "close l:uCTia'lSe'll1eelrAti lilliflieilaingtlg with ih . urging forceful action, officials of monwe;,'f,”:f,"g,';e';5:u2l,;';f Com ment in a zone :iv:lll)AliaIillzaet'l(:sf:tofe(ll(lgnit:laeniiElgiy:'c':tii;l. cabin9T' Shuffle In Hyngary revantative and p ae- ence with non-discriminatory ad- lloa the Jordanian mini-tn eek, Va. From left they U. Gaudet. son of Mr. and Mrs. phiblous warfare techniques atthc said Egypt, as well as Russia. - au are tlon of the canal. . - - . s. utgltnrelrstreet, Tig- u.s. naval base. would be a member oL.t.he.inter- 3' moan” KAS'-M-3'-'33 asked by order-in-council-to hear , wmpmr (Amp . -- the srgiuneehx -ad. ..t1ImonIIit...tliss out mpreparet an omm u& C ... -s '-.-oi... . .. man's life. he said. is much um M A 'ansoliiit..-.,n.T., - & .3, . -, wA'-L-- 0 v---A national and that E t Hnnggfy would share in the revenues algae men; 1.,.,,d'f,.',"'f,','f,',";,,,": xx . ' i l . A" . , Clarle 'auiih (ccr - Caps i mm wmuon. I mm Pick Up Stranded Airmen. ..:::':i:.- ...-"M. ...l;.'....-or. W..ii."t:.- :"..i:.-W'. .. a AE'L"l.6.l-..5A!i ,-,5,--; -- um am 2-. hit. ....:.:'...":i... ' I 1' ' O M Ilplflld g';u”''t':”""VI 5, S l'""' war we rm! um”; I , woeuld seek a.listeili1t'ernationa'l too1l'lwll'ieP;leolll:eln AP":-lliu Hatnlgd on V. e '8' m':l'he.gupr:me Court is a 3-: Anna - ) said many W '1. OH & U l e'3'7:i.l'i.”l..f,"”.u'2'c'c""'"' powers lmmtiiuli :'.'i'"'?”i3o''l'i.'"'i3' 1"- - ' ...Sl:l,. mgnajn - "E I ii at o ci dwellers OTTAWA (CP)-An RCAF fly- onto; and LAC. J. J. Latrellle. 2El3l'll' w".,"..'l31.v".'"l'.',',hli'.lio3'i'i'i'.;-. 3...: '":.aitencedd.to deaul l . e e n The 3l'll0lll and French cvnsld- and peasants, and a reform of mg cred American support essential legal code to remedy injustices at to the plan, and apparently were the Stalin era. I waiting for word from Waaliing- The prime minister addressed ee an pera e .. .. n... ........ .. p............ , P ' ' pmgsgung 3-03 AC-no" since the June 23 Polish workerst Under m.e”u,.e by both con. resellion at Poznan. which shook 5,,-vmva ad uh”. to uh dedg all the Communist satellites. 10 SM. mum to assure Bmahfs was also his first speech after he hit bill! hll Plclrod ull three Mont-I” '-Walked about 15 mll9S conviction if it had heard his ap- be given the automatic right to Canadian airmen who had been from the spot where the Canso pear, The cabinet did not inner. gppggl "tn the supngn. court. stranded for weeks on Melville landed on the sea The plane Island in the Qu& rigid not get: clt;i:er'to the camp - more . auseo oa g ce., s e 0 bill of Otta . ' The I (led MI- 7 - w- 8' vl,,,,,1n,:::;,g';r;Z,1g, 5,. Will Apply Anti-Dumping turday ce, ay to operate a e ' d three Iill . d tti sed i "M, '” ha I: oonl::.ctoionr'amshr msgclja. ;.p- base line. ping siuwey. They could not be WASHINGTON (AP)- Admiral some of his testimony was extensive." ”tv"iil"w..'i'l'l” ”'i"'...l.'f if? "T 'i””.';i tlih ”””'i'.:.”' 3'." "ii'h.”t"ll”'i. LE” . and or ave o o e was A as ay n a r ur e sa " e saw "ass 1” H - ousting two weeks ago f Matyaa 9 attire Mediterranean area union b&censored. less likelihood of a general iv n;lu';:d'"t:e""u:I'::p:::' gd'E;1';t Rnkosi, Hungary's long?time the U.S. Gth fleet could stay and D FLEET ALERT ' with Russia. pinning his opinion ' later, as chief of the Cornmunid Party. ' ' ormwn (cp) .. canada hu gidy to n mQ fight there in event of war. Both the state department and on an estimate that Russian de- l" ' M" ””"""e"' in u”-39"” Cpl. of Commons. 1. I. Titlil. U. larnil. 0nt.; LAC. -T. A. month. 3. Tor- picked :9 earlier because of the ID reakup. officially Threats Of New Gales Hang Over Western Europe Still By ANTHONY GOODMAN LONDON (Reuters)-Threats of new holes in over Western Eu- WPO otidli in thewaksol a fierce storm that claimed 11 The storm roared across the English Channel Sunday, sank or capslsed at least two vessels and forced scores of others to flee for coastal shelter. it was described :s the worst July gale oi the cen- ii ry. Officials on both sides of the channel tried to" unravel tourid traffichleavieat of the season. which was held up when channel were in the channel when the gait dill night. from gala force. the! prevented Oslotlord. with 3” American tour- 3:3; A&:::lc;:c.' tap. Iuculal Iuptto "ma he, Inuruu be, 1 Jedi ifniden. North Holland. The winds ;l;w";f,?:f,';”,',';T,i,',1,,'l,l-?,?U2f',.f;,' 5..., M1”. ists aboard. from docking at also delayed for 12 hours the docking at Liverpool of the 25.516 ton Empress of Britain from Can- ads. in Britain, the gale, reaching N miles an hour at times. snapped off chimne s and telephone poles Alllltic informed the United of cottosipldtsctl for aspect is states that it will apply and sauna six said a pound of cotton. dumping laws . . rs'"-.32:-:::.v"o..o' ”"i”' 9:: i - ncts ay. was earn . no-nu. Backs Egypt ' The exftei-na.ll aff:lrspdeital:.rti'i:,eisit sent a orm nos 0 .. V gavernmeiit last week to this AMMAK J”"'” m”””"iTt e ect. - Application of anti-dumping leg- minister. said Mods) Jordan will struck with full force. Nearly all lslatioii will mean that Amq-icsn mm.” gum mhn my nu. had been accounted for by Moa- googtmrglguzo :3;Icl:d;llltl0ll: by 3,4”; ;-,.m M 9,, gm... valued. it the its. price -in as- St-tel Uncmlhl the Wu CW1 Although the winds subsided mm" cmmm dunk ' The U.S. subsidy will apply on the 16.044 - ton Norwegian liner exports of cotton products when the US Awpi Abdulhadi. Jordan foreign grown also said in recent congressional i " .7 mode night that the U. of continuing retaliatory aunulta Vl"l9"”- after the first furious exchanp of 8. Navy t force ca The admiral said that if U.S. itated in the area by E "”'"'”"" C”"'J'n'.' IE2 lll'.'ii :';l.il..i”Ze..'.i...l.”"5.ii 552 Will RESPECT HGHT5 ""3 Evil "'9 0'3 the Mediterranean 33. if the Suez crisis flares into fli Both agencies said the fleet has be in the Mediterranean with car- of, them in the navy Monday denied a pub- fences "would have to be very 11'' C ”' "' "V" """d""' iished report that the sin Fleet fine. much better than 1 think pubuc loud” has been placed on the alert to they are now" before the Soviets take Americans out of the area Woltlld risk starting a general con- C . The chief of naval operations said that in the event of war the He "id gm iandbned pm." U.S. Navy would expect the 1lus- affected. to have some H get in because we Expanding beyond the "edit". wont be able to get them all. missile 31.300.000.000 "quite unacceptable in relation to omy." Th ....: ::.i:.' :3: on mm mm- :::dl:;eetlay":' onimhaelg kaierg never once mentioned Rakosi - Burke conceded that "we would w'”3d- ' tgugh sehiape" if the Comrrga; wwu nsts eplo as many as h. "om" f1'v",",d'f:., :1-:;?,-gywag pjgfricmmf suhmarinesyto launch hydrogen B."-ke' in M, genjmonx nu missiles against the United cam" hue, --cum, cm... ,3 that if the us. fleet cannot stay State!- the Mediterranean. we have lot" l" H , ,, the Mediterranean. and we had He" nobody can my "me- better be able to operate in the an ' 330 could not operate in the area ill” H win. ug3:g'kmaedM:f?:p3mm;em uni,” me ngeg M, in." and launching submarines and some canal revenues to finance the not attempt more than we can ml in I stattlitieht he iaid Jordan ate air power investigation before l'llhlhl8- .',.,d W”, .11 deem," mm, 5, an international crisis was precip- Since Egypt began buying arms from the Soviet bloc. British mil- itary sales to the Nile republic dared. have been slowed down. But at ' least two destroyers-Al Quaher and Al Fsteli-at Portsmouth for f:.l'3f"jvv:”uL7",',2l' ,?;nl;'2am',”tf.,, delivery to the Egyptians were our legs beyond the length of . . Eden said Nasser's plan to use new five-year plan. that we d Aaws Both these events were -- his two-hour speech although . Poznan. WON'T ovsnrsx ECONOMY in a speech marked throug - by moderation. liegedus d "This time we are not going -- Clirllet. That is the aim of IN: n Dam is iii and not overextend our econ t's seiz- ranean. Burke said control of the naval power of our Allies is not i - - Propose Canadian Waters hi bro t to h it in facllmolli wuind: and imp ”'?."E -3- two---hnd'ud' rlhclruekontheheel-otlheiorccdiossandonthoiraotnme summer-'s first heat wave in ,,,M- H g "A, g N W, gulch temperatures moved above pg ., mug of man ' Extend 12 Miles Not Just 3 OTTAWA (CP) - Prime Minia- ter St. Laurent said Monday night -sands of em ' un . Aithoush Ihlppins In the chub yoitelloru . of flooding and dis- nel and North S.-r -returned to "m'- mm” cummumgluqng throng. "101 1" M093 00” 7609'" WW northwestern Europe contrasted day. gale W8l'IIlll;,l5kVleI's s.:.i.i...u-Wm, . hug W", in 1u1y no later. Forecasters said the yuuuvi, wpm. gegnpgngngg :r.e;.thu- would be unsettled for mu 3,, an-51,1. mg. riisronssi resins TUl'i'l.l lsllfed. new principle In drawing the iso- No," the prime minister re- ritorial limits. He referred to a Canada will seek international piled. "But we don't think it decision of the international Court recognition on an tension of its would be any advantage to use of Justice and said it "set a prin- territorial waters to 12 miles off- the attitude of the honorable ciple which we think should i shore, instead of the present three member." applicable to our own shares." ' miles. OIL PIOHIBITION He did not elaborate. but he Historic fishing rights of other The prime minister's state was obviously referring to the gtions within those limits will ments were drawn out by opposi- rouri's decision in a case involv- . ve to be recognized by Canada. tlon questioning as the Commons ing Norwegian waters. It ruhtl iv however. he said in the Commons. studied a bill to write into Can- that in certain cases the has line . Canada would seek to have the ada's Shipping Act the terms of from which territorial waters ' '18-mile limit a at the out an intn-sdional agreement pro- measured can be I straight ' UN General ' oil from headland to headland which will within M miles of coastlines. The swinging out around clusters-. agreement has not yet gone into Islands where there are numerht. t islands offshore. is trying to The court said the straight lb Iiould be recolllud." be bid arrange matters so it can make basis is .IIlstl'icd when I apposition queslioners. a declaration on territorial waters line Is deeply indented or But to have that claim Moog. without having It contested by there are special economic nised by others. Canada would "adjacent countries" and other siderations. .. have to make clear it did not countries with historic Interests is Canada has followed intend to exclude historic fishing Cane , principle of measuring from is. tie it he hopes before the coastline. On that basis. the & N'1' WANT WAR general UN discussion to tell I1 George l-lees (PC - Toronto those countries "of the position narrow to 10 miles. except SI. imwearegoisgtoendeavortopro-bayswhlchare can mote . sithrsl as - . E . Amb mouthed. Chsieor-souihdtieGItvIPh6 -4-, st. Luann: said therein la. liudsoo sayaiso isla- wosidlsltttieaesetcaseda decfarsttn of Iii 1 v . NIAGARA FALLS: Ont. (C?)- an Walker. 2. died Moe-. it A ib