MAXIM8 or A MERE MAN Love your enemies, for they you your faults. loll : 3, carrier: Chnrloaohwn. Gnlnsraido usso pet umun, Ingmar. Plovlnsu hP.I.l.U.OO. Othot andlJ.I.A.II:.00perannIn x Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew A CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1952 It costs more to revenge inhrlea than to hear them. MAXI MS OFA MERE MAN 16 PAGES The Guardian, Five Cents Morning Dally Founded 1581. GOVT OFFICIAL BLAMES IRANIAN TROUBLES ON ACHESO Evidence May con?wien Bonn Gov'i Raiifies Treaiy Bl!lRiL.llN. Dec. 14 -(AP)-Alli- ed informants said today they see mounting evidence of a creeping squeeze on Berlin, perhaps a new type of blockade. British officers. analyzing a series of recent Russian-none moves. said the East seems to be gearing itself for a new all-out drive to isolate West Berlin. U. S. authorlti agreed, and added they believe the blow being prepared is to be timed with Bonus ratification of the Western European defence treaty. The Gommunlst movu have been spread out so that any single day's developments are likely to be ignored or minimized. But this is what they have been doing in the last month: i. Erecting a series of stone and concrete abutmenis at each cross- ing point between West Berlin and "the surrounding Russian bone. 2. Imprisonlng or forcibly eject- lng "lukewarm" or suspected antl- communist people from border vil- lanes. 3. Forcing west Berlin cars which enter the Russian sector to undergo stringent inspection and risk confiscation. Compelling East Brelln automobiles to obtain spec- ial permits to drive into the West sectors. 4. Imposing new mtcontinued on page is col. 3) Safe with 38,000 Stolen Ar Glace Bay GLACE BAY, N. S., Dec. 14 - (OP)-A safe believed to contain about 58.000 was stolen from the Metropolitan Store in the heart of downtown Glace Bay early todsy. and R. c. M; P. believe five men were involved in the theft. Entry to the store was gained by prying the iron door off a coal chute. . . Coming Events "Brookvale School Concert, Dec- ember 23rd. Dance after. "Christmas concert, Harrington Hall, December 22nd. controls on "Cherry Valley Christmas con- ccrt Saturday. Dec. 20th. 8 o'clock. "Christmas concert. Plsquld East school, Thursday. Dec. 18th. "Come to Wheatley River con- cert in the Hall, Tuesday, Dec. 18 "Wlnsloe school Concert. Thurs- day. December 18th. ' "Reserve Monday. Dec. 22 for Pnrkdale senior concert in Park- daie Hall at 7:30. "St. Andrew's I-Iall, Mt. Stew- ga tonight, bingo 8.16. Admission "Reserve Tuesday, Dec. 16 for Parkrlaie junior concert in Park- dale Hall at 7 o'clock. "Roseneath school Christmas Concert. Tuesday. December 23rd. curtain s P. M. "New Glasgow school Christ- mas Concert, December 23rd, in New Glasgow Hall. ' "Card party and lunch, Hope River Credit Union hall, Wednes- day. Dec. 17th. Hall, 17. "Special dance, I-Iowa: Wednesday evening, Dec. Glasgow Road Hockey Club. ”'Comc to Mount ldellick School Christmas Concert; Pownal Hall, Thursday, December 18th. I P. M. "Come to the regular Dance at Bonshaw Inn. Tuesday night. Rollie McKenaie's Orchestra. . "see Santa Claus in person at York ohristmu concert. Decem- ber 13nd. a o'clock. "Dance in Stanley Bridge Rink Hall. Tuesday, Dec. 16th. Sponsor- ed by Cavendish hockey team. "Christmas Cohort. Donagh School. December 0th. Curtain 3.00 P. up "See st. Peters Variety Concert in Bridgetown Hall, Monday, Dec- ember 15th. at 0.30. ' "Concert. Afion Hall. Tuesday. Ni-ember 18th. staged by Young and Old of Rice Point. ' "Come to Cape Traveru school Concert in cape -mvn-so Kali. Monday. December! and, at I r. as. "Don't forget the big Dance. lagging: straw on non; nu Oman-u " -A Reds Planning New Berlin Blockade I mg such boats for Recent Work By Noted, Islnd Artist Above is shown a striking oil- painting recently cornipleted by Mr. Hubert Rogers. distinguished Island-born artist. which was com- missioned by the Canadian Club of New York and will be hung in the Club's permanent quarters in the Waldbrf Astoria Hotel there as one of a series of paintings depict- ing Canadian life in all the Prov- inces. The picture ls entitled "Re- fittlng For The Races". and shows which draws a large attendance oi . spectators. Onlthe left is a portrait by Mr. Rogers of Chief Justice Thane A. , Campbell, also painted during the - artist's stay on the Island this ; year. 2 Mr. Rogers is a son of the late f Mr. F. L. Rogers and Mrs. Rogers, ' of Alberton. He leaves this week on return to his home in Vermont 3 after a busy season's work in land- ; scape and portraiture painting. The top painting shows the lab- ster boats hauled up at the end . of the season as owners prepare ” them for the annual flshermen's races. They were all built by the veteran Alberton craftsman, Wil- liam Audrey. who has been build- thc past 60 ' years as he carries on the old Is- iand tradition started when this ?r0vlnce was noted for its ship- iulldiing. Prince Edward Island will also eceive some valuable extra pub- '.city from the frame of the pic- .ure to be hung in the Club's quarters. in New York. Mr. Her- NEW YORK. Dec. l4 - (AP) - A sinister figure stands astride the world's biggest port. He is the rack- eteer. motivated by greed, reigning through fear. The extent of his power and the ransom he exacts are being explor- ed by the New York State Orlme Commission. Public hearings last week showed what he has done. When the hearings resume Monday the commission hopes to detennine Just what can be done about him. Along the 700 mils of New York's sprawling waterfront. ship- ping each year does a 37.000.000.000 business. But racketeers milk an estimated 8300,000,000 annually from this huge industry. Last week a host of witnesses was N. Y. Port”Racl(eteering Explored By Commission stevedoring concerns, labor bosses who would tell the commission no more than their names-all their testimony added up to this picture: Handling virtually all 51-.1p.m- shore freight in the port of New York is the International Long- shoremenls Association (AFL) head- ed by 88-year-old Joseph P. Ryan. Ryan, elected to a life-time job as president. receives a 320,000 salary and has a 87.Xl0 expense account. "Goodwill" Gifts Commission witnesses had told in many embarrassing "goodwill" gifts to Ryan. But a few goodwill gifts were nothing compared to other items the commission dug up. Specifically: placed on the stand. 1' k -- mtm. shipping executlvu, heads, of (Continued on page 5 col. 0) NEW YORK. Dec. 14 -(AP) - President-elect Eisenhower return- ed today from his 21.000-mile trip to the Korean battlefields and the Pacific with "renewed confidence that a satisfactory solution in Korea can be speeded." He said his lo-day journey "marks not the end but the be- ginning of a new effort" to bring an honorable and to the Korean fighting. "This is not the moment to state more than that resolve." he do- olarod. "lot we face an enemy whom we cannot hope to impress by words. however eloquent. but only y deeds-executed under cir- 'I cum ness of our own choosing." 0 -Inaiormaiataianntllildailiofhatoffioe. Eisenhower Home From Trip To Korean Front newspaper men shortly after he alighted from the big U. S. Air Force Constellation. Eisenhower said a solution in Korea "will de- mand common sense and care. much foresight and much patience." And he added: "But no more in Korea than any- where else in the world is honor- oble peace beyond -the power of free men to achieve when they pursue it intelligently and. en- ergetically.” lllsenhower said that any public report he would molar on his trip would be "nat limited." "Until I assume he office of the presidency," he said, "lt would be wrong, for me to pretend to speak with the authority attaching to i . . 1 . WW 1.”.l'P!l:" inert Lovatt. Alberton. made a shipping frame of Island driftwood which Mr. Rogers admired so much that he turned it into a permanent frame for the picture. Its dull grey contrasts veiy pleasingly with the vivid colouring of the scene. He (Continued onvpagegbmj): Mclhieliriiicism Of Karsh Provolies Maclean's Ediior TORONTO. Dec. 14 - (CF) - Ralph Allen. editor of Maclean's Magazine. replied Saturday to the criticism of photographer Yousinf K-arsh by W. Chester 5. Mcllure (PC -. Queens) in the House of Commons Friday. Mr. McLure. annoyed at Mr. Karsh's criticism of Charlottetown cooking in n Macleaifs article. call- ed the Armenia-bom photographer "a foreigner-who is now a doubt- ful Canadian." In a statement, Mr. Allen said: "Mr. MoLurs's attack on Yousuf Karsh and by Inference on the mil- lions of other good Canadians who were born outside this country is the sort of racist venom which re- futes itself. But for the record Mr. Karsh arrived in Canada-in 1923 and within a week filed a declara- tion of intention to become a. Brit- ish subject. After the statutory wait of five years he became naturalized in 1930. "In 1946. when the Canada Cit- was accorded the honor of being the first resident of Ontario to re- ceive his Canndian citizenship un- dsr the new regulations. "No one has been more lavish in his praise of or more distinguished in his service of our country than right to offer suggestions for its improvement, including the im- provement of cooking ln.,I"rince Ed- it --(OP)-- has fired a Russian employee sc- wood by the United States of "at- tempted vealed Saturday. sonal aide lzemhlp Act went into effect. he enko. UN I881-llant Iecfelrlry-KEN erai, was "taken off the.UN Day- sources said. in the UN secretariat, now are in Yousuf Karsh; no one has a better Russia. Bomb Red Base Near Manchuria SEOUL. Dec. 15 --(Monday) - (AP)--United States SB-29 Super- forts blasted a vital Communist communications centre on Red Manchurlals doorstep Sunday and the airmen reported smoke and flames billowing a mile over the target. on the battlefront. Red Chinese troops made only one half-hearted assault on little Norl Hill in the Western sector. The raid by 14 Okinawa-based Superforts on the communications centre at Uiju was the second since Nov. 28. when B-29s plastered the centre in the biggest night super- fort strike of the Korean war. Yukon Weather Too Warm For Army Exercise SILVER CREEK. Y. T.. Dec. 14- rCP)-Warm weather for a Yukon December-the temperature scarce- ly dropped below zero-threw a monkey wrench into army exercise Reluctant Beaver. Forty-below cold was needed to help the army's only airborne en- gineering unit build a 2.500-foot airstrip on the ice of Kloo Lake. l.50O miles northwest of Edmonton. As it was, the ice wasn't thick enough to hold heavy construction equipment, let alone the C-119 fly- ing boxcars that were supposed to test the airstrip. 1 Two eight-ton tractors went through the ice. one of them is still at the lake bottom. But while the 10-day exercise was not as successful as hoped for. it... .w. Love, ,dir,ctor. of Re- . flu? ”IVBea'ver. 'sildfF"W?"l'eiirned what we had to learn". Radio Operaior Denies Held Al Pislol Poini HALIFAX. Dec. 14 -(GP) --The radio operator of the Israeli freighter Abraham Graetz today denied that his 24-year-old cap- tain held him at pistol point at-sea but parried the most pertinent question of all: Did Capt. Adan Graetz radio the Israeli Government that he would scuttle his 5.686-ton ship unless his father was named minister of com- munlcatlons? Max Roth. 33. of Haifa replied: "I am pledged as any radio officer to secrecy. I cannot confirm either the contents or existence of any messages." Roth made the statement at a press conference attended by Frank Wcnnet of New York. the ship's first officer and acting cap- tain. and Davie Brodie, vice presi- dent of M. Dizengoff and Co., Ltd. Children lose lives In Fire CORNWALL. Ont. Dec. 14- (CP)-Three small children were burned to death early today when they were trapped in a fire which swept through iheir home at Green Valley Station, 25 miles north of here. The youngstcrs were Gerald. 4. DEHISP, It and Monique. eight months, the children of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Prouix. The 1 U2 storey frame house adjoins the CPR station. Mr. Proulx said he awoke to find the whole downstairs of the riwclling a mass of flames. He had only lime to throw his wife out a window and follow her to tho izround. The fire and heat were so ficrce that lhore was no chance of re-entering the house to rescue the three children iWllO slept in an adjoining upstairs room. Police, who believe the blaze was a result of an overheated wood stove, found the children's bodies. e o louiseville O Remains Under 0 Biol Act Rule LOUIEVII.l.I-l."m Elie” Dec 14 - (CF)-The little town of Louise- ville remained under Riot Act rule tonight .wll.h Provincial Police finn- ly in control and townsfolk quietly going about their affairs. Enforcement of the Riot Act did not prevent the lown's Roman Catholic population, including more than 500 textile workers on strike since March. from flocking through slushy streeis to Sunday mass. Movie theatres were open- thougli they did little buslness--- and inveriis served beer as usual. The Provincial Government liquor store was open Saturday. There was no hint of repetition of last Thursdayls violence in which a Provincial Police bullet wounded one man four others went to hos- pital with injuries and 25 were air- rested. Rhodes Scholar For N. B. Selected SAINT .lOllN, N. 13.. Dec. 14 m (CPI David M. Harley, 21. Rotliesay. N. B.. has been selecied as New Brunswick Rhodes Scholar for 1953. lie was chosen from among 10 applicants interviewed here Saturday by a selection com- mittee under the chairmanship of Defence Minister Turns Over RCAF Fighter Wing At NATO Base In France GROS TEINQUIN, France, Dec. 14 l-(GtP)- The RCA!" No. 2 Fighter Wing was officially turn- ed over to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization Saturday by Ch-anadn's Defence Minister, Brooke Claxton. The Canadians were welcomed to France by Defence Minister Rene Plevln. . The wing is made up of about 1.000 airmen and is the only NAT 0 airbase in Europe equipped with the latest F-88 Sabre jet fighters. Three squadrons, 80. of these jet fighters manufactured in Canada were flown to Gros Ten- quin Oct. ii. The wing is the first of Can- adals air contribution to the de- fence of Western Europe. Three more Canadian wings of 60 to 70 fighters each are due to be estab- lished within the next few months in Western Europe. one near Ver- dun in France and the other two close by in Germany. Claxton handed over the three squadrons to Air Marshal Sir Hugh Saunders of the .RAF, air deputy to Gen. Matthew Ridgway, NATO supreme commander. Ple- ven presented the Gros Tenquin airfield to NATO on behalf of his government. ”Canadians have come to Eur- ope in peace so as to make it uh- necessary for them to come in war." said Claxton. "It is better to have air fields than cemeteries." claxton presented Pleven an al- ibum of photographs of the wing "as a permanent souvenir of the friendship between our two coun- tries." Pleven described the base. con- structed since May 10 of this year. as an example of the speed and efficiency of the defence effort of free peoples. Federal Gov'il Has Received Currie Report OTTAWA. Dec. '14-(C?)-The government has received the Currie report on army handling of stores and equipment and is closely studying the document in anticipation that it will become the pivot of parliamentary con- troversy. Tho rr-port. rlimaxink SEW?" months of investigation, is under- stood to criticize various aspects of army administration and to make a number of recommenda- tions for changes. Gcorize Drew, Progressive Con- sorvative leader. has left no doubt that his party is eagerly await- ing the report. It mny be tabled ihls week be- fore Parliament adjourns for Christmas. The Commons starts morning. afternoon and night all- iings Monday and it is hoped that the debate on the address in re- Mr. Justice G. F. G. Bridges. Mr. Harley is studying for a Master Degree in history at t'nel Unlvei'sity of Toronto. He will go to of New York, ship's owners. It was the first opportunity re- porters had to talk to a crew meni- ber since Capt. Graetr. left his ship Wednesday night in a secret rendezvous 16 miles off Halifax and left by air for Montreal to meet his parents who flew from Israel. Capt. Graeiz's father. H. R. Graetn. owns the three-vessel ship- ping line. Graetz learned his sca- manship during the days when Israel was fighting for national recognition. Mr. Brodie said crew members and officers had been instructed by Mr. Graetz to remain silent on the captain's reported troubles at sea: He said. however. that Graetz left his ship ”of his own volition" after a dispute with his father. He said it "may have" concerned handling of the crew. Russian Fired By Ii. ii. For Spying mm? UNITED NATIONS. N. Y.. Dec. The United Nations espionage". it was re- Nikolal Skvortsov, formerly per- to Constantin Cinch- roll" in October after he asked for an extension of A holiday, UN Both akvortsov and zinchenko. highest-ranking soviet national UN, sources said Skvortoov had worked at the soviet embassy in Ottawa in the past but this could not be confirmed immediately. Oxford University in England next year to study law. After attending Rothesay Col- legiate School he went to Trinity College, University of Toronto. and obtained his Bachelor of Arts De- gree with honors ln history. COPENHAGEN. Dec. 14 -(Reut- ers) - A Danish tobacco denier says he's going to send Mrs. Win- ston Churchili it box of "petites madames” cheroots for Christmas. lie said she tried the cheroots ply to the Speech from the Throne will end Wednesday. Prime Minister St. Laurent may speak again in the debate in make A statement on the llrime mlnisters' conference in London. He returned to Ottawa Friday night. HUNTING FATALITY SPRINGHILL. N. S. Dec. 14 - (CP)- Gary Coon, 15. died in hos- pital Saturday a few h0uJ's after he was shot in the stomach while target shooting with a companion. It is believed Coon stepped in (prince-size delicate cigars! on a a visit to Denmark and took a fancy in them. l front of the target when his D31 pulled the trigger. An inquest will be held tomorrow. Radiation Touches Off , Alarm At Atomic Plant CHALK RIVER. Ont. 14--(CF) --An atmospheric quirk nnd a pin-point hole in Canada's atomic pile were blamed for evacuation of the ntnmlc energy plant here Friday because of excessive rad- latlon. Dr. C. J. Mackenzie. president of Atomic Encrizy of Canada. sairl the atomic reactor maybe out of opt-ration for some time. Other operations at the 340,000,000 plant 140 miles northwest of Oil- awa won't. be dclnyed as long. About 350 workers were evac- uate-rl Friday when 100 alarm sir- ens sound:-d the warning that al- omic particles were present. in dangerous proportions. No on- wax injured. Conditions seemed normal Saturday but a careful instrument check continued. Dr. Mackenzie said a pin-polnb size hole in the reactor caused greater-than-usual radiation to escape up the mo-font-high slacks which carry off radiation. The heavy overcast and humid- iiy kept the atomic cloud from dispersing as it normally does. A down-draft brought it down about the plant site. Instruments detected the immediately and the alarm ens sounded. Workers and scientists left the plant's 100 buildings in an order- ly manner. Decontamination squads. equip- ped with goggles, rubber gloves. lcnd-soled shoes and rubberized clothing, had cleaned up the plan! area by Saturday noon. Dr. Mackenzie said decontam- inntinn of a seriously-affected area means a thorough scrubbing of exposed surfaces. The atomic reactor where the leak occurred is considered to he the most efficient heavy-water reactor in the world. It is a boiler-like structure 84 feet high and 34 feel in diameter coated in lull. its concrete walls are seven feet thick ' cloud air- Says Blotked Deal With Small Oil Companies By Marc Purdue T!!l'i-IRAN. Iran. Dec. 14 -(AP)-- A high Iranian government official in a bristling parliamentary address today blamed most of Iran's woes on a policy "imposed" by the State Secretary Dean Acheson. lie said American sympathy for Iran in the bitter oil dispute with Brit- ain had been nullified by Aclicsoiils actions. Hussein Makl. secretary-general of Premier Mohammad Mossadeghls National Party. accused Acheson of blocking all Iranian steps in rem- edy the situation. lie charged i Acheson prevented prospective 1 American ciustomcrs from buying l Iranian oil and acted under the in- fluence of the big American com- : panles wliich. he said, are members .of an international cartel of five I American and two British firms. Iixpecis No Change Deputy Speaker Seyid Ahmad Razavl asked how Maki Nould ex- pect a change in American policy under the new government since the same big companies supported President-elect Eisenhower. Makl replied that he had no ex- pectations the new U. S. govern- ment would do anything in Iran's favor. He said Iran must attempt to make its nearly bankrupt econ- omy lieaithy without all income. "Damnvthe oil which jeopardized our independence. What we want from Democrats or Republicans is only that they should not co-oper- ate with British policy." Makl recently returned from the United States in an apparently un- successful attempt to interest smaller oil companies in buying oil. Local newspapers have quoted him as saying that he had docu- mentary proof ihat the l'. S. Stare Department aided the fall of the Mossadegh regime last July when Premier Ahmed Qavam ruled brief- ly. After.three days of bloodyriot- mg Qavam quit and Mossadegh again took up the reins. U. S. Denial The U. S. embassy yesterday in- sued a denial. saying: "The gov- ernment of the United States... had no connection whatsoever with the events of July in Tehran." In his speech today. Maki said he had been misquoted to the effect that he had documentary proof, but he had "reasons" for his al- legations. 'On his recent trip, he said. he obtained information in Texas that Acheson had "instructed" Texas oil engineers and other technicians in leave for Abadan immediately after Qavam became premier. Abadan is Iran's big oil refinery centre. "This shows Churchill and Acheson were collaborating :0 bring Qavam to power", he told the deputies. FIND MISSING YOUTH PICTOU, N. 5. Dec. 14 -(OP)-o The body of 15-year-old James Landry, missing for nearly a week, was recovered from Plctou Harbor Saturday a short distance from his home. An inquest returned a verdict of accidental drowning. HALIFAX. Dec. 14 -(opt; of- flcial forecasts issued tonight by the Dominion Public Weather or- Iioe here and valid until midnight Monday. synopsis: some light snnwflur- rias or rainshowers may develop on Monday but for the most P873 the weather is expected to remain fine. Regional forecasts, valid until midnight Monday: Prince Edward Island-Varilblo cloudiness. snowflurries in widely scattered localities. continuing very mild. Light winds. low and high Monday at Charlottetown II and 30. High tide today at Charlottetown at 0.41 A. M. and 8.35 P. M. High tide on the North Shore at 4.41 A. M. and 3.59 P. M. summerslde tide eighteen min- utes later than 'Charlot.tcmwn. sun rises today at 1.44 A. M. and sets It (.32 P. M- it -3 .4. ..-.4.-a-....