MAXIMS 01A 3 MERE MAN Den y I; 3 wyalun of thought even sronothan e lllllnl 09 80'- Read by Evybody ,MAxlMs I OFA MERE MAN A man is rich In proportion to the number of things he can afford to gnment. . let alone. . Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew --------i "r The Guardian. rm Cute 5, cu-rIIl'l Charlottetown, in-wmuiide 010.00 per aannm. liaewltau visions and U.8.A. 812.00 per annals! -. in P.B.l. 39.00. Other - CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. FRIDAY, AUGUST 28: 1953 14 PAGES Morning Daily Founded 1311. WORKING MODEL OF GUIDED MISSILE TESTED IN CANADA Prospector Charged With Death OF Hunters 1,000 Homeless, Heavy Loss In Freak Rain Storm In Rome (Reuters)-Blinding rain pounded the Eternal. City Thurs- day, flooding low-lying sections. breaching the ancient wall of Val- ican City and killing "V0 DEY5'3l'l-1 The violent cloudburst lasted two hours. when the sun came out 1.- 000 families were homeless and 50 persons were injured. The two dead were killed by fallins 1335' onry. . A 100-foot section of the tower- ng "Leonlhe Wall" crashed. tak- mg with it part of the gardens RAUME. where the Pope takes his dailY constitutional. Romels 2.000-year-old drains- .'or which citizens may a special sewer tax-could not cope with the hater gurgling down from the sev- on hills on which the city stands. I".l'f'll the main "Clones. Maxims." has clogged with debris. Cellars and first floors were flooded. mud 9 plastered everywhere. thousands of nllclr-rit paving stones torn up. l'cpc At Summer Home The Pope watched the freak vnrm from his mountain summer home at Castelgandolfo, 12 miles south of the city. in underground garages. rushing miter crashed parked cars one into the other. Above. the muddy swirl -ddled through the glass fronts of 'llfflS. bars. barber shops and lnated out the furniture. Big forces of firemen saved the Vatican art museums from dam- lgc. but the famous piauas be- Tilnll? like lakes, with water drib- lv' 2:310 historic churches and is great church of Saint ll 2 . o, built two years ago by -I0'l.tl00.000 Rormn catholics all over thr world to celebrate ths.50th an- niversary of the 's ti . nuddy water labia” "'at"pIgli"0uetqsnl- aroldered altar cloth. Filth covered the rich marble floor. For five hours Rome was cut off 'mm the rest of Italy and the rm-ld by telephone or telegraph. I"l'Jl2lld were up to three hours late. Coming Events "Drince. Cardigan Head School. Friday. August 28th. "See "Come to the stable" at Klnkora tonight. "Dance. 1-iowe's Hail, Brackley fir-sch. Friday night. "Dance at Gordon Lodge every Friday night. "Dance. South Melville School, Friday, August 28th. "Dance Sl.C;eTer's Boy Holy Name Hall Tuesday. Burns' Or- Hhvstra. "Memorial service will be held a! Cenotaph, Cornwall, 2:30 p.m Sunday. Aug. 30th. Guest speakers. every Friday night, ice Hall. Canteen ser- tetoninns Orchestra. "Unloading car Bran. Thursday and Friday. good price off car. Ellis Bros. Dial 3223. "Dance South Rust vice. Charlo "Special Meeting Abegwelt R. B P. Kingston, Friday. August lath. 2nd and 3rd Degrees. "iiineo and Dance In Little Pond Hall. Monday, August am. Janclng from lo till 12.30. Lunches. finance. st. Peters Bay Holy lime Hall. Friday. August alth. Tom 9.30-1. Chaisson's orchestra. "Queen's County Plowing Match fnrvinm and Committees will meet Hllllzlllst ztlth. 8.30 P. M. Pownal fl . "ll-Int your nh-nd-c.-at my office for 3"-Eiom combining with an up-lo- MI 6 machine. Phone I-2. E. J. liwouesii. Vernon. . n 'Pantry Sale. Saturday after- ci;1""v M-Igilst 20th. at Fennell and w””i”f'-1'5. for the Mount Albion omens institute. Mglzltigsaitalreladncs, Beaver Hall. I IV. A1131!!! Nth. glilgvnwwnen orchestra. Dancing - to 12.30. Admission 00 cents. M"Annunl Sunday school Flcnlc w”:3I.Vde River Presbyterian Church Au be held Saturday aftsmoon. mi 2901. at nrackley Beach ,,j;3h;v:ixw It so. stwut may Wm ,,, reader; the talk- ' "N0 is the official mascot of Charged In Death Of P. E. I. Man Al Ilalifax man. Thursday when he in connection with the death 0 James Condon, 62. a. native 0 Little Pond, P.E.I.' later of the car which struck Lh Pier night. route tn hospital. Mau Mau Terror 'May Be At End pelgn may have reached an end. Dedan Kimathi says in e. lette published in the Swahili languag newspaper 1-labara Za Dunia: "In order to bring back peac and to make a new Kenya. I hav instructed all war lenders in til forest not to fight again after Aug ust. 1953." It was learned that in leaflets dropped by air over th forests. No Marker Al level Crossing TRURO 1GP) -An RCMP poral testified COT Thursday this crossing where seven on a lonely country rcnd me here Wednesday night. Cpl. R. Copeland said at the in quest that lights. wig-wag or marker to indi cate that it railway crossed lonely country road. lor, 15. of ”"lro. Sylvester Mccallunl said gess. his neighbor. law not drinking man. Bonk ltobbery At Tonenltom. Ontario the Royal ed an estimated 12,600. 'Ilcttenha.m is northwest of Toronto. Iy IYDNIY CAMP'Bl.L' , LONDON. (Reuters) -- Business under the new International Wheat Agreement improved slightly dur- ing the week ending Aug. 21 but sales still remain extremely low. Salsa notified during the week totalled'5.lI0.000 bushe' . The only appreciable business was 0.000.000 bushels of United states wheat. to Japan. 1.010.000 bushels of Austral- ian to Ceylon and 300,000 bushels of Canadian to Belgium. The week's total is better than the previous week's also of only rsspondl week last year sales were assoomo bushels. excluding , football team. Britain-which is not a. member HALIFAX. (OP)-Murray Wart- an 18-year-old high school student, was placed on 31,000 ball appeared in court charged with manslaughter Police say Wartman was oper- 9 watchman late Saturday Condon died of injuries en The case was continued to Sept. NALROBI, Kenya, (Reuters)-A the letter. dated Aug. 14. is similar to one sent to Governor Sir Evelyn Baring re- cently altering. surrender on cer- tain tetins. The Kenya government and security forces last. week issued surrender terrna to the Mau Mau there wasn't a marker at the level! persons! were killed in s. train-car collisicnldeath of Richard Lindsey and Fred the crossing had no the A Dominion Atlantic Railways; than 0, Rodney, 5. and Heather, 3, and their niece, Margaret Tay- Bur- I 'I0'I'IENHltM. Orltl, (GP)-Three men armed with Lugers robbed Bank of Canada here Thursday, provincial police report- roilce said the bandits fled with about 40 miles s,m,ooo bushels. nut in the cor- importers Preliminary Hearing Set For Today: ' By BENRARD DHFRSSNE Canadian Press Stan Writer G-ASIPE, Que. (OP)-A burly, 3'1-year-old prospector has been charged with the murder of one of three American bear-hunters who died in the Quebec wilds. The charge of murder was laid Thursday against Wilbert Coffin of nearby York Centre shortly after he was held criminally responsible hunters. whose bear-devoured re- mains were found July l'l in the Gaspe mountainous wilderness, 65 miles west of here. Coffin is charged specifically with the murder of 11-year-old Richard Lindsey of I-lollldaysburg. Pa. He was also held criminally responsible for the death of 20- yenr-old Fred Clear. No mention was made of Eugene Lindsey. father of Richard, whose remains were also found. Cause of his death was listed earlier as "un- known." will Be Arraigned Today Coffin will be arraigned today in Pierce, Que. 52 miles away. The preliminary hearing will start immediately after the ss- raignlment before Magistrate Jos- I' f 8 letter from a Mau Mau leader to eph Duguay. a. newspaper here Thtu-sday indi- About 40 witnesses are expected cates the native terrorists cam- to be called at the preliminary hearing which is expected to last until Friday evening. Dr. Lionel Rioux. district coron- er, signed a warrant for Ccl'fln's arrest immediately after the cor- oner's court jury returned its de- clslon. Coffin has been held about three weeks by provincial police as 0. material witness in the case. Capt. J. Alphonse Matte. of Que- bec provincial police. who headed the investigation, served the at- rest. warrant on coffin who- sat in a squad car outside the half- nlled parish hall where the in- quest was held. Did Not Testify Coaln. believed the last man to have seen the hunters alive. June 10, did not testify although he did so at the coroner's inquest a month ago. The six-man coroner's Jury after hearing 11 witnesses and deliber- ating 47 minutes, returned the fol- llcwlng verdict: I "On the basis of evidence and texhlbits presented our verdict is that Wilbert Coffin be held re- sponsible in connection with the I' I 6 O C B rIClaal'." The verdict was read by W. 1-1. Annett. the jury foreman, before a hushed crowd of about 200 per. sons, some tourists. others resi- dents of Gaspe. At. the earlier inquest. July aft. -ircrjntiinued on pirfge-5-Icortlly for the deaths of two of the three ' ”Moeting with His Majesty King Gustav of Sweden and railway station in Stockholm was the big event of my trip overseas," was the comment of Sgt. W. Allan Massey in speaking of his tour of Great Britain and parts of the continent of Europe on his return home last evening. He is shown above enjoying this exciting ex- perience. Allan and his travelling pal, Plat Shields of Vancouver were notified at breakfast that the King was on the premises and had expressed the wish that the Calla"'N I: 5 be presented to him. have other features, both pleas- ing and amazing were the fluency with which English is spoken by everyone and the abundance and variety of excellent food in Swed- Chltown Cadet Chats With King Gustav At Stockholm chattlngl with him quite informally at that on. Enquiry revealed that study of English in the grammar .schqols is compulsory. I An American cadet from each of. the states Tennessee, Nebraska,' South Dakota. Georgia and Min-I. lnesota and one from England and iNol-them Ireland were on the trip to Europe. all of whom were set down before the Canadian boys who were enabled to touch on Holland, Norway and Denmark be- 'fore dlsembarking in Sweden. I "All endless chain of sight-soe- .ing tours. visits to aircraft factor- Iies and defence installations wasy punctuated by dinners and ban-I quets," said Sgt. Massey. Notable places visited included Grlpsholm hm mmg experiment Has m test lone of these. There may be later Castle, Bremmn Airport. Kalvsvik where the party embarked on at ! contlnwued "or? Paie"5'c6175 Ontario Truck Strike Settled TORONTO. (CF)-Labor Minis- ter Daley of Ontario late Thurs- day announced settlement of the Southwestern Ontario truckers strike. A tentative agreement be- tween the 36 trucking companies and 1,500 members of the Team- sters' Union (AF'Ll will go before the union membership for ratifica- tlon. Mr. Daley said agreement. has been reached on all matters at issue. He did not elaborate There were reports the trucks would be running again Thursday night. passenger train on route I'it'l'ei .. from Kentvllle, N. 8.. rammed intol the late-model car as rain fcll and darkness was falling. Witnesses said the victims and , parts of the car were strewn .on! both sides of the track. Killed were six of a family of. 11 and I. niece. They were Mr.I and Mrs. Murray Burgess of T” nearby Beaverbrook. and their four children. Geraldine 11. Es- u:f,SI.l,:' 1-;,,I;lge,ll:.' year-old New Yorker, flew non- In a tiny single-engined plane. Mrs. I-fart arrived here after a 13 1-2 hour flight from at. John's. Nfld. With her was 30-year-old Wayne Vietterloin of Shawnee-om Delaware. Pa.. her navigator. As she stepped out of her little green and white Beechcrafi, Mrs. Hart. said: "I feel a bit shaky and everything is rocking." After drinking a large Scotch whiskey, she said: "Now I feel much better." A aportawornan and author, Mrs. Hart has been flying for nine years. In 1930 she crossed the Pacific in a small sailing craft. Vstterleln. a Pan-American Alr- Slight Improvement Is Noted In Wheat Sales of the new agreement. . g The United states has so far sold 12.006000 bushels. Mmliared with 02,075,000 bushels excluding Britain a year ago. Canadian sales are 10,740,000 bushels com- pared with 40,000,000 buoheis and Australian 4.076.000 huahela against la,coo,ooo. sixteen of the Cl member im- porting countries have still tostart their purchases under the new agreement and most of the others have no far bought little. Coun- tries which have to date bought nothing include the two biggest , Germany and India. though Germany bu Inca been reported inquiring about 11.3. stop across the Atlantic Thursday. wheat under the anoelnuat. Woman Flies Atlantic ways pilot, said Mrs. Hart was "a wonderful pilot." "Did you see the perfect.'three- point landing she made?" he ask- ed. Mrs. Hart told reporters she is thinking of flying sol to Africa or India. she kept in touch with weather ships during her flight. by short- range radio. She made the crossing one hour betlind schedule. Mrs. Hart said they had most perfect conditions" for the trip. "There was at bright moon all during lhe night and we could see the Atlantic clearly.” she said. Mrs. Hart said they were so 'ex- cited during the crossing that they forgot to eat. "We still have the sandwiches and coffee with which we set out," she added. "the Joked with Linen Vettorleln told how thby joked on the plane radio with passing transatlantic liners. He said: "You should have heard their surprise when I ,loklngly.told them we were on our last engine. "To one airliner pilot who asked our speed. I said, 120 knots'. To which he replied, "Are you on a scooter? He was a colleague of mine flying a Stratocruiscr to New York." Mrs. Hart intends to remain here overnight before flying to the continent. She will be completely on her own then and will have to act as navigator and pilot because Vettt-rlein must be back to work in the U. 5. Tuesday. G-LAC! BAY. N5.. (OP)-Among the many swordfish being brought in by the flailing fleet in August was one giant weighing Mopounds. Local dealers were paying about Haounlaaooundtomsrnn. Old CN R Roundhouse Now To Be Demolished I I I house at the foot of Prince Street which has rapidly fallen into disre- pair since abandoned as a going concern by the Canadian National Railways is to be demolished forth- with. according to official inform- ation received by Mayor J. D. stew- art yesterday. . Negotiations have been carried on for several weeks between May- or Stewart and Railway official-5 at Moncton with a VIEW to elimin- ating the building if no furtner use could be made of it by the railway, in order that the resident- ial outlook in that vicinity be im- proved. The negotiations were broullm I9 la successful conclusion yesterday when Mr. G. 1:. smith. Regional Manager. Real Estate Department of the C.N.R. advised Mayor Stea- art. of the decision to demolish the building. which has not been necessary for the tumina Of 10”” WASHINGTON. (AP)-President Eisenhower provided 2 vi d e n c c Thursday that the United States has decided to assist-with dollars and political support-Iran's new anti - Communist, anti - Moesadegh government. Such a decision has been rumor- ed here the last day or so and it is expected to result In early. for- mal assurances to Premier Fasci- lah Zahedi that he can count on 11.8. financial help in the near future. This should enable the Iranian government to meet its most. prea- sing financial problem, which in! payment of army and civil servlcei salaries and some debta owed to; army suppliers. Scotland Yard To Study U. 5. Methods LONDON. tkeuiersi A veteran Scotland Yard detective will go to the llniled States next week to learn how to fight vlce- Amerlcan style. The home office announced the 60-year-old detec- flve. Command:-r Ernest Cole, will study anti-x-loo methods In New York. Chicago and other Ameri- can cities. a working model of Canada”.- to-air guided missile and later nn-.IHHn9i' noilllced Thursday that the radar-IRCAF has-r took nil imm nearbyi guided weapon has testedisi. Hubert last '"hui'SClR.V on previously in Canada. and previous tests was lifted enough to disclose a facts. The model was here as part of a series of designed and built in Canada. is being developed for by the Defence Research Board andlHubnrt, so officials there got the National Research Council. g I The fact that Canada has been T-33 made the flight here in been minutes. It took off again within gov- , emmenf. decision last year that Canada was build- ing a missile for use against en-lKorl-all 21 might attack Was Firedllrom Sabre Iel Near Ottawa OTTAWA (CP)-Scientists fired been The secrecy which cloaked few flrcd Built in Canada The experimental missile engaged in such work has known for some time. The announced ll emy bombers who... from the north. Dr. 0. M. Salandt. Ill an interview months. Thursdayls firing place near Winchester. Ont, miles southeast of Ottawa. Fired from Sabre Jet The missllv was fired from I air-. this only bare all Ul';ZDIlI l'('qUPSI lDl' all unspeci- ll('.'llt sum 3-year-old boy was cilllerl on the RCAF base at If. Hubert. the RCAF. There were no Jet aircraft at St. .) cllairman of me the Defence Research Board, snld that others have been fired in this area in recent look 35 H Uet Trainer Carries Drug lilo Afilicted Boy In Sisitlutag MONTREAL ICP)-A 'r-as Ietlf Belfast District from Chatham. N. .B., only two candidates nominated 10 save the life of am Fourth Queens District on in Summerslde.INomination Day yesterday. The ,Wlth no commercial flights until by-election was made necemary in ilate Thursday night, the firm order to fill the Provincial Legis- St. lature vacancy caused by the nam- .in; of former Premier J. Walter to the Canadian Senate. ini The official Opposition. the Pro- thelgressivc Conservatives, did not 55'name a candidate in the tradit- Iional Liberal stronghold. 15 minutes for Sulnmerside. I Nominating were Mr. H. P. Smith. Piloting the jet were F0 S B. Pnlmal. Liberal. Mid M1 L90 4Bl'llcei Fleming. 29-year-old cx- Praueht. Cherry Valley. Independ- Cb r;-am Montreal, ;mi1jentFarmer. The returning officer at imeiry flight to Summersldc. P. E) Island. - . A Montreal drug flrln recrlvedl : fled drug itoucli with Chatham and 'Flt. Lt. Johnny Ursulak. 2s. otgis Sheriff John Benton. South Porcupine, Ont. Both are 30th CPHGAGEABS 319 W911 k"0Wn lnslrucloxg M cmmmm, in the district where they operate lrxtensive farming interests and L-0l"1l3 T130 I81 Plane arrived where they have resided mom of with the drug at Summerslde air-lzheir llvgs, iport at 7.04 p. m. and left at 7.15, My, smith has a large properly ll. m. standard time for its homefor mixed farming and also has n. lm.-e at Chntham. herd of 26 cattle. He has been at iThe afflicted boys name is longtime member and officer of Charlns Patrick Glazncr, son nfime Queen's County Liberal Asso- FO Jack Glilznor of V0:-n:m, B. C. Aeration. Mr. Praught also possesses iiabre 'jet fighter. No further 090 and Mrs. Glaznel: He was suffer a large property on which he me- lails lle”7,dl,5Cl”5,e.de , ling with a bowel restriction for cializes in the growing of turnips. , The mlsm” med mday HA5 5””,wl-rich he was operated on six days He is also a keen horseman and "I "I" dwcmpmem 51"” Dr:'a;:n' His condition in the mean- t:-;..r.s and drives trotters and ysolandt said. "T'1da)”s firing was time did not improve as aatisfach pacers. gm): of ills.-rte: of ICslishll'h1lCll h;lvo mm. as docmrs hwed and 11193, g, ni:m:'tihs1?, Me mm! 5 "52 ” ,wlred In Mnntrnal for the druiz, . T R '. . . . tl f which had not been He said an air-to-arr guldody,.g:,N?1:S?C O Russla 0 en..." missile must be developed by sug- rs and each stage must be trstrd sing.-s. Other Tests Planned , (Dr .Beer, the lads physician at GCHHCII PTISOHCTS 'the Prince County Hospital, saidv llllsl. night that the patients con- BERLIN. tneuiersi -The West: diilon is "just fair". ';BerIIn evening newspaper Nacht y -A fhespesche reported Thursday that; More Than 700,000 iRussia intends to return 5.000 Tests on guided missiles and .German prisoners of war this rockets are also planned at the year. flb f d "1 f I new armament range being dc- . It at rl -u e 0 repor o veloped in the Cold Lake area sotlrces inside the East German northeast of Edmonton, Alta. The a IUFPIBH 0””59- W959 Gum” range is expected to be in opera-: lion early next year. The air-to-air guided long range, all-weather ;nirrcnp- lnrs when they have been perfect- ed. . Want Pay For V t. T. The number of recipients last 0 month, by provinces: Newfound- land 15.155; Prince Edward Island 6.709; Nova Scotia 37,042; New 5mM(;I;'cE:'Ev'f:,l;;k:rCsPI,n thiorggoniEBruns'wick 25.931; Quebec 149,626; "El ladies. garmem mdusm,;Ontnrlo 260.039: Manitoba 41.914; should he paid for time takenlslwkmdwwnn 41566: Alberta 41" 2 from work Aug. 10 to vote in the. federal election, the Dress Manufacturers Guild has atl- vised its members. The guild earlier fold momhnr industries that .piare workorsl Seffle In T013 U.5.A. need not he paid for time. since, -.., ,. the guild said, pit-('5--wnrken were, not mentioned in the Elections Act. conference-if and when one is d n. .- re The llNls 60-country mmmlitee Thursday approved lil- stead it United States-backed plan limiting the peace WIl'lC) to the 10 nations which fought in Korea. plus Russia on the Cclnmuuist Slflv".;(llFfllll1f'fl to hazard a guess Vlshiusku I the chances of its success if thc:t And Russia's Andrei helped vote his country in on thriis one. Pilot Recuperating After 7-Day Battle In Wilds TELEGRAPH CREEK. (CF)-A bush-wise pilot was re- cuperating Thursday from a plane harmed when crash and a seven-day battle for survival In the wilds of northern British Columbia. l-lei-man Peterson. veteran bush pilot from Atlln. EC. staggered into the Dean Lake weather ata- tlou near here Wednesday night after hiking 75 miles through mountainous, heavily-timbered country from his wrecked plane. Peterson's llghtl plane vanished Aug. 20 on a flight from here to Itowsrt. l.C. 120 miles north .of missiles The obsolete umighm, Roundaare expected to be fitted in CF-100 l.lul)', I 1621 Montreal ' kon and Northwest Territories 459. i Ex-Kin:Zog :l'o CEIflR(llRll'hI Albania has his villas in Cairo and Alexandria polllhzli drawn hnggle like the Panmunjomi I armistice negotiations. ' B Cqlllliln-reililiipcri. authorities claim more than 100.- 000 German prisoners remain in Russian hands. OTTAWA, (CP) - The number of Canadians receiving the Fed- eral Government's universal cid- lage pr-nslnns topped 700.000 In the Health Department said Tlltlrsdny. A total of 701565 persons In July received the 540 monthly cheques which are paid to those '10 and over. Payments now total more than 028,000,000 :1 month. i No Foaci: zonal.-a , file Ponce or. I British Columbia 81,912; Yu- illeuivrsi Ex-kingzog derided to close F.-'tIRi7. motives the use of deamng pug The guild announced ils nag. no.1 and settle. down in the United ,, V 7 g W"& M We the W” 095"” ?”"i' lI””?..iI"f33;I'ir".i.3”?LlT...:l..LllIi'i.”.3”3a..-"'5ri.fI”lL"l .r5t'-I hi?” TORONTO. icvi - Minimum MM have been replmed by dlescl Iacdnies Garment Workers llnion llnsl r-his ithrnnr lilo" fl1'c'ng'CI(I)m:jAaIId maximum Iemmmlurni dl-liven motorized Equlpmmt lvfnsl lmemhrr firms had not. paid A nllrnixlu has already bought anl Ml"' M”' The Rmmdhmlu was the cam”? Alecc workers I 'NI'll!'l. 1 home . DMVW" ” 51 of general activity on I 24 110”? ll ',, .jn,..:,.” ,,,, V,f,,,,g ymwrm 51 -,,n, basis for half a. Nnttlalryl as goco- . . . Edmomon " 51 62 motives were cons nly ring Cl , 47 as in Indla Falls To Wm Place .2522” 2 order by the mechanical staff. Wmmmg g y 59 at I-.-:ACCC..-C TnrnnM 70 95 - At Peace Conference at as . . 0 ' hionrtrcal M o o 1 illnd side after failing to get a 3:?”-"Mhn :37 G7 I By H. L. Jones ' lstralgllt UN lllvltall'oll. Wlmmnn 52 H5 Canadian Press Staff llriivr I But as the political rnlllil1il'.I:Pi' mu, ' M g , . ,, It ' To UNITI-TD fx'ATlONS. N. Y., icr.g::":m.1;f Lglpglllscrt:;:i(?harlnliclol-lin 5: ' . -India has failed to muster en-.viigLl,d;w, me belief seenmi to be g;-otr.i:,;?;:::lx'h its 67 "'”' United Nations support to win her- lug alnnmz l'N diplomats Lhnl, . ' ' ' g. BY JOHN MA HIGKTOWER self it place at the Korean peace illerr may never be it Korearl,s" John 5' Nnd' 46 peace conference. and if there is: HxL1F.Rx-T6,?) g It Wm M 1: may llll'n out to be another lone,-iploudy Wlm scanned shnwe" av" the Maritimes Friday, the Weath- er Office says. one hlnlily-placed observed said. Rmmnal (ennui, there is now but a ”50-50 t-.hancn”I , I , that ii Nlnfcrcncr will he held. Hr rrm" Emu"! 1'l"'d' cloud,” " mymiliir-rul showers Friday: not tmuch changn In temperature: light winds; lmv-hlgh at Charlottetown .55 and 08. Eastern New Brunswick coun- ilies, lower St. John river valley: Overcast: cloudy with widely acal,- Flernrl showers Friday; continuing moi. Light winds; low-high at Mohclon and Fredericton 50 and 60. Saint John 55 and 65. Umwr St. John river valley. Bay ynf Chalaur: Cloudy with widely ,scatterod showbfsz Fonilnulnl cool: Peterson said he escaped un- vmlm winds. lowmgh 't Edmund. his DIR"! Cf!-"195 ston and Campbelilon 55 and 05. and managed to rescue a small my nf Fundy: Light winds; food package. He then started hik- llll through the bush. Woalllrr siatlnu officials report- ed Prtorsrlll has ”nono the worse for wear” from his ordeal. Pt-tcr.-oil's victory over the BC. wilds spurred the big search un- derway lit the same area for New Mexico ollman Ellis Hall, his wife, two daughters and a family friend. shore 0.28 A. M. and 03! P. M. missing for to days on a fllaht, sun rises today at 0.30 A. M. and from Alaska to seiiinalmn. warhlnels at are r. M. ' nverrast with fog patches; wide- ly scattered showers about noon .Frtda3; visibility in miles. lower- jlng in near" It-rn in fog patches; ltempr-ralurr near 60. High iide today at Glarottotowr. at 12.0! A. M. and 1.30 P. I. High tide today It the North