MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN I n".u.upuin-u-wm.- Qhg light is given: avawnrd in saith-and lean thonsltolssven. 5, carrier: Charlottetown. h-marllda 010.00 per aarlusn. lisowisan 1. I. I. l. 0.00. other xrorlnasa and U. 1 A. 211.00 per PROBE SUSPECTED NEW O,UTBliEAK OF F. AND M. DISEASE Read by Everybody Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. TUESDAY, APRIL 22, 1952 Air Force Considers Blane Mystery Solved U. S. Navy Reports Red Coastal Guns Improved -Sir Stafford Cripps, Powerful U.K. Leader In Wartime Dies At 62 ZURICH. Switzerland. April ll .iAP)- sir Stafford Crlpps. tmll but powerful leader of Brit- .in's post-war economic and aus- 'o-rity program. died here tonight. He was 02. Cripps mapped India's way to 'rccdom and shaped Britain's post- rar policy for recovery. lie was I ntrong advocate of increased trade at-tween Canada and the United Kingdom. No Consultation With Provinces On Redistribution OTTAWA, April 21-- (CP), - IPrime Minister St. Laurent today He was scientist and lay preach-I pr, wealthy corporation lawyer and rociallst. idealist. As treasury chief )I the Labor Government from 1945 to 1050 he ruled the nation's economy with a hand of iron- -nsny called him "Austerity Srlppd". . in Asia he will he remembered above all for his leading part in the 1010 negotiations which turn- ed the old Ilndlanl empire into the free domlnions of India and Pak- stan. The austerity he prescribed for Britain's economic ills-rationing, uesvy taxes, wage freezes-were matched by the austerity of his personal habits. lie was a teetot.al- er on moral grounds and s. vege- tartan because of his health. Failing health in his late years made him change many of his ways nf living. He became a vege'arlan on doctors' orders and gave up (Continued on page ll col. 3) Coming Events "in stock all cake and soy- abean meal. Mccuigan & Boyle. '"Salvation Army Bean Supper today it to 7. Tickets so cents. "Dance every Friday night. Soutlh Rzustico l-fall. Music by Chas-lottcto ' us. "Card Party. Stanley Bridge school, Tuesday. April 22nd. Pro- ceeds for rink. "Dance Kozy Hail. Georgetown. Wednesday. April .33rd. Refresh- ments served. "Cards at Southport School W dnesday at 8:50. Lunch includ- ed. 30 cents. "Booking ordersafor clover and timothy see . Benton as MacRac. Phone 2211. "Partners. ask about the snu: Gain Feed Finance Plan. For part. zculara contact your local feed mill "Car of cement to arrive this week. Please book your orders. J. F. Morris, Kinkora. "Come to the communit bene- fit card party and dance Hunter River Hall Wednesday, April 23rd. Canteen service. "Come in and talk over our Purina finance plan for feeding vnur chicks and hogs. Dillon st Splllett. "For Snapshots that will not fade, mail your Films and Nega- Iivea to Garnhum Photo Studios. Charlottetown. "We still have a full 1 e of high class merchandise sell ng at very reduced prices to clear. W. 0. Myers, Stanley Bridge. "We have a supply of Coal on hand. Anyone wanting Coal. pleas. rontact our warehouse at Milton Station. Norris Kitson. "Booking orders for Strawberry Plants. Dunlap 81.50 hundred. moo thousand. Premier 31.75 hundred. 812.00 thousand. Parker Jewell. York. . "Tho winnr of lucky number osom at central Egg and Poultry was Albert Bruce of waterside. Ticket was drawn by John, flor- rims. Cherry valley. "weakly Thursday night Dance, Mt. eta-wart Canadian Legion Hall. -mung Thursday. April ma. Macltsnaio and Bisokett orch- estra. Canteen service. Atknission 50 cents. "Starting M it this to will close at near OI.) Wednsaldag It 0 p.m. on Mondays and Pri- 1l"”-i.”..?u'.'i' ".'P3'.'..?.5.'.'; ””" try, an even- inu until I p.m. J. 1'. Morris. Klnkors. "Come to Afton Hall 'f'bul'ldl!. Avril been had be entertained by Mrs. Gordon Maolfllan. rejected a Progressive Conserva- tive request for consultation with the provinces on plans for redis- tribution of representation in the Commons. George Drew. Progressive Con- servatlve leader, said a Federal- Provinclal conference should be called to obtain the views of the provinces before the decennial re- distribution is made on the basis of the 1951 census. A motion by Mr. Drew suggesting such a con- ference was ruled out of order on technical grounds. Mr. St. Laurent said his party has always held the view that representation in the Commons is something which concerns Par- llumcnt alone and not Parliament and the Province. The two party leaders spoke as the Commons, returning from an 11-day Easter recess, resumed a debate on redistribution. Mr. St. Laurent referred to the particular problems arising out of redistribution. always a con- troversial issue. He outlined changes which might be made to the constitutional formula for fix- ing representation in the Com- mons. Under the existing formula Saskatchewan would lose five of 20 seats in the commons and Manl- toba would drop two of its 16 seats. Nova scotla would lose one seat. British Columbia would gain four. and Ontario and Quebec two each. (Continued on page 5 col. 2) liadio Sales llown, Til lip Last Year OTTAWA. April 21-(CP)-A decline in radio sets last year was matched by a. boom in sales of television sets. - The Bureau of statistics report- ed today that radio sales amount- ed to 351,152,000 in 1051 compared with 359,100,000 in 1950. Television sales climbed to a value of 320306.000 frbm 012,048.- 000 in the same period. The lumber of radio sets sold in 1951 was 754,000 as against 759,000. while 39,200 television sets w9e'roe sold as against 20,000 in l . Radio sales were lower in all provinces in 1951. In Ontario sales dropped to 282.000 units from 370,000. Quebects sales fell to H5,- 600 units from 151.000, Manitoba's to 42,000 from 44,600, and British Columbia's to 39.700 from 50,200. There was a. decline in Alberta to 35,000 from 45,800, Maritlmes to 36,400 from 51.500. katchewan to 10.300 from 20,000. and New- foundia d to 4,400 from 5.100. But Host Of Skeptics Still Have Doubts OTTAWA, April 21 -(OP) - The air force was pretty sure to- day that Southrwestern Ontario's Sunday ltmystery all-crs.ft." was a 600-miles-an-hour British let bomber. l-lowever. a lot of skeptics still had doubts-including Clix- Wing Commander who saw it. Defence Minister Claxton oom- municated the air force feeling to the 1-louse.of Commons when he told Joseph Noseworthy (OCE- York North) the object "almost certainly" was an R. A. F. Can- berra bomber flying from Mont- real to Omaha. Ncb, with Air Chlef Marshal sir Hugh Lloyd a-board. But in London. Ont.. Wing Cmdr. A. D. llayiett. officer com- manding No. 420 City of London reserve squadron of the R. C. A. F. estimated that the object musr. have been doing 2000 miles an hour. It was Wing Cmdr. piston-driven Mustang aircraft vuhlch tried to intercept the "mystery! and fell far behind at 450 m.p.h. The incident. he said. squelched his doubts about flying saucers. "It couldn't have been an aircraft." he said. "not at that speed." Whether the object was going 600 or 1,000 or 2,000 miles an hour -1.000 m.p.h. seems to be the popular version among those who got an eye on it-it went so fast that aircraft control towers couldn't keep up with it. Reports are that it was over Toronto and gone before a night plan for use oanbura reached air traffic control officials fl-cm Montreal. Toronto airport men called London city airport but. by that time the Canberra--or what- ever it was-had come and gone there too and the Mustangs were trying to catch up. Within 12 minutes Detroit air officials reported its vapor trails visible there. Another mystery developed to- day. Residents of the Georgian Bay town of Midland, Ont. saw vapor trails at 20,000 feet for more than half an hour and agreed that some object. was doing better than Haylei.i.'s Malan Gov'l Goes Ahead -With Court legislation Prime Minister Malan CAPE TOWN. April 21 - (Reu- ters) o- The Nationalist Govern- ment today pressed on with its plan to make parliament supreme over the courts and beat down an opposition demand that the government obey a Supreme Court ruling. Interior Minister Eben Donges said he plans to introduce tomor- row a bill to set up a "high court of parliament." As Nationalist Government mem- bers cheered. he said the bill will define the jurisdiction of the su- preme Court which last month de- clared unconstitutional a govern- ment law changing voting regula- tions for colored (mixed blood) persons. Prime Minister Daniel llfalan said this created an "intolerable situation" and it is the govern- ment's duty .to place parliament": laws beyond review by the court. The House of Assembly todziy defeated by 78 to 61 a United (op- position) Party motion that the 1.000 m.p.h. overhead. Protest To o'I'rAiwA. April 21 --(CP)- Prime Minister st Laurent, expres- sing shock and regret. said today Red Chinese neglect or maltreat- ment may have caused the death of a. Canadian missionary for the first time. He told the commons the death at. Chefoo Feb. 8 of Father Joseph Leon Arcancl of Champlain county. Que, was the "first case which has come to our attention in which there is some reason to believe that the death of a Canadian 'mimlon- ary has been caused or at least hastened by serious neglect or maltreatment on the part of the Chinese Communist auhorlties." (Continued on Page 5 001. 7) Australia Plans To Boost F ood Production CANBERRA. April 21 -(Reut- ers)-The government today out- lined in program to stop the drop in Australian food production and to increase the yearly yield from exports by 2i0,o00.000 during the next five years. John Momven. federal minister of commerce and agriculture. told a meeting of state agricultural ministers that the plan calls fora 230.0(1)-ton increase in meat pro- ductlon over last year's figure. He also ,pt0posed a big increase in cotton and tobacco production to ance. Surmyslde Hail. WEI- nesday night. Modern. oldtime. Burns Orchestra. ' "Plan to spend every Tuesday night, at Wlnsioe Station Hall. Modern and square dancing com- mcncfn May sixth. Excellent music. "come to the Masonic Hail. Hunter River. Pridu. AM" "HI. and sea Trinity Yotml People ii'.'."...'1l .'.?J:.....a”'””' -2' uf."'i'&:l.'i:.'.'i Alooidtlon. ' "land llsart Club. Borden. nts I-act comedy "stator It". Bevan Milo lay WW3 Wednesday moan 0? ISM. curtain I2”. candy. Admission 3015 and 00c. EUR sites help halt the drain on Australia's dollar supply. Mcliwen said huge savings can he made by reducing imports of tobacco, cotton and linseed. lie estimated dollar savings at 37.000.- 000 a year and sterling savings at t6.000.000. Mclmen told the ministers that the proposed increases fall short of the government's desires. But he added, the targets were set. by experienced officials who said the figures are as high as possible considering the country's ,hysicsl llrnttatlona of ... ction. Today's announcement follows by a month the government's drastic hid to halt the drain on Australia's overseas banner: by slashing imports from all sources by half. At the some time all licences issued before March 8 for im- port: from the dollar area. Japan anti Russia were withdrawn for review. I The production tenets an- nounced today: - wheat: ld.000.000 acres-4.000: on more than last. year. oats and barley: 4.500.010 acres -an increase of 1.000.000 acres. Tbscoo: ao,ooo acres-an in- one of 14.000. csoatlton: 00.000 acres-an 'noreua R .000. Meet (beef. lamb. mutton and pork): l.200.000 tons-an inaeu! izovernment accept the court rul- ng. ' Canada Joins In New Red China Thre-it-t-eit;dRllam rcontinues To Hold SWIFT CURRI-INT. Sask.. April 21 - (GP) - Men and machines tonight continued the round-the-clock fight to bolster a precarious district dam and prevent it. from un- leashing a. wall of water on Swift Current 25 miles down- stream. Battling against time, they worked to complete a buffer dam to protcct the crumbling concrete spiiiway at Duncairn dam which began to break up Friday under the pressure of flood waters. Dr. L. ll. Thomson, director of the Prairie Farm Rehabil- itation Administration. said the situation was unchanged ;tnd could be considered crit- cal The buffer dam. an earthen barrier in front of the dis- integrating splllway to relieve pressure on the damaged out- let. was expected to be com- pleted by tonight. .C. N. ll. Forecast O'1'I'AWA. April 21-rcP)-An over-all deficit of 318,025,000 for the C nadian National Railways in 1052 was forecast in the C. N. R.'s annual budget tabled today in the commons by 'n-anaport Min- ister chevrier. The deficit compares with Gib,- 00l.000 for list. Record high operating revenues of l068.000.000 were forecast. com- pared with the previous high of s62d.000.000 last year. May Not Support Choose Prices OTTAWA. April 21-40?) - Agricuiture iunirter Gardiner told the Commons today he is not in I position to say whether the Peder- al Government will support dices! prices. Questioned by W. 0. Blair (PO-Lansrk), he said the quasi- llon of cheese and milk has been "fairly well taken care of" by the Government of Ontario, main of 300,030 who 5 cheese-producing province. china-guns and t rowing tear gas TOKYO. April 22 -(Tuesday)- (AP) - Greatly-improved Corn- munist more batteries guarding Korea's northeast coast have been shelling some United States war- ships nearly 10 miles at sea. The United states Navy report- ed today in a survey requested by the Associated Press that this al- most certalnly means the Reds are using radar-directed heavy guns. The navy did not specifically re- ports hits at that range but for the first time it disclosed that 41 United states ships have been hi' durlnsz the last iii months. Thirty-one of the ships were struck off wonsan, the battered ooasal rail and road junction on the east coast which has been un- der constant naval bombardment. Among the warships suffering damage and some casualties were the battl:shlp Wisconsin. the de- stroyer Ozbourn and the destroyer- mlne-sweeper Brinkley Bass. hi: twice. However. casualties have been light. The Communist big guns are well-hidden. the navy reported. apparently "For this reason intelligence officers rarely obtain an aerial photo of one of the guns. The Reds are careful not to expose their guns to unrestricted counter- battery fire from destroyer guns. Neither do the Reds expose their guns when U. N. aircraft are in the vicinity." The navy added that guns of 9.5- lnch and possibly l2-inch calibre are hidden in caves (lug into cliffs and hillsides. The navy said that in the Yel- low Sea, off the west. coast. 11 commonwealth ships have ”been nailed by Communist shore bat- teries but damage. in all cases. has been slig-ht. Total casualties have been two killed. none injur- ed." First Jet Airliner Service Opened R0iV.l.-1. April 21 -(Reuters)? B.O.A.C. opened the world's first ing 34 guest passengers 927 miles from London to Home in two hours and 17 minutes flying time. The Comet aircraft, carrying a party of reporters. was inaugurating part. of the route it will use from May 2 for regular-.flighis between London and Johannesburg. South Africa. CAMBRIDGE. England-(CP)- Cambridge University students are trying an experiment with :00 birds. They are trying to ascer- tain whether a. bird inherits its typical song or just imitates it. In turn they hope to learn whether humanr sounds and expressions Chief V2? Sees No Cause for Alarm. - OTTAWA. April 21 -401?)- Zlwelve head of infected cattle. showing some symptoms of foot- and-mouth disease are under in- vestigation near Onnlston. 50 miles south of Moose Jaw. agri- culture officials said today. Ormiston is at the southwestern tip of the South Saskatchewan buffer zone erected to prevent the disease from spreading. The last actual foot-and-mouth case was disclosed existence of the new aus- pcctcd case during a speech to the Ottawa Rotary Club that dwelt reported March 8 last and disposed) of March l4. Agriculture Minister Gardiner Gather the rose while red its prime. for soon comes an that will her pride deflower. MAXIMS OIA MERE MAN 16 PAGES Morning Dally Founded N11. The Guardian. Five Cantu. OTTAWA. April 2l-(CP)-De- fence Minister Claxton said today he has appointed a special invest- igator to inquire into thefts, secu- rity and accounting procedures at the army's big Petawawa, Ont., camp and elsewhere. George S. Currie, Montreal char- tered accountant and former dep- uty minister of national defence. -has been named to handle the job. i Mr. Currle's powers and terms loi reference "have no restrictions whatever," the Minister said. Ev-' erything possible will be done to get. to the bottom of irregularities at. Petawawa which have resulted in the arrest of four civilians and 'an army captain. Jet airliner service today by carry-, largely with the economic rcper-l Mr. Clnxton made the announce- cusslons of the disease. mom in the commons as he re- He mid he hopes m be able to vieued the situation at Petawawa. report that the mvesugaron by vgg.1l20 miles northwest of Ottawa. and erlnarlans, including a United Sta- esllmaled me me” 1955 35 mum . m is as 550,000. :,:g:tx.8:.”' mm mm" C can Arrested on theft and conspir- acy charges are Jack Jacobson. ill. Brockvllle junk dealer. and David C. Mawhlnnev. 30 and Amos Dur- I tbth tVt' 'ki .1- m'- Thllm” Chlldsr "'9 AK1'l'ldl?son;oMa(uridi:m;nHs;1?r Pertiilbx-oxide, culture Departments chiefxvetcr-om” sslvage dealer and cnplp inarlan. said the lnvestigat on is'Do,m1d wi1mot'3a)dnck.2g . m. routine and should be no cause forlmvee 01 Brandon. Man” ',md ,, alarm. Results of tests will he member of the Royal Canadian made available in a few days. Vet-llsnginccrs stationed at Petawawa. erlnarians have not yet identified; Drew suns” Debug the disease. but they had been in- vestigatlng "dozens" of such cases! George Drew 3'10?-E”:0:;ea:l;"V9d W 5' 1m””ld' servative leader. speaking after "1 ' - .Mr. Claxton finished his state- Mr. Gardiner, returning from armeng, moved mm, the nous; ad. Prairie trip. made these points: flit-regularities at defence establish- l. The taxpayer will bear part 0 ,ments. the economic burden caused by thef He said "wholesale looting of outbreak. Prices of beef had drop-illllllitgfyj progcrw: has beer; 3:- ped 10 and 12 cents .1 pound ortcose. ncu ml 00 ns En - more in the last few. months. 1.,u;.appearance of the Farnhgm. Que.. he was going to ensure that melmilitary training centre down to .. . ,aand including the buildings.” aziecrfg do not so awn much N: l The outbreak of incendiary fires 2 Price at-pat military establishments. "signi- support for both be , lficantly timed in such a way that am mrk hm been "Mud by lhclthey could have hidden the ex- xtovernment. The boot floor was tent of my locum and mm”. Cm” P pmmd at Tmom" "'1 also hhouid be investigated. M”"”'"”v 1” 309d 3l””- Vim Mr. Claxton said irregularities -llmiinll DF1595 PTEVBWHK 1" the at Petawawa first came to light Maritlmes and British Columblapse.-em; month, ago, 1; w” found and slightly haw" Drices on the-that contracts for disposal of Prairies. lsmall arriounttss cg scrap! through Cf'Dll'l1 S39 OTDOYB On WCTC used to cover up about 380 addit- .lonai tons. 3. A floor or 5:, cent; 3 pound has! The material taken illegally in- 4,3", wt for 20.900900 pound; or cludcd used shower stalls, stoves. in camjwash Elftlkhi lantdkateei raalla. Canada would not likely find a "aw m3 9'” ”' 9" W” mm” market for pork at that price. lengths of soil pipe worth about Three Canadian officials now were!53'60o' in th United Kinsdom trvlns tel Some Material Recovered ifind market which would pro-l vide "some return to the govern-) A Comldcmble Pl” 01' U19 ml- mem, and the taxpayer: itcrial has been recovered, includ- 1. The provinces were co-operat- "W 9 "595 Wel3h'"5 "3" ""1 ' ing with the federal government inl5h0Vel b00""- ,, development of a national live-I 1”"5”g""m3suh”d. dlfclwelf in? mock markeung Douay. but foundation for re reports is eg n., . ., ., iirrcgularltlcs and deficiencies in ""”"m”"” W” "”i ""m”5 "Mn c nstructlo of bulldin a" at go into the beef business. l-le'Pet 0. B:1mhe,.m.eg,1nm therefore urged farmers to ke as! e awmui u -- K I FF les had been found arising out of much of their cattle as possible on the employment of engine" cm). No Cause For Alarm Progressive Con- Seeklng Market icanncd pork. but even are inherited or imitated. (CRTF --,3P 'R-I "5”"L- f" fan and service personnel and on my on page co 2 ,equipment and these are still be- JACKSON. Mich.. April 21- (AP)-One convict was killed and eight others wounded today as police and guards quelled a part nf the rioting in Southern Mich- lgan prison. But the death of the prisoncr- victim of a bullet. fired by a law ofliccr-heightened the tension. Authorities said it increased the danger of the 10 guards held host- age in the disciplinary cell block that is the centre of the mutiny. some of Michigan's most hard- ened criminals are inside the block. And they asserted earlier in the day that the hostages will be put to death if any prisoner is harmed. The convicts have radios inside the steel-doored cell block lo, the disciplinary block. Officials feared reprlsals from the riotcra after it became known Darwin Millage. a 35-year-old convict from Detroit. died in pris- on hospltal of a chest wound. Apparently Millage was wounded during the morning when a prison fire truck was brought through the cell yard to fight. flames set by the rioting convicts in one of the administration buildings. Millage, serving a. is to 25-year term on n statutory rape charge. was one of the 200 prisoners run- ntng loose in the cell-yard when the truck came through. Injuries to the other prisoners came at. that time and later. when 00 police officers and is guards nished into the” yard and cleared it of prisoners. They drove the convicts back to the cell blocks. bombs at than. several shots were fired over the heads of the riotsrs after prisoners showered the policemen with knives, clubs and other objects. Then an unidentified guard fire Prison Riot Leaves One Convict Dead, 8 Injured lng investigated by the R.C.M.P. and the Provost Corps." These latter irregularities. Mr. Claxton said. extended to the sale to contractors of timber and gra- vel in the camp area. Reports so far indicate that no .. personnel are involved outside the gunman woundgg engineer detachment pat Petawawa Hundred, of prison", had ,1”. and employees of civilian contract- ed since morning. setting fire to 0'5- - some prison establishments. in-I i eluding a store and the chapel. . and looting. L()NDON., April 21 -(AP)-The . h . I Bullish Museum paid i:l.3'20 today anzrhocr ”,l2,l,l,l”;,,.,S,l.;l,” 312,01: agi! for a first edition of "Alice's Ad- houm bexorc gamma COMWL lventurcs in wonderland which prison officials eatjmltcd gh, author Lewis Carroll considered so damage 3; 5300300. on, or thelpoorly reproduced that he had it several fires destroyed the prlgon withdrawn from circulation. The laundry. This loss was estimated museum bought the Volume from at 3115.000. the Duke of Gloucester. Four-Year Prison Term And Fine For Swindler .v-oFci'Tr:v7lE6t7a't'i.-?rTEiuTeFt scheme" to convert other persons money to his own use. ”The is-.v makes no distinction QUEBEC. April 21 -(CP) -- Jutize Eugene Isfonialne today described the theft of 5291.000 front Oiherljouru regular business to "debate, inting aub-ma- '7 I Quebec-Levis ferry company as a "formidable swindle" and sen- fenced Armand Rochetie, 46. to four years in penitentiary and a 310,000 fine. if the Montreal business man who, the judge said. "Bought the Traverse de Levis Llmltee with its own money" fails to pay the fine he will serve an additional two years. , Trial on a second charge of de- -frauding the company and its shareholders of 375.000 was acheduled for June 5. After finding him guilty. Judge afontstne ordered Rocltatu. who had been free on sso,ooo ball since his arrest last summer. taken into custody and placed in the prison- er's box. In his review of the evidence between a thief in rags and a thief in a frock-coat." the Judge told the nattiiy-dressed business man "You have had a just and equit- able i.l'lal...the evidence against you is formidable. Your hour of retrlbltion has arrived." The theft breaks down into 3200.000 worn, of securities. 1 90.- 000 cheque made out to Rochell- and drawn on La Trdverse de Levis account and about 01,000 in cash. Rochette later announced he would appeal conviction and Ian- lance. He was released on 850.000 bail pending the appeal and also had to post an additional 010,000 bail pending trial on the second count. Bali in both case was furnish- ed by Mrs. Maris canac-Marquis, wealthy Montreal widow who fum- presented at the trial last no- mary and March. the Montreal into the crowd. some sunesed iahed 820.000 ball for Rochrttrs ltempprsry release following his ar- Judge said lvwchotts was guilty be- re? Special Investigator To Probe Irregularities At Huge Petawawa Camp Queen Celebrates Birthday With Gift To Husband WINDSOR. England. April 21-- (Rcuters)- The Queen today cele- brated her birthday with a present to her husband, the Duke of Edin- burgh-she invested him as mem- ber of the order of the Thistle, a Scottish mediaeval order of chival- The order is second in prece- dcnce to the famous Order of the Garter. Enplish in origin and of glitch the Dulce already is a mem- er. Earlier today. in a pouring rain. she inspected the famed Grenadier Guardsmen at a parade in the courtyard of Windsor castle to honor her 26th birthday. 'l:'hree-ye-ar-old Prince Charles. heir to the throne. and his baby sister. Anne. watched their mother conduct the first military cere- monial of her reign Spectators in the quadrangle sheltered under umbrellas. But the Queen walked unprotected in the rain. wearing a black coat and tight fitting hat. Prince Philip, also in black. walked bah d her, She frequently stopp to talk with the men, dressed in tall hear- skin shakos and wearing grey capes over their scarlet tunlcs. The Grenudiers were then to say farewell to the Queen. hopef- arv colonel or the regiment until tOon.tlnued.on.pnge-5'-1:01. iv)- illlomic Bomb Test Today ATOM BOMB SITE. NEl'.. April 21-4AP)-An Atomic bomb. one nf the two most powerful ever to be detonated within the United States. will burst tomorrow at a record altitude of 3,000 to 3.5m feels above a haiilofieid whom sgidtcra and weapons are deploy- c . Officials dlrectlnif the test. set for 9 a.m.. (12 noon EST) gave these details today. Dr. Alvin C. Graves. test, cur. actor. explained that the high altitude of the burst-farther up than any United States last held anywhere-is to "avoid dust, con- tamination and fall-out." (Fail-out means the dropping of contaminated particles or rain, from clouds as they move, out from the scene of the burst 1. drift hundreds of miles down- wind.) Dust from the blast also could be contaminated. creating 11 ex. ira hazard for troops hudd ed in their foxhnles. Observers at the scene will be about 10 miles from the burst. Gordon Dean. chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission. tnld official observers and reporters. lair liifevtsrh SONE lint) rm WE MA. KEQP PAW, N UP! A E HALIFAX, April 21-(CP)-Of. flclal forecasts issued tonight hy the Dominion Public Weather Of- fice here and valid until mid- night 'l'uv-sday. g Synopsis: A high pressure area up- proachlng the district promises sunny. mild weather for most regions Tuesday. In the western part of the district. however skies are expected to cloud over late in the day. Regional forecasts: Prince Edward Island: Sunny and A little milder. Light north- west winds. how and high Tues- day at Charlottetown 30 and 55. High tide today at Charlene- town It 9.1.2 A. M. and an F. M. High tide on the North Shore at 4.11 A. M. and 4.40 P. M. summerside tide eighteen min- ut" lstrr than Ohoriomemwn. lun rises today at. I.1'l A. M. and 9! 9! 1'!" P: "-1 T