Mere Men Weitliris Tel" lei , . e.-.... Frinizke Edwer'd.lsldnai I Like The Deli! 1 111's loet that's put in I rlven dish. V 1a, races -1 rascal lie , Cherry Valley Federation Of x Mr. Lloyd Martin. a young farm- er from cherry Valley. was eleotsd president oi the Prince Edward island federation of Agricultur at the annual meeting of the dir- ectors held yesterday at the char- lmtetown Hotel. His position auto- matically makes him a director to represent the annual meeting oi the Canadian Federation of Agriculture. a year from now. Elected first vice-president was Mr. Archie Johnstotie of Burling- ton and second vice-president. Mr. Wallace Mallett. Union Road, Queens County. Others on the exe- cutive are Mr. Roland MacDonald. immediate ast president; John P. Wallace. A s: sylverius Yorston. Launching; Mrs. Willard Lank, west Royalty: Donald A. MacDon- aid. Glenilnnan and Mr. R. A. Proiitt. Freetown. Dinctors to the Maritime Federation of Agricult- ure are Lloyd Martin. Eric Madson. sherbrooke and Wallace Mallett. B9 RESOLUTIONS A total of twenty nine resolut- ions were considered at the meet- ing many of these had been given consideretion.st the County meet- ings last fall while others which the directors considered unreason- able were detected or shelved. Causing considerable debate was one in which the executive was urged to wait upon the executive Council of the Government with a view to obtaining a clear cut statement of policy regarding the status and operation oi the Prince Edward Island Potato Board. It was recalled in the resolution that Mr. Roland MacDonald had on December s received the personal assurance oi Premier A. W. Meth- rson. regarding his intentions not to interfere with the Potato Board Ford Talks, Are Cancelled TORONTO. (OP) - Peace talks between Ford of Canada and United Automobile Workers (UAW. OX0) ofiieials were cancelled again Wednesday. A company oificial said mgo. tiatore attempting to settle the strike. now in its 94th day. may meet today. Tuesday's scheduled Federation at the . Man Heads Agriculture Mr; Lloyd Martin in the exercise oi its legal powers and the carrying out of its respon- sibllities. Mr. D. A. MacDonald felt that action along this line was long lWAllFAliE ORACKLES AT it ill cosri men: u.s. ornan U .K. Exports At All-Time High LONDON (AP)-British exports reached an all-time high in vol- ume and value in 1954. the board of trade announced Wednesday. The year's total was 52,014,000.- 000 (8'1,46'1.200.000). The best pre- vious year was 1042 with 112.554.- 200.000. . During-lB54 the excess of im- ports over exports and re-exports totalled i608.000.000 compared with S655.400.000 in 1053. Tota of British exports to North Americ for 1954 was !Z28l.200.000 67.873.600.000). l1 per cent under 1953. OI that iilure. S149.300.000 went to the United states. six per cent under 1953. and i'.l3l.800.000 worth went to Canada. 16 per cent (Continued on Pnge 2 col. 2) under 1053. BURLINGTON. Ky. (AP) -- An airliner and a big private plane collided in mid-air and crashed into the bleak, snow-covered hills of northern Kentucky Wednesday. killing all 15 persons aboard. Among the victims was Stanley W. Wharton of Ottawa. a 4'I-year- old paper company oiiicial who was one of 10 passengers on the Trans World Airlines Martin Sky- liner which had just taken off irom Cincinnati's airport l2 miles away. The TWA plane carried a crew of three. The airliner bound ior Dayton and Cleveland. Ohio. collided with a DC-.! with two men aboard which was being flown from Battle Creek. Mich-. to Lexington. Ky.. to pick up.Mr. and Mrs. Frederick L. Van Lennep, wealthy Detroit race horse owners. meetings she were called ofi. Just what happened no one Battered Freighter Hopes To Reach Ha HALIFAX. ((.'P)-- The battered British ireighter Le Orilla reported Wednesday night that she had con- trolled the rush of water through broken underwater plates and was inching toward Halifax ' at 7 1-2 knots through moderating seas. Agents here said the crisis for the ship had apparently passed and if the weather remained good she probably oould make port to- ay. The latest message irom Capt. T. 1.. Bradford said: "weather I10WlY improving, proceeding to Halifax at 'l l-2 knots." other re- ports indicated the leak in No.- 2 hold was under control and that her other cargo holds were dry. smrs nnhaasln ' The ships which had stood by as the 7.047-ton Ls. Orills's so crew members battled to keep down the lHax Today innishing water were released. liar er in i.he day, the deep-sea. salve tug Foundation Josephine II raced from I-laliiax with pumps to help the mdrchantman stem the flow oi water. She was expected to rendezvous with the holed La Orilla about 200 miles south' of Cape Race. Niid., where the ireighter had been hat- tiing heavy seas and 40-knot galcs since early Tuesday PLATE! BUCKLE . La Orilla came to grief early Tuesday when a savage north At- lantic storm which earlier pounded the Newioundland coast sieve in her No. I hold plates and brought her to a standstill. At last reports 15 degrees. Le Orilla was launched in at Sunderland. England. she was listing 1942 Speculate Deal Coming ChineseReds Raise New Spy Cha TOKYO (Ileutera) Commu- nist China's propaganda machine churned out a stream of new ac- cusations of American espionage and maltreatment oi Chinese stud- ants Wednesday as United Nations secretary-general Dag Hemmarsk- ioid flew toward New York irem his negotiations in Pelping. The Swedish diplomat leit here for Honolulu Wednesday en route to New York, where he is due to arrive today. He was still silent on the outcome oi his talks with Communist Chinese For i n Min- ister Chou En-lei ior-' release. of 11 American airmen held prisoner bi! Chou'a regime. But new propaganda blasts Wed- nesday redoubied speculation that Coming Events "Gard Party. Ilerslto Iehooi. Friday. January lath. at I o'clock. "Danae. spring Valle! llall Fri- luv. Jen , is. Lunches. "Drokinole Party. Whestld River. It-idsr. January mil. . "Dance. Thursday evening. south ltustteo Hall. llollie lsclrsnale Oreiseetre. - ..f.'. ' 'rll2lif &i:l'.1'.f i'f'...; mheetre. - i i ' ' "xtugston It-soil: oanedien ion llolitgly ma Kan char- ' : i'i'. . l-io- :- .' Jun”. lot II . A . . - - . ill be as I.-,1-fail T'htIrlIlyh aighl: masons, trey arm um- Communist. Chinals getting ready to drivers bargain ior the liberty of the iliers-demanding in ex- change the return of Chinese stu- dents now in the United States. Communist statements for the sec- ond atraight day Wednesday said these students are being 'fpc,r- secuted" and held against their Iy HAROLD MORRISON OTTAWA (CP)-Federal moves likely will be made within the next lew days to settle the prolonged tax dispute with Quebec, it was learned Wednesday. Indications are the iederal gov- ernment win agree to allow Que- bec taxpayers to deduct their iuil ll-per-cant, pvlnelal income tax from fedora payments. providim Quebec will abide by a fixed ceil- tag on over-all direct tax cousc- tleos. W This basis for settlsmenwxiirst Eoposed b Premier Dupiessis in e tter to e Minister It. Leu- rent. will betaken up for formal eonaidu-stlssrey the cabinet today. Irina-Insets sets. . Approval appears Priliie Dliniehr Q. Laurent will attain Hr. Dupleesisel the cabin- I deelden by letter. , no AOIIIIINI -Quebec has no tax rental Israe- Iiseslt fills tewa. 'l'he.other prov- iaees. have. will be ecered the tax tile as an alternative to the year rental that expire in lurch. lul. is not strum?" mm. s to is "urai at has. j w Expect Quebec Will Win Tax Dispute With Ottawa 15 Killed When Private Plane And Airliner Crash seemed to know. Tower control. officials said they hail no word that the DC-3 was in the area. SAW FLASH. SMOKE C. Woodrow McKay. chief con- troller at the tower. said he saw the transport plane head southwest for about two minutes. make a right turn and then disappear. Seconds later he saw a flash and then smoke. Charles Rising. Cincinnati super- vising agent for the Civil Aviation Authority. said he knew of no reason ior the DC-.! to be ilying in the area. Another CAA official, who declined use of his name. said marks on the wreckage made it appear that the planes were ap- proaching each other as at the apex of a triangle and that it was their wings which apparently hit first. The TWA plgne crashed into the side of a gully approximately a half mile from the nearest road. It bounced back and wreckage was strewn for 150 yards. ' The DC-3 aprepred to have hit nose first ebou a half mile away. Wharton. a departmehtal super- intendent with the E. B. Eddy Company in Ottawa. was return- ing from Middletown. Ohio. where he had been looking over some plant equipment for his firm. Be- sides his widow. he leaves two chil- dren. Gerald. 10. and Leslie. 4. His parents. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Wharton, live in Edmonton” SPEED FLOOD PAYMENTQ roaomo (tip) - Metropolitan council decided Wednesday to speed up payments ior properties hit by Hurricane Hazel floods which will be talten over as park lands. Six real estate evaluators are survey- ing 164 properties to be taken over. council was told. Interim payments by 'metro finance commissioner were authorized to help the prop- r-rty owners buy new homes. will by U.S. authorities. At 'ihe same time. other Com- munist statements continued to draw a picture of American es- pionage on the, Chinese mainland -the charge of which the fliers were convicted. One Communist report said 37 American-trained Chinese agents had been killed in will accept the alternative because they can get more money out oi the rental agreements. It Is understood the Quebec formula means Quebec would limit its over-all tax collections to so per cent of what it would have obtained in paymen under a ied- eral rental agreeme t. Any collec- tions over that amount would be turned over to the federal trees- ury. . Acceptance oi the Quebec ior- iriule would mean the federal gov- ernment would give up an addi- tional sia.ooo.ooo in revenue each year. The mural tax law would have to be amended. CHANG! Qlllllo LAW Under the ottewe-Quebec agree- ment. Quebec also would change her own laws. conceding that the federal verniaent has prior right in the lrect taxation iield. it-: '""-"."'r”'- i:.'.."".".:" to .per seat e re- V! Ir. itsnanded that tire at be suede deduct- and the en lb; or: iederel payments. The en- lew allows a deduction of Plan 500 More Jobs GLACE BAY. N. 8.. (GP)-A new corporation will be-iormed to guide a 3250.000 govemment-supported fisheries program-which its back- ers say will provide 500 more Jobs on the Glace Bay wateriront. The details were released Wed- nesdey by Leo Maclntyre, chair- man of the fisheries development committee, and Joseph King. sec- retary oi the industrial develop- ment board, two local booster or- ganizations. . The undertaking calis' for the construction oi six draggers which would increase annual fish land- ings here by about 6.000.000 pounds. The 60-ioot vessels would have capacities of 4'! tons each and be able to function either as drag- gers or longliners. iishing craft that plumb deepses. areas with lines. WILL OWN BOATS Mr. Msclntyre said one ad- vantage of the plan is that it will enable competent iishermen to own and operate their own boats. The first dragger captains will be carefully selected by the cor- poration which will then stake each to a down payment on the 340,000 vessels. The captains will apply for read- iiy available iederal subsidies of 3165 a ton and long-term loans from the Nova Scotia governmeni's fishermen's loan board. Both sub- sides and loans are made available to anyone who provides a minimum cash investment and meets the general requirements. UNIDENTIFIED INVESTORSV Mr. Maclntyre said the corpora- Mur, g At Saint John SAINT JOHN. N. B. (CP)-Tes- tlmony by witnesses who live in the Waterloo street house where Lydia Godin was shot more than two month: ago featured procded- ings Wednesday at the trial of Joseph Vienneau. 32. who is charged with murdering the 38- year-old woman. The witnesses emerged from a bedroom. he shared with Miss 'Godin and said: "I shot her. but I want you to say it was an accident.” vlously the man had threatened to shoot the victim "if she doesn't come to bed." He had said. "she's going to die tonight." Another occupant of the house said that after the shooting Vien- blood; a gun battle after parachutlng onto the mainland fromiAme,rl- can planes. "MUST HAVE PATIF.NCE' The Communist Canton radio said 23 other air-dropped spies who landed with the slain men were given undisclosed sentences ior espionage byga Communist court in Kwangtung province Tuesday. It said the rest of the group were killed when they opened iira aiter being ordered to surrender. All 00 men belonged to "Ameri- can and Nationalist Chinese es- pionage organizations," the, radio said. charging that they were dropped by American planes. and that two of the men worked ior the U.S. central intelligence agency. I-lammarskjold so ier has refused to indicate whether the. question or the Chinese students was rais- ed during his four-day series of talks in Pelping.l The only member of his party to make a statement here Wednes- day was his executive assistant. Per Lind. who said "the iamilles ol the American fliers must have a little more patience." Lind said that Hammarsklold could not make any a merit about his talks until he has sub- mitted a written report to the United Nations. which approved his mission aiter condemning Communist China.ior a violation oi the Korean as-rnistlce in held- ing the intern. DIOOIATIVE -BILL LONDON (CP) Four men nightly. water 450 flower baskets hanging from lamp standards dur-1 la the summer in southwest Cem- berwell district. The item lg in cniydiive per dent oi the federal thought here that other vlvvtnees II”. the accounts at 3187 a year. Boost Fishing At Glace Bay a said Vienneau W neau's hands were covered with The trial enters its third day : - this morning. i i tion would raise its starting cap- ital irom a group oi unidentiiied investors. He said the organisation re- garded the fishing grounds off this northern stretch of Cape Bre- ton island as among the best any- where on the Atlantic coast. He also said the industry should act immediately to take advantage oi strong market conditions. The draggers will be built in Nova Scotia yards but Mr. Mac- lntyre did not say where. He said it was hoped to get started on the program "as rapidly as possible." Blizzards Anti Freezing Gales Lash Britain LONDON. (CF)-Blizzards and ireezing galcs lashed Britain Wed- nesday. spreading deep snow over northern England and Scotland and endangering coastal ships. Two trains were stranded in heavy snow in Scotland and dozens of villages were isolated. Gales swept down the North sea and Irish channel. The 1,515-ton Norwegian freighter Gait radioed it was sinking oil the Duich coast. Two small Swedish vessels called ior immediate aid. One was oil the Dutch coast and one oii eastern England. At Wick, in northeast Scotland, a plane coming in from the Ork- ney islands got stuck in a runway snowdriit. The 20 passengers wait- ed an hour before airport workers could plow a. path to the plans. .More than 100 school children at Wick could not get. home and spent the night in the town's hotels. A search ior two RAF planes carrying 18 men was called ofi in the Atlantic. Three ships still stood by trying to spot me rafts. but hope for the men dwindled aiier U. N. Destroyer Fires On Planes Off Chino Coast TAIPEH. Formosa (Reuters) - A United Nations destroyer Tues- day iired on Chinese Communist planes near the Nationalist-held Nanchi island, Chinese National- ist correspondents returning from the Nationalist-held Tachen island said today. There was no official confirmation of the, report. Nanchi island is 80 miles south oi Tachen. oii the South Chekiang C0531. The Chinese Nationalist corres- pondents said the incident occur- red whilc Communist planes were pursuing a Nationalist tank-land- ing ship. on which they were trav- elling and a Nationalist destroyer escort. They said the Communist planes made seven passes but did not bomb or straie the ships. although anti-aircrait guns on the National- ist destroyer escort opened fire. The correspondents said that an American destroyer accompanying the two Nationalist ships also opened tire on the Communist planes. There was no immediate identi- fication of the destroyer or lur- ther details. u. sfro Offer Butter For Sale WASHINGTON. (AP)-The U. B. agriculture department Wednesday offered 10,000,000 pounds oi sur- plus butter for export sale on a competitive bid basis after March i. ii: was a move to encourage sales. since last June. the depart- ment has been oiiering butter ior export at 41 cents a. pound, but less than 2,000, pounds have been sold, The department said that sales on a. bid basis would make the price competitive in world mar- kets. FIIIT WOMAN ELECTED NIAGARA FALLS. Ont. (CPie Niagara Falls board of education Wednesday night elected its iirst woman chairman since it was formed 33 years ago. Miss Winni- a 20-hour search in vicious weath- er. fred Stokes. city editor of The ENPL as s PLANES Bv cannos SAN JOSE, Costa Rica. ed: ”We don't scare with the In a country - wide broadcast. Figueres charged Gen. Anastasio Somoza. Nicaraguais strong - man president. had ”decided to unleash the men he had in his estates and is now throwing them into Costa Rica through -various points." A rebel band was reported mov- ing south in the inter-American highway from La Cruz. only 10 miles from Nicaragua. A lone tighter. described by the civil guard as a "Venezuelan plane which came from Nicaragua." car- ried the tight to Costa Rica's cap- ital city with blasts oi .50-calibre, machine-gun bullets not tar irom WASHINGTON. (AP) - The United States announced Wed- nesday night it will "make air- icralt immediately available to carry out Pacific observation ilights" over Costa, Rica. as requested by the Organization oi American states. .L.:...m.L...... Figueres” residence. Fleeing to the north. the plane was later report- ed shot down. i Observers here said the, plane was a Second World War P-47 type. No casualties were reported here. but there was some dam- age to ouiidings. RAID OTHER TOWNS A government communique, said planes also raided Liberia. in OTTAWA (CF) - Nine Eskimo seal hunters. cut. edriit on a sub- Arctic ice cake, may be waging a. desperate battle against death from exposure. an RCMP oiiicer said, Wednesday, weather oi some 30 degrees below zero are, slim. added Supt. I-Lm. Larsen, a. veteran oi thenorth. For 10 days now, the Eskimo hunters have been lost; cut oil from their sleds and kyaks when the ice cake on which they were standing cracked and set them a- dritt in the ioizzy. icy waters in the northeast oi Hudson bay. Mrs. Frank Gionet said that pi-c- . Famous -Johnny Doughboy. the only 5- gaited horse in the Maritimes. a beautiful jet black horse beloved and admired by thousands who watched him marshal the horses to the starting gate at the Sum- merside Raceway for the past two years. died in a fire a t 9.80 am. yesterday that gut the bam- gerage oi his owner. ,Mr. G. 3. "Jerry" sheen. a director and sec- Evenlng Review, is 1955 chairman. 5 ll s - S'side Horse retary treasurer oi the summerside gent animal this champion show- Raceway Aaeooiati - ""1 PNlIi'i- horse in both saddle and eemege The men. with their families at Burned (Photo by Wotton) And their chances'17i'durvival tn,” ESCUDERO (AP)-Costa Rica's spreadit ing warfare crackled at half a dozen points over the coun-1, try Wednesday. Mystery planes cluding this capital where President Jose Figueres decl attacked our towns, a splatterings 01' bullets." ha northwestern Costa Rica. and Ca tago and Turrialbe in the centra part or the country south of Se Jose. ' Government t r o o p I attscke rebel forces who Tuesday seize the Villa Quesede area on an lmc portant highway about 40 miieg northwwest of the capital. A corms munique said two rebels were killed and two soldiers werq wounded. Twenty rebels were red ported captured and one of tho! prisoners. ithough not identified, described as "important." ; At United Nations headquarters. Costa Ricsn delegate Bet-nading Nunez said invaders had capture two of the country's small Paciiid ports-Puerto Soley in the north- west about 25 miles south of thd Nicaraguan border. and Puertd Cortes in the southwest about 60 miles from San Jose. ,- Coata Rica called Tuesday rod military -aid irom the countries 00 the western hemisphere to "repel the (cross of invasion." The on ganization of American States. which has headquarters in Washe lngton, Wednesday hurried a lived power commission by plane ta Costa Rice. to investigate the site uation. 5 Nicaragua has oiilcieliy den-ietl Costa Rica. ll Little Hope For Survival Of Eskimo Hunters On Ice a camp nearby. were on the wins ter seal hunt in a bay off tin.vi Cape Smith island. off the north east Hudson bay coast. about '75 miles north of Moosenee. 0nt., get about 1.500 miles north o i.evv,ac ' .- Supt. Larsen said reports in( dleate that all the men may hav with them are some rifles and harpoons. ' he ice cracked on the wron side.” mvggc . ,...... ... ii-IA?-.10 Acrxj , NA1'uRAt.xTo Ptay Ell-lElF00i..Q:”i wonorrro (CP)-Minimum on! maximum temperatures: Min Max '1 Dawson 4 iii Vancouver . 37 44 Victoria . 41 45 Edmonton . 2b 3 Calgary . . . . . 3 42 Regina db it Winnipeg . 2b 5 Toronto .. . 22 2h Ottawa .. . 0 17 Montreal . lo -. Quebec 1 11 Fredericton . ii 21 Saint John.. to 1p Moncton . 20 at Halifax . . . . .. as 33 Charlottetown . to as Sydney as 81 Yarmouth . . 20 20 .- St.John's............. al 33 ” l HALIFAX (CP)-The Dominion public weather office here says iempereturea over the forecast district are approaching more see- aonable levels. Tem ereturea Wed- nesday remained be ow Ireezing in all regions except Haiusx and in many regions were below 25 dg. rees. A disturbance over the . reat Lakes is moving eastward and is expected to aiiect the south- western Maritime: late Thursday. The northerly llow over the east. ern regions. will continue, Reaional torecsets: V” Wllilv eeetteeed light seem. flurrlee; little c in tempo". GIN! lortlweet ll. law-high at Gbarlotletewe 3 an as, Eastern N. 3. counties. upper St. John river valley, Bay of Chum": cl”-id! with a low clear intervals: little change in tempei-g. etor oi sheen and Melanie shoe dlessea, was never beaten" when store in Summer-side. Wherever Johna, Doughboy iep- Winter 1!-gig in peered in public be was eurround- horse shows in Madison ed by admirer: at all uses. and is Garden in New York. shown in competition at the loyal Toronto. and at lquare seen above with his trainer-rider, porn in xmgmg, ,3 n.” in 1118- Mun wedlock. on one oi his iirat purchase price u g thine occasions, An extremely clever and intelli- t year-old was goes, and (Continued on Peg. is got. 3) ill": light winds. Low-high gt Iloncton I0 and I5. Edmundsten zero and 15. Cempbellton eight and High tide today at Charlottetown at 1.47 aim. and 211 p. in. summer-side tide eighteen min. utss later than Charlottetown. Sun rte: today at 7.lI a. m. and sets at as p. as. any connection with the trouble inli Prince Edward Island: cieggy '