A Vote For Drew Means Depressio n For You Inserted by the Queen's County Liberal Association MAXIMS MAXIMS OF A op A MERE MAN MERE MAN thfcllklll Ill!- Hewhodoaonllllllfltoollev By Carrion 0har1ottaturn.'ln-motile 318.00 in annan. llaowboro hovlnoas and lJ.l.A. 311.00 per IIIIIH.) in P.E.l. "-03- 0910! Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN. OANA'DA. FRIDAY, AUGUST 7, 1953 CITY HIGH SCHOOL - SITE SECURED NORTH OF SANATORIUM Dulles, Rhee Agree On .MuI:u'aI Security Pact Soldiers Returning From Red Prison camps Bring Storiesiliiirim Experiences By JIM BECKER FREEDOM VILLAGE, (AP) - The stories told by soldiers back fmm Communist captivity turned mm Thursday. A relative of the chief Allied l!'llllSl.lCC negotiator at Panmun- -um said his captors tortured him ii a futile attempt to wring mil- iai;r information from him. The co-pilot of a downed super- inrtress said he was tortured for liilil' days. A United States army corporal smd he saw 1,500 of his comrades buried in the brutal winter of 1950-51, dead of starvation, frees- Coming Events "Dance. Hows'a Hall. Brackley Beach. Friday night. "Dance Beaver Hall. Montague. August 7th. Burns Orchestra. "Dance. Little Pond Hall, Mon- day. August loth. "Festival and Dance. in Cherry Hill School. Friday, August 1th. Home-made ice cream. "Try our Purina Finance Plan for feeding your pigs and poultry. Dillon 6: Spillett. "Dance every Friday night. South Rusiico Hall. Canteen aer- i'lce. Charlottetonians Orchestra- "Bonshsw inn. Our special for Sunday evening is Roast Spring Capon Chicken with new vegetables. "Pantry Sale, August 0th. Moore A: McLeod. Ladies of Brookfield Church. "Dance in st. Peter's Legion Hall Friday, August 'I. Chair-son's 0'.-cllestra. , "Pantry- Sale. Fennell and ttllandlerls. Saturday, August 8th. 7.10. Aid of Kingston 1... O. B. A. "lnman Re'union, Augustine Cove Camp, Friday. August 7th. I 30 P. M. A "in stock. new improved Ply spray for cattle. Greensheaf binder 'll'lilP. cattle salt. All kinds potato 5lll'ay. Dillon st Spillett. "Master Feeds -l Another car arriving Prince Edward island Fur Pool Ltd. lummeraide. It's results ihtli count. "Master Feeds .7 Another csr :v"'iving Clark's Feed Service, Mount Stewart. Also grinding and mixing service. It's results that -"-'lnt. "Mt. Stewart Branch Canadian Legion. will hold a monthly meet- ing in Legion Room on Friday. lniiust 7th, at 8.30. All members illinse attend. "Royal Feeds produce greater llT0llt from your poultry--market rnur chickens earlier by using Rrwal Growing Mash and Pellets. Wily Feed Service. on .. "Farmers ask about the Shut Gain Feed Finance Plan. For par- 'mils.rs contact your local food mill. .1i'armers who break records use Shut Gain. ' immo your Shoes. Boots, etc. in Modern Shoe Repair so-so Syd- IW Street. Charlottetown. when run Home to the city to shop. Re- inilrs made available daily. "Show, Morell Hall, Friday and Saturday. "A Queen is Crowned." shows on Friday '1 and 0. Saturday ii 30. This is the Coronation in tech- nicolor and everyone young and old. should see it. "Showing at Mt. Stewart Satur- "M night "Calling Bulldog Drum- nioild". A Scotland Yard Mystery Story with Walter rliisoon and Margaret Leighton. owing to reno- -'nilona in progress at the Theatre ihcre will not be the usual Friday Quilt show this week. IF THE " LIBERA sing or neglect of wounds. Evidence of Neglect There was visual evidence too of Communist neglect on the second ay oi the exchange oi prisoners. ne South Korean soldier was dead on arrival at Panmunjom. Another South Korean died of tuberculosis as a helicopter took him away from Panmunjom. Many Allied prisoners were human wrecks. some were terribly emaciated. Others could hardly walk. Most were south- Koreans. Lt.-Col. Thomas D. Harrison of Clovis. N.M., a second cousin of Lt.-Gen. William K. Harrison, senior Allied truce negotiator, told of nine days oi starvation and torture. Harrison lost his left leg when his plane was shot down over North Korea in May, 1951. He said he was taken in September to a building near the North Korean where North Korean civilian police tried to get military information from him. 2 food entirely. but at every meal they compelled me to watch oth- ers eat." be related. I-n November, 10 police entered his room. stripped his clothes from him, wired him to a chair. and pulled his head back. . "They put a towel over my face and poured water on the towel,” he said. "This cut off the air and I could not breathe. When I would pass out they brought. me to by stabbing me with rets." Detroit, co-pilot shot down over four days by North Koreans trying to get military information. He said his frostbitten hands were bound behind him. He was given no food and was The beatings stopped only whe part. of his left hand rotted own? from gangrene. Cpl. Russel P. James of Auburn. Wasll.. said he was on a burial detail in the winter oi 1950-51 at a notorious North Korean mining camp known, as "Death Valley” and had seen" more than 1,500 fol- low U. S. prisoners buried. Eden To Holiday In South of Franco LONDON (Reuters)-Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden will fly to the south of France Saturday for a week's visit before going on to Greece for the last stage of his convalescence. Edell, 56, is recov- der operations this year. HARVARD CRASHES CIINTRALIA. 0nt.. (CP) - A Harvard training plane from RCAF station Centralia. on a routine training flight. made it forced land- ing five miles south oi Centralia Thursday. Cause was engine fail- ure. Flt.-Lt. K. R. Stacey. the pilot. was uninjured. capital of Pyongyangl "For seven days they cut off myl lighted ciga- Lieut. Samuel E. Massinberg of of a Superfort Pyongyang last Jan. 11. said he was tortured for beaten. crlng from three major gall blad-1 Will Discuss llniiicaiion of Korea Today By ROBERT TUCKMAN SEOUL (AP)-United states state secretary Dulles and Presi- dent Syngman Rhee. with a mu- tual security pact apparently rea- dy for signing, turn today to the explosive question of unification for Korea. Dulles was calling on Rhee at 10 a. m. (9 p. in. Thursday, EDT) for the third formal meeting since the American dlplomatls' arrival Tuesday. It was the last such conference scheduled although Dulles said he might see Rhee a fourth time just before he departs Saturday around noon. Dulles said Thursday's etirlg was devoted largely to disc ssion of the vast program of economic aid planned by the United stntrl to rebuild war-wrecked South Korea. The other major objective oi the Dulles mission, to negotiate a security treaty between the United States and South Korea, seemed near settlement. subordinates of Dulles and Rhee on a special committee have been working for the last two days on the treaty's provisions. They reported their work nearly finished and the pact could be concluded before Dulles and "his party leave. The treaty, which must be ap- proved by the U. 8. Senate. would commit the United states to come to the aid of south Korea in the event of'a new Communist attack. Naval Training Scholarships TORONTO. lOPl-Winners of six university nnval training division scholarships valued at 3250 each were announced Thursday by T. D. Kelly. chairman of the scholarship committee of the Navy League of Calladaj They are: A. E. Skinner of East- vleiv, Ont. to Carlton College, Ott- awa; A. S. W. Stiles of Edmonton to the University of Alberta: R. A. Ferguson of Edmonton to the Uni- versity of Saskatchewan; W. L. Boiduc of Wainwright, Alta... to the University of Alberta; D. C. Lan- fziilo of Ynrmouth. N.s.. to Acadin University and Philip P. Ney of Qualicum. B.C.. to Victoria College, University of British Columbia. Awarded to qualifying members of the Royal Canadian Son Cadet corps. the scholarships require re- cipents to enrol in university na- val training divisions. ..D..,,..L. will Compete For "Golden Ploy" COBOURG. Ont. tCPlCPlowmen from 12 countries will compete here Oct. 6-9 for the "Golden Plow". emblematic of the world championship it was announcch Thursday. Entries have been' re- ceived from Belgium, Denmark. United States. Britain. Northern Ireland. the Republic oi Ireland. Norway. Sweden; Finland. The Netherlands. West Germany and Canada. JASPER, Alla.. (OP)-An am- bulance wsited here late Thursday for 82-year-old Alex ,McCoubrey to be brought out oi the treacherous Athabaska pass area about 35 miles south oi here. where he re- portedly lived on mountain berries for nine days after becoming lost July as. He was found earlier in the day "well but week" by search parties who were ready to abandon their search. On July 21. he was one of a group that began an ascent on Brown Peak. near famous 10.782- foot Mount Hooker. as part of a lump program of the Alpine Club Man Lost Nine Days In Mountain Area; Is Safe of Canada. First reports indicated he turn- ed back down the slope of Browne Peak after the party completed 6,000 feet of the climb, Later word from the area said he du- appeared during the descent. Mocoubrey, who has been climb- ing with professional groups since the 11730:, was to be brought. as far as the Columbia icefield high- way by litter. The pgriy that found him was reported to have horses with them. A messenger who brougllt the news here early Thursday said Mocoubrey was found on the west- ern slde of the mountain. H by Ls 28,346 Acres Eisenhower i Adhering To Earlier goals" By DOUGLAS 3. CORNELL WASHINGTON tAP)-Prosi- dent Eisenhower reported to the people Thursday night the admin- istration is adhering firmly to the goal it set six months ago al- though it had not yet "conquered all the problems of our nation.” The chief executive spoke over all radio networks. As he analyzed things: "The future. both immediate iand distant, remains full of trial and hazard. - '”The end of our staggering economic burden is not in sight. ”The end of the peril to peace is not clearly in view." But he said there is in liifzht a firm and binding purpose guiding all objectives and deeds. "This purpose," the president said. "is to serve and to strengthen our people, all our people. in faith in freedom and in quest of peace: and to strengthen all other peoples who share with us that faith and that quest." yet Two Precious Victories In the field of foreign relations. Eisenhower said that the Korean truce has produced ”two precious victories." First, he said, it has been shown that the free world can and will meet aggression in Asia-"or any- where in the world." Second. he said, we have won the chance to show that free peo- ple can build in peace as boldly as they fight in war. ' Eisenhower went back to the State-of-the-Union message he delivered to Congress six months ago to describe the major purposes of his administration and then to report. as he sees ll. what is being done to carry out these purposes. He mentioned use of U. s. influ- ence ln world affairs in a way to deter aggression and eventually attain peace. He spoke of estab- lishing a national administration of integrity and efficiency that would be honored at home and respected abroad. He listed. loo. encoulagemen to creative initiative in the nation's economy and a dedication of the administration to the well-being of all citizens. "These purposes." he said. "give meaning and sense to all that has occurred in these last six months. We have adhered firmly to these purposes." Heads Canadian Nickel CtLl.id. COPPER CLIFF, Ont. (GP) - Ralph D. Parker has been elected president of Canadian Nickel Co. Ltd.. expldration and prospecting subsidiary of International Nickel Company of Canada Ltd, it was announced Thursday. Mr, Parker previously was vice- president of Canadian Nickel and has been with the International Nickel organization since 1029. PBIESTS ARRESTED HONG KONG. (Reuters)- A Roman Catholic Church spokesman said Thursday that he has receiv- ed information not three Irish catholic Jesuit riests had been arrested at Canton. south China. Names were given as Fathers Oanlce man, 40. and Richard Kenedy. 47. from Dublin and John O'Mara, 55, from Cork. WINNIPEG. (CP) - Twenty- seven new cases of poliomyelitis Thursday raised Manitoba's 1053 total to it'll cases with 10 deaths. Provincial health authorities said 336 cases have shown signs of paralysis. . STAY Entered in PEI For Seed lfnhto inspection "The seed potato crop on the Island this year is very good, with every indication of all excellent yield” states Mr. Henry Ma.c1..al.'cn, head of the Certified Seed Potato Inspection Branch. Experimental Falm. Tilers has been little or no early blight, but some late blight is showing up in some districts. In spite of the wet season we are experiencing, the blight is small! compared to other years. This is explained by the fact that al- though ihe weather is wet there has. been no excessive heat. and the brisk breezes which follow the rain dry off the leaves before the fungi have a chance to become established in the plant. This year shows an increase in seed potato acreage of 5200 acres. A staff of 28 inspectors is engaged in field inspection at the present time. Following are the preliminary figural of acreage entered for in- spection in the Province: Acres .. 15.938 5,672 2,424 2.078 L324 Scbago Irish Cobbler Green Mountain . Kaiahdin . Canso . . Pontiac . Keswiclt Warba . Kennebec . Netted Gem. Chippewa . ... Bliss Triumph .. Sequoia. . Mclntyre . -u o-3'33 vuaaea-.-&.n:o:ra.a Early Epicure 4 Early Ohio .. '2 Columbia Russet '.2 28,346 War Prisoners Stage, liiiis TOKYO IAPV-Mass liar- ing by 12.000 North Korean Communist prisoners of war was put down Thursday by United Nations guards who I used gas and small arms fire. the UN prisoner of war com- mand announced today. At least one prisoner was shot to death and four were injured ill the first of a series of demonstrations that began at 4 p, m. Thursday. 350.000 Slander Action MONTREAL (CPl-A 850,000 I slander action was filed Thursday in Superior Court by Hector Du- puis. Liberal candidate in Mon- treal Ste. Marie in Monday's fed- oral election. ' The action, third of a series in- volvlng candidates ill the collati- tuency. was based on alleged dam- aging statements sald to have been made by Leo Fournier, at a rival candidate's meeting. Fourllier was not further identified in the action. Wednesday, Mr. Dupuis' son. Yvon, Liberal member of the Q118- lbec Legislative for Montreal Ste. llvlarie, lodged a s5o.ooo libel act- iion against Jean-Paul Boisjoly. lProgressive Conservative candidate in the riding. Yvon Dupuis alleged that lie was libelled in a number of political speeches by Mr. Boisjoly. Mr. Boisjoly Monday took in :l0,000gslander action against Hec- -tor Dupuis. D LEAVES FOR SCOTLAND LONDON. (Reuters) - Princess Margaret left London by train Tllursclsy night to join the Royal family on holiday at Balmoral Castle, Scotland. 13o,ooo In- B E R L I N (CP) -Communism took a new heating from defiant East Germans Thursday. The Red blockade of free Amer- ican food in West Berlin was breached by 60,000 from five Rus- sian-occupied provinces and 70,000 from East Berlin and its suburbs. Desertions from the Soviet aone army and people's police set a record of 51 in a. single day. The total for the year rose to 2,606. Resort in Forgery V Meanwhile West Berlin author- ities reported East Germany has resorted to forgery in s new and desperate effort to combat the successful relief program. They said forged food coupons had been picked up at food- dis- tribution centres in West Berlin from members of West. Berlin's 250.000 unemployed. The unem- ployed men. they said. had ob- tained the coupons from East Ger- man Communists. The jolnt United States-West German food gift. program. begun July 27, is intended only for East Germans. Recipients of the 10- pound food parcels must first prove their East German,resld- cnce through the presentation of official papers. They are then is- sued with food coupons and told to take their place in line. West Berlin officials said the Communists must hl?VC taken one of these food coupons back to East Eisenhower Vetoes Repeal of. Tax WASHINGTON, tCP)- President Eisenhower Thursday vetoed ii bill which would have repealed the 20 per cent federal tax on movie tickets. It was the first major piece of legislation Eisenhower has re- fused to approve. In a "memorandum of disappro- vnl,” he said he was taking this step because the government can- not afford ihe ion of. revenue and "it is unfair to single out one in- duatry for relief at this time." each Red Blockade For Food o'e'r7rl"rTi'y-laiiii m.d'.-ca.';l;.7;:'r Engulfing Communists The forgaries served as one in- dloation that the tide of battle in the food war is engulfing the Com- munists. East Germans" have re- buffed every Communist move to Perseverance in a good cause is olistlnacy in a bad one. . 16 PAGES A block of land has been secured from the Provincial Sallatorium Commission for the erection of :l Composite Junior High School for Charlottetown. it was announced last night by Dr. R. G. Lea. chal'r- 5 man of the City School Board. The land has lmmcdintely north of that Sanatorium and has a frontage oil 350 feet on North River Road andl a depth of about 750 feet npproach- l mg the level of McGill Terrace. The transfer of land from owllershlnof -the Snnatorlu-m Coni- nllssion to the school Board followed negotiations between two bodies and with the approval of the Provincial Government. It was also announced that at A meeting between members of the School Board building committee and the architects (Messrs. E. H. Blanchard. Charlottetown. and Wil- liam Downle. Halifax) final Pip- proval was given to the prelim- inary plans. Work is now proceeding on detail- ed plans and specifications prelim- inary to calling for tenders, It is anticipated that tenders for excava- tloll and foundation will be called later this month. Present plans call for the erection of a one-story, U-shaped building fronting on North River Road. Pro- vision is being made for 18 acade- mic class rooms in addition to space for vocational arts and household economics, combined auditorium and gymnasium. The ground lends itself very suit- ably for the type of building plan- ned and has surroundings sufficient for a. playing field, Dr. Lea states. Access to the building may be by way . of Maple street and McGill Ter- race as well as North River Road. It is hoped to have the building for occupancy for the Fall term of 1954. The School will provide facilit- ies for the pupils of Grades VII to X schools. As previously announced. it is the School Board's intention to continue the present system of providing educational facilities to the end of Grade X at Rochford Square School, and to accept on a rental basis a school in be erected by the Roman Catholic Episcopal Corporation for the accommodation of those pupils now enrolled in Grades VII to X in Queen Square. provided the building is subject to School Board approval as to the details of plans and mtimnted cost and that the basis of rental be subject to agreement. crush the relief program. A ban on railroad travel through , East Germany, imposed last Sat-i urday. was eased unofficiallyl Thursday after East Germsnsl found other ways of reaching the. West Berlin food centres. 1 Thousands flocked across the zonal boundaries for lard, flour, coldensed milk and canned peas. i ommunist authorities openedl. up their second rival food disti-ibu-; tion centre in East Berlin Thurs-L day morning but were forced to shut it down two hours later be-l cause of lack of food. l By GEORGE KITCHEN Canadian Press Staff Writer EDMONTON,' 1C?) -The Social Credit party, striking to win the balance of power in Monday's gen- eral electlon. has confined its elec- tioneering to a. grass-roots cam- palgn. Many of its key candidates. from party leader Solon Low down. have stayed close to their home con- stit-uencies. Party officials here say their candidates-'71 across the country --have preferred to forego the fan- fare of the big political meeting and have concentrated on door- to-door and farm-to-farm canvas- sing of their prospective constitu- ents. They have preferred to ad- dress small groups-perhaps 10. 20 or 30 farmers out from the sum- mer fields-depending on broad- cast speeches to reach the larger audiences. Mr. Low did not embark on a national tour in this campaign. although he spoke in a number of Ontario centres on his way west Social Credit Hopes T 0 Hold Balance Of Power People OfTlll'0SIIlmd' Pray For Peace - TOKYO (AP)-More than 300.-l 000 people of Hiroshima quietlyl prayed for peace Thursday as they observed the eighth anniver- sary of the world's first atomic, bomb blast over the city. Somej 7.500 Japanese and Korean leftistsl staged a peace rally for the an- niversary in another section of the city. from Ottawa. late in June. Like his followers. he has kept close to his oivn riding. Here in Alberta. where social Credit sprang to provincial power in the depression-riddled 19303 on a platform of far-reaching mone- tary reform. party spokesmen openly concede that they hope to hold the balance of parliamentary power after Aug. 10. Mr. Manning told it rally at Lethbridge last week that the election migllt see the party for the first time in a position n exer- cise an effective voice in the program and policies of the next federal government. He pointed to a possibility that neither the Liberals nor the Pro- gressive Conservatives would win a majority ill the new Parliament. leaving the Social Credlters with an effective voice even though in opposition. The party concentrated its 71 candidates in the West. running only nine east. of the Manitoba border-eight in Ontario and one in New Brunswick. the' presently enrolled in the existing l The Guardian. Five Cents Morning Daily founded 1007. To Be Built (bl-.and Obtained ”:From Sanatorium Commission Time Running Out For Missing 0. S. Airmen (By Tons Ochlitrcri I LONDON. (AP)--Time nos Turi- ninrz short Thursday night for M Klimt-rii'an airmen missing in llie :Sl0Fl'llelilSllCd North Atlantic since their 10-engine rcronnaissalice bomber crashed before dawn 'Vt'erlncsll.'iy. Hopes for their sur- vival slimmed among sea and air searcllers. Four of the giant craft's 25-man crew have been found alive by ships directed to the area at the crash 500 miles south of Ireland and 300 to 500 miles west of Ira- land. The bodies of five others were recovered from seas that reached 15 feel in height. The survivors and the dead were he- int: carried back lo British ports. Tile 180-ion RB-36 was on 8. training flight to England from Travis Field. Calif., when it. was fatally crippled by an engine fire. The big bombers, largest in the world, are powered by six pro- peller rlriven engines and four jet enxines. Twenty-five searching U. S. Air Force planes braved folll weather to criss-cross a 200-mile area at low level in quest of survivors. Although the weather was sub- siding is bit toward evening, seas were still running 11 foot high. Hopes dimmed that the missiiil: airmen could survive night in the icy sea, even ihoilgli they may he afloat. on one-mrlrl dingllies, rails or in .12-font lulu. boats dropped by the rescue craft A coon Switch iioulo mraoun TORONTO. (GP)-Minimum and maximum temperatures. Min. Max. Dawson . 41 81 Victoria 58 on Edmonton 57 79 Calgary 48 73 Regina 50 '70 Winipeir 54 so Toronto 60 ' '75 Ottawa 54. 74 Montreal 56 '72 Quebec 55 78 Saint John . 53 '12 Moncton 52 70 Halifax 55 73 Charlottetown 53 86 Sydney 57 64 Yarnloilth . 52 .-- St. John's. Nfld. . 61 62 HALIFAX, ICPI--Ii will be sunny over the Marilimes today with temperatures in the '10s. the weather Office says Regional forecasts: Prince Edward Island. st. Johr. river valley. eastern New Bruns- wick counties. Bay of Chaleur: (llear: little temperature change Light winds. Low-high at Charlot- tetown so and '10. Moncton 48 am. '12. Fredericton 40 and 15. Saint John 50 and '12. Edlnundston and Carnpbellton is and 70. Bay of Fundy: Light northwest winds. Clear with visibility 15 miles. Temperatures near 80. High tide today at Charlottetown at 8.02 A. M. and 10.06 P. M. High tide today at the North Shore at 5.16 A. M. and 4.20 P. N1. sun rises today at 5.04 A. M. and sets at 7.32 P. M.-- - v YOUlLL CONTINUE TO PAY Inserted by sin Qooonh County Progresin Conservative Anastasia another”