MAXIMS - MAXIMS ., A 0' A - MERE MAN MERE MAN 6.. qua an new and big tin Strife and friendship allow of comm”. no excuse. .., Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew . ff-.;1":”?t"i3.2:'?.&n'9;”"J:;'tf:?g";.;;?':.,”.l:.7?;; CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 11, 1953 14 PAGEs' .ii.'.'..32'ii'1f.';' .5'.l::.5'."i'..i. ' EASTERN-WESTERN. PROVINCES JOIN IN RATES PROTEST 1 Sees New Farming Pattern Witl-I Antibiotics Lie Drops Cloak , or Neutrality; Levels Blast At Russia By SPANLEY JOHNSON UNTPED NATIONS. N. Y.. (AP) .;r1-ygve Lie threw on his cloak of diplomatic neutrality Tuesday and accused Russia. of putting the crvudest sort of pressure on him hecausc he opposed Communist 3ggr9Slnil in Korea. This pressure. Lie told the 80 Miioii general assembly. was the most serious violation yet of I see- ton of the United Nations charter forbidding interference with him as secretary-general. . "Cheap Propaganda” Rumzas Andrei Gromyko was present to hear Lie. Gromykc told reporters after the speech it was A...-. cheap propaganda. 1 do not think it is worth reobins: to". The attack was unprecedented. since a UN official is not suplJ0-59d to denounce a member state. Lie coupled it with praise for the united states. He told delegates the U. S. re- rorri since the Second World War is one of support. for the UN ihnrtcr and its organs. Further- more, Lio declared. he welcomed a i'.S cxccutlve order calling for loyalty investigations of Americans ;n the secretariat since it would help clear the U'N's name of sub- ve'l's.VP charges and also help set :.;i orderly personnel procedures. To Pick Successor up has submitted his resigna- tion rind was evidently exhilerated tn" the chance to tell the Russians what. he thought of them. The -t-()cntinuecl-T3,n-Pagc9-7V-Col.-d):- Summer Hotel In Ontario Destroyed OAKVILLE, Ont.. (C?)-Fire rozcd the Trafalgar Arms Hotel Tuesday. The hotel was unoccu- pied. Loss was unofficially estim- ated at 575,000. The frame. old- l-7ngiish-style summer hotel was iiostroycd within three hours. x U. S.wDelivers Fou Jets To Yugoslavia BF.LGRADE, (AP)--The United suites delivered four jet fighter planes to Yugoslavia Tuesday. Top ranking Yugoslav military officials ind foreign diplomats watched xniericaii filers bring the planes iztn a recently-completed military iirbasc outside Belgrade. U.S. Am- ).i5F.'ldOl' George Allen turned the pi.'il1PS over to the Yugoslav Air Force, Coming Events "Arch Meeting Friday ilth. at Derry Lodge. All members please attend. "Flllxlx, Mermaid school, Friday. March lath, in aid of European Flood Vlctlrnl. at 8.30. "Variety Concert tonight, cherry Valley l-fall. "Horse Racing. O'Keefe's Lake. Avondsle. Wednesday. March llth. Races starting at if P. M. "Flying for eggs delivered Ver- non. A Large 48. A Medium 45. 5- J. MacDnugall. "Klnsston Branch Legion. will hold monthly meeting Thursday. March 12th. Legion Home at 8.30. K"V,lc1vrIa Rink 'I11ursday night. ellys Cmcs Redwlnga vs Green mgtaiyteteors. Friday night. school "Variety concert. Tuesday night March 17th. two one-act plays and Other numbers. Kelly's Cross school Hall. Admission toe and sec. "Croklnole Party and Social gtenlna. Breadalbane mu. Thurs- HY. March lith. "Just arrived. Car of Iran and Emlii-ygelso in stock Barley Meal lumw-Li'BoQ'I;t;.:nd Wheat Mix- ,"Doubleheader at North River ,',',"k Wtdnud-v. March 11. Mll- Ng Ichool team vs. Glasgow Road nwotrl team at 7.30 sharp. Glea- ROMI Maple Leafs vs. Lennox lsl skgrglamymacn. Game time 8.30. Dom C: Rink vtvllalleheader at North River . lurch ll. Milton vs 7.00 sharp. Ocmhe d Myer: t RtImbl.ere vs. Duri- ben. &.te '" amt. To Coronation i it Leading Seaman. Naval Stores. J. Clifford Mac.Leod. R. C. N. (R). Orwell Cove. (above). will repre- sent H. M C. S. Queen Charlotte at the Coronation (Barter: Film Lab.) ueediuicror Older lien 'IiO.RAOtNTO. (Cl?)-The Western world must find ways to use its oldsters-or run into trouble. Mr. Ian Macdonuld. chief of service medicine at Toronto's Sunnybrook hospital. said Tuesday. "We have to use our human material or we are going to be in trouble with the rest of the world in 24 or 30 years.” he told the annual meeting of the Health League of Canada. He warned that the West's older age group is rapidly increasing while the over-populated East's young population is multiplying. 1-fe criticized the chronological age standard of compulsory retirement. ”Many persons are actually old- or at 50 than their counterparts at lib." he said. "There is a lilgh death rate during the first three years of retirement. partially be- cause of unnatural inactivity. "Old people today are being forced to lend more and more un- natural lives because the aid given them does not allow them to 'VIli- trihute to their own supporL' u. K. loin; C Canned Salmon VANCOUVER. (OP) - Fisheries Minister James Sinclair predicts the United Kingdom will buy "a. considerable parcel of canned sal- mon" from Canada this year. Speaking at the annual conven- tion of the United Fishermen and Allied Workers Union, THC, he said: "The marketing situation does not look too grim. If we hold our present foreign sales and get the promise of it reasonable purchase from the British in the next few weeks. we'll be able to dispose of our catch this year." An order from Britain will be discussed during a conference in Ottawa this week with Britain's chancellor of the exchequer. R. A. May Double Farm Production; i antibiotics do for animals, make , them grow faster and stay healthy , to capitalize. i United States Industrial Chemicals ' ' of the risk to Parliament, Solve llitresl By about a. aimi- 51'. IDUIE. AP) - A scientist predicts a who new pattern of farming, with anttblotlcs. will dou- ble farm production. Dr. H. J. Pre-bluda of New York told the national farm chernurglc council Tuesday the use of anti- biotics in farm soil may do for crops what penicillin and other He said this may solve most of the world's hunger problems. elim- inating one of the causes of .unrest upon which communism nas tried Two Important Effects Dr. Rebluds, biochemist with the C0,. said recent experiments show that antibiotics. which are pro- duced by mlciroorganiams in soil and other materials, appear to have two important effects upon soil: 1. In large amounts they (re plant disease killers, just as anti- biotics now control some animal infections. 2. Small amounts stimulate plant growth. A similar effect has been noted in some animals. In Barnyard Manure When organic materials. such as barnyard manure. are applied to soils they appear to have a crop stimulating effect far beyond that which comes from the quantity of minerals and chemicals they con- tain. These organic materials usu- ally contain huge numbers of nucrooiganisins and Dr. Prebluda said the extra stimulation appears to come from the antibiotics they produce. He said these antibiotics haven't been identified but he believes they can be isolated and produced com- mercially in great quantities at low cost through scientific meth- ods. "When we do this it will be the equivalent of opening millions new acres of land to farmers." Dr. Prebluda said. "Crops will grow so fast we will be able to get two crops a year in many more parts of the country." Drop Plans To Take Parliamentarians tin Jet Flight LONDON, the-u;r.-i - Sixty members of Parliament were bar- red from a flight in a new British jet airliner Tuesday night-because The members. 30 Conservatives and 30 Socialists, were to have taken a test trip Wednesday in a new Viscount turbo-prop plane. The airlines cancelled the flight. A politician said staldly: "The trip was cancelled because the pos- sibility of 60 by-elections, in case the airliner crashed, was more than of WASHINGTON. (AP) - The United States today ordered "the strongest possible protest" sent to Communist Czechoslovakia over the shooting down of an American Jet. fighter. l WIESBADEN. Germany, (AP)- Twc Soviet-made MiG-15 Jet fight- ers coming from Czechoslovakia, today attacked and shot down an American F-B4 jet fighter plane about 10 miles inside the Amcaican zone of Germany. U. S. Air Force headquarters announced. The pilot bailed out and landed without in- jury. in Clear Wea ther The air force announcement said the attack occurred in perfectly clear weather near the Bavarian Yank Jet Downed In U.S.Zone Of Germany town of Regensburg at 11 a. m. 4 a.m. EST today. Two American jets were opera- ting from Fuerstenfeldbnlck air base on routine patrol "well within ilie U. S. zone" when the two MiG: appeared at an altitude of 12,000 feet from the Czech side of the border and immediately made a firing pass at one of the two Am- erican planes. The announcement said; "The MiG scored a hit on the wing tank and stabilizer of the F- 84 causing it to crash seconds after the pilot had bailed out." The pilot was identified as Lleut. Warren G. Brown. He was flying with l.leut. Donald C. Smith. in 9. second F-84. fmm Fuerstenfeld- bruck. The soviet fighters disappeared. presumably in the direction of Communist-ruled Czechoslovakia. Hotel Workers To Ask Wage Boost, Shorter Hours WINNIPEG, (CF)-A for higher wages and shorter hours may he" made in a few months by 4.000 employcesl of Canada's railway hotels. Extent of the demiintls being discussed Tuesday at .1 conference of the general ad- jouuimcnt committee represent- ing the CNR and CPR hotel- eni- ployees, who are affiliated with demand; was the Canadian Brotherhood of Railway Employees CCL. 1 Representative: of tho cm- ployccs from the 15 railway lin- tels are attending the confer- once. The collective agreements ex- plrc between June and August. Under the contract, the union must serve notice to the mzin-, agement 60 days prior to the ex- piration of the agreement for its revision. lien. ilurerar Fined 3100 And costs HULL, Que. (OP! Pleading guilty to driving while impaired, Gen. H. D. G. Crerar was fined 8100 and costs in Hull court Tues- day by Judge Jacques Bouchcr. A car he was driving knocked over a fire hydrant in Hull Monday night. New Russian Ambassador To could be contemplated with equan- imity by the leaders of the two parties." U. K. Puts Bounty On Grey Squirreyls IONDON. (GP)-The govern- ment has announced it will pay one shilling for the tail of each gtrey squirrel killed. A national forestry commission official said the grey squirrels were introduced into England from North America about 60 years ago and now num- ber 1.500130. They chew up trees Butler. Finance Minister Abbott and Trade Minister Howe. Iron Curtain By HAIG NICHOLSON CAIRO, (Reuters)-The reform administration of strongman Mo- hammad Neguib has signed a sweeping barter agreement with three Iron Curtain countries. thus passing another landmark in its Pledge to transform the life and ways of the Nile valley. The agreement to exchange agyptmi cotton for 115.000 tom of wheat from Russia. Poland and Dulgarln linothe-r milestone :- longl the rse Gen. Neguih set for his country when he "ousted King rarouk eight months ago. The wheat will increase the food gupply-of ngypt. which depends largely on the fertile Nile valley running through miles of desert. Government officials have em- phasised they will conclude trade agreements with any country pm- nnd craps. Naguib In Deal With Countries Last week Egypt signed an a- cment with Communist East Germany for n 8l2.ll)0.000 ex- change cf cotton. pholphatea and onions for machnery. electrical appliances. chemicals and fertiliz- ers. - while increased trade is consid- ered vital, it is only one of many reforms to which Naguib has ded- icated himself. These can for changes in foreign policy. social welfare. industrial development. domestioi politics, armed forces. the civil service and forest lands. Most spectacular of all has been Naguib's rapid reshaping of for- eign pollcy. highlighted last month when and Britain. after months of haggling. signed an agreement on the future of the Budan. the vast British-run territ- ory in the Nile valley which Egypt- vided they benetlt lzvntllns fans have eyed for a generation. tihina Named LONDON, tfteutcrin - Appoint- ment of a new top-level Russian ambassador to Pelping is a quick move to consolidate Sino-Soviet friendship. This important change. by which Vasily Kuznctsov replaces Alex- ander Panyushkin as envo' Communist China, was annrunced Tuesday by the official news agency, Tass. Kuznetsov is a deputy foreign minister and during the last few months of Joseph stallnls life was one of Russia's policy-makers. As such he may be empowered to make vital policy decisions in his new job with Ruseials most powerful ly. The relations between Stalin's successor and China's Mao Tee- tung may be touchy, at least at first. Mac. as leader of China's 500.- 000.000 people. could and did talk to Stalin pretty much on equal terms. He did not attend Stalin's funeral. It may be that. for pres- tige reasons, he did not yet want to present his compliments in per- son to Malenkov. In stature as an international Communist leader and "prophet of Marxism-Lienlnlsm," Mao ranked second only to Stalin himself. He now may feel that Mslenkov should send an important man to talk to him-in China. Kuaneteov could fill the bill. TRIBUTE TO S'l:Al.lN BRIJSSELS. tllculcrsl -- Mom- bcra of the upper and low houses of Belgium's parliament stood briefly Tuesday 10 pay homage to Malta. Lower house president Frans van Cauwelnert fold the standing deputies. "Stalin was the most powerful pollliclfln of this Kyle federal government m crouching on their sources of rev- llrge Ottawa Give Better gal To lviunicipalitles OTTAWA. tCPt - Two Com- mons members with expcrience as tcwn mayors have asked the gov- ernment to give municipalities a better deal on taxation and fed- eral aid. The requests came Tuesday from Michael Starr tPC-Ontario). may. or of Oshawa. and Owen Jones tCCF-Yale). former mayor of Kel- mvrm. B.C.. during continuation of the budget debate. They agreed that municipalities should be allowed to tax Crown property and their purchases of equipment and other niunlclpal needs should be exempted from one form or other of federal tax- atlon. In addition. Mr. Jones Dropog. ed that the government turn over to municipalities '75 per cent of its ,1-evcnucs from duties and taxes on liquor. Nearing Voting Stage They spoke during a day-long debate as the House appeared to be nearing the voting stage on two opposition motions of ncn-confi- deuce iii the government concern- ing budget policy. A Progressive Conservative. mo- tion calls for the overthrow of the government on the contention the budget did not "give tax relief to those who need it most." The OCF motion adds to this the declar- ation that it was a "rich man's budget." Votes appeared to be in prospect for some time this week on the traditional budget motions. In Commons developments, Fi- nance Minister Abbott announced that corporations will be allowed to deduct, for federal income tax pur- Doses. any corporation taxes paid to a province or municipality. The Change will particularly benefit corporations in Quebec, only prov. ince without A federal-provincial lax at-rreement. Mines Minister Prudiham said he does not intend to resign be- cause of :1 5100.000 land-sale tran- saction betwe-en a company he owns and the government-owned Canadian National Railways. de- spite a demand for his resignation from Ray Thomas tStC-Wetaski. win). lrtltlic budget debate, Mr. Jones SlIlf,.l'lllll1lClpalltl8S are finding it ll&JIdPl' to make ends meet because is en- enue. The government, he said, 51.50 rlee--itself be taxed normal- ly by munlcliill-Ltles and scrap the "Abbott formula” whereby they get. annual grants in lieu of tax- ation. The government often had the most expensive municipal land. which had to be serviced by the municipality. The two members also agreed that the 15 per cent special excise tax on automobiles should be re- moved. Thla is classed as a "lux- ury" tax. but they said automo- biles no longer are a luxury in Canada. Wanted Trapper ls Captured , KEIOWNA. B. C.. (CPU -- The trapper who declared an open sea- son on police and game wardens was captured by RCMP Tuesday without I. fight. Sunrounded in deep bush coun- try l6 miles north of here. 60-year- old George Bowen surrendered to a police posse. He had been sought for two weeks after he fired on a police patrol car and put it bullet- punctured note on a free near his cabin on Kelownrs outskirts. The note warned police and game war- dens that the trapper had declared "open season". Returned to Kelcwna, Bowen was century.” urge tialiinet To Delay Increase (By The Canadian Press) Canada's Western and Maritime Provinces-the areas most. vitally affected by transportation costs- are protesting the latest increase in freight rates awarded to the country's railways. Appealing the seve-rt-per-cent in- crease are: Nova Scotia. New Brunswick. Prince Edward Island, British Columbia. Alberta. Saskat- chewan and Manitoba. Ontario and Quebec. the only provinces who haven't opposed the series of post-war rate-increase applications. are not appealing the award of the board of transport commissioners announced Monday. Transport Minister Chevrier said following the announcement that can be taken was ”The Prince Edward rates and requests your crs pending appeal. We h PEI Government To Appeal New Freigliljgites increase A telegram protesting against the latest freight rates increase by the Board of Transport Commissioners and requesting suspension of the order until appeal proceedings forwarded yesterday by Premier J. iwalter Jones to Prime Minister St. Laurent at Ottawa. The text of the Premier's telegram was as follows: Island Government pro- tests against the seven percent increase in freight Government to suspend the order of the Board of Transport Commission- ave instructed counsel to commence immediately preparation of appeal to the Federal Cabinet under the Railway Act." the government would not act ant its own initiative to stay the in-l crease but would entertain formali appeals from bodies such as pro- vlncial governments. He made the statement after members of all opposition parties in the Commons asked the gov-l ernment to exercise power to re- scind or delay the increase. worth 330,500,000 a year. pending further consideration. Maritime: Act Premier Angus L. Macdouald of Nova Scotia sent a telegram to Prime Minister St.Lau.rent appeal- ing the increase and asking that the board's order granting the in- crease be suspended pending hear- ing of the appeal. In neighboring New Brunswick. both government and Opposition united in opposing the increase. Premier John Flemming told the legislature his government will protest the increase and is ready to take pa.. in any joint.repre- s:ntaticns which may he carried out by the Atlantic Provinces. Premier Walter Jones of Prince Edward island also sent a tele- gram to Ottawa protesting the in- crease in freight rates. He told the legislature that counsel had been instructed "to commence im- mediate preparatlon of appeal to the federal cabinet under the Rail- way Act." Western Protests Premier W. A. C. Bennett of British Columbia sent a wire to 7 ConAi Page-il'Col.V ail” lleporl lanket In Difficulty BOSTON, (AP)-The US. Coast Guard reported Tuesday night an unidentified tanker has broken in two out on the Atlantic. The S.S. Claiborne is standing by, the Coast Guard said, and hopes to remove the crew at day- light. The crew is huddled in the storm-tossed stem of the tanker. The position of the. stricken ves- sel was given as 40.22 degrees north, 50.11 degrees west. .L.oNDoN, (AP)-Prime Ministrr Churchill has hinted Britain may take up Communist Hungary's of- fer lo barter Englishman Edgar Sanders for a Chinese Communist girl terrorist imprisoned in Ma- laya. Churchill indicated Tuesday in reply to it question in the llouse of Commons that the door is ajar for an East-West prisoner exchange. Sanders, 43, a business man. was convicted in 1950 of espionage and is serving a 3-year sentence some- where in Hungary. The price of his reeate is freedom for Lee Meng. pretty, 25-year-old Red leader. Her death sentence was com- muted Monday to life. Churchill said he is "not yet able to make a statement in regard to In Seven Can OTTAWA. (OP) -- With prices for some foods. fuel and rent high- er, ivlng costs increased during January in seven of nine regional cities, the Bureau of statistics re- ported today. Declines were shown at both ends of the country. Vancouver and St. John's. Nfld.. while living costs rose in l-lalifav. Saint John. N. R. Montreal. Toronto. Winnipeg. sas- katoon and Edmonton. In most centres. increases in meat pricu offset decreases in eggs. tea. oranges and potatoes. Rents advanced in all cities except St. John's. Halifax and saint John. charged with shooting with in-tent.l Coal was reported to have jumped VVould Have lName Half Senators Slresses Need For Cooperation in Housing Projects OTTAVVA, (GP)-Prime Minister St. Laurent indicates that he feels more could be accomplished in the housing field through closer eo- opcration among federal. provincial and municipal governments. lie told a delegation from the Canadian and Catholic Confeder- ation of Labor Tuesday that he had spent. Monday visiting housing pro- jects in the Toronto area. "I would like to see the projects matched on the outskirts of other of our large cities." said Mr. St. Laurent, speaking in French. The projects were the result of understanding and cc-operation at the federal, procincial and munici- pal level. Goodwill, understanding and mutual trust are needed to make legislative and administrative machinery produce with the great- est. effect. he said. Possibly with reference to the fact that Quebec has remained out- side several federal agreements. Mr. St. Laurent said he does not believe there is any great differ- ence among governmenyts on the goals to be reached. The diver- gence of views was on how to get the best results. Despite these divergencesofviews Canada still was a Canada where conditions were as good as in any other country. Annual Brief He spoke after the 93.000-mem- ber CCCI. presented its annual brief to the cabinet. Among other things, the brief urged that: 1. Income tax exemptions be in- '1corTttEi?2i'on'PiQeCiaCoc17if Churchill May Accept Man For Woman Barter the Hungarian governments of- fer." But he replied in the affir- mative when asked if an exchange is still under consideration. British officials refused to ex- panrl on Cliurcliiilis statement but it was plainly indicated the Hun- garian proposal is under close study. Leo Mona. being hold in Talping jail in Malaya. originally was sen- tenced to the gallows for carrying a grenade in violation of 'lVinlayo's eniergcnrv laws. The commutation opened the way for British reconsideration of the Hungarian offer. On March 2 Churchill spurned the offer with the proviso that. it might be rc-examined "once the question of capital sentence has been resolved by the responsible authorities." Report Living Costs Up Q I I adian Cities iTiTrIt'iTr't't'iu. - The regional cost-of-living in- dexes based on August. 1939. prices equalling 100. for January with December's standings in brackets: Halifax 173.9 (173.5); Saint John. N. 13., 130.8 1130.7); Montreal 190.5 (189.7): Toronto 181.5 (181.3); Win- nipeg 177.2 (176.51: Saskatoon 182.1 (181.8); Edmonton 175.7 Il'I5.6l: Vancouver 1875 tlB3.2l. The st. .lolin's index, based on June. 1951. prices equalling 100. eased to 1023 from l02.(. The indexes show changes in re- tail prices and services in each city but they do not indicate whether it costs more to lve in one Provinces ..... xu (OP) Dr. Arthur Beaucthesne. authority on parlia- mentary procedure and clerk of the Commons between 1925 and 1949, suggests that half the man- bers of the Senate be appointed by provincial legislatures. Dry Beauchesne suggested in an. address to a service club here Tuesday that the present practice of the federal government appoint- ing all members nif the 102-seat Senate does not fulfill the inten- tion of the father of confederation. "The fathers of Confederation had in mind an upper house which would protect the minorities." Dr. Bcauchesne said. "With the gov- ernment appointing all the sena- tors this is not done. ”I-f half the senators were ap- pointed by the provincial legisla- tures. it would provide for a more equal representation. senators OTTAWA, 1 would not just be Liberals and Con- servatives as they now-are." He also suggested that future appointments to the senate in which there now are a record 21. vacancies should be for 10 years instead of for life. Senator Wishart Robertson. gov- ernment leader in the upper cham- ber who several years ago suggest- ed a study of Senate reform. said in comment that Dr. Beauchesncfs idea is not it new one. senator Robertson said he had mentioned the idea himself as a. possible line of inquiry for Senate reform in a speech in the Senate several years ago. "It. would mean an amendment to the British North America Act to which all provinces would have to agree." Senator Robertson said. "It also would be a departure in that one authority would be ap- pointing people for which another authority would be paying." ; fut: Most DNMOVABLE dimer is A Postdoc Smu- STucK ON BY Misfaht 9 'lORONTO. (GP)-Minimum and maximum temperatures: Dawson Victoria . l Edmonton i3 is 1 Calgary Z8, 32 f Regina .. 23 40 ' Winnipeg 24 34 t Toronto 13 as Ottawa .. 0 la Montreal 2 14 Quelbec .. 4b R saint John 7 14 Mansion 4 1!! Halifax .. . 14 an Charlottetown 6 17 Sydney . .. . . ii 21 St. John's. Nfld. El 25 I HALIFAX, (CF)-Official fore: casts issued by the Dominion Pub- lic weather office and valid until midnight Wednesday: Prince Edward Island: Variable cloudinesswlth a few snowflurries: continuing very cold. Northwest winds 26 diminishing to notlhvest 16 in morning. Low-high at.,Cthar- l'Ol.l.f'l0Wl1 2 and 18. l-ligli tide today. at Charlottetown at. 7.23 A. M. and 6.01 P. M. y High tide on the North Shore II 2.45 A. M. and 1.46 P. M. summeraide tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. city than another. sets at 6.13 P. M. sun rises today at 6.84 A. M. and -