,r. ) Maxims of a More Man e Guartdialz Covers Prince Edward pl. ”qk.'ul. g.,;,.,,,-pm - Island Like the Dew . I C . -arias: 'cn... no.-i, FRIDAY, omomn so. no Fm 3' ,j EastPolicy Unclei DON tllouteral - Britain's uliilll Middle East policy. widely considered to have suffered major setbacks recently. will come un- der clnse scrutlnge here next week when Foreign crstiiry belwllll Llu.Vtl confers with British oiivoil m mg grep, diplomatic s0lll'CGI (jld Thursday. Lloyd, appointed foreign sec- rotary last week to Prime Min- nter Eden's cabinet shuttle. is summoning British envoys from lsmel. Egylil. lull: Lebanon. syrla. Jor an. Saudi Arabia and the Persian gulf area for urgent tiiiu next Wednesday and Thur!- rlsy. ' The foreign office said Lloyd was "anxious" to discuss With lllem personally the situation in the tension-packed area. Diplomatic sources said the talks will cover the whole range of current Middle East problems- psrticularly the recent Commu- alit arms deal with Egypt; Brit- ain's unsuoeasful move to get Jordan into the five-nation Bagh- tension. WANTS CLEAR lflCTllNE The talks are designed to give Lloyd on up-to-date assessment of lthe c.itical Middle East situation beinie he accompanies Edon 'to discussions with President Eisen- hower and State secretm John Foster Dulles. Diplomatic sources can these are likely to be the chic vvnics on the agenda: . An iissessinent of ll new cold war front the West ice us. Ila has opened in the Middli act with the Czech arms ogre out with Egypt and Soviet wooin: of other Arab states. Western dip- lomais charge that the Czech arms deal has upset the arms balance the West has been trying to maintain between Israel and the Arab states since 1950. The British envoys also will dis- cuss the recent offer by the United tales and Britain to give Egypt financial aid in building the mal- Washington later next month In- ggd Pact. which resulted in vl- slve Aswan dam on the Upper plant riots in the Arab kingdom! Nilc.' and the continued Arab-larasil 2. The violent reaction to Brit Sampling Of New Year's Resolutions Oven I; THE CANADIAN PRES! in time to haul out the resolu- tfeatnlobettarandpoliabltup for a new tilt in 1056. Canadians in each of the to provinces will face the new year armed with resolutions to aelslr personal improvernut or contrib- ute to the betterment of others. interviews by The Canadian Press with men and women in each province indicate many are resolved to help their flllw. mall." others expressed I desire to de- velop I better understanding of friends and business associates by exercising more patience and tolerance. . .- RAISE IN STANDARDS ll .' ifs hung ill :1 ti; Yea:'r:.re.aolu.tii1ep by 'c&lil'-vs!"-1 represe.ilto.r: J C G". Y O men and women: liallfax. blind . , waiter Ceiioe of Premier Jounh Iiaeliwooa or and rlraiyud since the First Newfoundland: ".f'l'o ' New- World War: ”To get as many new folmdlgnd . gm, nu-3 soul. .11. wheel-chair coaches as posible to Icanada standard of public serv- res.” alive Association of Newfound- land: "I can remember making only two such resolutions in all my life. The one I ltopt was a new life for me. for I resolved to ask God to direct my way of life. ..I shall renew that resolu- tion." ' Senator Florence lumen of Moi!- tague. P. l. 1.: "Let us reaolve to continue our united efforts . . . to promote peace and international cooperation among the nations of the world". now son NEW visa Neil A. Mstheann. iitbarst mem- ber of Parliament? for 2i;een's. P; is. 1.: "1-wtiitili rather lprafstif my hope -for the year that lies take sbutins. invalids and disabled persons . . . out into God's fresh Mrs. Grace 8 arliaa. women's air." ' editor of the John's Daily. Mayor Gladys Porter of Kent- News and president of the -ville. N. 5.: "I will endeavor to We men'a Progressive Cohsarw have a warm understanding of Some Progress Towards Malayan War Settlement . BALING. Mal a (AP) - Talks and his aides rafuud. Then Mar- to end Malaya'a years of gun shall submitted a resolution for rllla war ended abruptly Thursday. Ontnmunist acceptance. It read: But the Reds pledged h writing "As soon as the 'federation ob- lo lay down their arms when an tains complete control of internal elected government takes over. security and local armed forces. Negotiations broke off when we will end hostilities. lay down ahead. It is that lmay be able wro st year. 1 think it is wiser not. lo old mother fed 190 Review aln's proposal that Jordan Join the Baghdad Pact. which links Turkey Iraq. Iran, Pakistan and Britain in the "northern tier" of Middle East defence. CABINETS FELLED Rioting flared and two cabinets foil in Jordan. for many years the recipient of British financial aid for her budget and army. Failure to get Jordan into the pact was seen in the West as a major blow to British policy. which has been working for more than a year on .tlic gradual construction of the or- ganization. 3. The reaction to the proposals but forward by Eden last Novem- ber for an Arab-Israeli settlement. Eden called for a compromise be- twocn Israel's insistence that her permanent frontiers were fixed by the 1949 armistice lines and the Amb couniries' demands that the lines should be those proposed b the United Nations in 1947--which would make Israel much smaller than at present. Israel rejected Edn's idea, while most of the Arab states were non-committal. Canada human nature and willingness to pitch in to make our town and community more attractive and a better place in which to live." GREATER PATIENCE James A. Whitebono of Saint John, senior vice-president of the Trades and Labor Congresa IAFL): "A greater degree of pa- tipnce and forbearance. and taller- ance for the other fellow's point of V W .. irs. I. W. Santana. lowei7...St. '8. N. 15., nntlolah. esiiient t lgomena Progressi .con. rervstive Association: re- solve ir..:iwt.to.. .egenoe:'jso many people" are it it magnify aplinrent sllgbta oruirnggnad n 1.. . . Jake Schulz of Winnipeg. chair- men of the lntorprovincial Form Union Council: "I intend to go on day and night . . . telling the Canadian farmer that organized Hoclviy has a bounty on him and is hunting him down." Senator Nancy Hodges of vlc. tnrlat "l'vo seen an many (reg- olutions) broken early in the new make any. " Fed 190 Aspirin Tablets To Sons: Felt Remorse NEW YORK husband. police said, but franti- Big Battle Shapes Up In U.S. Over Canadian Gas wgsnlnog-on tCP) .- A vlgor- commission's history. With that ous. months-long battle is shaping many tuterveners. they say. the up over a proposal by an Ameri- can pipeline company to import natural gas from the Pi'0le0'-Oil Trans-Canada pipeline and sell it north-central Untied States. More than 100 groups-rcpt-cs. entlng consumers, gas companies. and labor or; enizatlona-have in- dicated they intend .to intervene in the request by Tennessee Gas pipelines. coal mines, railroads fllliate. Midwestern Gas T:-4 ismls- slon Company. for official "armis- slon to import '10t).tXifi.0f)tl "ublc ffeet of Canadian gas daily iron i like 'llrana-Canada line at Emei , ison. Man. Tennessee Gas. which liiiiiuils to pal eedings will drag on (0! months and possibly years. HEARING IN JANUARY on the WJd&open ma,-gel ln thg ' No date has yet been set for the . hearing, expected to start sumo time in January. Not 'all of the mterveners are against the importation of Cana- rlian gas. Many of them are municipalities and smaller gas companies which will support the Transmission Company and its of Plan lit the ll"l3P ill Eelllllg "ill"- lzas supplies But a number of large gas and ipeline companies along with imcrlcan labor, coal and railway uterests have announced they in- tciid to fight the plan on various grounds. including one charge that . L I'll V AMBASSADOR Herbert F..Feavar. 48. Canadian meter to Denmark. has been. raised to the rank of 8nibaSa'fitltJl".l The Danish ltagption in Ottawa has market the Canadian product inlll l5 ”merel.V another attempt to. me States of Nm-ll, Dalmla. Wig. ihave A maric ans subsidize the. ujnghh llllnnegnla and Iwiphlganqlblllltllflj of the all-Canada natural: lflled its request with the recieralisas nIp9iIne- lpower commission Oct. 10 along C9l'll3llllY- llle llF0P053l by ll” with a companion proposal to ex- 33'-3ll.000.000 Tennessee Gas Com port U. S. gas to Canada at Niag-. gm Falls to help lmllld up anrlargestonatural gas transmiasionl INA WAR SHOWS SIGNS Britain's Entire Middle i l I l l T0 VENEZUELA l Richard Plant Bower. 50. Can-5”” 'hem”3 M Qwmufw commercial counsellor at since 1050. will become- adian London Born in the United States. he was OF LIFE Mainland Guns Shell Q uemoy (AP)-A tthyear-. her two young sons; Wednesday i night following a rlimrrel with her also been raised to the status of an embassy... A native of Glace Bay. N.S., Mr. Feaver was ap- pointed to'l)cninark in 1954. l - tCP Photo) Hem: Worker Yarmottih Fire YARMOUTH. N3. (CF) .- Wax placed too near a stove was blamed Thuruiayn t for a fire that destroyed the w olesale gro- cery warehouse and office of Edward Allen Ltd. on the Yar- mouth waterfront. One hundred firemen fought the blaze. which started about 10 o'clock Thursday morning. Manag- ing director Edward Allen ea-. tlmatetl the loss at about 370.000. The fire was discovered on the second floor of the two-storey wooden warehouse a short time after an employee lighted a stove. 5:13;! adtoi-eta near the stove is We to ave gaiied. An igloo followed. " ” - ; Lack of wind iarsvent--thecrfnusa I -adjoining buildings. The new ver- -Inoutb-Bnr Harbor ferry temfftial is about an yards away. A warehouse employee. Fred Sims. suffered minor burns about the fare. OTTAWA (CPl - Milk output is expected to reach l'l'.3il0,t)fi0.fl0lJ hounds this year. about 5.5 nor will lilflher than i9l'ri. the bureau of statistics said Thursday. 0:- tober milk proriuctinn rose to 1,- 49-i.755.0oo pounds from 1,372,866.- 000 pounds last year. Fluid milk sales of milk and cream rose in October to 455,448,000 unds. an increase of about 10. pounds. l helped. 'tHl'eflf1el!" eastern C a n a d i a n market for Trans-Canada Gas. Since then. 125 groups notified the commission that they intend as interested parties to in- tervene in the application. and dustry s okesmen have predicted; the hen g will develop into onel of the most hotly-contested in the network, is the key to present Canadian plans to pipe as M00 have miles from the prolific fields of macs Alberta to the industrial markets of Ontario and Quebec. . Under an nttrcemsnt reached in Ottawa late in the fall. Tennessee Gashecame a one-third partner in the Canadian enterprise. Reports P.E. in Cancer Education According to a survey taken dur- ing.the past year across Canada. Prince Edward island is more pro- gressive in cancer education than any of the other nine Provinces. This was one of the encouraging announcements made last night by Dr. W..l.P. MacMillan. 08.15., residen of the PE. Island Div- lhionl Canadian Cancer Society, at the organization's annual meeting ii". .. .... . i now a. eusuom the Cancer mpatgit, ”ilillli:ll"'l l'l?9.?Mizl'iiiEl'" .eroillMlionr- ” programme. "Dr.”MacMilIarr SI ' In his address the speaker re- viewed the work and progress of the Society's educational campaign and further outlined the contribut- ions to cancer research, cancer fellowships and refresher courses available for local doctors. - The financial report showed till receipts for the cancer campaign for the year as h9.687.37. with ex- penditures of S4.289.27 for cancer education. a2.925 for research. 5334 for the national programe and 3282 for campaign expenses. The following officers were el- ecicd: President. Dr. W..l.P. Mac- 'a!IbrIW' larrirl .' dbl l. Leading Millan; Vice-president, Mr. Wli. Keaton: County Vice-presidents; Queen's. Mrs.' .l.G. Dennis and Mrs. Frank Walker; King's. lilr. John R. MscLesn and Mrs. Gilbert Clements; Prince, Mr. Franklin Cameron and Mr. Vernon Camp- helll Horiourary Secretary. R.M. Jones: llonourary Treasurer. Wil- liam Howard. Executive Com- mittee. Dr. MacMillan. W.H. Beat- on. R.M. Jones. Wm. Hayward. Mrs. ,-LA. Macmillan and Mn 1!. F- MfICP..lise- , . .In hirrseaet Dr MacMillan re- ferrelto the objective of bringing to the notice of every citizen of the dangers of delay in consulting a doctor as soon as any symptoms were detected. The slogan ”Eui-ly Cancer is Curabla" was used as the theme at many meetings and consistently in publications. Through this means many more people are going to is doctor early. whenever symptoms are noticed. In closing Dr. Machfillan ex- pressed appreciation for the work done by the educational director, Mr. J.P. Maclnnis. and to the many workers who gave of their time and talent during the annual campaign, and also to the assist- ance given by both the press and radio. ' educated at Wlnnlpadg and Joined the external affairs apartment in- (CP Photo) Two Burned To Death in NB. DOUGLASTOWN, N. 1!. (CP)-- Two persons were burned to death land five injured while two other members of the same family es-p raped unliarrned when fire swept through the home of Edmund Car-l roll in this village four miles from Newcastle early Thursday. Robert Carroll. 10. died it I heroic attempt to save the life of a three-year-old brother. John, The father suffered a broken ankle and burns. Mrs. Carol had severe face. neck and arm burns. A daughter. Joyce. and two sons, Fred and Donald. suffered minor burns and exposu e. All five were taken to hospital at Newcastle. TAPEI. Formosa, (AP)e-Formosa etraiit: stirred omlnougjg Thursday with Rod rnaiisiland guns thelllfil Quemoy and sea skirmishing around the Nationalist Mgtgu wands, official aooounta said. Quemoy and Little Quemoy-120 miles across 3:0 strait from Formosa--were hit by artillery Fir! 01' I mind gtralght day. But the defence ministry said that mainland guns joined in this time. I The Red port 0! may and near, zllgiirxqoffgatilae Olfleldl Central news by Tlltetii i8l&Dd Md camed the The defence ministry's commu- load before. All three seoi(:i's jtillml nique made no mention of Inch in pouring on shells on the two an ensasemeiih n 5”” l”””'Vl?'' islands before falling silent under-,tbat warships exchanied Shots Will! heavy counter fire. the ministryllted artillery on I-lsimu.Vii Nel- said. The islet lies west of hiatsu. (Reuters said the ministry 1'9-lmal" "land "f the National!” nomad ml.” emu.” ware km” group 100 miles northwest of For- . mnsa Central news placed the ma 38 how" W". dwmyed lupnsval skirmish off Kaoteng. which .la about five miles north of Matstl. The ministry aha repormd Red There have been persistent ro- mainland guns threw seven rounds . . 'l.'l of Red sea concentrations in . i Q l Mal-chlof artillery shells at Kac -ng. Onlyvlml wpany, which operates the worlds amlia--Sad”? W Venezuela ll mm mu” from the R .,l more the Matsu sector. The islands were . under repeated air ”"y"lf'ol.w3 if memnlofhle rllxags week and early this week as Red :3, ' "W" on planes flew near but did not attack. The situation was reminiscent of REPEL GUNBOATS the o e a year ago. At that time Off the Matsus. where the Na-' the R da were preparing for their tlonalists this week increased sea conquest of YikianE5ll3'l lslllllll. and air patrols, Nationalist war- whichlled to the Nationalist with- shlpa battled Red gunboata for an drawsl from the Tncheh island! hour Wednesday night and drove 200 miles north of Formosa. Brooklielcl Man 'H ea cls Junior Farm Federation Mrs. Maude Bears. Belle River; Wayne Cameron, Head of Hilla- bom; Lainga Ma::J1l;:'; lttliewllisoxtdi Mar ant - an ac a . r enelf; Mnrltn Maeboliald, Moi-ell. IIIOLUTIONB A motion recommaudlng that alarms last Mr. Sterling MacRae.. Brook- field. was elected Fresldeut of the P. I. I. Junior Farmerr Fed- eration at their annual meeting held yesterday at Prince of Wales Call a. George C. Macbonelld presided." In his annual report. retiritia MacDonald indica the Pruidentrs report, in view of Keith and Clayton Carroll es- pmldwl 1, 4, ll gm gg-scion, bg ngenlgd cared injury. The other motor m ":u,.l:'g",,?l"u,b:: E ' stag, ' . pry and 0' ll" fenilhli, 1-1161: VI! was ll.-..,,,.,.,l...su,. ...,..l. .,g puty Minister of Agriculhiva. "as. ';:.':'..;;.;r- "min... .. ---fwm we mm l- M "if W""....tr:.';".”-. ri.::"ii M... is: ''s”5:ii.?.f'”””".f-h:-d.?t - ”” . 9 P0 W38 aglaze when lite father discovered Lu” u the l"'”' "mm1"mm' the flames. The survivors escap d from upper windows of their bed- rooms in the two-storey wooden house. boss was estimated at 520.000. DROUGHT THREATENS WASHINGTON (AP)-The threat of new dust storms hangs over wide areas of the eat plains. the United States agr culture depart- ment reported Thursday. Reports from the field as of Dec. 1 in- dicated that dry soils and below normal rain and snowfall have left about 20.000.000 acres of land in 10 plains states in a condition to ' fieldmen from the Depart. meat of Agriculture addreasedtha meeting. Besides the president and plat president. other officers elected were: Vice-president. Edward Clark, Belmont, Lot 16; score- tary-treasurar. Gloria Jenkins. Dunstaffnage: directors for the counties: Prince. lldward Clark; Charles Wrighhsearlatown; Kath- leen Deliker. Sberbroolte; Donnlo Beairsto, Malpeque; George Ril- ey. Hamilton. Queens: George MacDonald. Tracaditt Glofll -lll!' Jiins. sterling Mac-Ru. Rev. Fr. cesii, Vernon River; Robert Rack- suffer wind damage. ham. Wheatley River. Kinga; BLAST WEST lN SHARP TERMS Russians Stress Might TORONTO (CPD-Temperatures issued by the public Wttfilller cally summoned help when their . . i Om”; M... u,,,. Communist chief Chin Peng re- our arms and disband our forces." Iuffcrins wrench:-ii her heart. mgm my l90l9d I government demand for The Communists had said three The two children. Bruce Blacliv Damon . 71., 9 xurrender. Before stalking back to times during the talks that when well. 8, and Keith. ti. were taken Vanmuvel. ' ,4 3,-. his 3.500 jungle guerrillas. be de- an elected vernment took iiver to a hospital in snrinu: cnnrlllltm. Victoria N13,, 3.-. llited "We will never accept sur- they would try down their Tma. Tlwy were relmricri improving Moscow (Reuters) -- Russia's No fresh Soviet lfllllBllYf.' on ma- Asia. but through the fault of the-Edmonton . H U 32 -glider and will continuetostruggle Marshall took their statement down later. 1 to 1 d M I I m W. . 10, .....,l.l,.ms such as (;....many colonize" who have implamed imcalgary . .. . 4) In 0 the last man." in Pellcll illlll M9395 ll l" "'9'" RH" 5"” mp m0”1er' we P u an as N O I and iii-armament was indicated. the countries of Asia. and not onlylm, ma "'l..l, 5 "9 dl""53l0l'9 "3 Hill the llllIl- l0l' i!0lilll'm8ll0ii- hln Penn Said Mrs. Dorothy Binckucli. gave the he” Tl".l"d” 1" ""3 sharluu Dinlnmnis here think the Russians in Asia but in Africa just as wclhlwilini est . H illi. 2a I. which has cost 1o,mo Ilveg, he could not ren Enullsh One tablets to the children while upset terms used by the Russians aince,w,” U... H, maintain ll... id,” 0; . umcm of lnvemmgnl hand on Tnmnfo " " ' 3,, k ma" betwee" ch” ""3 SW” RS bu '"l I ' t"'"”mod mm M" 3 q"3"'9l "ml h" h"5h""d' last Julll when the Gchcva ”Ium- oar.-fill coexistence and the ”Ge- violence robbery and ruthless ex- oft H 3 mi ”mm"lll3lC0mDanlona on one side assed it back after adding two Joseph. in navy sonman. who left .. ' ' p . .. , . i - ' av" 3 V - . mit conference brought a partial nvlil mint while seeking to ex- ploitation of the population . . . Monlrgal H ..x d Malayan Chief lmgsigtag Prince ackatad clauses. This amended home after the hiss she was . . , truce in the cold war. ii-no tin-ir influence among colon- "we hold thgt colonial regimes Quebec Mil Rahman and Binge it to read. quoted as so big the planned to . . . .. , ,. g - Nikita Khrushchev. Communist mi ..nrl formerly-colonial peoples. are a (ll. mg, for regent d.-iv hredericton . . ll lilef Minister David Marsha on As soon as the telectcd uiirn take her own lfc 'lflt'r the children E P . - other. me" ill lllel lelleliillilii lhtiiins med. V ' C party secretary, reminded the inn Kremlin diplomatic gallery mankind and are ln(lompatils'"lS8lnL John "'9 F0il0I'Itl0iI of Malaya an complete control of internal aecur- She told nffircrs slic fed e ch WW 9' 3ll"l” '”l”'"'' l" llf ll"-t """ll"l0d '0' ll” ""”l"ll- with the peaceful and demnci-'1 .M0'?C'"" -- ;” 5 . m.ot.cm..h V". . dwbd wmd Io”, "med ,0”... W, W," of the chndrm M wm.m N, a. bomb 'testa and condemned as (ll-l the floodlit dais facing the prlnclplpg 0: ll... null...-l Nnllnnnllalifax .. fl ulsmure-ova Wm” a” mum. and homnueh my down I" M” md "W they mwd in," mm". Christmas message from Pros L34. (lvplllleg were pl-.,.l,l,,,,l Kll.pm.”m"mm.-- Charlottetown .. .i. lllh commissioner baa veto WWII. and diabasid our forces. Does not Soon they ilpbcnrrd in he iutfarv ld"'l El”'ll'”w9l' '0 ll" C"""""l "l('"" V""”l'"'"' ""l "W 'l9l"llV "0 Salil ill? 500l8ll-ll Will?" Sydney 9 ritaln has promised eventual amount to accept lcorrecll of the ing terribly. she said. and she "lll 0ll""ll'l95 07 aisle?" El'"lW P”"ll'"”i- ammll ll"9"l 9X'i"'9"'l9l' eventually would Win in Deactllil Y”m""'.h ” " Cg dependence or Conunoowealtli Drwl amnestyi." eouldnft ' and ll nny lonm-r, she as "crude interference." Eiscn- ticnrui hialcnliov. competition, but "in our struggle Sh 'l"l"" -' " 31 m"5- V O lbvanlmant negotiators called poles and housed for '"!lP- Lingigedr sremasslagg :"ll:lhee(:r ml:i'i'i;'zr:inin received a standing for cnmmllnlgm we will never HALIFAX. (cP);I.ha WMHW. NE POINT WON munnhel: m" by mlallclmg tllllla '.'.m Nnlx plilsgnliowcr has been ractiriilly I n." "I ulrenlve wnl office says a band of snow and While r the 'GtI!Inisnlata caicin-rad nulhhe rifts, llotnn-lan''it' 0" W ' immune from personal pattack by W-VTRl3l7Tl9N T0. .l?EACl'-.... ..59..,lv9!'g.g'!!nssif..1.-reel. .l0i. ht-rah--0V”-Qwbec and ll” 935” - the sound a clear Abdul llahman sails for Bi-iiziin Out-van pave Indicated oil -e- Moscow since he became president lie said Russia's success in do .-b2:S5.'.e.::d'."-(E .l),:,a;:m:l:.&e':r; Rim U';l::fw;ff't'3T.shhls gfvhnag. -- Will one point - the Jan. 1 to begin talks with the sources in India are capabl 1! three years ago. xcioping friendly relations with b M'd X l.. H d 1 d "H 3””-l ' t W ll - tum talks the colonial (slice about Malayan inde - 9 " '”"' ' "cm " DOIIGICO. ellll9ill3 l0 ll! down arms when supplying about 7.000.000 ton year. . acting with I id ragtg. Maricball opagq .. lunmusrista Coming Events- ) a c-33.3." iamm-ial -Hall tonlgu. l g 1- g rcheatrlt. Cards , tho ...... as -are C a laatitnta. YlI'tl.f!.'ml.GUldeCl Missile Program-ls Stepped Up ' WASHINGTON (AP) -- Tlh be i lii'::sg,m.r::'cew' um I”- :t.ltlll,edt:. blaaltSll.."vlhi:-lrfatgea Ru:-S ' . ' ' sight It an bases nnI.i' I ma NIV1 YIIr'I Dance. Mt. lnutu by it plnn- 'Iiizht. glad lily c I to Okinawa. the island 'f the mainland being built uga complex of American mines. member-aofhtsfamikataliac a Iaequ1;Qaa..tl-saasrmaertlialv -Qabae Amid loud cheers. Khrunhchz-v told the supreme.sovict-Russian parliament-that Russia did not want to boast of her military strength, but must remind the West that a hydrogen bomb re- cently tested was "equivalent to many million tons of ordinary ex- plosive-aad it can be increased." DEFEND ASIAN ILAITS Khrushchev and Russian pro mier Nikolai Bulgaoin both de- fended ihe speeches they madc on their recent tour of Asia--which provoked much criticism in the West-and made no attempt to I0?!-Pedal harsh denunciations of "colontallata." S But Bulgsnin insisted that ltitlil was a "filming point in the re- laaattm of tension." and western observers did not interpret thel speecbaa as hersldin a dramatic: revival of cold war ties. The leaders made direct ref- erence to their scheduled Loaitoa om a-.:v..--v-T2'.t..... uesiernuu lnriin. Burma and Afghanistan .ii-as a great contribution to world peace . Guilt for Asian backwardness rested with the calonizers, he laid. life attacked SEATO and the Bagh- .rlad Pact as aggressive colonial- lam in a new form. He reaffirmed Russia's support for lndia's case in Kashmir and her demands for the return .1. Poi-tuziiesc Goa in Burma he wished to soc an economic system independent of foreign powers. llulganin urged an end to the arms race and a ban on nuclear isnd intercontinental weapons. He said that "the outgoing veer will go down in history as one of a definite shift in the strained ' - tcrnatinnal situation which has Illa.- velopcd over the past riod." "The shift is due in arge twis- urc to the efforts of the Soviet Union directed towards ensuring peace and the security of tin "if the social and political pro- lraes of Asia was slowed Old held back for the past few centuries. this bu come about no hit of he peoples at Jtnown facts." be said follow down of Mr. Dulles. the U. I. Russia sympathlsed with Arab de- sires for independence. BRITISH "ROBBERY" Khrushchev said that in some countries. there was a "reaction of hostility and vicious attack against us" for the statements made by the Soviet leaders while in Asia "All we did was to repeat well- Ha said that if Britain had not left India. the Indian people would have expelled her anyway. Khrushchev posed the question of whether Britain brought civil- isation to India. and answered: "it was robbery in the full sense of the word. The allegation that Britain brought civilization to India is a tale for eimpletmis." Kliriiahchev ridiculed the Ameri- can - Portuguese declaration on Goa. lie said that. according to Dullea. Goa belonged to Parting because Portugal grabbed It 79!?! Ill . logic abonltl Maiaatfl aearetalv consider herself lat dominion." the tion is expected to reach New Binsnewick and eastern Quebec this morning. but Nova Scotia and Pntnoe lidward island are not expected to be affected to- day. southerly winds and milder weather accompany lain Dre- clpitatiias. Regional forecasts: Ncrtlrl Neva loela. Prince Edward lel&d: Cloudy Ill milder WM winds. Lu-Itlb at New teegew II and 8. char- II and 30. Eastern N. 1!. counties: Cloudy. ocoaslmal snow in afternoon and vesting: milder; southerly winds . Low-Mgh at Mom.-too it) and I! St. John river valey. Bay of asaleur: Cloucbv: intterrnitte-at snow bedmiag is morning: milder: Ioutib winds ll becoming limit. by eve-ntng. law-Mm It fretterlcdm zero and 32. Saint John to and I. Itlmsndetnu pare sad so, cernpoentm 5 below and "a High tide today at Charlottetown at 11.01 pm. and il.I pass. 91- uereide etgtiteaa astoolee hill mil lIi&tl. tbaacharlettatawa. ,:zsheeat'f.la.n.ndhI -lb