Maxims of a Mere Man Old sin, new shame. 14 PAGES 77w Guardiait CHARLOTTEFOWN. CANADA, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1955 Covers Prince Island Like the Dew FIOMBAY (AP) .. More than moon rloters led by Communists m'l Socialists of the extreme left urncd India's second largest city min a smoking battlefield Monday. them to "capture" the state legis- lature. ting to discuss the city's future under the new state plan. THIRD OUTBREAK held off other rioters trying to storm the state legislature building. RIOTERS LIGHT BONFIRES Offices. shops and restaurants It was the second successive day of violence and the third outbreak against the government in four days. Torch-wielding. stone-throw- ing gangs milled through the streets. hacking and smashing pub- lic property. stoning and burning fen persons were reported killed ind 250 wounded and 1.000 were under arrest when uneasy quiet na: restored. police and army units stayed on the alert Monday night. There was 5p(ll'H(llC violence even after dark- ness felt. The riots. the worst in Bombay in the eight years of India's inde- pendence. grew out of protest dem- onstrations against the decision of up federal government to make a separate state of Bombay. Communist leaders raced about the city on motor scooters flying nimmer sickle flags. egging an the frendlpd mobs and ordering and felled trees- tear-gas shells filled the air. the littered streets. Firemen tryin buses and streetcars and barricad- ing the main streets with boulders Police fired rifles through the smoke and the choking fumes of Ambulances screamed through to reach the flames were set upon forces under a barrage of stones closed their doors as rlotars lit bon- fires in the streets and stormed into office buildings. Police opened fire on one group in front of a large department store and within minutes the scene looked like a battlefield. Approximately 45 per cent of Bombay's 3.000.000 population are Marathi-speaking and want the city included in the projected Marathi state. The northern sector of Bom- bay state is to become a separate Gujerati-speaking state and the city of Bombay a small bilingual state. under the government's plan. The Communists and socialists have espoused the Marathi cause, 8 by rloters. Police and home guard Public Control Of Patent Pools Urged At Hearing OTTAWA (CP)--A royal commls- in a difficult position. ilon was told Monday that in the The chief justice observed that Arob Rioters Hung Frenchman (By Michael Welgall) RABAT, French Morocco (Reu- tersi - Frenzied Arab rioters Israel's Need For Arms Stressed WASHINGTON (AP) - Israeli Foreign Minister Moshe Shareto says his country's "paramount need is additional arms." Shareti said Monday in a speech at the National Press Club that any peace the Arab states may make with Israel "means peace with Israel as it is. both as to its population and to its area." In substance, Shareti was re stating two major diplomatic po- sitions Israel has taken since Egypt made a deal for Czechoslo- vakian arms. 1. Israel now wants more wcap ons above everything else-even above a security agreement with the United States. 2. Israel will not accept. at least in its present form. Prime Minister Eden's proposal that Is- rael and the Arab states try to reach an understanding based on compromise boundaries. First Show Snuris Traffic In Montreal MONTREAL ICP) - Montreal's first major snowfall of the season caught residents and public trans- portation unawares Monday. A two-inch fall caused bumper- io-bumpcr driving conditions in the Hon. John J. Bowlen arrived in the city on last evening's train. lGnt'crnnr were Dr. W. J. P. Mac- i A of interests of free competition big companies which hold a multitude to dominate an industry in law the patent holders did have a monopoly. The law was so un- certain in that field that the courts would have a dificult time deter- Monday hauled a Frenchman out of his car and lynched him during the third straight day of violence in Mbrocca. iiiould be refused court injunctions ior infringements of the rights they claimed. The suggestion was put forward in s 34-page brief by two Canadian newspapers. the Regina Leader- Ptist and the Saskatoon Star-Phoo- of trade and he wondered if the bricf's suggestion would be "just the thing to do." Ian M. MacI(eigan. Halifax law- yer and former deputy commis- mining if in fact such patent pact! dominated an industry in restraint Ilieged 'l-H- use of , I hcludlng compulsory registration of all patent pools or portfolios with the restrictive trade practices snnmission. - IIIELD MONOPOLIES Judge Thurman Arnold. one-time .S. assistant attorney - general. aldng for the newspapers. said Iy in an industry. to beak sma ler competitors and nix. The brief made a number of other sweeping proposals to curb sioner of the Canadian combines investigation branch. and Dr. Wal- ton Hale H world author- ity on patents and former Yale University professor. aided Judge Arnold in presentation of the brief. FOR READERS Clifford Sifwn. proprietor of the two newspapers. said they were presenting the brief on behalf of their readers. "a substantial body of consumers." He said "Combines in restraint of trade are obnoxious and unlawful" in Canada. Mr. Msclielgan told the commis- sion pstent pools have not been given a real test in Canadian courts because it was big question just wht rights they hvs under the Ptent Act. He said patent owners who license their patent right should not be permitted to attach special conditions as to prices and markets and this uncertainty should be removed from the act. The death toll rose to 10 Mon- day night in various clashes. both among supporters of restored Sultan Sidi Moha-mmed Ben YOIISSPI and the man he replaced on the throne. Moulay Ben Arafa. The lynching took place in Taza. a town in the nortiheastern sector of the protectorate. Bad feeling flared after a Frenchman. thinking a Moroccan policeman was threatening him. drew out a pistol and wounded bhe officer. Acquitted In Child's Death TORONTO. (CPI -- David and Margarercleverxlon were acquit- ted Monday on a charge of fall- ing to provide the necessities of life for their child. Patricia. The eight-year-old girl died Nov. 1. I954. of primary periton- itis. an abdominal ailment. 'I'he crown ohnrged that tlietgirl was not adequately fed. clo ed or nourlsvhed by her parents. During the four-day trial al teacher tesitfied the girl fell asleep in class and Mr. Cieverdon told her: "If Patsy falls asleep. strap hcr " city and traffic snarls cxtcnding as far as 20 miles out. Provincial bus drivers said scores of motor- ists slithered helplessly on glazed highways. Many slid into roadside ditches or sprawled across roads. blocking traffic in both directions. In the metropolitan area, trans- portation officials said conditions were not quite as bad. Trains and buses ran up to 20 minutes late. Compbeliron Goes After Vandals CAMPBELLTON N. 8.. (GP)- Dlsturbed by vandalism that has cost the town nearly SL000, Camp- bellton is hiring a criminal inves- tigator in an effort to stop the destruction. I Mayor .1. W. Howard said Fri- day night the piainclothes in-I will work with the eight-man RCMP detachment here. but will be paid by the town. He will be selected by the RCMP. "We've got to do something.” Alberta's Lieutenant Governor. A native of Prince Edward Is- land. Governor Bowlen was met at the depot by His Honour Lieu- tenant Governor Prowse and his aides. Lt, Col. A. W. Rogers. wing Commander Alan Macmillan and Li Commander .l. N. Kenny. Also on hand to greet. the visiting Millan. a personal friend of many yczirs; Dr Alan MacMillan and Father Wilfred Wood. Governor BnwlPn's nephew. Governor Eowlen went to the Charlottetown Hospital where he will bc the guest of his niece. Sister Mary of Good Counsel, hospital administrator. Today he will make calls on Lieutenant Governor Prowse. Premier Math- eson and His Worship. J. David Stewart. After spending some days with his niece, Governor Island-Born Lt.-Governor Of Alberta Arrives Here Bowlen will be guest of Govern- ment llouse here. .Egyptian Batteries Fire On Israeli Fishing Boat TEL AVIV tReutersl-Egyptian coastal batteries opened fire on an Israeli motor fishing boat off the Gf-ll coastal strip Monday as Is- raeli sources reported a deteriora- tion of the tense Arab-Israeli bor- tlcr situation. There were no casualties and the fishing boat sailed out of range of the guns, an. Israeli military spokesman said. (Cairo radio reporting the shell- lug said the boat violated Egyp- tian territorial waters. and Egypt protested to the mixed armistice coiumlsslon.i Isrncl also said a unit of "Egyp- tian-lrained saboteurs" from Jor- dan wrecked a carpenter's shop and damaged water installations. but without causing casualties, in the village of Avouka on the west bank of the River Jordan. Theme were at least three xplosions, one appnrenily from a time-bomb, the spokesman said. AMIIUSIIED TRUCKS Mr. Howard said. "Some ouog fellows have gone just I litte too He said that an armed unit from ,.Iordan Monday ambushed two far. ltrucks on one of lsraeli's busiest Decision to bring in an investi- .-highways. ncar Affuleh. One of the gator was made at a special ses- ltrucks was hit by several bullets sion of the town council after 3795 and the driver was wounded in the was "spent replacing shattered leg, IHPEEI lliZlll!- ITRIIIC BISIIHIR End The Israel foreign ministry said Wlnd0W! In ll0m85 End Ollie? the worsening of the border situa- Soviet, Leaders Charge iWest Blocks Disarmament NEW DELHI (Reuters)-Soviet Premier Nikolai Bulganin said llhnday the Western powers have backed down" from their stand earlier this year on world disarma- meal and may delay a solution by st least l0 years. He expressed "great regret" that the Fast-West deadlock on dis- ament. struck many points of agreement with India's repeated calls to avoid a nuclear war. BRITAIN DENIES CHARGE Bniganin said: "To our great re gret. our effort to end the dead- lock on the question of disarma- ment and the prohibition of atomic and hydrogen weapons has not so far brought about positive results. "As a matter of fact. the United States. Britain and France have the last Big Four foreign min- isteis conference in Geneva. The Soviet premier addressed Judge Harry Donley said "there isn't any doubt there was some neglect of the child in the latter days of her life. but I don't be- lieve it amounts to criminal nog- llgence." buildings. including stores. Another 8183 was spent by the school board to repair damage done to school property. A sub- stantial reward has been offered by the board for information leading to convictions. l Britain Prbposes New Oil Agreeme BAGHDAD. ll'dQ Britain Monday proposed tlleuiersi-. an al- of the West arid the oil wealth of the Middle East to bring peace liance between the technical skillsl India's 700 members of P in a speech read in Hindi for him. backed down from what they them- selves proposed at the beginning and prosperity to the area Foreign Secretary Hafold Mac- nt To Iraq the area and expressed the hop. the United States will join the pact. The US. already has decided on military and political liaison withl the pact and has four observers at the closed meeting which fol- l l normal in this town. disastrous landslide Nov. 12. II of this year." (A British government spokes- man sald in London later that Brit- ain still stands by the Anglo- Frenoh plan of last year for fixed levels of armed forces and a He is on a 15-da state visit here With Russia's ommunlst party chief. Nikita Khrushchev, who also (I a speech read for him. blhe visit has been interpreted -I WPIRII observers here as an millan made the poposal at the opening meeting of the ('0llIli'lI of the pro-Western Middle East De- fence Organization-the flvc-power Bagdad Pact. lowed the morning's opening iigpl sion. (The Associated Press reported the premiers of the four Middle Eastern powehs and Macmillan set up a military committee of high tion in the last 24 hours was part of an "organized guerrilla carn- paign" conducted by Egypt. Since Nov. 5. when a house at Nicolef Gradually Returns To Normal NICOLET. Que ICPI - Activ- ities gradually are returning to scene of a All convents in the town resumed nrmal Pl:-issos today Classes in 'he boys st-nunnry are expected "it be resumed within the next few Lt.-Governor Bowlen Sdeh Hemed was blown up. simi- lar attacks have occurred "with ominous frequency and regular- ity," the ministry said. The ministry said acts of hostil- ity "go hand in hand" with relecr tion by Egypt of proposals by United Nations Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold and the chief truce supervisor. Maj.-Gen. E. L, M. Burns of Canada. for settling the problem of the El Auja de- militarized zone which was the scene of bloody fighting on Nov. 3. Israelis own acceptance of the United Nations plan in principle was handed to Gen. Burns Mon- day. The plan is reported to propose withdrawal of both Israeli and Egyptian troops from both sides of the zone. and to allow restricted number of Israeli civilian police- men to protect the Israeli settle- ment of Ktziot. which is inside the zone. Murder Trial Opens Today ANDOVER. N. 3., (CP)- The trial of John Rankine Hanson. charged with murdering Mrs. Gertrude Trask. opens in one Vic- toria circuit court here today with Chief Justice J. E. Mlchaud of the Queen's bench division pro- s g. The body of the 41-year-old wo- man was found last month in Hanson's dwelling, where she had been living. Death resulted from a shotgun discharge. A grand jury reported a true bill against Hanson Nov 1' and the trial was then adjourned un- til today. Former Member of Alta. House Dies CALGARY, (CPI- Col. James J. Cornwall. DSO. 86. soldier. ad- venturer and former member of the Alberta legislature, died In hospital here Sunday night after a lengthy illness. Col. Cornwall was known to thousands in northern Canada as "Peace River Jim." He was the first man to proclaim the agricul- tural possibilities of the Peaco River district. He was born in Brantford. Ont.. received his early schooling there and then moved to Buffalo, NY.. at the ace of i4 His first job was selling newspapers Suh- sequently he sailed on ships on the Great Lakes and on the At- lantic. ri.ieve?EiJ'"l-llui From Halifax Safe HALIFAX, (CPI-Halifax P0- llce said Monday the thief who blasted open a safe in the Met- ropolitan stcre Sunday and u- caped with between 33.000 and 55,000 in cash and oihequee was still at large. The store in the city's north end shopping district was enter- ed iahrough a cellar window and the safe-cracker used materials from the store to cut off the dial and smother the sound of the ex- plosion. I-Ie rolled a rack of dresses hi front of the safe to hide himself from paaeers-I158 Sentenced For Theft Drowned When Truck Overturns Into Deep Hole KIRKLAND LAKE. Ont. (CPI -Steve Spack of Chemlnils. 0nt.. drowned Monday three miles north of Swastika when the dump truck he was driving overturned into an excavated hole in the highway filled with about eljtt feet of water. Chemlnks is 25 miles east of Klrkkland Lake. The hole had been dug out to remove muskeg as part of a road- construction project. It was half full of water and rocks were be- ing dumped into it from trucks. Spock drove to the edge of the hole and the heavy machine lur- ched forward over the ledge and overturned into it. He was pinned (lays. underneath. TORONTO. (CF) -- A former bank accountant, convicted last week of stealing Stl0.0m from I branch of the Canadian Bank of Commerce, was given reforma- tory sentence Monday Of W0 years less a day John Donald Hume, 24. stole me man” during a three-year period. He testified he had spent it on cars and a boat. Judge Sam Factor said he was not basing the sentence on the money Hume stole. He was not setndlng Home to the pellU52ll' vioiua reconl. ”Real Fun" WINNETKA. lll two ymmg girls "ti-ioiitzhi was real fun" turned into a cxicndcd night- mare for s mitidlc-aged couple In this exclusive north shore suburb of Chicago. For nearly four months. the tele- phone had m-cn.an instrument of torture for ilziurii-c ll Franks. 55- and his wifc. Violet. 47 There wcrc scrcn to ill anony- suspended until the hearings are completed. No date likely they would not before January. held at Vancouver at the request of the British Columbia government and will take in a I-LC. application that some of the grain rates should tiary because Hume had no P?" P9 I'9d"c9d' Girls Arrested As Their tAPw A What cement patio slabs- battle without outside help. He the telephone the-clock tap was Missing 0Wl'l POWEF. The long-liner was at first feor- . ed to be a victim of the destruc- tive storm that whipped tihe prov- l lnoe. taking one life and leaving a path of damage. Eleven-year-old John Simms of Simms settlement died from ex- posure after being trapped in the woods along the province's east- ern shore Sunday. His l7-year-old brotlher Gordon. was found sev- eral hours later in serious oondi- tion, REPAIR CREWS OUT Meanwhile telephone and power repair crews have been working around the clock in the Atlantic provinces splicing wires and re setting communication poles, knocked down by the 50 mile an hour winds. Power facilities have been re- stored in all majori centres but work is continuing in outlying districts where oil lamps still are the only source of light. Maritime Telegraph and Tele- phone Company officials reported Monday night that lines had been opened to most outside points but that long waits were necessary. Telephone services In the Anti- gonish district of Nova Scotia. PRICE50 ONE DEAD IN N.S. SNOW STORM Communists Lead Fierce Riots In Bombay, India- Boat Reported Safe HALIFAX, (CP)-A 60-foot fishing vessel, missiing off Nova Sootla since a bowling blizzard swept across the province Sunday. turned up at Lockport late Monday. Two of the four crewmen were taken to hospital but: their names or oondltions were not known immediately. The RCAF had been searching for the Harvey III Sisters Monday and planned to continue the hunt today. The air force said the shlpylanded at Lockport under her only be made to Summerside. P. E. I. through Charlottetown. Some calls are reported going to New- foundland but connections are none too good. The Canadian Press news circuits. disrupted since Sunday afternoon, were all back in order late Monday. FORCED LANDING A near tragedy was averted at Gander. Nfid. when a USAF B-I made a forced landing with two of its four engines feathered. Strong winds at the airport made it impossible for the plane to use regular runways and it landed as the new 8.200-foot runway that wgas not slated for use until Dec. 1 The plane carried seven per- . ......,,- 'r e-W” still is disrupted and contact can OTTAWA (OP)-Over the rak- ways' objections. Western provin- cial governments Monday obtained from the board of transport com- missioners a delay in hearings on I board proposal to increase some western freight rates on grain. The board also said the planned incre. iginally scheduled to go into effect next Jan. I-will be postponed for them was set. but it appeared be held The resumed sessions will be The increase proposed by the BackHres Franks, meanwhile. fought his SOTIS. Two small fishing boats were destroyed near Cornerbrook. Nfld., when dashed against their moor: ings at Lamond wharf. Nova Scotia, hardest hit of tin eastern provinces, still was trying to clear main highways and roads were reported dangerous, Apart from utilities little actual property damage was mported. Newfoundland. where the atom changed to rain lashed by gals winds. reported several roofs rip ped off but no serious damage. Delay Start Of Freight Boost On Western Grain board is one of 10 per cent on grain and grain products naming within the four western provinces to domestic markets. It amounts to about &600,000 a year. All the western provinces are opposing it, and Monday B,C. coun- sel C.W. Brazier told the board his government in the next two week) will file a formal application for reduction in the rates trolls the Prairies to the west coast. These rates on domestic grain show an unreasonable spread in relation to charges on export grail moving over the same rail line. he said. kept sending back the "deliveries" as mistaken orders but declined to inform authorities of the straps? happenings. PHONE CALL TRACED Finally he reported the calls to . A round- put on the Franksl phone. "flirt to phased schedule for banning nu. H, ,,,d such an nmancr WWI" "IIIC9" '0 dflw UP proposals for lm”II5 53'” ” fl”-V 0”” IIW" "'9 ensure India's continued I? and to increase Soviet clear weapons. He said the plan "work miracles in health. hiimanta permanent military structure 30 who Ill Most calls were of too short dura- TORONTO. (CF) - Mlnlmuii g . . t be traced. But Friday. one . , I co in Asia. Bulganin-; ad. is subiect of course to agreement welfare, productivity and enrich-fblndlni the members into a NA'rcnl siimoiiines the r:Ixl.l(cli”.sA hnngmnnmg mynery cane” talked .0 and mumum temperamru: y dress. dwelling on drum, first on method, of cont;-oj..u1e 1., meat of civilization in the regionyllke organization.) S0lWI'?'d "I", l”"""" . H m" lMrs. Franks for 22 minutes. MW M”- I g jug which ,,;-oducm um Gene" which constitutes a vital desert Three premiers, Turkey's Adnan Up. 0”!" ll,'”"-igllw-lg, vi": , r l The mm was (raced m another Dawson . 27h ass - ,, " J' ' ) flank of the Atlantic Alliance and Menderes. Iraq's Nurl al Said and IFFIHIIRS 0' "'5 W”? " 3 Clley wmnmm home. Ponce took hm, Vancouver , 32 - E Blllllnln said Russia considers lies on Russia's southern borders.lIran's Hussein Ala-said the Arab- ybi-inn made in th('"' Mm" msmm, Smurday 8 lzgyemmm Rm, Victoria . 38 I V , ng I ban on ' ' weapons the most Usually reliable sources -said Israeli problem must be solved ISFVT TH”. B...-K She Mimmed making the M", Md Edmonton so I , ; Import as cc: of .::...mgmem but, Britain offered to put her exper- quickly in order to stabilize the " 3 - i a e 13. "I3"-V 13 3 1 P ..un:-iskod implicated another gir. g Card Party in Witdlllv hal to to show goodwill, had accepted ience in the field of peaceful uses Middle East. The d(.1,...m.5 came - The Em. were questioned and Refill"! - - I . . llitht. the West's proposals for fixing .of atomic energy at the disposal Premier Nurl said "Iraq will not 3"” "'"::ICn'.:Io,,amC homo in find relcnscd to their parents without ,:"l""Ilt)9l -- 3 Dance, drsconunued u st levels of the armed forces and of membcr-states lot the pact and hesitate to use her resources for om? mu. 5.1 A nfhor iimr-. slim-mal charge. A hearing is sched- "T0" " ' and m "'1'? dates for a ban on atomic was that British scientists and technic-llthe assistance of any Arab state 3 "”"l "I s'"' " 1,... Fridnv mmw" " ” Re nk' puns. ians world be made available to subjected to Israeli aggression, in load of lzl'r1”'I .v an 1 mn I" "We thought it was real fun." Monk”, 3 Card party wimp). mu, wed. llhose who wish to develop their accordance with her Arab League A mink rollcti up will; W"; I3;.mlW quoted the sum as "yum. Quebec . at llesday "mm, 1'0";-"mam ,4"... rr Au, gm," lawn sources of nuclear power. obligations and based on uncle 51 !'h8l"5- ””"'"" 5"”. .. , . .,-.e4j--P-j I:;m9I”JI:;;" - 3 '. , fth UitedNti - -- '" DULWICH. England (CP)-Pen- NEED 1'0 C0-OPERATE Fight. ofnindividud)lmo:-mcrotlllecllhvii - ' M""”'”" 3" Dance. Gowsn Brno sdiool. nlen Putin s on box by choir boys Speakers of all five mcmbcrs- elf-defence) " lfahan Seaman UI'VIVe5 "am" - -- 3' gfillleidly. Nov. 2!-d. Lundns. It Practice In helping to raise Britain Turkey Iraq Pakistan and Nurl was. unanimously elected . gmlmwn" ” ' 3' aisson' music, the ELMO -' ' ' ' -. Py M . ' . ........mm." "W" '" :::::..'.:::r.:.1..:::."'”T.::.r.: :;::::.r 0' "ie N" Wm-"W 12 - Dav D" I " 3" ”""""i ” s..Zi.”'”'Is';..lilS.” il.”li"'ili”.i"""" 0” 'I"""'” ' Rom, M,cK,n,,.. o',.ch:m”g I” ISTANBUL. riiriii-y lAPI - An -captainuthat flint?-'i”":l ""”d I” HALIFAX. (CPI-The weather Weekly den Winaloa. ltd Italian scaman who survived iii any as on o - office here says the storm that en ti: "Next everything turned purple and I found myself in the sea. "It was pitch black. I could not lcee anything. " . . . I found a plank and citing to it with all my strength. "After the first few days I found nails on the plank. I pierced my sleeves on the nails so that I could days in the Mediterranean without food or water told Monday MW II, feels to drift bark from rioath on a six-font plank p nnmn Rain. .15, of Trieste lav In a hospital here and REV? Ill-S V9!" sion of what happened after hll ship sank and he was live" UP for dead. was south of Nova Scotla Sunday night is now moving northward across Labrador. In its wake a moderate to strong west to north. west flow of air is blowing across the district. Cloudlness is vari- able and there have been widely scattered snowflurries. Not much change is expected on Tuesday. Firemen Race Big Blaze To Carry Out Dynamite MONTREAL (CF) - In-emu msed a race with flames-and hit every Friday iiigiii. Rollie gag-oKensh's orchestra. Dancing h wmlllo. Lower Montague hall. ; mu. F... Nov. 8. Amnlaeiol uju,,&'”' ”'.o'” "In" S". which deals in dynamite among the dynamite and dyna ite other things. the building houses m "N were stored separately, minimizing blase licked towarth iriiteinshardwarostoreneartha "huh; heart of Montreal Monday. The time-stars: structure as Notre Dame street was destroyed by the fire after so rssldonb. ia- ciudlng an elderly deaf-mute. or cspsd without injury. rm firemen were hurt. It was Montreal's. first three- alarmdbtltasfen in nine 31.01101! and s c din-Ia morning a 3 bag; inc. worisas financial district in the first snow- niag '5u.vIr-s grossed rents. pg won-whsnlsnddalnstnbbsraunan storsldyla-and is and roorners on the second third I s. BLACK SMOII Typical of the reaction when the fisrleswoke out was that of Mrs. Rosa rd. ho id: "I snnimd Ifvlvlnlnulfld when it turned black and easy I knew it was serious. I ye ed that the dy- namite was burning. and for every- onstogotontlgi-abbed mytwo ind storm of the season. Xln 1463' IA. .5 the danger to his men as they snatched the boxes from the base- ment and ran from the building. Residents and neighbors told of a blast that preceded the fire. and another minor explosion shortly afterward. giving the Impression stations 50 YEARS xiii; Hsakoii VII of Norway has been fifty years on the throne, since the peaceful dissolution of Ovals: & 3 V A KING reigned longer than any other king in Norway's history and. at as, is the oldest reigning mon- ui hia- iour ship moving rather strongly- The ship-the Patrizia went down Nov. ll six iioiirs out of Beirut. At dawn Nov. 18 the Czech ship Lidice saw a narrow strip of wood riding gently on the waves supporting the naked figure of a man. Throughout the ordeal on the plank. Rota told reporters. he had only one wish: "One glass of water. then I'll die." NAILED T0 PLANK He said: On the night of Nov. 0, while I was listening to the radio. I noticed sleep and stay on the plank. ALMOST GAVE UP "I slept for a while. then swoite and found myself stripped, The movement of the sea against fist plank had rubbed off all sea I was on the point of giving up. "I could no longer move. I could still move my eyes slowly, how- ever. and I spent my time lifting them to God to ask for mercy." IhoIlIIIa&IdII1InesrtaI& previously and have been reportr led h good condition. Regional forecasts: Northern Nova sooth. Prince Edward Island. esabmi N. I. eounths and Iowa at. Join me: valley: Vurhble cloudiuss with my a few uurwfltrrrtost cold: wei- rrly wnfds is beeomhg lkhl by evs-nfng. Iiivw-IligII & New Gill- an 20 and 30. Chalstletewa I and 25. Mm:-toss it lid 2!. Fuel- arlchll and Sin! Jilin M ltd I. I-Tiizh tide today at Charlottetown at 1:42 a.m. and 4:05 p.m. Suin- Th. othgr njng crew member: merslde tide eighteen minutes II!- of the Patrizia all were rescued er than Charlottetown. sun rises at 7:10 am. and ab Gil Isl