ncentralions and said British know that to date rg OUR TELEPHONES For manner Want Ad Teb phone PA 52114 The telephone number to call for the Business or Editorial Dept is PA 6671 after ttv 97th YearNo 156 Order Troops Mine Frontier Against Iraqis KUWAIT TOWN AP Brit ains commander in Kuwait has ordered the desert frontier mined charging lraqi forces across the border appear to be building up at an increased pace Brig Derek llorsfprd defend ing his door on to mine the frontier said have been or dered to come in and organize the defence of this country if am caught with my pants down then would deserve the sack British military sources said the Irdqis despite their con tinued insistence that they would get control of the oilrich shelkdom only by pe ul means appear poised for offen sive action The Iraq news agency re ported that lraqi Premier Abdel Karim Kasscm after plane surve of areas near the Ku Willi rder Wednesday denied the British reports of Iraqi troop The Iraq has not moved single SHIPS ON MOVE Six British warships started through the Suez Canal bound for Kuwait UAR President Nasser who seizbd the canal from BritishFrench control in 1951i made no attempt to block them though he is opposed to tile British force in Kuwait The convoy comprising the carrier HMS Centaur three de stroyers tank landing ship and fleet tanker entered the canalonlya few hours after the Unitedndrab Republic demanded immediate withdrawal of Brit ish troops from Kuwait UAR gavornment state ment said Br ish forces in the sheikdomconstitutod danger to the people of Iraq and the en tire Arab bloc tKossem said in his state ment at Iraq will combat Brit sihrnpariaiism ï¬rst legitimate ways until the liberation of our Arab coon wait the stolen part is saved and restored to its homeland Iraq the UAR and the Soviet Unv ion joined drag in demanding the immediate withdrawal of the British forcis that went to Kuwait after an appeal from the countrys rider Sheik Ab dulloh As Salim AS Sabah There were hints the council might ask the Arab League to settle thc crisis generated by Iraqs claim to Kuwait in insisting the Arab League be left to deal with the crisis said of annexation of Kuwait by Iraq But we cannot oppose any program of unity among Arab determination we support waits claim to independence Lawmen Search KillerKidnapper MOAE Utah APlLawmen searching the vast southeastern section of Utah for killerA kidnapper and a15yearold girl hoped today that the rugged country would be on their side Object of the search was Deaise Sullivan of Rockville Conn and the man who kid napped her after killing her mother Mrs Jeannette Sullivan 41 and badly wounding their travelling companion Charles Boothroyd 55 also of Rockvllle The Federal Bureau of Inves tigation entered the manhunt Wednesday and Sheriff John Stocks said officers fear the girl may notbe alive Hes not going to leave that girl alive to trjtify against him the sheriff said He esti mated her chances for life at one in 100 Boothroyd was flown toSalt lakemheï¬lhe underwenl surgery for removal of two 22 calibre slugs from his face He tries in the gulf and until Ku was in fair condition in NUTsHELL Set Maximum 0n Charity Receipts MONTREAL CP Le Devoir says federal income tax in spectors have set maximum of snoofor married men and $200 for single men as acceptable to them for charity receipts given by parishes in Montreal Will Expand Kiwanis TORONTO or resolution to expand the organization of Kiwanislnternational to countries other than the United States and Canada ran into heavy opposition at the annual convention Wednesday and pas gins sed with lhe slimmest of mar iorm Designs fit Fault an inquest Wednesday that the Commonwealth To TORONTO GP Consulting engineer Edgar Cross told design for concrete form in asubway section which collapsed May 26 kflling two men aded to indicate bracingvital to the farms strength Be Protected wnLomnroN NZ aenieisi Britain promised today to seek specialmangements to protect Commonwealth countries before entering the European Common Market Dismiss Charges Against Strikers TORONTO CP Magistrate James Butler Wednesday dis missed charges of unlawful assembly laid against seven strik ing construction workers after ject May 30 Zinniagenre YearslAgd CausesIltepércusjsions QTIAWAICP How was your trip Jack This question addressed by CNR President Donald Gordon in September 1952 to Pickersgill fl vista Twillingate thep clerkiof the cabinet ha 15 repercussions in theCommons wen neorly nine years after an inci dent in Winnipeg These repercussions came 35 peculiar offshoot to the raging debate on the governments bill to sack James Coyne as gov ernorof the Bank of Canada Prime Minister Diefenbaker stepped into the debate for the time and said the Liberals ridiculing the Bill of Rights last year were usng it as the cornerstone of their ar ment in demanding Com olts committee grfor rCoyn trial casked had vcn to Robert replaced as manager of Winnipegs Fan Garry Hotel in an incident at suburban pro DEBATE 0N torment minister St Laurent had stayed there overnight LEERAL DENIES Mr Piekersgill said there was no truth in thecharge he had had anything to do with anyac tion taken by Mr Gordon 0utside the Commons he gave reporters bundle of let ters and memoranda dealing with the visit of several cabinet ministers and himself to Winni pegia September 1952 memorandum written by Mr Pickersgill to Mr St Lau rent more than six months after the incidentrelated se ries of FortGarry miscues in which Mr Pickersgills reserv ation was lost Fisheries Minis ter Mayhew couldnt get room Mr St Laurent wasnt met ithhe lobby andthe ele votor taking the prime minister to hlsroom went by his floor The Fort Garry is CNR hotel Some time after this incident Mix Pitt wastransferroi to the geptember 1952 after prime smaller CNRhotel in Brandon In the UN Security Council UAR delegate Omar Lutfi lily country opposes any idea brothers In the spirit of self Premier Manning of Alberta delivered the key note address to the Social Barrie Ontario Canada Thmdly Julys 1961 GIVESKEYNOTE SPEECH Credit convention which open ed officially at Ottawa yester day CP Wirepholo harm iiixamiml Competition From Private TV Forces CBC CostsrUp 134 OTTAWA CP The CBCS need for federal funds to cover its costs rose by 134 per cent to 359238176 in the last fiscal year as new competition from private TV stations inlhe big cities started biting into its od vcrtising revenues Whats more the financial effects of this competi be will get worse the CBC said in its annual report made public to da The corporation indicated that as result its calls on the fed eral treasury will grow larger The report for the year ending last March tabled in the MTAWA CPlIf you order certain antibiotics or tranquib izers in drug store you may end up paying three times as much forthem if your prescrip tion calls them by thei rbtlnar rather than their generic names This was the situation de scribed Wednesday by Dr No prominent 0t esninonybehre trade practices commission inquiring into the manufacture and distribution of pharmaceutical drugs in Can ada with plea that doctors should seek to obtain drugs more cheaply for patients he suggested that dnigs should be ordered by their generic names This might help both lower cost and reduce confusion over the multiplicity of similar drugs bearing different brand names Appearing as private med ical practitioner rather than in his capacity as chairman of the pharmacy committee of Ot tawas Civic Hospital Dr Schoe ter also assailed drug company Jio epics fie diid hatt promotional methods of new the generic name ineprobamate May Pay Times As Much For Brand Nome Drugs drugs He said he threw out 75 per cent of the literature re ceived because it was impossi ble to read it all He described some of it as blatant advertis ing written in the same vein as ads for soaps andrdetergerits He also charged that there were too many company pronJ majorltsgliif drug samples he received were not used FOUND BIG DISCREPANCY Since the recent widespread publicity to drug prices more and more doctors had become interested in knowing the cost be said In the last few years he had begun prescribing drugs to patients under their generic names and in every case had found wide discrepancy be tween the price of generic and brand names He quoted the price of an antibiotic which sold for $17 100 tableLs under its generic name chlorargphenicol and for $5660 under brand name tranquilizer cbst $3 a100 under BUFFALO NY APlA 15 yearold girl undergoingpsy ariatric tests faced kidnap ping charge today in the June 22 abduction of Richard Edging ion at Buffalo Police said Wednesday night that warrant would be issued against Chyrel Lee Jolls but would be held in abeyance pending completion of themen tal tests Chyrel one of seven children of Mr and Mrs Howard lolls was lpicked up Monday in the Man The affair became hot issue in Parliament at that time Mr Pickersgill said in his memorandum to Mr St Laur ent that during conversation on another subiect with Mr Gordon some two weeks after the incident the CNR president had asked how the western trip badlbeen er Pickersgill related the sad tale to Mr Gordon But he maintained in his memo he didnt make any complaint about Mr Pitt personally He was Mr Pickersgillconfesscd somewhat annoy It Was the fist timeMr Pickersgill civil servant in 1952 had given hisversion of the incident No sooner had he deniedWed nesday that he had demanded Mr Pitts head than Mr Diefv enbaker accused him indirectly at writing or dictating partnf the tolary bombardment by Buffalo Police Issue warrant For 15YearQld In Kidnapping investigation of the kidnapslay ingof threeyearold Andrew Ashley Twice before she had been questioned by police but both times was released heavyrset girl with brown hair Chyrel has history of mental illness She was com mitted to hospital for tests Mon day with parental consenf POINTS T0 Gm As she was be rought in for questioning Richard painted her outas hisabductor Another youngster Susan Benedict alsovbad been lured from her horns and like Richard bound and gaggedand left by arail road track Susan ldentif dChyrel as her abductor in an ensuing police lineup Chyrel has denied any connec Ztiowwitb the kidnappings and slayingDistrict attorney Car man Boll said no charges were planned immediately in the other cases berels aunt Mrs Estelle Ott of Welland Oohsaid Wed nesday the girl was sent to hospital in Rochester for obser vation because she was having difficulties in foster homes She said that when thrgirl was released from hospital she tried to bring her to Welland to live with her but Canadian au thorities would not allow the move because Mrs Ott had too with her FOUND VIN LAKE The Ashley boys body was found in Delaware Park lake Junezi two days after he was reportedmissing His hands and feet had been tied Strands of hnit found in the Edgington hoys jungle helmet were analyzed and police said they bore the some character lstlcsas thesao the Jolls gir quever the tests undiluted at the FBI laboratory in him did not conclusivel the ham to be Chyrels income crisis drought hit and $925 to $1350 under vari ous brand names Ile hadheard unofficially that most generic name companies were satisfactory Not all brand names were of top quality he said Dr Schecter said that for real information on new drugs doci to 4b digit aliï¬ifrnln nï¬iï¬i Commons by Marcel Lambert parliamentary secretary to Rev enue ltlinistcr Nowlon showed the CBCs budget topped the $100000000 mark for thofirst EXENSES RISE Total expenses reached $100 952B25 an increase of $691 060 or 74 per cent over 19594 But gross advertising rev outlays of 591039755 when ex penses rose by 77 per cent enues from TV and radio dropped by 15 per cent to $37r 601651 from $38162337 in sharp contrast with the 133pervccnt gain the prevlous year in ad revenue yields The total was some $1500000 short of goals set for CBC salesmen in their drive for commercial revenues This commercial income com bined with some other minor revenue sources left the CBC to use $59283476 of its parlia mentary grant for the year Since Parliament voted it 62 085000 the corporation turned back an unused $2796524 to the federal treasury an amount CBC books it was the second year vi row that the CBC didnt spend all its grant The previous year it required $52300275 in federal Judy07 rxaeltsésï¬nd turned back $6103722 of tlie instance depended largely on company advertising parliamentary grant as not needed Drought Notional EDMONTON CP The Ca nadian Prairies are on the of drought disaster Maninon Agriculture Minister George Hutton said Wednesday July 15 is Dday he said If we dont get rain by then weve got disastera serious one Mr Hutton said the Manitoba cabinet will ask the federal gov ernment to declare the Prairies disaster area if the drought situation is not eased in the next few days Meanwhile in OttawaH Hannam pre ent of the Cana dian Federation of Agriculture said the Prairit drougb is as suming the proportions of na tional calamity He said crop insurance meet the emergency and called for immediate government con siderationos to what steps should be taken to meet the farmers will face MANITOBA wonsr arr Manitoba has been harder hit than Alberta and Saskatchewan Mr Hutton said the province would be lucky if no more than 50 per cent of its crop is last Dates have been set by the provincialI government for gional meetings with municipal and seed requirements of the districts Wednesdays light rains which raised hopeofrelief in Alberta and as chewan failed to reach Manitoba Weather fore casts are forwidely scattered showers over the Winnipeg and FlinFlon areas but chances of badlyneeded downpour still seem poor The Un ed States weatherbu reau in is longrange forecast issued last month predicted the Prairie region would remam dry at least until Mri Hutton Day of July 15 do Alberta and Saskatchewan Wednesdays light showers pro persistent salesm refused to leave when the secretory told him the boss wasout An hour passedtthen two Finally of being prisoner office the boss admitted the sollt Myf secretary told on mat exclaimed the muted boss wd otiknow schemes are not sufficient to officials to learn the water feed MQY Be Disaster vided largely inadequate an swer to prayersfor rala from congregations of almost every denomination And showers fore cast for today seemedilikely to do little more than settle the dust Effects of the drought con tinued to spread More claims were received Wednesday by the Saskatchewan crop insurance board largely from eastcentral parts of the province chewan Association of Rural Municipalities said the two monthlong drought is beginning to affect the economy or rural critical fodder shortage and pmspecLs of poor crop have adversely affected tax collec tions selfhelp system forMoose Jaw area formers has been started by district agriculturist Jack Braidek His planinvolves listing all farmers who have feed they can sell to farmers who need fodder to save their livestock this winter LOCAL WEATHER Sunny with cloudy periods to morrow Low tonight so High Friday 71 For complete summary tum topage three termed budgetary surplus in the The president of the Saskat districts Jack Hamilton said Car vHits VTICtiIl At Oro StotiOn Two men were killed instantly about 1130 am today when the car in which they were rldlng struck fast muvlng freight train at Oro station The men believedto be from Toronto were occup ants of stationwogon with the name of Toronto television station lmprlnted onlt Their names were not immediately available The train was heading to hop occurred ward Orlllls when the mlslt The car was travelllng south on Line of Ore Town ship toward Lake Simona It was knocked off the road landing against it fence post Bodies of the two men were catapulted nearly 40 feet throiigh the alr and the tracks landed few feet north of Diei fEvil Genius In Cane Firing Bank Heqd Says OTTAWA tCPlBank of Can ada Governor James today ca led Prime Dicfenbaker the evil genius be hind this whole matter of his battle with the government lh blistering statement Mr Coyne said it was his unbridled ï¬n nlicevcaudï¬viodictivehessll which seized on the issueofa pension increase for the bank governor as clever stick with which to beat me and intimidate me Mr Coynes statement which hit Parliament Hill during lull in the hot and heavy Commons debate on the government bill to fire him also said Finance Minister Fleming deceived and misled Parliament over ques tion of monetary policy that arose in the winter of 195758 nonuan HEARTNG The 50yearold governor re newed his demand for hearing before parliamentary commit tee and rejected statement by Mr Diefenbaker in the Com mons Wednesday that Mr Coynes letters and statements made public hearing the dispute constitute the record before Par liament It is very incomplete rec ord Mr Coyne said should be glad to produce more letters many more He made public three letters today correspondence be tween himself and Finance Min ister Fleming to bolster his érgument thatMr Fleming was wrong in request in 195758 for an easing it the liquidity rc serves of chartered hanks Mr Fleming said in the Com mons recently that Mr Coyne had flatly and angrily rejected his request Mr Coynes statement said this is the one and only in stancethat Mr Fleming can ap parently allege of lack of coop eration on my part CHANGED STAND He said the ministers views in 1957 were opposed by the dep uty financeminister Kenneth Taylor the eh rtered banks 1nd that Mr Fléming finally was con verted to thepoint of view of the rest of us Mr Coynes attack on Mr Diefenbaker was the first time he has turned his guns on the prime minister in the running battle of words that began June 13 Mr Dicfenbaker made his first speech inthe Commnns Coyne debate Wednesday Opposition Say Diei Is Afraid OTTAWA CF Shouts of Youre afraid to goon and Cold feet greeted the an nouncement by Prime Minister Diefeobaker that the govern ment would not proceed today with its bill to oust James Qiyne as governor of the Bank of Canada Opposition Pearson asked the prime minister to ex plain why the bill would not be proceededwith though the gov ernment had once considered it urgent Mr Diefenbaker said Paul Martin EsseXEastl had stated the Liberals wanted to continuethe ï¬ght for 10 days and the government therefore wanted to go ahead with other legislation Mr yne against the govern ment report added