T TELEPHONE 8506 Buyer meets seller with Guardian ‘vii’;-'stAds. Dhllflaskforchnh om .@IUIfltfilJiflM “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” WEATHER Sunny except for afternoon cloudlnefl: much oolder; west winds 25- low-ilslfi at Charlottetown 5 and 20. Tu. PAGES Trouble In “Brain t‘Al’l-.‘ C.-\.‘\'AVERAL. Fla. TAP) miles above the earth's surface - could stay up for a year. calcula- tions indicate. The lower the satellite stays aloft. The calculations on a satellite‘: life are based on the density of the atmosphere at various heights. Even.the extremely thin air at a height of 300 miles would 9"" ¢"0Uilh drag on a satellite to slow it down and end its car- er in the ion run. The scheduled zero hour for the fort to give the Russian Sput- ni an American companion 5 a.m. Wednesday. but the navy source’ said it is doubtful the. fir- ing will come off at that early hour. He suggested “tempt to propel an American bgby moon into space. An informed U.S. Navy source uid technicians are rking around the clock to clear the bugs out or the second stage. which ,,(,u.o< the control and guidance svstciiis of the 72-foot rocket. This stage has not been tested prev- iou<l_\ . He described the trouble as "static" in the electronic system. Unless eliminated. he said. this could cause the rocket to wobble in night and force its destruc- tion Wednesday might be a better “it we can lick this problem 3“9S9—ll 3-119 3130011118 Is to occur we think we've got it made." he "1 48 said “if the second stage works mi-rectly. the chances of getting the satellite into orbit are very at y. Weather conditions will have an important bearing on the firing me. The navy source said wind more than 10 miles an hour "COUM live us trouble.” ‘Hie U.S. weather bureau at Ml- ami forecast that winds might be more than 10 miles an hour. It said winds for the Cape Cana- veral area at 5 a.m. Wednesday should be moderate easterly or -wlheastcrlv up to 15 miles Later the winds may strengthen, a spokesman added. . If the grapefruit-sized satellite In the nose cone of the Vanguard is hurled into orbit, it will go aloft lust two months to the day after‘ ussia sent up Sputnik l. Sput- nik II with its dog passqiger good In Washington. the defence de- partment has emphasised there is no certainly the first sphere to be fired will start circling the earth ~ Putting the satellite Into orbit "is not the prime purpose of e test but of course such a result aould be welcome because of additional data which could be gathered." the department said. The test is intended primarily to try out the complete launching equipment and to gather perform- ance data. A 58191111! D00 is an orbit 300 anranetaaeusoeaaaaaulanaytasrasosa. Depart.-as.ottaws Vanguard height, the shorter the tuna the into N Delayf Satellite Firing was launched Nov, 3. The U’ ped to broadcast signals back to the earth and. enable American moon watchers to keep track of their progress through the skies. They will not be visible to the naked eye. When the 72-foot. 22.000-pound Vanguard blasts oft fromthia mis- ls sile test centre. thousands of resi- dents of this boo defence area will be able to see it from the he dies. Reporters also likely will have to see it a take pictures of it inside the test centre itself. Powered by the tint stage, the massive rocket will rise straight upward. then begin a slow tilt into the intended orbit angle.. If the skies are clear. it still be visible when the first stage burns out about 36 miles above the earth. 5 on '< If all goes well. the first stage will drop to the ocean about 230 miles out to sea. The second . stage. igniting immediately. will ‘drive the satellite to an altitude of about 140 miles. From there its velocity should carry 1 on up to soo miles. The third stage then will go. in operation and release the beeping satellite orbital speed f Iboutl-8.w0miloasnlTour. 0 - 8l00.w0.000 with a suggestion from the beaches instead of from gm Ask Conciliation Board In Rail, Union Dispute MONTREAL (CP) — A federal conciliation board was requested Monday as 15 nonoperating ini- ions terminated negotiations with six railways and a railway ex- press agency. . The unions said he railways totalling a than sh; expiring two-year contract be ex- tended a year. Frank Hall of Montreal. chair- were _‘‘completely sterile." committee wired Labor Minister Starr for a conciliation board. thus fulfilling expectations the n gotiations would be fruitless. The unions submitted demands Nov. 12 which included a wage P803889 of about 35 cents an hour. an eighth statutory holiday, establishment of severance pay, Proved paid vacations and in- creased company contributions to a health-welfare plan. The Canadian Pacific and Ca- nadian National Railways. main ones involved. had called the "Shocking" and irresponsible. Mr. Hall said their suggestion for a one-year extension of the con- tract was based on their finan- cial situations. WOULD BE .50 HOURLY They said the increase would amount to another 50 cents an “P-t-‘he average hourly wage now is about 8l.63——g.nd 3|] .3. Killed In Full Mid-East Talks Move Slowly A.\f!\fAN. Jordan tAPi._s¢ci-e. tary-General Dag kjold of the United Nations emerged grim faced from his final meet- ins Monday with Jordan officials. A communique Indicated he has made little headway in his new quest for Jordan-Isr '1-Cary.’ acting UN tnice chief. who lives in the d role in the dispute has b e e is strongly criticized by Jor- n. The Israeli officials ‘say Boa- on N J rd declar th t result< ‘bf atlwo dgygfllgnn u M. far short of what the ex- taiacludelsasollaoln C Perl . f ilammarskjold is far from fin- es spin l“"°d- l'°W¢V¢I'- ieged violations of the demllttar. ized area for a decade. Hammarskjold went into the talks with Jordan officials as the Jordanians got new support from Esvpt in the quarrel with Israel. NASSEB STEPS IN Obviously no (I e c I s I o II was reached in the dispute over Is- rael s insistence on sending a sup- N." "°nV0y to Mount Scopus. an Israeli area reached only by trav- inflsmed Israel - Jordan had a new promise of full :IIDport from Egypt in the quar- TELL OP "DIFI-‘ICULTlES" The communique said: Dicussion of specific issues on the agenda has also covered diffit-iilties which have recently ll'I<f‘n in connection with convoys lo \lnunt Scopus. "The views of the government 3! the Hashemite Kingdom rordan having been fully clari- “_‘d. the secretary - general now Will undertake further steps to re- Iolve the problem." ll" Israel. Hammarskjold will Ill: (lllllih Pri.raneFMinister David .,u 0 . . coma Morris oreign Minister thl\i‘at'|i officials said. however, ‘' -““'rG8TY - general first will 0, now are banded together in the Egypt’: President Nasser gave Jordan's Hussein a brotherly pat on the back with a promise of “full spport" in the. Says Eisenhower Will Not Resign MONTREAL (CP) - Governor re McKeldin of Maryland. says President Eisenhower “will not resign unless he is physically incapable 1! running his office properly." ~ The governor, in Montreal to ad- dress the Council of ichristians and Jews, told report- ers ay: “As a military man Mr. Eisenhower realizes the sa- credness of discharging his du- ties. He realizes the burden o presidency and its heavy respon- sibility in this troubled.world." "He will as a lad resort . . . he is completely dedi- natadJa wcltpace and to his paopia and his coun . , The Maryland Republican said there is erfui movement to nominate vice - president Rich- dency. FIND HOWE JOB MONTREAL ICP) — Rt. Hon. C. D. Howe, trade minister in the former Liberal government. was elected a director of the Bank of Montreal at its annual meeting. Mount Scopus dispute. JAKARTA, Indonesia (Reuters) Indonesia Monday put into effect a widespread campaign against th Dutch, former rulers of the 2.000 islands and islets which Indonesian republic. By order of the cabinet: 1. Dutch newspapers and mag azines were forbidden to publish. 2. Indonesia employees of dutch firms staged a 24 - boui- strike. - 3. KLM Royal Dutch Airlines was ordered to halt its five-times- weekly service to and from In- donesia. KLM has served the is- lfl with US. Marine Col. Byron Be Honored A TORONTO tCPi~—Rt. Hon. Ar- um’ Mflkhen. former plrme min-~ Ilter. will be honored tonight at ' ‘l"'”S'UP Canadian Club of Tor- "“'.‘° hirthd-y party at which the Pfl "'.'"_“D8| speaker will me llinister Diefenbak 9 0 M“ Mfllhen. now 03. has ""“‘d to meal: '‘If he feels "‘°“8lI." chrh . Pllllii said. Mr Ph'l :: club '2‘ said is been well M recent yeaas ""“°'| Churchill was so "N and last year it was Liv- :::'"0¢ enhaat. than on mmlmbasaador to Canada. Rt. Hon. Arthur Meighen Will -haillngR xha this most distinguished Canadian loll iaalau. Isl lm he i Club Tonight in 1955 at the age of at he finally retired as chairman'of Canadian General Securities Limited. a holding company with wide financial interests. Mr. Metghen first became Con- servative prime minister in 19!) the retirement of the late Robert Borden. on Sir FROM CIIURCEILI. TORONTO tCP)—s9lr Winston Churchill has sent a means to the Canadian Club of Toronto t. Hon. Arthur Meighea as "‘thls most distinguished Ca- tesman ‘' Churchill‘: message will be read tonight at the club's‘ Oth anniversary hi I! - dinner meeting will honor Mr. llatghen. former Canadian ma minister is his message Churchill RIG! ‘ "very warrntst ood ldI¢I"‘& and ' V "I waslvary glad to hear that to who.durln8 nwdlhls hntnaadfia ‘I'M Canadian Club honored auehillstiaitu-iytwoyunl as is anal amass: urb- Batl%dllnIfiiIl"‘ of shareholders Monday. lands since 1930. Opinion here is inflamed against the Dutch because The Nether lands r e f u se to give up sover- eignty over West Irisn —— Dutch West New Guinea. This territory of 16,000 square miles with T15,- 000 persons was retained by the and Nixon for the 1960 presi- C In Coal Mine SYDNEY MINES. N.s. (CPI ._ Joseph Gracie, 40- year -old fa. ther of 15 children. was fatally 1111 Monday when he at nearby Al- der Point. I5-Year-Old Retains Title Of Wheat King CHICAGO rCP)—Fifteen-year- f old Jerry J. Leiska of Beiseker. Aita.. retained the wheat king ehasnpionship for M day when he won the crown thettirdeonsacutlvayearatthe it-nadaaal Llvadock End- Leiske. the youngest winner the title in the history of the ax- position. sent in an entry of hinook ariety of hard spring wheat. .His triple win will entitle him to keep the trophy. which gen- erally changes hands each year. T reserve wheat king cham- pionship went to Ralph L. Erd- man of Barons. Alta.. the 1955 junior champion at the Interna- tional. Erdman showed durum wheat of Stewart variety. Indonesia‘ In Widespread Campaign Against Dutch assassination Saturday of Presi- dent Sukarno. The president and two of his children were uninjured when four grenades were buried at them. But nine persons were kil- led and 150 injured. Oll- for the Later, the government lbuse of leader. Works Mlnhiter Howard red of recent Diefenbaker said Monday his gov- ernment plans to propose "one or two" tax changes this session without presenting a formal bud- N 0 no His announcement in the Com- mons that there will be no budget uced a storm from the Oppo- sition parties. who called for a financial accounting to the Cana- dian peop e. ‘ Mr. Diefenbaker's statement came as he outlined a hefty list of government measures still to come before the current session which started Oct. 14. Later. the Commons agreed to lengthen its hours of sitting by arly 50 per cent—to 39 hours a week from the present 27.5—in a move to speed up the sessions] work. but not before the Social Credit party registered strong disapproval to doing it on an in- definite basis. A motion by Social Credit 5 0 leader Low that the extended hours of sitting should last :3 longer than Dec. 21 was defeat 121 to 21 in a vote which saw five Liberals side with the Social Credit group. Mr. Diefenbaker hinted that one of the proposed tax changes may involve the income tax. RECALLS LIBERAL ACT He noted that in December. 1947-—in the second session that Liberal governmenti had introduced tariff changes by motions, without a budget. “Insofar as changes in the in- come taxes are concerned. those changes could be made by no- tice." the prime minister said. The changes would be few and time available was brief. pvernaaant felt “that a for- mal budgd b not noouaag this tlma.". ' Green. said any change in the ex- cise tax on automobiles-subject ress reports-“will be announced just as quickly as pos- sible." Mr. Diefenbaker’s list of addi- tional government measures this session included a move to abol- Ish the Commons rule on closure of debates—a step he promised during the election campaign as a result of the former Liberal gov-i emment's use of closure to limit last year's pipeline debate. Later Lionel Chevrier, House leader for the Liberals. indicated his party may fight the move. He said it “could be of such a con- tentious nature as to take a great STUDIED SKITTERS OTTAWA (CF) —— Dr. C. R. Twinn. 60. head of the veterinary and medical unit of the agricul- ture department. is retiring at the end of the year. the agricul- ture department announced Mon-- day. Dr. Twinn. born in Eng and, joined cated power-irrigation introduced this agreement is reached with katchewan. Most of the other planned legis- lation he announced had been in- until bombers wo quently over lear spokesmen now produce as stock a n s w e r Thomas Power. chief of the air command. gave at a Paris press conference two weeks ago. He im plied that the U.S. has its planes loaded with n u c I e a r weapons. when he said they were "not car-‘ rying swords or bows and ar- rows " that agreement cated before including: I. Extension of the basis of fed- oral sharing of provincial unem- ployment relief costs. 2. A loan of up to 330000000 for New Brunswick’: Beechwood hydro project on the St. John River. 3. Federal construction of ther- power transmission lines in Nova Scotia Yank Planes Likely Carrying Nuclear Bombs Over Canada The United States Air Force just isn't saying today—or any other day—- whether its bombers mbs along with them when they fly over Canada. But the chances are that they have aboard on such missions a full complement of nuclear weap- ons. including H-bombs. Disturbed by the stir created in Europe over reports that U.S. aircraft fly aloft daily with H- hombs aboard. the air force has Thllli become more cautious than ever about divulging inf It the mov ' i-‘-11 its‘hlg defensive FLY OVER CANADA It will concede that B - 52 jet and other aircraft of the Strategic Air Command. the defensive force it maintains an a basis. do fly fre- Canada. but makes a big point of the fact the Cana- dian government always knows‘ about such flights power plants and WASHINGTON (CP) take ormation rld - wide As for H-bombs weapons. the air. It was that statement by P0 PEARSON T0 OSLO OSLO. Norway lReutersl—-I.es- ter B. Pearson. former Canadian external affairs minister. will ar- London, rive in Oslo Sunday to receive, the agriculture his Nobel peace prize. The prize S35- fl. n the payload bombers. big Launch Emergenc On Automobile Industry Government Plans Some Tax Changes This Session OTTAWA (CPi—Prlme Minister deal of the time of the House." FORESEES POWER DEAL The prime minister also indi- may be close with the Saskatchewan gov- ernment on sharing of costs of the South Saskatchewan River project. He said legislation for that project will be ' session. provided and New Brunswick. 4. Federal "adjustment graiits" to the four Atlantic pi‘()\'lnCOS to help offset their below - average economic position. Mr. Diefenbakc said that if there were time the (‘itizenship Act would be amended to remove 'discrimina!ion" ii at w e r n na- tural-born and naturalized Cana- dian citizcns involving loss of citi- zenship rights. . DUTIES UNDER STUDY Also expected to be lnlI‘()du('(‘d next session for passage—woul be a complete revision of the isuccession Duty Act The prime minister's long leg- ilslative list. and his announce- ment that there will be no bud- get. brought some protests from i0pposition members faced with the big increase in their working .hours. which touched off the outcry now being heard in London and con- tinental European cities over the possibility that nuclear - armed U.S. planes are aloft over popu- lated areas. The Strategic Air (‘ommand has three bases within easy reach of the Canadian border——at Lime- stone, Me.. on the wick border. at Rapid City. SD.. ut 300 miles south of Saskat- chewan. and at Spokane. Wash” lust below British Columbia. Britain To Cut NATO‘ Force slash her NATO force in West Germany to 50.000 men next year, despite objections from her allies. She now has 63.500 men there. But government officials said Britain may ma please her Atlantic Pact partners. this session — but held over to _ d New Bruns- LONDON (AP) —— Britain was reported Monday determined to e an effort to NOT MORE THAN FIVE CENTS y Debate P. M. Calls Move Liberal Trick; Discuss Layoffs 0'l‘TAWA '(‘l"l Paul Martin‘ Monday kicked off an eniei‘gcnr{v lComnions debate on unemp _v-‘ lmcnt in the automobile industry: fby asking the government to ‘make an immediate statement on what it plans to do about the 10- er-ccnt excise tax on new cars. Prime Minister Diefenbaker im- mediately replied that he could not give advance information on government taxation policy. add- ing . r. Martin knew I at At the night sitting. Revenue Minister George Nowlan said he has taken steps to ensure that if an excise tax reduction is made it "will be passed on to the car There was therefore ‘no reason in the world" auto manufacturers could not start rolling cars out to dealers at opce. Mr. Diefenbaker said the de- bate was "a subterfuge" to ob- tain indirectly information the government could not give di- rectly. Mr. Martin. Liberal member for Essex East. which embraces the Windsor, 0nt., automobile manufacturing centre, took strong exception “subterfuge." “Withdraw. withdraw." cried a chorus of Mr. Martin‘: Liberal supporters. Mr. Martin said the prime min- ister should be made to with- draw the remark. uttered twice by Mr..Diefenbaker. The prime minister refused to withdraw it. Speaker Roland Michener ruled the word is not unparliamentary. SINCLAIR SPEAKS UP The former Lib e r a I cabinet minister accepted this ruling. but James Sinclair IL — Coast-Capl- Ianoi. his desk-mate. interjected: "lie Diefenbaker) is a master of it (subterfugel him- se . The debate resulted from a mo- tl ' that the House suspend its normal business consideration of private mem- hers‘ resolutions — to debate a definite matter of urgent public importance: layoffs of auto work- ers. At Windsor. Chrysler Corpora- tion did not operate Monday and hourly - rated.employees will be off until Friday. Ford also closed sumes today down Monday, but production ro- I uith the qilestion ‘Whal mat- Ier"" Mr Martin replied "the C)u'l§O tax on automobiles." That did it. Another point of or dcr was raised. The mere men tion of the words. argued Justice Minister Davie Fulton, was am- ple evidence that the whole de- bate could not continue on such narrow rounds as unemploy- merit in the auto industry. ‘Not so. Speaker Michener said. It was not improper to mention the tax during the debate, or urge that there be changes. Mr. Martin said the situation. because it affects dealers across the country and suppliers of ma- terials to the car industry, is a national matter. QUOTES DIEI-‘ SPEECH He referred to a speech Mr. Diefenbaker made in Windsor during the election campaign and quoted the prime minister as say- ‘ e was elected a ses- called in Septem- ber to take steps to remedy the situation. The present session . 14. to the word ‘tut At the time, Mr. Martin said. 1.000 auto workers were without Jobs. Now. the number would be larger. following layoffs last week and this week by the big automo- bile manufacturers. Entering the debate after the dinner adjournment. Mr. Nowlan said he knows nothing about a cut in the excise tax. But since it was his depart- ment's duty to collect taxes, just on “speculation" he had investi- gated the possibility of refunding tax cuts to dealers with cars in stock. At first. Mr. Nowlan said. he was told this could not be done. But he had asked that the situa- tion be reviewed and finally was told that it could be. "If a tax reduction is made the __ reduction on that tax will bs~ on to ers and they will not be stuck for it again said. CAN BLAME LIBERAL? Mr. Nowlan said if any admin- istration is to blame for reported drying up of auto orders in an- ticipation of a tax cut. it is the ormer Liberal administration. It had twice cut the excise tax on 6 as they have been in the past.'‘‘ and other nuc- force the one Gcn. In a compromise plan, this coun- be ‘I M'mrs so far has not try is thinking of basing a‘st>e:ann0:1:1rCed 8%), layoffs. but over cial 5.000-man unit of its nationaltume work has ceased ‘lraheglc reserve in Germany’ The Ford workers return today This would mean the 5.000 l'i‘l(" mt Wednesday an estimated 1” "°"“’ be ‘‘’’‘°“ °‘‘‘ °‘ "ill" "°" ooo ' be laid off indefinitely. ‘ml “ml placed under Bmlsll C.°'." This will cut the companies work "°'- “'3' ‘.‘’°“‘‘l “"9 B'"‘“" 5 force to 6.800 in the Windsor dis- manpower in Germany number mot cars in recent years and had “stuck dealers with the losses every time." The dealers now had made up their minds they would not get stuck again. Hurricane Hits Hawaiian Is.; General Motors. Chrysler and Ford have announced production PROTESTS "(E VB" slowdowns affecting 16.400 work- . - A ers in Ontario plants at Windsor. 0 wifigglspigil P_ouI;;‘dt§e:':lk,r‘;gl:,ln Oakville and Oshawa. E. Hm Known .b d Walker.‘ General otors presi- eliceitpiiigglien tvilori)iiIyi-lf?as]ivi?r)»i‘i“ai;hc‘i: dent’. sald m ' Tmtemem Nov’ 29 TIONOLULU (AP) "“H"n'l°‘n. opposition in the visit of Prcs- ms “rm: declslon was based °nlN"”' C“-°m.°d nonhwnd M°“d.‘y do I’ i,-N.nh0“m. m. Vi(.(._P".<_ the uncertainty -Created by W055 after battering the Hawaiian is ' n " reports about what the govern- . . . - lands with winds up to 92 miles N f h NATO . ;‘:‘;.'::..*.‘."=“:::.:‘...‘:..‘:.'; do about -- --«s -on- mm with two feet of rain. wer department in 1922. He pioneered will be present at a ceremony hence. Pnujade said ‘such a visit 0 k." in studies of Canadian blacklin Oslo University the following by the "anti-l’-‘rcnch American (-(1,-I Sm-REDS EM-_ER was"‘;_eI'1’l‘t3i3el‘):'3r'nin:m°d- Damn" me’ ‘ml "‘°sq""°°s' T“°‘d‘y' , l leaders ‘mum be .','lq“Tnt' in the ensuing (‘ o m m o n s A 434001 cnmme,-C131 fishing Dutch when they ‘ their jurisdiction over the lotio- nesian islands after the war. BAN ENTRY Shipping circles in The Nether- lands said Indonesia has banned the entry of Dutch citizens into the country.) The United Nations last week refused to recommend that Dido- nesla's claim to West lrian should 5. h. then warned take steps "which would not be conducive to the improvement of our relations" with Holland. Despite Monday's strike. karts generally was calm. Wealthy adiag firms and banks were closed. Work was 10- gar. He said nationalisation of M: i-aataaedbyactualjodllydao WIS Re cea- h')bI¢.A.J.Dowltag. pro-~ / YT‘- . wrangle. all three Opposition par- ties lincd up in favor of the e- llbate. The government argued boat. the sampan tsu Maru. was missing with three aboard. Preliminary reports from the has-g$........ union oars CHARTER sldent of the toad ti-tgiii center‘. w. w. Reid. pepoiy iunntsm of from the coastal town of zm Observing the ceremony are left. Labor. Miss Eleanor llenncsscy. Alex Maclsaan. president of the and Mr. Preston Hillier. labor District Council. Brigadier ooutlvo members of local 501. against it. .Sa)'IllR it would llif’\l- ‘tably lead to debate on tax poii-' cies. lag . . Spcakcr .'\lii-hener allowed the; Th;-re was "0 Wm-d (mm the debate. warning that it could prii-mm-_ prj\/a|(\]y.()\~in('-d isiand of (‘Nd S0 IOHE 85 NIX l>0lit'i<‘S “'<‘rt‘iNiihau some 30 miles northwest not l0|M"h0d UPON lof Kauai. It has no communica- Mr. Martin then launched the ttion with the main island chain. debatc.'which was intcrspcrscd Messages ‘mg suppne‘ u-e dpnv. ‘with miscellaneous points of or-‘ in der. and spoke of unemployment In the auto industry. For a time he skilfully avoided mentioning the vvirrds "excise tax on aulo- in the ppm.-._ U5 weather om. mohilcs" . cinls said they have no records But Postmaster - General Will- of a hurricane hitting the Hawai- lam Hamilton finally trapped himl ian islands in the past. five major i s I a n d s Indicated fewer than 50 homes were darn- cd i Q r y a. Ilarrlcst hit by the first hurri- cane to approach the islands so ’ closely was Kauai. northernmost ll 9‘! ' ._ ‘ Moroccans Ambush Spanish coil and tea . Convoy In Sahara Desert l live in tho it Miumin lRPtfl(‘i‘Sl .. ()h<erv- Ver- "'"o‘m .ers speculated Monday whether‘ Report: from lfiii <airI one mr'1cU“T ‘I attacks on Spanish possessions bv Spanish <0lt'llPr uas killed and a I‘ Moroccan irrcgulars will spread other woiinded in the ‘‘Iiberation'' 999 ¢V'¢“5“°" still more following the amhush_of a position at rtna cl M ti D933‘ of a Spanish convoy In the south that was under heavy Arab pres- Vfllu "1 Sahara sure | Sixteen Moroccans were re- The reports added that Moroc- ported killed and 50 wounded in cans who infiltrated into the area the southern attack. Two Spanish‘ "W"€Tl‘d I’?-“'3' IOSICS." soldiers were killed and fivel . wounded l In Rabat. Morocco. the cnrre ‘ . in ntirlhwtwt Africa, Spaniehlispontlent of the lstiqlal party T0rlt'\ have held out for the last MWSWWF “am Skid that week against attacks an the Spain 1 “P”? llilhllnil NIWPPD Sfianiih . ‘ mi enclave in lfni The area of limos and Moroccan irregular: thc convoy attack is south of lfnl '9'" 0" SUMIY llrolmd Sldl lfnl. in the extensive spmjsh 5.5."? main town in lfnl. zone. which has a 7w-mile-long The correspondent and that the ‘l Atlantic coastline. llonoccans were using captured no convoy yu artillery to bombard the town. He added that para-drops 1! Boris to I-:i Aiuii about so miles nmmuifitlnn and food were made inland. Reports nor. an to Spanish troops snnounded I reached El Mun safely after es- TIIIOUIM PM! oi the Com coring troops heat off the atIack- corner of list -. onltaway a Q‘.