MAXIMS ' OI-'A MERE MAN Mgka your flutes IITGK .j Carrier: Charlottetown. Suinmerlide 315.00 per nnmun. Elsewhere In P.l.l. 59.00. Other Provinces and U.8.A. 11.00 per llllllllll. TWO GLACE BAY MINES SEALED IN MOVETO HALT FIRE Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CAN ADA, Read by Everybody MONDAY, MARCH 22, 1954 CO By dint of going bully, III will MAXI MS GPA MERE MAN well. 14 PAGES The Guardian. Five Cents Morning Dally Founded 1381. By-elections Today First Test For Liberal Party Since General Election Q1-1'AwA. (CP)- Four federal by-elections today in the central pi,-ounces provide the first political test of strength since the general mction last Aug. 10. The consiitueiicies--Verdun and mmv-au in Quebec-were divided uvmly between the two main part- 9; in last years voting. The Lib- erals held the two Quebec constit- uencies. Progressive Conservatives the Ontario ridings. No new major issues have arisen since the last election, which was gought by the Lberals on their record in govcmmcni and by the progressive Conservatives chiefly on . promise of lower taxes. The by- election campaigns have revolved chiefly around local issues md have not amused widespread public interest. iilthoug top party spokesmen and cabinet ministers hgyn participated. standing in the 265-seat Com- mrtns: l.bt-rais l'il: Nngrcssive Conservatives 49; CCF 23; Social Credit 16; Independent 3; vacant. 6. Record Not Good Although the Liberals won by it landslide in the last eicction. their by-election record during the life of the last Parlianicnt was not so favorable. In 29 contests. they lost eight. seats to Conservatives and held ii. while Conservatives held five. constituencies and lost none. The other five contests resulted in changes between Liberals and in- dependent. I.lbCr.'lIS. Polls will be open Monday from I sm. to 6 pm. EST. Seien candidates are contesting the election in Verdun. which has gone Liberal since 1940. Two of them. Yvcs Lerliic and Roland Gadhois, cinim Liberal sup- port while Herve Fcrlaiid is a Lberal-Labor candidate and J. M. lfkyes is running as an independ- cit Liberal. The other candidates ue: Armand Dupuis. Conserva- tive: William Dodge. CCF, and Ken Perry. Labor-Progressive. Verdun returned Paul Emile cote last year with a plurality of 13.020. The former parliamentary asslstmit for labor has since been appointed to the Quebec bench, Four Cantlldaics Cvatneaii, which always has re- hirned Liberal candidates. has four men in the running. Rodolphe Le- - diic, member from 1938 to 1945. is the Liberal candidate. The others: Frrnest. A. St. Jean, Conservative: Roger Boucher. CCF. and Marcel Bonnier. independent. The by-election was called fol- lowing the death of Joseph c. Nndon. Feel constituency has voted Con- Iemiilce since 1900. The former member. Gordon Grairloii. who died last September. had held it linre 19.15. Two of the three csnddates are I3-year-old lawyers: Conservative John Palieit and Liberal A. .t. C. 0lMarra. The CCF candidate is H"-V” Calif. 39-year-old cattle breeder, i'Iigi.n was held by Conservative C D. Coyie from 1945 until his death rec.-nily. "'"'ld5J'B Vote will be ii t.wo-way ';””W" between Cnnscrvai lye -!i”ilM McBain. 43. an farmer and Rflrmer county warden. and Liberal l'- IIMTY Rodney. 39. fl Presby- lerisn minister in St. Thomiu. Coming Events "Curd tonight. Party Dunstaffnage school n'I'New Haven Jamboree, Marsh. Ni Hall Tuesday, March 23, "TWO. one he-tfplays in Borden T”" HE”. tonight. "Hiciiiieia United w. A, cake I10 Saturdlot. March 27. Fenncll And Cihsndlefs. "Milton Hornets hockey team members meet at. Giiiespit-is store 9--'40 tonllht for Summerslde. E "NOW uniting;-ear of seat on Bilge meal. special price on car. union and Mncl-'tse. Winsloe. Dial in"P. E. 1. Drama Festival clos- Rr dates for entries. April lat. CHIP! obtainable at P .E. X. and hlrlottetcwn Libraries. "5"-Vin! Pigs Monday iii. Pre- gmcton: Tuesday. Brookfleld 30-M: Milton 10 am.; York 1 pm.: sword 2; '1Tacadia 2.-so; Mt. ”W"l- 3: paying 040.00 pr. for grid pin over as lbs. m-ii. sao.oo W over in lbs. each. will buy my '”'- Knlid Jorgcnsen. ,'TH'i'ke.v at North rum rink "iiillli. Nine Mile Creek Buli- '”II vs. Cornwall Meteors in giifti lame of finals. (tame time '1 mftofk sharp. Whichever team is H" "NY to start at nine o'clock Cu tame will be. awarded. if """Ill wins, trophies will be Rich Uranium Find Reported ' OTTAWA. ICP) - The Journal said Saturday in a front-page story that "cm ore body so rich in uranium that it. may dwarf the radio-active deposits at the El- dorado mine near Great Bear lake has been discovered and is un- der investigation near Manlwiiki." Manlwaki,Que., is 90 miles north of Ottawa. The newspaper says eigiht '10-foot holes have been drilled I half- mile from the town following "in- tensive" surface surveys. Uranium content of the rock was "still con- stant" nt the 70-foot level and ar- rrnngemeiits have been made for .diamond drilling 1,000 feet down. , The Journal quotes Dr. Rodolphe ilieduc, Liberal candidate in the Gattneau federal by-election Mon- day, as telling a public meeting at. Low. Que.. that prospects for production of uranium - the basic fuel of atomic energy - are ”en- lgaglng the attention of some of the biggest mining concerns in the country." Halifax Group Wins Drama Fesiivai Award HALIFAX, (GP) .- The Halifax Theatre Arts Guild won the CLI- vert trophy for the best. play in the Nova Scotla drama festival Saturday night. but the two other entries walked away with the best actress and actor awards. Halifax won the award with "Ladies in Retirement". the last play of the three-diiy festival, Ad- judlcator Graham suter said the play's first two acts were well done but the last was "rather boring." Eileen Connolly of New Glasgow won the best actress award for her role in "Dear Ruth". presented by the New Glasgow Theatre Guild. Bob Daily won the best actor's award for his role in the Shear- water Players' "Angel Street." Robert Aiban was presented with a. Canadian Drama Association award for his work in developing talent in Halifax and for starting theatre-in-the-round in the city. Rule Mouton Coats Liable For Tax OITAWA. (CF)-Mouton coats are fur coats and thus liable for the 15-per-cent excise tax on dress- ed furs, the Exchequer Court of Canada has ruled. Universal Fur Dressers and Dy- ers Ltd. of Toronto had contended that mouion was not true fur but tihe court decided that merino sheepskins used in the muuton pro- cess come from fur-bearing ani- mals. Most fur stores advertise Mouton costs as furs. Storrnallamage In Newfoundland ST. .YOH'N's, Nfld. (CF) - A heavy wind and rain storm whip- ped across the southwest coast of Newfoundland Sunday, ripping telephone and telegraph lines to the ground. Repair crews restored the lines near Port aux Basques about twelve hours after the storm struck. Apart from communica- tions, no other damage was re- ported. Wreckage At Crash Scene Near S'side Following the accident which occurred near midnight on Friday about one mile west. of Summer- slde, two tow trucks were used to separate the truck and car before the bodies of L A C Albert Grant: Townsend of Pickering Ont. and Corporal James Albert McRorie of Vancouver, BC, could be moved from within the wreckage of the car. A third airman LAC Joseph Raymond Doucette of st. Louis. P. E. I., who was a passenger in the back seat of the car is in hospital in Halifax and is given it good chance of recovery. In the crash he was thrown to the pave- ment from where he was removed to the Prince County Hospital and later flown to Halifax. His injur- ies include a broken leg and mul- tlpie head injuries. The bodies of the two airmen who were killed were flown to Moncton yesterday and from there will be sent to their respective homes. ' The accident. occurred when the, 1948 green Dodge. travelling to- i'.'fil'('IS Summcrsidc plowed into the back of a three-ton 1953 Ford truck which had reportedly run out of gas and had been parked on the side of the road while its louibreak-5.000 Feel Underground Takes Two lives (By Don Macllenzie) (Canadian Press Correipondnntl I GLACE BAY, N. 5., Workman sealed off two big Cape Breton coal mines with plywoodl logs and crushed stone Sunday in a costly move to snuff out a! fierce fire 2.000 feet below ground where two miners perished . I The drastic decision to close. down collieries No. 26 and 1-B was reached by company and union! officials at midnight Saturday at-; fer a four-hour pit-head vigil in the vain hope that tons of water, casciiding into the tunnel linking; the two mines would check the blaze. . The fire spurted forth Friday atp 7:30 pm. when an explosive charge, was set off to loosen a coal facel in No. 26. Two hundred night.-1 shift miners scattered through the: workings stretching three milesy undei the sea sprinted for the . I ,tunnel exit at a telephoned ai.arm.l Kw jThey were whisked to the surface - - - r - ' ,on the shaft cages. - 4 i Veteran employees Donald Mac- to operator had gone obimn Thelian, 52, and Malcie 0'1-landley. supply of gasoline. The force 0 37 d d d mm Lh y ome m the impact carried both vehicles i 95”” 9 5 N m II off the highway into the ditch 13"” I" help light me u” lmd and the heavy iwooden truck bot-,dIed' MHCMIIE" 5”””9d 'i he?" tom wrecked the front part. of lllPiFwack Mid OH””””3' W” "V-Ih3x' car. shearing off the top or the 13'” by me deadw Wmest engine covering and part. of the P" shut Down hood and pinning the bodies of Harold Gordoiri, the Dominion both occupants in the front 5;-atj Steel and Coal Corporations man- lr. the wreckage. A C0lt0IiCr'5 Jul? WES Pmllamlelled nger for coal operations, said No. 26 would be shut tight for a at the scene of the accident and the inquest adjourned to the call minimum Oi 101" W691” Ind 1'3 g for at least one week. gfnthe coroner, Dr. W. E. Cailag A small number at the L200 ” ' .mmi-rs whose jobs were affected 'iPh”i" P-V WWW” by the closure will be taken on in other collieries. But hundreds gal? . be I t P. E. I. Native ilies in halite- C. Mnckinnon, 78, a fcnner state legislator who was elected a Mex- ico aelcctmain last. Monday, died Saturday. - I A retired Oxford Paper Co. em- ployee, Mackinnon served in the Maine House and Senate. He was ii native of Prince Edward 15-! land. Former Mayor Of . . Halifax lmured HALIFAX. (OP)-L. A, Gaston- guay. 00. a spry and colorful for- mer mayor of Halifax. is in hos- pital in "fair" condition after be- ing hit by ii car at n downtown intersection Saturday night. Mr. Gastonguay, who has never failed to practice his figurc-skat- in: every winter, received head in- juries. Find Body Of I Preserved in I SANTIAGO. Chile, (Reuters) -A; Chilean mule train driver has dis- covered the body oi a young men princess preserved for 500 years without so much as s smudge on her face powdery Perpetual ice is the seen-I of heri preservation. He found the princess.l aged about 12, in an ice cave 16.000 feet up on the slopes of Mount El Piomo. in the Andes 25 miles from, Santiago. ....... y The body has been brought. to the institute of anatomy at Chile University and put. into 1 deep freeze. I The Chilean found her enthronedl in a mountain shrne. Her arms were folded. her childish features To Western ADELAIDE. Australia. (AP) - The Western Australian cabinet will decide at a. special meeting to- dny to cancel Queen zllnbethta visit. to the state because of s polio epidemic. ' Members of the royal household said Sunday they think the tour will go on, but will be drastically cut. The Queen aim! the Duke of Edinburgh are reported anxious not to disappoint the people of Watern Australia. but do not wish to risk increasing the infection by bringing out. large crowds of adults and children. Medical opinion appears divided on whether tour should be mod- ified. There is speculation that one measure to protect the royal couple themselves would be for them to live bboani the liner Gothic instead of at Government House. Perth. This was supporled by venom the mldoiaidc for 5.. m. May Cancel Queenls Visit Australia Western Australia today instead of later in the week as planned. If the tour is out enough to leave the royal pair with time on their hands three alternatives appear likely. They may: l..Lesve Aiislrniis earlier than expected and enjoy a leisurely voy- age through the Australian bignt and the Indian ocean to Ceylon. 2. Extend their visit in the Cocos islands. in the Indian ocean. some 2,500 miles south-cut of Ceylon. At present they are due to stay there only it few hours. 3. Take a trip to Alice springs in the barren heart of Australia. The royal couple attended A div- ine service in Si. Peter's cathedral here Sunday momlng. Today the Queen will spend the day free from official duties while the duke visits the woomera rockei YMIKP. about 800 miles northwest of but . A 4 Stella Maris School Burned - prance and all other air vents lead- MEXICO. Mnlnt. (Apt w -Infill. log into the cavern would be plug- Re One or the most serious fires in the history of the village of N0l'lIli Rustico Saturday morning destroy-53 ed the modern Stella Maris schooly and the adjoining hall. For time reritients were afraid the oil- tire village would be lost. The fire was discovered by Rev. Eric Robin. parish priest, shortly! after five o'clock. and although, help came from Pairkdale, Hunter River and Cliarlottetown. the buildings could not be saved as the flames had made too much headway. The loss is estimated: at sioo,ooo, only partially covered! by lllsl1i'Zllli'”P. As a school day had been sched- uled for S(lllll'ClEty the 260 pupils had left their books and, all were: destroyed as well as all the notes of the teachers and the records nca Princess ce 500 Years bore an expression of sweetness and she wore face-powder which! came. off at a touch. i She was buried in a black sleeve-; loss woollen dress. leaihrr mocca- sins and silver ornaments. I iicligliicd experts here said she is proliulily the most perfectly prc-i served human specimen to come; down from the past ages. i Richard Schaedcl. a United States anthropologist. who is a vis-l rtmg professor of anthropology ni the Univcrsity of Chile, is examin- ing the body. He expects the find, to yield iinportarit antlimpologicnl data. Eyeball: Intact Uniike the wrapped mummies of ancient Egypt, the Inca girl pre- served the look of a living crea- ture. Even her eyeballs were in-I tact. I Scientists believe it may even be. possible to take her fingerprints. in her hands she was holding a bag containing red parrots feath- ers and her own nail clippings. pre- scrvcd since her birth as I pro- tection against witchcraft. Surrounding her body were small images of gold and sliver, of great arcliriroingical value, The reason why she was taken up to the care is obvious. The in- ciis worshipped the sun and they believed the nearer they got to the sun. the nearer they were to their god. About the time of the princess' death. her people ruled ii vast. em- pire covering Peru much of Ficus- dor, Chile. Bolivia and northwest Argeni.in.a. Originally one of the ntimeroiis itmsli tribes in the Andean high- lands. the Incas emerged into his- tory through lheir skill in war and adminstntion. The dynasty came in an end in 1532 when Aihuaipa. the last emperor of the Incas. was mrssaci-rd by the followers of the were told to register today for un- cmpioymcnt insurance benefits at a time when lob scarcity haunts the whole of industrial Cape Bre- ton. M 2 Gordon said the main ent- E m vwiyfy 7' 7 K d so the fire would bum itself for several years. The school hndl0l-IL through lack Of 0Xi'llH1- nine vicll fitted classroonis. and The tunnel where the blue xiii auditorium winch would seat started vonllecl-5 the 9W0 COIIIEHCS 00 persons. There ll'Cl'G also too like t.he tail of a The inter- bowllng alleys, recreation hall, IVIOCIKUHZ DELWOFK made it "9095- sewlng and home economics rooniS.iS8I”Y to (11050 l-3 illlahoulh me life handicraft room and a. Grade l0.was entirely in No. 26. laboratory. Besides lllls tilte equip-l Mr. Gordon. red-eyed and 1imD ment lost included two pianos and y from exhaustion all-er I17-hour the laboratory innterials as u-ellpstint at the pit-head, described as all the materials Ill the niaiiunl1MacLeiian and 0'Handley as "two. lt)r31ieiirin)5tccll1i:-:- ufeiiflifu dish" end if .cmi.at.tIa"o;.'pagJsi1017;?" i The original school builrilng was opened in 1940 and had nriizimilly been a factory which was from the shore to the sitc The great. loss is t'0ll.Sl(lCl'Fd nlnmst: a small coiiviiuiiiiyl Ll2"I..37;”l.1.T?,'1?.3”.'3E2.f”11lTslfiischeduled For New Look a disaster in of only 150 fRllllIlr'S. Hnwcvcr. the EV RIOHARS-5. KAS15CHKE l rm" "1 NW”? Rustic", mm. MOSCOW IAIN-Soviet adver- mceting yesterday to make plans t . for the erection of a new st-lioolftisiiiiz. llF91i.l' Pl'im1ilVe by WES!-i In the meantime tcnipoiary (:I;iss-I.-.1-n ,:ti.indar(is. is going to get up rooms will be fouiirl and it is new wok, h0P0d 10 hi” Fmdms ”5”'lWl in the future. for instance. an sometime this week. rid for a movie is suppostccl mi The l1Pa1tl1.V 1101119 OF M11 UN" tell who's in it. and give some idea rcnce Gtilluiit uss sci'ioiis1y thrent- at whm 11;; about Cried by "18 We and 11 NW Y?” The internal ti-nde minlstry.i that liiid 111101 13001! Y0!" ill? FYION5 ncedivcl in the press for a poor of a volunteer bucket brigndc it adv.-ifl,1g:)nq job, mu just, put, out Indo - China I munist. - lof reddish mud. It ,northenst command it-uie;.Advertising In Russia By Larry Allen HANOI, Indo-Chins. (AP) -The (CF, gt stubborn struggle of French Unlonl iforces to hold the fortress of Dien 'Bien Phu and cut down Coni- lecl Vietminh besiegers looked more and more today like the "battle for Geneva." The battle, now in its day. may end quickly or drag on for weeks. But it has become obvious that the Vietminh rebels or Most-o-.w trained Ho Chi Minh want a i. tory to strengthen tlic.r lmiirl lll talks at the iortliconiing (Jciicm conference on Korean and Indo- China problems. May End War Big-power talks at Geneva be- ginning April 26 may lead to the end of the lndc-China war by negotiation, The Vietntinh know that if they can crush the f0i'ti'ess on the plain 175 miles west. of Hanoi they can boast about a major defeat for the French. The French know that if they can knock out the estimated 3".- 000 elite troops the Vietminli still have in the surrounding hills anrii in the trenches near the heart oil the lug power tcnlli it may fortress. Ho Chi Minh's strik- uill be sinashed. The Rebels Want Victory To Strengthen Hand Mccartiiy-Stevens Row May Benefit Democratic Party WxSlilfx'fiTO.V, iAl'l - Demo- crziis lZl'llC.'ZlCd Sunday they expect. to benflll pol;iical.y from a Senate probe of the McCarthy-Stevens 1'()ll ulioiiy a Republican mcsr' sud Srziiat-tr John McClel- I.'lll Dciii-.ii'k, who will have a mnirr l".lF in the iTlqili2'l' He added that "all the principals in this hear- iiies are Republicans or under Re- puhi;can coniroi " Hi 521d he referred to Senator .It'l:.'Dll liitcarihy iRep -Wis I, -Willi” Secre::i.ry Robert Stevens. Roy Colin. ciicf counsel for Mc- Carthys investigations sub-com- mitie:-, and John G. Adams. army coiiiisel aiding Stevens. The inicstigrition of the fight :3 S('l1("Illii"fI to begin this week It. involves army charges that Mn- Carthy and Coh.n exerted pressure on the army in demanding special treatment for David Schine, a pioitmer McCarthy aide who was drafted. and counter-charges by McCarthy that the armi used massive struggle for the fortresslscliine as a hostage, offering sppc. can thus be regarded as decisivalial treatment in Rain hit the region Sunday. turn- ing the dustbowi into an oval lake forced the French to taper off their biggest? sir attacks of the war after fiyel days and nights of hitting rebell gun replacements and smashingl rebel trenches and foxholcs be-I ing dug closer and closer to thel fortress barricades. i find Missiiig U. S. Transport ST. JOHN'S. Nfld. tCPi-A United States ti-arisport. plane missing since Wednesday on I Greenland glacier has been found and her crew members and two civilians are safe, the USAF's; here announced Sunday night. The twin-engined C-47, on I scientific mission to locate the massive ice fioe known as "Flet- ciier's island."madc an emergency landing 200 miles north of its base at. Thule. it was spotted by search planes satiirdny. 'Mosfciirrant-spin?-Iiirdsihg mercly states that something ex-. I isis. The Soviet press often admits that the advertise-nients are no good because they lack informa- tion. so the trade minisi.ry is putting out information sheets for custom- ers. These. tell, among other things. that a new type of shoe is coming (tui7an inexpensive sum- mar sandal made of pigskin. It exchange for agreement by the McCarthy com- mittee to switch its investigations of communism to other branches of the service. Author 0f Sev-e-rai Best-Sellers Dies pa.iNcr.'roN, N. .1, tun .- Samuel Sncilabarger, 65. author nf a number of swashbuckling his- torical novels which became best.- sellers, died Sunday. His best-known works include "Captain from Castile". ”'.li.i Prince of Foxes". and ”The King's. Cavalier." His latest book. "Lord Vanity”. is near the top of best- seller lists. A native of Washington, shella- barger is a graduate of Princeton. Iieadquni'ters!Htu'varcl and Munich universities. His first book was "The Chevalier Bayard”, a biography, in 1920. He wrote ii novel ,”'I'he Black Gale”. in 1929 and I. biography of Lord Chesterfield in 1935. HE WHO LAUGHS LAST is USUALLY Tl-lE.DUMBES'l' Wnlllri NW6 bcfn lml End lWi".V nneight.-page booklet of householdisitvs a special tanning process is' Oi-holes Willi 11- Sl78I'kb imlll the hints. It contains such infcrma- being employed so you can't tell - D1071? VWF” Ci'l'l'l0-ii "V01" I10” I tion as this. that 20 new fish,the difference between pigskin and ' mile mid lire fltimcs could be seen Srmrs um nppn 5001.; mm you can TORONTO. (Cpl Mmrmum and for a Iniiiz distance, L.2iH ill RILV siinulrl "wind your which in the Then tliein are beauty hints -- maximum lPmDPT"'U1P5 hlilh iillld 15 "'"d'iNl Willi 1li'IP' morning. not in the evening. be- how to but pm-tume. and how to Min. Max. ing to confine the blaze to the tii'oi.-M59 than .15 gprlngs are better apply ma-W31"?! ;Davison . 8 -- buiitiin:s- able to survive the jolts of the You are told where you ranlVRnC0'-Iver . . . IN Si -re - were-V” - ICIIH " order a cake from a caterer for siVlCi0rla . . . . . 39 54 I l The booklet also tells readersibirthday party at ltonic and areiEdm0nion H 30 ithni if thcv want, to eat in slgivcn recipes if you want. to ba.ke;C8IF!8Fl' . i7 34 !i'esi:ti:i'.1iil it. will cost from 45 in your min .'RP2in-R .26 34 ””'" W0 rubles per person. The official And --there is A warning not ln,?'lnllIPPG' . 7'-3 JR . gg rate of exchange is loiir rubles to starch clothes on the grounds-, Gfflnm . 2i 30 i5sLl',(e);il2oprE)t;:'eTgeL3l.:e the dollar which would mean slthat it is bad for the health. Ottawa .. . ..2l 23 emmem IKMML we Rmnung ox bill of from 813 75 to 317.50 per3Siiirch, the booklet says: "closelpM0nbll'PI1 .. 2? - mu-nuy hues to the Umwd SKat?'.1))(il'Si'lll. rthe pores of the clothiiig. iguey cc, . 2a 10 me Sam” new agency Tug Mm; WW 7' ,-Main! -olin 31 41 Sunday. p oncion .13 44 W ! I k Halifax .. 36 40 E ' Chirlotlelovin ....- :ii in TEL Aviv, (Reuters) - An in i:ii'drir.i' h 35 50 raeli foreign nlllli6l.l'y spokesman 11 P t t l'aTm0lll 33 45 accused Jordan Sunday of seek-is CS S 5?. Joliiil . 22 M ing to encourage tirther attacks - "---r----- across the border in the wake oil -- m .iwm,.mjdiM"tm, RuSSmnTmm,eyTl ll.-tl.lFA.X, tCPt The weather last Wednesday": massacre of it, By staniey Godfrey i The Ram" no”, .0 The Ne-,,h.H'l”iV9 litre says colder air is mov- yacstioning bus riders in south-I LONDON. (AP: - The NPl.hCl'"lerlandg cam. jug, three wcpkg '"3 W" ”” M'"''''""5, "'4 WW” .m 1",”, lands and Turkey Saturday mnmg.M".r Dutch Deremw Mmmn cm. l- uiatlrrrrl snnuliurries are ex. iii?” "ll RI”-iitin Dr0i9Ul4 I"-hi-Tlinllnelis Stat announccri that. the p";;'::lnY:l:'l"fn::I" J'"”"' Mmld”-V' . . .3 K (my-nr,n NA-nryns, N y. Mp. the two nallolls with heightening - Arab nations cninpiained in W'lTI'l '"n”""- UN secretary-Gcnci-al Dag Ham- 1" -VPRFRM "NM ""9 Ki'Pm1"1 mmiuoia Saturday that Israel is it-Wiitd the Dutch Mlmmeiit W. conoomnung rmopg on the horn", establishment of an Ame-rimn airy of her Areb neighbors. The Arabsib”-59 On her territory and Turkey”; gm Lhgy would mun”, .ny ng,lpIanned military alliance will-ll grngfon, kllnkislan. ' In The Hague. reliable sources la-nirf the Red protect would be re-I jecird cciiinririct Arnontnm MONTRIZAL industry is 4Cl").- The tobacco trying to pgrfgcy ,. the Turkish capital. Foreign of-I cigarel. which will go out as soonliloe lniofmlnh in Mill?! Inld Iicontribute lo the international at-i mosphere and to relations between as it is discarded. but nothing F991! Would I10 Ilm 10 the Ru!- suitable has yet been found. ll; mm. but iu-it when "div-ids on indii.st.ry spokesman said here hi?" WW W0 M!-" Such ii cigstret. has been sought, "We In imtti-it bun iii-t now." as 1 fire safety measure mg p it spokesman said. Eponlsbooloiiletlzi-nncIooPinrro.kuic time. Neither govqninsni gspneared, United States will send a Fl1llff(I- iightcre in time this rout of its r.cwest let The Netherlands some year. in it. the Soviets protested the move ”has nothing in common with the miintrys defence since Netherlands is not threatened by any attatk." "The granting of military ha-cs 11 I itn foreign states and the st..tion- :..nutiit:rie2. A W111i" T"4Fil0l1 MW i'1'0m ing of foreign troops on Neiher- lowering to four miles in fliirrin; Tlielsnini John '30 and 32. . Von llriinuvlck and Prince Ed- uard lnlnntlr filvimly with widely watt:-red snnuflurrin. clearing by ;v-uuing: colder. ui-at winds 15. ll.mv-high at (thnrlntleiown '15 and l3?. Moncton. Fredericton Inrl EdmIilId- .-inn and (hniphclltnn 15 and 25. Rn-. or Fimrlx. lVrxIFllV uinrls rimivii uiih uirleiy srgtinr-41 Vizihilttv 10 mllu isnds territory can by no means vrtlrier. countries," the note added. The Russian note to Turkcyl High tide todly ht Charlotte- Ilovin at 12.39 am. and i232 p.rn. Surnmeralde tide is minutes was delivered Thursday and pilb-ilnltr. itei-ted by i Saturday. Moscow ...- Mu spapers Sunrises lrtriily It I.l3 cm. and Iseta II 6.26 p.m. . L