MAXIMS OIA MERE MAN mg. poverty by wrong. mus wretched men are cradled oerrlert Charlottetown. lunun i'.' I. I. I. 00.00. other Province: llltli 815.00 per annuna. Elsewhere and Il. I. A. ll2.00 per annum. Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA. MONDAY. NOVEMBER 26. VAN DOOS HOLD FIRM IN FACE OF FIERCE RED AS 1951 I7 Deaths In Four Train Wrecks In The U. 5. Kurt Meyer Enjoys Brief Leave From Military Prison By Douglas How O . Germany, .tCPl- Kurt Mieyer. major-general sentenced to life imprisonment for war crimes, said today--in the midst of his first freedom in seven years--that, he went to Canada as "a fanatical Nov. 23 German German" and came back to Ger- many "convinced that all nationai- , ism is dead." He was interviewed by a Can- adian Press reporter within easy sight of the Russian zone ins meeting that was it surprise to both of them. The imprisoned former SS. leader came to his mother's home in this coal-mining village only two days ago under a system which he said allows ors to go home alone on leave from time to time. Neighbors Keep Watdi This reporter went to Offleben to interview Myer's wife and was amazed to step into a room where l.ie,ver himself was romping with three of his five children. Neigh- bnrs keep a casual watch in near- by homes in case Communists lrled to take him behind the iron Curtain--only 300 yards away, The man who is serving a. life sentence because he was found re- sponsible for shooting 18 Can. attisn prisoners-of -wa r in Nor- niandy in 1944 said he'll return Saturday to Werl military prison where he was transferred recently from Canada. Ironically. Werl is only a few IIIUM from Soest. where Canada's mh Brigade ls gofng.to be posted in 1052. These are Meyer's key words: "i went to Canada it fanatical German. I came back convinced from all 1 could read and gather fiom talks that nationalism is dead, whether it be German. Brit- Coming Events "Reserve December It for North Wiltshire concert. "Chicken and Ham Supper, Fortune Hail, Wednesday. Novem- her 73th. beginning at 6 o'clock. "Burma live chicken. llbwi and Claw. Tuesday. 3 until 12. a. 1. Dickleaon, New Glasgow. "Don't miss last Dance of aeo- noii. Tuesday night. November 77th. in Stanley Bridge Rink I-lali. "shur-Gain Amateur contest, Tryon Baptist Hall, Thursday. December 6th. Lunches sold. "Buyinz daily-Oats and good WNWY mixed grain, must be 507:; barley. Clark's Feed Service. Mt. Stewart. OI . W-W For Snapshots that will not. tilde mail your Films and Nega- t-vea to Garnhum Photo studios Charlottetown. ' "Reserve Tuesday evening. NW. 27th. for an "All-Star" con- Pcrt in Hunter River Hall. spon- mred by C.w.f.. "Notice to ratepayers, New Lon- don school: Taxes are now due. N0 discount after December lst. Earl Carr, Secretary. "Hear Douglas MnCFarlnne. president P.E.l.. C.C.F. Party week over CFCY Tuesday. No- vember 2'Tth at 8.25 p.m. "Buying live fowl and chicken d'"i'. We weigh and pay at farm Write or phone collect for pick up '"'Vl0O- Smith Brol.. Pownal. "Dance every Friday night. South Ruatioo Hall. Canteen Ber- Muale by the Ohsrlotteton- "United Ohurch Chicken sup- per and lesser. Murray Harbor Hall. Wednesday, November :';'"gE0lIhl-II. Buss: 4.30. supper D”!-ulna Dressed Geese and "03! Thursday. Grade A birds thvuld be dry plucked and dressed rt least 12 houra before market- M. R. L. Diokleson. New Glasgow. "Mootuu regarding Electric I-(lrht tutu will be held in d asonlo llsll. Hunter River. Mon- I:&"::3aanbor nth. at I P. If. dhmnu plgnuutma all outlying "Worth River nan. uoneay. 0'; 33- I-18 a.m.. Oeritrsl Royalty A peasants "The rsniliy war prison- t War Veteran Passes Two Pas?e-nger. And Two Frelghl A Trains Involved NEW YORK. Nov. 2S-(CP)- Four train wrecks in the United States during the week-end caus- ed at least 17 deaths. scores of injuries and untold damage. Two passenger train streamlin- era crashed head-on today at Woodstock. Ala., 29 miles south- west of Birmingham, killing at least 10 persons and injuring about 40 or more. The trains were the Southern R. at l w a y system's Southerner. hound from New Orleans to. New l I I . . I l I l K i (above) a veteran of the South African war passed away )'&'t'-9fdBv 31 the Charlottetown Hospital. A former Mr. Michael McCarthy resident of souris East, he was in his nerd year. Funeral arrange- ments had not been completed last night. It was believed the deceas- ed was without any close relatives. Eh or any other. A united 'E.t-ir-ope is the only answer." sees Hope For Freedom told some Canadians Canadian Government eventually will release him and was prked whether he expects to get his freedom. He said he has had no official word ahout a re- lease, bttt this reporters impres- He was think the sion of his reaction was that Meyer entertains considerable hopes of one. To the question whether he would become a soldier again if (Continued otTP;ge 5 Col. 1) Make Progress In Truce Negotiations MUNSAN, Korea. Nov. 20 - (Monday) -- (AP) - sharp bar- gaining, accompnied by fierce fig.htin.g, brought Allied and Com- munist truce negotiators to agree- ment on all but 10 positions on the snow-swept Korean battle front Sunday. Differences remained in the centre and the west dominating some 30 to 35 miles of the M5-mile front line. United Nations troops won a savage 4i-hour fight to re- store their western "Little Gib- rnliar" positions some 35 miles north of Seoul. The fighting appeared closely co-ordinated with the cease-fire talks at Panmunjom, where staff officers hold a four-hour session Sunday. Red and Allied map makers sohetlulcd another session to fix the actual fighting front for 11 a. m.. today (9 p. m.. Sunday. EST). Although more fighting may erupt, the U. N. command spokes- man refused to he pessimistic on l York. and the Crescent Limited of the Louisville and Nashville Railroad, bound from New York to New Orleans. The Southerner had pulled in- to a riding to let a southbound train pass, then pulled into the main line. At Orchard, Idaho. a westbound Union Pacific freight train ram- med head-on today into a waiting eastbound frleght. killing five crew members and piling up wreckage 30 feet high. Five other crew members coped because they got off throw a switch. Saturday the locomotive and eight cars of an Illinois Central passenger train jumped the tracks near Fort Knox. Ky.. kill- ing the engineer and fireman and injuring four of the passengers. In Portland. Colo., 13 freight cars of an eastbound Denver and Rio Grnnde freight train over- turned today. scattering livestock. lumber and freight. es- to A broken axle on one of the cars was the apparent cause of the wreck. Hunter Missing In N. S. Woods HALIFAX. Nov. 25 - (CF) ..A 79-year-old hunter missing since Friday will be the object of at ground and air search tomorrow in the densely-wooded area of Ship Harbor. on the Provlnce's eastern shore. . Joseph Martin and another hunter became separated while hunting deer. .1-fis companion fig- ured Martin had probably return- ed to his home when he failed to join him Friday night. A search party was organized when it was learned that the elder- ly hunter was still in the woods. Temperatures are well below freez- ing in the area. A naval helicopter will join in the search tomorrow. Three of Family 0 Killed In Crash MINTO. N. 3., Nov. 25-(CP)- Three members of a Newcastle Creek family were killed and three others survived alter their car left the Mlnto-Chlpman high- way Saturday night and crashed into a stream. The victims were Aubrey Straight. 36. his wife. 33. and four- year-oid son. xlossland. Three other children of the same fam- ily. aged ll. 8 and 1. survived. Apparently -caused by a blow- out of the left front tire. the ac- clclcnt occurred on It curve. The car landed upside down in four feet of water. The family was returning from chances for an early buffer zone settlement. WASHINGTON. Nov. & -(CP)- The United states charged Satur- day that I. mlulnl NV! Neill-TIM bomber was ”nttacked without warning" by Soviet fighter Dishes over the free international waters of the sea of Japan on Nov. 6. The plane with 10 men aboard is pre- sumed to have been shot down. . In making this formal accusa- tion in a report to the United Na- tions. the United Ste rejected as untrue a. Russian complaint that the American aircraft had "violated the soviet tatsta fron- tier" before it was approached by two Russian fighter planes. The Russians also siieled that "I0 Amlicsa plane opened fire first. in the confllctlnl versions of the sffsir made public lsourdsy. about the only thing the United sums Ind an-ta mud on "I that apparently the incident had occurred in the general vicinity of cape Oatrovnlyl. iibout so miles a mmwfziuiontouignizs 4. ' , a visit to friends at Jemscg. Charge Russia Downed Plane Without Warn.ing '11-is official United states re- port on the incident was made not to the Soviet Government at Mos cow. which had filed on Nov 7 at protest asalnat the alleged border violation. but to the United Na- tion's secretary General, Tryrve Lia. at the U. N. General Assem- bly meeting in Paris. The state Department explained this was the. proper procedure be- cause the plane was operating ll part of Gen. Matthew B. Ridg- way's U; N. Korean command. The United States had already refus- ed because of this fast to aoce; the Russian pretest note on any basis other than as a matttr of in- formation. The soviet versiai of the sertei clash was set forth in Eunice Nov. '1 note which Dquty Pbrelgn Minister Andrei Gltuym - W0 to American diplomat out of Vladivostok Trophy Winning Carcass Purchased At High Price The winning carcass in the Todd Tmpiiy class at the Tomato Win- ter Fair. exhibited by Stirling Willis of North River, was pur- chased by Swift's for 82 1-2 cents per lb. it was reported by Mr. H. W. clay. Senior Livestock Field- mari, Dominion Department of Agriculture on Saturday. Other prices realised for entries in the Todd were ii. s. Stevenson. Manitoba. 60 cents; Harrison Green. Kingston. 2nd. and 3rd. places. 50 and 47 cents: Stirling Willis, 47 cents; and Elmer Pet- ers, Rollo Bay. 4.5 cents. Average price for Groups 1. 2. and .1 was 45 cents, with other carcasses selling at ordinary market prices. The Reserve Champion in the Brethour Trophy. owned by Wil- liam Found of New London. was bought by Canada Packers for 69 cents. with the winner of the trophy selling for 90. Others were All pigs in the first three groups of the Brethour averaged 50.3 cents. The champion live bacon hog. shown by H. S. Stevenson of Man- itoba bmught 62 cents; Reserve. shown by David Wright 57 l-2; 2nd.. Col. 1''. I. Andrew, Chariots- town. 45; 3rd. William Found, 41: 4th.. Stirling Willis, 40. and 5th., Ralph Macbean of l-llghbank, 40 cents. The winning groups of three. live classes. in which island ex- hibitors won the first three places. realised 47. 40 and 40 re- spectlvcly. These prices are much higher on the average than last year. Mr. Clay stated, and the lowest price received for any of the pigs in the prize money was 33 cents. Practically every breeder who contributed to the exhibit will re- ceive a premium dnuch shove the regular market price, in some cases it will be double. Both Swift's and Canada Packers were heavy buyers of pigs shown by Is- land breeders. John Johnston of Margate. two entries, 53 and 56: and David Wright of Lower Montague. 56. The following letter in reply to Premier .funes' letter relative to Church of England representation at the State dinner tendered their Royal Iiighncsscs in Char- lottetown was released last eve- ning for publication: St. Mary's Church, Summersicla. P. E. 1. November 24th. 1951. The Hon. The Premier nf Prince Edward lslan Dear Sir:--- Your reply to the letter signed by the Clergy of the Church of England in Prince Edward Is- land has been received and con- sidercd. The charge of more properly sophislry may be referred to yourself, for our letter neither slates nor suggests that the Church of England is establish- ed in Canada. It simply states the fact that the Church of Eng- land is the Church of Their Royal Highnesses. You say that you are aware that the, Anglican Church In Canada. the Episcopal Church in Mid. Eieclors Vole Today (By Canadian Press Staif Writer) ST. JOHN'S. Nlid.. Nov. 25 - (CPT - Newfoundland votes to- morrow in its second election as a Canadian province. Engaged in the main battle are the Liberal forces of Premier Joseph Smallwood and the Op- position. Progressive Conserva- tives. Five Independents round out the slate. Bernard White. another Inde- pendent. had been named to run in St. Georges-Poii au Port. but announced his withdrawal Satur- day night. Tlia-t loft Fir-lieries Minister .W. J. Kcougli and an- other lndependent still in the. fight in that district. Polling will be in only 23 of the provinces 25 districts with voting between 8 a.m. N.S.T. t'I::i0 a.m. A.S.'i') and 8 p.m. N.S.T Liberals took four seats by ac- claniation and voting in Labia- dor was deferred because weath- er conditions made it impossible to complete arrangements. The voting there will be next July. P r o g r es s iv e Conservatives. caught by surprise by Mr. Small- wood'a election call with only half the legal term of the legis- lature expired. fought mainly on an appeal for a lirong Opposition. The Liberal campaign was cen- tred around an appeal for ap- proval of the government's in- duatrial development program un- der which the government has been bringing industries into the province and backing, them fl- nancisily up to to per cent of their capital investment. Although voting is slated for tomorrow it may be days before the final re- sult is known. The election is being run under a 1013 Act which requires boxes from all polls to be collected at a central point before counting can begin. Collection of tits! boxes in lane districts could take days elpecislly it bad weather ar- rival. The standing at iliuolutloa of the House early this month was: Liberals N. Pregrhsive Conserv- atives five. lnbualents two. and vacant one Reply To Premieris Letter By Church Of England 0 Clergy the United States snd the Church of England are quite similar. May we respectfully point out that they are not only similar. but. one and the same Church in communion with each other, parts of the Anglican Communion throughout the world, along with the Chtirch of South Africa. Aus- tralia. New Zeslahd. and the West Indies and so on. Because of the historic position and faith of the Anglican Communion in Canada and throughout the world. no Bishop or group of Ministers of Religion outside her jurisdiction can in any way speak for or rep- resent her clergy or laity. It is true that some of our Priests belong to the Ministerial Association. but, they represent only themselves. as the decisions of that body are in no way bind- ing on us. IQ any case the Prcsitlent of the Provincial Ministerial Assoc- iatlon was not invited to the State dinner. but only the Pre- sident of the Charlottetown Min- isterisl Association. Your reference to the "anony- mous letters indicating that the Anglican Church tiesired repres- entation". and that as a result you invited a representative of of the Clergy of the Church of England to the State function at the Experimental Farm. shows two things. First. that. while an- onymous lelters are tlsually re- legated to the waste paper has- ket. yet. you felt bound to make public reference in the Press to them. Second. according to your own printed statement they were the reason which prompted the invitation at the last moment of a representative of the Church of England to the function at the Experimental Farm. As Clergy we deeply regret that any member of the Anglican Communion resorted to this method of drawing your attention to this matter. bill. at the same time. there must have been some qualms of conscience on the part of those concerned and n realiz- ation that an error had been made somewhere by someone. and discourlcsy shown to our Church and her Bishop. Since yott assure us that the omission of an' invitation to the State Dinner was "neither a re- grettable oversight nor a lack of courtesy". may we humbly suggest that it was due to ignorance. and that this is borne out by your letter. We deeply regret that you felt obliged to air this correspon- dence in the Public Press. and we are therefore compelled to make our answer through the ume medium. Signed with the consent and on behalf of the clergy of tho- Church of England in Prince Ed- ward Island. We are. respectfully yours. (3. R. HARRISON. Archdeacon of Prince Edward island. ELWIN MALONE. Canon St. Peter's Cathedral, Charlottetown. P. E. I. A. E. PTERCEY, Rural Dean, Milton. P. 1-7. I. J. T. IBBOTT. Rector. St. Paul's Church. Charlottetown. P. E. . KILLED IN ACCIDENT IDIUNDGTON. N. 3.. Nov 25- tari - trad oasourie, so. died in hospital laturday ll hours after a truck in which he was s psnenger unease into a culvert outside Id- uiundstsn. The driver. ldward La- Cuimba. escaped with minor injur- Make No-nTSlop Allacks For Three Days By Bill I-loss hladian Press Staff Writer WEST SECTOR. Korea. Nov. 25-(CPJ- For 24 hours the Royal t32nd Regiment has fought off re- peated Chinese assaults on their ridge-top position without budg- in: an inch. The battle has raged almost non-stop. The Chinese have been attacking in massed battalion strength. The Van Doos have been at- tacked from north, south. east and west. separately and simultaneous- They have been encircled and stormed. Seven times in 24 hours have beaten off their assaults. They have not slept for 48 hours (This Boss cable was dispatched from Korea at 8 p. in. Satui'day,i Korea time--6 a. in. EST satur-f day.) they Woman In Black Killed TOKYO, Nov. -(l-'l.eutersJ- A- Canadian machine-tgunner ' cut? down "the woman in black" Sat-ii urday night as she led a savage Communist attack on it United Nations position west of Yonchon. Her body, in black uniform with. no insignia of rank. still lay in the snow this morning. Butch Bourchard of Jonquiere. Que, fired the burst that killed the woman commander after he saw her brandishing a pistol and screaming at her men. in English: "Come on. come on. hubba. hubba. hubba, hubba (hurry up)". infanirymen could not recover the body because of heavy enemy artillery fire. "The woman in black," with her hair streaming, had become (gm- iliar to Allied infantrymen in Korea. She led a number of at- tcontinu-eIi'"6'n i-..;i1 col. 4) 25 Report Princess- Ativisetl To Best Music, when son voleea die. vi- brate in the memory. N MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN 12 PAGES The Guardian. l'Ive Cents. Morning Daily Founded 1881. Island Man Killed, Brother lniured In Automobile Accident BDWANVILLE. Ont., Nov. 5 - (CPi-Two men were killed and a third injured early today when an automobile in which they were riding went out of control and rolled over three times. Killed were Fred Ellis, 21, and Floyd Brought. 19. injured was Wilfred Lorne Ellis. iii. a brother of Fred. All three were district residents. Parents of the Bills brothers are Mr. and Mrs. Harry Ellis of Don- aidston. P. E 1. Fred Ellis camel here 15 hli'ill2.hS ago to work at a rubber plant. Lorne l-sills suffered head injur- ies and a crushed right hand. Police said the youths were on lheir way home from visiting friends at fll2aYl.7,V Maple Grove when their car crashed on a sharp CUFV9. N. S. Fisherman Reported Missing HALIFAX. Nov. 25 --(CPJ - A llSllErl'llBl'l and his small boat were missing off Nova Scotia's south shore tonight despite a day-long search by surface craft and an it. C. A. F. plane. F'lil't'l Myra of nearby shad Bay left his home Saturday to fishl near Shad Bay bell buoy. tie dial not return at dusk. Department of Fisheries vessels and :1 Lancaster plane from area today without success. Search and rescue officials here said more planes may be sent into the search” at Daybreak tomorrow. . Endorse Grain Marketing Plan WINNIPEG, Nov. 25 - (CP) - The present system of marketing oats and barley through 'the Can- adian Wheat Board was decisively; endorsed Saturday by Maniicba', gl"fllli EFOWCIS. LONDON. Nov. 25 -- (Reuters) - Princess Elizabeth has been ad- vised by her doctors to take a three-week rest to recover from her tour of Canada and the United States. the Sunday Express says today. In a provincial referendum. about 34,000 farmers faced bitter weather to go to the polls and vote on the question: "Do you wish to continue to sell your oats and bar- ley as at present?" Eightv-nine per cent voted "yes." More than two-thirds of the ill.- R03 registered farmers voted. farmer was crowned wheat. itlng. Harold Mclcalf of Fairgrovc. ich.. won lilo crown with a sample of soft white winter wheat. He was the first American to be crowned wheat king aincc i928 when C. Edson Smith of ship at this year's show also. VNCYH. the runncr-up honors with red winter wheat. which weigh- ed 61 V2 pounds. ills sample was of the "viga" variety. Canada Loses Wheat Title After 22 Years greatest day in my life. I wish I could come in the show but my (arm chores make it hihilcti at. married nnd young girls. raises from 10 to 20 to a Michigan farmer. Lccibins, 5.1. ni Shaunavon. Sask., was D. Ferden of Chcsaning. who tookleliminaied Saturday softircd spring wheat class. lie plac- Metcaife won with a sample of impossible." It is the first time he has cx- (he show. Mt-tcalfe. the fallit-r of four Last yearislwinncr. R. P. Rob- in thc linrd Q.-eenwnoti air base searched"?-ht .. ' I Offioial forecasts . Dominion Public Weather Office here and valid until Monday. crossing the Maritimes and will be followed on Mondal New Threals in flooded Llley ROVIGO, Italy. Nov. 25 - (AP: -Disrupted sewage systems. weak- ened buildings and a lack of drink- ing water posed new threats today in the flooded Po Valley. Health. army and an police officials opened intensified campaign to save thousands from spreading disease and building collapses. More than 160,000 persons have been made homeless by the floods, vxliicli started i7 days ago. and the unofficial death toll has climb- ed past 150. Damage is counted in the hundreds of millions of doi- lars. Flood victims clinging to roof- tops and staying forlornly in the upper stories of flooded houses were being removed today iiy authorities. Many had to be con- vinced that they were in danger of being buried in the collapse of water-weakened homes or subject tr a plague of typhoid before they would leave. WHERE . (HERE'S A WILD -rt-tr.e.e's A HALIFAX. Nov. 3 -,- (CP) - issuod by the midnight Synopsis: . An area of high pressure it tonighi by increasing southerly winds moderating temperatures a n d thickening aloud. Rain is ex- pected in the Southern Msritimea later in the day while in North- am New Brunswick and Eastern Quebec 4 to 8 inches of ln0W will fail. Regional forecasts: IBy Craig Arnistrnngl --yo,-kwjn" gwhgch u,'pigh(Id 60,5 Prince Edward Island: Clear. CHICAGO, Nov, 35 .- (,tp).. pounds to the bushel. His vic- clou-dill! 0Y9? 35W” "W?" '3'" C,-mad,-gs 2245”-.o1d supremacy in tory was the first for a farmer beginning in the 1119 159-309"- whpat competing" at nu, Int". frnm any Slillf? outside Montana. Muchgmilder. South wind! ' l5 national HM. and Grain Show Melt-alto. when reached by becoming south 25 in the evening. ended today when a Michigan l9lePh0"0 Mid? "This is "1" Low and high Monda! Ii CM” lottetown 15 and 36. High tide today at are A. M. and 8.04 P. M. Sun rises today at TM A- M and sets at 4.36 P. M. Summerside tide eighteen mint- Cornvallis, Mont.. won with Mon- MTFS Of Wilt?" MPH KNIT. mes later than charlonewwn s iannn. 36. a variety of hard red ("I-151 Wiildlczl ”T;l”' "Ml 919"”; ............C... gpring whom, o show an we empcra ure Ito" on ISLAN g g CARIBOU Every year since 1929 Cnn- down to 18 liclnw in l-ulrgrovc. W0 FERRY SERVICE hdinns from cilhcr Saskatchewan. he said "the Wllf'Ill looked so (Sand-rd .nme) Alberta or British Columbia had good when l harvested it in .lui.V Luvs Vvood hl.nd.,g, been declared winners. Since the that I scrccnt-ti out some land ran” Novngs A. M" I Pr M. competitions were inattgttraicthsent it to.lhc show. I dtdnl Ch" A. mmnm' pp H A. M ltcre in 1919. tilt--i'niIcti Stall-siknow liow ii. xxwiulrl slack lut: 3 P. ht hitxuproduccd ll winner only fIi'cHgn:1titi;lludtlirIi nl'l1ld Len", C "balk. p 8 A M ” . .. . A. D n - - - The reserve witcat chnmpinn- sent. 't nlonfz fill?” mm K i-rum Nova - ll a.m.. 8 PM MCA AIR SERVICE ed sixth in the class which was DA",y gxczpr SUNDAY dominated by W'cslern Canadian ulw Chlrmumown ml. Moncgm 7M”m""5- 6:30 A.M.: ll:20 A.lll.: 0:50 l'.'-W Ar. Charlottetown from Monster lly Francis W. Carpenter PARIS, Nov. 35 -(AP)-Andrei vishinaky rejected the Western Big Three disarmament plan Saturday and submitted a damn amend- ments intended io substitute Moe- cow's brand of 'arm imitation, with an immediate ban on the atomic bomb. For an hour and 47 minutes. the soviet Foreign Minister lam- basted the formula sponsored by the United States. Britain and France in a speech before the 60- member United Nations political committee. Ne complained the Western plan did not go fsr enough toward re- ducing the dangers of war. Hi- said it "cannot. In the present form, serve its announced pur- Vishinsky Rejects Big Three Disarmament Plan r;lsc.T.'T'h:n--he pr"?-Eaten hh amendments, by which the plan would be rewritten almost com- pletely to conform to soviet ideas. Ambsssador.Phlllp C. Jessup. U. S. delegate who replaced secret- ary of State Dean Acheson in the disarmament debate, expressed disappointment that Vishlnaky still used infective instead of practical words. Jessup and spokesmen for Britain and France indicated they will go ahead with work on the plan in the hope some progress toward a genuine system of disarmament is still possible. The net effect of the speech Was that the Russians hsd reiter- ated their opoaltlon to the West- ern propoaals and had not moved one inch toward accepting them. 1:25 A.M.; 1:85 l'.M.; 6:55 PM. Leave Chsrlottefnwn for New Glasgow - Halifax 7:40 AM. New Glasgow 1:50 l'.ltl. New Glasgow Oi Hallfaa Arrive Charlottetown from New Glasgow and Halifax 11:00 AM. from New Glasgow (:35 PM. from New Glasgow and Halifax. ttormar. weowasnar. nmai ONLY 0:10 AM. Arrive Sydney from New Glasgow. 10:13 A.M. Arrive New Ghagow from Sydney. BUNDAY ONLI Leeve Charlottetown for Mancini ll:20 A.M. Arrive Charlotte-tewn from Monetnl 8:55 P. IOIDIN - CAPE TOIHINTINI PIIIY SERVICE but had shown they V070 wlnin to keep talking, heave Ierlee leave 0. 'll I.l0 Ll. 10.80 A.M. 1.00 PM. 8.00 P. 0.00 DJ! 0h P 030 Ply SAULTS