Maxims of is More Man He that lives in hope danceth without music. 16 PAGE Meniles-France Stakes Govlt Life On Arms Plan By Harold King i . PARIS. (Reuters)-Premier Pl- erra Mendes-France Thursday night seemed assured of the French Assembly's approval of his policy to rearm West Germany. He outlined to the assembly the plan to bring a sovereign. inde- pendent Germany into the Brussels and Atlantic defence pacts. After- wards. political observers pre- dicted the House would back him to hilt in the showdown vote on the rearmament issue, due within the next 24 hours. The mood of the assembly was one of resignation rather than enthusiasm as Mendes-France re- called the assembly'a rejection of the original European Defence Community treaty six weeks ago and traced the more recent nego- tiations in London which produced the new formula for rearming Ger- many. The majority of deputies outside the Communist party seemed con- vinced that they must ratify the London agreement to prevent France from being squeezed out of the Western defence network ul- together. PRAISES BRITISH PLEDGE Opening the debate, -Mendes- France avoided taking any credit for the London settlement but ap- plauded Britain for deciding to commit troops to the Continent for the remainder of this century. He said the chief reason EDC failed was because it contained too 7 In Montreal Mayoraliy Race MONTREAL, -(Cl?)-Hector 'Du puls. Liberal member of Parlia- ment for Montreal St. Mary rid- lng. Thursday filed nomination papers for the mayoraity elections here Oct. 25. Six other candidates are offi- cially in the running: Osenator Sarto Fournier, Dave Rochon, Jean Drapeau. Camilla Dionne. Adhemar Raynautl and Charles Lafontaine. Mayor Camillien I-loude has an- nounced he. is retiring because of poor health. F-Vents "Cardigan Chicken supper, Oct. Illhu Dance Blur. "Dance in Iona xiii. night. Good music. , "Buying and cleaning timothy daily. McGuigan J: Boyle. Monday "Rummage sale. Holy Name I-fall today at 2 o'clock. "Dance at Gordon Dodge every Friday night. "Come to the Legion Dance in tie; Belfast l-lull. Friday, October 3 . "Unloading oar Oil Cake. spec- iak price of! ear. Central Farmers Co-op.lDial 0122. "We are buying Island grain daily. Paying market prices. E. J. Macbougail. Vernon. "Reserve October 27th. for Turkey and Chicken supper, Kings- ton United Church. "Dance in Bear River south School. Friday night. October lth. Free lunch. Chaissonls Orchestra. "Crapaub hall Monday evening. Oct. 11. household shower for Crapaud family who lost their home by fire. "See. colored slides of mission- ary work in the South American iunglss at the Montague Gospel Tabernacle-tonight at I p.rn. "Dance, l-lowattla Warehouse. North Wiitshire. Pridey. October lth. Music by Rollie Mcxansie Orchestra. "Your Saturday night Jamboree features Winston (scotty) Fits- deraid at Community Centre, Bat- urday, October 0th. "Unloading car Bran at Royal Feed W house. 'Grs.fton ltraat last. h silent price off car. Ellis Bros. Dial I223. "United Church I-lot Turkey su pit and Basaar in. Victoria 1-1 2 Thsnksgiv Day. Monday. October ilth. serv g at B p. in. "Notice - custom Grind I To . sth and Friday Ith obsr. liowlng week shut down for ire. signed P. 1.. ll had ervioe. Kinkors. "rendsi-a will be received uatn lundsy. October lath. for the Painting of Pownsl flail. liowelt it any tender not neceuarily ao- espted. Elliott Robertson. "Attention Moral! and vicinity. he'll have you rolling. down the aisles. that's "Genevieve . It llerdll tonight wily. noteh nnidlhfnmdnt for the when tain- Y- 1 l "- ioken s ppsr. stoi-on nan. their. oiitotiar iith. raansasiva . slipper will be served salt to it. I will be 9 far a I dose of supra.-nationality ;n that Britain was not a mom- or. A major result of the London conference. he said. was that France obtained a right to veto any increase in West German forces above the initial level agreed to. as well as s new safe- guard against the revival of Ger- man militarism. The latter pro- vides that Germany'a internal poi- ice and security forces also will be subject to the maximum ceil- lng for armed forces. France is thus protected against the creation of "occult forces" liable to change the authorized level of rearma- ment. he said. niiiiiis liiissiaii Subs Off Coast VICTORIA (GP) - Vice. Admiral E. R. Mninguy, chief of naval staff. said Thursday that Russian submarine activity has been "continually" report- ed oif Canada's Pacific and Atlantic coasts during the last 18 months. . v He said in an interview: 'tWe continually get reports and see no reason why some of them shouldn't be true." Admiral Mainguy was com- menllns on a" Los Angeles re- port which quoted a high American naval officer as say- ing unidentifed submarines had been located by sonor equip- ment off the Canadian. U.d. and Mexican coasts. mNo further details were giv- Adrniral Mainguy officially Opened I-IMOS Venture. the "'V3"5 "CW Officer training school at HMO Dockyard at llelfby Fsqulmalt. Friday he opens the new Pacific naval laboratory. U. S. Promises Careful Handling of Food Giveaway Pr nasonn nsoasisoiv . Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP)-India hh pub- licly welcomed the United States 31.000.000.000 surplus food disposal offer and pledged that it will not disrupt her normal purchases of wheat and other foodstuffs from Canada and other exporting coun- tries. C. D. Deshmukh. India's finance minister. told a press conference the American food offer should be "very useful" not only to India but to other countries in South and southeast Asia. "But we will not encourage tak- ing free food from the us. if it means displacing normal puichsses from Canada and other suppliers." he said. It was a matter of India's "enlightened self-lnterest" not to disrupt or injure stabilized world trade. He said also: ii India supports Japan's mem- bersblp in the 16-power Colombo plan and expects that the new (Continued on Page 5 col. 4) Queen To Pose T In london Studio LONDON (AP)-The Queen will pose for Italian portrait painter Pietro Annlgoni. in a suburban London studio. rather than in Buckingham Palace. Annlgoni said Thursday night. "Her Majesty has expressed a preference for attending at the studio . . rather than that I should go to Buckingham Palace." Annlgoni told newspaper men on his arrival here. He sgid the Queen has agreed to 15 sittings. each lasting about no hours. The first will probably be late this month. The three-quarter length por- trait will be for the Fiahmongers Company. an organization which dates back to the medieval guilds. It is understood Annlgoni will re- ceive t8.0I"l for the Port?!"- ......i Hanoi A John llohriek HANOI. Indochina. (AP)- This ancient city. once one of the brighust jewels in H-ance's colonial crown. supinaly awaits the arrival today of ssoseow-trained Ho Chi- Idlnn's arm . &rly in morning. continu- nist-lsd Vietsainh forces will march into Hanoi as French troops begin to pull back toward llsbhong on the coast. The vleminh takeover under the Geneva truce agreement will as gradual. By sundsy nlsht. under fhl iii of a tripartite in- ternational oosniaisaion. the victors efnisallsaraiiwulhimtotal -Wednesday moi-nlns the VIM- nlnn tsodgd into . 10 lnll-U south of anal. without incident. Cisailinuuqgmwgees Invasion For His Nationalists In China Brince Lik mmav. ocroniin 8.01954 Accident MISS RUPERT MONTREAL (CP) - The bodies of two Charlottetown women kil- led Wednesday night in a car- train collision at suburban Lachlne will be flown today to Charlotte- town for burial. Accompanying the bodies will be R. J. Rupert. father oi one oi the women. Mr. Rupert identified the body oi his 24-year-old daughter. liidlsrilyn. at the morgue liere Thurs- ay. Miss Rupert was killed instantly when the car was struck by a Montreal-bound Canadian National Railways passenger train at a level crossing. Roma Isabelle Burke, 21, died en route to hlspital. I-048 Burke. it-year-old slots: of Roma and driver of the car. was -had planned to stop still ,ln hospital at Lschine. Her Victims .. i ii Miss nuniuq condition was described as "very good." An inquest was opened here for identification purposes and ad- journed pending completion of police investigation. HAD BEEN VISITING The Burke girls were returning from a visit to Charlottetown when the accident happened. They at Lois Burke's Lachine boarding house. less than 1,000 feet from the cros- sing where the car was hit. Miss Rupert was en route to Toronto. Police said the car crossed the tracks after allowing one train to -go by, but was atrueicby a second train approaching lrom- tha,-'.ap- poslte direction. The car was car- 'Frosl Posesi New Threai lo I Maine Polaioes PRESQUE ISLE. Me.. (AP) - Potato farmers wsrlly watched t h e l r thermometers Thursday night as falling temperatures pos- ed I new threat to crops bedevil- led since spring by adverse weath- er. The temperature was expected to plunge in the lower 20s overnight in Maine's northern potato empire. Short-handed crews worked long past sundown to get. the tubers out of the ground. More than half of an estimated 39,000,000-bushel crop still lies un- dug in mud-choked furrows. Due to abnormally lic-avy rain all sum- mer. some fields have never dried otit - leaving their product easy prey to frost and late blight. some 300 men from air force bases at Limestone and Presque Isle joined volunteers, wandering farm workers and school children in the back-breaking job of pick- ing up potatoes The airmen volunteered after many migratory workers became disgusted with rain-enforced de- lays and moved on to other jobs. The growing desperation of many growers was heightened earlier today when the season's first snow flurries swirled over sections of the Aroostook potato belt. Elecirocured In Unusual Accident- MEAFORD. 0nt.. (CF) - nouglaa Richardson. 31. was elects-ocufod Thursday when the mast of a sailboat he was towing along a breakwater touched a 4.000-volt power line. The tow rope was wet and it is believed Richardson may also I. have grasped the supporting - "Ely-wire -of a hydro pole before the 30-foot mast touched the nod about 125 feet. BEGIN DIVERTING CARGOES T0 OONTINENT By s'raNl.s:! GODFREY IDNDON (AP) - Britain's ship- ping companies Thrsday night started diverting food supplies from London to Continental ware- houses as a paralyzing dock strike brought this port almost to a standstill. ' Nearly 135 ships were idle as a result of the strike, now in its fourth day. Dollar - earning cargoes over- flowed the warehouses and the road and railway systems refused to ac- copt any more cargoes for the waterfront. Om ship sailed this afternoon to land its 2,800 tons oi cargo at Hamburg. Another bound for Lon- don with frozen meat was diverted to Antwerp. Nearly 16.000 dockmen were re- ported out as the highly-skilled permanent" lotigshoremen - men employed on a guaranteed weekly basis-began to quit work in pro- test against the use of lascar (Indian) seamen to unload ships. These men are traditionally the last to stop work in any strike. Another 8.000 man - electric- ians and engineers employed in the repair yards - are out in a parallel strike, claiming that men were laid off without regard to seniority. CLAIM EARNING! OUT The dockers went on strike four days ago in protest against THE EASY WAY MONCION (OP) - Police are looking for someone who got his deer the easy way. A hunter phoned police Thursday to report someone had stolen a deer which was tied on his car parked on I Strike Closes London Porli altored working system which they claim will cut down their earnings. They are also demanding the right to decide for themselves when they will work overtime. only 1,000 of the longshoremen are on official strike. They are members of the National Amal- gamated Uoion of Stevedores and Dockers. OITAWA. (CP)-Canada's fish- eries have gone -modern and bloa- somed into an industry worth close to ssoo.ooo.ooo ii year. with the helping hand of science. Aided by scientific advice and idectronic and mechanical gadgets born in the laboratory. the Canad- ian flsherman now is making far bigger hauls with less manpower. science has also stepped in to show him how best to process his product for quick sale-the tricks of quick freezing and attractive packaging.to catch the eye of the modem housewife. It has told the fisherman where to find fish. In other cases it has provided him with gear for track- ing them down. Types of fishin: and fishing boats have been changed after scientific study. For instance. a fisheries spokes- man said Thursday. once scores of proud sailing 8ChO0l1Cl'S-Def” haps typified by the famed Lll.IlPfl- berger Bluenoae--carried dortes for hand-line fishing on the Grand Banks. Last year only eight Nova city street. Communist-led foroas eianked in. the townspeople retreated discreet- ly behind closed doors; After they were reassured nothing was going to happen to them. they ventured outdoors. They put up a victory arch in the street. and red flags burst out in fusion. . Iy n htfa the Viatininh had Van Dlnb, six miles south of Hanoi. Hanoi already had seen its first vlatininh rspraasatatives. Four hundred administrative officials l:i"'H..ii..i...H '”"'f.'..i i:'..;?.l'.:l”"”?iZ french are leaving behind. Though activity continued on a subdued seals in the Vietnamese quarters. where pictures of soviet Premier Georgi Msianhov have TIHIDATFIIBT Asllillkdlshwltbdrewandtha suddenly appeared. life reaehego Scotia vessels were listed as dory waiting Red Armies Todayi standstill in the old French busi- ness district and the tamarind- shaded residential area. FEAI. HEAVY TAX Six weeks ago, it was believed that several thousand French busi- nessman would remain behind to lake their chances under vietminh rule. Now then are only about on left of the more than 0.000 who once ran the city's economy and helped make the 'Ibnkin delta one of the richest rice-producing re- gions on earth. . No one knows exactly why the French changed their minds. But reports of heavy Vlletininh taxa- tion. amounting almost to confis- cation. seeped in from Noni Dinh which Ho's men hive held for sev- eral months. True or not. the Fewer Fishermen Make Bigger catches Now hydro line. Thetremalnder are members of the giant Transport and General Workers Union who came out on a wildcat strike in support of the others. As the position became wnrse in London. dockers in other British ports gave notice they would re- fuse to handle ships diverted from London. fishers and had none left. LONG-LINERS TAKE OVER They have been replaced by the long-liners. equipped with mechan- (Contlnued on Page 15 col. 3: Winlerweaiher in New England BOSTON, (APL Winter wea- ihr-r nlppod New England Thursday with snow and be- low freezing temperatures. Snow flurrit-s foil on Cari- hou and other northern Maine points. In Montepelier. Vt. the mercury dropped to 29. Two to four inches of pow- der snow fell on Cannon Mountain, N. H. More and colder weather is to come. the weather bureau said. with temperatures as low Newfoundland ports! as 20 Thursday night in parts of Maine. ' TAIPEH, Formosa, AP) said Thursday his armies could whip Russia if it intervened in any Nationalist invasion Chinese people wouid.rise and In an exclusive interview the same fate would await Russia as whole people rising. in wrath It was noted that N. S. Krush- chev. secretary of the central committee of the Soviet Commu- nist party. was reported to have given assurances in Pelping last week that Russia would support plans for an attack on Formosa. "If you counter-attack the main- land and Russia intervenes. what then?" the generaiissimo was asked. "The Soviet Union". Chlang re- plied, "began 30 years ago the process of training and equipping the Chinese Communists so that they could carry out, by proxy. Russia's conquest of the main- land. "Today, the mainland might ap- pear to some people to be under the Chinese Communist, party btit it actually is under control of Soviet Russia.” IT HAPPENED TO JAPS Chldng then recalled that Japanese militarists before 1937 concealed themselves behind the cloak of the northern Chinue warlords in encroaching on Chi- nese soii. when the Japanese came out in the open in 1937. the people rose and fought the invad- era. "The Soviet Union." Chlang con- tinued. "is still hiding behind the scenes its control of the Chinese Communist party and by these tactics has deceived many people. both on the mainland and in other countries. "If the soviet Union in the fu- ture comes otit into the open, mobilizes troops. and fights with our Nationalist army on the main- land, the,whole Chinese people will rise up and fight against the Ritsslans. Russia could never conquer us in a fight on Chinese so Chiang was confident his forces would triumph once they attacked the mainland. "Ninety-five per cent of the people on the mainland are op- posed to the Chinese Communists. As soon as the Nationalist army could occupy a foothold on the mainland for three months, or at the most six. the people would rise and Join us in the fight against the Communists," he said. "Communist troops would begin to defect. They would come over in increasing numbers." NEEDS N0 U. S. TROOPS Hazel Misses Duich island ' MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - The island of Aruba off the northern coast of Venezuela escaped damage from hurricane I-iazel Thursday as the centre of the ll5-mile-an-hour tropical storm passed about do miles north of that important Dutch possession. Grady Norton. Mismils chief storm forecaster. said Aruba. where the standard Oil Co. of New Jersey operates one of the world's largest refineries feit winds of only about 30 miles an hour. As it passed Aruba, the hurri- cane headed out over a vast stretch of open waters of the Caribbean sea. Norton sale no threat to any other land area is expected "for a day or two." the Three Women Mayors Scheduled To Take Part In Special Plowing Maich BRESLAU. Ont. (CF)-Women are going to plow against some of the host of the men cnnieatania next week" at the international plowing match. For fun. three women mayors rmicli believed it. picked their things and drove off to Haiphong. The French will conilnue- some of their cultural and educational institutions in a brave attempt to absent what is described as 1'ls presence franchise"-the French presence. one is the oriental Mu- seum, among the finest in the Far East. Another is the French Ly- cee. which opened its doors to 300 students Wednesday. it had more than 2.000 last year. There was no news as to when Ho. the wispy-mustached. lifelong Com , ievoiutionary. will en- ter the city but he is sure to be here Get. 17 when Indian Prime Minister Nehru arrives. Beside the French. the British and Americans will have diplomatic representation here after the take- over. - from Ontario will try their hand at the tractor wheel in a special mayor's class. Mayors Grace Mc- Fariane of Lesmington, Wanda Miller of Gravenhui-st and veteran plowwoman Bernadette Smith of Woodstock. will compete. Mayor Charlotte Whitton of Oi-p tawa. it colorful perennial con- tender. psssad this match up. i in the. regular classes are two pert young upstart: from south- western Ontario who have been giving men a run for their money in regional matches. Mary Byers. 16-year-oltl high ,schooi student from Tara. will be in the running. Last yenr she won four matches from the best farm- era in the province and so far this year has won two top mat- ches. ' She will also compare furrows with Betty Oporiikn, m-year-old farmeretie from Watiord who runs a 165-acre farm with her mother and plows nearly IN acres a year for practice. Miss Byers was horn on a fix)- acre farm near Tara and has be-n (Dy Spencer Moose) J munist minority in Germany power Vi -President Chiang Kai-shek of Red China because the fight the Soviets. , the generalissimo predicted overtook Japan-a against the foreigners. Chiang scoffed at some Ameri- can fears that the United States would become involved in any at.- tack on the mainland. He said he wanted to repeat once more that the Nationalists needed no foreign troops to fight their battle-only arms and equipment. As for a Red attack on Formosa the generaiissimo said: "Nothing would be more wel- come than a Communist attempt to invade Formosa. Such an at- tempt would give our forces the opportunity to inflict a. smashing defeat on the enemy." Hon. Paul Martin To Speak In N.B. F'R.EDl?RlC'rON. (CPl- Health Minister Paul Martin will fly here Oct. 16 to address the annual meeting of the New Brunswick Liberal Association. it was an- nounced Thursday. The convention will name a new provincial leader. THREE-MONTH SENTENCE MONCTON '(CP)-Ronald Young Sydney Mines. N.S.. was senten- ced to three months in county ,1ailt'I'hursday after pleading guilty to a charge of shoplifting. He. was charged with stealing a quantity of articles from a local depart- ment store. He said he was drunk at the time. Covers Edward Island at The Dow IEUEK cl:ory Tells Business Men To Huslle For Foreign Sales By FORBES RHUDE Canadian Press usinoss Editor HALIFAX (CPI-Canadian busi- ness men. apprehenslve about the chances of selling their goods in other e o u n t r i e s. were advised Thursday in do a more aggressive job of salesmanship. The advice came in a panel dis- cussion on foreign trade at the closing session of the annual meet- ing of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce. Brig. J. A. Rvoberts. Toronto marketing consultant. said that in a recent trip to Europe he had met no Canadian representatives seeking to replace lost business. despite the fact that there were growing markets waiting to be cultivated and that scores of rep- resentatives frnm the United States and other countries were going after it. T00 CAUTIOUS He thought that perhaps Cana- dian manufacturers were too anx- ious ior deals which were absolut- ely clear cut. rather than attempt- ing to do business on whatever basis might be available. On the other hand. perhaps part of the boldness of U. S. com- panies was because much of the business they were getting was paid for by the U. S. taxpayer in aid of one kind or another. (Continued on Page lo col. 1) Eden Turns Down New Russian Move To Siall llearmameni of Germany By FRASER WIGHTON BLACKPOOL. Eng. (Reutersi- Foreign Secretary Eden has turned down Russia's latest at- tempt to stall the approaching re- armament of West Germany. The proposals for further nego- tiations on' German unity made Wednesday night by Snvict For- eign Minister Molotov show that Russia still aims at giving a Com- to subvert the whole state. Eden said Thursday. The foreign secretary opened the three-day annual conference of the Conservative party with a review of foreign policy. UNITY IN PERII. lie said that unless the nine-na- tion agreement on German rear- mament, negotiated under his chairmanship in London last week. is ratified by its members "the unity of Europe will be in dan- ger." ”The Russians have made every effort to draw Germany to their side and prevent us from drawing Germany to ours. "They have consistently refused CARDINAL BURIED to agree to German? being re- united except on terms which would result in a Communist mi- nority being given power to sub- vert the whole state. "This is still their plan as shown in your newspapers this morning." This was I reference to Mol- otov's speech. . SEASON IS OVER -ALL BUT THE LOSERS . 7. -ri-ie. Basia saute? ROME (AP) - Funeral services were held Thursday for Francesco Cardinal Borgonginl Dtica at his titular church. Chiesa Nuova. The; funeral mass was celebrated by; Msgr. Diego Venlni, secret aims- man for the Pope. Cardinal Bor- gongini Duca died Monday of a heart attack. milking rows the planting sinrr. When she was ill. Bruce County plowing ship; Farmers weren't too about this hazel-eyed bruneiiefs swapping of county awards but she went right on winning. Last year she was hired by a largei tractor-plow manufacturing firrrii to travel to matches and do clem- onslrntlons. "This is really not the way in win friends and influence farm-l and helping with. she was slx.' she won the champion? pleas-cl i-rs.” she says. "But I love, farm-i ing and I love plowing.” To Launch New Fdrry November 9 OITAWA. ice) The new Yarmouth-Bar Harbor ferry Blue- noae will be launched Nov. ll at Lauson, Qua. Transport Minister Msrler announced Thursday. The ferry, being built jointly by the Nova scotia and federal gov- ernments, is expected to go into service at the start of the 1005 summer season. It will be oper- sted by the ONE. . It will make one round trip a day during the summer between handling a tractor. pgching hay. the Nova lcotia and Maine pom b TORONTO (CF)-Minimum and maximum iemperatures' Min .Ma:. Dawson . . . . . . . . . . .. 15 37 Vancouver 52 62 Victoria 52 57 Edmonton .14 62 Calgary . . .15 '70 Rt-gina . .. 31 69 Winnipeg 32 55 Toronto .12 50 Montreal 34 49 Que-her . . an 48 Fredericton . 29 47 Saint John .. 31 44 Mnncton 30 43 Halifax . 37 47 Charlottetown . 33 41 Sydney . . . 35 Cl Yarmnulh . . HR 48 St. Jnhn'.! . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 41 HALIFAX (CPv-The Dominion piihiic weather office here says temperatures Thursday were more like late November than early Oc- inbcr. Afternoon values were in the low 40s and there were snow- fluri-ies at some places. A large high-pressure area is approaching from the Great Lakes. promising sunny skies tnrlny. Frost will be general early fhia morning. How- ovor. temperatures then will be- gin a rising trend that should con- tinue ior several days. Regional forecasts: New Brunswick and Prince Ed- ward lslandi Bunny and warmer; west winds 15. Low-high at Mone- ton 25 and 52. Fredericton 25 and 55. Saint John, Edmunsinn and Camphellum 28 and 55. Charlotfb town 3! sld 50. High tide today at Charlottetown at 5.59 a. m. and 1.4! p. in. summerside tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. . High tide today at the North shore at 1.25 a. Ill. and 2.01 p. m. Sun rises today at 6.19 a. II... and sets at all p. mi.