TELEPHONE 8506 Buyer masts seller with Guardian Want Ads. Dia I 0506 ask for classi- fied ad taker, for quick results. while mnmsoiian "Covers Prince 14 PAGES 0WN, Edward Island Like The Dew" CANADA THURSDAY. JANUARY 24. 19W WEATHER Variable clou&ioO alsowflurrlaa today and much colder. low-high at Charlottetown I0 and 12. PRICE 56 s7oo,ooo Allocated For Gulf Shore Rd. This Year OTTAWA lSpeclal)- A sum of 5700.000 has been allocated for road and bridge construction this year on the Gulf Shore imnd in P.E. island's National Park. it was learned Wednesday by Neil A. Ma- theson. Liberal MP for Queens. This amount is a proportion of a large catch-all item for National parks. listed in parliament- ary estimates a 1 ends . Mr. Matheson was ' 'ormed by officials of the Department of Nor-l thern Affairs and National Re- sources that of the total amount. SGMJXJO will be devoted to con- struction of two stretches of the coastal ad. One section is tau;-. point-seven miles from the park entrance to Stanhope and the cum- Is also four-point-seven miles from the Brackley Point Road to the Western end of Rustico, The lana- stretcb will cover the new dam or Russia Warns United States msloscow (AP)-Russia warned e llllllt against setting up nuclear weapon and missile bases other countries. Allied nations also were warned. U The statement called such bases bridgeheads for preparation for closure across Little Harbor and will continue on across Robin- son's Island. Asumoftlomooowillbsspent this year to complete the pill trestle bridge across the Covehsad inlet. in addition to the 3700,0w In these definite projects, administra- tion and maintenance of the Pl. 1. Park will cost 8111.000 and 83!.- 205 has been set aside fir spacial minor projects. increase the threat of atomic war. the. official agency Tass after a day of similar warnings by the Soviet Communist party through publicati in Pravda. The paper also hinted that the Senator lnman Stresses Tourist Industry Needs A OTTAWA. (Special) - "Instead of giving assistance to aid people to leave the Marltlmes and es- tablish themseives elsewhere. we need assistance to encourage peo- ple to stay," Senator Elsie lnlnaa declared in the Senate Wednesday afternoon. . she was speaking on recom- mendatluns of the Gordon Com- mission and expressed some skep- ticism about ths opinion of ex- perts". Among suggested remedial measures. senator Inmsn mention- sd an overhaul of the existing scale of freight rates and Govern- ment encouragement for agricul- tura. Prince Edward island and other Maritime es. the island Senator said. needed more federal aid for promotional work for the tourist industry. With an active campaign of newspaper advertis- ing. magazine articles. radio talks and television programs. a great deal could be done. she said. to attract more and more on Along with the necessary promo- tion there is need of improvement in accommoation for summer visitors, better meals and unprov- ed transportation- In the same connection. Senator lnmantsdvocated extension of the prssen program of smbellishing historic sites. IIIGII PRIORITY Another high priority need of P.E.l., Mrs. Inmaa said. was the establishment of more processing plants and refrigeration plants for primary farm products including small fruits an tomatoes. More Jobs and real wealth would he created by processing the agric- ultural output at home. than sending it away to be processed elsewhere. Mrs. luman expressed warm ap- proval of the Throne Speech pro- posal in set up a committee to discuss and recommend on use of land. In P.E.i. she told her col- leagues. there are far too many vacant farms. Reasons for this visitors to the coastal ' r warsthstsoansyoungpeopladn Thaw Brings-Floods To Some Southern Mariti HALIFAX (CF) plagued the southern Msritlmos Wednesday as a tbrso-day Jann- arv thaw culminated in a gale art on that suit rivua . 6gm mu. hr roads and farms and strewing ins cakes our the area. I Five famlllas bad to leave their homes along the Laliave River in Brldgewster. N. s. Througlanit Nova Bcotla hundreds of cellars W9It'! flooded and highways and: wa er. Halifax and Saint John. N.B.. got almost two inches of rain. Winds reached 65 miles an hour It Sydney. g .An tca Jam combined with I on Mill Brook. Cornwallis Bi lylngstrsstssndsentwl feetof water surging fax highway. Several homes in the lnes' Sections Floodalohn and Digby was cancelled. Main lino trains of the Dominion Atlantic Railway were held upfor a time by flooded tracks at .'nT:uma."nuhnn "Dar Trum. flooding At Kantvills. N.S.. an ice ism tributary of the flooded inw- over the main Hali- lMarltimes and their people. United States in guided missile developments. Rowe, Martin Wt llke fmnlnr: at times than Clash During its no son to carry on the family .tsrming operations. and some farms have been allowed to run OTTAWA (CP) - Hon. Earl down because of lack of knowledge. Rowe and Health Minister Martin other reasons for the decline of clashed Wednesday on the gov- farming in the Province is the crnrncnt's attitude towards the high cost of machinery. labor and Commonwealth as the Commons taxes. It was essential, Sonata throne speech debate ended with lnman said, if P.E.I. is to can two votes carried by the Liberal tillue tar an-agriculturdalhprovinea majority. l ll 9'9 "Nil Ill 30'" "Never have I been more 9335' lllll1l30ll9d llI'l'lIl ll! lmllllhl ashamed of Canada's position hack into production ualn. 1! within the British Commonwealth the am where the lives In Klnss than I have been during the last County, Mrs. Inman said. IMP! six months." said Mr. Rowe. dep- is plenty of farm land for lIlVIl'Il'uty leader of the Progressive hundred families. Conservatives and member for f Mrs- lllsllll felt tbs; the Island Dufferin-Slrncoe, Ont. srmscodbebrougtbackinta MLM . profitable production u such II- M" ,,,,n,,""",,,:, ”,f,l:,'f ””'”l '' v flfllltlle ell: ill."-. farm, "One would have thought that reduced interest rates on farm "' lo” ”"ed "'9 d” when " loans and better transportation. "Md b” Wlslblf 3-” Wk '" she dunked Juno, DNA”. divide public opinion in this coun- (Kingston, gut.) cl-2:” his kind”: gv,;: ..fg;,,gg;;;3:,',;t.-Hsw eul c rem ' '"'" ”"' "”'" As the sitting hum its and. G. H. Castleden (CCF-Yorkton) 16 More Mina Victims Buried At Springhill SPRINGHJLL. NJ. (OP)- 5? .35 5 E n. deluge of rain added to tho gloat lllb Ubcrlll. lIl1llllN0Vlil00llllIllllllll0WIlINII sulssav rlmnxs Wednesday as 16 victltas I th -1-... elm” .. W L", NlW'1u', cd mogul. , a trill tiiii it Wednesday from past have said thetotalthlswI&bI.g ' funerals were MU Tbasdly. Rain and melting snow floodd ilk which you could some ceme' lea but services trembling across the 31 E5 on as scheduled. Bonn grav half filled with water. i : "Even that gossamer a weakened since that government's attitude to be that Canada must the United States. i a should not sell this Com- monwealth short." Would Unite 9 95.9 5 Clair Styles and Donald Tabc. Rev. T..l. Buchanan of st. J- Ba Roman Cathdh so it Private services were held bl Daniel Winters. Richard Ellis ah- nast Bolstillsr. David auu. haul ”"-'3 s'-”-"cl--1-"'""-u Farm Groups wmmrnd (CP)-A proposal In to the l t in I I r...."""il"" :'ll"”'”l ii. Cmaitin wag given to the CFA A pulley Itatement issued Wed- tho CPA said that a coin- lsay-'bs appointed by the would "lead to usher unification" of the efforts United States Wednesday atomic warfare" and said they The statement was carried by Soviet Union is ahead of the "ll night routs. All are from Mono- 'CI'A' b Ias if any plan may be be which MacNAUGHT MAKES DISCLOSURE IN COMMONS Will Seek Revision Of The Potato Tariff Agreement From Missing N.B. planes on the ground Wednesday. A government aircraft flew over the area with an R.C.M.P. obser- ver but found nothing. R.C.M.P. constables in the Min- to area, in miles northeast of here, and at i-iavelock 25 miles west of Moncton. continued a house to house canvass for information that might lead to discovery of the single-engined tripscer. R.C.M.P. from Moncton lent HALIFAX (CP)- A distress sig- nal picked up Wednesday at Har- mon air base near Stephenville, Nfld., may be a clue to the fate of s New Brunswick cabinet Min- ister and two other men missing on a flight from Fredericton to Monoton- R.C.A.F. Search and. Rescue Unit here said Wednesday night the United States air base sent a C-54 aircraft to investigate the signal. but the plane had to turn Possible Distress Signal Plane constables. soldiers and volunteers from a coordinating centre at liavelock to checlc reports of s low-flying plane heard by s8llt'lGlIl.I there "between 9 and 10 o'clock" local time Tuesday night. "We won't be able to do much at night," a spokesman said. "Some of the men will be staying here during the night but things will really get rolling again in the morning." back when it ran into rough weedi- er near the Cape Breton coast. Harmon reported the signal was an S.0.S, call heard on a recog- nized distress rsdlo frequency. Missing in a single-engine tripa- cer plane are Municipal Affairs Minister 1'. Babbitt Parlee. 42. civil defence official I-Inward Smith , 36. and construction company more Vehlcles I-Isllll the highways head Lg. Runn 39. .11 of than ever before. the 734 acci- Moncton, they dlupwud me, dents reported to the provincial leavlu Fredemwn med” mun Motor Vehicle Branch for I956 in- Au. Force 5",”, Hudquuun dicated a 12 per cent decrease here said more' than ll planes lmm me 1955 "3"” T 323- Thu would begin . much of m, mg," was learned from information ro- mu" u awn today (1-hundlyg) leasedyesterday by Mr. .l.A. Gal- Mrcun from Damnoum ud lant. Registrar of Motor rehicfles Greenwood, N.S.. and summersidol Salt” lPa3”Vl""' 15 ”;"':ed :3 PEI Wm b. uud. es. were non-ata. a .A lilght search by a Canso alr- 539 "'""'d m propmd hmm craft from Greenwood was held mllyt tl.'?22&:i?..2l”li;”n:::iti3 i'”i-'-?-'1?---'3-' , ding) decrease." Ill highw:-y g s B .3 of 10 persons, exactly the suns most intensive in the province's "WW? " mm 9'' N" '9'd' l' history. resumes today (Thursday) 1955- llllllrlu '50 Wk ' 37””? for municipal Affairs Minister '1'. toll of hlshwav me" In 1950 - 97 Babbitt Parlae and two campus htlhl lnluled la" 9'" in "NW tons wboss light aircraft dlsap- ll0ll Wllll only lllll lniured in 1055- Dund nu mud” mun. 5, Damage to property involved in tween here and Moncton. llllllw” ml5h'll' '1' "55 "" .' The 42-year-old New Bruns- ttmated to be 835,416.50. a do- wkk "bum mum". mm.” crease of approximately 8lt.000 Smith. 36. deputy civil defence from the 1955 estimate. In all coordinator for New Brunswick Despite the fact that there were Fifteen Fatalities On PEI Highways Last Year in 1956. This was 232 less than the number involved in 1955. UNDER GOOD CONDITIONS "The trend observed in the ma- jority of cases was similar in I950 to that obtaining in prior years." Mr. Gallant stated. "The majority of highway accidents occurred on straight sections. in daylight hours and under good travelling condi- tions." "This would indicate”, the Re- gistrar continued. "that in most cases. the driver wast at fault. . ceding at too grea a speed for conditions. or lackin in the ,7 care and a " Every effort is being made is ensure that only competent quali- flsd drivers were licensed in the Province. Mr. Gallant asserted. Candidates were subjected to ari- tsa. practial and scientific exa- ninotion 10 being on-ate afilbior vmicle on the pro- vinciai highways. But despite all precautions. careless and reckless drivers still constitute a serius hazard to life, limb. and pro- 121) vehicles were involved in van- and construction company prosid- ml" ml" ll! Maw" "uh. ell! LC. (Bill) Rllllill. 39. III BO- OTTAWA (CP)-Csnada is go- ing to renegotiate its potato tariff agreement with the United States probably attempting to have the present seasonal Canadian tarifi extended over the full year. J. Watson MacNaught. parlia- mentary assistant to Fisheries Minister Sinclair, disclosed in the Commons Wednesday that the government applied for permis- slon to seek revision in the tariff from the General Agleement on Tariffs and Trade. He said the GATT organization has given Canada the permission required since the Canada-U.S. potato tariff a... meat comes un der GATT. I Mr. MacNaught, Liberal meni- ber for the Prince Edward Island constituency of Prince. added: if hope that the experts of Can- ada and the Unletd States, if they have not already done so, will get together and try to work out a more equitable tariff alrangement on potatoes going between Canada and the United States." The government move follows representations from Canada's po- tato industry far several years calling for a higher tariff on Am- erican potatoes. TARWF UNEQUAL The present U.s--Canada agree- Will Seek To Have Seasonal Rate Extended For Full Year ment provides for a tariff! etfao : tive for six weeks from Juno Ill to July :1 each year of SW: cents .- a hundred pounds on American l potatoes coming into Canada. pun t ing the rest of the year, they anti 3 a two-level quota basis. A duly 1, of SP6 cents a hundredweigbt ,3 lPVled on an annual quota of Ir 0 000.000 bushels of table potlti and 2.500.000 bushels of seed po- tatoes. The tariff is doubled G . over-quota imports. Theagreementhasbeclllnd-, fact since 1939. when Canada primarily an exporter of pots and U.S. imports were not so portant as they have since come. The tariff board conducted investigation into the situation and I. reported to the government in No vember. i955. It recommmendad 3 specific action. Potato interests , otestcd befoaa V the board that U.S. imports. espo- cially in years when that country has a big crop. have a depressing effect on the Canadian market. They generally ues t thd the present seasonal tariff of 875 cents a hundred pounds be an tended to apply to U.S. import throughout the year- i i ; Heard Near Hu rifle fire wprs heard froh the nssdmlll---hst the outbreak of the anti-Oommu- nist revolution which was crushed by the Russian army. The firing was heard as the Russian-imposed Communist gov- ernment announced a series of lleved lost in dense woodlands . somewhere along the 100-mile ton. Darkness late Wednesday after- noon forced temporary sua min! of the hill-scale landhnnt aunch- edearlierintbedliintbecentral and southeastern sections of the province. Poor flvlns conditions kept most Cold Wave Moves East By Till CANADIAN PRESS Ontario ind Quebec residents shivering and skidding about on the ice that formed when floods were followed by freezing tern- TORONTO (CP)-Earl Attlee, Britain's post - war Labor prime minister, flew into Toronto Wod- nesday, sadly waaried by a gnial- ltng three-week lecture hour and bewildered by the vagaries of North American weather. The 73-year-oldpaer, who at- rived in this arctic-staged city at 4 am. on an interrupted flight from tropical Beverley Hills, Calif. submitted to a I a.m. press con- ference. within less than an hour he was lneptly cl-on - examined by a dozen newspaper men. one radio and two television interview- reratnras and gale-driven snow ers, and an 11-year-old boy who ooked hopefully at the weathsr- asked for his school news letter: InanW "How did you happen to be chosen prime ml ' LosT His GLABBEB lie slumped on a hotel - lobby sofa. His eyes were red - rimmed and he was without his spectacles. lost in a harrowing. six-hour over- odnesday. ."IOoattnued cold" was his for!- c . And as for the Maritime pI'0V- inces he said their turn is com- ing. The Arctic air mass which covered most of the continent overnight Tuesday pulling the I mercury down through thermome night wait at Chicago , ties like milk in a straw will "The aim of my tour." ha extend t vet to the Grand sighed. "seems to be to put me in the sun one flu and in the snow the next." There won't be a single centre Temperatures In California Tues- in assign cangda with tempert day were around 00. Toronto Wed- PUI Banks by the end of Wedncsds! III!!- C Q fhtl niovunent in Canada. tures above free-sing he said. Incsday lay under about four 1 . Csnadln GET NO COMMITMENTS 1 Labor ongress Meets PM two otlggrgtg urged by that contained these ; 0&3. . st. Latest 1. The federal govu-and said: u should glvctheiitgasstpdulo Lihthareqaesttasifederalttnesdopaonofscsxaactve Mil cannot: be given coilectlvehatlonal health insurance Diwali HE. he said that tbelleither l:0.l,IQ or the d YUM rdarad at d incu ing a acct: 1!!) of the station is the.Unllgi::re. M. Sl.l.aurentbsdnoenD OI lb Kim. w&e th civil servicalmenl o this. bIl'&I&.wIh & t bin; 2. There should be federal 3 III as: Q agna-ltion for an improved pin. meals.llsaiIaaastsaalh.lu l.AsidefroIn insurance. 31.. security IIIOIXC s Three-Week Lecture Tour Wearying Task inches of snow. the thermometer stood at it and icy winds wblstlod through downtown streets. Still Lord Attiee. lookinl a little like a British sparrow caught in a Canadian blizzard. politely par- ried and dodged the interminable questions. lie was non-committal on virtually all political The man who guided Britain's ernment from 1945 to II! as- piained: - ”I never criticize a government when I'm I Illicit ll the COIIIF t ." n'l'o questions on domestic Brit- ish politics he replied: ''I don't know. I've been away from Britain more than a fort.- night.” VASTNESS IMPRESSIVI What impressed him most about North America durinl llll lll'I1 visit since 1950: "The vast wealth - the enor- mous number of automobiles-the immense size of the universities." What or North American press conferences? "in Britain with national news- pgpcrg you give one press confer- ence and that's enough. Here I have to give one everywhere I go and they all ask the same ques-I tions. No one seems to blow what; 1 nld at me last one. Lord Attlee's tour, which has taken him from one coast to the other in the United States and mm the 29th parallel to the ma. gndg next eekend when he film back to Britain from New York Montreal Area Blocked Out MONTREAL (cm - A Itll.000- Volt transmission wire burned out Wednesday night. hlnckins out I larg section of Montreal for 55 minutes. The I81, the height of the evealnli rldlloar .0EicIalsoftbc0lIebec at break came at 5:33 V-M-laud it new ” , new t i gs and new mass arrests of "coun- ter-revolutionary" or "criminal" elements. it was announced that in Buds- pest 406 persons had been an- rested in a two-day roundup of "criminals" who had allegedly been freed from the capital's pris- ons during the P t t revolution. The people hanged or impris- oned were accused of inciting against the government of Pre- mier Jsnos Kadar or hiding weap- Dfls. Wednesday's firing was unex- tre of the capital before dark could find no open demonstrations or clashes to mark the date. CANDLB ON MONUMENT However. someone lit a tiny can- dl in front of the Budapest hero's mo ument. All over the city hun- dreds of other little candles flick- ered on the graves of the freedom glgiters, many buried where they Hungarian Communls militia- men with fur hats and tommyguns were more numerous than usual Wednesday about the pital. However. Russian tanks have dis- appeared from downtown Buds- pest, although they are heavily "concentrated in the suburbs. In central Budapest armored can manned by Soviet troops guard the parliament hlllldimz. the Com- munist party headqliaru.-ls. the RI--slnn Embassy and other key points. some Hungarian: say that even the courage of Budapest residents is breaking under the daily -9- nouncements of ecutions and an- Report Bursts Of Rifle Fire BUDAPEST (AP) - Bursts of hills overlooking Budapest Wad- "ti plained. Reporters touring the cen-q owed Tuesday when the coven- O I ngarlan Capital This wearing on the people's courage was heightened as the - . ...l.. Three more publicly nounced death sentences for leged "inciters." 2. Seven more prison . - for alleged concealment of oils. 3. At least two more arrests concealment of arms. 4. A broadcast warning by ! leading Communist part? llllcllef man that "the dictatorship of th proletariat will settle accoun p with all its enemies." The intensified terror wavs H t r to by the several hul- dred refugees who continue daily to cross the Austrian border. 69" ' plte the hardships of snow and sub-zero cold. H The roundup of alleged crim- - linals" in Budapest was fore5lII4- ment announced that all citizens must turn in their personal iden- tity cards to police "for exten- sion.” One of the main ohiectivel of this check would be to establish what happened to the thousands who were freed from Cammlmlll prisons during the October-Nib vember fighting. Communist Finance Minister flxtvan Kossa said that of not! alleged tr t ' freed from illll only 3,000 had been recaptueu. Claims Anti-British Feeling ln The U. S. LONDON rlleuters) - Nicholas Monsarrat. author of the best-sell- ing novel. The Crucl son said is a letter to the Daily Tele1i'IP' Wednesday: "it Mr. Hugh Gaitskell ileades of the British Labor party) was truly 'not aware of any Illll-3l'll- ish feeling' during his recent visit to the United states. I would I gcst his most urgent purchase a first-class bearing atd.' PQIII. Monsarrat now lives in Ottawa. CAMP PITAWAWA. Ont. lCPl Top col-nrnaaltcs of the int Casa- dian infantry Division are study- ing a radical new approach It battlefield tactics. 55 3; gr- Ell First Division Makes Radical . 5 Approach To Battle Tactics at; 'l