Maxims of a Mere Man Tn. first step is . ions may i2"PAGl-:s EISENHOWER HAS H The Guardian WN. car-tans, MONDAY. SEPTEMBER :5, 1955' (West Indies Island Of Grenada sr. oi-:oitGl:'I. Growl! (Mll- tersteltfucb the IIOIIIMIIWI pnlm-dotted West Indies island of Granada was in a shambles Sun- iliIl' and the island was without tlliliiklng water after a vicious Itaiicring by hurricane Janet. Fifty persons are known to have divri in the disaster and many ,....n- deaths are expected to he -.-in-rieti. .innci first tore into Grenada. ...nnmrnmost of the Windward ls- lantis. from the southeast It ninl ..'t-inrk Thursday evening. Near mlrliiight, the damaging winds sub- -wtictl, only to strike Illln with flill force from the southwest. llmty houses were destroyed. nianv more were left without roofi- ttw balconies of government head- ntiarlrrl in St. George's were ,.,.,.mi off. and the capital's hos- mini and leading hotel were dam- 1L'rii Hundreds are homeless arid zicni quantities of the ltlllldl crops were destroyed. In DIE IN BARBADOS No piped water is available in st. George's because of damage to waterworks, and none is exptclid for another four days. The only other possible source of drinking water.-the river. is polluted end people of Granada are relying on rain water. Health precautions are in-lug taken. The crew of a U. S. naval rac- nnnaIsSanCP plane which surveyed tllP island-S21 miles by l4-es- timnteti that M per COIN of the tnniriings were seriously damaged nn the west side and 10 per cent on the east. in Barbados. holiday isis north- east of Grenada. end about the same size. the death toll from .i.nn-t was given Sunday as I. littl here too the figure is expected -.. no revised as full reports come ill ill lilF.D ALIVE mu-i-tacou. the largest island in the l"-reflldillbl ITOIID I0!!! oroiiadn. appears to have suffered nmst-...ith reports of is dead and (lit .u-rluillly injured. A relief motor ..-...-I has already sailed for Car- rinrou with medical liid food IliP- Eoming Events supper in orwel In-lie, post- it-med. Dance Vernon It Ioaday. SI-pt. Nth. Gordon licguiar D s n e a at Luclge every Friday night. Dance Bonshaw in, Tuesday. Burns Orchestra. Dundss United Guroh diiken supper Sept. ailth also besaar. Card party. spring Park Hall. ltililElll 8 pm. bunches. prises. Rcgulnr dance. Qipllitl rink. Wrtinosriay night. burns orchestra. ltiini-e, in Igglon Kill. Mi. -tlmon, wcdnesday. Iowa 3. iluml mttslr. Buying live poultry at start Tues- dziv. it until 1). EL. Dickieson. Nov Glasgow. 4 Int-Lu-n supper. Graham's Road wt lirginning ars p.m. standard lvtiir Fvril. 29lli. SN: Hie "Irish hl.iilionaira" I irrnon River Hall. Tuesday 4-int. 27. Dance after. we "Smiling Blli' Mccormaek ill St, Margarets Elli. l (om-.33.” clnguul balm. .0 m. I Will. 27 at 8:3). Ii.irn dance llllllfl Bay. Monday. S 0 to 12.30. Canteen. vincken supper. St. Teresa's -lnntlny. Sept. 1. Supper served .30 . s:sii. Dance after. Sow "lrlsh Millionaire" Stan- iluiw-Covchead Hail. Friday. 809 30th. ilzrto. sale of lunches. 5' Cowmbe'aupl:arls”ilm Chiohm '-litttttw gd. i'-"Fling-at a pm. Danes after. H--I vhlclteh dinner and basaar at Giff Peters. September i . VFW Glasgow Hall Wednesday tio llllllgsnnnsond by Christian Cbureh lmiics Am, Annual meeting of & Ielfest 5, doun of Q. "on. I d, i.”.'.'.".."..tl.'”".n 'iif...'.i'.i. l'..t"'si'f -r'v-M '1 Tl-7-'w ' " "' 3” vm- -. aoouosuc raoausss cinckenaadilani cm--7MlHIVt!'II7.PIrIsIIs ts?!” ""'....,,.' '-Euuhtsistr-en' A rnt?ri'esmlis'stituto. ' N. .:he'a.i , and meet. in wool. a complex lbsuyinl tiaiiy.'m pip over I g: gnu-g gun". nu, 7' "713! H I IIHIH exports. out down on wws we a cum Son. Buntaialrl-in Isll'.s.IIerf Will D. ”j gy M from its 1 i will pick up i go farm . p . llriceii. ' h . E E Peek. P 31.33; W hr ---'31” Eaga neconomic or political. or, in some I PLAN ILICTIONI Lei piles. and will also call at points of the west coast of Granada cut off by landslides to pick up per- 3:: w-boraea ill or seriously in- e.. The few persons who have made the haaardous trek on foot from out off parts of Grenada tell stories of wholsgfamiiias being buried alive and dying beneath the wreckage of their homes. JAMAICA ALIITET) (The Associated Press re rted that Janet continued to w p the i Shambles iii) miles an hour. The storm was located about no miles south- southwest of ilaiti at noon EDT and was moving in a westerly di rsciion at about 13 miles an hour. (Jamaica. some 500 miles to the northwest. was alert for future sdvisorles and vessels in the storms path were warned to exer- cise caution. Storm warnings were lowered at dawn for the Dutch West Indies and the Paranagua peninsula of 'v' ezuela after Janet moved past Saturday well to the Caribbean Sunday with winds of north.) A "second" buyer has been found for Birds illye Foods (Can- ada) Ltd..p siilowing the break- down of a d at with a Canadian- U.il. group negotiated last spring reports the Financial Poast, Tor- on o The new buyer is National sea Products of Halifax. subsidiary of They are expected to take over the property in about 60 days. it is currently being run on a care- taker basis by Lever Bros. Ltd. Canadian subsidiary of Unilever Ltd.. London. Eng. R.G. Smith. National Products assistant general manager and Ocean Fisheries vice-presiden' told The Post the company has not yet bought. Birds Eye (Can- adal- As to purchase in the near future "we are not ready to talk." he said. However. it is ex ectcd purchase arrangements wll he announced shortly. Birds Eye of icials confirmed that the company has been sold to "A Canadian compan " but declined to reveal names pending a buyer's announcement. PATON OPTION LAPBIID Last February. a purchasing group headed by Hugh Paton, N president of Paton Corp.. Toronto and Milton . of National, us: Corp., New York. announced that they had taken an option to pur- chase Canadian Birds Eye effec- Argeniina Fa a. any n. MEYER WASHINGTON (AP) - Argen- tina faces a hard period of read- lllstment following the revolution. Most of her sister nations in south America also are having troubles of their own. Latin American exports agreed on that hemispheric appraisal in a checkup following the overthrow of dictator Peron in Argentina and his replacement by a military junta headed by Eduardo Lonardi. Six other Iouth American na- tions - Colombia. Brazil. Chile. Uruguay. Parsgu and Bolivia- hiive reported d flculties. either cases. both.. A tense and 'potent.lally explosive situation is reported in Colombia. its strong man regime is said to be the toughest in the hemisphere, and recently it has imposed in- creasingly irkaome restrictions. Brazil. after months of political tensiai, plans to hold presidential elections Oct. 8. The heat of a tense that for n time it appeared the country misht postpone the elections. but it now is expected 9'0 V09-llll will take place nor- mllllh There is such an accumula- tion of economic problems and political strife. however. that any new government will face great difficulties. . Chile has been in economic dif- ficulties for years. This pm created various periods I-' -solit. ieai tension. Billie! prices for copper. Chlle' mater export. have helped rellev: strains there. not infla- tion as reached alarming propor- ns. Colombia. on the threshold of an Ocean Fishei-la Ltd. of Halifax. th . id it.'::."..'.':. -- Maritime Firm Purchasing, Birds Eye Foods Limited tive Aug. 1.. and had put up a deposit on the purchase price. The option and deposit were allowed to lapse and negotiations undertaken with the Canadian compan . early in August. Lever Bros. officials said they understood that the new pur- chasers agree with a number of e or ' for -- A an- nouoc f by the previous syndi- cate. These included increase in thersmount of Canadian produc- tion iabout 35 per cent of the total Four Federd B -elections I S oied Today OTTAWA (CP)-Voters in four federal constituencies h eastern Canada will choose new members of Parliament is by-elections to- day. The conteats' are in three rid- ings in Quebec and one in New Brunswick. all of them Liberal strongholds in the past. Liberals have been elected in Temiscouata for 59 years. in Quebec South and Bellochasse for 38 years and New BrunswIck's Restigouche - Mada- waska for 22 years. As in most by-elections where the government's life is not at stake, local issues and the can- didates' personalities have been the main campaign topics. That has been chiefly evident in Tom- iscouats where the prime min- ister's 43-year-old son, Jean-Paul St. Laurent. is making his first election try. SUSPECT FIRE-BUG SUDBURY. Ont. (CF)-Officials of the department of lands and forests said Saturday a fire bug is on the loose again in the vicinity of Fairbanks lake. 1) miles north- west of here. Five bush fires, , ” J and MP ” ' Friday. evidently had been set deliberately an official said. Some five weeks ago 11 similar incendiary fires were extinguished in the same (Continued on page 2. col. 5) Dulles Heads OTTAWA. (CP)- U. S. State Secretary Dulles led a delegation of American ministers into Ot- tawa Sunday night for high-level trade talks with Canadian min- isters. Arriving at nearby Uplands air- port he made a brief statement before television cameras in which he said it is always profit- able to talk trade with Canad- inns because Canada and the U. do more trade betweei each other than any other two count- res. Mr. Dulles declined in tmswcr questions concerning the talks ces Tough Readiustmeni, ls Belief not yet in good shape. Three other countries report insuperablo problems. V rich in oil. is in a fantastic boom. Peru reports an era of extraor- dinary ac o u out ic development after heroic measures eliminated an exchange system which was crippling the country. Ecuador. in political turmoil for years. now tells the world its polli- ical stabiliiy.is increasing. and its economy greatly improved. H0 s township. Delegation For Ottawa Trade Talks which open today with External Affairs Minister Pearson pre- siding. The American group was met at the airport by Trade Minister Howe and U. S. Am- bassador R. Douglas Stuart. The one-day conference today will be the second meeting of the joint Canada-U. S. economic and trade committee set up in 1958 to iron out trade issues between the two countries. Officials have said the major item to be discussed will be the U. S. wheat giveaway program which Mr. Howe told the Com- mons last June is infringing on some Canadian wheat markets abroad. Mr. Dullcs and two nlhcr min- isters Agriculture Secretary Benson and Treasury Secretary Humphrey-arrived aboard a U. 5. air force Convair. U. S. Com- merce Secretary Weeks arrived about a half-hour earlier on a private plane from his home in .' New Ham shirc. Mr. Dules said it was unfort- unate that the conference will be only a brief one but added the two countries can look forward to another meeting in Washington next year. A reporter asked Mr. Dulles whether he had any news about President Eisenhowe '5 condition. "There is nothing new. but nothing alarming." he replied. Republicans Fear Tough Presidential Campaign ll Eisenhower Out Of Race . Iy JACK IILL WASHINGTON (AP) - Vise- Prestdent Richard Nixon appears to command today the greatest party organization of any potential Republican presidential esndidate if President Eisenhower does not run again. Within hours of the news of the resident's heart attack. Repub- can leaders were beginning to accept the strong probability that Eisenhower will not consent to seek a second term. They found themselves suddenly bereft of the only candidate with whom they felt certain of winning in November, 1950. They conceded privately they faced a tough. un- certain battle next year with sud- denly revlved Democrats. These same Democrats gave every sign of a free - for - all scramble for a nomination most of them had regarded a few hours earlier as offering only a long chance for election. NEEDS IKE"! SUPPORT some of the ablest Republican strategists said that. as of today. Nixon is second only to Eisen- hower in popularity with the party's state- chairmen. governors and others who will play a major role in the selection of delegates to the San Francisco nominating convention next year. However. these same strategists do not believe Nixon would be able to make a major bid for the nomination without the active sup- port of Eisenhower himself. While the vice-president would have strong support within the party organization. the strategists recalled that even greater organ- lzatlon strength failed to win the nomination for the late sen. Rob ert A. Taft in 1952 when Eisen- hower took the prize. DEWEY MENTIONED Despite all the political breaks Eisenhower has tossed to Nixon. party leaders do not rule out the possibility that the p r e s id e n t eventually might choose a mo a mature colleague to receive ha support for the nominatio . M In Hospital After Collision ST. ISIDORE. N. 3.. (CPl-A two car collision near here Sun- day sent it to hospital, three in serious condition. Seriously injured are Genien Lebouthillier. 72. and Mr. and Mrs. John McGratb. All the in- jured were from this northern New Brunswick district. 60 miles from Balhurst. Mr. and Mrs. McGrat.h had nine of their children in the car while Lebouthiiller and two oth- ers were riding in the other vehicle”. All but two of the nine Mccraths escaped without in- oouaias u oouaas TO. soucariou. CHARITY l.aceIoerac.hsbchdustrisivakia.donatsdai.no.u0toedesai-Oesnien at is new locacsoavclsrO!.H.lIhrtepur- gomdsaand .'i'ha secult it Iiildfsle umyinvededhtsnatfescsncboab-amedsfh-Ilr.aadIlrs.Kcas-ser. office building in downtown us. Chief Justice Earl warren. who tried to take himself out ef con- sideration for the nomination last April. and Treasury Secretary Wil- liam Humphrey are ntioned in that connection. Warren. as last March, is only five months -younger than the president. Hum- phrey was so last month. Former governor Thomas E. Dewey of New York, who is 53. would come closer than many others to fulfilling the president's reputed belief that a vigorous. younger man would be the best Expect Sinclair Recovery To Be Complete VANCOUVER (CPl -- Russian specialists believe Fisheries Min- ister linclair stands a good chance of complete recovery from injuries he suffered when a scaffold col- lapsed while he was touring Rus- sian fisheries installations Aug. 4. The full extent of his injuries was disclosed here Sunday on the minister's return to Canada after an absence of 10 weeks. Alistair Fraser. the minister's assistant. told a press conference Mr. Sinclair suffered a clean break of his left leg. a deep gash in his right calf and a spinal injury that left him partially paralyzed in (Continued on page 2. 001- 1” choice. Of Brief On (The matter of presenting a brief to the Provincial Government re- questing the appointment of a Royal Commission to investlga.s the educational system of the Pro- vince, with special reference to finance and Federal aid. was one of the main subjects discussed at the first meeting of the Provincial Executive of the Prince Edward Island Federation of Home and School. held on Saturday in Char- lottetown. Members of the executive from industry To Benefit From . New Rifle OTTAWA (CF)-Private ind s- try is expected to benefit by about 34,000,000 front the defence depart- ment's decision to produce the Bel- an FN (Fabrique Nationalelmifle r the Canadian Army. Canadian Arsenal: Ltd.. a crown company, , t to spend at least this amount on materials and parts to fool up for FN production. which probably won't begin for several months. . Canadian Arsenais has a con- tract to produce 72.00 automatic mo-calibre FN rifles for the 40.- 000-men army. The first run of 0.000 rifles is to be completed by the end of 1950 and the entire production pro- gram probably will extend over several years. Canadian adoption of the FN will mean standardization and inter- changeability of the weapon be- tween the Canadian and British armies. Belgium and Australia have also adopted the FN. Creation of an alternative. source of FN production in Canada would be of great value to Britain in the event of war. The four countries which have adopted the FN have greed not to change any working part of the FN without consult tiun. Thus there will be complete interchangeabil- ity of essential parts. .C::hgEsu-uuenmsuesasauesF"T'P"" - '0' Photo) Discussed Presentation Education all three Counties were present at the meeting at which the vice president. Judge C. St. Clair Trainor presided. Preliminary plans were discussed for the pro- vincial somi-annual meeting which will be held early in November- Speciai speakers are expected to be in attendance who will report on the recent Kcilog Foundation meetings and u...' changes. Arrangements are also being made to provide a panel of speake s who will deal with practical suggestions on program planning and ways of increasing membership in local Home and Schools. A request was received for a list of acholarshi s available to Is- land students. udge J. 5. Des- Roches was requested to look into vincial Chairman of Parent Educa- tion asked that any Home and Elchooi members interested in forming small parent education discussion groups. or members wanting material on parent edu- gallon. might get in touch with er. CHURCHILL. Man. iCPl-Five men who travelled down 700 miles of northern waterways in canoes reached safety Saturday, but re- ported their ieader had downed. Arthur R. Moffatt. 36. lecturer and explorer from Norwich. Vt.. lost his life Sept. 14 while shooting the Marjorie lakes rapids of the Dubawnt river in Northwest Ter- ritories. The other members of the party reached Baker lake. N.W.T.. at 3:15 p.m. CDT Saturday. complet- ing a trip through the Barren hands that started June 20 at Stony Rapids. Sask. Fred Pressle. Jr.. of Grosse Point. Mlch.. led the party after Moffatt's death less than 100 miles from the group's destination. 375 miles northwest of here. Other members of the party were Bruce LeFavour. 20. Amsterdam, N.Y.: Peter Franck. 18. San Mateo. Celif.: George Grinnel. New York. and Edward Lanourtie. 21. San Paulo. Brazil. SEARCH ALREADY STARTED They said they recovered Moi- fat's body hilt were unable to bring it out. The RCMP planned to form a party in a few days to undertake the task. The party. which followed a route taken in I893 by Dr. .l.l3. Tyrell. a Canadian government surveyor. reached Baker lake near the western shore of Hudson Bay 07 days after starting the trip in three canoes. The survivors. all in good condition. were flown hero by n Churchill-based plane owned by Arctic Wings Ltd. of Winnipeg. A search had been started for the matter. Miss Mona Clay. Pro-A Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew PRKJlIe EART ATTACK Condition Of Preside Safisfac ni Said iory 'By Ernest B. Veocaro DENVER, Col- (AP)-President Eisenhower was stricken with a heart attack Saturday and taken to hos- pital where he was placed in an oxygen tent. Physicians attending him issued a bulletin Sunday saying: ”The president had a very satisfactory night. His blood pressure and pulse continued stable. There were no complications." Cal. Thomas W. Mattingly. U.S. Army heart specialist who was i'iown here from Washinlllim. mid newspaper men: "There is nothing at the time being to change our previous re- ports. l-ie's getting on very. very well." - Eisenhower. on vacation here. had suffered what his aides de- scribed as a "digestive upset" Fri- day night. It wasn't until Saturday afternoon that it was announced he had suffered a "mild coronary thrombosis" and had been taken to Fitzsimmons Army Hospital. In later bulletins the word "mild" was dropped from the description of the heart attack. . HEALTH A FACTOR The president's heart attack came at a time of prime political interest in his health. At a Wash- ington press conference last Aug. 4 he decllred his health next year will be a factor in making up his ind whether to seek a second gr-m as president in the 1056 elec- tinn. Eisenhower. who will be 05 Oct. 12. has been urged repeatedly by Republican leaders to seek re- election. The general political feeling in the United States is that the Re- j-b didate again. would be strong fav- orites to win the election. But with- out him. they would have far less chance against the Democrats. who have several strong possibilities. including Adlai Stevenson, laser in the 1952 vote. Senator Estes Ks- fauver of Tennessee and Governor Avcrell ilarriman of New York. Mrs. Eisenhower. who has been (Continued on page 2, col. 5) pubiicans, with Eisenhower as can- - seven days overdue. When they left Stony Rapids. about 400 miles north of Prince Albert. Saslr.. members left a note saying they had food for 80 days. The note said the party was due at Baker lake Sept. 15 and if they did not arrive by then it would be a good idea for the RCMP to know their whereabouts. Moffat had made several trips in the Canadian north and other mem- Wesi Germany Gobbling Up Expori Markets LONDON (Reuters)--The trees- ury warned home industry Sunday that booming West Germany is gobbling up the European export market even though British sales are still on the increase in the export race. A treasury report drew a com- parison between the exports of the two countries in April and May of this your compared with the cor- responding months in 1054. The re- sults showed Britain and West Germany expanded their sales to the rest of Europe more than all other countries put together. But while Britain's increase was 12 per cent. West Germany showed it whopping R8-per-cent increase. The irertsury said it would he danizerous to future British pros- pects if industry assumed that Eu- rope was not its market but West Germany's. Britain must be flex- ihlc cnough to move with expand- the party after it was reported Leg Of Trip By FRED L. STBOZIEB IUEN08 AIRES (AP) - Arilon tina's revolutionary government Saturday granted Juan D. Peron permission to leave the country for asylum in Paraguay. The Paraguayan gunbsat Parn- guay steamed away from a Buenos Aires late Sunday. presumably carrying Peron on the first leg of his trip into exile. Meanwhile. Provisional President Eduardo Lonardi picked as ii-men ubinet including Rear - Admiral Issac Rojas. the man who led the Argentina navy in the rebellion which overthrew Peron last Mon- day. as vice-president. The United States and llritain Sunday became the lnth and ilih countries to recognize the new government. The V a I is a ii an- Iouriced lrecognitinn Saturday. FRIEND OP PARAGUAY Lonardi, whose regime has be- gun a wstematic boat for hidden wealth of members of the Peron gavcanseet. cleared be way for a naval escort to ensure his safe arrival in Asuncion. Juan Peron Sails On First (Continued on page 2. col. 71 into Exile Peron's choice of Asuncion as a Pcron's exile and even promised place to live in exile was to be expected. He had included Para- guay in his program of conomlc union of Argentina with various Latin-American nations. He visited Paraguay last year as an official guest of F. siden Alfredo Stresse- ner. .1-ie was made an honorary citisen of Paraguay and an hon- orary offlcer of her armed forces. Peron fled to the Paraguayan embassy when he was tipped his smell was planned by the three- man military junta to which he nlinouished his powers under the throng of a rebel bombs-drnoni of his capital. ASSOCIATES JAILED Although Peron and some of in foreign embassies. many of his closest collaborators were jailed. An army source said retired Maj. Carlos Aloe and his brother illlid Cf!llIj I H00 till With satchels filled with 1!. M pm! his chief associates found asylum gg. Valentin Armando Aloe were eap- ssoaetan Canoeisis Encl 700-Milei Trip;-Leader ls Drowned hers were experienced. PLANE CALLED BACK On the basis of this information. an RCMP Beaver aircraft new along the proposed route. An RCA! aircraft was also sent aordi to join the search but was called back when word came that the (Continued on page 1, col. I) tfllaf A WOMAN CAN (AK: A TORONTO, tCPi Minimum and maximum temperatures. Min Max. . . . . . . . . . . . . .. fl Dawson Vancouver Victoria Edmonton Calgary Regina Winnipeg Tnrnrtto Ottawa Montreal Quebec . Fretloiicion Saint John Moncion Halifax Charlottetown Sydney Yarmouth St. Johns HALIFEAX. tCPl-The weather nfficr , says temperatures dropping rapidly in all regions and there is a risk of frost in New Brunswick early this morn- ing. A large high pressure area over the Great Lakes is moving eastward. and promises fine weather in the Maritimes for the next two days. Halifax and fllunediah vicinity. northern Nova Scolds and Prince Edward lslnd: Clem with a few cloudy Intervals: cooler: north- assurance szgszaaaaaazsrazazs in cash tmore than SLUXLQ).