J.” i' ' ' Silence answers l. - Maxims ofd Mere Man much. A 7729 Guardian .14 PAGES EDEN AGAIN Asl Soviet Leaders Welcomed Home vitiscflw tAP)-Premier Niko- igi Bulganin and Communist par rim-I Nikita Khrushchev were we - mime Wednesday with bou- flowers and speeches after of India. .-onicd mists of ihcir month-long tour Riirnia and Afghanistan. Thoiisands of Muscovites stood n the cold along the capitals main thoroughfare. Gorky street. to .;..rh a glimpse of the returning toafiers Lines of soldiers standing .,..,.,t,q..r in shoulder kept the nouplc hack. lI(iKl'tltl' developed what exper-. icntcii chauffeurs called its worst traffic jam in 20 V98”- Trcating the ocasion as a tri- umph. Khrushchev claimed that India. Burma and Afghanistan love the Soviet Union. He declared he and llulgafiin had "exposed the p0llI'll'S of the colonizers in Asia" and that colonial regimes were "a hint on mankind." llNRlt7PW'l'ANT The leader of t.he Soviet Com- muuist party. whose bitter attacks on the former British colonial reg- imes in Asia had drawn furious comment in the West. told I crowd I at the airport that ha was not in lie least ropentant for the things lie had Iald. colonial regimes. As far as the Russians are con- cerned, Bulganln and Khrushchev could hardly have timed their at- rival better to achieve maximum dramatic effect. . They arrived as flags still flew in commemoration of the bloody fighting in Moscow 50 years ago- on Dec. 29. 1905 during the revolu- firm of that year. NOTABLE DAY Wednesday also was the 76th sn- niversary of the birth of Joseph Stalin and Moscow papers dis- played large portraits of him on their front pages. Also the Supreme Soviet - the U.S.S.R. parliament - goes into special session next Monday. Khrushvhec and B-ulganin are likely to make formal addresses before it reporting on their tour. Khrushchev and Bulganin both spoke after debarking from their two-engine aircraft which brought them from Tashkent in Soviet cent- ral Asia. The loudspeaker system distorted their voices so that those present could bear but little of their words. People on the fringes began to leave. By the time Bulganiri was through. many were streaming out He said he would go an attacking the airport gates. LII u Mr. Elric C manager of the Prince Edward Island Potato llarkctlug Board returned from flttaiva last night "encouraged by an llllPI'VleW which an Island and .Vs-iv Brunswick delegation had WW I limits of Federal agricult- ili'1ti.'-. one of the main topics of dis- 0l.lSSlflli was a subsidy which would make it profitable for New Bruns- irirlt growers to divert two to lhrer million bushelsiof their crop to xtai'c,Ii. yl.-land growers supported the M-iv Brunswick delegation with the realization that whatever amount of the New Brunswick "Pith rould be third 'd1vIrted.”it tw-uld serve to strengthen the 'nnt'kvt for their own crop. The Island delegation was head. "I h.I' Hon. Eugene Cullen. Min- rilrlr of Agriculture: S.C. Wright, rnutv Minister: William MscLen- nan chairman of the P.E.I. Potato and llr. ED. Reid who has had mwricnce with at least three pre- "””" fllllllflrf plans. The New frlmswlclf delegation was headed 3' Agricultural Minister, Sherwood and included two other govern- Coming Events - Nftllh Granville cart. Dec. 22. Anglo Rustico school concert. -. 2.1. N School con- (lrivoll Cove gchooy Thursday. Doc. 33, Dance in Mount Ryan loll ev- "'.V Thiirsrlay night. Till". In-t'iFsa's Christmas Concert uu-day. December laid. M-Vglzml-Ipaven Concert tonight 0 11. Concert 22:(lI'.99lIl;i;i;h gzlltlctrt. Dec. 1.hIf.:':dl;lv I;-)r;vI.5::so:l 'clom;ort - i oaoc . Wiviwniiry River Geisha: Cc.- i”- llscembsr hid. M4-I ll sumo! y F3... in... o”J3'4iE3.'l."" it u. '-c---I”-Ty. 331:'.'..nc.""i"”.t'i 3'?.'If.”" um?” NV-' Mm oaneoiiou to- ”l"lVlllI Quins llecmbtr Inna. Duos fal”lAll!IIl -u 3 h itaii. ll) 1 - '”' Dec. nasal 0 pgnfn" 'nn"d..y' roriccrt in New Port! Ball day. December I! org.” 3,3, Christmas Concert h Vast :Ioy. .ilty Hall, Thursday. Dec. Q g 4 otclock. iloliday dance. St. Mary's toitria. Tuesday. Dec. fltb. l'0fers' Orchestra. &llance Cardigan Legion Hall. ibursday. WabatIr”I Orchestra. PA. system. Canteen service. Reserve Weckiosday. January l for Travelogue by Mrs. Keith 3 llrviters also I abort musical Dtntzram. I 3'l"Wlns at Moi-oi mm. "The 'llllllltel'." starring Edmund linen. wttttna trsiuan. Virgin- lmm. Fran! Lorain. near is New Perth school (0 Ottawa Meeting Success Reports Board Manager uient officials, four growers. three dealers and three starch factory representatives. I-leading the Ottawa group was Mr. A.M. Shaw. chairman of the Prices Support Board. Mr. A.H. Turner of the same Board: S..I. Chagnon. assistant to the Deputy Minister: L.W. Paarsall. 11.6. Page and E. Eardly. NOT DISCUSSED Mr. Campbell said that the mat- ter of a price support for Island potatoes was not discussed. It was felt. he said. that discussion of alcill I proggaigie was useless since a no wou .gn dum lug , , sfoeii 'Intd"'(-Batfsdti is si-ulli dam price ” d that being paid in the States. The Board Manager said that the Federal officials were quite Sympathetic to the starch diver- Slflll Drogrhm and promised that the matter would be referred to the Cabinet at tthe earliest possible date. lion. Mr. Cullcn was on the train following. Mr. Campbell and was unable to make alr connect- ions from Moncton last night. It is understood that the British market was discussed along with the findings of the Tariff Board but the Potato Board officials did not enter into these discussions. When asked by Federal Officials what action was being taken to better conditions for themselves the unanimous reply from the joint delegat' was: "That noth- ing could be done so long as the borders of Canada are open to the importation of U.s. potatoes and especially when the Mariitmes border on the State of Maine which produces more potatoes than all of Canada. combined". a ') DRINK! 0N RISE OTTAWA tCPl - Production of carbonated beverages climbed dur- ing November and the first months of the year from the cor- responding periods last year. the bureau of stItlstics'reported Wed- nesday. All l7'On P JACKSONVILLE. Fla. (AP)-All 17 persons aboard a Boston-bound Eastern- Air Lines Constellation died when it crashed and burned in early morning darkness wed- dily only I few seconds away from I safe landing. No Canadians were aboard '-"I0 lb" pushed the number of dead and missing from three Flor- idI,(l:raslies in the last three days Two air force bombers went d0.Vll. Moll!!! Just outside Tampa when they collided in flight mid- WIV down the Gulf of Mexico 32:3... taklns elsiu men to their 'Afewliours lateranairforca PW? IUKIIDO col- .i:-.:.. .. ..t:i:.'E3.-:i..':".""i':-. tlirea II”! 0311 tlIl'C Ilill mlmng. The COIICIIIINHJVII about I half mile b-tun tbs-and obao alts P0" runway wbad-.ii struck tab ton of I alum! of instant! plunged to the lid." As the craft ed Iloli into the dirt. I Ibod I c ckali coop. an onocupled house trailer. snapped off I larga oak tree. and 'l several tall pines. ' HHEAR8 WINGS OFF The wings were sheared off. the low:-red, landing gear wronched of! the fuselage and the emm torn from their mountings. -impact scattered bits of twisted metal, cloth and other debris along I plfl . 100 feet wide Ind 130 yeards long. IIIddltioIbIalIpaIa&I 11 left Sioux Lookout at 406 p. m. In Jacksonville Crash 3. Q: , ,0, A good idea of the savers ice conditions in Charlottetown har- bour may bo seen above. The Findlchild Died In Fire Started By-Her Mother WESTVILLE. N B. (CPI - A coroner's jury Wednesday decided that two-month-old Deborah Cyr died in a fire set by her mother. Mrs. Harry Cyr was taken to hospital in nearby New Glasgow under police guard after the In- quest.Police said she probably would be given a medical exam- ination to determine her fitness 1fo:'dtrial. No charges have yet been a . The mother of three other chil- dren. Mrs. Cyr told the jury she started the fire that burned her baby to death-Dec. 10. She gave no reason. She said she set the baby's mat- tress and crib sfire. Other children called neighbors who summoned firemen. Westville firemen Daniel and Cecil Halo said they carried the charred rcniaiiis of the infant and the crib”'froIn"IiIt'iltouse. ' Dr. H. D. Whitman said burn d the infant's death. 4-year Terms For Robbery DIGBY. N. S. (CP)-Two Hall fax men were sentenced Wednes- day to four years each in Dor- rhester penitentiary after plead- ing guilty to a Dec. 3 armed rob- hery at the Capitol Theatre here. Frank John Wilson. ill. and Raymond , Fredv Greeley admitted taking :60 from I theatre cash box which manager Harley Wynn was forced to open at i. r l t after being lured from his apart- ment to the theatre to look for I lost wallet. U. S. Air Force Pane Missing WINNIPEG I('Pi- A USAF C-45 Expediier aircraft ulih a crew of three is niissini: on a .'l.'i0-niile fllght from Sioux Lookout in north- western Ontario in Minneapolis. RCAF lieadqiiartt-rs reported Wed- nesday night The twin-engined plane. which CST. developed engine trouble. The unidentified pilot reported he had lost one engine and was turning back to Sloiix Lookout. lane Killed the Eastern Air sent to and crew of five. carried the hotly of an Izlnes employee bciniz Washington for burial. The airport .lRIfI there it.-is .1 soo- fot ceiling and R half-milr Visi- huiy. The piano i-as makiui In instrument landing S.V-""0 DD- proach. The plane appeared to be In Do trouble as it started its aPPF0llClI- The pilot-Capt. Tom MCBl'lEl'l 01 Neiv York-had talked to the air- porl control tower seconds bt3l'll'G the crash and evcr.VllllllE aboard was reported normal with the craft on course. Leroy Council. a bollcrmakar who was in his homc drinking cof- fee It the time. said he saw I'I landing liflllll ll" 5,” Iard what might have been 1- plosioa or the sound of lmv-I-' I! the tug tops were sheared off. Fill AFTER citasu "The big ship hit the srmmd..ll"f than was no fire until it till. he said. Fran where he was when he first saw the plane. Council said I1 is be about the "0"" It t for I. landing lain mu. I foundry worker. was in tlip yard nr I nearby nousc when he heard the ship "it sounded like it was In good mechanical condition and ruonlnl alrlinlr ' hi - .-t, . - - ...g.i.s .....4.Ns .srias&.s. . 5. SEVERE ICE CONDITION government supply ship laurel is shown breaking a channel for the Irving Company tanker Seekonk Saurel Ordered To Convoy Icebound Brant To Piciou E A report received late last night indicated that the C.G.S. Saurel. which was convoylng the C.G.S. Brant through the ice to Pictou, were off Point Prim between ten thirty and eleven o'clock. The Brant. which had slipped from the Marine wharf at noon yesterday to proceed to Pictcuu for repairs. had reported that she had only reach I-Iaszard Range by four p in. and was having difficulty due to NEW YORK. tAPl - Lawyer Albert 8. Zink complained Wed- wontt go along with I gag-a :76.- 000 gag. As he told it in state Supreme Court: '”On Christmas morning. 1945. I visited the defendant in her apartment at I Sutton place and brought her several relatively inexpensive Christmas gifts. Among the gifts was a camera. which cost 875. "During the exchange, of gifts. I expressed regret that my fin- ancial circumstances were such that I was unable to give her more elaborate presents and. hi the men-lme-nt and jostling which prevalrled at that time. I drew a blank cheque from my wallet and Five-year-old Jinsnw Illlar es broadly Iftor raostviu I wrist watch from a club in Xenon. Ont. it .99";-gd to come ill low," he laid. til the crash occurred EAL llbwn ll.0ll.Ill plane mlldl thinking youngster u.sao.m p I I I e nll' I hhllb. Cheque Issued As Jest Returns To Haunt Lawyer Iaadax uni bis- estranged wife. 5' 4 ts...-I.-I I 5-YEAR-OLD FIRE HERO mill- in in Kenora. Jimmy. his pants new burning. led his brothers to up .A. A. .- - ' i-asli IN CH which is being employed transport- ing fuel and oil from the large tanker irvlngbrook. which is lying 3:? . S lbeavy ice conditions. Consequent- ly the Saurel was despatched to her assistance immediately, with instructions to take the Brant to open water. However. on reaching the Straits heavy drift ice was en- countered. and the ship was in- structed to continue on to Pictou and return immediately to assist shipping here. The estimated time of her arrival hack in Charlotte- town could not be determined ow- in a spirit of fun. wrote a cheque to her order for 875.06) and dat- gd it . Obristmu Day. to years lat:er.". " " ' DIDN'T KNOW IIIAUDE Zink married the girl. Maude. in 1946 and always figured she had destroyed the cheque. But he didn't know Maude. he admitted. Mrs. Zink sued the lawyer for a separation in 1952 and the shocked Zink learned the cheque was still in her possession. The separation suit is pending. With the "mcrrlment and jest- ing" of that by-gone Ohrristmas only I memory. Zink is worried lest the cheque L valid next week and Mrs. Zink cash It. A hearing was set for Jan. 8 on his application to have the cheque declared null and void. Oll Aiiort I own ER 22.1 -.-.-...a.. -.. HA to off It. Peter's Island. to the Railway wharf for the companvis new bulk storage plant at the east: ing to the ice conditions. Earlier yesterday the Saurel had been employed breaking a chan--. nel for the Irlving oil Company tanker Seekonk. from alongside the tanker Irvinghrook off St. Peter's Island to the Railway wharf. which took until four o'clock in the after- noon. Ou her return she will again: assist the Seekonk out to the Irv-I fngbrook and back again. Company officials hope to carry out the same operation again on Friday. The continued cold spell is caus- ing concern to local marine ship- ping interests. but I small ray of hope comes from Neil Malhesou. M.P. for Queen's. who yesterday received the following reply to the wire he sent to .the'Deputy Minis- ter of Transport the prevloui: day: "Local Marine Agent has been ad- vtlad that die Saurel may he used to assist over period until Satur- dIy. Probable that we will then have to remove her for duty else- where." Local officials of the Department of Transport last night reported that ice conditions were severe. with the ice being about five inches thick. and piling was making the going more difficult. Of the two freighter now at the. Railway wharf. the Seagull was ex-1 pected to complete ' -'i either early this morning or about mid- day. depending whether the agents decided to work her through the Mexico is expected to finish dis- charging her cargo early today. and will probably immediately start to take on a part cargo of potatoes. dependent upon how much worse the ice conditions be- come. Irving Oil Company officials esti- mate that the Scckonk making three trips from the Irvingbrook with fuel and gasoline will give them more than sufficient stock on hand. With the arrival of this ship. the new Irving Oil bulk storage fcly in the snow and carried his dill- sleeping baby sister out of the fin to his mother who was in I nears saving the llvasof bis toIr.yoIag- by cabin. He suffered severe lag Irhrotlieralld ahtaswbu Iburnabaforablaalotblnawnre heater exploded and sprayed da- ostbrouja-aloas-racnoab-novas. canon) has now gone into operation. fnmllyowned Ford Motor Com- pany. preparing to sell its stock to the public for the first tinii-. opened its lodgers Wednesday and bnred these long-held secrets: 5559'-5. 32.483.000.000: sales in the first nine months of this your. 34.042.500.000: profits in ihp sanit- gglod. I record-breaking s.'ll'1.7.'J0.- The company informed the Sec- urities and Exchange Commission. in the registration statement re- lllllfed by law for the guidance of investors. that the Ford Founda- tlon. Inc.. will sell io,zoo.ooo mum of voting stock to the public. It indicated the price will be 375 I share but set no specific figure at this time. If that price Drcvnihi. the issue will sell for S750.0flo.ooti. easily the biggest equity stock "M-IHOII II! any industrial concern in history. The proceads wil go to the Foundation. set up by the Ford human welfare." dously rich Foundation will PART T0 COILEGEI Part of the !000.000.oilo error the next week. oat-mIrkadtohp.IlytbIgr utiaeome wouldnot Iafnotdtonaka&apIyIiantI. nadir Plant at the east end of the city WASHINOTON (API - The- family with the goal of "advancing year. but sale of the shares will be used hylemhn the Foundation when it distrihtiteal.-idered ll Earnings months to colleges and hospitaliiiot I955 amounted to 0.5.05 I undar I program announced last again figured on A spokaoman for the Foundation Ford”s biggest said that while no assets bave been 955 end of the city. Barter's Film VL.al:; Heavy Fire Loss In Hamilton HAMILTON (CPI - Fire in I. three-storey manufacturing build-I tug raged out of control for more than three hours Wednesday. An early unofficial estimate placed damage at between 3500.000 and s1.00il.000. At least three in- dustries in the building were so- riously damaged and two others threatened. Flames broke out about 2 p. m. in the West End Engineering Com- pany and spread quickly to the ground floor premises of Garwood Heating Company and the Con- solidated Glas Company. Two Years For Bogus Cheques TRURO. (CPI-Halifax sales- man Donald Lee. Z3. was senten- ced to two years in Dosdbester penitentiary by Magistrate John I.. Crowe h police court here Wednesday. He pleaded guiliiy to ilrrae charges of obtaining goods and money by passing wortihless che- ques. Lee. tlllrflliiih his lawyer. asked for the full penalty so he might have an oppotrtamity ho team I trade while servin his time. Magistn-site Orowe iged. Report 47 Below At Old I Forge In New York State night or not. The fertilizer boat NEW YORK mpg-1-ht mrm. eastern United States Wednesday night was gripped by the worst winter's eve cold wave in years. Temperatures as low as 47 degrees below zero were reported. Gradual relief was forecast by the weather bureau but not before late todaywinter officially ar- m. EST Thurs- rives at 10:12 a. day. The numbing cold and its hand- mniricn. fire. plunged many sec- tions of the arcs into misery. Two y mcn froze to death in Jersey City ' .l. Ford Motor Company Bares Long-Held Financial Data for the stock is almost "epidemic" sillfl buyers will be limited to 100 shares apiece when 700 underwrit- crs across the United States begin soiling about Jun. 10. I The disclosurcs-which the 52- xcar-old auto company never was ir-quit-cd in make while it re- mmnr-d A tightly-held family cor- pm-atinn- tncliided I The company "plans to introd- lllil a now passenger car line ltllllln the next few years." It did not elaborate. i The Ford family. which now en- joys I00 per rent control. will be FPIIIICNI to 40 per cent voting con- lirnl when the public is let in. iiThis uoiild be more than ample. however. I come I The Ford directors have voted I doiihled its sales since I940. It has Ford dividend of 00 cents I share for wre.-tied second place in the indus- Ifirst-quarter l95f'v-I rate of 82.40 I try away from Chrysler. but re- Wlll mains far short of General Motors The tremcn- "vary subject to business condl- in may Vmume, GM ape.-gs gm, re- lions ' '.'.'.ii”.i.i'.?..& 5': .l3":"" '."”.". "'""E”” ii" ”. we" 9 I Dividends were paid this year an an F0"! com""y' f"""""' equivalent to 83.1! I share. reck- oned on the new. expanded com- s from the zmon stock basis on which Ford is rking. Of this. 81.31 was con- fiiture dividends v "extra dividends." the new basis. I year each-go to Henry . great East-West power struggle H actions at the highest level by each ilcaniime investment firms. re- pflrlllljl that anticipatory demand to give the Ford heirs management control for years to and Er- Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew LONDON . (AP)-Prime ueaday night. They said that decblon cabinet shuffle announced ed day-by-day control of other homefront duties " chancellor of the exchequer minister in all but name. Eden is said to believe that the outcome of the new phase of the may well prove to be decisive for generations to come. In hlst view it will demand the closest continuing scrutiny and. very olten.svirlft judgments and of the big Western governments. MUCH OPPORTUNITY The international diplomatic cal- endar for 1956 will give Eden I lot of scope to supervise foreign polic- ies. He travels with Foreign Sec- retary Selwyn Lloyd to Washing- ton late next month for talks with President Eisenhower on all as- pects of the international situation. Warmest In HALIFAX (CP) -- Maritimers still shivered in zero weather Wed- nesday uight. The Halifax weather office grimly forecast more of the same for today. The cold wave. which spread over the Atlantic coast from central Canada Tues- day. brought the lowest tempera- tures of the season. about 30 de- grees below normal. Fuel dealers worked day and nlghtonatloodofruahordars from consumers caught with low stocks. one Halifax supplier re- ported I 40-per-cent jump over nor- mal business. Firemen in many cities and towns were kept hopping by I rash of blazes caused by over- heated stove and furnace pipes and faulty chimne .. Outdoor work on some construc- tion projects was slowed or stop- ped by the severe cold. At nearby Imperoyal only 100 of 960 men em- ployed on I new oil refinery pro- ject were able to work. However. loading and unloading Trains ran late. power failed, k ' closed. Motorists by the thousands were stranded by stalled cars. SKIES MOSTLY CLEAR There was little snow accompan- ying the cold wave. Skies were blue in most places. In the Adirondack mountains of upper New York. a reading of 47 degrees below zero was reported at Old Forge The New York state record is 52 below. recorded at Stlllwater . reservoir in Saratoga county Feb. 0. 1934. man. who is credited with a major role in rescuing the firm from its crisis position just after the Sec- ond World War. The report showed the company lost 15 cents a share in 1946 but suddenly revived under the Ford- Breech reorganization. In 1948 earnings were 51.82. Earnings have risen since then. with dips in only two years. to S314 in I953. 8431 in I954. and on up to the brilliant showing of the first nine months of this year. The company has plowed back Sl.334,z00.000 of earnings in a tre- mcnrlous expansion programa re- peating the early-century pattern of the founder. who bought out his fellow stockholders in 1919 because they opposed Ford's plans to build the huge River Rouge plant at Dcarboru, Mich. The company has more than flfi0.fl0t'i.000 in sales this year and profits of more than 31.000.000.000. to resume his favorite role as statesman in the revived oold war, over wealth prime likely to range not only ave own family problems but alsotoover world affiars. K of ships continued as usual on tha Halifax waterfront. Early rloruing harbor traffic moved through a curtain of frosty mist. caused by the contact of frigid air with warmer sea water. the ears of early risers every- where in the Maritinies Wednes- day axoept in southwestern Nova Scotta. Debert near coldeat spot at 11 below. Yarnsoutb N. 8.. above. was 10 below over New Brunswick five below in the Annapolis valley and Prince Edward Island. and zero along the Atlantic coast. miles an hour over the sea and I steady I) over land made tiia frost seem mora intense. ' weather office announced winter will officially begin in the Marl- timea at 11:12 I.. In. AST today- 1 -SHOOTER Factor Behind New Cabinet Minister Eden has decided I trouble-shooting world aides reported Wed- was I. main factor in the Wednesday. Ednen has hand- parliamentary business and to Richard A. Butler, former who now is deputy prime The main topic will be to seek concerted and new long term ans- wers to the new challenges of the Soviet Union in South Asia and the Middle East. They will then go to Ottawa. Eden in April will be host to Soviet premier Nikolai Bulganln and Communist party boss Nikita Khrushchev who are to visit Brit- ain, The occasion almost certainly will be used for negotiating. or seeking I basis of negotiating on some of the basic issues that divide the East and West. And in June Eden will preside a conference of .Commcp ministers o are their 4'1. Deberi Coldest, Yarmouihll - 0: Maritimes Below zero temperatures nipped Trurowastbo It! was the warmest For this morning the forecast Nortbwustwiridstustlnsilioi With I touch of wry humor tbs .cpi-'remperaturoI TORONTO the public weather issued by f' : oh” Min. Max. Night Da.V Dawson ...45lh Vancouvr . Victoria .. dmonton - Calgaiy Regina Winnipeg .. .. Toronto Ottawa Montreal .. Quebec Fredericton Saint John Moncton . Halifax .. Charlottetown .. .. Sydney ... Yarmouth .. .. 0 St. John's .. .. HALIFAX fCPl - The weather office says a high pressure area extending from Ontario to the east- ern United States is moving so slowly eastward that no op- preciable change in the generally fine. extremely cold weather is forecast for today. However. I change in the weather picture i indicated for Friday. Regional forecasts: Prince E d w Ird Island: Clear with I few cloudy lntervalal on- tremeiy cold; west winds so. inw- Iilgh at Charlottetown 5 below and g:wlS5!OHtd;:;;w'ggiZ:a?- The financing outlined Wednes- day marks the passing of the last of the great famtlly-held corpora- tions.Whereas the Ford Founda- tion has owned the bulk of the com. pany's'stock. its shares were non- to the first nine monuni vnllmz-ml.v the family held the share. nlm-Q voting tights. precious "B" stock. which carried Now the foundation. anxious to salaries-0321.000 diversify its investments. has per- Ford II. sunded tthe company to let it sell ants. our president and namesake grandam 10,200,000 shares of its "A" stock, ba we company founder. oraboutalpareaatafhtotal I. Breech. In board &Ik- holdlnQ. Sahove... . . .. . Northern Nova Scotla and New Brunswick: Clear and extremely cold; west winds B). Low-high It New Glasgow 10 below and zero. Moncfon, Fredericton and Saint John 10 below and zero. Edmund- aton 15 below and zero. Campbell- ion 10 below and sore. High tide today It Charlottetown at 3:23 a.m. and 4 pm. Summer- side tide ei hteen minutes later than Char wn. Sun rises It 1:40 a.n. and ooh I 0230 ).l. '9wa.lL