'rEl.Ei?it6NE 3506 Buyer meets seller with Guar- dian Want ask for classified ad taker, for Ads. Dial 8506 x quick results. ' A PAGES 77te Guardia "Covers Prince Edward Island Lilte The Dew" STORM DAMAGE TO N. S. HIGHWAY Till-1 highway was gutted out by wmd-wlpped seas during the gale storm that battered Nova Scotia with too mile an hour gusts. This main highway between Hali- fax and Yarrnouth was washed out by the winds and surf that twisted telephone poles along the Way- CP Photo... .. Russia May...H,ave Secrets Of Canada's Radar Lines I LABRIEVILLE. Que. (CPI- Russia may have acquired some new. secret information about Can- ada s northern rader network with the defection of an American pro- fessor to the Reds. says Pet Welsh secretary-treasurer of the Pan- Canedlsn Anti-Communist League. Mn Wlilh. first to make public last year's attempts by a soviet dipllomet to bribe an RCA! clerk. a eccese-to all of Canada's top-ae- eret emmetrlc projsas the far north. including the DEW gallant Eu-Iv Werrtillll radar 6. lie said an informant in the geodetic survey of Canada had dis- closed that Prof. Maker wu given Miller of all secret o tions in Canada on the heals the U.8. airport on eodaq end pltotorem- in had done no secret work. meiry had been given security clearance by the us. interior de DlI'tII'Ient'I geodetic survey. Pilotolrarnmetry is the science Oi Plloioiflhhlc map-makin . At Ottawa. geodetic survey of ciele said they had no knowledge of Prof. Maker outside of news re- ports thet the 41-year-old scientist had decided to work in Russia. Tile? said also all their maps are available to the general pub- lic. including those'deallng with the far north. The sodetlc survey they laid. with the exception of some Work on lutded mlssilu two years ago. The results of this work were available to American officials but only l-ilfmllll "official channels." Mr: Walsh said Prof. Maker had at one time been employed .5 a geo- desist at the white sands atomic Psychiatric Training is Made Available To Undergrad RN's - a "Mil: bxein -n3a..K:”.. th "Boil-' iion of 'i'1'IiniI!l School officer un- :55. 13:. - i:!Plft1:l:lt of: Health. geelth Minister. ML. Miss llaclsennen who has been Superintendent of Nursing at the Provincial Senatorium since liuwillbeinehergcofunder lreduste Registered Nurses wise with to affiliate themselves for a three month period of psychiatric i-"ililll at elconwood Hospital duties the three years of their hospital Mm the Island's three training Iehools may participate in these courses. Certain provinces of Can- ada require that e rechtered nurse have tralnint in psychiatry be- M1 they can fully practice their profession. in addition to the above duties. the newly appointed training so officer will be in charge of a program for the training of our- sing assistants which will be a two year course. The first year will be a course in general nursing while the second year will be de- votedtothecareofihementelly course. Nurses ill e Y-i-rdsv and guided missile proving grounds in New Mexico. Geodetic officials said that if Prof. Maker had been so employed. he would have had access to the Canadian classified information. Prof. Maker's decision to do- nounce his A l titlzenship was reported Moscow by Tue Dec. 18. RCMP and arrrty officials said they had no personal knowledge of him. Mr. Walsh said: "Our league has cornplled docu- t y evidence in the past three years that e well-organized Soviet espionage ring has been in oper- ation across Canada compillng val- uable top-secret data on gcod operations in C a n a d a. hydro- greplllc surveys and oceano- graphic information. ". . . It becomes dncreasinuy apparent that Soviet agents have been coordinating their espi activities with Makar. . . ." Last September Mr. Walsh rrtede public that Gennadl Popov. first secretary at the Soviet embassy. had attempted to bribe an RCA! clerk. The govcrnmut later an- nounced the Popov was botted out of the country and the clerk fired. .r....m...... 37,000 Fire Damage At W Saint John Refiiietvtents From Government :W ---a”"'”"”” gag was stationed at Windsor- HEADED FOR RECORD HIGH Newsprint Price Increase Eisenhower Replies To Bulganin WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi- dent Eisenhower called on Russia Wednesday night to work toward disarmament "within the frame- work of the United Nations" rather than through a five-power confer- ence such as the Soviet govern- ment proposed recently. This was the gist of a reply by Eisenhower to a Nov. 17 message to him from Soviet Premier Bul- ganin. Eisenhower's reply was made public by the White House. In his November proposal. Bul- ganin called for Britain, Russia, the United States, France and In- die to join In a summit confer- ence to move toward disarma- meat. STICK WITH UN In his reply, sent to Moscow Tuesday night, the president left the door open for some such con- ference ln the future. saying:- "I could agree to a meeting- wltenever circumstances woui make it seem likely to accom-m pllsh a significant result." However. Eisenhowc. went on to make it clear he feels this is not the time for such a big power conference. He added that in his opinion "deliberations within the frame work of the United Nations seem most likely to produce.n step for- ward ln the higltly complicated matter of disarmament." For that reason. the president said, "The United States will make further proposals there"-within the UN. A reliable source in London said Wednesday that Prime Minister Eden has turned down the Bul- ganin Proposal for a disarmament conference. He ezild Eden's an- swer. which now ls in Moscow. will be delivered at the Kremlin as soon as the British embassy can get an appointment. The French reply is expected to be sirgil to those of Britain and the U. . "Deputy Dad" For Prince Charles IANDRINGHAM. Eng. (Reut- ers)-The Royal Family Wednes- deycailedlnajovlel-looking schoolteacher who sports a bandl- bsr moustache as "deputy dad” for Prince Charles during the Christmu vacation. The sight-year-old prince, at the rough-and-tumble age. misses his father. the Duke of Edinburgh, now in the Antarctic in the course of a world tour. To solve the problem. the Queen asked Michael Fsrebrothcr. 3'!- year-old headmaster of an exclus- ive boys preparatory school. to spend the next two or three weeks with Charles at Sandringham. where the Royal Family tradi- tionally comcs for Christmas. Ferebrother. a bachelor. is ad- dicted to twceds 'and peaked caps. He has a reputation as a marvel- lous storyteller. His background includes Eton. Oxford University and the Grena- dier Guerds. He met the Royal Family during the war when he OWN. CANADA THURSDAY, JANUARY 3. 1957 75.000 EMPLOYEES AFFECTED Para Iysis its C.P.R. As wlantse; Clear with e few cloudy Mm . vols; very cold; west wind!” Low-high of Charlotte- town I0 below and ldebews-if 20. R Firemen's Strike Underway Pick Barbadoes As Site Of Sugar And Spice Capital LONDON (Reuters) Three men who have never lived in the British West Indies suggested Wednesday that the proposed Brit- lSll Caribbean Federation create a federal capital on the Island of Barbados. Ten of Britain's West Indian col- onies. with 2.000.000 to 3,000,000 persons. will be linked together being later this year. The site of the federal capital ld d is one of the unsolved issues among the "sugar and spice" ls- lands. Colonial Secretary Alan Lennox- Boyd lappointed Sir Francis Mudie. Prof. H. Myles Wright and A. E. Cook in study the contro- versial problem "as wholly lin- partial persons who have never resided in the West Indies." CLIMATE BEAUTY They selected Barbados on the basis of availability of non-agrl- cultural land and climate. They also considered the beauty and views they feel a capital should have. They gave second prefer- ence to Jamaica. largest island in the group. and third place to Trin- a The commission frowned on the proposal by the Trinidad govern- ment that temporary govern- mental headqunrtcrs be estab- lished in unused buildings at the United States naval base at Cha- gunrmas. "We consider that it would be highly damaging to the prestige of the new federation to have its capital even temporarily situated in an area which is under the con- trol of a foreign power. however. friendly that power may be." they said. Any capital. they said. should be big enough to have a popula- tion of at least 10,000 persons. The estimated cost of such a town would be no less than f:10,000.000. "The capital should be the place which will draw people from all the islands and foster the growth of that West Indian patriotism which is essential if the federation is to be a success or indeed to have any real meaning at all." they said. Many Communities Facing Food, Fuel, Mail Problems By THE CANADIAN PRESS Delivery of food. fuel and mail loom as the all-important problem for a long list of Canadian com- munitics serviced only by the Canadian Pacific Railway as the company's firemen went on strike Wednesday. Although most of the commun- ities affected can be reached by roads. trucks will be hard-pressed to meet essential demands. let alone keep up routine deliveries a Canadian Press survq indi- cates. . The strike also threatens to cur- tall or close down production la many industries. including the 6.- 000-man Consolidated Mining and Smelling plant at Tr-all, B.C.. In- ternational Nickel Company at Sudbury. Ont.. and the Canadian Gypsum Company at Windsor. N.S.. where 400 men were laid off Wednesday because of the strike. NORTH HARD HIT , One of the most isolated areas is a CPR-serviced aree northeast of Sudhury. Starting from the small village of Benny. to miles northwest of the ining centre. there are If communities on a 190- mlle stretch of the main transcon- t' ntel CPR line which are com- pletely dependent on CPR serv- ce. A 12th. Chaplcau. is joined to the outside world by a 149-mile road. Then there is e 104 - mile stretch front Franz. Ont. where TORONTO (CF) - Newsprint- the paper on which newspapers are printed-seems” headed for a new record price. Abltlbi Power and Paper Com- pany, one of Can e's big produc- ers. Wednesday announced an in- crease of 81 a ton. effective March I. to bring the New York price to 8134 a ton. No other companies followed ' medlately.but in the past an increase by one major pru- ducer has been followed by the others. M. J. Foley. president of Powell River Company, a west coast pro- ducer. said the increase should be at least double the amount en- "igiti -it E ill; il- l i. ii: the CPR meets the Algoma Cen- to the daily newspapers which are finding increasing economic pres- sures which make it more and more difficult to maintain sefa profit margins necessary to fulfill their obligations as the basic mass medium of communication. Ser- thls (Abitlbl's) action." paper Publishers Association the increase will materially of Canadian daily newspapers. N0 PROBE PLANNED posaisofanothergoverlttnen tilwehavereceivediestsof proposalsthroughtlteuual nels" ifittoneliyu crease would be said inns in December. Senator Charles reaching what E. Potter. Republican scnatc about suggested that and demand. cuadi govern lion and demand increasing and to curb likely to increase for some years it wm Newsprint g has have seen sharp climbs and dips. such in distress. chee- Prices climbed back to 850 la The Canadian basic price is tre tut: tents; in 1945: set belowtheNewYta'I8iiini!t7&inlstl: price. and under the Abltilsl ie- into: as in test; ms in mass: tral Railway, to Marathon on Lake Superior where there ere four more isolated centres. These villages. with a combined population of about 4,500. have been stockpiling food and fuel to meet the strike. Mayor Leo Raclcot of Cliapleau said there is a week's supply of food on hand. The town's power utility alone uses 3,000 gallons of fuel oil a day. and there was”im- mediata ' " of the supply running out. The CPR had offered to sug- ntettttlte town supply from its own stock as long as possible. but the hospital has already been given priority on oil supplies. , Temperatures throughout this area have generally been below zero for several days, and little relief was promised by long-range forecasts. N0 SPECIAL PLANS In Montreal, CPR and union spokesmen said no plans have been made for special relief trains to the isolated communities. either in northwest Ontario or other ar- eas. A company official said that so far as he knew no c ' has asked for special considera- iy Megantlc. Que.I asked people to withhold mailing parcels to points served by the strike - bound CPR. The strike would cause congestion and de- lays and facilities of alternative transportation services would be taxed to the limit. There was no immediate clear indication of what would happen to CPR express services. Most CPR depots were reported accept- ing express on a "subject to de- lay" basis. 01!. TRUCK! MUSTERIJD In City bus company of- ficials sald they are watching the ” ”on to see if extra buses should be put into use to fill the transportation gap. Juebec - Montreal pool trains were stopped. but Canadian Na- tional Rellwsys trains were ex- pected to fill the need. In the Marltlmes the Dominion Atlantic Railway. a subsldia y of the CPR. is the only line into Nova Scotia's Annapolis Valley. but officials said there is little likelihood of hardshlpethere be- cause thc area is well serviced with roads. They added, however. commun- ltics on the CPR line between and McAdam. N.B. may find themselves in dif- tion. and W. E. Gamble. chief of the striking Brotherhood of Fire- men and I-Jngincmen (CLCL said that any emergency will be dealt with if and when it arises. In Ottawa post office officials ling newsprint in that province. but the provisions of the law have not been put into operation. Newsprint prices have ranged from n 3ll2.ti0 pre-war high is 1920 to a depressed low of S40 in 1934-35. and back again through ions consequences can result from a succession of increases to its present figure. John Bessett Jr.. publisher of Canada this year produced as the Toronto Telegram and pree- estimated 6.w0.000 ions of news- ldent of the Canadian Daily News print of which some 5-225,01! in the United. add States. The United States itself to the already-heavy cost-burden produced 1.800.000 tons. were sold Newsprint - which has been scarce since the war dcsPit8 mounting production - now is to he a balance between suppi! with both Drodue IBTOICAI. rm.-runs: prices over the years ms-ma: SIN in I043; 160 II in INC: flculty. Pulp and paper mills in western Nova scotia faced problems as a result of the tie-up. Oil companies were marshalling tank trucks and hiring extra driv- ers io supply fuel oil to Annapolis Valley consumers along the D line. Hospitals and schools in re- mote communities would be given priority in truck deliveries. p Gasoline would also be shipped if needed and trucks were avail- able. Hold I2 I. R. A. Raid Suspects BELFAST (Reuters)-Irish (Re- publican police Wednesday nllZ'Ji held 12 men suspected of taking part in an Irish Republican Army raid on police barracks at Brooke; many so to employ". fn pay. borough Tuesday nisiIi- , Two of the gang of 15 raiders were killed in the attack. 'They were identified as Felron OH!” Ion. a ll-yearold draftsmsn em- ployed hy the Monaghan ilrish Republic) county council. and Sean South. 10. of Limberfck, a timber merchant's clerk. ' Police and troops hunter! "'1'; the rest of the gang who attacked, the barracks with machine-guns-I and hand grenades. Four of the; men held by Irish Republican P0'l lice were in hospital in Monsshnl and the othcr eight taken to-Dill?” lia. It was thought that the ofheri IRA raiders are somwherc In the; bleak hills of Northern Ireland's county Fermaaegh. Police and trnopg aided by helicopters and tracker dogs swept the loud! mountain area Wednesday- Tuesdey night's raid was the latest in a series of attacks which . Earlier nlifht county Fermanegh. mo 7 ntvsirtrsiovan 7 LONDON. om. lCPt-Tca per- sons scrambled front an oval- lllth hour peace attempt MONTREAL iCP) - Paralysis enveloped the vast rail network of the Canadian Pacific Railway Wednesday as ti firemen"; strike became effective at 4 p.m. local time. Operations were tied up from coast to coast. Maritime points were the first affected-at 4 p.m. Atlantic time- Four hours later. at 4 p.m. Pacific time. trains came to a halt in British Colum- bia. Union chief W. E. Gamble in- spected pickets at Windsor Sta- tion, where CPR President N. R. Crump's office is located. At about the some time Mr. Crump issued a statement offering to run trains if unions other than the firemen's union will work. Anti he added that if the Broth- erhood of Locomotive Firemen and Flnginemen (CLCJ "accepted the report of the conciliation board not one fireman would suffer loss of employ...e..t or earnings." The union already has rejected the re- port. Mr. Gamble toured picket points -and read a statement he sent Wednesday to Acting Prime Min- lster Howe-as the strike became effective in the central region. CPR operates in eight provinces and five time zones. excluding Prince Edward Island and New- foundland. ABOUT 75.000 JOBLESS Although the flremen's union has only some 8.000 memzers in CPR. a total of. some 75,000 workers are expected to be out of employ- ment. Non-fireman unions have pledged to respect picket lines. The CPR right-of-way stretches l7.0t)0 miles. from Halifax to Vic- toria. and three subsidiaries. Do- minion Atlantic Railway. Quebec Central and the 197-mile E malt and N-soalmo are also tied u . company officials said here. erller only the Dominion Atlantic and Quebec Central were mentioned here. Negotiations between the CPR and the brotherhood began last 21-percent wage increase. pay for statutory holidays and tlme-and-a- half for statutory holidays worked. The dispute went to a concilia- tion bosrd after the compnwy pro- posed gradually dropping firemen- helpers front diesels in yard and froitzhl service. The boardsmajorliy report - accepted by the company - ap- proved the company: diesel plans .- and . ommended wage in- creases of seven per cent retroac- tive to last April and five per cent effective next June. The union promptly rejected the report and called a strike vote. PEACE TALKS FAIL The disputants were brought 10 gcther by the government for 6:! , . town. but the two-day talks col- llapscd on New Year's Eve. l Mr. Crump called Mr. Gamble llshorlly after noon Wednesday to inquire if there had been any change in the union stand. it was February. the union demanding a . 'with Mr. Greg and Acting Prints Company Offers To Operate Trains ll Unions So Desire trains. UNION BLAMEB CPR "Train service on Canadian Pa- cific unfortunately remains sus- pended 4tntii unions represe employees other than firemen us their men will work," he said. "When this occurs Canadian Pe- cifit: will run trains. Furthermore if the flremen's union accepted the report of the conciliation board. not one fireman would suffer loss of employment or earnings." Mr. Gamble, releasing the text of his telegram to Mr. Howe, de- clared: "In view of the several facts, among them that the CPR is the only important railway on the North American continent re- fusing to withdraw those in the diesel issue, and also re- fusing to grant locomotive firemen deserved wage increases. the brotherhood cannot conclude oth- erwise that the prime respo ity rests with the company." He reported that strike pay it effective immediately, with fire- men eligible to receive as much as 8150 monthly if they have tent ilies. The'scale is 83 a day basic. 75 cents for the first child and 50 cents for others. PLANT TO CLOSE Across was asked how long the welkotl -with its impact on the Canadian ukely last. the CPR was involved is strike, which lasted nine Parliament now is scheduled to sit Jan. 0. , t At Trail. B.C.. an official of Q Consolidated Mining and hdliS Company said the a shutdown of the giant tion 'iwlthie a week". because at lack of concentrates. throwing some 6,000 out of work. CNR. Trans - Canada Air Lines and other agencies braced them- selves for heavy demands with the CPR shutdown. but made little comment. Provincial Transport, a big Oils- bec bus line. said "We will do our best to make extra buses avail- able. . .but there is a limit to the amount of extra equipment we can provide." In many parts of Canada CPR is the only rail service and in some sections it is the sole means of transport. Fears were expres- sed in the Algoma district north of Lake superior that food supplie- would run short. LAST HOPES QUASHED The only apparent lets hope Oi averting the strike was dashed New Year's Eve when Mr. Crumli and Mr. Gamble disagreed It all Ottawa conference on a SOVCTW mcnt-proposed plan for a commis- slon to study the diesel question- They had gone to Ottawa at the invitation of Labor Minister Gr!!! and held two days of discussions ii Minister Howe. rcpnrlcd. "We told him that there had been no chaotic. and it amounted- iu mutual verification that rteitherl .ltllP of its hail changed his Sland- ;3lr. Gamble said. g V I A railway snurrc t-sitmnicrl rcv-! lcnuc loss to the CPR at 812.00.000 in day. and here referred to the lromp:-iny'S annual report Stlllllfi .nm 5.1 per cent of earnings nor- Mr. Cntmp announced Dec. 25 that the railway Wm-lid "9 "9 '" its services if the fircmcn's unit"! went on strike but his statement Wednesday made clear that if un-: ' ions offer to work OTTAWA (CF) A general: alarm fire wiped out half a city: block in lower town Ottawa Wed-I nesday and made homeless aboutl 150 persons in sub-sero weather. The loss was unofficially cati- mated at 81.001 003 01' "lo" I! wind - fed names destroyed lo buildings, including two small ho- ment buildings. and small businesses In the By- Ward market area. fought the blue in the capital's oldest section a few blocks east of Parliament Hill. union's proposal for investigation of the diesel question by a trib- unal that would not be hirtritnv inn the diesel issue later. then thi CPR will run Mr. Crump said. Half A City Block tsvviped . Out In Fierce Fire At Ottawa fully held the fire to the casterl half of a block bounded on west and east by Sums: and PH- cnf streets and on the north ad south by Murray bl Clarenee Streets. cepd destruction in the half-block were the 51-room Canada RoH leis and an assortment of 1001- and two old stone houses (ll rooming houses block's northeast corner. were able to save much more of Three firemen were injured es their hdongings thn the clothes most of the city fire department they wine from sleep. The disputants agreed i-0 ll” idea of a study commission-but collided on its nature and power!- Mr. Crttmp said the CPR was will- ing to submit the whole case-dies els, wages and subsidia , issues ,to an arbitration tribunal PI'0' virled the union gave prior aim mcnt that the findings would be bimi'iltZ. CPR was not agreeable to the "If we had no meeting of minds trike would take place later." Ice - encrusted firemen success- lb The ti building! which G E tewofthehorrtelessinfhcerca as Heavy ice which covered - the - .t...,: ------y-- e--.--..,,, Q ,.. .