Maxirm of a More Man If it rains. well; if it shines, well. 12 PAGES 5 '5 '3 TICI PIOPI-I'D PAPII CHARIDTTETOWN, CANADA. TUESDAY, AUGUST 23, 1955 hedh IILD IV IVIIVIODV ll Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew PRICE 5c CASUALTIES IN MOROCCO MOUNT Will View Destruction Eisenhower Calls For Conference On Relief DINVER tAPl - President 4 full extent will. the Red Cross and aid after the emergency. Long Road lack Begins In Flood Areas NEW YORK (AP) W The long. painful road back began today for- northeastern statas prostrated by floods. The job of recovery will take months-in some cases. even- years. i l Lunch Wrecked When Wind Hits Jamboree Site" y BILL 3058 Egyptian And Israeli Forces in New Clash GAZA. Egyptian-held Palestine (CPI - An Egyptian military spokesman said three Egyptian soldiers were killed and five wounded in a 25':-hour exchange of fire with Israelis near Gan Mon- French-E-eneral Killed; 1,600 Die In Revolt llisenhowar will fly twer flood rav- gged regions of six eastern states "my and then hold an emergency! other relief agencies. , The president had planned to in- The Red Cross has allocated tarupt his vacation in the Rockies 82.000.000 for relief work and is by going to Washington today and t B The still - mounting death tolit cuuun pr"; 5;." wm" stood at 100. with the following: NIAGARA , ON . THE . LAKE, state counting these losses of life'.,m. tCPi..Lunch new berm. th. from drownings, flood - provoked relief conference at Hartford. operating 107 shelters. housing and to Philadelphia Wednesday. p winds Monday at the World iut Conn. in the heart of the strlnkenlfecding 11.000 homeless end pm, He moved his departure .., 2 nccldelill and 9l9"i'"C"””"5 '"'" Jarr' roe. panied by "air ".5, tvidlng clothing for all who need It. hours to make the flood area ur- ""9" wire”. . , deal f canvas. cutlery an: lig- The president himself announ .3 E. 'oland Harriman. Red Cross Vey and after the conference in P9'""WlV'"'a 933 C'3"""”'-'” 'l"- hit: his plans to reporters at the sum--chairman. estimated that 8,000-.Hartford will resume his journey MAW"-'h"'9”5 135 mind” l”l'""l 13 A ate-morning storm blc ipl mar White House and also called.famiiies would need Red Crosslas planned. ' New -l""Y 53 New Ymk 45 Vii" suddenly from Lake Ontarit ic-l on the nation to "pitch in and help" ,- ' the American Red Cross raise a' disaster relief fund. t Federal funds-to the extent de- scribed by presidential secretary. James C. liageriy as ''In effectl s hlank check"-have been made svailable for relief work through the civil defence administration. Eisenhower was scheduled to fly aaat overnight aboard his prlvatel plane, Columbine III. After daylight today he will view' the ravages of the flood over six? states. which has caused ucarlyl 200 deaths and made nearly tsoool families homeless. PLANE CONFERENCES The president will confer in his plane with governors. or their rcp- resentatives, from the flood - hit sress of Pennsylvania, New Jer- sey. Connecticut, New York. Mas- sachusetts and Rhode Island. over Broken Ankle Will Not Upset Prime Minister's Plans, Reports Indicate ST. PATRICE. Que. tCP)- been bound in elastic bandages. Prime Minister St. Laurent basl X-rays at Rlviere du Loup Mon- been told to stay off his feet forlday revealed the break- the naxt on hours to help heal hlsl liil ililia”l”ll2.'i..li'i.ll.”l':l..i?.tCl Naval Vessels - a To Visit Here eru Quebec. A spokesman at the prime min islet": residence here said . Monday the injury is not serious- H.M.C.S. New Liskeard, under and that Mr- St. Lsurent's injured the commandof Lieut. Cmdr. N.A. anklc was encased in a cast "just -Turner will arrive in Cho"lotte- to be on the safe side.” The cast ,town on Thursday morning. The Would 5183' on for some two weeks. vessel. which is a coastal escort glnia 3. Thousands of persons wero not only homeless. but without means of livelihood. Plants were l"1Cl(Ed out of operation in.man.v trial cities. and it will hr before they run again. WIDE CURVE RUINED Prom town to town. along a vast curve stretching from Mas- sachusett, through Connecticut, Rhodc island, New York and into. New Jersey and Pennsyl-'aiiia,p 0": mi" W” ”hmm""5 i" "mm" - contents high in the air. often driv-l Arvi in many places therc were . - - the long lines of shocked. lmwild-l:icl:;mbg:"::or2:.al;:L Flying. ored people. waiting forfood or a l giacc to lsipend thelnlght. The Red ETUDY SCOUT EXII.ES' PLEA . roar sat a partia survey showed Marge". Dan C. Spry 0; Lon. l34'l6g lamm” h"m9l”5- -don. Eng.. director of world scout- mo FUEL I.-on FIRES ling": international bureau. said in The perm 0' ll also H J an interview sympathetic consid-p companied by 30- mile an winds. l Lord Rowallan. luncheon ,uestl , J Jackson Dodds. deput: v.-htef' '"d"5l scout of Canada. and six -ther wur them. A camp headquarters state-. .ment said: "All the gentlemen setl lto work puting up the tent again." The 11.000 scouts throughout the mile-square campsite shared their lot. The scottts' mess shelters were oration is being given to admit-; ll” """'"l"3' . ting boy scouts now in mtg, Ecollvsalah Cohar. :1II"eCi4l;I' loftthe The scouts. exiled from Poland. gypfa" W3". mm” Ty S 5 cg me the Ukraine. Latvia. Esthonia. depf"t"le":'d(:l":m:dhl'lla” me Is Lithuania. Ruthenia and Hungary,- "us 5 fr ' ' " lg mg" ' , . . . He said their attack was timed have formed associations in rheir to precede mo arrival mcaim CASABLANCA. (CP)-The French turned tsnkli jet planes and foreign legionnaires loose on rebel trouble areas in Algeria and Morocco Monday in reprisal for week-end blood-letting that left 1,600 dead with the toll nev. countries. They want to loin the international associaiior rc- taining their own identity. us- toms, language and culture. dd to vote as one "country" or. the council. l The results of a Sunday meeting on the subject will be reported to- reeks guests had their mm cave in upon d-aymtomtheg international meeting: Salah said three had been killed Tuesday of Maj-Gen. E l. M. Burns of Canada. the United Nat- ions truce supervision chit-f. for still rising. discussions of the frontier situa- tion with Egyptian officials. An offcial report earlier said cleanup Of Oued Zem, me Egyptian officer had been kill- in Morocco. ed and four soldiers wounded. but massacre The number of prisoners takenj Baby Tornado Causes l Damage In Maine, N.B. HALIFAX (CPI-A hlt-and- run baby tornado. packing yales up to 50 miles an hour. raced through Maine and western New Brunswick Mon- day and vanished so fast that the Dominion public weather office here missed it altogeth- or The storm felled trees by or questioned is unknown but lhel figure runs to thousands through-l out North Africa. DUVAL DIES IN CRASH To the southeast of 011011 Z9"!- tbe commander of French troops t TC.lll'lIIl.! out of Maine mcr ibel in MOFOCI-'0. 51-YEN-Old Gen REY-p St. John river a few miles below mend Duval was killed along with iwoodstock. a brief. vicious wind two comP5"l”"5 when Ill! "EM out It narrow swath: of destruc- Plane 0l'3'h9d "Cl bumedt hThe ption across Fredericton and Mln- Crash 0W11"9d "3 fhet:":hw "9 to hcforc slackening to a milder: l'0b"' iflbesma" Md " r ' mu blow in the Buctouche area Isacrv at Quad Zem. in om. i While more northerly regions A5 WP”53l melfstlfr” teunion. Ibent before galcs. Halifax andglhe native guru-ions-Moroccan: Elfarmouth recorded the hottest "mumed "1 f 9 9”" M” the dozens in Maine. They -,Aug. 22 in history. HalIfax's 89 cm” N""'l"'P'” publlshed PM The injury is believed to be a Algerine mlnesweeper. has a crew the afflicted towns. with utilityl Sinclair To crashed down on telegraph broke a mark est.-ibtt-in-d in tom Vl0"ill' 5"PW"9d dmllf ”' l"'""'li Nine suspected rebel hideout villages in Algeria were emptied and razed. by artillery. Heavily armed legion- naires, under jet fighter cover, started a house to house scene of the week-end”: worst violence. French Premier Edgat Faun and the qovernment "coin miltee of five" met with Moroccai leaders at Aix-les-Bains on tht Franco-Swiss border in an effor to find a Moroccan solution. Tht first Moroccan called in was tht loll-year-old Grand Vizier. spokes man at the parlcys for tho shakg regime of Sultan Ben Moula: Arafa. The Aix-les-Bsins talks art 9C'l'"'IllEd to last a week. Immedi- ate results are not expected Fl'1C( the talks are merely a fact-finding mission on the part of the French government. I08-Year-Old . . . . .. it t tb k nd and author- wmch M Wm ny. Norm and SN...” services in many cases still par. and telephone lines in scores and the E2 in iarmnuth extccdcd ' 95 0”" 9 W” 9 small break in the main ankle of 10 officers grid no men, Carolina, to the south, and also storm ravaged. will send represent- stivea to the meeting. Eisenhower said the federal gov- ernment had been cooperating to burglars Get 5700 From Halifax Safe HALIFAX, trough a 1.000-pound office safe is the north and during the week- and and escaped with 8700 in cash. Police said the job was a "clean one." expertly done. Two Sailors Kilod in Traffic Accident COBOURG. 0nt.. (CP) - Two persoaa were killed and two aer- iously hjured Monday in a head- sa collision between a car and a Eactoi--trailer transport sear .re Police identified lie dead as two sailors riding in the ear. Ted Rabble. 10. of Keene.' Out. and John A. IAII. ll. of R.R. 7 Pet- thorough. Coming Events Your Saturday "night Jamboree -Format. - . Let I parish picnic at West Point Wharf. Tuesday. August 18. Dance Belfast Hail, August Is. It. Buchanan W. . Dance forest 1. August Mt. Dance Koay Iall. Ieergeiown. Tuesday. August and. Dance in lous-is Line Road North school on Augult asrd. Dance rortuaa lall. every Tuesday night. 9:!)-12:80. Regular dance Bonshaw Inn tontslit. Bur-na' Orchestra. Regular stock Car Dance Tues- !!! night Covshead Raceway. leven Mile lay chicken sup- lnr and basaar, Wednesday. Mth August. "Regular Dance. Crapaud Rink fgtnssdsy aight.- nuns em: I. Wednesday. "Dance Lorne Valley hall every he-d-y mm. Webster's orch- estra. . lhmntnn Church chicken supper III! B . mt uslaar an Wednesday. Au lleittilar Dance. Stanley Bridge "cry Tuesday. Rollie McKensIe's Orchestra. . T has defended the use of other an knee breeches and silk stockings (CF)-Burglar: cut W009 Ml'- 3l- lalllftni ll l'9D0Tledt The usual calls will be made T951108 he"-' Comfnrllbly and stIf- on His Honor Lt. Governor. Prowse nearby Rivlere du Loup. Que..l where x-rays of the swollen ankle were taken Monday morning. rec- .ommended no walking for the next hours. The injury. however. will not in- terfcre with the prime minister's scheduled engagements. including attendance of a cabinet ” , in Ottawa tentatively set for Aug. 31. an address to the annual meeting of the Canadian Bar Association Sam. I and a trip to western Can- a it. But golf and fishing are out for the 'remainde of the summer. the spokesman said. FISHING CASUALTY The prime minister broke his ankle while fishing with friends. in- cluding industrialist Jules Tim- mins.-in the Ungava district some 800 miles northeast of Quebec City. He slipped off a moss-covered rock Into a stream. The injury at first was not be. iieved as serious as a break and Mr. St. Laurent went ahead as scheduled to officials at the un- veiling of a plaque at St. Eioi. Que.. birthplace of the late Justice Minister Ernest Lapointe. In St. Eloi newspaper men there noticed the prime minister " ' . .with a slight limp. The ankle had afternoon. On Thursday evening a small number of guests will be received aboard ship and on Friday night a Governor's Ball will be held for the officers at Government House. on Saturday morning a coastal minesweeper squadron of four ships under the command of Cmdr H. Bruce Carnall, D.F.C.. C.D. will arrive in Charlottetown. The four ships with their captains are: H.M.C.S. Gaspe (Cmdr. E. Bruce Carnall. D.l".C.. C.D.l. H. gM.C.S. Ungavs tLleut. Cmdr. RM. Young. D.P'.C.. C.D.i. HM CS. Trinity fLieut. Cmdr. A.H.M. Slater. CD! and HMCS. Quinte (f:Lli,eul. Cmdr. D.P. Brownlow . .l On Saturday night at H.M.C.S. Queen C' rlotte a reception will be held for the officers of the five visiting ships. and will be fo" wed by a dance at thc srmouries soon- sored by the officers Charlottetown Garrison. The men on the ships will be ante" ained at dances. smokers and sport events. The five ships wil' leave port on Sunday evening at T p.m. n:m..mm.F. NEW WRAPPING Jamaica plans to wrap banana exports in polyethylene film. British Export Trade ;Recovered During July 5 LONDON. (CP)- Britain's ex- . port trade with dollar area count- ries-including Canada-showed a "striking recovery” during July. the board of trade said Monday. Final July trade figures. re-- leased today. confirmed the ten- tative report made public less than sharp fall." SPREAD THROUGH LIST The board of trade said the in- crease in shipments to Canada was spread widely through the list of goods Britain is offering abroad. l Wool. yarns. fabrics and non-elec- itrical machinery each accounted two weeks ago. Exports to Canada. for s:i.000.000 of the total export in Julyh artiiiougiltcd to I:,14.700.0t)0.; rise in July. - more an on e exports 'n .l n , t, , when Britain was caught ln ddclfl pr'(l;;t;)cT;lg(-(1102:;-o?))(i)l::)'f)u ,:',”.f,;,I"'y,,,',l',, "id '5" m'lll95- I half as much again sis in June and Ca"'l;l'lIit; iirnpgolvement in exports to! is per cent more than the average PI "Y W88 Plrlcularhr monthly rate in the first half of welcome after the very low June' the yen, fig'ure.V" the board of trade said. l Imports from Canada in July But it would be unsafe to read also jumped. Britain bought goods too much into the latest month's worth more than 228,500,000 last outturn which appears to be chIef- month. compared with 224.600.00ti 1! I correction of the previous in July. I954. alyzed. In Putnam, Conn.. a dis- traught resident said: "They keep telling us to boil luring no pain. lPr I M th . ti M , - . on His rnnr lstt-aulvrliretl mi tiff)!" r:tnui-n -I-tllll: lililt llazirthk" um” "mm lo- ”? Ivoltelmln I-id I doctor Itlwlll be made to thn ship in the rims. an official estimated it .wili take 10 years to restore the city of 10,000. Martial law ruled the town. where several of its key industries were knocked out. In Woonwocket, R. 1.. 8.0001 workers were left without jobs.l Textile mills were laid waste.! Corpses were washed out. of a l (Continued on page 2 col. 5) A11 Killed When Train. flows i Info School Bus SPRING CITY. Tenn. (APl-A 'ioaded school bus here Monday lkilling at least I7 children and in-l juring many others. g State highway patrolman feared lthe death toll might run much -higher, but critically injured child- lrcn were scattered out to several hospitals in nearby small towns. .making an immediate acctiratc t count difficult. The bus. loaded with more than 40 children six to 12 years old. was .-struck broadside by a southbound lCincinnati. New Orleans and Texas Pacific " ilway freight train. Raymond Moore of Sprinc City. driver of the bus. suffered iinor injuries. Police said all the child- ren were either killcd or injured. They ranged from six to 12 years of age. . Moore said four parked cars' obstructed his View of the on-, coming train. "I stopped at tho crosslng."l Moore said. "but I didn't scc the train. When I started across the? tracks I saw it and heard the engineer blowing his whistle. "I prayed I would make it but I know I was too late." Paul Giles. engineer. estlmntcd the train's speed at 45 miles an hour. EXECUTIVE DIES WINNIPEG (C?! - Walter A.. Hastings. 63. vice-president and; director of the Lake of the Woods Milling Company. died Sunday at his home. Son of the late 6. v.4 Hastings. founder of the Lake of the Woods Milling Company. be was with the company for 47 years. Wing Cmdr. Defends Use Of Personnel As Flunkeys LONDON tAP)-Air Commodore C. L. Dana. commandant of the RAF officers' camp at Hitchin. was spent cleaning windows. cut- ting lawns. llshing floors. car- iyins coal. cleaning bathrooms, He served overseas as a captain: in the Fort Garry horse in the; First World War. I Resume Tour In September OTTAWA. tCP)- Fisheries Min- ister Sinclair is expected to arrive in the Red China capital of Peiping in the first week of Septembe . the external affairs department said Monday. Mr. Sinclair suffered leg injur- ies Aug. 4 in a fall at Petropav- lovak. an eastern Russian port. Last reports were that he was re- moved from hospital there to a hotel room for convalescence. The department said it has re- ceived a report from London say- in! Mn. Sinclair. is . ed to ar- rive in Peiping in the irst week of September. though it was not sure that the minister has as yet left Petropavlocsk. It will be the first visit behind - loo-car freight train plowed ""0 3 the Bamboo Curtain for a Canad- ian minister. From Peipin" he will go to Hong Kong and from there to Tokyo to get a plane for Vancou- ver and Ottawa. Mother Charged With Abandoning 7-month Baby TORONTO. tCP) .- A mother Monday was charged with aband- oning hcr seven-month-old daught- er and failing to provide her with the necessities of life after the child was found in critical condit- ion ai her home. Police said her head was wedged between bars of her crib. They said the child had been left for more than 24 hours without food or care and had suffered bruises "all over her body" either as a result of violence or in ef- forts to free herself from the bars where she was trapped "for sev- eral hours." Tnny Michaud. landlord of the house where the child and her mother live. told police he found tiny Linda Marie Harrison satur- day evening when he called to col- lect the rent. He said be freed her by sawing through the crib bars. Officers said Marlene Harrison. 23. who they identified as the baby's mother. was arrested at a rooming house. KILLED ON HIGHWAY FORESTVILLE. Que. tCPi - Francoise Tremblay. I0. was killed Sunday in a bighwa accident int this community on t e north shore of the St. Lawrence river. of places, isolating towns and villages on each side of the border. A Canadian Press survey at 11 pm. ADT disclosed no injuries. Both Canadian Pacific and Canadian National Telegraphs reported all their lines to the west from Halifax out of com- mission for a time. Trees were split asunder and streets flooded at Fredericton where supper-hour crowds ran better-skelter for shelter from torrential rains. A lirrsb crashed to the ground. narrowly missing a group of pas- sengers at a bus sto . Another telephone wires. COLD FBONTS CLASH The weather office here said branch ripped down a batcif oil the previous high of 80 st-t in 1938 TELEPHONES RESTORE!) I The New Brunswick Telephone; Co. reported all lines between: lFredcricton and Edmundston. N.' a.. 175 miles further up the St.l John river. knocked out for two or three hours but emergency circuits have been set up to all points. Full extent of the damage to lines and power poles will not be known before dawn. The com- pany has alerted all its line crews along the route of the storm. Telephone checks with Wood- stock. Mllltown. Fredericton, Min- to. Chatham. Blackviilc. Dalhou- sic and Butrtouche all report va- rious amounts of damage. but no known injuries. ities feared possible spontaneous, reprlaals by any of the conflictini factions in the touchy protector- ate. Since the outbreaks began Sat; urday the clashes have fallen off in sporadic encount...-.. and French cleanups but reports still arrive such as riots at the sermons!" ports of Safi and Mazagan in Morocco -where 14 persons were reported killed. TWO BATTALIONSARRIVII 1 Two reinforcing French bat-tal- l ions have arrived in Morocco and i Le Bourget airport in Paris was busy loading jeeps and automatic weapons aboard planes bound for Morocco and Algiers. ” As l"precau.i'ionary measure. police in Paris put more men in the section where most North Africans live. Gives Advice AIX-LES-BAINS. France. tReut- ers) - Grand Vizier El Okri of Morocco. the world's oldest states- man at an estimated 108. Monday told reporters his recipe for reach- ing a vigorous old age and pro; serving an unwi-inkled achoolgl I complexi . His recommendation: "Lotl if lemons. lots of milk and lots of washing." . The tall. aristocratic old men. with pointed white beard and large horn-rimmed spectacles. is leading the Moroccan delegation to talks on Morocco with the French at tbil Alpine resort. Nobody knows ll Mokri's exact age. But-the unofficial estimate of too has been calculated on the basis of beliefs that he was the Sultan's ambassador in Madrid in Amid the tensions caused by the 1575 and may even have attended '0 . the freak storm ' ", was caused by the collision of warm and cold air fronts. Thunderstorms were reported from Portland north well into New Brunswick. The gates and falling trees dis- rupted the Canadian Press serv- ice. to Maritime newspapers and radio stations from Toronto for more than 2V: hours. An altern- ate routing from New York to Halifax via Bermuda was arrang- ed but regular service was re- stored before it was put into use. The weather office explained it could well miss predicting such a storm If it failed to strike hear any of the bureau's meteorologi- cal staiions. ' At a time when the official forecast listed winds at Freder- icton at four miles an hour. pe- destrians were struggling against close to 50. The storm displayed all the characteristics of a tornado; towns only a few miles from its path sweitered in above-normal temperatures and excessive hu- midlty. The electrical storm dazzling their eves and assaulting their cars led many of those in the storm's path to fear thunderbolts. but it was the wind that caused most of the trouble. MINTO ROOFI DAMAGED Heaviest loss was reported from Minto. In a furious lo-minute as sault there about 5:30 pm. the West To Test Russia's Real Plans Towards Peace WASHINGTON (AP)-The West- crn allies are working out plans .lor a series of proposals design- ed to test real Soviet intentions toward permanent East-West set- tlement. These plans. still being devel- oped in Washington. London. Paris and Bonn. will be put into operation in a series of import- ant international conferences dur- ing the next several months. These include the United Nations sub-committee on disarmament meeting in New York Aug. 29; Chancellor tdcnaitt:-'s scheduled visit to Moscow Sept. 9; and the four-power fo r 2 i g n ministers' meeting to open in Geneva Oct. :27. when these sessions are con- cluded. Western officials hope to have a much better idea than they now hold of the true aims of Russia's present leaders and .thc extent of change in Moscow's lattitude toward the outside world. lliMILES AND GESTURES 1 So far the Soviet change has been displayed mainly in smiles and gestures. The biggest con- cession ihc Russians have made to date to ease cold-war lcnsions was their signing of the Austrian and Romania. as well as large numbers of Soviet officers advis- ing and training the armies of the other East European satel- lites. the sun canal is 1309. . Highest Temperature in British Isles LONDON. (Reuters) -The high- est tempessture recorded so as this year in the British Isles was iesched Monday at Jersey in the Channel Islands. where it was 91 degrees. At the UN meeting the United States. working closely with Brit- ain, France and Canada, will press Russia to accept President Eisenhower's proposal for u- change of military blueprints andt aerial inspection as a basis to' develop a world-wide disarma- ment program. "lsenhower's advisers are hope- ful but not optimistic. They be- lieve that if Russia turns down aerial inspection and insists on restricted ground inspection as in the past. it will mean that Moscow's present leaders are no more prepared than was Stalin to join in effecting a system of international arms reduction con-I trol. . BROAD RANGE ' l The foreign ministers of the U 6.. Britain. France and Russia will meet at Geneva for a broad lrange of negotiations on disarma- ment. German unification. Euro- pean security. and measu an to remove the iron Curtain. American officials are deter- -rwsw"” RAF ranks as waiters in fancy dress at an air force ball. He replied to criticism in Par- liament. ' The airmen were dressed in and were wigs. "I see nothing basically un- Peelinl potatoes and running er- rands for the offlcers' wives. DEMANDID INVESTIGATION Socialist MP Denis Howell de- manded an investigation after Holland told him -70 other un- willing RAF batman had made a pact that the first one out of the eAuGUsfee PERSONAGES WERE. Not ALL Boa i ronomo (CF)-Minimum ad maximum temperatures: Min Max . Dawson 47 55 storm tore roofing and shingles independence treaty last May. mined to confront the Russians 55 -,0 from an estimated two-thirds of They have promised to with- with a series of concrete propos- H 54 53 the houses In the town. brake draw their troops from Austria ilions for agreement to test the 3 7. windows. snapped TV antennae. soon. but this will not materially possibilities of real East-West 3 -,1 and uprooted trees galore. bring-latter their European military dc- accord-and expose the reasons 50 79 mg down power and telephonetployment. They still will have for failure if that accord proves 73 31 cables. lforces in East Germany. Hungary impossible to achieve. 79 35 72 as - ' 63 W Saint John . 56 04 enauer U S ra es l'i rowan -- 6- at Halifax at U Cbarleuofowl I - - Sydney . . . . . as 8! es erman earmamen -1 - I-IALIFAX (CF)--The weathn By W.M. IIORIACII BONN (AP).-Chancellor Konrad Adansuar has quietly put the brake n the speedy buildup of the new Weet n Army. Responsi e government officials said Monday he has adopted a tion"--meaning German reunlflca-mldes o the pay rate issue. "wait and see" attitude toward a tion. lie emphasized it would not' Other -preparations tcltlef foreign policy advisers will all generals. decidc Friday whether to send an- VRTOPS ENLISTMENT other note to the Kremlin before No soldiers can be put. into uni- Adensuer takes .off for Moscow lform even though Parliament auth- Hallsteln said such a note if sent orized the recruiting of ssoo volun- would deal with the "German ques- teers in July-until the cabinet de- for the fast iearmament in view of its cancel or even delay the lilnscowibuildup of the Wehrmacht also in service." said Mr services would report their "de- 1” Commodore DIIII. 'iThe blll Wll u-gdjuong," I My load - Holland carried with him sign- Tbe incident baa brought de- edstatsmeutail-osnotberseftbe Inaadsthattbs period of national men detailing the duties they had srvice be cut. s been ordered to carry out. Is- For the fiunlieys were young eluding dressing the offlcers' .ealIad lp two your children and cleaning out pets' out of the service he member of Parlia- ”toilaf boxes." p but it was the flunkeys that headed the list. foreign ginlters f - ace in Ieneva. I con" aiatic . 'atioiia the outlook for German natty. .-Big Four tor- hnpendlag trtp,to Ioscow and the trip. October It was disclosed later Monday have slowed down. The personnel committee which Adenauer will sate the Soviet Adenauer in Russia include Iial- all officers feom the rankof ' ' Union Sept. I to use primarily latcin: Foreign Minister Heinrich up "as met only once to discuss utabllshing Bonn-Moscow diplo- von Brentano: Herbert Blanlrrn- the technical details. that those who will accompany must approve the appointment of thorn. German ambassador to Besides screening the appoint- NATO. and Felix von Eckardt. ment of higher officers. this com- aigl ministers will tickle the ambassador to the United Nations. mittee must draft regulatfais for thorny issue of unity at their con. Other development support this the recruiting of all other volun- fa-ence in Geneva starting0ct.17. report. The federal cabinet has teers. This work has not started. 4 meat the "wicked As anonymous wing commas- wltc tins." der tried to soothe feelings. Or- "! udloobetllikaslotlyaniaersofineuballmbesaid. el&II."IsIdI-oseroldgiaasemetisaesdreestbeirwsitersto . 'losne olficq-a' flttbetbesneoftbebell. ed. "the motif was western and "At Little Rlaailgton." be add- ihe waiters were dressed as aw- boys." eelebratietuitniansadtheeldestweaianinibe leader. the parade district. Mr. J Gaudet. age IAY SIN!) NOTI Ja '!lb.llll1l(l. where a abbey black caavert- Q and Mrs Ms ins Gallant age hwbichwsreteeldestl (-PbetehWetttn) Wat Gar- liaa State hcmar7Vdtn Ral- btsia said he chancellor and his temporarily shelved a law setting Many highly qualified former of- tlie pay rates of future German ficers have found good jobs in West taoldiers This law was drastically Gennany's thriving industries. t ” t .. Iilpper Thev are new reluctant to rejoin office says much cooler air is flowing out of Quebec and pram- ises us bring relief to the Marl- times by this morning. Northern Nova Bcotia: class with scattered showers and w ely scattered thunderstorms and- ing in the earl morning; vari- able cloudiness furnace and evening: much cooler. light winds: low-high at New Glasgow 55 and 75. Prince ldward Ielaal. utter! N. B. rountles. lower Salat Jobs river valley: y mi eeoles Tuesday: light winds. low-high at Charlottetown I6 and 1!, Mesclaa I and 7!. Pselerietea I and 73. lalat Jolie ml 7!. High tide today at Charlottetown at 1.15! am. and 1.45 pm. At Rustico at 10.0! ant. and 9.3: in. tide ll sniautaa tl ' y llfousel last month to reduce theitlie army. especially since the out -planned pay for most officers and in psv rates. than Charlottetown. 8usriaaetl.sIa.n.andasb I 1.0 p.n. Itaadll has