.\ Buyer meets seller Ads. TELEPHONE 8506 With Guardian Want, Dial 8506 ask for classified ad taker, for quick results. The (Encryption * “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” Little change in and 759 WEATHER temperature; Winds. Low-high at Charlottetown 60 Authorized u Segue? rflas-t M338 by the Post owe. R ,..____ ______ I V a men . w. A 'A I ’ I f, - , 1 L0 1 I A TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, 1958 Nail?” FIVE CENTS Group Captain J. E. Creeper. '1” will officially take, over m‘onnniand of RCAF. Sta- ”; simmerside on Wednesday. gm on an official visitation 5 Is Set 0. hunters busmess agent, ._ ,9 badly Monday that he couhl be identified only by fingerprints, .gfihewssmrnedintoahumnn .byJ‘two men. . - , mar Kierdonf. . 56. fIrishman gentler Teamsters-le, mm men We etc!!!» into a whod, soaked him in - filament] ‘ ‘ Taylpn- Ssistant Pro" . he ' not‘know the (1 they cameito his Sunday night and ‘ ..l* s» ' A Taylor he did not know set him atfire but, positive the reason ‘ 2w rwi't‘h busi- lnea-Juerdon staggered .. lobby of the hos- 'Mé who only a few nit a similar post with rs, reported a threat- . = ‘ call warning him gases-red been called be- kfiéuate rackets investigat- * ' H to énswer charges used pressure tactics in .M'union rules. Thermals showed the burned nfin‘ito be, Frank Kierdqrf, 56, agent for Teamsters at nearby rum. He g8 burned over 85 per cent of said they believed he m m Fixtures. (OP)\— A cor- ms buy decided Monday that died of heart , “litre. Whfle taking a bath. The tiger-old .spinster was found . m'her bath tub at her home TAKES OVER AT, S'SIDE STATION TOMORROW Currie In the mayor’~ office in the Summerside Civic Building. Group Captain Creeper, who was at one time previously sta- tion at Summerside. ,will be as- ,egtgrday '01 Mayor W. A.| suming command of the Sum- l-Union/ Official n Fire was tortured but that there was no hard (and fast evidence the burning was deliberate. “YOU’RE NEXT” Kierdont’s uncle, Herman Kier- dorf, business agentfor Teamster Joint Council 32 in Detroit and an aide of Teamsters president James R. Hoffa, said the anon- ymous caller cursed him and said “you’re no .” The uncle said he could give no reason for the binning the telephone call. ' ' . ‘ Clad only in a; baitluobe, shorts and shoes, nuresessaid rocked of"‘gas6line, Frank Kier- donf lurched into the hospital lobby. A car was seen away: ,1 ' tors got no information of consequence out of Kierdorf, who invoked the ‘Fifth Amendment, censtitutional. protection against more than 40 times v". 7 merside station from Group Captain W. H. Swetman, 'who has been transferred to Goose Bay, Labrador, where he will be in command of the R.C.A.F. station located there. One Killed, 14 Hurt When Bus Takes Tumble R=EVElSTOKE, 3.0. (OP) -— One person was killed and 14 oth- ers injured Monday when 8 Grey-. Bend highway and toppled 60 feet down an embatnlu'uent, spilling sleeping passengers , against the The i nj u r e d,'lncludiug the drivenwere broughtto hospital They suffered cuts, bmtwsand shockxMost ware re- leased after treatment. ' Identity of the dead person was released bylpolice'. , . LEG OFF, AM‘W GRAND memos, Mien. (Al?)— A'hubcar elf/M James Ri‘ste, 32 drover over a refined out to retrieve it his foot caught under a rail. Seconds later a Grand Trunk ' passenger train roared past. Riste’s left leg was severed below the knee. He hotb- blcd to his ear and drove six blocks to a hospital. Following surgery Riste was reported in fair condition. ' Girl lniured, Police Seek Missing Friend ..Ancl Motorist ,PfEERmH, N.B. (OP) -—— Shirley May Arenbung, 20, of Berwick, N.S., was semi-canscious in hos- pital Monday night as police soughta car in which the injured girl and a missing friend were believed passengers. Miss Areuburg was round un- conscious by a motorist Saturday night in a roadside ditch at Lower Perth. Police said she may have fallen or jumped from a car. . , There was no trace of Paulette Sohofield, 1-5, of Aldenshot,_N.S. Miss Arenbur’g told police she and the Schofield girl were ‘hiltch-hik ing to‘Othario to see friends. Roadblocks were set up throughout New Brunswick in an effort to find a motorist who gave .‘W‘Monday. the girls a lift. ' (AP) ,-—’James . Nan-cl of Toronto said is fading fine despite sessile spent in a Jor- back home I Varound- and despite ,. Wilch as healthy ' ‘3‘ told a reporter- - ,.> explained by ear- him called him Franklin,” leaving _ order guards ar- v, .~ read his name Where the third M 4' auction to eat, . was not partic- fle was returned to “glean following inter- . 9119 Canadian Em- . the UN 1: remote... mm “WW 4%, on UN COURSE ., ago arrival intl'srael , Dav ‘cipa-e in a we?!) course for youth 33“: he was arrested went alone“for Katha-f Rachel area .‘ ,‘ lpartoft'he - mm Jerusalem. “"39 Whether I had mustice line 1 was chair w He thinks ' l, “ Feels Fine Alter .‘2Weeks In Jordanian Jail ,_ longed by an Arab wearing some sort of uniform and black kel’fyah (Oriental headdress). “He yelled at me in Arabic, which I did not understand — at least not at that time. I learned at least200 words of Arabic while in ja' .” He added: ‘.‘I shouted ‘do you speak Eng. lis‘h?’ SPEAKS ENGLISH “One came forward saying he spoke a little English. I explained to him that I was Canadian.” The Jordanians examined his papers, then blindfolded him and took him to a small boluse. “They offered me a seat and told me not to worry. Half an hour later an officer walked in ordered me blindfolded again, and then took me to some police sta- tion—I’m sure it was in Beth- lehem.” “They took my passport away from me, and some money. But the passport was given back when I returned to Israel and I’m convinced I’ll get the money back too—they treated me fairly.” An army officer questionel him about Israeli Army camps, and said at one point: _ “if you don’t give us any 1n- formation, You’ll never return to Israel alive.” . _ Later he was taken to a 331] filled with political prisoners. ROMP said they were trying to question the girl in spite of her semi-conscious condition and an apparent loss of memory. Hos- pital official-s reported the vic- tim’s injuries were “not serious" and she was recuperating satis- factorily. ' . Construction Company hound bus rolled off the Big, track Monday. When Biste got Ask Special Session Of NB Legislature SAINT JOHN, N. B. (CPL—RA motion to consider'withdrawal of the entire working force of all Canadian Labor Congress affili- ates in Saint John if the “vicious and unwarranted” verbal attacks on international union and labor representatives do not cease, was approved Monday night at a meet- ing of CLC officials and the Saint John Labor Council. Also approved was a motion to ask the provincial government to call an emergency session of the legislature to change the Labor Relations Act to provide protec- tion for unorganized workers and guarantee their right to bargain. The meeting was called asa resul of a strike by members of Loc 1278, International Union of Hod Carriers and Common Labor- ers July 22 for bargaining rights. Labor charged local firms would not recognize the union. NOT CERTIFIED A labor spokesman said it was a fully-chartered union but be- cause of the seasonal nature of the employment of its members, it had neiier sought or obtained government certification. ’ About 300 workersgattended the meeting. Sharp criticism was lev- elled at the “publicity campaign” said to have been carried on by employers against striking work- men and international unltm or- ganizers. , The original strike tied uptlnee construction projects. They were a marine dock being built by Foundation Maritime Omnpany of Canada Limited, a customs build- ing and an addition to Saint John General Hospital both by‘ Acme Limited of Saint John. ‘ Both companies obtained in- junctions restraining picketing and work was resumed. The in”- junctions are expected to be tried sometime in September. Jeer Dulles ln' Bro‘zil Capital ' RDO'DE JANlEllItO (ATM—Stu dents jeered Secretary of State Dulles on his arrival for an offi- cial visit to Brazil Monday/A banner demanded: “Dulles go home.” , P we and whistles sounded from of lhe’National Students Union headquarters as the secre- tary’s ear ,Sped by at 50 miles an hour. A sign swinging above the en- trance to the building ‘attributel to Dulles the quotation: “The United States has no friends, just interests.” Riot police with submachine- guns and tear gas manned sev- eral patrol cars parked around the corner to discwrage out- breaks by the students. / . of President Juscelino Kubitschek’s g o v e r nment we]: corned Dull'w at the airport. There was applause from a small throng at the US. Enlbassy in downtown Rio. \ Dulles is here for talks with Kubitschek on hemispheric prob- lems ranging from defence to the sagging coffee market. over the public ad- dress system, Dulles said he had come to Brazil to “talk about the things that matter most — peace, freedom and progress.” SIAJIINT JOHN, N.B. (OPE-Wal- ter R. McLachlan, executive vice- president of administration and coordination for A. V. Roe Can- ada Limited said Monday Cana- dians “must do more of their own brainwo ” whether it be in the military, economic, industrial or social fields. Speaking to :a joint conference of the Atlantic Provinces Econ- omic Oouncil and New Eng- land Council, he said Canada’s fate hangs on the ability of educa- tion and business to bring forward ideas will contribute to ‘a dynamic, realistic policy of lead- ership. “We have been a borrower of brains and talent and know-how too long,” he said. . A 1955 bureau of statistics sur- vey showed only 377 of 2,500 Ca- nadian firms did any research at Their research amounted to $66,000,000 and the latest informa-‘ tion suggested they were spend- ing up «to $115,000,000. “But this is still peanuts com- pared with the $10,000,000,000 spent last year in the United States. T ADEQUATE FORCE “As never before, we need to maintain an adequate force of well - educated, scientific-minded people if we are to shoulder our share of the burden of national or international security.” PULP EXPERT DIES MONTREAL (iClP)—iDr. George Herbert Tomliuson, 78, pronunent pulp and paper research chemist, died Saturday in hospital here fol- lowing a brief illness. Dr. Tom- linson, trained as a chemical en- gineer, retired last September as a vicelpresident of Howard Smith Pepe-r "W‘s limited, but had re- m?‘:::,l Will the firm as a con- sul be lit. MOre Bré-inwork Need-ed fo Canadians Is This Opinion He said Canada must do this to maintain and improve her stan- dard of living. “In today’s scien- tific age, a nation that does not dotluswillneverbemmethan a second ratepower.” In Canada, about 2.5 engineers per 1,000 of population were em- ployed compared with 4.2 per thousand in the United States. OTTAWA (CE—Whether Can- ada will get nuclear warheads for a U. S.-deve1oped missile under the. NORAD agreement remained uncertain Monday after ex- changes between External Af- fairs Minister Smith and the mittee. Within minutes, Mr. Smith said In a variety of statements: 1. “There is no question of stor- ing nuclear warheads in Can- ada.” » ' 2. If emergency arose, Canada could obtain “too quickly, per- haps,” authority “from Washing- ton” for othe ROAF to use such warheads,’even if not stored in Canada. 3. Under ent U. S. legisla- tion, Cane ' could obtain an agreement, subject to congres- sional approval, under which she could manufacture nuclear war- heads, “but we’re not asking for such an agreement. TO SEEK A-WEAPONS Defence M i n i s t e r Pearkes, meanwhile. was reported from , flciency and diversification but By GEORGE MoNEVIN Canadian Press Staff Writer .SAINT JOHN, N.B. (CP)—Oa- nadian and American speakers at the. Atlantic provinces-New England states economic confer- ence agreed Monday that the two areas have similar economic pro- blems. EButtheyalsoaagreedthetwo areas have adopted diffuént means of tackling them and the New England states have tem~ porarily come out on top. 8. N. Branch, Atlantic Prov- inces Economic Council econom- ist said similar problems “appear to exist” in the Atlantic provinces and the New England states, “but they have been dealt with in dif- ferent ways and different results have been achieved.” n FOREIGN CAPITAL The United States and Britain had invested capital in the Atlan- tic area since the Second World War in fish processing, manufactming of aviation sup- plies and electronics equipment, oil refining,.leather goods, pulp and paper and food processing. 'This had led toward self - suf- the diversification had not pro- ceeded «as quickly as in New Eng- land which had attracted a num- ber of “nuelear age" electronics anddefence industries. Dr. G.‘ H. Ellis, vice-president and research director tor the Federal Reserve Bank in Boston, said the New England economy had been “hit a little harder” than the rest of the United States it was maifly emanufacturing areahut there were signs a re- covery was being made. Mr. Branch said the four At- lantic provinces occupy a land area times that of the 'New England states but have only one fifth of their population. NO ,MASS MARKETS such as Boston in the. Atlantic re- gion“ and not many large metro- politan areas. Only 27 cmnmu- cities had a population of more than 5,000 in 1956. The Atlantic population was (scattered and ’ 0‘ Agriculture ' 0 Meetings AT » . . Halifax Open HALIFAX (GP) -— Represent- atives of all provinces Monday opened the ninth annual meeting of agriculture ministers "and dep- uties. ' During closed business sessions, delegates analyzed Canada’s agri~ qu-tural development, control of animal diseases, and farm exhibi- tions. and their impact on agricul- ture and marketing policies. The conference ends Thursday. BOY DROWNED SHEDIAC, N.B. (CP) —- Pat- rick Joseph LeBlanc, 10, of Lake- side, N.B., drowned Sunday while playing in shallow water at near- Commons’ external attains com- \ in the current recasion because I There were no mass markets about half lived on farm or in settlements with population of less than 1,000. ’ Mr. Branch said that while per capita incomes in the area were 36 per cent lower in the Atlantic region than in the rest of the country, they had increased to $933 pericapita in 1957 from $652 in 1950. The labor force in the area had increased by 26,000 since 1950 and OTTAWA (om—cue impending Political storm Over leak of a con- fidential government document blew up Monday night in the Com- mons. x Opposition leader Pearson moved a nonconfidenc’e motion against'the government charging that its actions in connection with a trade department economic forecas, t h ave "weakened the valuesof confidential advice from civil servant l, mu: resultant to the proper tormula- tlon of economic and fiscal pol- idles." The leak concerns publication last Friday in the Toronto Star of excerpts from a secret report said to outline Canada’s economic moments tor 1958. The published excerpts are at variance with some of Finance Minister Fleming’s forecasts in his June 17 budget. ' Francis Tam, 19-year-old Chin- ese student from Hong Kong is beginning to think he must have been born under a lucky star. Last year while attending as a freshman at St. Dunstan’s Uni- versity, he saw an ad in Life Magazine inviting students .to write a fifty word essay starting with the words—“A good educa tion is important because. . ." “Tam” thought he wo uld answer the ad—just for fun— Having arrived in Canada- only a few months earlier‘, his English was not the best but he had some- thing in his favor—he had Always stood high in classical Chinese Hung Kong—so he wrote the essay in Chinese. Over the Weekend the St. Dun- stan’s student was notified by the Johnson and Johnson Drug (10., who sponsored the contest that he had won one of the fourth place scholarships worth $1,500. EDUCATED FAMILY “Tam” really knows why an by Cape Bimet. Nuclear War Canada Seen Uncertain , Washington as indicating that Canada plans to ask the U. S. for“ atomic weapons for RCAF fighters under the control of NORAD 5— the integrated North American Air Defence Command with headquarters at Colorado Springs, Colo. The subject arose during com- mittee‘ discussion of the effects upon Canada of recent amend- ments to the U. S. Atomic Energy Act, which have the ef- fect of making nuclear weapons manufacture know-how available to countries which already have made “substantial progress” to- ward manufacturing them. In ef- fect, that limits such information to the United Kingdom. Opposition Leader P e a r s o n, saying he was interested not in Canada making such weapons but in getting them for her RCAF forces, commented: “As I understand it, a Cana- dian Bomarc squadron could not have at its disposal, under Cana- dian control, Bornarc missiles with nuclear heads that would be in the hands of U. S. airmen in during his high school days in I now totals 567,000. The population had increased by 14 per cent to 228,000. The overall Canadian pop- ulation increase was 26' per cent. Rremier of New Brunswick welcomed delegates at a dinner. Chairman was APEC director H. A. Fredericks of Sus- sex, N.B., attending were Pre- miers Stanfield of Nova Scotia and Mantheson of Prince Edward Island. Storm Blows Up Ov’u Govl Document Leak Mr. Pearson said that mm c Minister Diefenbaker last Jan. 20 had made public the 1957 report, charging that the Liberals ha kept it secret. v NOTES REFUSAL ‘ Now the government refused to make public the 1958 report, as bald. " ‘ This demonstrated, Mr. Pearson added, the prime minister’s “spu- rious, hypooritical and " " attack on the Liberals last Janu- port public. / _ v Time and again, Mr. Pearson call'enged- the government, in- cluding Mr. Dictanbaker. to deny that the excerpts 1n the Termite .Star were accurate. government benches, and;,ll/lr. Pearson said'tii-s “shrieking sil-’ once” led him to demand publica- tion of the economic report. Chinese Student At S.D.U. Wins, $1, 5‘00 59h FRANCIS TAM youngest in a family of third education is important. He is the headsFor the same force.” COMPLEX WEAPONS The Bomarc is a super-sonic, unmanned interceptor of 250-m-ile range that requires a complex and costly ground - contrOl sys- tem. The RCAF has been re- ported studying the possibility of putting it into operation but no official statement has been made. The weapon is made by Boeing. Canadians, Mr. Pearson said, would be fighting with inferior weapons, “inferior in the sense that they are not under Canadian contro .” The minister replied that under present U. S. legislation, Canada could obtain an agreement, sub- ject to congressional approval, both to produce the Bomarc her- self and to control any assigned to her forces. “But we’re not asking for such an agreemen ,” he said. ' “Is Canada preparing to enter into such an agreement?” Mr. Pr rson then asked. “We have not entered into such generation engineers; His father plied, adding, “it has not been gvvernment policy.” ‘ WHAT BENEFIT? Pressing the point, Mr. Pearson asked: “Then how are we to be- nefit by the changes made?” Mr. Smith did not answer. Paul Martin (L—Essex East) said the U. S. position with re- gard to Canadian forces having nuclear weapons was, “you can use it if we permit it.” “There is no question of storing nuclear warheads in Canada,” Mr. Smith replied. Mr. Pearson suggested that the minister was dodging the ques- tion. , “I feel that I have given the honorable member a complete answer,” Mr. Smith said. Walter Dinsdvale (PC - Bran- don-Souris), when the minister added that approval for the RCAF to use nuclear warheads would have to be given in Wash- ington, asked, “could we get it quickly?” ‘changes in house rules and or- nry'for not making the 1067 r9. Therewasnommlvfnmnthe Olarship ' E. Hartlen ‘of Canada. Packers OTTAWA (GP) -— Prime Min- ister Diefenbaker said Monday consideration will be given “at the next session” to ways of speeding parliamentary business, and implied the changes should be modelled on the “mother of parliaments’? at Westminster. “We’re all guilty,” he said, ap- pealing to parliamentarians to purge themselves of “repetitious utterances m a s q u e rading as wisdom.” ' In a gentle epilogue to an often turbulent Commons debate, he said consideratioh will be given after c o n 5 ul tation, to making ganization “along the lines I have suggested.” GOVERNMENT MOTION Mr. Diefenbak er spoke on a government motion providing for morning sittings of the House starting Aug. L1 for the remainder Of the session, which Works Min- ister Green said the government hopes will be completed in three weeks. , The Progressive Conservative majority in the‘Commons pushed the motion throu h by a vote of 135 to 34 after a F amendment was defeated 150 to 7. The amendment would have de- leted a, provision under which Monday sittings will, be devoted to government business, suspend- ‘ing a rule which would have al- located three more Mondays this session for private. members res- olutions. » _ Opposition Leader Pearson said the Liberals do not object to the part dialling with. private mem- bers? Mondays, but are strongly opposed to meeting “morning, at- ternoon and evening for an inde- comm ‘ , motioh‘lncreases jhe par- liamentary from 36 to 4.1.houns. It means the. House meet morning and afternoon ev- ery day, and every evening ex- cept Wednesday and Saturday. conducts a successful contracting business in Hong Kong and “Tam’s” ambition is to obtain his Master’s degree in engineer- ing, preferably at McGill Uni- versity. , With only a working knowledge of English a year ago, he was able to complete his first year at S.D.U. with C1éss I standing in two‘- subjects and Class II in three others. The young student from Hong Kong said he started out at age 17 to travel around the world all by himself. Although his parents who are British subjects are quite able to finance his educa- tion, “Tam” is determined to pay his own way. MOST GRATEFUL He is ‘most grateful to Mr. G. in Charlottetown who gave him summer employment here. His unexpected piece of good luck in winning the scholarship has as- sured hint of being able to real- ize his ambition. . Times are much better for “Tam” and hisfamily since the defeat of Japan. During the Jap- anese occupation, he said his father was sent to forced labor camp while his mother tried to earn food for her smallfamily as a street hawker. - .He recalls that little children without ‘16 supervision of par- ents roamed the streets often gathering a scant meal from gar- ArgumentOn Speed-Up ls CauseOl commons Delay g CONFERENCE CONTINES New, England Leads This N ‘Area, Delegates Agree . P. M. Promises Action Next Session TO Change Rules The House does not meet Sun- claps. CABINET PLAYTIIING CCF House Leader Hazen Ar- gue said the motion follow I. Progressive Conservative cebi, rules now are becoming a “play- thing’ ’of the cabinet. “Something the government should avoid like a plague is any suggestion that the cabinet is dic- tating the rules of theHouse.” said Mr. Argue. - ‘ Replying to Mr.2Pearson. who asked for “some inkling" of the legislative program remain- ing this session, Mr. Diefenbaker said he hopes all 'egislation al ready presented or forecast will be passed, except for one item which had aroused “contro- VEI‘SYA” ' This is the proposal for a $65,000,000 railway from north- ern Alberta to Pine Point on the south shore of Great Slave Lake. No decision has been made whether the railway should start from Grimshaw in northwestern Alberta or waterways in north- eastern Alberta. ‘5: The d e b a t e struck verbal spanks at several points, with, OOF members claiming that the government was interfering with the sovereign rights of Parlia~ ment. Mr. Diefenbaker replied quietly, saying. that since Last Oct. 14 Parliament had had 142 sitting days in a possible 295, not a bad record considering the pe- riod included an election cam- paign. ' . ' The prime minister spokeof the need for “cogency of argument" and “lack of prelixity" to so ‘ “ crate Commons discussions. ' pointed to the Brltiflt in,,Ldnd9n. where therewu-me unnecessary repetitidusness, redundancy and few 40 -' minute speeches. Referring to the fact that Brit- ish MIPs their Canadian counterparts have no desks In front of them on which to place “voluminous notes,” Mr. Diefen- baker implied it be a good. thing it also on their own. 9 In 0 ti a w a, extemporaneoun speeches were “aided and abetted: by manifold documents.” (Each of the 265 Canadian Chm» mons members has an individual desk. There are no desks at West. min-ster, w h e r . membership total-s 630 crowded ’into a much smaller chamber than the Cana- dian Commons). Hears Oil TO'Be' Used In Plant HALIFAX (OP) —— Liberal Leader Henry Hicks said Mon- day he, understands oil be used in a plant being built for an Italian textile firm by Indus- trial Estates Limited in a dc- pressed Pictou County coal-min- ing area. 1 Mr. Hicks said at a press con- ference the Progressive Conserv- ative government should take more “vigorous action”- to pre- serve the coal industry. “I have recently learned that the plans for the Industrial Es- tates plant to be built in Stellar, ton for the Faini Company of Italy contemplate the use of oil- burning equipmen ,” he said. “I, hope the provincial govern- ment will not Industrial Estates to proceed on the basis of these plans.” ' The textile company will lease a plant being built by Estates, 1 Crown corporation set up to pro- mote industrial development in bage thrown out by the enemy. Plans Wilhclrcl BEhRJUT (ATP) -— Gen. Fuad Shehab, in his” first announce- ment since his election as pres- ident, declared Monday night that thewithdrawalofAsmemcan troops from,chanon is “foremost among our national aims.” At the'same time President Ca- mille Chain-nun underscored his determination to keep American forces‘ here, and indicated he does not intend to resign. He said he will attend a Middle East sum- mit conference if one is held. Rebel leaders have been insist- ing that president ; elect Shehabi represent Lebanon’at a top-level meeting even if one is held before Chamoun’s term ends Sept. 23. They have warned their revolt “will be inflamed anew” lfCha- moun goes to a summit confer. ence. an agreement." Mr. Smith re- “Too quickly, perhaps.” Mr. Smith responded. . \'l the province. New President Of Lebanon, wch Ol Yanks are in Lebanon. They came here A at the call of Ohamoun last month. The United States has promised to pull out its troops if the legal government of Lebanon requests withdrawal. Jordan authorities in Amman reported Monday that the United Arab Republic had ordered its Syrian border with Jordan sealed off at Russia’s insistence. Jordan retaliated by sealing off its side of the border, Amman officiall said. The sealing off of Syria’s bor- der with Jordan aggravated a se- rious supply problem for Jordan. The border action came a day 'af- ter Israel barred US. and Brit- ish planes from flying over its territory with supplies for Jor- dan. This left the Jordan port of Aqaba as the only entrance to Jordan without passing over I.- ‘Thirteen thOusaJnd U.S. troops raeli territory- meet-ing, and said parliamentary- FAIR RECORD " manlbers here were ’ E i l l l