ELKIRK ADMIRES sxsrua Pacific Command of the Royal Canadian Navy on September 8. during which he boarded ll. Il.C.S. slraena. one of it of the new submarine hunters either completed it being finished in Canadian Navy. Here he is pictured by the forward guns of the Sheena with Rear-Admiral ll.S. Rayner, Flag Officer Pacific Coast (left) and at right Commander John PT. -I:.--...... commanding of- ficer of l:l.M.C.S. Sheena. canadawinssnppaniror Full-Dress.Trade Parley rhovlns Canadian bilateral talks will be MONT TREMBLANT, Qua. !CPl-There were lg: cll.ldlcI- lions Monday nada has veicasnsnonwealth a K, loposal to a it-oaaatey common- weai" ass acoonsic eon- feroasa;--;' ' ' add the finance mi N qui Iml& Q and with vir- tualclyh ' indicated to the for holdln The car. we Call by r Ml -bsnsis no for an other asaslse to be bet at out p m. Th likely will be compldad morning with a formal pnlllc session in which delegates nadanbtodty will votes hold later. informants said it is not Later he was boat at a formal dinner for the delegates. Time and place for the big con- ference is expectcl to be settled likely to be held before sometime in I950. The spotlight now will be switched to Ottawa where Anglo- launched Wadneqlay to deal with llritain's proposal to establish a free-trade area botween'tha two countries. David Eccles. vfialdent of the board of trade. will represent Britain. The Commonwealth finance CUT Oil PRICES IMLIP - lqnrial Oil to- :1-J5 the lions of its .....,.'--...........-"- ”z:.'"u:.”"....' The reduction men to fur- awve and oils all men. It follows a half out sedation mans in July. naia rdutiens reflect competitive eoaCsO 3 ii iii 3' ii!- ii ute speech outlining Canadian suggestions for expanding trade. It was learned Canada in- dicstcd in her suggestion a will- ingness to consider providing capital for the expansion of the British West ladies including the boosting of a tariff pref at West indies sugar. Regrets Federal Reaction To U.K. Trade Offer I'!'. PE'!'ll'I. NJ. (C!) - Nova lootia Liberal-leader BaaryHlcks.saHIlandaybare- Reta termed the ”un- liva careful study to the "free trade" offer announced Sat- urday by British Chancellor of the Exchcauc Peter 'i'hornsy- IdrlI!icks'remarkswereeon- tainadlnthetextolaapeechre- leasadtothepresslnadvance. III! MARITIME! He said the reduction of trade barriers with the United states as wall as within the Common- wealth could mean much for the Prosperity And develonment of I sulnsted Dartial retunr . . . to the traditional British policy of free trade. which finally diup Paarad at the Ottawa conference in 1911." "in view of the fact that the British suggestion results from repeated datemesita of policy by Prime Minister Diefenbahcr and other members of the govern- ment of Canada, I regret that the initial reaction of the minister of Hm. Z other government has been so unfun- sbla as to even reflect on the stools dnrial the recent election campaign.” Special Session Call Delayed IaI'I"I'IaE ROCK. Ark. (AP) - ANCIENT LIBRARY The famous Greek patriarchal library at Alexandria. Egypt. marked its lmoth annlversaa; In I51. "Covers Prince Edward Island Like The. Dew" WN CANADA. 'l'Ul-BDAY, ocmaav. 1, 1957 French Gov'fjGoes Under On Algerian Home Rule Largesl Canadian-built Plane Delivered To RCAF MONTREAL (CF) h The larg- est aircraft ever built in Canada - a submarine hunter named after all-seeing Argus of the loo eyes - was formally delivered Monday to the RCAF. Defence Minister Pearkes ac- cepted the first four-engine Argus from the builders, Canadair Ltd.. at a special ceremony here and then promptly tur-ned.lt over to Air Marshall Hugh Campbell of Ottawa, chief of the air staff. The huge plane. a resigned ver- sion of the Bristol Britannia. will Join the RCAF'a maritime air command for sub-hunting duties off Canada's coast. It is expected to go into service early in 1958. The Argus - named after a giant in Greek mythology - is packed with electronic search de- vices. It is capable of carrying homing torpedoes, depth charges. and other anti-sub weapons. Built for a cruising range of about 4.000 miles. the aircraft can search out and attack enemy sub- marines far off shore. it has a cruising speed of about 115 mph Customs, Excise Officers Meet SAINT JOHN. N3. (CP) - A report on efforts by the Customs- Associa- and Excise Officer's tion to get pay for overtime work, rather than cornpensa" ttme. was given here Saturday by A. V. Paterson of Ottawa. " ' secretary -treasurer. He apok. at the annual meeting of the New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island branch. R. E. McCavour of Saint John was elected branch president. Vice-presidents are H. A. Pow- er. Charlottetown; Leo Geary. Laacastt. N.B.. beossne sec- Enacutlve members include D. B. Dunflald. Moncton; G. D. Murchle. Dallioosle; C. A. Silli- phant, sumrnerside. P.l:.I.; SJ. Gillis, Bsthurst. N.li.: A. 3. Met- sler. Campbellton. N.B.. B. J. Dewolfe. Newcastle. N.B. S. D. MacDonald, Chatham, N.B. and S. J. Loretta. sackvilla. N.B. WILL REPRESENT CANADA LONDON (CPl-George Drew. high commissioner in London. w represent the Canadian govern- ment at the funeral of King Haa- kon of Norway in Oelo today. Canada House officials announced Monday. Liberal Convention To Pick Leader Likely In January its basic principles appeal to the to meet with members of the OTTAWA (CF)-A Liberal con- vention to pick a successor to retiring leader Louis 8. st. Lau- rent likely will be held in late January at Ottawa. Duncan K. llacTavish. national party pa sideot. said late Mon- day that this appears to pronect following a day-long meeting of . the 32-member executive coin- miiicr of the National Liberal Federation. But he said in an Interview that the committee came to 3 firm uoommendatlon on an no tunl date. aithrongh the Ottawa locale appeared flrrn enough. pieofc d.Buthesdded ”u'..”..mi."'.-7.a.....a.m make any changes neceuary la heap pace with the times. Late Monday Mr. st. Laurent arrived at Liberal haadquartu-s them and sat around informally at the closed meeting. The 75 - year - old Mr. St. Laurent has awiliced that he executive. Officials said he just shook hands with as soon as a successor is chose; Developments st Monday's one day meeting made it clear that he will be leading his Liberal op- position party through the com- ing session of Parliament. CANDIDATE! IN TOWN Two prospective candidates as his successor were in the capital Monday but did not turn up at y were forrner Pearson and former health min- ister Paul Martin. former cabinet mlnla ' Beck's job s' T F -slow enough for effective sub searching - and a maximum speed of about 300 mph. VITAL REGION Mr. Pearkes. accepting the Ar- gus. said Canada's sea board is a vital defence region, ”because we are cognizant of the fact that the Russian navy now has is consid- erable number of submarines ca- pable of firing rockets or missiles from far out at sea. 'l'l'he modern submarine, nu- clear - powered. with vastly im- proved weapons. presents a thre not only to our ships at sea but also to our cities and industries located well inland." He said this emphasizes the importance of the anti-submarine work of the Canadian navy and air force and the ”con.stant nec- essity of developing equipment and techniques that will provide effective counter-measures." Text of his remarks was re- leased in advance for delivery. Four planes have rolled off Canadair's production line. and three have completed their flight tests. The first two will remain at Canadair for further develop- ment work. The Argus will replace the con- verted version of the wartime bomber Avm Lancaster. now used lby the RCAF for offshore pa- 1 trols. Mr. Pcarkcs said in a press conference Argus has drawn the ttkeenest interest" from NATO countries. B r i t B i n and the United States were particularly interested. Mr. Pearkes declined to dis- close the price of the present Ar- gus contract. "All I can any is that It costs is great deal of money." he said. "I give it a very high dcgree of priority for the defence of this country." Labor Speakers Flay UK BRIGHTON. England (Reuters) Powerful trade union leaders told the Conservative government Monday it is "playing a den- gerous game”. if it hopes to break the unions by deliberately crest- ing unemployment. They were speaking at the La- bor 'psrty's annual conference which opened here with 1,500 del- egates unanimously condernriw government economic policiu which have led to renewed finan- cial austerity here. W. J. Carine, president of the Amalgamated Engineering Union. said the government has capito- lated to the demands of indus- trialists and flnancie . who want a measure of unemployment in order to break the unions. "That is a dangerous game to play in 1957." he said. "We would advise the government that the trade unions have not the slightest intention of permitting such policies to be effected." USE AGAINST UNIONS Prank Cousins. general-score tary of the giant Transport and General Workers Union. accused the government of aiming to use unem pi e y in ent as a weapon , ' t unions. The conference began with all the tmosphere of the general elcction campaign. which Labor leaders bellve soon will be forced on the government by the current financial crisis and waning popu- G "r an election is not due until 1”). Delegates passed unanimously emergency resolutions on the two issues on which any election would be fought. One declared that through abs donrnent of domestic planning all control and its "military adven- tures abroad"-a reference to lad fall's Suez crisis-the government has contributed directly to infla- tion. loss of gold and dollar re- serves and recent speculation against the pound. n.zr-ass. ACT The other pledged the next La- bor government to repeal s ru- cnt rent decontrol act by which the government has freed land- lords of hundreds of thousands of middle-class dwellings to charge higher rents and evict tenams. Harold Wilson. Labor's c economic spokesman. at ed Prime Minister Macmillan. Ila said "every month this govern- ment clings to office to satisfy Mr. Macmillan's dignity and love of power means a further weal- ening of our economic defences. .a further loss of our precious re- serves. and further loss of our standing in the world." Wilson said the government is facing the worst economic condi- tions Britain has known for more than 40 years. He described latest economic measures as "a vicious and calculated attack on public investment. local authorities and Iarlty among voters. Technically. on the trade union movement." Holla Appears In Command Of Convention; Beck Blasted MIAMI BEACH. Fla. IAPW - James R. Hofla's political foes complained of pressure tactics Monday night at the international Teamsters convention and lost an attempt to get AFL-C10 Pres- ident George Mcany to address the delegates. e These developments came nit 68-year-old John F. English. the tesmsters' secretary - treasurer. blasted retiring president Dave Beck and other fellow Teamsters chiefs. Hoffa, Detroit union vlce-pres- ldent and leading contender for enmeshei iv- the union's scandals. appeared well in command of convention machinery as seaaiona got under way at the oceanfront Municipal Auditorium. BLAST! LEADIRSIIIP English. a veteran of to years in the union. said he'd spent in hardest fiva years of his life dur- ing Beck's leadership trying to keep track of union funds. incentive is there for inglon Monday that the Senate rackets committee has evidence that 50 per cent or more of the convention delegates were ll- legally selected. Beck countered that M:-Clelisn has supplied no facts to back up his contention. and told reporters: ''In my opin- ion. the senator is in error." This came as the convention lenlailvely seated some 1.500 of the I929 delegates. Beck said those tentatively seated had cre- dentials legal on their face. but any of them still could be chal- lenged. Aim in Washington. Chlcf Jus- tic. Earl Warren of the Supreme Court took under advisement ar- guments made by a Teamsters rank-and-file group aeekinl to block the convention elections here until delegates u C ' I could be checked. The plaintiffs in the court case claimed. as did McClellan. that delegates had been improperly PARIS (AP: A Premier Mau- rice Bourgcs - Maunoui-y's gov-' ernment and his program for a measure of home rule in Al- geria ioundered Monday night on' a vote of no-confidence. I The National Assembly cast 253 votes for the XV:-month-oldi regime 279 against. Bourges-Maunoury offered his resignation but President Rene Coty asked him to remain in of- fice to handle current business until a new premier is named. Bourges - Maunoury, 42-year- old middle ruader. and hm min- isiers had gone to Elysee Pal- ace to hand their . signatiuus to the president. MAY CONTINUE Since the government's defeatl was not by an F ' f majorifyl of the assembly's total of 596 deputies. the government was not overthrown constitutionally. There was a chance Coty might talk the premier into holding of- rice until the assembly has been limited for a second renting of the A palace communique said the paesident told the premier he could not accept the resignation "at this time and in present cir- cumstsnces." This meant that a precedent set last spring would be followed again. Then premier Guy Mallet. although eager to resign. was in- duced to remain and handle cur- rent business for several weeks until a new man could be found to form a government. That man was Bourges-Maunoury. The premier left after half an hour with Coty. He refused any comment to reporters as he made his way to his car. - Mnmury. France's since Armand youngest premier Fsiliores took over the premier- ship at 42 in lass, heads a coal- tion of Socialists. Catholic Popu- lar Republican and moderate Radical - Sociailds with a. few spllniiu elements. He took omen June 13. His government h F'rame's mus since the Second .World War. and the lsth sinoe Gen. Charles De Gaulle. set Q his Paris regime in 1944. leading the opposition were about 15 Communists. 84 Pound- ists, about is Social Republicans (former De Gaulllsts) and some Premier Asked To Remain Unlil Successor ls Found Radical Socialists. I with these forces evenly matched. the balance of power layin thevotesofabout lmin-, dependents. Peasant party mam. bera others. A majority sided against the government. FEAREI) INDEPENDENCE Bourges - Maunoury's measure would give Algeria internal nu. tonomy through six or seven lo- cal assemblies. French settlers probably would dominate two of the assemblies in areas when they are concentrated. the Al- gerians the remainder. The assemblies could cap the Algerian governmemal structssre by creating a federal assembly. Despite the vagueness of me Powers 51! this federal body. it . . 9 A.” is ... who feared it would open the way to the outright indeperalenes of Algeria. Communists and fel- low - travelling Progressives joined the opposition because they want independence for the Algerinna now. Two Children Killed, 20 Hurl I05 ANGELES (AP)-At lead two youngsters were killed and more than 3) injured when a school bus plunged into a 26-foot dl! and landed Catholic School on the city's nan aide. , Coroner's deputies add bodleahlldhem SPOKANE. (AP) - Il- vestigators said two boys. is and while trying to steal a radio from his show window. Rev. Donald Campbell of Men- tague. Moderator of the Synod of the Maritime Provinces of the Presbyterian Church in Canada will preach the sermon at the opening session of the land as- nusl meeting in Zion Presby- terian Church here this event Following the service the S will elect ainew moderator. The Communion service will be held Wednesday forenoon Mayrr .l.D. Stewart will bring greetings on behalf of the City of Charlottetown and Rev. Howard Christie of Trinity United Church will speak on behalf of the Min isterial Association. Reports will be received at a business meeting on Wednesday afternoon and Rev. H. Keith Markell. professor of church hia- fnry at Presbyterian College. Montreal. will address a meeting in the evening which is open to the public. r There will be is luncheon at St James Presbyterian Church at noon on Wednesday and din- ner will be served at it pm. lnl Zion Church. V Rev. John MacNabb. editor of- the Presbyterian Rcrord. will be one of the visitors from out"ide of the Marifimes. It is expected that Rev. Al). Mncl(innnn. Lil- Presbyferian Maritime Synod Opens Sessions Here Tonight REV. MR. CAMPBELL tie Narrows. Cape Breton. Mod- erator of the General Asaembb. will also attend the sessions here. although that was still uncortsdl last night. chosen. The suit for an injunction contended that delegates” selee tion had been rigged to support i Hoffa. l The two Teamsters vice-prev lidents who had no opposition Joseph Dlvlny. San lfrancinco. OPPMITION "VlNDfCTlV!” Lee said the suddenly - devel- HALIFAX fCPl -"The free . trade proposal of the British gov- l ernmenl is a trick." Lord Beaver- lbrook said in an interview here Beaverbrook Calls Trade Proposal U.K. Gov'f Trick