Maxims of a More Man t O C The way of the trans- gressor is very popu 1!: PAGES * Iar. Daylight Time Measure Passed By City Council Unoflicially In a move to cireumvert an Act of the Legislature providing for “one standard uniform official time" throughout the Province, the City Council last night ap- proved a resolution. by a vote of 5 to 3, to introduce Daylight Sav- mg Time unofficially during the summer months_ The resolution states that "from and after midnight of the 30th day of June. 1064. to midnight. of the 15th day of September. Daylight sgvjng Time. being one hour in advance of legal Standard Time, shall be in effect in the City of Charlottetown. It was moved by coun. Hutcheson and supported by couiis. Keefe. Mccormack, Mac- Donald and Rogers. Opposing wm Couns. Johnstone, Gaudet and Ctormley. A similar resolution was adopted at a special meeting of the Mon- iague Town Council earlier in the week, but was released for publica- tion only last evening. In speaking to the City Coun- cil motion Coun. I-lutcheson said the move was being made due to the failure over the years to get daylight saving time here and he felt that "we must do something this year" or probably wait for 20 years. Councillor A. Walthen Gaudet strongly oposed the resolution stating it was out of order as it would be illegal due to the Time Uniformity Act. He reminded the council that the city depended to Report Reds Could Mobilize Eight Million PARIS, (Reuters) —-— Intelligence reports on Russian ’ military strength to be put before the North Atlantic council here today show that the Soviet tlnion and her satellites oould mobilise 400 divisionb—about 3.000.000 men— within a month. These reports show the Commu- niat oountries, excluding China. have more than 8,000,000 men un- der arms. of whom about 4,500.00!) are in ground forces. soviet air strength remains at 20,000 plsnes, but in the last three years almost sill piston-type right- ers have been replaced by Jets. Coming Events "Rummage sale, Central Christ- iein Hall, Saturday. 2.30. "Pownnl Ladies Aid Pantry Sale (xi sattu-day, at 3. A. MacDonald's, at 1 p. m. "Dance liiorell I»-lull modern. old-time. 9 to Burns Orchestra. "Starting to clean grain April 26th until further notice. Ira D. MacDonald. Oovehead. "Annual Meeting of the Crap- aud Hall Co.. will be held on Mon- day, April 26th, at it p. m. "Pantry sale at Miller Bro- thers at 2:30 Saturday, East Roy- alty Women‘s Institute. "Card party every Friday, St. Peter's Legion Hall. Dance Sat- urday. “Cleaning grain commencing April Zirrl until further notice. Walter Mallett, York. .\Ionda.\'. 12:30. "The Kanaington Y.P.lI. will present their play "Cranberry Corner" in Cavendish Hail. April 26th. Sponsored by Avonles W.I. "Movies tonight Mayfleld lfall. Opening show “Jack and the Bi-anstock." in color. Starring Ab- nott and Costello. "Don't miss the cart. at Coveheriri Community Hall. Thursfiay. April 29. Dance offer. Sponsored by the ball teem. Sale of lunches. “Afton Hall. Wednesday. April 28th. New Dominion Women‘.-i in»- stltute present one act play. Addi- tional program of songs, readings. dance. "Don't horae".at. Hunter Sponsored by Women's institute. "In stock l0——3—5 gallon milk cans. milk strainers and filter dishes. Dillon as Spillett. "In stock Moase‘s Prtrne Mangle Seeda. Turnip Seeds and all kinds of Timothy and Clover Seeds. Dillon it Bpilleti. "5Il0\l‘Ii‘ig at Mt. Stewart P‘flfIl.l' and Saturday at 3.30. Perilous .Iour- ney starring Vera Rslston and David Brian. A boat load of Maidona sells for California in the days of the Gold Rush. variety con- "New Haven Jam- River tonight. Ronnie's Road m is: "Buying pigs it! all usual places next. ucrk. Y‘;L\I7IK $42 I ptiir for goml pigs over 42 lbs mi». 528 over Ii lbs. extra for i-ibetween. will buy any size. I-laud Jorg-naan. "what.‘a new in feeds? 22% of shut--Gain sweetened Calf starter and Grower. The results are ex- cellent. Get some at E. J Mac- Dougall'e Feed service Mill. piles- not - a large extent on the good will at the farmers in the surrounding areas and they did not wish day- Light time. He recaled that the Board of Trade had formerly tried to get this but without avail. He did not feel that residents here were in a position to antago- nize farmers on whom they de- pended. The merchants to whom he had spoken on the subject ‘almost to a man favor daylight saving time". but unless it is uniform they were against it. He thought the institution of another time would result in utter chaos unless all businesses ,tran.sportatiori compan- iaa and others would participate. He asked the Council members to give serious consideration to the results before they voted on the matter. Councillor Elmeir MacDonald stated he had spoken to a repre- sentative at st. Duristana Easil- ica and had been assured the (Continued on Page 2 col. 4) Girl Steals For‘ Sick Boy Friend MONTREAL, (OP) -- Tre family of an 18-year-old girl who ai- legediy stole her company's $1.300 payroll for her sick boy friend has offered to pay the amont and charges against her may be drop- ped. police said Thursday. Police identified the girl as Lor- raine Derome of nearby Laval des Rapides and said they believe the girl stole the money from the Ca- nadian Crown Cork Company to help her boy friend, an asthma suf- ferer, to move to a dryer climate. 540.0% Grant Made To Festival STRATFORD. Ont.. (CF) ——The Ftockfeller Foundation has made 9. conditional grant of $40,000 to the capital funds campaign of the Stratford shakespearian Festival of Canada Foundation. The grant depends on the strat- ford festival raising the additional $80,000 in its objective of $120,000 to place the foundation on a "sound financial basis." John R. Ander- son of stratford. campaign chair- man, said. The grant. payable in Canadian funds. will be made on a basis of $l0.000 for each $20,000 the festi- val raises before June 80. I-‘REIGHTER ARRTVES TORONTO (CF) A Dutch freighter was the first foreign ship to enter Toronto harbor this year when she eased into her berth along the waterfront Thursday. Capt. T. Aaldijk moored his ship. Prins Wil- helm III at 1:45 am.. just nnsmil out the German ship Gchelmrat. //‘ Member OE Russian Police A Murder Team B |'s aper OHABLOITETOWN, CANADA. Rfll Founded 18 By MARC PURDUE PARIS tAP) —- An American source said Thursday night the Western powers have reached a firm fresh agreement on refusal to accept Communist China as a host nation at. the Geneva conference. This source disputed a statement from another informant earlier that still unsettled procedural questions might delay the Geneva meeting on lndo-China and Korea‘ from opening on Monday as sched- uled. The American source said there is no prospect of postponement. Adrian Pelt. the United Nations official in Geneva who has been consulting with British, French. Russian and Amerclan represent- atives there, said from a "purely technical view" the conference can open as scheduled. He said tech- nical arrangements were far from perfect but adequate. British Foreign Secretary Eden, U. S. State Secretary Dulles and French Foreign Minister Bidault met for two hours Thursday to iron out pre-conference details. One big hitch is Russia's in- sistence that the Geneva meeting be a five-power conference with Red China as one of the hosts. The western powers maintain that the Big Four Berlin meeting de- cided that tha Peiplng government would be only a participating NaTnWew Bridfiea After N. S. Premier I-IALII-‘AX. (CPJ—'I‘he $10,500.- 000 harbor bridge now being built will be named “the Angus L. Mac- donald bridge" in tribute to the former premier who died two weeks ago. The Halifax—Dartmouth In-ldice Commission announced Thursday that the name has been approved by the board of commissioners with the consent of Mrs. Macdonald. The late Liberal premier who sparked construction of the bridge while head of the Nova Scotia. gov- ernment declined two years ago to have the bridge named after him. At that time the commission dc- cided to name it "the Halifax- WESTERN POWERS FIRM ON REFUSAL TO ACCEPT CHINA AT GENEVA PARLEV power. not a host. INDO-CHINA PROBLEM When the discussion of thé Indo- China conflict opens. there will be another big issue - who is to icontonued on Page 13 col. 4) left-Vfing Writer Sentenced To 2 Years In Prison OTTAWA. (CP) — Raymond Arthur Davies, described as is Montreal left-wing writer. was sciitettcod Thursday to two years in peniteritiarv for passport frauds. in sentencing the 46-year-old writer Judge A. G. Mcnougall said evidence in E two-day trial showed conclusively that Davies is in fact Rudolph Shohan who emigrated from Rusmia with his family to Boston in 1921 and later became active as a Communist in Cariisdaa and the United States. The writer was found guilty of falsely claiming in a 1936 applica- t.ion for a Canadian passport that he was Raymond Arthur Davin. a British subpcct born in Montreai. in 1902. Peter Nrwcombe, defence coun- sel, said he may appeal the sen- tence. MAxlML'lti TERM The sentence was the maximum prison term which could be im- posed for the offence. although Davies also could have been fined up in 5500. Special crown prosecutors .I. J. Robinette of Toronto and Rowell Laishley of Ottawa brought wit- nesses out of Davies’ past. to test- ify that he r-mtgrated*’tb"lBoxton"ne a youth and subsequently became active as an organizer for tho Young Communist League, both in Canada and the United States. Nfld. Schooner—§inks ST. JOHN'S. Nfld.. (CF) --The Netvfoundln-nd schooner Madonna Mrtijv sprang a leak and sank Wed- Dartmouth bridge" but with the idea of re-naming it after the pre- mier latnr if his consent could be obtained. , The bridge will be open for truf- Sartori of Kiel. fic late this year. l’l€Sdfl) while sailing from ’I‘repna- scy. on the eastern tip of the }A\'i‘il.’lll peninsula, to St. John's ‘Skipper Jerry Tobin and his three eretv inenibers rowed one mile to FRIDAY, APRIL 23, 1954 Kremlin’s top secrets, includi weapons. This was announced here ities, who said two veteran Ea The captain is Nikolai E\'gcri_\'c- vich Khokhlnv, 31. a staff officer of the Soviet MVD. At a press conference arranged here by the U. S. state depart- ment. and the central intelligence alency. Khokhlov said he was de- terred from carrying out the slay- ing by a stirring appeal from his "wonderful wife." she remains in Moscow along with their 21-month- old son and his wife's 14-year-old sister. APPEALS FOR FAMILY I world to save his family from what he said would be certain Soviet rcprisals. possibly death. his side as he spoke. was Okolovich. the man he was sup- posed to kill. Khokhlov named his East Ger- man assistants Hans Kukowitscb and Kurt Weber. They now are in protective custody at. their own re- quest. U. S. authorities said. The three-man squad slipped into Germany from Switzerland following special training in Mos- cow. They were equipped with such weapons as specially-silenced (Continued on Page 2 col. 2) Tell _I3TirItdo-“Pla—ying Mother To Go Home KIRKLAND LAKE. Ont. (CPi—- Police told is bingo-playing mother tango horm.~Wedneirday night after they learned she had locked her two young children in their apart- ment. Officers investgiated a telephone call from xi neighbor and found the woman's apartment locked and El child peering from the window. They found the mother in a local hall. The neighbor told police the‘ play bingo. I Ishore in the schooner: dory. action. 1 I Russia Continues "Housecleaning" CANBERRA iRcul.ersl—- Ruasial Thursday continued the house- cleaning in her embassy here, as Australian agents conducted Mrs. Evokiya Petrnv to a secret reunion with her husband. . The Kremlin put. two more Sov- iet diplomats on “back-to-Moscow“ orders, leaving only three remain- ing on the embassy staff who were serving when its secret. police chief Vladimir Petrov won sanctuary in Australia eiirly this month. I His blonde wife, Evokiya, 35. earlier made a i.ooo.miie plant‘ flight from Darwin to the east coast. Elabnratcly contrived do- coy; completely fooled reporters and preserved the. mystery of the closely-guarded hideout where the Sflflififfflfijflfllfilflfl Nfld. Disturbed By Freight Rates ST. JOHN'S. Nild., (CPl— M- torney-Gr-neral Curtis told the leg- islature Thursday the govei-nnient is disturbed over the frciglit-.'ai.e question. He, said in the throne speech de- bate that under terms of Confed- eration Newioundlarid should have received a 20 per cent reduction in freight rates but this didn't come about. He said it costs 33-21 in Ihll) 100 pounds of first-class freight from st. John's to Toronto and only 32.72 to ship the same freisht "0!!! Toronto to st. John's. Premature Birth Saves Baby‘: Life HAMILTON iCPi—A premature birth saved the life of a baby who was given in complete transfusion in which all his blood was drained tiff and new blood substituted. The parents of Robin Brucl Millar, who was born April 8 with Rh negative blood, said doctors told them the baby would have died if he had not been born ahead of time. "They explained antibodies in his blood which would have killed him hadn't time In start wnrkinl." said Robin's father Arthur Miller. Ion three weeks‘ separation. Aussie agents throw security screens around several cast Aus- tralian airports to confuse news- paper mcn anxious to glimpse the (‘l’ilI0\’. and third secretary G. I. made hcr 05- Khzirikovcts, who also is press at.- seek political refugee minutes be-‘I'm I101 50 SUIT i>¢0l"l€'3 huds to ' will." woman who early Tuesday caped two guards flying her to Moscow. after a phone chat with her husband. “PllRGF." LIST ‘ The two Russian ornbnssy dip-I IiIIIl.'iI1< ulm were added to the “piirge" list were commercial at- K. V. Kisliisin. was in charge of lit" liinlluailf‘-K I(I('I|(‘ N. (I. Kfivrilcv, who rankslMrs. Petrov and the two ai‘n1r\dlr2I’s shg -stand tip under ncxt to Anibnssadoi‘ Nikolai Gen- Iiriciic. Both had been due to return soon in Iiloscow. under rotal.ion,I till (’Il|'Il0l‘ riato. apparciitiy be- cntisn of the l’r-iro\'s' defociitin. I Iirinns the secret police captain made up a squad assigned to kill Georgi Sergeyvich Okolovich, a mem- I'll” 35 the MCCarlhi'~Arniy row ber of the anti-Soviet organization NTS in Frankfurt. Vishinsky Hopes To Return To UN turn here. He said. I from flying saucers." (By Brock Curry) BONN, Germany. (AP)—-A Soviet tain sent to West Germany to kill a Russian resistance leader has deserted to the west secret police cap- and hatred rig new some of the type assassination Tliursday by U. S author- st German Communists and three-man murder UNITED NATIONS. N Y (API Andrei Visliinsky, chief Soviet dele- gate of the United Nations, asked Thursday about speculation he was going back to Moscow to stay. re- ilied through an interpreter? “I am going back in Moscow on leave Khokhlriv appealed to the iron l‘”' ‘‘ rest." was asked if he \\'Dlil(I “I hope." lie ye. ManySlfeptical About Epidemic Of “Glasspox" B)’ THE CANADIAN PRESS The average Canadian is in- clined to pass off the reports of p()l..'I( - marked ivindshields as counter saucer myth. in - irritant to the flying- Across the country, the man-in- the-street. was skeptical about the sudden damage to windshields and wns infi- (filined to call it “mass hysteria.“ epidemic of reports of ut. he had his own tongue-in- cheek explanation. Most followed the line of the Mnntcoal used ~-‘ca-rt dealer‘ who said: "I examine 40 cars a day on average. Out of this number I expect. in find four or five dam- aged windshields. It’s been going on for years. The cause is par- ticles thrown from wheels of other cars." That was the way they looked at it in Edmonton where one motor- ist said the whole thing was “ob- mother would often put the ciiil-lvinusiy over-played—a cheap ver- dren to bed and then lock tiiclsinn Hf flyillif S3UCCF$~" apartment while she went out to SAUCER CHIPS? A group of Vanentivcrites. with Police said the nmlhm‘ tliouglitlitvinkles in their eyes. blamed it there was nothing wrong with her ‘nn' "Business - siarwad use-cl - car "small "chips salesmen wtih b-h guns." lmys wiili slingshots." or In Ottawa, motorists and pedes- admiticd they were a bit scoffed at the idea ‘that ash from H-bomb tests in the The cmbassvs second secretary, I couriers guarding her when dramatic decision to l fore the airliner left Darwin take her homeward. V. Antotiov of the Tass Pacific was responsible. Montrcalcrs pooh-poohed it in One said: "The and their windshield: will ll-bomb tests on be other side of the world. but And there was the Halifax news vmrnan who was sure she had the-first Roman Catholic Archbishop of but thew will be shimml home at agency and attache Y. E. Plaikais,nii.=m-in “It's the Russians just also have been ordered back toilryiitg to confuse us With some Nlnscnw. at-cret. stihstrince." Canadian Sailors “Adopt” Orphans Canadian destroyers patrolling the west coast of Korea have come to regard the welfare of orphans In that area as their particular responsibility. The destroyers Iluron and Haida call at the island of Par-ngnyong-do and members of the ships’ hompanies take supplies to the homeless you ng Korean children. Here. some of the llaida's officers and men are shown outside the orphanage with the orphans they have temporarily adopted. (CP fence) 1954. from National Do- Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew PRICE 50 olts To West: Stormy Scenes At By EIY CREAGH WASHINGTON (AP)-Army ser- rclary ROI)!-'i‘l. Stevens gaxe the lie lit) Senator Joseph l\lcCattii_v ’l‘liitis- flared up into stormy hearings lie- fme a national tclmision audien:-e. The army secrotiiry first accusori McL'.'-irtliy and THE chief alfli"5 of waging a "persistent. tireless‘ canipaign---lire must lilI'f‘llLll)‘iS one in his official PxpPi’l"nCe—~tn get special treatment for Pie. G David Sciiinc. 'l‘hcii SI(‘\‘t‘Il.< Ialiellorl as 'Rll.~"iI- Vutcly false" l\lcCat‘lh_y's l'Il£.lIflL' ‘that Sieveris urged him to ‘go ‘afl('i"' the navy and air force ill- stcad of looking for Cunimuiiists in the ai-niy's ranks. ‘‘I never niatic any such stain- ment." Stevens declared. lie rio- nicd. ion, McCaiih_v's charge that he triecl to use the Schine case as "blackninil." direct conflict that can load to per-’ jiry charges against somebody. ihcl l‘lII.“T. day of licarings in the short- .tcmpeicd atmosphere of an over-‘ croivricd, overheated Iienring i'oiini.] .TV flondlights glared and perspir- ing spectators were jammed to-l U. S. Army Sec'y Gives Lie To McCarthy: Hearing Yesterday gather. 'i—"ic.iirs BA(‘I( .'\l<-Cai-thy got I some licks. too. for all that be h removed him- self from the Senate investigations lsuli-committee for purposes of this ‘inquiry. llt- denied that any “improper prt~.<<iii't.-" was exerted by himself 'If his staff on Schine's bt-hall. Anrl ho bitterly objected to Stev- r-n:-‘ speaking "for the army." Ha hiasted the army secretary as one nf tho "Pcntigon politicians" who are tryitig. he laid. to block inves- '..;z:it.un of "communism in the aiiiiy." l\lcL';ii‘.li_'.' said he knows plenty of army people from private: to .gf‘ilt1l‘ilI.'§ \'.hn want it understood that “Mr. Steven: speaks only for Mr. Sle\‘ci1s." Tho Pcniafzon nfficiais embroiled with McCarthy were called on first lin back up, if they could. their And so ended_ in the kmd nf5,Cl‘lEl'Qe that McCarthy and sides Roy M. Cohn sought by and Francis Carr “improper means" to lget favors for Schine. REBER TAKES STAND Iilaj.-Gcn. Miles Rebvr was the lead-oft \|'lI.nCSF. He testified that (Continued on Page 5 col. an The number of applications re- ceiver-1 from the teachers of the Province has practically assured the holding of another summer school th-s ,ve.ar. DI‘. L. W. Shaw, Deputy Minister of Education, told the delegates to the annual con- vention of the P. E. 1. Teachers Peder-atlon ycsteday. It was the closing session of the three-da_y l'llf.‘PlII‘lg held in the auditorium of Pruice of Wales Col- irze. New officers of the Federation will not be elected until the annual meeting of the Board of Directors in November. Dr. Shaw, liovicvcr, warned that those who wished to take some aca- demic work along with the summer school program should seek to en- ter such schools being held in other Proviiices. He said that the school to be roiidticted here this summer uculd be priii~..irily concerned with pi'e.lin1inrii‘.\' teacher training. Ap- proximately 100 teachers had at- tended the school last year and he anticipated the same number or IFiTITeraI§eTvTce? For Archbishop Sinnott Yesterday WNNIPEG, tCP)—-Piineral serv- ices were held _Thursday for Most Rev. Alired Arthur Sinnott. 17, Winnipeg, uho died Sunday after ,a long illness. I St. Marys cailiedral. centre of -liia labors in Winnipeg and the went for 30 years, uas crowded FINE COOPERATIVE SPIRIT SHOWN = AT TEACHERS’ CONVENTION NOTED more this rear Mr Earle Jclley. 0'Loary. presi- dent of the Federation, in his clos- mg remarks expressed his pleasure at the great success of the conven- tion which aaw the greatest at- tendance on record He thanked the teachers for their “wonderful spirit of co-operation." Immunisation Clinics ‘ The extreme importance of im- munization clinics conducted by the Department of Health in the schools was emphasized by Miss Mona Wilson. Director. Division or Public Health Nursing. She said such clinics were to be held in all (Continued on Page 1! col. 2i «Ntzvr-:.rzI BURN ‘flu: scanom. A-r BOTH with more titan 1.000 parishzom-ra from iixaiiy sections of Manitoba James Cardinal McGuizJn of Toronto sang poniifical I"‘..'1|lI(‘I'll high maks. Oiiicatiiig at tho grave- side service in St. Mary‘: come-. tery was Archbishop P. F Pocock of Winnipeg. The Poor Ileacher TORONTO. (CF! A professor of education Wednesday accused the public of thinking of leil«’hI‘t‘A as. "note quite human and at. the ssimel time supei'iiuiiian" The rtverage. liyinaii iii: .’i xitherl prrlllliil‘ \'ll"\r ni icachcrs "almost thinking of them as .1 tiilrn -mx.“ Dr. Ernest G oahorne ,of Colum- bia University told the Ontario home and school (‘i'\I'l\(‘l‘ill0ii I "If a pretty, young girl goes on, I cruise. she. isn't likely to eon-‘ fees to her fellow passengers that she is a iI‘af‘h"I'. She is afrairi. and with some tti.at.ifirat.inn. that it might. interfere uith some of the normal prnceritirea ol Caribbean cl”lilst‘=. People mtzht stippose she, wouldn't be as comfortable or as effective in II moonlight situation as other people." Student Pilot Killed In Crash CLARESHOLM, Alia- (CPI--An R. C. A. F.'student pilot, killed Wednesday night. in the crash of a Harvard t.r.iining plane near here nag identified Thursday in Flight Cadet Donald Frederick Boswell, 19, of Cobourg, Ont. l(‘I”i.’lIl0llt"IO\\I1‘ I TORONTO. (OP)--Minimum and maximum temperatures: Dawson V£lllf‘(\'l\'Cl‘ Virlo:".a. ‘ I-Itlmonton Cwlirary RI‘ ‘ \\'. . Toronto Or‘.-iiva \lnnirenl Quebec Saint John . Mnnrtoii lfalifiax t:z:ss::$:$32 Sxdiirv Yarmouf h St. John's HALIFAX, (CF) -- The weather nffire here says showers are fore- (as: for most regions, but drier air is expected to flow into the rii.=l.rici, bringing slowly clearing “rather on Friday. Regional forecasts Prince Edward Island. eastern N. B. rnuntlea. lower St. John river valley: Cloudy with scattered showers and a few thunderstorms ending during morning; elearins in the afternoon; mild with light winrla_ Low-high at Charlottetown 40 and 60. Moncion. Fredericton and Saint John 45 and 60. -Upper St John river vallei. of Chnleur. Sunny with a law rlnuch intervals; colder; light winds Low-high at Edmundsum and Campbellton 40 and 55. High tide today at Charlottetown at 212 a. m. and 1.01 p. I'D. Summereide tide eighteen min- utes later than charlofu-town. Sun rises today at. 5.10 L. In. and sets at 1 00 p. In. 232