,...j . ' . Maxims of a Mere Man All are wise after the event. 14 PAGES Bkzrnned Sales In”U.S. GrandmolherlyGangHead Ha's Dope Plans Smashed R013 (AP)-A grandmotherly gang queen was in an Iranian Jail today - her plans smashed to smuggle two million dollars I neck of illegal heroin to American dope addicts. A heroin laboratory capable of producing 110 pounds weekly and 520.000 i"orth.of heroin and mor- phine were seized with her in sud- rlcn .alds by Iranian police and Li. S. bureau of narcotics agents in Tehran. The action was announced Sat- urday by Charles Slragusa. U. S. bure u of narcotics district super- visor for Europe and the Middley East. Sirngusa flew here from Tehran Friday night. SAW VARIOUS PRISONS Siragusa told this stnry from policel records: For 40 years police around the world have duelled with two clever international n I r c o t i c s traf- tickers-M lchael Kslogridi and his ' began work. Last week Iranian police and U. S. agents struck. Three ac- complices. all Iranian, were ar- rested. Their female leader was caught with heroin. Police say I long sentence is certain. A lifetime in crime had hard- ened Kalyopi. Question her as they would. police got but two words out of the fat, old woman wife, Kalyopi. The couple Served TV prison terms in Greece and Tur- - key but returned to crime. Mich- ael was I skilled chemist. In 1948 Istanbul police grabbed ” me couple Just as Michael was ). about to leave for Mexico and set up I heroin laboratory financed by I New York city gangsters. He went to prison instead. Narcotics agents made I number of arrests in the United States and Mexico. ” Eighteen months ago the tough nld couple disappeared from their known I cunt . The reason: Mich- If'l was in enforoed retirement be- cause of illness. For I year. his wife nursed him. Three months ago he died. She was widowed- and broke. Their savings had been used up during the illness. BACK IN BUSINESS Then word slipped around the Mediterranean underworld that Kalyopi. It 06. was back in busi- BOSS. A rich Iranian drug merchant financed her. A two-storey villa ' xi-as rented It Tehran because ll- tanbul Ind Beirut were too hot. National police h ve hit hard It dope smugglers are in recent months. Unknown to Kalyopi. U. 8. bar- colics agents and Iranian police had pipelines into the underworld and knew of her activity. Three weeks ago. the Tehran laboratory Ferry Bluenose ' Sails For Yarmoufli SAINT JOHN, N. B. (CF)-The ferry Bluenose. drydocked here since early March for ropelier repairs. sailed Sunday or Yar- mouth. N. S. She was taken off her Yarmouth-Bar harbor. Me.. run March 8. Queen Home From Holiday LONDON (AP)-Sunburned and smiling, the Queen flew home Sun- day after I weeks holiday cruise in the Mediterranean. hv .i though the royal yacht Britannia ran into some' rough I'f'dlller the Queen said "we hIve lljoyed it immensely." The Queen and the Duke of Ed- Iiburgh came back to London in separate planes. The Queen new in I Viking. the duke piloting his own plane. The Queen went to Windsor Castle where I Soviet delegation including ex - premier Georgi M. Mslenkov went on I sight seeing tour earlier in the day. Coming Events Variety concert in Vernon liail linnday. March l9. Card Party Spring Park iiall Monday at 3:30 Prizes. Lunch. Tournament, Reserve April 18 and 24 for three It! Play "80 of my heart" by Trinity Young eopleg, Cfllllud rink tonight. Delve- dere vs. Orapaud at 7; Cape Traverse vs. Charlottetown Ab- bics 8230. Annual play. Thanksgiving Hall willlniton. Monday. Tuesday. Msrdi lath and Starting fill Good specialties. Vlrlrtr coaocrt iI Mt. Stewart Ncniorial mu ea Tossday. March lat ms: nu Lem. "'1 ct MI. as church. Hock t ” ' ' 3.1.. .::.:..:'.r" in our. CNOR Inlliy firtt Im h mill.-finals. acme tlroo Ml. slim It CD. as of New Glasgow . will be held in Hall on Wednesdly. I run. Patrons re- Anausl '. if! 10 ail. pi 17-day pir tour of the Arctic. This map shows Mr. Mu- ilo route. His itiner- tar. Frobtshcr Bay, Hall LING Resolute with her hair in In old-fashioned bun and I mole on her left cheek. She would speak her nIme-noth- ing more. Kalyoti looked deceptively weak and grandmotberly. but 51118038 said: She had been the brain! b9- hind her husband when he was alive. She was the real icy-eyed international dope queen the novels write about." e Guardian CHARDOTTETOWN. CANADA. MONDAY. MARCH 19, 1955 Fine Weather On Emerald Isle Sl. Palriclt's,Day slashing rain, There was laughter and danci feet throughout the land on the birthday of the patron saint. All the bars were closed .St. Patrick's Day is I day of prohibi- tion in the Irish Republic. But many I I tut Irish- DUBLIN (AP)--A bright sun shone on the Emerald Isle on St. Patrick Day after I week of BS Cypriol Terrorists Shoot Choir Member In Church I Covers Prince Island Like the Dew men nr.:naged to find a way to give his traditional toast of "down- ins the shamrock." St.gPatrick'I Day is not I holi- day in Ulster. There wIs I rush to the north over the border where the pubs are open. Basically March 17 is I religious holiday in the Irish Republic and the Roman Catholic churches were . thronged for morning masses. The afternoon. was the biggest Sports day of the year with horse and dog tracks crowded and foot- ball stadiums filled. r 0' A Author Louis W70 any QITMPWFDE - -qmxnow--J-Ia. naewnumlu-ms, To Anusosuk. - vacuum 'T”"l' ...v so: I own. .-4-Ir-nu I -char maso- asl-s0&- Arctic Town Planned Governor-General Massey sets BI . March 2:! flight over North out from Ottawa March I) on I Po . March 35: Camltfldle Bly- Canadian March 27; Tuktoyaktuk. Mnrch 28; Aklavlk, March 80; Norman Wells. Whitehorse. April 8: The PII. River. N I w April 4; retuni Ottawa. April I. 'H-' h x "(or Photo" 1 WINDSOR. Englnnd (Reuters)- Former Soviet premier Malenkov Sunday made I rapid- fire tour of historic" buildings out- side London and left harrassed officials of Britain's ancient mon- uments sweating and bewildered. Malenko was originally sched- uled to inspect Windsor Castle Sunday morning with I party of ...y. ahe ... on I three-week tour of Britain. But the other Russians arrived without him. Officials of the castle showed them around and were about to depart for lunch when Malenkov suddenly arrived in I click Rus- sian llmousine. "I had work to do at the Soviet embassy.” he said. "but I felt I must see Windsor. The appointment that kept him was to receive I delegation oi trade unions from Battersea power station It the Russian em- bassy in London. The lunch was hastily cancelled and castle officials escorted Mal- enkov and other Russian officials who arrived late around the castle. Security was almost forgotten. Only I fcw plain clothes detectives lingered close to him Is he in- spected the castle. Malenkov Late For Castle Tour Queen Elizabeth was not It Georg: Windsor during the weekend. Crowds took advantage of the ease-up in security restrictions and crowded around the portly Russian. He spoke to them chlldreny and dotted his list to women. He posed like I movie star for tourist photographers. M ' ' will hold short -talks with Prime Minister Sir Anthony Eden today. Politicians were uk- ing whether Eden in his scheduled &-minute talk with Malenkov will seize I unique opportunity to ask reaction to the disclosure of Com- munist party chief Nikita Khrush- chev's attack on the dead Soviet diemonstrations in Georgia. Rus- I. PLOODS RIP HOMES VIENNA (AP) - Thousands oi houses have been destroyed Danube river floods in southe u Hungary. Radio "duapest said Sua- day. In the district of Tolna. 1.385 houses have been washed away. Oi about l.000 buildings in the city of Bodiulo. 006 were destroyed. NEW YORK (AP) -- liumorist Fred Allen. the dour and baggy- eyed fixture of radio and TV for I quarter of I century. is dead. Allen. 61. collapsed shortly be- fore midnight Saturday on I mid- town street during I nightly stroll. An autopsy-I routine procedure in cases of death without I physi- eian in attendance - showed he died of I heart ailment. Dr. Milton I-felphern. chief med- ical examiner. described it as In occlusive coronary artery disease. He said Allen had had I heart condition "over the years." ill health and sponsor difficult- ies put Allen on I-part-time basis on the airwaves in I940. about the time he save up his -trussle Igalnst the TV medium. "let someone else pioneer it." he had said with distaste. But av. years ago he became I regular member of the solid” night "What's My Line" panel on c3s.'rv replacing Intlhsr come- din of the same turns. Ste" Alien. Allen's death was as quick as thearilibsheloosedatansv "iii"-uni into redio II us: after years Is I vciafeville budllasr. With him wcl his wife. if preciative public for so mm! M Humorist Fred Allen Dies On Street During Nightly Stroll Allen" g r e e ii I g became their trademark. WIFE AT SIDE She was in their apartment on West 50th St. when Allen was Itricken as he strolled along 57th near Seventh Ave. at 11:6 p. m. Allen's rapier-like wit held few subjects sacred. III was especially fond of commenting on the pass- lng scene through the months of such people as '”' t ClIg- born." one of the - hsbitants of "Allen's Alley." Giveaway programs and net- work officials were his pIrticulIr targets. Programs til It gave people riches - and this was before win- laadliofmwbcsalillvaoll 'IIr friendly tones. patted the heads of Bromfield Dies COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Pul- itzer-prlze - winning author Louis Bromfield. 59, died Sunday night in University Hospital. He was 59 last Dec. 27. Dr. Charles A. Donn, Brom- field's physician. said Bromfield was admitted to the hospital Feb. 33 lllffefllll from "honologous serum jaundice." . Dr. Doan said death resulted :from I failure of the liver and kidneys following infection by the jaundice virus. Bromfield was I well - known novelist, newspaper columnist and historian. At his residence near Mansfield, Ohio, Malabar Farm. he conducted experiments in scl- entlfic farming on I large scale. Bromfieldfwon the Pulitzer Prize for 1926 for his novel Early Au- tumn. It was I story of I Mas- Iachusetts family. Many of the more than two score novels Bromfield wrote became movies. The one-paragraph outline of one Mrs. Parltlngton. brought :1!!! I 300.000 cheque from. Bulb)- ood. Bromfield was born Dec. 21, 1&6 at Mlnslfled. Ohio. He en. tered Cornell University in 1914 to study agriculture. After com- ltletini I you at Cornell he worked I year on andfsthei-'s farm. school Iounaltsm I writing curses. r The first war war cut short is college work. 9 served with I American Ambulance Corps. at- tached to the French Army and won the Croix de Guerra and the Legion of Honor. GERMAN BEDS GATHER BERLIN (AP) - East German Communists staged I mass dem- onstration of armed workers in the east zone city of I-Ialle Sunday. They were observing the 35th In- niversary of I P ' upris- ing in 1921. The official East Ger- ,” man news agency ADN said 20.- 000 members of armed "fighting groups." bearing machine pistols and carblnes. came from indus- trial plants in East Germany. In ' co mbia University "' at S for New Powers To End Rebellion In Algiers ALGIERS (AP) -- French res- ident minister Robert Lacoste flew back from Paris Sunday and at once invoked his new and sweeping powers for stamping out nationalist rebellion in Algeria. Lacoste issued a series of de- crees-approved by the French cabinet Saturday-which in effect puts Algeria under a state of emergency. He announced troops now are being airlifted to reinforce the 230,000 here. The Frnch cabint has ordred two divisions from France's North Atlantic Treaty forces in Germany flown in. other 1,500 troops streamed ashore from troopships at Oran. About 300 interceptor planes will be flown in to reinforce the all power now stationed in Algeria. While using his get-tough pow- ers. Lacoste at the same time undertook measures to improve the economic position of Algeria's Arabs. The struggle with the rebels went on, as it. has for 16 months. even as Lacoste outlined his pal- icies at I press conference. There were rebel attacks on the French and French counte measures. LIcoste's new one-man author- ity gives him control over nearly every facet of life in this country of one rriilllon Europeans and eight million Moslems, a land four times the size of France. BANS GATIIERINGS Lacoste declared that all dem- onstrati us by European or Mos- lem res dents are banned. He cautioned against any It- tempts by the press .to spread "flase news or false opinions." There will be no censorship of news from Algoriatmhgowaver. be tied. Lacoste IVk0yllld;IOlI3.I;fWDl1ll of Idvice for I citizen'I' committee which last week drew up an ulti- matum demanding execution of 80 Algerian rebels sentenced to death for terrorism. I-le declared he would not have "this extremely delicate matter regulated in the ltreets." The powerful committee. which claims to represent all the Europ- eans in Algeria. has threatened to shut down all municipal offices in the country beginning Wednesday if the rebels are not executed. Such I stroke could throw the country into near turmoil. NORTHERN NAVIGATOR Martin rr bisher in 1576 discov- ered Ca.iada's eastern Arctic is- lands while searching for I north- ern passage to Asia. the man who was Stalin's heir his leader and subsequent reports of "' basement Friday when Edward NAPANEE. Ont. (CP)-A spring housecleuilng in the basement of I Napanee house has turned up I bizarre letter with professed con- fessions to several crimes. includ- ing two unsolved slayings and I suicide. The curdeiy-printed letter. un- doted. fell from I beam in the hen. l7. son of the owner. was using I vacuum cleaner. Signed only "Bob." it confessed to an unsolved slaying of I North- hfook trapper in 1937. and the shooting of I Toronto policeman. It also outlined details of the 1031 suicide of I J ed prisoner in Frontenac county Jail, 25 miles east of Napanee. The letter writer said he was an eyewitness to the slaying of Aub- rey Fedora, the trapper. NAME ILURRED The name of the Illged slayer was blurred and almost illegible. part of it burned. Robert Woodman. tion with the slaying Ind acquitted. Knowledge of the death of Ches- ter Croalcy. I convicted murderer who died mysteriously Nov. 3. I017 Ilse was contained in the letter. "Bob" wrote that ey. Negro, was slipped I quantity of Probe Death Of Saint John Mon SAINT JOHN. N. 3. (CF) - A father and son. held for question- Confession Of Murder Turned Up In Spring Housecleaning poison to insert in his veins. Toronto police said there is no record of the policeman the letter writer said was shot and killed by I "gang of six" of which "Bob" claimed to be I member. The letter also mentioned sev- eral other minor crimes. including I house burning. "A WICKED MAN" Purporting to explain how "Bob" beca ie I member of the ”Gruop c' Six." the letter began: "A confession of I wicked man." "It was while standing on the street in Toronto. Ont.. cold, wet and starved. that I car came along. "A well-dressed man came up to me and asked me if I wanted work. bed and board. I said I would do anything for him, little knowing what I would be asked to do. "I might better have died that night.” Help Delayed I HALIFAX (CPI - A swirling blizzard swept across the storm- weary Maritimes Saturday. dump- lng huge drifts on highways, caus- ing one death and preventing help from reaching an isolated home where two children burned to death. ' Some areas recorded I 19-inch snowfall. highways were plugged with 15-foot drifts and five ships An- were held at bay off Halifax har- hor. Although it broke no records it was one of the winter's biggest wnllops. Gales teaching 40. " s-an-hour fanned flames through I frame dwelling at Mount Uniacke in cen- tral Nova Scotia claiming the lives of three-year-old Donald Smith and his seven months sister Irene. Their f I t h e r. James Smith. walked eight miles over snow clogged back roads to the nearest telephone to summon aid for his wife who was burned when the stove she was cooking on ex- ploded. It took him five hours. Mrs. Smith was brought to hos- pital here but the extent of her burns was not known. The blaze broke out at 11 a.m. Saturday. A plow dispatched from Halifax, 35 miles away. to break I trail for I hearse. ambulance and RCMP car from Windsor Iched the scene about 3:30 a.m. Sunday. CAR HITS SNOWPLOW killed when the car in which he was riding collided with I snow slow It Pennfleld. N. B. Another mmger in the car. Gerald Wil- 15. was taken to hospital with I broken leg. The youths were members of I basketball team travelling from St. Stephen. N. B. to their Saint John homes. At least five ships. including the German liner Seven Seas. en route to New York with 400 passengers, hove to off Halifax harbor during the day until gale force winds abated. The pre - spring blizzard. spawned off the southern United States. dumped lit inches of snow on Ya. lb It the southern tip of the province. Liverpool. further Ilong the shore had seven. and Halifax about eight. Sixteen inches fell at Greenwood in the Annap- olis valley. Sydney. at the opposite end of the province. received five inches. Prince Edward Island reported four inches at Charlottetown and I little more at Summerside. Saint John with 13.2 inches was the hardest hit New Brunswick centre. Fredericton reported 6.6 and Moncton five. Airline nights were cancelled while highway and city traffic moved at I snail's pace. The CPR train from Boston was more than eight hours late arriving at Saint John. Wind whipped names It Kedg- wlck in northern New Brunswick dutroyed I two - storey general Son of Hon. Mr. Winters Dies DENVER. Colo. (AP)-Richard Winters. 13-year-old son of Works Minister Robert Winters of Can- ada. died Saturday night It Gen- eral Rose Memorial Hospital here. two dnys after undergoing I heart operation. His father and mother were at his bedside when he died. The boy was operated on Thurs- day to close I hole between two lower chambers of his heart. I n Tragedy store valued at 310,000. Cause of the blaze has not been determined. All bus and airline schedules were ancelled in Nova Seotla and trains were running behind time. A rash of minor accidents were reported in Halifax and emplo cup of many firms were sent home. Construction work halted and 1,000 women went home from the One Death is Blamed On Snow Storm In Mariiimes Imperial Oil Company refinery project at Eastern Passage across the harbor. Nearly eight inches fell in New- foundland but most roads were kept open. Train service in the central part of the province. dis- rupted by a snow storm since Thursday, was resumed Saturday despite the blizzard. With only four days of official winter left Prince Edward Island was blanketed Saturday with I ten inch snowfall which when whipped by I steady North East wind of 35 miles per hour piled drifts high throughout the Province bringing motor traffic to I standstill. Government p l o w s were in- effective against tbe continual drifting which lasted well after dark. The machines stood by for emergencies only. With the plows on the job early yesterday morning most of the main highways were open around 11 I.m. Work on secondary roads will continue until they are clear- ed. All of the Department of High- way'I 50 plows were in operation until I late hour last night in In attempt to get traffic flowing John Joseph Dunn. 16. was ISM n. The Canadian National Railway although ninnlng ” ' ' behin Late Winter Storm Snarls Traffic Throughout Province schedule did not experience any particular difficulty. Some heavy cuttings are reported, the heaviest being near Harmony Junction. The M. V. Abegweit after mak- ing the round trip. tied up It Tormentine on the first half of her second trip. The return trip to Borden was not made until 7.00 o'clock in the evening. - The C.N.R. freight trucks did not make any trips. The mail to Murray Harbour went by after- noon train. The continual patrol of City snow- plows kept the streets of Char- lottetown passable but the going was slowed to a crawl with many of the side streets blocked com- pletely throughout the day. Due the visibility all flights by Maritime Central Airways were cancelled on Saturday. but with the weather clearing yesterday all d scheduled were maintained PRICE 5c Proclciim Death For informers NIQOSIA. Cyprus (AP) -- Foul men in masks dashed into I Greet. Orthodox church just before the service Sunday, shouted "fl.'3lfDI" at. a choir singer and killed him with blasts from their guns. The men got away easily and British authorities ran into In other blank wall in their efforts to track down the slayers. EOKA. the terrorist branch of the Union-with-Greece movement has proclaimed death for inform- ers who give the Brltish informa- tion. The church shooting was tht second fatality Sunday in a rislni rate of violence since Governor Sir John Harding deported Arch bishop Makarlos. bearded Greek Orthodox leader of the movement. to the remote Seychelle lsands in the Indian ocean nine days ago Britain charged he was abetting the terrorist campaign. Congregations crowded the Or- thodox churches Sunday and heard a pastoral letter read from all pulpits calling upon them to resist British rule. The letter said Britain was completely mistaken if she believed the exile of Mak- arios would break the will of the people. Prayers were said for Makarlos while the people knelt and church bells peeled a dirge. The second shooting of the day was near Limassol where I Turk- ish villager in Pendakomo was shot dead and another wounded by British soldiers who were I search for Inns. WAS WAVING CLUB . 5 , An official British stahllesl he ran toward the soldier , Iciuosnatal1odtonIIInqr,II- NEW YORK (AP)-A winter that refused to die spawned an- other snowsto ... in the northeast United States Sunday bringins the weekend death toll to 82 and im- perlling highway travel with ice and snow drifts. Spring was officially scheduled to bow in Tuesday but stalled cars ice-glazed roads, slushy streets and snow shovels were the order of the day from Virginia to Con- necticut. The new storm. coming .on the heels of Friday's combination ltortheaster and blizzard. brought snow to portions of Virginia West Virginia. Maryland. Pennsylvania, New York. New Jersey. Massach- usetts and Connecticut. The weather bureau predicted the new blizzard would lay I blanket of up to six inches inches over the area. Sand trucks moved out to help clear up traffic snarls on many major highways I nd bridges. Cities called in additional snow removal crews. Toll roads and thruways cut speed limits to half and found. in many cases. that motorists were obliged to halve the figure again. Governor Abraham Ribicoff of Connecticut scheduled I confer- ence Wednesday to deal with the possibility of floods from the blanket or snow. CAUGHT IN CLEANUP Most of New England was still diggin out from the earlier storm when ts sister began moving out of West Virginia for I northerly Visit. Among the snowbouud was Prea- ident Eisenhower. who gave up the idea of returning to Washington when I five - inch snow pileup closed roads in the viciniw of his condition present since birth. Gettysburg. Pa.. farm. IEIRUT. Lebanon (Reuters)- The Lebanese government an- nounced Sunduy that 131 persons were killed in an earthquake whiclt rocked the country Friday night and toppled buildings in 1'! south Lebanon villages. Unconfirmed reports put the number of homeless It l0.000. I was estimated at close to M. . (Tia Jerumui celsmognpn station registered two more light earth tremors Sunday believed to be centred in southern Lebanon.) ROOM operations. supervised from we headquarters by Pres- ident ille Chllhoun. continued thromt the light in the atrlcku villages. Hospitals nished Ilosl Qsma fpr the bulls, lb- I0,000 Homeless In Lebanon 131 Killed In Earthquake lured. Supplies. blankets and bedding were also being hurried to the south and trucks and hastily clim- lnllldcered taxis distributed them to isolated villages in the Mt. Leb- anon urea. in the village of Chhlm. Ibollt I miles south of Beirut. where ll persons were killed. the villagers staged asking tlia bedding for more than 1,000 men. wanen and children who hon lost their homes. REPORT to rnsnsolts Officials at Run observatory population. The main centre of the quake was the Jeuin area near Mt. Lebanon. The authorities said gases beneath the earth's surface fa t'Is coal and sulphur-lkaring Irea built up and blew through to the surface. The shocks sent panic sweeping through Beirut. the "Paris of the lliddle East.” People fled to the kills. the beaches and orange and Olive groves in the surrounding lcountryside. many of them leav- lng doors and windows open in their hnste. Hundreds of can sleeping whole hnilles. lined mads outside the In &. Camp fires flickered along the beaches and in the countryside ll night as thousands of people hnddrlled in the open under I cold III!!!”- 82 Storm Deaths In Eastern U.S. Meanwhile; the effects of Fri- day's storm lingered. In addition to the deaths directly attributable to the storm, three elderly women perished in I Boston apartment house fire. Snow and parked cars hampered fire engine: tying t reach the building. The new storm also quickly ad- ded to the death tally. Three women and I man died in I two- car collision on an ice-slick high- way near Warrcntown, Vs. The St. Patrick's parade in south Boston was postponed until next Saturday. New York's Irish had better luck. however. The sun came out at dawn and by the noon parade time crews working overnight had Fifth avenue vir- tually clear of the 4.6-inch city snowfall. WARSHIPS AGROUND Off Newport. R. I.. where. three destroyers and I frigate burst their moorings and went aground. I small open navy launch was washed ashore. In it were the bodies of three sailors from the destroyer Preston. apparent vic- tims of over exposure in the win- try tempest. Tugs from the Newport Naval station managed to nudge the three destroyers off the beach but the frigate William A. Lee held fast on the Jamestown shore. Off the New England coast It Scituate, Mass.. the 7.000-ton ital- ian freighter Etrusco was dashed against the rocks by a furious blizzard that caught her when she rode high in the water without cargo. After 10 harrowing hours aboard the foundering 141-foot freighter, her 30-man crew was taken ashore by brecchcs buoy in I coast guard rescue. When the winds abated. Capt. Gaetano Traini and three crew members returned to the stricken vessel-by then over on its side and shipping water-to off- set any question of possession un- der maritime abandonment rules Report Failure To line Up Jordon CAIRO (Reuters)-The leaders of Egypt. Syria and Saudi Arabia Sunday night were believed to have failed in I new bid to bring Jordan into their camp. ' Diplomatic observers thought the three-nation bloc. strongly op posed to Western influence and alliances in the Middle East. had been rejected in I fresh attempt to win Jordan over to close col- laboration with them. Bahjat el Talhuny. chief of the Jordan royal cabinet. flew here im Amman with I met Iage for he Arab rulers who hive been meeting here from ynmg King Hussein of Jordan. in: ctinllehgcirmree itimas. wounded man when he approached. the meat said. The village was put III- dor a curfew. l Commtgildos stllii searched vit- Iges in e rebel- nfpsted TroodoI' mountains southeast of where five soldiers were ' In- bnshed It I hairpin turn ' . The body of I rebel killed the skirmish was carried seven villages and was viewed W 3,000 persons. But so tight-tipped w-Is the population that no one would say ha recognized him. :-:4 REBEL WRITER FIRED VIENNA (Reuters) - Jeno Snell. director o the Hungarian Institute of Fok Art. who joined I recast writers' revolt against the ideo- logical ”straltjacket" imposed by the Communist party. has been dismissed. said reports reaching lit. llolifttisc . ti Dttlfists ' olticiz is PM A ' l"ll.l.IN(.. smiotv 0 I K TORONTO. (C?) - Temperu tures issued by the public WI ther office: Night DI! Vancouver . ..... 32 51 Victoria . .. 39 50 Edmonton .. 28 51 Regina 4 31 Wlnnipeg . . 14 3 Toronto .. .... 16 2 Ottawa 0 Montreal . 5 I Quebec ..... '5 '3 Fredericto 10 I1 Saint John . 10 If Monctou . 2 . Halifax 14 1'1 Charlottetown - I Sydney . 12 21 Yarmoutb .. . 9 I St. John's . to II HALIFAX i CPl-The Dominica today will very cold air over the district. There will be I few unb- Nortbera um . Prhll Edward Island: Variable scattered whlc. law - IIII I NC! Glasgow acre and II. Choli- tdwalnllb. an toduatcliarlottetluva Ital?! I.:n. at us run. Ms- mes-sidetidcsellN00ll'll"5?' arthan Cha it rlottetown riscstodu fill b e"ewm.:ful;:cIrrytIIgthetl' sun at (if I.ta. M 30 It "I ,-I- '. sold the villager was killed when A Ilse fIllId to ball state- -5 5'. . -3;