out Guardian "Covers Mm Edward Island Like 11.. Dew" WIATI-III Wldelyaoutterod oftertfoon and evening; little change in Temperature. shewerslntho Delegates to the British Corn- nioiswealth Prime Ministers' C0!!- ferencs in London pause outside PREMIE RS CHAT No. I0 Downing St. for I chat fol- lowing first session June 26. In t (dark suit) is Prime Min- Iister John Diefenbaker of Canada. Prime Minister H.S. Suhrawardy lof Pakistan (hands in pocket) Prime Minister CHARLOTTETOWN CANADA. TUESDAY, JULY 2. 1957 -stands nearby and at rear in color- .ful robe is Kwame Nkrumah. of Ghana. Biggest Parade Dominion Day Was At Gagetown Iy JACK SIAYLEY Canadian Press Staff Writer CAMP GAGETOWN. N.B. (CF) Biggest parade of Canada's 00th birthday was held at this develop- ing army camp when 10.000 men of the lat Infantry Division. pol- ished as brass and stiff as ram- rods. marched past at the Bliss- ville air strip. Staff Chief IA. - Gen. Howard Graham told them their dash and steadiness made them worthy sue- cessors to those who had worn the red patch in Canada's wars. And by their preparednus they were making I Vlhl usutrlbtiil to lib peace of the world. Looking down the long lines infantry and support ti-oop.thnL extcudld almost out of "is general told tho I ll- vision it was an important ent to war. Drenclilng showers laid the dust just before the big parade and than caught a crowd of many prominent guests. before they could get to sheltering can and marquees. 450 IQUABI: MILE! To get to vantage points. of lbs 400 square miles of the big camp. The crowd sew signs of the growing shape and size of the lcountry's biggest military base- some of the 500-man mess halls. the big barrnck b of concrete and brick. the hallp. recrea- tion buildings. s cinema, garages and workshops.l5 miles of streets on which an more homes for married men. and big khaki and white clusters of tents laid out in nest patterns and well- ordered rows. The march past has become an the great force it rosdy for tho generers sergeant major. drove watch the liowy pageants-y lire smwd lrsd motored through some ovanfou amlnutetoanspsomn Noisy Welcome For Mayflower " At New York Pleases Skipper NEW Yoltl (AP) - no sin- flowar ll Maslssttsn lion- dw. 'l1io have but era blasted their total. hurled sun - lit plumes of water aloft. Planes thundered ovsi-hood More than 1.000 persons crowed the pier. If. after onse- tiie Atlantic to Plymouth. ..InodoltlntoNewYorkbsr- IQOI dock. time network direct from the tea. ..,I, Jransmitfsr. with .e I0 ask-. possibiy one of longest dis- last minute checks. He l intern Eisenhower was asked pictures of some of his guests and lthen took up his position for the TCVIEW. l Gen. Graham made four jeep 'runs up and down the long lines lof troops and then mounted a re- ;view stand for his brief address, .' given in both English and French. 3 The general and the guests went a mile by bus to the end of tarmac than Ltooiivhere they took up positions to watch the big march past. The massed bands accompanied each unit with its own distinctive regi- mental march. SOME CONCESSIONS in spite of the great mass of drab green bush jackets there ” were some concessions to old tra- by in proud goat mascot. sporting a well-groomed WNIHC and feather. who never last step with the band. The Blackwatch marched with its pipes skirllng ilsnces of another day. Gen. Graham said-it is clsily significant of Onads's new lngltselftotlisdofsncoofcansih ASKS lII.I.'S VITO WASHINGTON (AP)-Presildnt Sunday to veto a bill that would permit con- gressmen to accept decorations from the Vatican. Glenn L. Ar- cher. executive director of Prot- estants and other Arnarleail United for separation of Church Vatican as a fonlgn power?" I Fatalities Reached 80 Last Night By THE CANADADIAN PRESS Canada's holiday death roll rose um 80 as the Dominion Day week- end drew to a close. The most deaths-48-were on Ithe highway. according to a Cann- 'dlan Press survey which started at 6 p.m. Friday and ends at mid- night Mondny. Ninety - five lost their lives last year during the same period. The record, 96. was set in 1955. Twenty-one were drowned this weekend. a child died in a fire 'end 10 died in miscellaneous acci- ents. Qubec and Ontario accounted for 1 deaths: Three drowninga and, three other mishaps in Que- hoe. and sssmrdhtrmm riilr collaneous Mllllti six and 14 highway victims in On- tarlo. Prince Edward Island reported no deaths. and Newfoundland one. Three were drowned in New Brunswick and four in Nova Scotis. which also had a traffic death and one other fatality. Maoitobs reported five. ti-off: Brltid Columbia five. Short Courses Beginning Today Mons than one hundred persons are enrolled in two short courses that get underway today at Prince of Wales College. More than eighty teachers are taking instruction that has special relation to their professional train- ing. Twenty-seven are enrolled in the academic short course. This course enables students who have completed Grade eleven to com- plete the work of Grade twslvo. One and one-half subjects can be and State. said: "woiua not up completed In the five-vs-k counc- proval of this act recognise the This short course . in academic workwss started agreed Monday that Red China as a treaty to end the world arms race. At the same time qualified in- ,formants reported the United States stands ready to announce important modifications of its pro- posals for a nuclear weapons ”truce" with Russia. The five - power subcommittee of the United Nations disarma- ment commission resumes '3 talks in London today. In the concicrrent conference of Commonwealth statesmen Mon- day. Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru of India. backed by justice minister M. W. De Silva of Ceylon pleaded that Britain should take the lead in concluding an East,- West accord to stop nuclear tests -with or without conditions. Four of the 10 countries repres- ented at the conference recogniu Communist Chin-a; Britain, India. Ito extend recognition soon. a potential nuclear powerl The five other Commonwealth would renders global should join final negotiations for conferees - Australia. New Zea- ment treaty meaningless. land, Canada. South Africa and the Central African Federation- have withheld recognition. Disarmament was the main to- pic of the premlers' agenda. mid- way in their loday conference at the I sidence of Prime Minister Macmillan at 10 Downing Street. Nehru was reported to have argued emphatically that the United States and Britain must join Russia in an agreement to stop the testing of nuclear weal)- ons. Nehru saw this as a first step toward a general agreement on disarmament. I But conference officials said most of Nehru and De Silva's col- leagues disagreed with them. AGREED BROADLY The Commonwealth leaders were said to have agreed broadly should be brought into the final Ceylon and Pakistan. The new negotiations for any world disnr- West nuclear race. Suggest Red China Should Join In Arms Agreement LONDON VAPI-Lenders of 10 Negro state of Ghana is expecledlmamenl Il'F8n39m9I1lS- They ar- that to exclude Red China disarma- gued informants said the Common- .wealth chiefs realized that the yUniied States-which does not re- cognize the Peiping regime; would find it difficult to accept Red China as an equal negotiator at this time. 1 Current East - West disarma- ment talks. however. provide that when an accord is in siglita world disarmament conference should be called under UN aus- pices. Commonwealth leaders ev- lidently felt Red China should par-' ticipate at least in that confer? lence ' British conference sources said the Commonwealth leaders ”gen- etally" w e l c o m ed Britain's arrival as the world's third nu- clear power. Lloyd gave the Commonwealth leaders a preview of U. S. pro- possls for a standstill in the East- LAKE CHARLES. La. (AP)-A seemingly endless cortege of hur- ricane dead moved north Monday from Louisiana. The sil- ent cargo came out of a land so greviously devastated that it can no longer sustain hinnan habita- tion. The death toll from Thursday's great atom. it wns now feared. would reach I0. Val Peterson. Prrcidgpt” Elscnllollell . representative on the scene. so re- A n log ported by telephone to the chief executive before flying back to Washington. At receiving centres here Ml bodies had been counted. Not until Sunday was a road opened to the stricken Cameron area of southwestern Louisiana so that a mass removal of victims could begin. A dozen volunteer rescue work- ers in the area were seized as looters. accused of a ghoulish be- trayal of trust. NOT GRAVE However. civil defence officials did not regard the lotting as grave or widespread. Public health authorities de- clared the Cameron area unin- lsabttable. probably for three weeks at least. They said the very air was contaminated. "Every disease is a threat if the people return now." said Don Stout of Atlanta. Ga.. director ii the Red Cross operations in the area. ..W. W. Wilson. a regional civil defence admtnlst lws, added: "We know the people will start moving back faster than they should. People want to go home. No quarantine has been put on hoi-olastyoor. Death Toll In Hurricane May Reach 500 Mark the area. But there is no doubt it is a public health menace from every standpoint." 3.000 RESIDENTS Before Hurricane Audrey. the season's first. struck last week. Cameron counted some 3.000 res- idents, with another 3.000 in its surrounding parish. or county. It is a centre for fishermen. trapper: and rice mowers. Only its court- houss.roInainsd.intact against the fury of the storm and its accom- panying 20-foot tidal wave. Cameron lacks fresh water. It has no workable sewage system. Broken glass and protruding nails endanger human movement Mos- quitoes are breeding by the mil- lions in pools of stagnant, un- receded flood water. There are no facilities for refrigerating food. Poisonous annkes sllther un- checked through debris. Refugees returning to this deso- late land would face the menace of typhoid) tetanus. malaria and food poisoning. "Anything to eat. breathe or drink poses a threat to Cameron," said Harry Martin, a Red Cross spokesman here from Washington. Officials said Cameron's flood water must" recede further before it can be cleaned up thoroughly. ANOTHER THREAT Meanwhile, the housln g of thousand! of refugees in cramped quarters posed its own threat of pestilence. The health problem was com- pllcated in the disaster area by 50.000 to 70.000 head of dead cattle bloating in the relentless heat. Thousands of old rubber tires were collected to feed fun- Ospd menu -& A "W OIJTOF I-taco -. -unl5'-Gf2.”.:”.:'&l'i".5':".a:'a'EC'f.";i” """"""u'-'1-& I ' feature of the history of this pe- I'lod. ' Diefenbaker Would Have Next Meeting Al Ottawa I . t i 1 l Moving Site Might Give New Solidcirity To Commonwealth. LONDON iCPi-Prime Minister I Join: Dieienbaker hinted Monday l night he would like to see the next! minister reviewed Colombo Plan meeting of the Commonwealth Assistance and pledged that Can- lada will continue to lend a "help- premiers take place in Ottawa. y ”l would like to suggest that the lmccting place of Commonwealth iprime ministers might well from time to time be in other capital cities of the Commonwealth." thef Canadian leader said in a speechlGhBY18 Which FECEDUY W0" DOWN? I at the Canada cm), Bmanys o1d.l ion status. One of his first tasks. . est dining club. It was a gala din-i W0Uld be 10 explore the Deed! Ind ner meeting, highlight of Dominion; possibilities in the held of tech- v nical assistance. Day observant-es here. ”I think it would give a newi. . sense of solidarity and destiny H115"! in ASI3 and Africa 0V9!"5l"3d' In his speech. entitled Canada l and the Commonwealth, the prime - ing hand" to other Commonwealth i countries gaining independence. ; The government was taking ini- mediate steps to send a high com- missioner to Accra. capital of He said the surge of national- this were to take place." he saidu 0W9d "9" "'9 "C0'lir0""m”" 0' ”I don't suggest any fixed order. or rotation. London will always re- main the most suitable place and would continue the meeting place of must of these gatherings. "But I feel strength and vitality w and a new sense of mission of the Commonwealth would be achieved lif such a course were followed." lHONOR jND PLEASURE Significantly. Diefenbaker added "it would afford Canadians abid- ing honor and pleasure to have the Commonwealth prime ministers meet in Ottawa.” Turning to world affairs, the prime minister said the enormous surge of nationalism in Asia and Africa is probably the dominant eral pyres for the carcasses. Portable pumps drew water from deep wells in a race to save 15.000 to 20.000 cattle that sur- vived the storm. They were not expected to live more than four days unless their plight was re lievcd. Already. many were re- ported "feverish and dying of thirst." ..The human burial problem was more complicated. A mass grave wns "prepared in sandy soil east of Lake Charles for unidentified Negro victims of the hurricane. their passing marked by a com- mon headstone. The fury of the great storm separated families in the last moments of their lives. For lack of identification. the common grave perpetrated the same un- avoidable sadness ln death. The speech climaxed a busy day for the Canadian leader. He at- tended a morning conference of Commonwealth leaders on defence and disarmament, lunched with Premier Nehru of India and placed a wreath at the bust of Sir John A. Macdonald. whom he described as the founder both of Confederation and "the Common- communism and Western democ- racy and gravely" complicated that historical struggle itself. SIGNIFICANT PATH "The Commonwealth path to In- dependence has been particularly significant for all of us in the past decade because it has been a part. and a most constructive part. of the great awakening of Asia and Africa." It was in this creation of inde- pendent nations in Asia and Africa and in creating a bond between them and those who emerged to . national status at an earlier time. - that the Commonwealth processes had been playing a new and im- portant role. In the last I0 years the "growing up" of the Commonwealth had been particularly rapid and sig- nificant. ' . Stressing the importance of i Commonwealth trade. be said: "we believe that the Common- wealth ls a potent force for pencd. order and good government throughout. the world. and the more we trade and prosper to- gether the stronger will this force be. . i l i wealth concept as we know it." Attending LCIETHDHTCS at the crypt of St. Paul's were 20 mem- bers of the Commons Common- 'wea'lth affairs committee. includ- ing Wiiliam Aitken, nephew of Ca- nadian - born Lord Benverbrook, and Sir Peter Macdonald, great grandnephew of the first Canadian prime minister. MET 300 The C a n a fl l a n leader shook .hands with some 800 persons at the annual Dominion Day recep- tion at Canada House. Travel Feature By THE CANADIAN PRESS Sporting events. memorial serv- ices and trips to pleasure spots oc- cuplcd the nation's time during the weekend as Canadians marked the Dominion Day holiday. Friday's warning of weather i-yercussians from hurricane Au- drey prompted many Canadians in the central provinces to con- sider staying home but as tem- peratures rosc and the rain passed. the highways became crowded with people headed for cottages, horse races and soap box derbics. ;- Across the land the weather was mixed-from scattered showers in; British Columbia, clear and warm in Ontario. chilly in Quebec and fine and warm In the Atlantic. provinces. This is how Canadians spent their weekend: Iritish Columbia: A queen was crowned during annuall festivities at Steveston in the heart of the salmon-fishing area. Clouds persisted along the cons Sunday morning with rain re- ported from Prince Rupert to Vancouver. However 10.000 peoplo tamed out at Mission in the Fraser Valley to watch the West- on Canada soap box derby. Alberta: The final day of an eight-dy horse racing meet and the annual highland games were the big attractions in Edmonton. At Rocky Mountain House. 55 miles west of Red Deer. the 150th anniversary of the arrival of iron- tlersman David Thomson was celebrated. Saskatchewan: At Saskatoon. city talk from southern Saskatch- rellef from node- lifl ii livils 1. E l Sports, Memori al Services, Dominion Day Coitagers along the Ottawa River were on the aien for floods as the Ontario hydro commission began a run-off of excess water collected behind up-river dams after heavy rains. Quebec: Low temperature gave many a weekend at home with MUTUAL SELF-INTEREST "I am one of those who believe that mutual self-Interest . . , the strengthening of common wealth economic ties." ' But he said that in seeking more diversity ''In our trade we would want to achieve it by expanding. trade with the Commonwealth and other countries. and not by cutting down trade with our American neighbors." Stating that the centre of Can- adas loyalty was the crown. is e added that Canadians looked in , , ward to the opportunity "we shall i V have of demonstrating that loy- alty.and affection" when Quen Elizabeth visits Ottawa in Octo- her. He said he hoped she Wvoultlll visit Canada for a longer stay In 5' the sprlngof 1059 toopentlsnnowl St. Lawrence Seaway. i The 600 guests at the dinner ap- plauded when Dlefenbaker said he is the first Canadian prime niinis- I ter whose ancestry is not ustirely British or French in origin. ; These Canadians of different 11- ' clal origins "yield to no man in J: I most of the activity around Mont- real and Quebec City. , Atlantic Provinces: There was warm sunny weather with New- foundland basklng in the B03-the hottcst weekend so far this year.! in St. John's. a parade of Cana-- dian servicemen and U.S. Airi Force men featured memoriuli services for fuewfoundlandis dead! in two world wars. I July I has been observed as Newfoundland's memorial day ever since the Battle of Beaumont; Hamel. France. in 1916, when the Royal Newfoundland Regiment salmon i was dccimabed advancing through the brow of a hill near here. barbed wire in the face of Ger-. man machine gun fire. 3 Elsewhere in the Atlantic Prov-3 inces either horse racing or base- ball was the centre of attraction. The lst Canadian Infantry Divi- sion from Camp Gagetown. N.B.. staged a track and field meet at. the University of New Brunswick. which also attracted many specta-l tors. And 10.000 men of the 1st infantry Division held their an- nual march past at the Blissville. air strip. l were not believed to be critical. their loyalty to the crown. or in - the value which they attach to the - Commonwealth connection." he declared. " Former Island Family In Crash HUNTSVILLE, Ont. (CPI-Eight persons were injured Saturday when two cars collided head-ou & One vehicle was driven by Dr. Vernon Sobey. 36, of Winnipeg and the other by Raymond Lavrecqno. 24. of Timmlns. Ont. Passengers in the first car in cluded B y r o n Cuicliffe. 15. d Downsvtew. 0nt.. and formerly of Cape Traverse. P.E.I.. his wife. Margaret. 20, and their three ellll dren. Donald 4. Sidney J. and II. .Only Byron and Sidney were C hurt. The injuries of tha othenl American Boycott Policy On . Red Chino Meeting Opposition WASHINGTON fAPl-The Am- erican policy of boycott of Red China, which has just been reaf- firmed by State Secretary Dulles. appears to be heading into trou- hle. Various pressures are building up ssalnst It both at home and abroad. and the Eisenhower ad- ministration may find it impos- sible to hold the line at all points. The policy restatement was made by Dulles in a speech of San Francisco Friday. It was his first major pronouncement on the' United States attitude toward Commanistcklsalnthoe officials Ihotltwsshlly In advance by Pros- Identlll senhower, As an official declaration try the iiatlon of the president. the X .' Francisco speech pI'elena& Q resents the considered i of the ndmlnistratin Q best for the interests of the States In dealing wib th marks of n dot.-um I 1 leaf debate. Dulles Ii T the policy barring my stausecretananderfkosuthw