It It's Good For The island I he Guardian is For it mtcle finotrotai “Covers Prince Edward Island VOL. LXXVI. N0. 332 Aatlsarlud as second Class Mall Dopartrnenl. Ottawa. and 1964 EXPANSION FORECAST Trade Minister Estimates 6% Growth In Economy OTTAWA tCPl—'l‘rade Min- ister Sharp. estimating a six- per-cent growth this year in na- ‘ tional output. foresees further lasting solution to it of-payments problem. expansion of the economy inithe trade minister for 1964. . "A q u i t e substantial in- $25,000,000 in total. crease" in l964_ _ exports s . goods likely. and “significant expan- ,from last year's $40.401.000.000. ces are apparent within the domestic economy. he‘ said in his year-end eco-‘ nomic review issued Thursday. Mr. Sharp described 1963 as "a year of steady economic ad- vance" in which Canada made 1 significant progress to w a rd overcoming its main economic difficuities. “Unemployment is lower. in- dustrial slack has been par- tially absorbed. and the imbal- aiice in our external account and reiiance on foreign borrow- ing have been reduced." But he said a furthern sub- stantial broadening of Cana- ria‘s industrial structure on a competitive basis is necessary if the country is to achieve a {RISE OF 4 PER CENT output in volume terms has ‘risen by more than four per rcent. “A record grain crop icontributed to this advance, lnon-farm output also is up by about four per cent. 1 “This growth has increased lthe earnings of all major in- icome groups. Total personal in- lcome is up by six per cent. and Lper-cz-pita rea'. income has ad- ‘vanced to a new hlgh." i in the first 10 months of this Iyear. C a n a d a’s merchandise ltradc surplus had risen by j$275,000,000 “while further sub- stantial gains are anticipated in s balance- ‘ ensuing i s The six per cent rise in Gross National Product indicated by ‘nif cant improvement in the in-, 1968 Tternational pahmenis deficit on would mean an increase to $42.- lcurrent non-merchandise trans- ‘i value of actions. has but U.S. Commerce Department Okays Russian Wheat Sales WASHINGTON (AP) — The commerce department Thurs- day authorized the sale of $40.- . o f United States wheat to Russia. The department said there were two proposed sales. each involving $20.320.000 worth of wheat. No other information about b the proposed shipments was re- vea . The shipments would be the first from the United States to the Soviet Union under a pd.- icy. announced a few months ago, of permitting such sales. There have been shlpme is of wheat to Soviet satellite coun- tries. in making announcements of wheat sales to Iron Curtain lcountries. the commerce de- partment in most cases has ‘given only the dollar amount without revealing the number -,of bus The name of the dealer or dealers and the method of financing also are not disclosed. The Foreign Aid Bill passed the House of Representa- s Tuesday and due for Sen- ate action Monday includes a provision permitting U.S. gov- ernment guarantees of .credit sales if the president finds that is in the national‘. interest. Earlier this year. Russia bought , "worth of wheat and flour from Canada. The purchase involved 5.600.000 Sins of wheat and 575,000 tons of our. I -v tive l by the Post out ‘for payment of poctaga in cash. months due to unu- y heavy grain shipments." ut there was no sign of sig- which remained at and services produced lclose to $l.000,000,00fi annualty. Thus Canada had ii large over - all payments deficit on current transactions running at He said it appears that total $542‘m0m0 for the 12 months : ending last September. -GREATER RISE LIKELY ‘ “Nevertheless, the chances of vs further increase in the ._plus on merchandise trade ap- Sharp said. wheat sales. “atmosphere of I r ida's principal foreign markets. l “These conditions suggest the llikeliliood of a quite substan- itial increase in Canada‘s ex- iports in 1964 which would bei -the fourth consecutive year of strong advance. ’ “Significant expansion- ary forces are also apparent iwithin the domcstic economy." ' Even with a decline next year in grain production from year's record high. “the additional spending power erated by this year's reco production and exports will be a source of new stimuics in the economy as a whole for some time.” "Continued on Page 3 Col. 3) Anne Lindbergh Weds in France PERIGUEX. France tersl — Anne Lindbergh. 20- year - daughter of Col. C h a r l es Lindbergh. married French student Jacqucs Fcdy. 20. at Douzillac city hall near here last Monday. city hall sources disclosed Thurs- day. Col. and Mrs. Anne Lind- bergh attended the ceremony which was kept strictly pri- vate. the sources said. British labor Party Demands Probe Oi Fire On Cruise liner LONDON tCPl Britain's opposition Labor party has de- manded a government investi- gation into the burning of the Greek cruise liner Lakonia. The request was made Thurs- day as 300 survivors of the dis- aster steamed toward Britain on the liner Arkadia. The official death toll among the crew and the pre-dominantly British passenger list stood at 96 Thursday. A spokesman for the Greek Line. owner of the fireswept liner. issued new figures for the Sunday night tragedy: Dead 96; missing. 31; survivors. 901. He said it now has been deter- mined there were 1.028 aboard the ship. (in Funchal, Madeira. a num- r of passengers refused to board the Arkadia because they did not wish to sail on a ship owned by the same company as the Lakonia. (Some of the survivors have alleged a better-trained crew could have handled the fire that ravaged the 20,000-ton cruiser. They also charge that some of the crew left the passengers to save themselves as best ‘they could. URGE PROBE Labor party called for an investigation into the disaster in view of the grave ‘allegations about the accident." Labor foreign affairs spokes- man Patrick Gordon - Walker backed up the call for a full public inquiry by noting that, while the ship was owned by the Greek Line, almost all its pas- sengers were British and “the cruise was organized by agents operating in this country." "We must do our utmost to prevent any repetition of such a tragedy." Gordon - Walker commented. Alexander Webster. 41. one of a group of survivors who ar- rived in London from Casa- blanca. Morocco. said that alter the fire broke out “some of the crew got excited when the life- boats jammed." He said the lifeboat on which his two daughters. aged 10 and 13. left the Lakonla "was half full of crew before the women and children got into it." "I saw one lifeboat only half t'ull—jusf of crew members." he added. "They went off." CREW ‘WONDERFUL’ He also said. however. tha while some crew panicked. others behaved “wonderfully." But in Casablanca. one Ger- man survivor commented: “There was no panic aboard and all that has appeared in the papers is false. Only certain elderly passengers were handi- capped. “The cr w has no responsi- bility in the catastrophe." an- other s u r v i v or commented. “They all did their utmost and I owe my life to two of them." The Pakistani ship Mchdi ar- rived in Func al, Christmas Day with 25 surviv SUl'- - lsustained expansion" in Cana-g Ci lthe west side. rReu- 1 CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, FRIDAY, DE ‘Berlin 1 l . oo, Changed C!’ from AP-Reuters BERLIN-—-Although the blood- stains of a hristmas slaying were still visible on the Berlin wall, West Beiiiners passed in droves Thursday through the ‘checkpoints to the East sector. The official East German news agency, ADN. said that 7500 West Berliners went 1-‘! . through the controls by early evening. The agency said that since ‘the holiday reunion operation .began Friday t 163,000 West Berliners had made day fvisits to East Beiiin. ut t h e atmosphere was ;changed markedly by the shoot- ing b East German guards [Christmas night of an East German refu ee. Paul Schulz. 18. received a fa- : tal wound as he scrambled over Ithe wall. His companion. also escaped injury. On the wa’.l where Schulz was ‘ shot was a dark stain of blood. .There was another brown stain _ ;in the melting snow where he }fell into a policeman's arms in ._. 9° PROTEST SHOOTING A small group gathered at the spot Thursday and shouted "murderers" across the wait. jBut it did not appear to be an ' organized demonstration. ‘ planned tour of East Bet- and its four border cross- ‘ by a West Berlin. y government official was ncelled early Thursday. erman govern- lment was notified that the shooting of the youth made the visit impossilzde. , “These shots have hit us ‘all." said West Berlin Deputy lMayor Heinerich Alberz. NRSE FEEDS infant as Turkish women and children are giavtihered in shelter 1 A . ilin "“ 5 int! i cit ca Like The Dew" CEMBER 27, 1963. PHAN n §. .3 . il l i l i Nicosia after removal frrom the Turlnish civiliians from embattled Tirrkish sector of Nicosia. (AP Wirephoto via cable from Nicosia). battle area in Cyprus capital Thmrsday. Garce-ks removed Last Of Shubert Brothers Dies In N.Y. Penthouse l WEATHER Sunny with a few few snowflurries; cloudy periods and a northwest winds 20. gusts to 40. Low-high 2 below and 15. ”°T “‘”“" SEVEN CENTS 10 PAGES Turkish Jets Over Cyprus Jolt Precarious Cease-Fire U.K. Moves lroops lo Help K C!’ from AP-Reuters NlO0SlA——Two Turkish l i jets i screamed low 0 v e_ 1- Cyprus {again Thursday, jolting a pre- . carious cease - ‘re between lcreek and Turkish - Cypriots [Britain ordered in more troops tin an attempt to keep the peace land prevent a clash between iNA’I‘0 allies Greece and Tur- fkey. ‘ After five days of bf.ood communal clashes, Greek- and Turkish-Cypriots still traded a few shots. Bu it appeared a ‘cease - fire proclaimed Christ-- mas Day was being observed generally. The jets buzzed over as com- manders of British. Greek and Turkish garrisons based on Cy- prus by treaty met in the Tur- taiis of headed Briton. agreement Wednesday to the joint command was considered a major step toward peace. in London, British govern- ment sources reported there was stitl anxiety over how closely Turkish units will co- operate in an unified force. The reappearance of the jets was not reassuring. The government of ms filed a complaint against Tur- key with the United Nations in New York after two Turkish eep Peace Greece on Wednesday had asked 1' n extraordinary meeting of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization's nent council in Paris. shortly before the reappearance of Turkish jets over Cyprus. the Greek government asked for a postponement. A statement by Sophocles Venizelos, Greek foreign minis- ter. said the postponement. was requested because “the situa- tion has calmed down some- what." I n fo r m e d sources said NATO's permanent council met secretty on the Cyprus crisis Christmas Day. presum- a-bly acting on Greece's origi- nal request. SEEKS UN MEETING Al the prompting of Arch- bishop Makarios. president of Cyprus and leader of the Greek- C y p riot community. Cyprus‘ delegation in New York asked the UN Security Council to .meet and consider charges that ‘Turkey is using “force and the ;threat of force" against Greek- Cypriots. Turkish government in- " The sists it has acted only to save the Turkish - Cypriot minority from a massacre. The Turkish embassy said R0 «Turkish - Cypriots have been i (Continued on Page 3 Col. 4) l r l l Corregidor is. .%To Be Memorial WASHINGTON dent Johnson has signed a bill authorizing $1,500,000 to turn Corregidor Island into a Second World War memorial. The - G n land. lying in the Bay of Ma- nila in the Philippines. was the '9 scene ‘of one of the opening bat- tles of the Second World War. I’ APl—Presi- ‘ l lsh .bui‘g. Pa.. and Lee. who died -10 years ago almost to the day .—on Christmas, 1953 Jacob Shubert's John. died at a3 a year ago. NEW YORK (A-Pl—-Jacob J.‘ ubert, the last of three broth- j ers who founded a theatre em- ‘ died in his penthouse‘ . :Thursday of a cerebral hem-I “ ets buzzed the island on warn-l _ _ British Troop ing flights Christmas Day. ‘ WARSHIPS OFF COAST Use Opposed 1 In addition to the jet flights, ‘; he government of Cyprus also two days ago, the fed- some -:7 :. 5° I ‘ . lorrhase. . . Only cted because Turkish troop-53 LONDON (Reiitcrsl--Pat.rick Shubert. known flnqme man “ leral government sued to collect lien lheirvabms and moved»-into .Gm~a¢,n-.wa;k,,-,~«-the up " . who produ ce d a thousand . $15,700.38? in estate taxes from ,Nicosia. Six Turkish warships ‘Labor p a rty foreign affairs shows. headed an enterprise the estate of Lee Shubert. The also appeared off the coast of .ispokesman_ Thursday night op- that owned 16 theatres in New York and others in Philadel- hia, Boston, New Haven and‘: Cincinnati. . -‘ » government placed the value of lthe __ ._the estate at $25,000,000. repre- land 3 ~ ' [Sf-‘niing a half interest in a Lee, Breaking off a Christmas va- ' .and Jacob Shubert partnership. Ication. Prime Minister Sir Alec . i -13005 Shuberi had piaced the lDouglas«Home hurried back to posed the use of British troops ii a police capacity in Cyprus. Gordon Walker. who met ‘Prime Minister Sir Alec Doug- las-Home for a 45-minute talk eastern Mediterranean is-. most successful Eaton Receives ‘lCongratuiations LONDON (Reuters) —— Soviet Premier Khrushchev Thursday night warmly congratulated Cleveland mrilionaire Cyrus S. Eaton whose 80th birthday is today. the Soviet news agency Tass reported. “Soviet people deeply respect your tireless activity in the in- terests of universal peace." the message said. Telegrams were also sent by Potish government official and -by academician Dmitry Sko- beltsin, chairman of the Com- mittee for International Lenin ri Madeira. P 265 plays were The Student Prince, . ;value of the partnership at $15: iLondon and sent the orders put- ea.-her, sate; Blossom Time. M83/time. un-; l ‘ting British troops in motin. The - - -. . . _. . . prime minister told me ‘E55 Mam“ and The Last ~ - 5'33? Circles Said -73005 51'1"‘? ‘ °"‘i’3"y °.i .200 "name" of all the latest developments W3” .' . . . l Ebert innovated the northwardlflew 9"‘ °‘. B""'=‘”‘- A" army and I made it clear to him that Associates oi-edited him with; .move of the New york theau.e.banaa,,on Wm be flown from if our base in Cvprug was in ‘i""‘°d“Ci"€ “Ch Sta“ 35 Ali idistrict from Herald Square tollirilaifl to Cyl>FUS- A British 3?‘ dame, _ hp-}."n is mp..-" Jolson, Eddie Cantor. John { I ‘ lthe Times square ax-on, lmored squadron was ordered to wmfid Obviously be rm), to de; Charles Ti‘°mas' Nora B‘.‘y°"' J » ‘ The theatres W9“? 1" the 3'4ihlCYPT“5 ‘mm “-5 base "‘ L1b3’a' ‘fend it and to send troops. Fanny B”°°- Manly“ Minerv‘ Street area when he purchased‘ The British government as- H, added. “But it wmpd b. Ed Wynn. Ray Bolger and Bert alir. . The multl -miilionaire Shu- bert’s luxurious apartment is in l the Sardi Building in the heart: 1. a horse auction arena at 50th lsigned two battalions of infan-‘“.mM._. ,0 send B1-msh trnons in A a police capacity. We want British troops again." i ,. street and 3;-0adway__now the 'try‘and guard units of an RAF ‘Winter Garden. regiment already. in Cyprus to i The holdings of Lee and J3. -‘the role of helping to resotre do not shot at . .cording to the information he cob Shubert. including theatres .°"d°r 0", the i51_a',‘d‘ Grdon-Walker said the proh- °‘. ii” "‘°a‘?‘°‘“ “"§".'.’1‘ giihelgave Who's Who. However. the and other properties. were es-3 A" °i“°'a‘ 3"‘“5“ ~*‘*“°'“°"‘ lem should be put before the :;’;ltd".}gh'e:tr:e1§l;3°rw°or1d iamgd iShubert office said Thursdayltimated in 1942 to be worth ‘—‘mi’it‘35h‘7-eded tthaid iphley United Nations. . V . . . . . m op 0 9 0 . Shubert Altey. h0uSe§ Safd-1'5 maintained he was —— troops in Cyprus in a three-; G k Y Restauranhka gathering placei His wife Muriel was with ‘ipower force with Greek and; refi OU 5 50!‘ SHOW 0 - 5h‘ h d‘ d_ ' ID h T Turkish army units. E - |MAlNTAiNS HE WAS so i ]T1hew ee'r‘itre?preliieur's brothers} eat 0 Britain has 10-000 miliiarvi Urge ACTION - l personnei on Cyprus but mos RAF men untrained street fighting. I Shubert was born in Syra-‘vwere Sam. killed in a railroad; V icuse, N.Y., on Aug. 15. 1880. ac- accident in 1905 near Harris-j 5~‘-L9NiCA- G V" 9° " ‘R""‘ ors and four bodies from the Lakonia. A Greek Line spokesman In Piraeus. the port of Athens. said the Greek government has started steps toward an inquiry. He said the Lakonla's master, Capt. Mathos Zarbls. and his senior officers have been or- dered to Piraeus to report. They were to return to Greece by plane today. AN ARI Christa! Oeu~ gtcv. former Bulgarian dolo- late to the United Nations. want on trial ‘lhiirauy in lo- fla on cliarlls of for the 0.8. Central Intelligence Agency. Geoi-glev. pictured in U.N. General Assembly Death in int. is accused of selling military and economic secrets to the CIA_ for sao.ooo Georglev. 56. faces the death sentence if c ( CONFESSESS AT TRIAL Spy For U.S. Quit Post Because Of Petty Tasks 1 By RONALD FARQUHAR SOFIA. Bulgaria (Reuters'—i - A former Bulgarian diplomat at the United Nations, who pleaded guilty Thursday to spying for tersl—-—Greck youth organiza- tions appcaled to former '.1llPl'»- rilla chief George Grivas ‘Thursday to take steps azainsi “the barbarians who threaten Cyprus." Grivas. ii iicar-lcgcndary fig- ure who evaded seciirity drag- nets for years while leading his guerrillas against the Brit- ~ish authorities on Cyprus. now STUDENTS DI-JMONSTRATE I'd For Ho I ay i Several h u n d r ed students demonstrated in Athens against BY THE CANADIAN PREss'It.he Turkish show of force on Canadians neared the, end of 3 Cyprus‘ their Christmas and Boxing Day . O U.S. President celebrations with an accidental‘ death toll of at least 25 per- Has Peace Plea sons. including 18 in traffic mls- I . haps. A survey by The Canadian b iivcs in retirement in Greece. Press from p.m. ‘.ocal times .ioHNsoN crry, T.-x_ IAP) Similar youth aryrwals were Tuesday to 6 p.m. EST 'l‘hurs- -- President Joh nsnn has gent in Prim? i\ién|-‘:¢‘T ‘;v,90YFal w '- aan eou. an o ari- gence a g e n'c i e s_ information ‘ Gem-giev said his first contact gfigalgiitciflsmac'i‘r:s“iilil¢: iilriiximigas<fr?:ii1ii,eie‘r:ffoilt;)pi,r:t enod merit .dr ab°“i. the sm°'s°‘”e‘ 'de°l°3l" Wm‘ the cm was with a man Would be ill? i‘£Zill9Si im‘ a “this terrible fraternal strife" About 1.000 .\'oritli.< n;ii‘ar1'M °3,§‘h‘:‘5ti;::I°‘was expected to lastlaigfid Ggsgggv [:.‘§g§;,sI?zne'd bx Christmas holiday period for between Greeks and Turks on through the main sti‘£‘.(‘ls here several years. The total of at least 25 acci- Cyprus. Tluirsday night hearing signs three days and judgment will‘Cyril Black. son of a former ...(-ypms ls (-_”.ek~~ an .29. joint message to the the Unit“ 5'-“GE “id "9 ‘Um be handed down M°“d.y' di"°°'°" M an Amnman cone“ identa’. deaths was reached with leaders and people of the fight- .out of Cvprus. Turkish barbar- im" “V9” yea” 5993"“ Th? ‘“*“°"'.‘°"' descflbed the i" 50"‘ isix hours to go before the sur- ing ' Johnson urged ians_" Crowds applauded them. the "Petty 5935“! hsks" “'.""’°'-"'"g' 'pa"i‘a"»" bald G°"rg""’. He said he maintained c0n- vey ended at midnight Thurs- them to spare on efforts. to in .\tl1cn.<. Papandrr-nu told signed him. {as "a most malicious enemy {met with him until 1959. lllvinll day. Last year 85 persons died make any sacrifice. to restore the Gi‘cek—C_\'pi‘iots that Greece U.S. agents. he said. com-land traitor of our people poli- .,way stare secrets that in- on Canada‘s highways during a peac¢_ ismod by mm, Sid‘. plained about his extravairauttlcally and morally corrupted to lcluded the code used in commu- four-day holiday period‘ . -...., _. I “W9 3“3i1'5- We m3”'0“'-" 'nicatlons with the Bulgarian. Ontario led with 10 fatalities, The accused. Ivan-Assen Hrl-i The defendant said Bulgarian ;UN delegation. 'including six traffic deaths. CAN ANDREAS 5iv°V G°°"8i°Vv 56- “id he Wm“ Security men 8"‘?-‘Sled him in 1" 1959 one of his us, con. Three died in tires and an 0t- . to the chief of the U.S. Central Moscow Sept. 8 in his room at "ms corhplained ma. he was tam ‘Mam sumwated‘ Que_ pvgflw‘ “ugh. intelligence Agency. Alien Dui- les, complaining he had been‘ put on the level of low stand- ard spy. Georgiev was aleged to have received ut 3110.000 for be- traying poditical. economic and military secrets to U.S. intelli- gence agents whom he met in the United States. Paris. Go- neva and Vienna. He pleaded guilty in a trial before the supreme court after the reading of the indictment. mg too much money on bec's death toll reached nine. . pa ,5 0 n 4,] Caprice; ‘mciud. six killed in traffic mishaps and .ntely-- ‘inc love affairs. three in fires. . "9 “lid the 90"” he “"33 (;¢.m-gin. said hp \\'nrkod for New Brunswick reported two l"the0retically ‘unslalf-e" fo|lnw- years rm the p.me,i..a..5 with. traffic deaths white Nova Sco- ithe Hotel Metropole. and he was. imade a full confession immedi- .w‘".._' @‘.4'''‘‘’ ‘~-'- .-' ' .S(omao-1.10 , NICO“! SYRIA \ 0 ling changes in Bulgarian life N. speaking am... m.,,..._V. Hi. tin. Newfoundland. Saskat- ‘''Y'‘’‘““ -I‘*‘‘' after the Soviet Communist mm request, he Sam was {of chewan and British Columbia ' party's 20th congress in I to pay the .0... or {each had one traffic death. i H ‘ " hnoouai the dest_alinlzatlon_ congress. woman named _/tmnma. (1,. . 1",.“ Th’ ‘“d‘°"“°"i -53"‘ G°°"3‘9" lscribed in the indictment as one Deaths Mount-"19 C ;joined the U.S. lntellige he in November‘ ‘956 of his mistresses. . The judge inlcrvcncd. say- iafter he arrived in New York in... --we man swap abnmv '0 b°‘_‘°"“‘ “‘T""5"“°' 9' _ ‘ivoiir love affairs tater" Bulgarian mission to the United 1 nce serv- . t e d Across The U.S. , . cHic.a.c.o «Ar» Traffic‘ 'l‘he trial was adloiiriinri mu-c .am.1.-ms killed 315 persons in I4-4-Ioumunsn ‘$00 which took just over an hour. . . . ,4‘ About 350 specutors, |nc1ud- N3“°“-‘- ibccause Georizicv said hc coiild the United States during the 48 :‘AN M‘ ' ~ ' ing foreign reporters, heard not continue because of higlg hours of Christmas Eve and .........._._ ‘ ‘ Georgiev say in a low. atmost ‘blood pressure. After the secon Christmas Day. a toll described )0 conversational whisper: =recess. the chairman (“of tbs by safety EXDPN5 8-‘ "V9l'.V "'-'-"--' """" “1 did not confess to lessen A em M“ ‘ lseven-member court a our-no heavy. ‘ _ .. ..- my ‘um’ I do not Wu" ti‘ spec‘ Bi::ua.M(:e':tha . . . . 2. iuntigflf mdady" so how ever he hehiythie irvilimpdmz (til MAP FOCUSES on Cypmg nice Wnh 3 prosidmma‘ "1819 0|‘ buy 1113109. 1 803! YOU 9' m d 3 °°"' “mg ‘ ' ' ~ ' . m .‘'r 3 whore Grcek and Tiirkisn palace annoimccmont that six - _ 1|” 9 ‘drew laughter from the court- the 24 hours of Christmas itsclf. _ . . , . _ to give me the heaviest punish Comm 7 1 - (—- . - - ~h ‘ hi i‘ ' (\'pl‘l0t:< continued to battle rurkish natal \‘iP9~'(‘i|§ had m""- I 3m "Cd! 90 30¢?!" R Emmi ‘ irmm when hp. Fwd mmmm rwltv mg ‘me pmvmi mos‘ 'i‘liiirsriav. Tiirkish troops taken iii‘ Dnsitions off PVT" 5908"-59 I 5|" ¢0mmW£d "'9 “H ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' " ‘had " high °p‘.'"““ M. Mmse" pen“-'5' - nod out of their camp at His. Pirsndcnitlal Wokosmnnl .. , . . . . . . . . . 0 d once told his American con- During the first 10 months of ‘"0 . . . . ‘ ‘ flute“ aim." Klngg Queens. City .... “I; l::(.' he should he pmpmod “lthis year, 35.170 persons were‘ Nicosia HM and took irp posat- said five of t.-ic vessels were 10”) of Ruin]: ‘kl ' ‘ _‘ ‘ lk-“ed ~ 1 (H cfide is toms to the city's Tiirkiish stadvimz off northern port of Gem.‘,ev_ who u mam“, bu‘ “ UN secretary-general in sur- ‘ fl"mugh:.:‘u. 4;: Us C1-13: rep’:-9. ‘ quarter. Giwk Anrriy con- Kryenia in» and the sixth has no c ildren. was also [-1 . Mgrkg _ CESSKM 10 the iii‘ W‘! "cm" sents an average of M5 deaths hnfienl took no msllmn-‘~ "1 0“ Wllhwn W‘-‘l of I-8-rnacn as cc to . I . . chgnudwi gM..u.s,m.m. .m..-.,igo1d_ is day. lcrty's Greek sector. Tension ac». (AP Wirephotzo Map). \