MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN the event. arrier: Charlottetown, summer-Iido 015.00 per anntnn. Elsewhere 3:0 in P.l'.'.l. 89.00. Other Provinces and U.8.A. 812.00 per annnna.) A powerful imagination produces Covers Prince Edward A Read by Eve Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. MONDAY, JUNE 15. 1953 S the MAXIMS. OFA MERE MAN. one remedies are worse than dangers. 16 PAGES The Guardian, Five Cents . Morning Daily Founded 1887. ' ENE DEAD, 95 HOMELESS IN FIRE AT ST. NEREE, QUE. Armistice So Near Truce Officers Alertedllamag-e ls lS0uthKorean Units iarge-Scale Exercise To Test Canada -ll.S. Fighter DefenceglngJulL (GP)-A ”large-scale" joli1i.8XEl'ClSe will test Canadian and American fighter defences wntiiianeously in July. it was an- nnuiivecl Sunday. nxnrrise Tail Wind is the second mgnIwtli'l”P of this kind but it should (md Canadian air defences, at least, in considerably better shape mm they were for exercise Sign post of a 1'63-T BB0- RCAF statements have indicated that the Canadian radar system should be pretty well in full stride by this fall while it year ago only a few stations were even in in- cipiciit operation. Following the Sign Post pattern. nu wind will launch "aggresor" games, probably including the (nmet ict. transports, against the mint. iicfcnccs and see how both make out. it. will be bossed by the two top fighter defence airmen on the con- tlnen', Gen. Benjamin Chidlaw and Air vice-Marshal A. L. James, who head the air defence commands of their two countries from Colorado springs. Col., and St. Hubert atr- port, Montreal, respectively. The RCAF said it will commit gijxllialy or reserve squadrons and other units then in summer train- mg on well as "all elements" of .3'rT.a WA. Events --5-e Curran Bonn Players in st. Peters Holy Name Hall Monday. June l.'s'.h. Dance afterwards. "Brarkioy W. I. presents two one act plays with specially. Stanley Bridge Hall on June 15. "special Meeting of ratepayers. North Wiltshlre School, 1-3-iday. June 19th, 8.00 o'clock. "Kelly's Cross Picnic. Wednes- day, July 15th. "Sea Cot-ran Ban Players ln home Valley i-lall, Thursday, June lsth. Curtain 8.30. Dance after. every Wed- Morrissey- "Dance. Ions Hall iicsday, 930 to 12.30. lliicnonnld Orchestra. "Show, Morell liall. "Royal Journey.” A picture everyone to see. Tuesday. for "Regular Dance, Bonshaw inn. Tuesday night. Charlottetonlans Orchestra. ".limloi'n and od time dancing Mermaid School Monday, June 15th. Refreshments. Good music. "Don't. forget the regular Mon- tlav lllzht. dance, Morell Hall. Mun- roea tlrchcstia. "Come to the Lobster supper in Annandale Hall. Thursday. June llllh. rnmmcricing at 5 P. M. Ad- missitu S100 and 50 cents. "lll Ryan Dramatic Club pre- mits their three act play "Rose of My Heart”, in Emerald I-fall. Tues- ;l;'l'l"Jrt'llllE 16th. Curtain 8.30. Dance "ilrlultizv Plant now operating. ”'ll'lll2 all kinds live or rail-grade l"l'llll'.V; also custom killing. Island C”'0D Services, Fitzroy Street '5lliii.U. "ll nwoiing of the share holders 2' -pl" gNorth River Community llin will he hcld in North River Hm -ll'Wla.l'. June 15th at 8:00 p. "l- A (T Macliachcrn, secretary. X"l7ilr:t'e in Afton Hall, Monday. ;'”"' l-llltt Sllonsored by the King- inll" Branch Canadian Legion. ancin: 9,00-12:30. Canteen rer- ll” -ind lunches. t 8 l;Bl-vlniz daily, good thrifty :5 er pigs. Paying saaoo pair. as m 1 and over. Will also buy smaller 3'90 Wellington McNeill dz Son, untain dc Bell's wharf. "G-raid Dollar will be hauling the air defence system including fighter squadrons, control centres, the ground observer corps, radar and other ground units and the army's anti-aircraft commani 14 Homes And School Burned By Sons of Freedom NELSON, B. C., tCP)-.,Fire-raid- lng Sons of Freedom Doukhobors destroyed 14 homes in the west Kootenays early Sunday in ap- parent retaliation for the 14-year prison sentence passed Saturday on larsonist Paul Popoff. 'Popoff was convicted of starting fires which destroyed a 345,000 planer mill, at community hall and it house during Doukhobor raids last summer. "I cannot see where there is hope of reformation for this man," Mr. Justice H. S. Wilson said as he pronounced sentence. A one-room log school house also went up in flames Sunday. The 14 homes, most of them small log cabins, all belonged to Sons of Freedom members. Mother, Daughter To Stand Trial Ernest Trudel, Suzanne. have been No dates have been set. Variety Of Likely In C issues will confront the electors in the political campaigning that ends at the polls in the Aug. 10 federal election. The parties have not yet issued their election manifestos-these policy statements are expected in the next few days-but the main points in their campaigns have be- come pretty clear from develop- ments in the last few years. The Liberals can be expected to fight out the electoral battle basic- ally on their record over the last 18 years in office. particularly the last four in the 21st. Parliament under the leadership of Louis St. Laurent. The Main Issue? The Prime Minister was asked Friday at a press conference what he sees as the main issue of the election. "Good government." he replied tersely. leaving no doubt that is what he considers the public has been getting. The record also will be a main part Progressive Conservative ."5i5?rTcT'ii1i. liope school Mon- day night, June 15. of the govei'iimcni. of the "Dance Lot 65 Hall Thursday. June 18th. "All members of Barton Lndgc are requested to attend meeting tonight. festival School, and dance, Monday. "lciv crnam Gowan Brae June 20. VILLE MARIE. Que. tCP)-Mrs. 33. of Gainsmore, Que.. and her 12-year-old daughter, ordered to orrawa. (CPS;-"H. A variety of: bl” "m the 0PP0lW:'lNVP0l;'-T appeal, -'- U. N. Commander Issues Unusual Caution in Army By George McArthnr MUNSAN. (AP)-A Korean arm- istice appeared so near today that officers assigned to vital truce jobs were alerted and Allied soldiers were warned against mistaking a cease-fire for war's end. The UN field commander, Lt..- Gen. Maxwell Taylor. issued an unusual radio caution to his multi- nation army not to be swept up with thoughts of going home and get caught off guard. He said "the possibility of an armistice has in- creased to the point that we must consider what a. signing would mean to the 8th army." EDMONTON, (CPt - Light rain during the week-end helped check a series of forest fires which threatened to engulf the Alberta towns of Molvfurray and Water- ways. 300 miles northeast of Ed- monton. The rain came as miles of flame moved quickly through dry brush to almost encircle the towns. Eighty fire-fighters. including arnirl troops flown in from Calgary, along with many of the townsl combined population of 1,000, had battled the fire for days only to have it ad- vance on three sides. Light drizzle was falling over Northeastern Alberta Sunday at- ternoon and extended eastward ill- to northwestern Saskatchewan where one of the largest fires in the province since 1919 was raging Saturday. There were no reports on effects of the rain in Saskatchewan, but it was expected to lessen the hazard. The public weather office here predicted possible light rain over Base Camp Active The UN base camp in liiunsan buzzed with activity. Soldiers and medical personnel were told to start prisoner exchange reheiirsals. Officers who will serve on the military armistice commission were told to get ready to take over their Light Rain Helps Check Forest Fires In Alberta 3300.000 the entire forcst fire area for 12 hours or more About 50 ill'PS have been burn- ing tlirougnout the northland of the two provinces for more than 10 days. One at Portage La Lochc, cast of Waterways inside the Saskatchewan border, was report- ed to be burning over an area of 20,000 acres. The town lhsclf was not threat- cncd. Timber iiispectors said dam-l age would be confined to scrub growth in muskeg areas. Further east at Lac la Rouge, about 150 miles north of Prince Albert, fires burning Saturday had spiead a pail of smoke which re- duced visibility to almost zero. Waterways still was reportcd in danger Sunday. Flames in tree- tops were extinguished but mus- kcg four miles north of the town was afirc. , At lifcMtirr.'i,v, one mile west oil Waterways. flames wcrc four miles, distant. The only airfield in the district again was in the path of the flames. new jobs. Pelplng's Red radio said liaison I officers as well as staff offlcersl were meeting today at Panmunjom "to work out the last administra- tive details prlor to the signing of the armistice agreement." The first staff officer session to- day was set, for 11 em, t10 p.m. VEDT Sunday). Li.-Col. Sione 0 leaving 2nd BalialliondllPCLl Korean stand Pnchanged Preildent Slmzman Rhee called off ,at least for the moment. the anti-truce demonstrations which had raged for five days in the streets of Korean cities. Instead, 1.000 men and women from churches prayed in :1 Seoul lest the Allies v.- :n a park ”su rreiidcr to the stand trial on charges of murder 3Sgle551C0mm””l-W 3l1Rl'0550T5-" arising out of the shot-gun slaying 95” 19 me temporary absencc OTTAWA gm g . of Joseph Ceya. Mother mid M demo'm””0m.i' there W” "O Riley Stone. -fidcpils leillfiiiil llllllillllef Wlll be llflffl SPD-Trlilelyr apparel” weak mg 1" Rheels bu" mand of the first Canadian ullill Continued on page 5.001. 2 Issues ampaign itl to fight in Korea just before g for Germany. , The army announced Sundayl that an October shift will see col-, orful Big Jim from Salmon Arin,l B. C., relinquish command of ihej 2iid. battalion, Princess Patricia's' Canadian Light Infantry, to a 33-)? year old paratrooper, Lt.-Col. S. Cw Waters of Edmonton. l The unit, now in Calgary, isl scheduled to sail for Germany late in the fall to serve with the 27th, The main opposition body has been accusing the government of waste, extravagance, "folly," over- tnxation and failure to grapple adequately with such problems as brigade under the banner of the housmvtz. . I Atlantic Pact. With it will hel Radio-television policy also will other units of the original 25th, come in for Progressive (Nnservat- ive criticism. Another issue ex- pected to bulk large in the Pro- gressive Conservative campaigning brigade in Korea. But Col. Stone will be left. be- hind as chief iiistructor at thcl Royal Canadian School of Infan-l wlilll be ill” M "W Cul'Tl9 IEDON try, Camp Bordcii, Oiit., to teach, a'eging maladmiiiistration in the 0”,C..,5 and Ncovs what ml Blllly Works service. Governmentllcnrncd in winning the Distin-l misuse of its broad emergency pow- ers also Wm be a progressive Con. guished tcivice Ordci three times , and the Military Cross once in? servame c0m'en”D"' ltaly, Northwest Europe andl C C 1'' Appeal Km93- , g He rose from private to com-l ' Main appeal of the CCP' party, mending officer of the Loyal Ed-l it is expected, will be based onlinonton Regimcnt. in the Second social welfare measures. The CCF World War and his 2nd Patricinsl lV3lll5- Pl'lmEl"ll.V. 3 mil-l0l'lRl Plflll were the first Canadian unit fol Di heal”! insurance. and it also fight. in Korea, st'm-ting in the falll 5"” to llaV9 Old 089 P91190115 of 1950. They came home a ycarl b”05ted' later to become a pnratroop unit.,' A m”-l" Cmm, 0! W9 30Cllll Col. Stone commanded the army Cred” lml”p- it Ll llkelyt Wlll be contingent in the London Corona-l that the party's ability to provide mod government has been demon- strated in the West. particularly Coainiicd onv Page.5 Ecol.-Sh: F orci Companyis Golden Anniversary Tuesday tion parade. Col. Waters now is a member of the directing staff at the fli'l1l)'l staff college in Kingston, Ont. and Horace-.iSlaWck-li.'tm and J3EE Anderson, lawyers, who contribut- ed services or cash in the amount By David J. Wilkie DETROIT, (AP)-An industrial empire that started on a shoe- saus gm. overseas again, this tlmejpltal where the full extent ofthcir string and poured it golden stream of 35,000 each and cashed in Jitter s Send Eight To Hospital With Injuries; Automobile actzidr-uts ycsterday sent eight people to hospital liorel with minor in,1urie.s. Six were re-; leased shortly aftcr treatment. Thcl other two patients were held pend- ing x-rays to determine the extent of the iiijurirs. in the first accident a truck col- licicci with a sedan ncar Vernon River. Mrs. G. McPhce, wife of the clrivcr of one of the vchlc.ies, aiitly Mrs. 8. Candy. llllPlil1Pl' D'rlS5P,lliiYT in the same car. suficrcd llljLli'lC.s” about the face and logs. They were taken to the Charlottetown lins- lnjurics will not be known until the completion of x-rays. The driver of the other vchirle involved was Mr. G. J. ZilrtcDoii;tld of Orwell Cove. In the second accident two cars met on the St. Peters Highway near the turn to Dalvny. The driv-l crs were Mr. Edward Haywood and; Mr. Patrick Mullcu anti iicithcr was injured. The piisovngcrs, how- BY Bernard Dufresne tcaiiadian Press Staff Writerl ST. NEREE, Que, (CF) - A firc early Sunday destroyed almost one-third of this small munici- polity 38 miles southeast of Que- bec, bringing about the death of lone man and leaving 95 persoiisl' homeless. Killed in the fire that de- stroyed 17 homes, four stores. two 113171395. a blacksmith shop and the village convent was Joseph Laprise. 67-year-old church organist, who was over- come by smoke as he attempted to save some of his belongings. .Laprise collapsed face down in his vc:.,rt-table garden, parts of his body badly burned. Rev. Lorenzo Cote, parish priest, and Mayor Georges Laprlse esti- mated damagc about. 5300009. The 24 homeless families are composed of 44 adults and 51 chil- drcn. Started Saturday Night The fire started late Saturday night. in the summer kitchen of Alphonse -Lapointes home in the MP of his dtzv izoods store. The Lapointe familv, including 11 gnu. tlren. were asleep at the time. Roland Gndbout, whose neg;-by house was also destroyed, was the first to IIUUFP the flames in the apointe house and gave the alarm about 10:45 p.m. Saturday night. Pit-amen from several nearby towns were called to fight thg fire which was brought under cons trol more than seven hotirs later. Fireinen were hampereri by lack of water. Doctor Sees Elam The blaze was seen 20 miles -WH.'v' ll.V Dr. Laurent. Lizotte who sped tn the scene from St. Michel. He (lid '. Mrs. Georges Aubc to hospital in Levis, Que. She sui. fered from shock. Three or four firemen were treated on the scene for minor injuries. The fire cut through an area of 1-500 feel by 75 on one side of the main street. The convent for 65 boys and girls, a two-storey frame structure built (our years ago at a cost. of 333.000, and two homes were destroyed on the other side of the street. near the village ever, suffered a scvcrc shaking up and wcre all taken to the Prince i:';:.id..!::-:::;::l,f:;.?:t:i;,U,N. Will Have To Give Up Hard-Won Ground shock and minor injuries they werc, all released. 'i"hcy wcrc Mrs. Hay- wood. Mrs. ltili )lacl.c.'ii1 and Mrs.l A. Fcrgtisoii iit ihc first car. and' Airs. Mullen and two dntightcrs.l Shirlcy and Patricia, iii the second vehicle. De Georgi Faces Tough Problem In Forming Gov'i ROME. Ihctiinrsi - Prime Min- ister Alcidc clc (Zaspcrl today faces what may well be the liardcst. task he has cvcr had to tiiidcrtake:to form a ronlitioii government for, Italy. His own iiiirldlc-til-Ihe-road Chi'isi.ian ilritinrrnt Roman Cath- alic party won 40 per cent of thc vote in tlic gciir-rnl cl-action last week-end. i 'l'o form a iuiiiuiitv coalition. dc, Gasperi mufti, join forces eilhcr with lcft-or riclit-win: parties: whichever way he moves. he facnsl the danger of splitting his own party. For the iunmrut, he is cxpectcd to form a pi'ovisiniial izoveriimeiit of Catholics nnrl Tcchnit-tans, leav- ing final agrccinciit with the other slightly more than a milc :1 qtiai'tci'-ivitliin 72 hours lraptura, of Snipers Ridge 1 temporarv "Americans and South Koreans close By Robert Eur-non TOKYO, tAP)-United Nations forces will have to give up valu- able, hard won ground when llley haul their cooling weapons back along the blood-soaked Korean front af- ter the signing of a truce. However, competent military Oh- scrvcrs believed that from a strai- cgv standpoint the Reds will be in Jllsl. as vulnerable positions as illfl ground troops of Gen. Mark W. Clark when the tim sides dig in. East side will have to pull back two kilometres about a mile and after the Korean nrmisticc is slgiicd. Lost Important Spots in the FPllll.'ll front area. the Allies sccm lmuud to lose Snipcrs Ridge and Rock,V Point. A few hundred yiirris to the west, the UN 315., mu iosv Jane Russell llill. an appi-oat ll to Triangle Hill. which the Chinese have regained. The and a scizurc of Triangle cost to 10.000 casualtics last. Octoberaiid November in the biggest battle of tContinued7on page 5 oolrtll l movement. g Estimated At Buckle Under Fierce Communist Pressure Si-;()l'l,, (AP!-Til? South Km- lcwn fifth and cigiilh tiiiisloris lo- (l7H' luicklcri undt-r a crushing. t'ilitti'i( in uiivos of lltt,ius-ands nfll tili,iit.-wt ulio iollwl hack tltc. l(Ji'twiii trtirc riciiiitwtiiiovi line iuut-it .ts inn lllllF'S in sonic, 'lit"lPF. l Srimc 3(t,0tlt'l Comniunlsls werci ,att:ti-kin: along: a 30-mile sector of tho ccniral nnrl eastern fronts. l' Has the hizzr-.-t llr-rl attack -n two wars, since the spring flflYC' of l9'yl Infantiymen of the 1'. S third, ldivision battled with the Reds lnl lthe irenclios of the Triangle Hillsl l i l -on the south Kb: an it-ft flank- -"tnti lost sonic grtuinrl licfoic stuppiiig lllP t'liiiwsr- assitilts. TlgiIiPll0(l ('t-naorship i Earlicr rcports filtering tlirougli it Ilzlilcneri ccnsorship snirl fhcl South l(nrc.1n troops were icnlinzi ;undnr tlir- aitaclcs. The South -liorewns had illTF'r'Iiel'lFfl to ignore lany truce and drive northward to lihe Manchurian border. ! At l.'. S. 8th army headquart- iprs. A grave fat-Ni staff officer (said: i "The situation twiiilfl dcscrihed as fluid.” Tanks and artillery were play- in the battle. i)”Sl be ,ing a lung part : American officers :lSouth Koreans said the ROK! had .lv-r-n forrcri back by the Chinese iassatilt. across about 10 to .15 miles of the front in the cast- central sector that spans high hills and deep valleys. On the right flank, Communists in battalion strength pressed l:ii:::irI on Suiih Korcnns who re- lgaincd Christmas Hill. The Reds attacked in pro-dawn darkness hnhind I thunderous artillery and mortar barrage. Communist tanks support the at- tack in Iho ll. S. third division ,5:-ctor. Queen Accepts Scouting Award l LONDON, tR1-utci'sl-'l'l1e Queen lhas accepted the Order of the Gold Wolf--the higlicst, award in Scotti.- ing-fmm 1.500.000 members of the Boy Scout movement of the Com- monwealth, it. was announced Sat- urday. She is the patron of the i Kumwlia, with its important five- road junction, is so close to where lthe pull-back line will be stabilized. lit's hard to say whether the Allies lwill save it or lose if. l 1.05: of Kumwha would be a lserious hardship since it would cut lan important east-west road par- ialleling the front line. Three Killed When Caught By Train On Bridge BR.ADFORD,;()n.t. tCFl-A man and two women fishinz from a railway bridge over the Schomberg River ill." south nf this town 36 miles llfll'ih of Toronto were kil- led Sunday when a passenger train roared down on them. Dead are Mrs. Glerer Goodman, 47, Max J Title, 29. and his wife, Aiincttc. 137. all of Toronto Mrs. Goodman was cut in two by the li'aiii's wheels and the other bodies were thrown in the river. Another member of the fishing parttf. George Hahcrbush, also of Toronto. escaped because he was buying bait at a nearby boathouse at the time Mr. Haberbush said Sunday night he does not know why the trio did not see or hear the train coming. l-ie heard the train coming down the track while he was pay- ing the bnatman for the bait, he said. He shouted a waming to his friends and saw they were only 25 feet from the end of the bridge, Where they could have escaped. ”I screamed to them tb run for their lives or JUMP into the water," Mr. l-iabcrbush said. "I was thun- derstruck when I saw them freeze with panic. With the train rush- ing towards them I saw young Title put his arms around the two women. They were huddled to- gether like that when the train struck them." , iN0.V. .'Htc.t-iaaowt. DOESN'T MEAN Batiste; 3- BALD! -I-ogoyxzro, (Cpl-Avfinimum and maximum temperatures: To Save Fortress , It 5PPl'1lS fairly certain the tlhin-t "est: will save their terrible fortress; inf "Papa-San", overlooking Kum- lwha and dnininciiing the whole, lcenii-al front. it lies four miles. liiorth of Kuinwha. ' But. the l'N will save a illmlllllllli; in the south which is 200 fcctp llught-r titan the 3,600-foot Papa-, San l The Rt-ds' greatest gains will not, lbft on the gmund hut in thcii as-f, surccl llflllfli from air and naval at-l ttack i (il'(lllllFllil11 the UN fi;:litcr-l)vwiiih- inns and stipci'forii'csscs wniild nl-K .low the Reds to rchuild ihcir nir- : fields and supply thclr IFWDS ll'llll' tout. interfrrenrc V 1 One at the maior cnnrcssions ,was allowing lllc RN15 '0 Wblllld (their bomb-park:-d airficlcls I lPiFl'. 1952. into the pockets of a dozen timid original investors observes its golden anniversary next Tuesday. The Empire is the Ford Motor Co. incorporated on June 16th, 1903, with 328,000 in cash paid in and some 301.000 in stock distri- buted for services. Of all the stories "Dance in Hows Bay school on Friday night, June 19. Turn- er's Orchestra. "Montague presents the rollck- ing Ii-act comedy "A Ready Made Family" in Dundee Qall, Thurs- day. June 19. 8:30 p.m. "Hm to Wlltshlre factory on -M - . Tt...,m. g " . t with the saga of the Ford firm, ...'..:."” .f."it.::..:::" Lil; ....f.:'"::.:. .233: hair. .1; -on 1- ”'"l l"Nl on Friday: only. Charlie Munroe and hlrtorchastra. 0' Mm comm" H" hm” ig Dunc!" mm 9.30.100 sbomop ther, James Oouzens, A Canadian '-5.9 "1 5 ' ' ' who was then a coal company cm- s Kinkora Dramatic ed by Morell C.Y.O. 54:5 Present the three not play we hRl9Int-ntant". in Seven Mile Fur-mud 8.:3O.Monday. June 15th. h:'l'ii'Pt')'0n('. chihfto see Wheat- M- lllvcr concert. to be present- .,"""l New Glasgow Hall. Monday W": l5. and Wiltahire "99llB)'. June 17th. It mMNort.h shore Queen's No. 1 Dis- New Convention will be held in mm Gll-Stow Hall. 'hIeIday after- mmn at 2.30 and evening 0.30. After- " Weaker. Mn. w. R. Show and Wednesday. June Dance after. stewartls. Brat-kl ,v Hull. day night. C at on good music. leaving I.M.T. 9:30. in: and July 14th. Contestants tries ployee and later became a United states senator from Michigan, in- vested 8100 for her. she later re- ceived 395.000 in dividends and in 1910 sold her holdings for 0200.000. Her brother received propor- tionate dividends on his own 12.400 investment and sold out to Ford in 1010 for more than 020,- 000,000. Four or five of the other "See St. Peters C.Y.O. variety concert in St. George's Hall on 17th at 5:30. dance Fenner Beach Tues- service and Bus "Regular barn ree checkroom. in" the life of the company and missed chances to become multi- millisnalreu nut besides Oouacna there were John and Horace Dodge, machine shop owners who "Contest atop dancing, ling- fiddling Lot 65 Hell. can on- to Mrs. Dlmlen Trainer, '"'l”'"1 make: Mr.Alllson rme,ct..ummy C.W.I... Lot 55. built engines for the company. connected. initial stockholders sold out .early. for 012,500,000 each. All this grew out of the "crazy idea" of Henry Ford, then 40 years old and an engineer in the Edison Illuminating Co. planttin Detroit, that he could build an automobile that a workman could afford to buy. ' Ford and the Ford Motor Co. generally are credited with bring- ing the moving assemb', line and mass production to the automo- bile industry. Ford factories have rolled up a record mark of almost 10,000 cars produced in a. single day. This was done for Just ll. single day and has never since been equalled. Ford capacity currently is around 5,000 cars I. day. . , . .- Tom the his empire is directed nTllf..”l.iI...ll.TZIf l,'i?SLl3”'i.25 ?.?.?i".5 b3 "mm" Hen” ""d- the 350 er than normal for this time of year old grandson of the com- 3.93,. l”"Y"' 1”""d"' H9 l' Henry F0” Thick layers of river mud and II. who as president of the com- silt cover the baseball park and parties until fall. Medicine Hat Flood Victims Return Home MEDICINE HAT, tCPl - All flooded-nut families in Medicine Hat have returned to their homes as the south Saskatchewan River continued to drop Sunday after reaching a level of 29.10 feet, the highest in 30 years. Thursday. pony since 1045, has spent some Lions park. t900.000.000 in plant expansion The flood's total cost to the Ind improvement. Barring some- city ynd municipality, mostly for thing unforeseen he plans to spend another 3500,000,000 in the next two years. flood prevention measures and re- habilitation of the ball park is not expected to exceed 350,000. Switzerland Will Serve On Armistice Commission , ggRN' (Apt awitzr-.i-land chmued hlir mind Saturday Mid decided to serve on the Korean armistice and prisoner-of-war corri- missiona regardless of whether South Korea accepts the terms hammered out by the Communists and the United Nations command. Col. Fritz Rlhner, 62, was ap- pointed to lead a 100-man military mtsgion from this traditionally neuh-nl ngflhn to join missions from Sweden, Poland and Czechoslovakia in supervising the armistice as soon as the armlstioc is signed. sixty days after that. signing. a second Swiss nilsion will be dis- patched to work with Indians. Swedes. Poles and Czechs on the five-power commission to handle the prisoners of war who refuse repatriation. Switzerland's seven-man Federal l l Council cabinet. in announcing" the decisions. reversed a Mind that the Swiss would stay Rl l10m0 unless the truce WM ICBePi9Fl l3.V the government of President SYN!- man Rhee. who has denounced the proposed terms and threatened to fight on against. the Communists. All the other nations nominated have announced their acceptance. though Prime Minister Nehru told reporters in London Wednes- day that India would have in re- considrr hcr position if South Korean troops broke away from the Ul1llPd Nations command. The Swiss detachment of Col. Rihiier. whose rank corresponds to that of major-general in most western forces. will comprise about 50 officcrs and about 50 other ranks. A profcsslonal soldier. Rib- nor relircd last year after serving Min. Max. Dawson 70 Victoria 50 Edmonton '72 Regina 73 Winnipeg 88 Toronto 53 Ottawa '75 Montrcfsl 75 Quebec - 30 Saint. John. NB. 44 63 Mnnct-on 42 70 Halifax 43 51 Cliai'lotletoit'it 45 G6 Sydnrxv ' 42 02 Yni'mruiih 42 70 9. .lolui's. Nilcl. 43 6!) l-l.xl.lFAX. (CPI--The Doininitm Public Wcathcr Office hero save most. of the Marltlmcs enjoyed ill1F'. sunny weather Sunday. Afternoon tr-mpcratiirt-s rose to 78 at Edmund- ston lillfl 74 at. Fredericton. How- aloun the Atlantic coast of Nova Scnlm the weather rennin- pd mm most of the day and tom- pcrnturcs ncrc in the 505 and low 60s A rii.':t.iitbaiit'c south of Cape Cod is l'ii'llllll2 nmtlicast. Rain will sprcad into the southern Maritimes gradually on Monday. However, in northern New Brunswick and east- ern Quebec another fine day is foi-crust. Rcginiial forccasis' Prince Edward Island. Eastern N. '3. counties, lowcr SI. John river valley: A few clouds becoming over- cut In afternoon. Int:-rmittrnf rain hy evening; cooler with light winds increasing in afternoon for northeast 15; low-high at Char- lottetown 45 and 53. Monrlnn 4-'. and 00. Fredericton 45 and 65, Saint John 45 and 60. Upper st. John river vRllP,V. Fall of Chalcur: Clear with A few clouciy intervals: little chaiigc in temper- ature: light. uinds. low-high at: Edmtindstoii 45 and 75. Campbcll- ton 45 and 70 Rav of Puiiriw. Noi:tlu-.as'. wmria 15; inlt-rmittmt. rain in t-vtming: visibility 15 miles lowering to two miles in rain. High tidal today at. Charlottctowii at 1.42 A. M. and 12.47 P. N! High tide on the North Shore an 7.30 A. M and 004 P. M. since 1914 in the Swiss Air Force. Sun rises today at 4.26 A. M. and sets at 8.01 P. IVL ' -K