quick results. lb PAGES Stunning ilies servers night. i P It has dealt the Russians their biggest ralerse since Soviet inr- perialism was launched under Sta- lm during the Second World War. it was a much bigger blow to the Kremlin than last weekend's bloodles revolution in. Poland. This time Russian troops fired upon the people of an allied ”pe0ple'I democr ,v." Many observers were betting the Hungarian uprising would speed the overthrow of Nikita'S. Khrush- rhev as soviet Communist party boss in MOICOW. TELEPHONE 8506 Buyer meets seller with Guan- dian Want Ads. ask for classified ad linker. for Dial. 8506 Revolt ' West A What mystified most observers arlanshersaethssourceoftherebels weapons. Another question was how a full- u fledged revolt withstanding hun- dreds oi thousands of iers of the combined Russian and Run- gsrian armies for more than 24 hours could explode from what ap- peared e peaceful demonstration of students. Even veteran correspondents in Budapest who watched Wednes- day's student demonstrationai re- ported they had not anticipated anything like this. Hungarian authorities ap- parently were -caught flat-footed by this rebelli-n-especially the hoses of the Hungarian Commu- nist party. Police are looking for the driver of: carwithbrokenred guard ever the left headlight. They are also lookij for a pedes” who assisted the driver to place an injured men in the car at die corner of Bydney Street and Great George in Charlottetowrthe ave- nins of October ll. Police Seek Driver Who . Abandoned Dying Victim As a letter in the Forum Column tells, Chief MacArthur is forced to the conclusion that the driver of 1948 - 1.950 Plymouth or Dodge. black or dark blue. first struck an elderly pedestrian. then carried :8: away. not home or to hospital to a deserted spot. The victim died soon after being found an taken to hospital. improved behavior on the part of the children and better adjust- ment to other people. are the chief result. noted in the first several months or activity in the Play School for Retarded Children in Charlottetown, Miss Sue Hol- lett. teacher. reported yesterday. Miss Hollett was speaking at the quarterly staff meeting of public Health Nurses, held in the Pro- vincial ml of Health of- fices in lottetown. Miss Eni- lett outlined the efforts of the As- sociation of parents of Retarded Children which -resulted in the establishment of the play school last spring. She asked hr the assistance at the Public Health,-Nun-see in is- iormins parents of retarded child- ren about the Association. T.B. TESTING Play School Has improved Behavior And A Adiustment the Division of Tuberculosis Con- trol. who also spoke. revealed the results of the recent tuberculin testing programme carried on in several centres of the Island. Dr. Creelrnan said he was very much pleased with the wonderful re- sponse by the public when over 6.000 people were tested in less than six weeks. lie also very warmly praised the many volun- teers who donated their time at the clinics. The nurses also discussed de tails of the polio immunization project which is to be carried out in all the rural schools on the Island this fall. The rural clinics are expected to take three weeks to complete and it is hoped that clinics in Charlottetown, summer side and the larger centres will be in operation immediately fol- Dr. P.A. Crddlmall. Director I lowlngworkintherurelsreas. OTTAWA (CP)-The board of transport commissioners reserved hdgrnent Wednesday on the ran- Wn.vs' appliunilon -n- at- a v year increase in h-sight re The major railwws. which gross about 11.000.000.000 a year. have asked for the boost to ofist costs of wage increases obtained by em- liloyeee in contract negotiations this year. Reserve Judgment On Railway Move For Freight Rates Hike the expiry date at Wednesday's hearing, it was understood a deci- sion by the board on whether or nol the interim increase should be allowed to stand is being left in abeyance for the oment. Expect- ations were the final decision will take some weeks to work out. BAILWAYB REPLY A board announcement on the status of the interim increase was expected shortly. Counsel! for the Canadian Ne- tioriai Railway and Canadian,Paci- flc Railway Wednesday attacked oi provincial govern- ment is that the railways can get along without freight rate increases "Expenses have gone 3 DGYOTM the control of the railways," said wile ilglllih O'Donnell. senior CNR was-1 r'".'Wr;!.'-! ' ,, .. ,,r ., . . i e uar-did "Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew" CANADA. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25. 1956 Island Girl Is Awarded ' VON Bursary A former Kinross nurse has hen awarded a VON bursary for pod graduate study in public health nursing. Miss Anne Maclsean. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomu Macbean. Albcry Plains. P.E.L is one oi 40 nurses who will each receive 8750 scholarships. She will take the course at the University of Toronto. It is a condition that recipients undertake one year with the Victorian Order oi Nurses in which ever locality their services are most urgently needed. Miss Macllean is a member at the 1948 graduating class of the P.E.I. Hospital School of Nursing. Towing Job Slow In Heavy Seas HALIFAX (CP)- The salvage tug Foundation Frances is sched- uled to arrive in Halifax Friday or Saturday with the disabled British freighter Graniord in tow. officials of Foundation Mari- limes Ltd., owners of the tug. said Wednesday the ships were proceed- lug towards port at five knots. Progress was slow becsus of heavy use and a Tuesday after- noon report placed the two ships :95 miles due east oi here. The 7.007-ton Granford was en route from Hampton Roads. V.A. to Great Britain when Ilia led Ill rudder last Saturday. GLACE BAY. N.s. lCP)- The Cape Breton coal strike spread to another mine Wednesday and 4M more men left their jobs to sup- port the 7.000 already away from seven Donlmion Coal Company pits in protest of a working met- hod. Meanwhile a mass meeting of more than 1.500 strikers Wednce day appointed a two-man com- mittee to meet with Premic the government plans to take as the strike which started last Fri- day- with a 28-man walk out at one colliery. The two men will report to a seven-man committee made up of local union presidents early today (Thursday) and a nother mass meeting is planned for later today. ' The strike started when the 3 men said a wall in Caledinla colliery was not properly cleaned off and under a vew company system it meant they would have to do two days work for be day's wages. TEACHER RESIGNB BRIGHTON, Colo. (AP)-A fifth grade teacher suspended after she taped the mouths of three pupils ior talking gave up her fight and resigned T esday. Miss Esther B. Bogie, 60. a teacher for 35 years. said she had been offered another job. She said transparent tape was used to seal the glris' lipn b: :ause peated lristrucdoas 400 More Miners Already idle in Cape Breton so with the walkout of as men other miners fell in line and by Tuesday the seven company pits and their 7.000 miners were idle. Wednesday Princess Colliery. own ed by Old Sydney Collleries of Sydney Dosco. closed down for the night shift when the 400 men due to work remained off their jobs. If the mine remains. closed todu another 000 men will join the strlk . Hicks to see what action. it any Una leader. have "Red their members the appeals got little response. two men appointed to meet with Premier Hicks who was due to speak in Sydney Wednesday The night. are Donald Maelnnia of Glace Bay and John Lalo of new Waterford. RABAT, Morocco (AP) - Sixty . . dead were' count 4 000 Polggh Wednesday. vrcunmst grim Aralr ' retaliation for thlemanr;aatAl7y the F h of fiv e g geriaa Youui: rertigllg. Many (elf the bodies were Demonstration '""'"”"”- WARSAW (Reuters)--More than l.W0 Wuths fought a one - hour battle with club-wielding Commu- nfn Party and security officials Wednesday an to climax a tense day of tionsin IPIIW proved Polish cabinet and called for gen- eral electloos to take place next -Jan. D. The elections bad origin- ally been set has Dec. ll. the Polish capital. i f 3 13 following the Pon they. disobeyed ill? tostoptalkir: .- Dame ' last evening. Rev. Allan MacDo and a subsidiary at was ms t to return to work, but Arab governments British Em” cars. Among the N and demonstra- radio announced the diers. They were comrades were Tued& night. This s lcuseec rein-new sf subeldlslol lrilk e-sass I El &idren f .2 it it it 5:1 i s E . ll vigil 3. SUPPER WAS SERVED in the Notre Dame Acad my auditorium ical Mass of- fered by Bishop MacEachern last night. The Bishop and two mem- Centennial Of Notre Dame Academy is Commemorated Angry anti-French demon lions and protest strikes spread across seething North Africa as Ceremonies. commemorating the first year of the existence of Notre . formally opened. Centennial Year celebrations Ii this girlls school in Charlottetown Pontifical Mass was offered by His Excellency. Most Rev. M.A MacEachem, D.D. The Mass was celebrated in the Convent chapel where Bishop MncEachcrn was assisted by Right Rev. Monseignor Patrick McMahon as High Priest. nald and Rev. Waiter Reid as honorary deacons. and Rev. James Kelly and Rev. Francis Corcoran as deacon and sub-deacon. Rev. P.F. MacDonald of ceremonies. The preacher of the occasion was Rev. J.W. Mccardle, a for- 6O Victims, Of Arab Vengeance demanded to- lease of the Algerians. In Tripoli. Libya. demonstrnuuu stoned the and European dead, mo Europeans, were seven french killed and Id ounded in two ambuahes in eastern Morocco was themed serious French military loss in Moroccan since Morocco cast (J Dairy Consumers, Producers Clash On Price Supp k VIENNA (AP) Hungary's bloody rebellion against Soviet domination and the Budapest Red leadership blazed through its sec- ond night and spread to the prov- times. But apparently it was being crushed systematically Wednes- day night by overpowering Rus- sian armed force. Soviet tanks. planes and troops were thrown into the battle for the decisive blow against the up- rising workers and students. The Budapest regime claimed it had mastered t'e rebels but ad- mitted fighting went on. Moscow and East Berlin broad- casts followed quickly with claims that the rebels were beaten. Eyewitnesses returning to Aus- tria from Hungary reported many hundreds have been killed in bat- tie. Austrian businessmen told re- porters at the border that Hun- garians told them fighting outside Budapest was going on in the cities of Debreccn, Szolnok and Szeged. bers of ' is center table. served by the members oi the Alumnae. Guardian Photo rner chaplain. and , tly pes- tor of Saint Mary's parish, Mon- tague A-N hrcosgr-attdattng-Derlfslis-s of Notre Dame at the conchfsloa of the Mass. Bishop MacEecha'n ex- , i sentiments of gratitude for the work done by the valiant plo- neers of Christian education of women. His Excellency naked God's blessing on the present staff. the Alumnae. and the pupils. Following the Mass. the Bishop and his party. and the congrega- tion retired to the Academy aud- itorlum where lunch was served by the members of the Alumnae. During the lunch, choral numbers were given by the Notre Dame High School Chair with the Misses Morocoe Virginia Macbougall and Margar- et Mclntyre as soloists. its status as a protectorate. Rarnpaging Moroccans struck hard in Meknea and the surround- ing eountryside Tuesday night. starting less than 24 hours after the five Algerian rebels were seicedbyal" chcoupons plane night from orocco to Ten- isia. IIOSPTTALB COSTS .U'P OTTAWA (CP)-Operating cs- penses of Canadian hospitals. con- tinuing s 25-year-trend, rose 13.5 per cent in 154 to an all-time high of sass.oo.ooo, compared 8325.- ooo,ooo the previous year. the bur- eau of statistics reported Wedney t7.37, a increase of 6.1 cents is day. Cost per patienlday was one year. '3” hntstolesthiefltsefenesntrd- party . . an Refreshments were HUNDREDS DEAD The Austrian travellers said the number of dead in Budapest alone amounted to many hun- dreds as Russlan tanks. Jet planes. machine - gun batteries and grenades were thrown against rebel bands composed of students and workers. In its midnight newscast Buda- pest radio claimed the rebels" had been "isolated in many places" in Budapest but added that than N. B. Youth Up On Murder Charge DALHOUSIE. N.B. (CP) -- Rob 811 Felix. 15. arraixned here Wed- nesday on a murder charge. was remanded to October 81 for pro llminary hearing. The unemployed youth of Northern Falls Brooks was arrested soon after Jules But as midnight neared Buda- pest radlo still admitted there was heavy fighting in sections of the capital. in the latest Budapest broad- casts the government laimed the Russian and Hungarian troops were winning the battle of Buda- pest nnd that "more and more youngsters" surrendering and abandoning their arms. LIGHTNING BEVOLT There was still no explana" how the rebels had obtained guns k to hold off the combined attack of Russian and Hungarian forces in a lightning revolt that began after an orderly street demonstration Tuesday. Radio Budapest claimed that that the rebels had machine-guns and hand grenades when they attempted to smash into a Buda- pest military barracks. when the rebels ignored two ultimstums to surrender under amnesty. the government decreed the death penalty for every man who fought on. Later this was softened to mercy under "exten- uating circumstances" for rebels who surrendered 'elter the deed- SEIGNIORY CLUB. Que. (CP) -Free entry for It lde range of Canadian goods into the United States would be made a condition of Canadian-American hydro-elec- trlc agreements, under a resolut- inn adopted Wednesday by the an- nual mecting of the Canadian Ex- porters' Association. One purpose of the resolution. as expressed by W. B. Lambert. assistant general sales manager of fhe,Aiuminum- Company of Can- ada, is "to make the people of the United States and members of Congress aware that Canadians are thoroughly disturbed about their trade deficit with the United States.” This year. the resolution noted, Canadians are buying some -1.- 000,000.000 more in goods from the United States than Americans are buying from them. TIME to llAI.'l' "The situation," said Mr. Lam- bert. "ls that we give and give and give historically and it is time to say this far and no further. "Americans want a tap up here that they can turn off and on at their convenience." Several delegates questioned the it of emergency was p.m. GOVERNMENT TOPPLES ing Tuesday night turned rioting. and the rioting into rebel- lion and civil war that rspd Q past tworultimatum deadlinam nouncement of the death penal followed expiration of the sea; dras Hegedus toppled. Communldl installed the popular, OIICQ-Mat" lmre Nagy but this failed to posse the rebels. 'l'helr - demand was that all Russian diers leave the soil of Hungry Nagy's appeals for an end to - fighting were ignored. is not clear whether Nagy held - premiership at that momen ., pealed to Soviet troops for i , to crush the revolt. about mid time. into Austria said they saw Bovht A tanks roll into the streets of Beer s' pest. spraying fire as they std H at rebels holed up in the hIM- v ings. some of the buildings aye : aflame. WEATHER Sunnywithafewcloudyim tervals; much cooler. Low- high at Charlottetown 35 and 45 PRICE 5c Rebellion In Hungarian Capital Spre cling Into The Provinces Soviet Planes, Tanks, Troops In Action To Stem Uprising line of G p.rn. In claiming it was master of the situation, the Hungarian gov- ernment acknowledged by radls that "order has not been restored everywhere" 5 and was indeed prcading outside Budapest. The statement bore out a report by the Austrian interior ministry that shooting had been heard at the St. Gotthard railway station just across the Austrian-Hunger in border. The ministry said it was taking steps to protect the Austrian bor- der population. OCCUPIED CITY said a The Budapest radi declared at I In Warsaw, an informed source said Budapest was an "occupigd city" With Russian troops in con. troi of the official radio and pair rolling the streeTs. No ordinary telephone contact was possible between Warsaw and Budapest. The government was reported as have thrown out cordons of Soviet and Hungarian troops 15 to E miles outside the capital in an at- tempt to keep the revolt. from spreading. With hundreds of anti,-Soviet pg. bels reported gm Budapest”: sm'oke-hlyailefl dud h the authorities all who continue to fight, streets. iii: tened death to Students. workers and even nun. sarlan soldiers who joined an 1-. V0" defied I sovernment ultima- tum to surrender. Finally m. In. eminent announced: Banvllie. 65. gatekeeper at a fur have been "new aggressive at- "The counter . reyd esinr station near Kedwick. died tacks .in various parts of the still carrying out minder and rob- ofabulletwoundIepmsner8capital."7 ” "Pl beryl or 30' 3",," ." Th koedcaet eea- . ' elude; with s iefovngte aml by "at" Q l the government r ans 3 ' Exporters Group 2521.?” do are: away ma. mm", mg;--.m 3-glmvg Approves Hydro. ..... ....'"'.Jf......""'... ......... ::::;':.;::l-.,,';';o:g,ed, ---;;;n-; T 0” M 0 allout war, saying it would exee- any ,u,.,endu..d vommfruy C" 5 CH0" me every rebel who fought on. ' Peaceful demostrstions starb- fate rat 2 pm., then 6 pm. The en- The government of Premier 3 . I The Communist governmen That A - morning Buda ' Travdlers crossing the fkna&' in M . wisdom of the resolution. but only one-R. B. Spiro. export sales manager of Coleman Lamp and Stove Company in Toronto-raised his hand against it in the vote. "In the past," said Mr. Spiro, "our resolutions have asked for things it was possible to get. We know from the beginning um this 7'" ''”d '" ' """" "l ' policy Society for the prevention of a Cruelty to Animals was empha- sised by Mrs. Eleanor M. Kidd at a representative meeting of citizens held last night. Mrs. Kidd who for a number of years has been sponsoring the one is hopeless. Aren't we mixing two subjects which haven't too much to do with one another. other delegates didn't agree that the matter was "hopeless" and R. D L Kinsman. treasurer of Aluminium United Ltd- Mui- real. commuted: "For use Canada is in a slug position and in finding a soluttll to hydro - electric matters we should try to find a solution D the trade deficit." PT i Charlottetown. sods GuiltiLTo .'.'.'.”'...”.:'.l': .'”........ .. horses nfs NEW mvnn (AHA 8-yea- oIdbahysttendaat.Vh-gieialao Cl. 'efsbe&twob Seeks Police Co-operation In 3 Enforcement Of S.P.C.A. Act the reporting to the Poli:a establish a case. A number of those present of seeing cattle being ab&d being pastured in a held sufficient pasture or water. Kidd said she investigated cattle shipments from the I 4 and felt that the mica allotdt steams-hips was not edeemte week when it was dllllenlt