D! U gnauauhttshwqlmudde r.I.i.O.I0.otbesPsvvinasId Read by EVEUIIIIU Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Cl-IARIJOTTETOWN. CANADA. SATURDAY, APRIL 11 1953 PRISONER EXCHANGE SCHEDULED TO BEGIN APR 21 OTTAWA. (OP) - Opposition Commons members Fridsy critic- ized a. federal budget provision on- iarging personal income tax crediu on dividends received from Can- adian companies. CC? and Social Credit members called for elimination of the credit, while a Progressive Conservative said it would react against the sale of municipal securities and asked for some compensating con- cession on municipal bonds. During debate on Income Tax Act amendments to implement the budget, the House also heard a re- newal of the CCF's demand for removal of the three-per-cent "floor" on income tax exemption for medical expenses. The dividend credit proposal would enable taxpayers to credit against their tax 20 per cent oi the dividends they receive from taxpaying Canadian corporations. starting with dividends received this year. At present. a 10-per- rent credit is allowed. During the discussion. Finance Minister Abbott brought in an am- endment to the clause to provide that in no case would the taxpayer escape liability for the two-per- rent social security tax. Opposes Credit Stanley Knowles (CCF-Winni- peg North Centre) said his party is "strongly opposed" to the div- idend credit. It could result in I person with no other income es- caping tax on dividend income up to 59,760 a year. Mr. Abbott's amendment would have him pay only :00-the ceiling of the social security tax. West) said the credit would result in municipalities be- ing forced to put up the interest rates on their debentures to sell them to private investors. The result would be either that (Continued on Page 15 Col, 7) Coming Events "St. Peters Legion Meeting in the Hall. Monday. April lath. "Cleaning grain till Arnold Beer. May 10. "Try our Purina Finance plan for chicks and hogs. Dillon and Spillelt. "Dancing every Tuesday in .St. Peters Legion Hall. Chaisaons Orchestra. "Pantry sale by North Milton w.I. at Fenneli and chandler April ill at 2.30. "Weekly Dance, Fort Augustus Hall. Wednesday. April lfith. Burke's Orchestra. "Now open for cleaning grain and timothy. every day but Friday. lrs MacDonald, Covehead. "In stock. Purine. Chick and Pig Stsrtina. Try the Finance Plan. W. I. Bowman, Hunter River. "Farmers. uk about the Shui Gain Feed Finance Plan. For part :culars contact your local feed mill "In stock. Laurentisn turnip Seed. msngel seed. cod oil, oil cake, fish meal. and chick starter. Dillon and Spillett. "Crspsud-Victoria Board of Trade will meet at Crapaud, even- ing of April lath. att-0 o'clock. D. Hart. secretary. "Come to Ti-yon Baptist l-fall, Wednesday evening, April ibth for -' J Variety Concert. sponsor- ed by "lryon -v.P.u. "Ali Mount Alb n Schml taxes not paid by April th, 1058, will be linseed in for collection. By Order of the Trustees. ' "Community Auction. North "Mon. May ilth. List chattels with Fred Lcsrd accompanied by one iliailsr reliatration fee before M9! "Master Feeds. New shipments have arrived. For off car prices fell Dunk River Dairying Ce.. central Bedeque. Hun. .Wiilia inc. Konsington. L. D. McLeod " 501". Victoria and Albany. Feeders who keep records use Master. . 3 ' ...s.. ' urine pin Monday at Fred- ericton: Tuesday, I A. M. at Brook- Mount Btewart. . Paying 020.00 I D-ir for good pigs over -as pounds each. Will also buy smaller ones. "104 iwluism. income Tax Credits Touch Off Debdte in The Commons New leader Of CCF Party Named In B.C. Mr. Harold Winch VANCOUVER. (CF) -. School principal Arnold Webster, 54. was elected by at-clamntion Fri- day night to succeed Harold Winch as leader of the CCF party in British Columbia. His election at a convention called to prepare the CCIF for the June 9 provincial election fol- lowed the formal resignation earlier in the day of Mr. Winch. s veteran parliamentarian at 45. Mr. Webster was named leader after nine other candidates de- clined to run. Mr. Winch's retirement ended a political career spanning 20 years. Besides representing Vancouver East in the legislature for s score of years. he was leader of the Opposition for 12. 'The convention. which con- tinues through Sunday, listened in tense, silence as Mr. Winch told the 175 delegates he is re- 35 Members or Bing Placed Under Arrest BONN, Germany, (Reutersi - West German police have smash- ed the biggest Russian spy ring in Germany since the war. Vice-Chancellor Dr. nuns Blou- cher announced Tuesday that po- lice rounded up 35 members of the ring in raids throughout West Germany 'I'hu.roda.y night. Police are still hunting at least another seven spies. Led By Arm: He charged that the ring was led by Soviet army .of-ticers and masqueraded as an economic and political research group. Its head- flllIi'.CIS was in East Berlin. , Deputy Premier Wa":r Ulbricht of East Germany "knew all about the affair", he said. Other Corri- munist big-shots behind the ring include East. German Security Minister Wilhelm Zaisser and Act- ing East German Foreign Minis- ier Anton Aoirennsnn. Behind Business Finns Acting for Chancellor Konrad Adenaur, now in the United States Bluecher disclosed that the spy network operated behind "front" business firms illegally and legal- ly trading with the East. He said the spies' main job was ' gather information on every aspect of West erman military. political and economic systems. only highly-trained agents were allowed to become members of the Officers ng. The 35 persons under arrest acted as spies or couriers, the vice-chancellor said. Plane In Trouble Lends After 5 Hours WINNIPEG. (0PimA- chartered Trans-Canada Air Lines plane with 4'! persons on board developed mechanical trouble shortly after take-off Friday and circled Winni- peg for five hours before return- ing safely to the field. The North Star plane. taking 43 miners to the aluminum development at Kitimai, B.C., was unable to re- tract. its landing gear after the take-off, and its landing flaps jammed down. The Erie canal between Buffalo and New York City was opened tiring because of "poor health and nervous exhaustion." for traffic in 1025. HALIFAX, (GP)-The navy has termed "miraculous" the survival of four airmen whose Avenger air- craft crashed and burned in pitch darkness Thursday night in Nova Scotia's Annapolis valley. The crash was one of three with- in two hours. The pilots of the other two aircraft, which collided in inid-air over suburban Halifax. were killed. "We never know we were in trouble until our right wing began clipping off treetops." said chief Petty Officer R. E. M. Geale of Dartmouth. returning to Dart- mouth from Montreal aboard the Avenger.' Escape Before Fire "I reached for my parachute as the ship began shuddering but we were on the ground before I could grab it. We crawled clear before she burst into flames." The four who walked away from the blazing wreckage were Geale. Sub-Lt. J. W. Paton. Montreal: P0. P. Martin. Ascot. Eng; and AB. M. Legare of Gatineau. Que. Martin is in Canada studying under the NATO training scheme. "it's miraculous that these boys got out of the plane alive." said Capt. A. G. Storrs, commanding officer at the shearwater naval air base across the harbor from Hali- fax. The Navy is investigating crashts. the Four Have Miraculous Escapeiln Plane Crash ed from hospital except one, who will go home Saturday. The men built a shelter from s parachute and spruce branches. Geale walked out to summon help in the morning using makeshift boots made from parachute silk and kapok from a life preservor. He lost his boots in the crash. Two Pilots Killed Lieut. Robert O'Neil. and Lieut. F. 6. Rice. Gravenhurst, 0nt., were killed when an Avenger and a sea Fury. one of the fastest piston-driven aircraft in the world, collided near Halifax. The Sea Fury swirled over homes at suburban Fairview and plunged into the forest in a ball of flames. The other plane spun craziiy into Bedford Basin, 300 yards from homes. oil and rallysrds and a. busy highway. staccato burst of exploding am- muniticn and gasoline roared over the darkened waters of the basin as the piano burned to the water and sank. Both bodies were recov- cred. Bedford. Basin, at the northern end of Halifax harbor. was the rendezvous point for thousands of convoys during two world wars. The mid-air collision was the second involving Navy planes this week, but the earlier one caused only minor damage as an Avenger and a Harvard trainer brushed Ottawa. 30, of None of the four was seriously injured. and all have been relau- eight miles over the Atlantic dur- ing exercises. NEW YORK. (AP)-An electric- slly-pownod sutmiobile which its sponsors say can "accelerate like u, in was named Friday as win- iield; l0.00 Milton; 11.00 Chan net of the "most unique and ad- IW"-OVVI1. Market square; 1.00 vsnced engineering" award at the P. M. York: 2.00 Bedford: -3.00 international motor sports show here. Manufactured in Saginaw. li(lch.. the ear derives all its power from eieohicity pmibsoed II! 36981 Electrically-Powered Car WinnerOf Top Award Russian Spy Ring Smashed In West Germany U.S. Delegate By FRANCIS W. CARPENTER UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., (AP) -American delegate Ernest A. Gross called on the free world Friday to maintain its strength and un.ity. He dwcribed Moscow's recent gestures as "political weath- er-making, unpredictable in its nature." Gross urged the United Nations 60-ooun-try political committee to give a swift "no" to the demands of Russia's Andrei Y. Vishinsky that the assembly accept the old- type Stalin plan for peace, only slightly revised, as a way out of the world's tensions. The plan is embodied in a Polish resolution. Siding with Gros, Victor Andres Belaunde of Peru, said the pro- posal ls ”perfectly dead-not only dead but rotten." Ad,iorc'"s Until Monday The committee adjourned until Monday but the"- is no chance the Polish resolution will be accepted The time will come when the Soviet government realizes the necessity of modifying its tradi- tional "obstructive policles," Gross said, adding: Thinks Little 0f Soviet Peace Proposals "If so. we feel it will be the result of our policies of strength and of unity. "ft is clear to us that we must not abandon but rather nurture the very strength and unity which has broight forth some conciliatory gestures from the Kremlin in recent weeks. "it has been the policy of the soviet government, as the world has realized, in alternate periods and tactics of relaxation and ten- sion and back to relaxation again; 11. species of political weather-main inz, unlpredictzble in its nature." The Polish resolution calls for an immediate cessation of hos- tilities in Korea. It urges both sides to resume talks on the prisoner of war issue and do everything possible to settle thlli. problem. This is the only change from last year when the Poles and the Russians demanded the repatriation of every prisoner. The. change takes into amount the re- vised Cammunti Chinese stand on exc"inge of sick and wounded prisoners and repatriation of oth- ers, with those unwilling to go home to be handed to a neutral state pending a. final settlement. Ideniiiy 0f Body Found To Be Error (OP) -Harold Ti- tus went to a surbumen swim- ming pool Friday to report the death in a traffic accident of his brother-in-law, Grant Wyles, 16. He almost collapsed when his sup-posedly-dead brother-in-law called to him "Hiya, Curly." Tit- us learned Grant had spent the night at the home of a chum be- fore coming to the pool where he worked as an attendant. Young wylesi relatives were notified of his death Thursday night after the boy's sister "iden- tified" a badly-battered body. Police said the boy killed on high- way 401 north of the city wore almost identical clothing and this led to the mistake in identity. The accident victim was later identified as Robert Gilchrist. 14, of suburban North York. He was hit by a. car while cycling. Mrs. Harry Wyles was over- come after learning her son is alive. when she arrived at hos- pital Thursday night officials re- fused to let her see the body be- cause of her shocked condition. TORONTO. Recovering From Attack Of Flu O'I'I'AWA, April l0-(Speciiil)- .7. Angus MacLean. Joint Conserva- tive member for Queen's is recov- ering from a severe attack of flu contracted either when returning to Ottawa from Prince Edward Is- land after the Easter recess, or in the capital itself. Mr. MscLean had been anxious to take part in discussion in the House of Com- mons on public works estimates this week but was ordered by his physician to remain in bed. He hopes to be back on the Job on -parliament hill on Monday SmaliSiiilfe Closing Down Ford Plants DETROIT. (AP:-The Ford Mo- tor Company said B-idsy it ex- pects to lay off 45,000 men in fee- tories scenes the United States by Monday because of the lnali-parts plant strike at its Monroe, Mich. plant. Management said the layoffs were forced by the irutting off of " by a nine-doy-old walkout and silo by I luoiine-driven sen- erstor. It has no tnnlnisoion. Show otficiala quote the inven- torsssayingitoangofrom I dead stop to a speed of ion miles fsnthour in a distance of only 300 cc . 'rheoariscalledthe"inotball- elects-la quarts car." The electric- siiy-powered engine is located in the rear. The car has a fibregiau eabotb at the Monroe parts and equip. mant plant "hero local 17: of the United Auto l"orkers taro. has boui on strike since April I in s meed-in grievance. so far the strike affected only the lord car truck as- sembly wont The Wears; national monu- ment is a marble shaft towering 050 feet at Washington. D. C. I Southern Rhodesia Records Solid Vote For Federation SALISBURY. (Reuters) -South- ern Rhodesia has recorded a clear "yes" for federatlng with its north- ern neighbors. clearing the way for the birth of 8. British Central African federation of almost 7,000.- 000 inhabitants. The final count of votes cast. in Thursday's referendum was 25,570 for federation; 14,720 against. Only four of 30 voting districts showed an anti-federation major- ity. Expected To Follow Lead The legislative councils of North- ern Rhodesia nnd Nyasaland are expected to follow southd'n Rho- desla's lead and accept the federa- tion pian, as put forth by Britain, by the end of this month. The British Parliament has al- ready approved it in principle and is expected to pass the necessary enabling bill in May. Sir Godfrey Huggins, southern Rhodesian prime minister who has long fought for federation. said last. week he expected that the federation plan would probably be put into effect by next August. Expect Stability Federaiionists say the new state of 500,000 square miles and great mineral riches will lend pnlitinnl May Be -Thming Point In Search For Armistice By George A. McArthur MUNSAN, (AP)-The Allies and Communists signed a momentous agreement at Panmunjom Satur- day for exchanging sirk and wounded Koresniwar captives be- ginning April 21. It could be the turning point in the 22-month- long search for an armistice in Korea. Truce Talks The next step appeared to he the setting of I. date for resuming truce talks, bogged down for a year and suspended since Oct. 0 on the last big issue of an over- NAXIKS or A MERE MAN 16 PAGES Tbeuusllamlrivace-to lenlnglhliyfouldadlhl. Siside Pianiis The Board of Public Utilities has handed down a new scale of electric energy rates for the rural areas supplied by the Town of Summcrside to be effective May lst. The electric light committee of the Town Council met. yester- day morning and reviewed the raies'which have been revised upward. The minimum charge in the domestic and farm service cate- energy charge is four cents pPi' kilowatt hour for the first 200 kilowatt hours per month, and three cents for all over that amount. all exchange of war captives. The disabled captive exchange. pact, negotiated in only five day 1 and signed on the sixth. may prov-i ide an approach to solving the larger problem. Top Communist leaders have said they are anxious, to resume. the full-dress armisticei talks at once. . , U. S. Rear-Admiral John Danieii and North Korean Maj.-Gen. Lee! Sang Cho signed the disabled cap-i tive exchange pact at 12:08 p.m.; (10:08 p.m. EST, Friday). i They headed the liaison teamsi which negotiated the 10-pointi agreement. Will Be Sent uoiira Most of the Allied sick andj wounded will be sent to their homes immediately after they cross the line. if they are able to travel. Those who are not,weli enough to travel will be taken to hospitals in Japan. " The exchange must be completed within 30 days. The CommunisLs will return 600 prisoners. including 120 Americans, 20 British. 15 other non-Koreans, including Canadians. T u r k s. Greeks and Dutch, and the rest South Koreans. The UN command will return 5,- 000 North Korcans and 700 Chin- ese. New Royal Tomb Found In Egypt SAKKARA, E':.Vi'2t,, (Reuters)-A 5.000-year-old royal tomb uncal- thed here contained furniture and pottery showing a higher standard of civilization in the first dynasty of Egypt than formerly supposed, excavators said Friday. The tomb is believed to be that of King Uaciyi. who lived about 3100 BC in Eif.Vi'Jt'5 first dynasty. Ivory and wooden labels, fragments of wooden furniture, pottery, and .14 baster and schist rock vessels were found the tomb. DUNDEE. Scotland, (CF)-The Coronation celebrations committee here voted by 4 to 3 to omit the 2i-gun salute on Coronation Day, because of the cost. of ammuni- tion. Treasurer James Gillies said ”We don't want to be standing by with taxpayers saying at each round ibang goes another 21! " The general service. rate which fill apply to commercial estab- lishments has a minimum charge of 33.00 per kilowatt of connected load and the energy charge will be five cents per kilowatt hour for the first 200 kilowatt hours per monlh per kilowatt of con- nected load. and three cents for all over that. The schedule of rates is as fol- lows: "Rural area shall comprise all areas and districts outside the municipal limits of the town of -7 On n t in u edwo.h.1;age'l .75.Ool.Ai'27lt gory is 54.00 per month and ihci New Energy Rate Scale For Rural Patrons Whitewash As Defence Against Atomic Blasts LONDON, (AP)-if war comes. Britain overnight will become viri- uaily a nation of whitewashers. slapping a coat of t.he stuff on every window in sight as protect- ion against the heat of atomic blasts. This new twist to the blackout: of the last war was disclosed Fri- day in a preview of a new film an atomic bombs ordered by the home office for use in civil defence training. The documentary film showed that whitewashing of windows gives protection against heat from an atomic explosion and revealed civil defence plans to enlist al- most everyone in the task if war comes. Civil defence experts be- lieve the whitewash would in many cases prevent the contents of buildings from catching fire from A the atomic heat. By ALTON L. BLAKESLEE CHICAGO, (AP!-A drug made from blood is a hopeful prospect for giving cancers a sucker punch with x-rays. It may act as a fifth column inside cancer cells, weakening their defence against x-rays. The rays would hit the cancers much harder. with less damage to healthy tissues which don't take in the drug. Also. the drug may be a. good messenger to carry radioactive atoms, right into cancers. to bathe them with atomic rays. As yet, these are just prospects, although tests on humans are under way. P ..... Studies Described The basic studies so far, and possibilities. were described Fri- day to the American Association for Cancer Research by Dr. Frank Figge, University of Maryland medical school, and Dr. Ralph Wichtermar Temple University, Philadelphia. The drug or chemical is por- phryin. a raw material for giving blood its red color and for making other vital body chemicals. Tiny slipper - shaped animals, paramecia, gave the clue that por- phyrin makes living cells suscep- tible to x-rays. Usually, it takes 340.000 roentgen units of x-rays to stability to the entire troubled continent. They see a prospect of) great economic development, ' Opponents of the project were largely swayed by racial fears. Many Southern Rhodesian whites feared that the racial composition of the new state will be lopsided with 6.400.000 Africans against a mere 200.000 whites. vocal African opinion has been Bsainsi federation, claiming it win give the European population too much power. Russian Policy On- Austrla Unchanged VIENNA, (AP) -The Russians avoided any direct attacks on the West at the Allied control coun- cil meeting Friday but 3," no indication of any chjngg m 50... let policy toward ,Im,gt;-1., The Four-Power council ad. ministers occupied Austria. west- ern diplomats havc been hoping the Russians might make some conciliatory gesture toward sign- ing an Austrian treaty or 1nd,. pendent-e. sought by the West for the last eight. years. But Lt.-Gen. V. P. syn-ydovg the soviet high unsuIliJIiDnCX', aa- sailed the Austrian governmgnu Which have been in office since the war. demanded a ban on is book written by Germany's Fran; Von Papen and refused an Aus. trian post office request to make s teletype connection between two towns in the U. 5. and Rug. sien cones. ATTI. LEAVES nogprmy, LONDON. (AP) pm-"mgr Prime Minister clement Attlee. whose appendix was removed 10 days no. left hospital rridsy and went to his country home for con. vslescence. He is 10. U.K. Budget By ALAN HARVEY Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON, 4CPi-Treasiiry boss Richard Austen Butler retired Fri- day niglit to his country home in Essex with a pocketful of expen- sive question marks. The country gels the answers Tuesday. For Tuesday is Britain's budgc' day, probably the greatest occa- sion of the parliainenfiry year. There's one big difference this year. The usual con-f:dent forc- casts about what's going to be in the budget are missing. One of the big stumbling blocks 5 that Britain closed the finan- cial year March 31 with an over- all deficit of i-136,000,000. In his previous budget, Butler had esti- mated an approximate balance. but revenue vies considerably be- low expectations. The budgetary deficit apart. But- Forecasts Not Heard This Year ler's biggest decision may involve considcration of inzcrnaticnal fir.- ancial trends. Put simply, he must make up his mind whether re- slraints on spending should be tightened, or whether the possi- bility of a world recession niizht be an orcasion for letting out the sails :1 little. Last year Butler set out to : hievc 1 balanced economy. one i which neither the forces of in- flaticn nor of deflation would have too great an in-fluente. He is said to feel that he has succeeded, "".ih last year's increase in the bank rate from 2 1-2 to four per cent regcirderi as perhaps the chief factor iii killing off the "fluff" in Britain's economy. Now the task, as treasury oili- cials see it. is to keep the bal- ance and at the same time act strongly to boost production for export. WASHINGTON. (AP)-President Eisenhower took steps today to ex- tend existing import restrictions on butter and other dairy products, some food fat and oils after June 30 when presently-used legislative authority for such limitations ex- pires. He directed the Tariff Commis- sion to make an immediate inves- tigation of imports of these prod- ucts and recommend action for replacing existing restrictions. Canada already has protested formally to the U. S. against re- strictions on U. 5. import. of dairy Eisenhower To Extend Ban On Dairy Imports products. At. the present time. imports of butter, dried milk. dried cream, high fat malted milk compounds. peanuts and peanut oil. flaxseed and linseed oil are banned, and imports of cheese are restricted under quotas. These controls are authorized by section I04 oi the defence produc- tion act which expires June 30. The senate banking committee has said that it. will not recommend extension of this action. Thus. if nothing is done, the re- stricted products will be free to enter the U. 5. after June 80. , New Drug Reported T 0 Help In Cancer Fight; tTests Now Underway kill half of a whole colony of par- amecia. when the paramecia take ' pcrphyrin, an x-ray dose of only 40,000 units kills half of them. There is good evidence that can- cer cells take in porphyrin while most other healthy tissues do. not -tests are under way on 18 per- sons to see if injections of .(oTnTiiiEeTor-i?uE57:73f7ITS our income BiGG.EI'i' MOHEY' sauna I? ' NW TORONTO, (CF) - Minimum and maximum temperatures: Min. Max. Dawson, .. 44 I Victoria 50 Edmonton 3'! Calgary 28 Rrgina . 30 Winnipeg .'-iii Toronto 58 Ottawa . 50 Montreal . 57 Quebec . 40 Saint John, N. B 49 Moncton . . 33 42 Halifax . 38 40 Charlottetown 34 46 Sydney 35 till - Yarmouth . 35 ' 51 St, John's, Nfld. -- as HALIFAX, (OP) - Official fore- casts issued by the Dominion Pub- iic Weather Office in Haliihx and valid until midnight Saturday with an outlook for Sunday. Region forecasts: Prince Edward Island: Cloudy. with rain beginning in the even- ing; mild; light winds becoming southeast 15 about noon. Low-high at Charlottetown 35 and 48. Sun- day. cloudy and mild. saint John river valley: Inter- mittent rain beginning Saturday morning; mild; light winds south- east 20, shifting to southwest in the evening. Low-high at Fredericton 35 and 55. saint John and Ed- mundeton 35 and 52. Cloudy and mild Sunday. Bay of Chaleur: Cloudy. infer- mittent rain beginning about noon; light winds southeast 20. Ipw-high at Camrpbellton 32 and 45. Ciiudy and mild Sunday. Eastern N.B. counties: overcast with rain beginning in the after- noon; mild; eout-hesst winds 15. law-high at Moncton 35 and 45. Cloudy and mild Sunday. 1-iigh tide today at Charlottetown at 8.35 A. M. and 8.48 P. I. High tide on the North Share at 3.43 A. M. and 4.00 P. M. aummerside tide 'htsen min- utes late an Charlottetown. Sun rises today at 0.16 A, M. mg sets at. 0.53 P. M.