MAXIM! or A MERE MAN Tina glltlas saoratly on, and calves us as it flow. I Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew than There are no secrets batter kept ' MAXIMS or A MERE MAN V the secrets everybody giiauaa. 3, carrier: chorlom .. lanloaralda Lu P.I.I. 33.00. Olin! rravinoaa 815.00 per ansuun. Illsawixara Ind 0.3.1. 311.00 per saunas.) , CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. MONDAY, JULY 27, 1953 14 PAGES The Guardian, Five Coma Morning Daily Founded 1801. TQI KOREAN TRUCE SIGNED AFTER 37 MONTHS or BLOODSHED Reds Use Food And Money To Soothe Resltive Workers Fifteen Major Provisions Canadians in Korea Greet Shaky lihi'i Turns Attention To War Hero Dies In England Mon-rrui:At."7:i-i-sqdn. nix. signed an armistice at 10 a.m Announcemeiit-ill-ade in Tokyo By General gark Last Night . PANMUNJOM, (AP)-The Allies and Communists . today to end the Korean e Document war. The shooting will stop at 10 pm. 10 am. ADT Mon- J. D. Dickson, 32. thrice-decorated Truceggwith tiThatls Thatf lndustriaLArea Of Armistic day. Second World By BILL BOSS Canadian Press Staff Writer IN KOREA tCP)-The expecta- lion of an armistice in Korea was too long in the air for, Canadian troops to get very excited about Sunday's announcement that the truce would be signed today in Panmunjom. Rather than jubilation, the gen- etai attitude among the Canad- ians here seemed one of a reliev- ed "well. that's that-at last." The period of precarious peace about to be initiated after three years of warfare brings to an end the most difficult type of soldier- iorlcal officer now. He'll have more use for them tiian I will.” News of the impending truce ending the three-your war at least temporarily reached the Canadian fotce while Robert Mayhew. Can- tndian ambassador to Japan. was lrisiting brigade headquarters. Mr. Mayhew said he would con- tinue his tour instead of going on to the Panmunjom truce talks. Sunday he visited the 25th Cati- adian field dressing station and the 23rd infantry workshop, and Commonwealth division head- quarters. l M headquarters. ii? had tea with BERLIN (AP)-With food isl regime opened a in the "Ruhr". The shaky government its full Soviet zones the three-cornered area is concentrated. and where June 17 test climax. In Magdeburg. the government loniiouiiced the arrival of 520 tons of butter from the Soviet Union to and money. East Germany's Commuti- new drive Sunday to lull rebellious workers Saxonian turned attention toward Madge- burg, Leipzig and -Kalle-Merseburg, where most East German heavy industry the revolt reached its blood- MUNSAN. (AP) --Here are the major provisions of the Korean armistice document: 1. All hostilities on land, sea and in the air cease within 12 hours. 2. All troops withdraw with their equipment within 72 hours from the battle line. The Communist and United Nations armies both must pull back two kilometres :- bout 1 1-2 miles from the line to form the buffer zone which will separate Allied troops from the North Korean Chinese forces. 3. Allies withdraw within five the demarcation line drawn along, and Communist bile teams held in reserve. These teams will oversee all troop and equipment movement through the designated ports. 10. All prisoners captured in the Korean war who desire to return home will be exchanged with in 00 days after the armistice is signed. ii. A repatriation commission of five nations is formed to handle those prisoners who refuse repai- riatlon. This covntmlssion is com- posed of one member each from India. Sweden, Switzerland. Poland and Czecholsovakia. India will act as commission chairman and um- pire. India will furnish the only RCAF pilot in the War. died Saturday night at the Royal Air Force station at Holton, Eng, it was announced here Sun- day by air defence command head- quarters. A native of Rothesay. N. 13.. he was stationed with No. 412 squad- ron at Rockecliffe airport. near Ottawa. Sqdn..Ldr. Dickson was one of the first Canadians to fly the RCAF's new Comet jetliner, acting as pilot on the flight to this country of the first Comet last May. His war-time decora- tions include the DFC, DFM and AFC. His widow and two children sur- vive. Lt.-Gen. William K. Harr p.m. ADT. Sunday. in the middle of the room. isticc agreement and pointed signed. The signing ceremony. beginn- ing at l0 a.m. lOp.m. ADT Sun- day. was performed by the chief negotiators as representatives of After Harrison sigiicd, North isoii Jr.. senior United Na.- tions command truce delegate. signed at 10:01 a.m. 10:01 The signed documents were placed on an empty table Harrison went about signing in 8. business-'like man- ner. while Col. J. C. Murray handed him copies of the arm- out each place to sign. Korean Gen. Nam ii A licuit-naiit colonel blotted the still wet signatures. p:-tiinsula. Allied and Communist staff of- ficers agreed on the signing date at 2:05 p.m.. 2:05 ADT Sunday. Because of Red demands. they Maj.-Gen. Michael West division - - - . '1 1 tr o edt rd th ' "19 0l3P05inl:' Sumenle C0mm3nd' ltig encountered by troops any- . - , be immediately distributed through days from I5 ands had of! the 0 P3 U5 0 E113 0 DT150n9I”S- . . . H , g wheregcommued patrol "HEW ,commandet. and later dined with me muon.f.-ee gore system at, North Korean coasts. These troops may carry only small "5 0! the ,U””'3d Na””"5 70”” fa”9d- h9'ifVe.r' "sh rizch 35:95, mm” by soldiers unconvinced B118. Allard. g lower pdces mm before, t 4, No bio-grade of Korea 35 31. police arms. g and Ste. Chinese and North Kor- metit Olkblilllfglllg L e! Ci; rtnni any that the risk of being killed while hMen31wktme',1n 15 8”, .09”? wcret In the Lcuna works at Mersburg. 10Wed- , 12' The neutral mmmlssw" Wm eaa,jme,?,s'12 hnursgat 10 pm Man, 1:?;1:,:?1a..nu,.f;femi3:,':, (in an new T. an armistice was under discussion csgfly 1?” Bliegh Smigliirllila 1'? former I. G. Farben chemical I? EA freeze (immediately ttakes gllzlgri Jrrloentltjttlil ctgiinntlgefde ur;r1l1.It1cxi1tie6r(.;: day 10 am ADT an mint; -must Shaped building the Reds com V . n . g . . , , . ,, . was viorth it. if combine, pay taises for 10,000 9 99 0" renorceme" 0 NW5 cease on the 155-mile battlefront strucled here. studying the Korea west coast for it isuitable location for a rest centre for Canadian troops once the ar- mistice is effected. Brig. Allard has flown over 'iniles of coastline and islands off ltha coast seeking the best beach lfacillties. He has tentatively set- commemmg on ma truce news! tied on an island near Inchoii. oi equipment in both North and South Korea. Each side may rotate up to 35,000 men a month on a man-for-man basis. but neither may raise the level of men or arms it had in Korea at the time of the armistice. 6. A military commission takes control of supervising the truce and settling any violations. The day; after the arvmistice is signed. .13. For 90 days. the Communists will be allowed to vlslt the camps in South Korea and interview all the prisoners to stress their "full freedom to return home to lead a peaceful life." 14. The fate of those prisoners still refusing repatriation after 90 days will be handed to it political members of the 25.000-man force were announced, but the amount was not given. . In Leipzig. tour special commiss- ions were set up ... re-examine wage scales. At the saute time restoration of the traditional an- nual vacation for workers. can- celled June 1, was disclosed. For more than two years, it has been hard on officers who have sad to issue orders in the sol- .-liers' best interests, and on troops who were not always convinced of that. which spans the rugged Korean peninsula about its mldsectioil- near the 38th parallel where the ',NOi'Ih Koreans began their invas- ion June 25, 1950. Thus drew to a close the stale- mated conflict which the United States and the United Nations en- tertxi as a "police action" against Mystery Deaths Of Hunters BY BERNARD DEFRESNE Canadian Press Staff Writer GASPE. Que. tCP)-A coroner's Chief Negotiators The chief truce negotiators. Lt.- Gen. William K. Harrison of tits United States and Gen. Nam If oi North Korea were designated 14 sign and exchange 18 copies of tht cease-fire in a simple ceremony. No Special Order Brig. Jean Allard. commander of! the Canadian 25th infantry bri- gade. said "I have no special order of the day." , "We've had the ccase-fire order tnady for a month now. and we'll send it on to the troops as soon as we get it officially. "As far as we are this is still only a. pause in figiiting." Brig. Allard added: "I guess I can turn my nmps over to a his- concerned, the Motor Launches Ready on the island there could be es- tablished a leave camp, convales- ccnt centre and even training river almost to the brigade area. However, the most likely pect is that the Canadians ltions '72 hours after the Every move of that In all three industrial areas, un- completely month's re- bellion. A refugee meclititilc who came to West Berlin only two days 7 rest has never been eradicated since last commission is composed of five at least three from each side of general or admiral rank. UN and five Communist officers. Ten joint Allied-Communist pros- will withdraw from their present pos- signing. Opeliaiioll-ipi-oddlng of Russian bnyonets. synthetic gasoline that keeps the wheels of the Russian armored divisions rolling. Enraged workers set it aIir.e June 17 and for many days refused to work even at the schools The Canadian Army ab ago said general slowdowns are Ubserver mum are Orgmmd for ready has two motor launches at pvxeiigalem in L?pzlK't1w;hele fine hm c”m'm1”iim m mm” m” bun” Kure Japan suitable for fcrrics Mn erg. me no 53 sled i th ""9 md the Hm ”V" '”””y' Wm”; cmud 'e,,en 1 - me” l”"d5' 8 Five ports of entry are desig- PY "19 lmim Leuna turns out much of the i nated in North Korea and five in South Korea through which men and arms may enter and leave. 9. A neutral supervisory commis- sion of four nation; is created with officers from Evtvedeu, Switzer- land, Poland and Czechoslovakia. conference. This conference may discuss disposition of the prisoners for 30 days. If any prisoners are still in camps after this deadline. they will be reclassified as civilians and be allowed to go to 1 neutral country. After the 30-day limit. the neutral repatriation commis- sion will be disbanded. 15. The top military commanders recommend to their governments that a political conference convene wihin 90 days after the truce sign- imr. The armistice document says this conference should "settle through negotiation the questions inquest into the mystery-ridden deaths of three American hunters in bush country 65 miles from here will be held early this week. Provincial police said Sunday the inquest will be held as soon as possible after relatives of the three murdered men arrive here from their homes at I-ioilldaysburg, Pa.- probably Sunday night or today. Meanwhile. Dr. Jean-Marie Roussell. provincial medico-legal cxperl. worked all week-end here. examining the bones of Richard Lindsey. 1'1, and Fred Clear. 20, whose remains were found Thurs- Cnmmunist aggression. Within three days to it week prisoners will begin to flow home- ward. The momentous announcement that the United Nations command and the Communists had agreed Convinced Russia Will Not Start to a cease-fire after two years. 17 days of negotiations was made in Tokyo Saturday night by Gen. Mark Clark, UN Far East com- mandcr. 2 '2-Mlle Buffer Zone The armistice calls for troops of South Korea and 16 Allied nations, "1 do no, WASHINGTON. ired M. Gruenther, head of West- ern defence forces in Europe. has said he is convinced Rania will not start a European war. European War i (AP -Gen. Al- think war is ever day. Dr. Roussell had previously examined in Montreal the bones of Richard's father, Eugene H. creating a buffer zone in their sector-already is carefully plati- r.cd. and units know where every of withdrawal nf all foreign forces from Korea, the peaceful settle- ment of the Korean question, etc." the Chinese Reds and the North Koreans to pull back about its miles from the front within an- Much of the German resentment Thlg commigion has 20 inspection which boiled into open revolt had teams, on, gum Wm be mmongd been aimed at Walter Ulbrlcht's in "ch port gf entrytnnd 10 mo. going to come." Gruonther. new supreme cominander of North At- lantic Treaty Organization forces. Coming Events . 1 Clluipmem il l0 30- tou ii economic and oliticnl' ol- Lindsey. 45. H. 50 h -5 Thu Wm have I - - "Dance Ml. Hope, Monday. July me” O . . R D D 0 91” Wig , told. the Senate appropriations 2-,. F01” W99” W C0015 the C3nBd- icies. but the spade-bearded com- Swmh ff" mnh" Temaim and jagged. 2';-niile wide buffer zone Committee ,9, . c1o,,d.d0o,- 5,551.31, ians will be making their new mumsg gene,-at sec.-em;-y had hm. bits of evidence. which had gone across the 15o.mue mm of Korea July 18. on tirelessly since the hunters were first reported missing two weeks ago, was called off Sunday to give weary searchers a rest. Police and other searchers are expected to take up the hunt again today, hoping to find two missing skulls and evidence that homes weather-tiglit and comfort- able in the new areas. Intetisive ti.;aining and sport programs have been ready for months for imple- mentation after an armistice on since May Ottawa army head- quarters has been prepared to fly while a political conference con- siders the iuture of the battered Plastic Cars den through the crisis until now West Berlin heard reports that Ul- bricht has managed to turn Sov- iet anger away from him and to- ward Prime Minister Otto Grote- wohl. and that the inner fight for power now is npproachiug a de-; His heavily-censored testimony, released Saturday. reported Russia. superiority in ground, air and sub- marine forces over those of NATO, but that NATO forces are increas- ing in strength. Gruenthers testimony was in be- Board Chairman Comments On Potato Marketing Resolution "Dance, Cardigan Head School, July 27th. "Dance Summervillc S c h o oi every Tuesday. "Green Road parish picnic wed- ! O nesda . July zetit. sports and educational suivpllestcistott. , ; .s.:..e mishi B g D g d half of President Eisenhower's re- l' and other welfare equipment lol But all factions have Joined in a, I , x , f me emion trade who then, as now. seek to lead to a solution of the deaths, al- quest go, more mu, ;5'000'000.()()g "Lot fl Mission Parish Picnic. Koren 10 keep the U'00P5 bU5Y- ipropagaiida fight against it com- in V? :5 glretggle gemxi chPCulaud hinder our efforts. I ready described by I: Quebec 80V- -2- in new foreign aid funds. The Jam, night-the I '3 P Y "Let the promoters of this petI- ct-nment official as murder. cold- House f)fR,ep)-ggentgtjvgs mg chop. Tuesday, August is. Sunday 1IIst,tntut roe-the t15.ooo.0oo American . .I We 9-balm” of me P”””0 M3-”' in th bli h they re; let p 11 "d s d 111 w autos are getting considerable cn- . . k U" Mr. D. A. .2... 3:: ie uxc ea uy . an. re in aid, Board chairman. has issued wmems of their resolutions 178- search which Saturday uncovered Years may pass begore may be. momv Cut by the House -5, "Ice cream social Springton School, Monday. July 2'1. m....mg.,gggg u S 5 what lt:sl.Lgarifduri1ctdbefoi'e ttiline. in at position to decide who it will and ,1 leather can Burn” 5 Showme e to 1” mo ham ever swung, I -m lbsog "D . at. Ft Ba 1-ll .' 1' t 6 C0" 9" 0 5 Mum?" " be In their DWI future Interests Among items still sought by po- .V C " H, " '1ute1y convinced of that. Thosl Nnmeugcnfu .ru5d:yf"Au'u!; t 0y ' ' been given to the public. The ap- to support", me are mom" pan. of binocular! bile displays and a few have been m1o..,.s (Russia and Cbmmunm ".. WASHINGTOT 7”) Se , PaIie"it9”0fi5 of 1” ;"5:;153ilG:jl:;;:,l p-----m- and woe the elder Lindsey was d”l””5'””' "W" 1”" forces are no superman. The: ' "Show. More” Ham Tuesdt. - ria or promo ers o preven 3. V known m have Wm, him, - . . iavc no edge on us at all." y ; .G0 For Broken with van Johmmil. . Charles W. Tobey. noted crime public from becoming awaie of Pmvmcial Dome Sunday held R Chevrolet has built some of its Gwemhel. said the commlmm 3 For Candidates I .2. p.r:h"':?”s.:l:: 3221:. "i3.”:li'..1”ii.ffJ...?.l”E.ll” 0, .,.., S::::.I:.::t i3:.”:.:li?”lf.”E.l..?”l".; rm -mg "Dance Beaver Hall. Mont ue. a "' Ry .m m .. ,0" i ' ' rid classifying all evidence found . , ' f9l'.';hC 95” 50”? Y5”-5 W"-h 17 wednesdm. July 29. Bmm.”E,rg I sub-committee reports declaring iquity. born in seciecy. and is now :0 I” md duwwmz various and is planning assembly-line pro- dmsmnsy some mmo Mrcmn ma . Chm”. " THE 1 1 t 1 n e d 5 for an Ulnltedd Ignites wtiaterfrcrrgts we're being i'iuIf.l!ltl'ed 53' certain agent: meoms which have Amen to exg dcrilcehtalnazfstgltteftl,t:its;ps;rr;n:I;sE;f);; 300 to 350 submarines. tr . 1 s as -cia g a' ' - pague y corupion a - w o are a emp rig o lcarry : i , (h d H . N t R C t '. g The general said Russian divis- ..F-ewul wd dance chewy didates in the Aug. lo Dominion munism. responsibilities which its actual ATHENS (AP)-Gen. Nicholas fa”s"mMj”e agguzame d”iSc5u:uO':a." line for Corvette production. inns numb" about 12.000 in election. For many years the waterfronts. parents are afraid to assume. Plastirss, 69, three times premier ' While Clieviolct and Kaiser have Hill School, July 28. Home made ice-cream. "Regular Dance. Bonshmv Inn. Tuesday night. Charlottetoniims Orcliestra. "North Rustlco Regatta and lobster supper. Wednesday. July 29. 2 oicloch . Canadian Press showed 859 cancli- cmt, Friday night. Thus the report ganda expert a few years ago did premier were from Jan. 3 to April 035331;)" (a(:nF1'r:a-;sa1::?:el.r,oMi:,ii,,,i,;i:;' their research with plastic reto- -qce "um loom David Mulch.” Iriates in the field for the 265 seats became. in il sense, a shot from not completely disappear with his 9, 1945: from April 14 to Aug. 21. amwd here by plane S-mmay forced i'iOdl95. Weight saviiic, nf A FREND atstake-two constltuencies.Qucetis the grave at the alleged misdeeds demise. 1950, and from Oct. 2'7 to Oct. '1, mr ms ms, omcm vim of cum course. is A motor ('0ltsiflPf'.'lliOl1. 1952. ' lawn. Mount Herbert. Tuesday, 28, l" '” "'”h9”'- - bf ll-Ptt M-it ti 3 d i ' H - hi ik "Th ' -t hi it) 1.. . .., --e flirt 't1”J.t.?l"tll'.i.lf .'i?5.?"l?.f't?2;i 3.l;..,ii2l2i...'l.”JJ? ”"” ” m”s?..ll..2L.Zt"l..il.2....1tif,.ili 3...”. .3?..1..v-,l?.m".l.."il'lii. duff aw; ambH;:,td;I,:;a.I, I;7,”;;r-V,,-,, ll.”."...2?.'”.”?ll.fJf iii? 3.1.; lllft. ISN'I' IN NEED? . cc Gnu” sum md Dmce figure of 848 candidates in 1949 ..we---.---- has been an honest edort by the ing strife in Asia Minor in l922. J M w m e p i steel. iii in Emerald school, Monday, July - 'it ..-...j-j. ni Good mum” tthligerrriiiisi olft H92: oifhfnligiciiit 1gi1:t1nexi'i1etriatll1't1eomt,ii)a maintaiihajgtlimie l::4I.E1i)ilreod:fce:lsnbil- with other officers on the island An”d' brigade c;),ma;Ki"'dThe hi” 1,, the my qmrm. M thk war. W .. , . . . ' w s n I r - I u." who contested the 245 seats atstake plant was found growing wild in ity in our most productive indus- of Chlos and proclaimed the revo- "me h: M5 (wiggle in eh: Wu rem; msmimgng 53.1” 1,, Canada; - in Reserve Wednesday. Aulust in 1",. India. try. much more could have been lution that launched him on his Nowm " ” mt; 7 8" fame” Wm, 3,” per cm, high" than 1"? L ,-xx- sh' Chicken supp” '"d B"""' The Liberals seeklnx their fifth --- accomplished 1! support Instead of P01"-10'” CIIIWI A5 President 01 nigonaung ' H es W ' the same period last vein. ' &(G-K"3 I cum Rum” Hm" consecutive term in office. led in The atsectl of meteors average obstruction had been received from the revolutionary committee he Mm J"”'"' ' ' ' v '1: number of candidates with 204. between l0 and 45 miles per second. certain elements of the potato forced Kins Conbtlnllne 10 lbdl- ! "Ions I-fall. dancing every Wed- nuday no to 12.30. Moi-riney- Maenonaid Orchestra. "Reserve July 23th for Lads and, Louie: at st. rater-'s Legion Hall. Admluion loo and Ice. "lam dance W. 1.. Color. Mll- ton. Wednesday. July 29th. Music by Doiron Bron. Canteen lervica. "Meeting of the Liberal electors of North River poll will be held in North Riva: Hail Monday avanina. July 21 at I o'clock. - -l.:. "Partners regular barn dance on Ttiesdsy night with power fans for ventilation. last of music and Snarsieen service. Bus leaving f.M.'f'. "Plan new to attend in cream festival Wlnsloa Station Hall.Tuas- day. July nlth. Ice cream. cake, Wt drinks. etc. Ausptcea High- field women's Institute. be protected against any last-mo-E merit attempt by the cncmy to, change the cease-fire line. Aspirants for office have until 2 p.m.. local standard time. to file their official nomination papers and pay their szoo deposits in 242 of the countryls 263 constituencies. In 21 large. scattered constituen- cies nominations closed two weeks ago. An tiiiofficial complilation by The in Prince Edward island and Hall- night before in Mmiliice-it WII5!offer of food for East Germans. Reds infest on the east. west and gulf coasts. have rtmaltted "lawless frontiers," the report said. it called the New York docks the ”fouleat” of them all The report was made by a Sen- ate commerce sub-committee head- ed by Tobey, New Hampshire Re- publican. Tobey died of it blood which Tobey battled so vigorously OTTAWA. fcP)-Cannon two major political leaders return to Ontario hustings this week as the hot-weather national election race sweeps into the home stretch. There's reason for this move of Prime Minlstor St. Laurent and George Draw. Progressive comer- vatlva leader. The Aug. to voting is just two weeks sway-and On- tario may hold the trump card. The most populated province. Ontario traditionally has the top number of seats in the House of Commons. In the next House she will be represented by 85 members in the flu-seat chamber. Quebec will have '15. In the 1040 national election, the Liberals captured lid of Quebec's Major Political Lea'd-ers Woo Ontario Electors some of throughout the Province requesting the following statement for pub- lication: "The text of the resolution which farmers are being asked to sign reeks with inaccuracy. the state- ments contsined therein are for the most part misleading and in- correct, their repetltion again in another form after their repudia- sions in the past indicate that the theory.of a certain Nazi propa- ”The record and actions of the vast to Manifesiofufges Reds Adhere To J ”i ' ' Th i 73 seats in the 962-seat House. The S Progressive Conservatives got two. came through with large majorities. In Ontario the Liberals got 56 of Ontario's 83 seats. The Pro- gressive Conservstives got 25. But the Liberals squeezed through by only tiny voting mar- gins. Politicai strategists consider On- tario displayed a certain amount. of ficklaneu in the 1940 vote. They're not too certain how she'll go this time. She represents the enigma of the 1058 campaign. M. J. Caldwell. COP leader, will be campaigning in British Columbia. Solon Low, Boc- ial stumping in the Walt. Many Liberal members Credit. leader. also will Alberta and be MOSCOW. (AP) - Communists throughout the soviet Union were advised in I both anniversary party manifesto Sunday that their lead- era would stick closely to Lenin's broad socialism theories and that a prime concern of communism now is "maximum satisfaction" of the people's growing demands. The statement. marking-a half century since the founding of the party. had the strength of a major policy directive from the country's leaders to every party organiza- tion and member in the land. it tells Communists working for the press and other public information media. what their propaganda tasks are to be. - - --- cale. dissolved Parliament tion come out in the open and fore the farmers themselves; then and only then, will producers be of Greece and dictator for a day, died here Sunday of a heart ail- ment. He had retired because of illness in October and suffered a serious attack last week. A white-haired soldier-hero of- ten called "The Black Rider", he had the reputation of being leftist and anti-myalist. His terms as In that same year, he landed and staged R. trial in which several ex-ministers and generals were sentenced to death. A year later he deposed Constantine's son.King George II. and sent him into exile for 12 years. The present king. Paul I. is George's brother. In 1938. when a general election favored the Royalists. Plastiras seized the ministry of war and became a dictator. He lasted just 1 day and then fled abroad. Two years later he was sentenced to death in absantla. It filled two pages in all Moscow newspapers published Stinday and was broadcast repeatedly. Calling for it foreign policy of peace and "lasting co-existence and peaceful competi ion" with capital- ht countries along the old lines laid down by Lenin and expanded by Stalin, the document repeated. however. that the leaders would continue to be concerned with building up defences against "im- ' parisliat provocations." blooded and planned". the last of four rifles carried by the hunters. a pair of binoculars Can. Ambassador Visits Korea ada's 25th brigade since he was ap- cepting an invitation by Brig. Jean DETROIT (AP) - Plastic-bodied come commonplace. The sports car with the retit- forced plastic body has made an ambitious productiotl plans for these cars they are not going to be easy of realization, Production processes for high volume output have yet to be developed and the basic materials are not available in unlimited quantities. Nevertheless the engineers and the major car makers are ptisliins: The designers say, too. that there 'MUNICl-f. Germany. (AP) -A Czech mechanic ripped the Iron Curtain in I homemade armored car Saturday and escaped to West Germany with seven other persons under the noses of a stunned Com- munist border patrol. Huddled with him in the tank- treaded car he built secretly at his home in Pilsen were his wife and two children, two Czech soldiers and ti civilian man and woman. The 31-year-old mechanic did fooled everybody. German border guards who watched it lumber across a field first thought it was a tank. A Czech tommygun squad started in pusalement as what such a. good Job on till car that it W Makes Freedom Dash In Homemade Armoured Car seemed to be one of their own: army cars bashed the barbed wire! border barrier. . I There was no shout. no hail oil bullets. t It was one of the cleanest geta- ways in the long months Czechs began feeling the Red dic- tatorshlp. The mechanic made sure he was safe before he "iinbuttoned" his car. Then, when West German border police approached. he got out and announced that he and his companions sought haven in the M . German police took the no nut to nearby Wald-Muenchen, Bavaria. and later turned them over to 11.5. Army intelligence of- ncers at Chem. since; I ped more than a billion from that Grucnther told the committee: "We are going to stop this was. streiigili while those of the grit. ish. French number 18000. He said this did not mean NATO divisions were 112 times as strong because the Russians concentrate on firepower and ”a. very austere program". , and United States moaao is the limo HALIFAX, (CPI - The .weathel' office says it will be cloudy and warm with a few scattered show- ers over the Maritimes Monday. Regional forecasts: Prince Edward Island: Monday cloudy and warm: southwest winds 15. Low and high at Charlottetown 67 and 80. High tide today at Charlotte- town n.t 10.42 am. High tide today at the North share at 0.55 am. and 0.46 p.m. Summers” tide is minutes litter than Charlottetown. sun rises today at 4.82 am. and sets at 7.16 pm. V5 ,;.;..- 3.;-we-..:-;'w”-,:-7 U