. 1 Q Who can refute a sneer? I4 PAGES- uNoER FIRE IN. COMMONS Criticized repeatedly by the Op- position. Commons Speaker Rene Beaudoln leaves the Chambg Frlday during the most hectic day of the pipeline debate. Wild disor- der reigned for 30 minutes early in Maxims of a MereilMan. l e Guardian Cl-IARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. MONDAY JUNE 4,1956 cARs COLLIDE NEAR REGINA ' Nine Killed, Three Seriously Iniured -In Saskatchewan Highway Collision Qovere Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Tito of Yugoslavla,'in the view of U.s. officials. is playing I dan- gerous game on his visit to Mos- cow. I Policy makers are following Tito's moves and awaiting the out- come of his talks before ventur- ing any final conclusions on pre- cisely what his present position as between East and West really is. But the opinion of most experts within the government is that Tito definitely does not want to break his highly profitable ties with the United States. Britain, France and other free countries even though he is clearly working for reestab- 'lishment of cordial relations with Moscow. . CONTRADICTORY AIMS . The problem of keeping these two more or less contradictory aims in balance is what makes Feel Tito On Dangerous Ground In Moscow Visit WASHINGTON (AP)-President of authorities here, a dangerous game. Tito possibly shocked western public opinion with his statdnent on arrival in Moscow Saturday that Communist nations would "never again" be so badly split up as they were when the Stalinist regime forced him out of the inter- national Communist organization In 1948. Administration officials h e 1' c said that the implications of this statement could easily be exag- gerated. Tito was expected to adopt a very friendly line, they said. but this does not necess ail; mean he is moving back into the Soviet camp. His private com- ments to Western diplomats in Belgrade in recent weeks were said to have stressed his intention to be friendly with the Soviet gov- ernment but to avoid any break or lessening of friendship with the his present diplomacy, in the view Western powers. AIMED AT MOROCCO, TUNISIA the aft noon in an unprecedented opposition demonstration against the Speaker highlighted by an at- tempt by Opposltion Leader Drew to have ' lm censured. (CP Phote) "Sensational" Discovery Of Christian Documents FRIBOURG. Switzerland (Reu- tersl-important fragments of a translation of the.Book of Gunsl- icl, hitherto -an almost unknown Apocrylpxl work. have been found In an loplan manuscript of the 15th century, it was disclosed here today. I The discovery was made by a Dutch Dominican priest. Father Marc-Antoine van den Ouderrijn. professor of Old Testament stud- ies at the Swiss Roman Catholic University of Fribourg. Authoratlve Roman Catholic sources described the discovery aa "sensational" and of great interest in regard to the origins of Christ- isnlfy. The fragments cover the story of the Passion from G Friday to the Ressurectlon Christ. Gamalial. a Pharlsee. favored treating the first Christians with leniency. The fragment of about 10 pages probably was translated from the original Greek in the second cen- Coming Events Hall. of Dance in Vernon River Tuesday. June 5th. Regular dance in Crapaudlllnk Wednesday. Burns' orchestra. Kelly's Cross play in Parish Ilsll. Wellington. June tlth. See Morria' advertisement West srn Guardian today. See Morrls' advertisement West- ern Guardian today. Dance Kelly's .Cross iiall Mon- day, June 4th. Vernon Rivcr play. Bclfasiliall Monday. June 4th. Dance in Bear River South school. Tuesday. June 5 Regular Dance. Bonshaw inn. Tuesday night. Burnr Orchestra. Card plrty Spring Park Hall Monday 8.30. Prizes. Beginning of tournament F a r m s r s: Cleaning timothy daily. McGulgan as Boyle. Hunt ler River, P. E . Dance Mt. Stewart Memorial Hall Tuesday night. Rollie Mac- Kenzie's Orchestra. For best results book your clover leads with us. Mcaulgan I Boyle. I-Innter River. Garden Seeds. Also mange lllflllll and Kale. store open 'to- night until 9 o'clock. Arthur Vesey. York. Beginning this week. dance Every Thursday night. south Rus- llco Hall. Rollie MacKenzle's or- chestra. Canteen service. ' Bowlers dance. St. Mary"! Hall. 'o":-- """""'.r'.....".'..'"”'..:.'.' now ng t in, In June a. clmhPetcrs oressilln Ualoddlag er of co-op feed Tuesday uediisdsunsy morning. lveclal off-car prices. Vernon ' tlratsrl - 1130131 '..'.'.'3"r. T4 ''''...''2: ma in passing in the Gospel according tury into Coptic. from Coptic into Arabic. 'and from Arabic into Ethiopian. It is contained in an Etbigfian tsandation of the homil- ies la Coptic bishop of the rev- enth csntury. Cyriacus of Oxyrhync (Egypt). IIEROD STANDS OUT The fragment contains an ac count of the attitude of the Jewish high priests; the scribes of Jeru- salem - of whom Gamaliel was one; of Pontius Pilate; of King Herod and of the four soldiers posted to guard the tomb of Jesus. Herod appears as the man mainly responslbl for the death of Christ. while he is mentioned only to Saint Luke. Professor van den Ouderrlju re- ceived photostst copies of the Ethiopian manuscript for identifi- cation from a source outside Fri- bourg which he was not free to disclose before the documents were PARIS (Reuters)-Premier Guy Mullet warned the newly independ- ent governments of Morocc: and Tunisia Saturday night to he? their hands off Algeria. Winding up a three-day debate on North Africa, the socialist p rnler told the national assemb that France can never allow Algi- rla to become a Moalem nation. He said he presuzqgt the Moroc- would not ' k their friendship" with France by lntsrfefllll Ill Algeria! Mollet reaffirmed that his gov- ernment is prepared to earl? 0'3 a "new order" in Algeria once the country is pacified. He said the nationalist lruurgenta know they have no chance of victory against the French forces. Once again, Mollet pointed out that the solution adopted in Tuni- sia and Morocco cannot be applied to Algeria because it Is an integral part of France and has a popula- tion of more this: 1.000.000 French- men along with about 8.000.0N Moslems. CONFIDENCE VOTE Mollet is taking the life of his four-month-old government on a published. confidence vote, scheduled Tues- MOLOTOV RESIGNAITION iForesee Lilile Change In Red Foreign Policy By ALVIN STEINKOPF LONDON (AP) - Western Eu- rope received the news of the reslgnatlm. of V. M. Molotov as Soviet foreign minisler with con- siderable satisfaction, but could foresee no spectacular changes in Russian foreign policy. That pretty much reflected the reaction in ' tashlngton. too. Molotov was the man who most persistently said "no" to Western suggestions for an East-West ac- cord. Dlplomais hope there will be a different refrain now. Mololo 'n going was big news e'verywherr in Europe but there was little official comment.' in many quarters his retirement was expected. and a general view was that he no longer fitted into new Kremlin patterns. British govern- ment sources said his departure "just catches up with events in Russia." extraordinary gesture of concilia- Tlto of Yugo-slavia. who began an extraordinary gesture of concilia- tion to President Tito of Yugo- slavla. who began an official visit to Russia Sautrday. Molotov was a prime mover in the 1048 expul- slon of Tito from the Cominform. N0. SOFTENING There was no disposition in West- ern Ev lpe to believe Russian for- eign policy is softening to any large degree. The lndepende A West Berlin Morgenpost said Molo- tov's successor as foreign minis- ter. Dmtiri Shepllov, will be "defl- nltely no less dangerous in nego- tiations with the free world.” "The new foreign minister." said the leftist but noncommu- nlst ne'-'spa:' " rnc-Tireur of Mollei Issues Siern Warning day. Saturday night he asked for a vote on his policies in all fields at home and abroad instead of just North Africa. In Saturday morning's debate. Robert Lacoste, French cabinet minister resident in Algeria, pre- dicted that France will find a triumphant solution to the rebel- lion "within a few months." He said there is no doubt the mllltarycampaign against the in- surgents will succeed and denied at the same time that France is conducting a ”war of exte tlon." Mullet said: "We do not want to restore the order either in the social. econ- omic or political fields. We want a new order." FUNCTIONS He promised elections within three months of pacificatlon and said local elections could be held immediately in areas "liberated from the domination of the re- bels." "We are not making war on Ara"1 v- on Algeria. We are fight- ing armed bands which repreent a small minority and we are doing so for the purpose of re-establish- ing peace and friendship." a Paris, "many times distinguished himself by his doctrinal stiffness Western newspapers ;, 'ally regarded Molotov's removal as an and his fanaticism. The (French) Socialist dc'egatIon which recently went to Moscow was struck by the cynicism of Shepllov, who used the scornful languagt of a (' ' sure of the triumph of his cause and of the eventual disappearunw of democratic socialism." In Austria. former president Truman. now vacationing In Eu- rope, said he expects no striking change in ".usslan policy. "I will understand a change in Russian policy when I see it work," he told a press conferen r. ''I don't trust the Russians . . Molotov is one of the last of the old Bolsheviks and his departure can be regarded as the continuing turnover after a dictator passe." ated district 17 rules nttlwen (IN ALTA. MLA'S HOME Seven Persons Murdered ERSKINE. Alta. (CPl - seven George Anderson 21, of Peace a.m persons were shot and killed sun- day in the farm home or John E. Clark. social Credit member of the Alberta leglslatu e. inspector M. Leberge. heading a I2-man RCMP '. stl atlng team. said Clark is sought qaestilh lng in the case. organised search for the t3: got under my late in the .,,y,.n -. police from River was broemt IE led- rt! River, Alta.. hired man on trial clark farm. and Bill Olah. about 3), a sailor In the Royal Cana- dlan Navy whose home was be lleved to have been Medicine Hat. Olah. a visitor to the Clark farm. was wounded and died later in hospital in slettler. about in) miles southeast of Edmonton. "Sara Rid 23 Inspector go In I - ealllkerllewssosndlatheslnr Mrs. Clark and the four chlIdi'H had been shot through the bend. it was not known immediately how Anderson and Olab had Mu shot. inspector Laberge said a .3 calibre rine was was to been borrowed Clark. a part-time school teeoln farmer who has TO VISIT HERE W. R. Wright, director of public relations of the Canadian Nation- al Railways System, who will visit Charlottetown on Monday and Tuesday. lie ser-ed with the Roy- al Canadian Navy In the Second World War and was the last per- son to be rescued when the Louis- burg .as sunk in the Mediterra- nean. He attended McGlll College and Imperial Defence College and was formerly executive assistant to the Minister of National De- fence and special assistant to the president of the CNR. 122 Candidales In Field For N DB. El ' " . ecllon FREDERICTON (CP)-A field of at least 122 candidates for the 52 seats in the New Brunswick legislature was indicated Sunday night. The official nomination for the June 18 election close at l p.m. ADT today. Supporters of Premier Hugh John Flemming's Progressive Con- servative government and the Lib- ml party headed by Austin c. Taylor have chosen full slates, There are 17 Social Credit can- dldaics to date and one independ- ent. No CCF candidates have been nominated. In the last election in 1952 the party nominated 10 can- didates. a Premier Flemming and Mr. Tay- lor are running in the old con- stituencles of Carleton and West- morlqnd. respectively. The standing after the 1952 elec- ilon: Progressive Conservatives W, Liberals 17. Three of the Conserv- stlve seats-in Kings, Saint John City and Victoria-were vacant at dlssolutlon of the leg I ' "is April FIRE IN UNIVERSITY LONDON (Reuters) - Firemen Friday fought the second major fire in the University of London's Egyptology department ru 11 weeks. and once again only just managed to save the contents of the famous reference library. The blaze brought down 150 feet of roof and wrecked offices and ice- ture moms in the department. Much costly repair work in pro- gress following the first fire last March was destroyed. . - I' B bf! I PI'ldt.farInc- .a.ea adllstIsrII.Ibsdu.I Damecsnvu.Ilslxesl- tions are that the government's controversial pipeline legislation will receive swift passage in the Senate, compared with the bitter three-week struggle in the Com- mons. The Senate's big Liberal major- ity wlll clear the decks today for passage in as little as one day, if necessary. Then physical lim- itations and lack of numbers will be allowed to take their toll. Any possibility that the seven Progressive Conservative Senators will be able to block the bill is just about ruled out, despite a plea in the Commons Friday that the Senate give the bill a long second look. The earliest time at which the measure is expected to receive third and final reading in the Commons is in the early hours of Wednesday. JUNE 7 DEADLINE That would leave the Senate two days to pass the pipeline bill be- fore the Thursday, June 7, dead- OTTAWA (CP I-Present lndlcn-I PREDICT EASY PASSAGE T Quick Senale Aciion On Pipeline Bill Expected line set by the government. In the light of Conservative and CCF opposition in the Commons, it is certain debate on third read- ing will go on several days unless the government moves today to impose debate-choking closure for the fourth time on the issue. In setting the deadline. the gov- ernment said that if its bill to set up the northern Ontario pipe line crown corporation is not approved by June 7, Trans - Canada Pipe Lines Ltd. would be released from its agreement to build the line's western lag by Dec. 31. WOULD PERMIT LOAN The legislation would permit the crown corporation to lend up to SBO.ll00.000 to Trans - Canada for construction of the line and to build the northern Ontario section of the 2,200 - mile project in co- operation with Ontario. Wallace Nesbitt (PC - Oxford) urged in the Commons Friday that the Senate should show it is not "completely supine" by putting up stiff opposition to the bill. De- mands for abolition of the Senate would be justified unless the Upper House displayed its traditional in- dependent character and gave the bill a sober second look. Unlike the Commons, the Sen- ate has no closure rules or time limit on speeches. It can sit around the clock and any motion for ad- journment could be defeated by the overwhelming Liberal major- ity. The little non-Conservative sup- port the Senate opposltion could muster likely would be insufficient to block the measure if Solicitor- General Ross Macdonald, govem- ment Senate leader, decides to keep the chamber in continuous sitting until approval is gained. The Opposition Senators ex- pected to speak are Senators John . I-Iaig, Manitoba, Opposition leader: Walter Aseltine and Ralph B. I-Iorner, Saskatchewan; John T. Hackett, Quebec; and Felix Quinn, Nova Scotia. Senator Arthur Marcotte. Sask- atchewan, is not expected to speak. Senator James A. Calder, Sask- atchewan, is not in Ottawa. Remainder of the Senate's mem- bership consists of 80 Liberals. one Independent Liberal and two Independents. By ARTHUR GAVSIION LONDON (AP)-Construction of two new naval bases on Africa's eastern seaboard and on Austral- ia's west coast were reported un- Authoriaed informants reported a high-level reappraisal of I" wealth defence strategy in the Middle and Far East is now far advanced. It has been supervised personally by Admiral Lord Mount- batten, Britain's first sea lord. who toured naval lnstallatlonrin the Pacific and Indian ocean areas two months ago. Mountbatten's mission was to check the needs and the strategy of Britain's navy against the changing political picture of the Middle and Far East. The urgency of Mountbatten's task has been underscored by events in Ceylon. where a new na- tionalist premier, Solomon Band- aranalke. has said his Commo wealth government will demand Britain's withdrawal from naval and air installations at Trincoma e. ON LONDON AGENDA Prime Ministers of other Com- monwealth countries luainly af- fected -- Britain. Australia. New Zealand, South Africa and the Cen- tral Afrlcan Federation-will dis- cuss the new strategic pattern la- tcr this month. They will be in London for a conference of Com- monwcalth prime ministers begin- ning June 27. The other countries attending are India, Pakistan. Cc?- lond and Canada. Favored setting now for a new East African naval base is Ken- ya's deepwater port of Mombasa. its Kllindlnl harbor was big en- ough to shelter the whole of the British East Indies fleet during the Second World War. Site of the projected West Aus- Possibilily Of New British Naval Bases In Far East I oonaidaratlgll. tadav lo. Commonwealtliilfence lines. a of Queen And Duke Sail for Visit To Stockholm . wmnson, nngrand i(ReuterI)-- Sound. 12 miles south of Freman- tle. Prime Minister Robert G. Menzies told reporters in Colombo today that establishment of such a base "is a matter that needs care- Th” 0”” "W I-59 DI-lh 0S Educ iulathation under-ts auateum b"53h"u "Id?! 35”"! "'0 1'07” many. ""3 Aulumm 3” 3, yacht Britannia for a three-day money ukbwny state visit to Stockholm. ' Earlier in the week Defence Min- 1"” "I" 5' fl" 4"” ' '1'” later Sir Philip McBride told Par- '""P" "I 5”””'”'m- "d '1" liament there is no urgent need swdml 3'”'”'"””i P" ”' foir a base there now but that the :;gne:,;;kwel”m' um: ""1 I” a vantages are fully appreci ted. ' The postwar upsurge of naltlon- mwh" ,3” ?m'".'l'.l" which "15 alism in Middle and Far Eastern Drsheve "5 -mm mgegmgicounty countries has transformed the face tell: '3-nrngu t cw "' 3:" of the British Empire. Some coun- ” ' T ""' ' tries which had served as safe iv1ui,thw?1 an f"”J,' iii 300 fie! and sure British bases now follow ;0?,,- e.'l,,,,”.'.'15,,,e',3 0-1?), can 12,": their own way eltherlinside or .out- md good luck " pp side the Commonwealth. They ln- ' Prince Bertil. the son of King clude India, Pakistan, Burma. Pal- Gustaf and Queen Louise, will be estine, Sudan, and Egypt at the harbor to greet the royal There are new pressures bulld- couple. ll'l8 up along the eastern seaboard The visit will be a family affair of Africa, in parts of Arabia, in as well as a state occasion. he- southeast Asia and in the South cause Queen Louise is an aunt of China sea. the Duke of Edinburgh. Admiral The Ed," government is Wm, Lord Mountbatten. Queen Eliza- .-led by Egypps pledge to wppo" beth'a aide-de-camp and the duke's Yemen and Saudi Arabia ambi- ""CIe- WI” be "' "'9 "W31 t?'"”""' tions to oust British rule from ages Queen L”"I” I5 M5 5'3"” Aden and the Aden protectorates. The Queen am the mike Wm Aden is a magma point which em drive in state to the royal palace ables Britain to dominate the sea W?" " ”"””"' 5""' with A "”3' routes to the east. 'g::1"";re:,I::'d”; "'51 :'1"b”' P” in the northeast corner of Africa, E or e ' sums" H. i b E S m en m British. h It has been unofficially reported French, Italian &maliland and age ila-i elxt? Swedish I-iloucemen Ethiopa have begun to agitate for an (lngncio men i1'"I- ii” 1;". a united Somalia movement. Brit- gar fursngu g gwrtiv Inst tain fears this movement might vu,ieui,i' co riiin sf ' fiance;-n spark an anti - British blaze that 0 C 9 Dogs ty 0 so on y could spread through the colonies Cypriot gunmen. of Kenya. Tanganyika and Uganda. The Queen and the duke will Cyprus in the eastern Mam”. lunch with their royal hosts at the ranean is Britain's main land and PRICE 5c Seven Men. "" - --,-.......-..a Woman And Chnd Die WEYBURN, Sask. (CPl-Nina persons were killed and three seriously injured Saturday night when two cars collided near this town 70 miles southeast of Regina. A child, a woman and seven men died in the crash, some in flames that enveloped one car just after the accident. Three children are din hospital here seriously in- re . Two passing motorists pulled I child from the burning car after smashing a window with a stone. They were driven back by flame: before they could get to five male passengers, all oil workers. They were identified Sunday as owner and driver Robert Prive ol , Stoughton. Sask.; Walter and James Thorlakson and Peter Bav- erchuk, all of Wynyard, Saak.. and Joseph Popadynec. addraal unknown. Killed in the other car: were el- derly Leonard Pickard. Mr. and Mrs. George Pickard and their sol Lloid, 9. All were from Blenfait. as . BURST INTO FLAMES Reported in satisfactory condi- tion in hospital were two other Pickard ci.lldren--David, 10, and Gerald, 5-and Randy Haverchuk, the two-year-old boy who was pulled from the burning car. Doc- tors said that all three children suffered multiple fractures. Motorist Melvin Bjerke was driv- ins along a straight stretch of highway No. 30 when he came on the accident scene. As he drove up, Bierke said, a car straddling the highway burst in flames. The other car was in a tch. heard someone shout and I tried to kick in one of the win: down." Gtoru Dawson. a district farmer returning from a friend's house, puilsd up behind Bjorke'a car and ran to help. "I grabbed a stone from along the highway and with it is-man. aged to br- ak a window." be said. C:.USEmUNltKhNOWN oge er e two men child from the car-theopufllaeirlre: Gllsulfed it. Two children were found alive in the other car. lying sideways in a ditch. One of the men took the three children to hospital. Police said it was difficult to say what caused the accident. There were no witnesses. r r our lam 1ie' uni. hlllllillb MK! if A G) Bmo(.E'PRlzE palace and in the afternoon will , meet members of the 4' ' th- alr force base in the Midlle East. corps. ., The union-with-Greece movement In the evening they will appea appears to be leading to a loosen- ing of the British grip, but Prime on the balcony of the palace to Minister Eden insists Cyprus must stationed on "Lions" hill (Lelan- trallan base would be at Cockh as ':v..':. ........"-” and 1 tialleseuhe .....I hear a welcome sung by a choir remain available for British use. backcnl near the palace. .v . I :1.-ahrtsa... .&rhlLo.. -naai " AND HONOR GUARD vasnexa-.32.. . arnbu eadprecededbytlower AQQTZ-I TORONTO (CP)-Temperatures issued by the Toronto public weather office Sunday night. M Max (Night) (Dayl Dawson . . . . . . . .. 43 61 Vancouver . .. 54 56 Victoria H 52 S2 Calgary .. 43 77 Regina . 54 79 Winnipeg .. . 61 El Toronto . 52 57 Ottawa . 55 74 Montreal .- . 59 78 Quebec . .. 54 60 Fredericton . 57 78 Saint John 48 75 Moncton . 52 79 Halifax 4H 61 Charlottetown so '18 Sydney 62 82 Yarmoutn . .52 71 St. John's .. . .. 56 78 HALIFAX (CPI -.The weatha office says a southerly current d very warm moist air continues to flow into the southern part of flu Maritlmes. Cooler air covers tlu northern regions, As more mole air comes in fog will beconu thicker and there will be occa- sional drizzle in the southern re gionr, while the northern region Will let a hit more rain. Rglonal foreasts: from 4th. Degree Knights of Cal-lgirle and lays.