MAXIMS , OIL MERE MAN MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN xrt Read y Lows your uremia, for tiny Isl! one must drew luck in order to you your faults, leap better Everybody Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew MONDAY, MARCH 29, 1954 1,424 RESCUED FROM F IRE-SWEPT BRITISH TROOPSHIP Tbs Guardian, Fivs Courts in Carrier: Cbsriottetown, Snnunersirls 815.00 Der snnun. lluwlmo Morning Dolly Founded ISII. iii nu. saoo. Other Provinses uni u.s.s. uoo par ........., CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, 12 PAGES New Monster Hydrogen Strike Diverts Liner Queen Mary To HaliFax'4Ki"edW Blast jtill On Schedule . rm E I ' 0 call For Speed-lip or u. s. Ptckels coin... McCarthy-Army Fight .,f,';,?f,,'”.',',.,,,,',',,,,, and swept by flames Sunday as I I I . . -. . ' p MW! . . Military Aid To Indo-China To feel Wis in Is Gwen Top Priority Elli-fii;?.f...l:.i:3?lElS9llll0Wel' y N- Y- Tled "P W" "M W W” by -" vim" ?.i”.E.”i..lf”;.i” .1; 22l.:t.':i'i Siiilpraises pefenide,-5 By JOHN OHADWIOK i By Russell Brinu . , , WASHINGTON (Again A Home F H g ahead with other invosti,r:ations in he be d h . d 1 th for next month. of Rzmesentatives foreign affairs S HALIFAX (CPFVTM Cu”. KWIA-SMliElIiG'dtIl0I:lE.l (AP)s-lgsenaixll. lme meantime. piroma, irmcan oggiggr F?)1?,n8mu: Except for the chance of niliioi s subcommittee called Saturday for "d luxury -lmer Queen Mm. ar un 9'D-- . .) sad, Inability to obtain special coiin- were killed but 1,1-24 pa,sgngemldnln)'s. fhees developnienta lllfll.-g n on accelerated American military aid is ex eded t d k h V Sunday t.he senate investigations sel has delayed the start of the and crew membem scrambled m.cated the current SPTIELS of irsvn .0 Iudmohins, and said any allied gm PET mi; M "9 at 8 sub-committee should finish itslsubcommittees public hearings on safety In E speedy and nombly in the Pacific would continue iui ------ attempt to seek ii truce there y.g, ' ' "5" dwened 1'” fact-finding job in the row be. the charges and countei--charges calm "Mus opemmoml planned tdespife Telllloall of DOS!-R iny H, 1,4,. Gm-mm ponemen or (fence a on: n pug. the second time in seven months by fl New York dock WASHINGTON, IAP) adrift-still rlrnt Eisrnliouer spoke out strong- exchanged by McCarthy and Army The ship was left Secretary Robert Stevens and their burning-in the Mediterranean, s " t. l 1 t to tr 5 to J h M'oC t.h means appeasemen equ va en MONTREAL. (GP).Jme Brmsh ween am End army aor;ncy- L Represemamp Jam” V” an Indo-Chinese "Munich'." ' (Rep.-Wis.) The siibcorrimlitee. reporting on ifiglgtgugeolggfgcKitegrspiml"853: '5":I1,l:' 81 27540" H r the ials before embarking on any new sides. I WM km. zandt ii-up-Pa i, 8 member of moi 1. gundm. m I,,.mS,, M me dpfgnd. ii 30,000-mile Far Eastern study mg in Montreal harbor mg seas: mmdis secjond 1” e ''M,' hearings. Muiidt said he does not thziik it Among 1,424 named wnhoml COl'l;zTeSSl0il'll atomic chem;-.,v coin-pp” nr 1...." gm, pg-U. and ..x. trip. moomrneiided internationaliz- on was reported 20 "maxing 0, Wmg 108;, useng 5' gqocar; McCarthy, who has turned over will be possible now for the hear- mishap were 27-, Women and ch”. niittee, aniiniinccd he is ll.l'liilI to p(('SSl"fl 'ariiiiiiaiion and beat iiig uid continuing the Indo-Chins. Fine Point Q S d , F mm '1 P g"5' " l) the subcommittee chairmanship to ings. which are to be telecast, to men, dependents of semce,,,en' Bikini during the Hoiirv of Rein ..,;i,,;v to 1,1,. ,.,,mm.,,de, nf ,1” rtmlllci "Nd" "19 United N3”0M- Point 15 0 'u ua” un Mi aTei Th! re ummg Canafjlant Mundt while that probe is made. get. under way before next week. who had boarded the Empm resentntlvfs Easter reccs-S. Amllibr-lnaziivieri Indo-China fortress. Th, F-,.,,,ch have opposed mgg, Lh trim ie Bspefoas attiei I . 6 Queen Mary will leave wmdmsh It Mum pom. swung 16-36, to witiiess further 'hydrozPnl Tlii-riiign dipirim.-ii:c r'liannPls The congressmen alsn pmpased moruh o . c St.'Lawrehce Rllehl 1;:-ie Thursday for the United mm hnmlmllzpd mlme” also We” u-aupuug" my-, lhe dlCpa!FhPrll an unusual mus ,hMAmer1mn and French Bumorj V e Spinner was scheduled. to iiigdom with between 1,500 ' lll (med 2. Informed atnmic c-niiisiiittee.n:i to President Rene Cnl,V oi -HF5 ”l'180T0l15l.V 9XPl0W" mElh0d-I pmk up A pilot. at Paul” Pmml and L800 -passengem bmugm e e S 0 ll l si.iii'i-es said no indicatioii had lJCCn.lll.i1lllllC anti to Ban Dal. rhir-f nl Que, Sunday night. she will be in by special train. Kmed 1,, gm; Km." M ,, iideubnayp pn5(pnllP-;Sl2lie or Viet. Nam, commending To improve the morale of native sl- - -1.4 the ”:1llanli'y and stamina of the ized troops and to speed their mil- itnry training. Chairman Walter Judd (Rep.- Minn.) told 3 press conference that if Indo-Chinn developments bring .1 French call for American troops -it would require the gravest con- isideration by the executive branch and the whole Congress." Pessimistic on Geneva The subcommittee implied that the April 26 Geneva conference on indo-Chins. and Korea would be a stalemate or would profit the Com- munists. other members are Rep- resentatives Marguerite S t 1 ti Church (Rep.-Ill). E. Ross Adair iRiep-Ind.) and Clemciit Zablocki iDem -Wlsl. Judd said any truce sought by the Allies. rather lh.-in the Com- munists, would be "the first step toward the war we are trying to avoid." The subcommittee that Amciticnti representatives "withdraw promptly" from any Korean peace talks-including Ge- neva-whcnever the Communists show they are interested only in "propaganda, abuse and delay." The United States has agreed in Join the South Koreans in walking out of J. Korean peace conference it. after 90 days. there is no pro- ITEM. recommended Imrk Clear Policy The subcommittee made these other general observations follow- ing the five-week tour of 10 coun- :ries made last fall: 1. The U, S. and free world lack ii "clear and firm policy" on Asia and should draft one quickly. 2. The U. 5. should continue op- posing recognition of Red China or idmimion to the UN. 1. Red China dominates Asia ind the "most feasible" course is to maintain pressure from within and without to intensify internal prob- .a-ms of the Chinese Rod regime. the first occzin-going ship to do so this season. Captain Frank D. St.i'us.s re- ported to the ships agents here he expects to dock at Quebec iriie Monday afternoon. The ship has been delayed by heavy ice condi- tions. Inquest Ordered In Boy's Death I-IAM.I.L'IlON. (CP)-An autopsy has been ordered into the death of John Labeiie. 2, who died two hours after eating dinner Friday No date has been set. oizist, said Sunday riiszht he doubts food poisoning is responsible for the child's death and also for the illness of two other children of the same family, Carmel, 3. and Michel. 4. Their condition in hospital was improved. Dr. Deadman said if food pols- oning is responsible, all members of the family who ate the meal would probably have been affect- ed. Police said it is possible the childreii got their hands on rat poisoning. Neighbors said they house. Swallowsd By 'Quake paper: said Sunday giant ci-rick: which opened in the earth after is horivy quake Thursday swallow- ed the village of Jezinsn. about 40 miles west of Tehran. The pop- ers said about 200 houses vanish- sil but the gaps opened so slnwlv all the village's 8-l0 inhnbltnnts escaped injury. Siamese Twins Unique In Montreal Triple Birth MONTREAL, (CP) - Siamese baby girls, joined at the head. were born Saturday night to Mrs. J. salvage of Montreal in a triple birth thought to be without pre- eedent. The Siamese babies were pre- :eded by a perfectly normal baby girl, weighing about five pounds, Ilthough n month premature. They were born at 10 p.m. ESP Saturday. All were reported do- ng well in incubators at Cather- ine Booth mothers hospital Sun- iny night. The mother also will n good health. The parents said they would irime the,Siamess children Janet ind Jessie. The third little girl will too rolled Mary Anne. The fsl.lisr's age was given as 30 and the mother's around Ill. The obstetrician who delivered the girls said he knew of no pre- rious case where Siamese babies "me no part of A triple birth. He said, however. that he knew oi fuel of Siamese twins in Mont- fell in recent. years. Coming Events "Wliestiey River Hull, erokinole lonlfht. "Curd Dirty Dunsisffnsge school tonight. ”VIrloty concur: in Kingston hull. March ll. if not fins April I. For school improvements. "in Stock Oilcske. Ned Mol- lassee. lrsn Shorts. st your one 5'03! Form Supply Centre. Kem- inlion reed Isrvics Liiiims. "Movies tonight, Hunter Rivsr, "W3" Wlvhe in "operation Paci- fic. Ss sure to sseit. It's top level entsttslunent ' " who at Nomi tum niiiii nni ht: Cornwall Meteors vs. Charlottetown Aseiu. asns use The hospital put I tight news blackout on details of the birth at Dr. W. J Deadman, city palhol-I had never known rats to be in the I TEHRAN. (AP)-Tehran news-j NEW YORK. (AP)-Longsliorw nivn cnnfinucrl piokeliiig along the New York waterfront Sunday de- SDIVP the tlitont. of federal and slate action to end the costly strike, now in its 24th day. Because of the lie-up, lliri liner Queen Mary will dock today at. Halifax and send her passengers on from there by tra.n. The Queen Mtiry decided on that notion rather tliiin fave the prissiliilily of having to berth here without the aid of tugs which have heeded picket boats sent out by the striking lndepend. ent International Longshoremen's Association. The Ctinzidion Pacific liner Ern- iiross of Svollzinrl vms abimdoned by her tugs Friday night and made three trics Saturday before islic tied up without the aid at lugs. The forward ripen deck mil. mil of the '.76.O00-tori liner was drimnged when wooden finals in the vinivr collapsed under the liriusual strain as the Empress was worked into the berth under the giiitinnce of Capt. C. E: Dug. gnu. About luilf the R24 pnsseng. on were from Montrerl nrd Tor- onln. The Cuniii-d liner Media arrived in New York Sunday afternoon and docked without the aid of tugs. There was s chsnce, how- ever. that she might have to take ier l.B00 tons of cargo back across the Atlantic. A P0019311)" Spokesman said there would be no unloading of the cargo. which included 3,210 bags of mail, unless the strike uids be- fore the ship's scheduled depart. iure Fridiay. Tings Help liner There was s slight. crack Sun- day in the iLA'ir efforts to para- ly ze the port. Two tugs helped be-rlh the liner Ocean Monzirch. returning with 325 p.-isspnigprg from a snvrii-day Brvrmuda cruise. Told about the docking of the ship by the two tugz, ILA prpsi. rlcnl. Capt. William Bradley saitl that as for as he knpw the. tug. boat affiliate of his union is still siippririliig the strike. added "'I'hei'e may have been no pivkcts on duly” at the time the vessel (lf)f'l(F'fl. About 2,100 men were busy at seven piers in M..1iihsl.iari and the request of the parents. The obstetrician, who declined use of his name, said the Siamese babies weighed about 4 1-2 pounds each at birth. He said it was too soon lo de- cide whether it would be possible to separate the babies. That could only be determined after lengthy examinn ion liy specialists. It would probably be about two months before anything could be attempted. The parents have three The doctor said he had not seen in the delivery room. He said he suspected a multiple birth but had no idea there would be triplets. No x-rays were taken prior the birth. he said. Special care wss being taken with the mother. who suffered I nervous breakdown about two months no. to By ALEX SINOLIFION BILDRADI (AP)-A secret un- dsrground organization chsilenged President Titio's Communiat gov- ernment lundoy and called upon the Yugoslav people to "overthrow ths country's dictatorship." It was the first sign of an orgsniud oppo- sition her: in six yesu, ' A communique outlining aims and objections of the organisation -which sold it was organising I aeclslist psrty - no circulated among foreign correspondents tits- fioned hers. tenors no signsture. It cautioned those who received it to destroy the copies for fear Yugo- slsvis's security police might at- tempt toltrsce their source. A spokesman for the foreign of- e.-lj mu ag; p- ,nsstsrsudtiienllcednesonm- otherj childrsn besides the triplets. i -- the mother until he attended bury Hrmklyn Suntlny (today) in defi- knnrc of the strike. , Tnriziy iiie strikers plan a march on Wnsliinglnn in protest tho gov- r-rnmcnl's role in the situation, .A.n ILA spnkcsinnn said hrfivcrn 000 and 1.000 demonstrators will ipmkol the White House, l (70 TlI9Srlfi.i'. the notional labor relations linnrd will vnnsidcr an pevamlnerls reconinicnilollnn that it W'nrt-sonlolive bargaining rocmli "election he vnldorl. riIlrr:'Alr.:1iV'i'sT-nlrilllin ST. GEORGE. N. B. (CPl---A 5” that tzutted the home of Ed- ward Hennessey Saturday endan- gared the thickly settled Camel Hill section of this litt.le town on the shores of Psssamaquoddy Bay. Burning shingles iwi-is scattered by high winds and list fire to nearby buildings and plots of gross. Secret Underground Seeks Titols Downfall inetlon "obscure, ridiculous and in- significant. unworthy of comment." Perhaps significantly, the docu- ment was distributed on the eve of the fourth plenary session of Yl.lKCIllIVla'l central committee, which meets today for the first time since Milovsn Djllas. A vice- president. was stripped of his rank for attacking pvernrnsnl. policies early this year. Speculation lmmedlstely fosussod upon the possibility that supporters of Djilu. one of the five top-unk- in; figures in the government. were behind the new move. It seemed designed to create an Inti- Tito party, perhaps in an sffort to bolster Djllas' desire for a closer alignment with the Wutern deonocrscies l V -,v Delay Plans Acheson Assails 'Dulles' Doctrine Of Retaliation (By John M. Hlghtower) WASI-IINGTON, lAP)- Former slate secretary Dean Acheson livolte a your-long silence on pub- to ss- lic. issiies Saturday night sail the. Dulles doctrine of "mas- slve. retaliation" against new Communist. aggression. a policy could weaken the great aiiti-Communist alliances "because our allies would rightly believe that their very existence was be- ing recklessly exposed to un- necessary risks." He asserted further that I Def"- ocrnlic nation could in fact use massive ntb lc retaliation only against an 'sl-out enemy assault and the threat of such retaliation iltoreiore would not prevent small aggressions. Acheson also took occasion. in of home front "fear of commun- ism" to "raise doubts about our allies" and attack such nations as Britain recognize Red China. Joins Issue - a--v-.-. long-lime political ins. Senor r Joseph McCarthy, who has lied for an end of aid in Brilai Lin- less it cut off trade with Goin- lTiUnlSl Chinn. . "One thing can be said of this lino of nrguinetti." Acheson wrote. "it strikes straight at the heart of our policy, past and present. Bradlevl ''It is the last. word in isola- il.lfllllSTll. ll. by-passes rlisciixsinn of the wisdom nnri l1l"('eSSll)' of inpplianres, by seeking to destroy the allies thenisclvez." Acheson, who served in secre- yl.-zry of slate in the Trunisn cab- linel. for four years until he furn- eri over the office to his Republi- lcnn successor, John Foster Dulle". jin Jnniiarv. 1953. strongly eni- phnsized lhe important-c he n'- tnches to the maintenance of rnnlilions such as the North At- ia.-itic alliance, to offset Soviet power. Retired Pilllllsher Of Ottawa Citizen lies OTTAWA, (CF! - Harry G. Southnm. CMG. rstirsd publisher of the Ottsws citizen. died here Saturday after I lengthy illness. The 70-year-old newspaper man. who shaped the policies of The citizen untu his retirement A Yes: sea. was s prominent patron of the arts and education and in his younger days ii noted morta- msn. Mr. Southsm. member of s family of publishers. took over The Citizen when it hsd a daily rirculstion of icon in lI'f Ind saw it grow to I circulation of 00.000. Besides his activities in the de- velopment of art. ho was one of the moving spirits behind Ottawa's Carleton College. He became its first chancellor in 100! and served as chairman of its board of gov- ernors for five years. He was made s Companion of the order of at. Michael and 5: Osoru in ill in recognition of his servieu to the country. A son. Robert W. Bouthsm. has succeeded him as publllier of The Oitisen. Mr. Southsm was s nstivs'of London, Ont. no later lived in f-lsaiilton. coming to Ottawa when his father. William Southsm. pur- chased The Citizen. The runorsl will be prints. 'jNA He argued the results of such 3 i For Assault By Larry Allen HANOI. Indo - China. fAPl - French forces smashed st Vie!-li minh entrenchmenls assault. A French Army spokesman said of trenches less than day's raids, he added, forced lhe,i rebels to taper off, at least tinns obviously intended as take- er. Bad flying weather. sault. of the lull to move up fresh troops marider. Gen. Vo Nguyen Glap, ap-f gm, unwiili to; try a new ss- ::ult until hyllns nlL.'SLf'rPd liizlilroute from Japan to Southamp- t.he' um, where it was due April 2,siid i had called at I-long K008. 5103!" (Continued-civil.-l;avgqc 5 col.:5lV numerical superiority over French defenders. Giap has ignored appeal: by the. an article in Sunday mornings! g , X t New York Times. to denounce use.m0V9d ham ""3 h9mm9d'm 0' ' l ress. 7McC . engulfed by the raging Tigris river. French commander in chief, Gen. Henri Navarre, for a cease-fire un- til the French wounded can be re- :is being watched closely by people which trade with oriin France and many other lands. The battle for Dion Bieii Phul They feel that if the French can knock out of action the rebel horde besieging the fortress, they will: have taken the first big step to- hi this be joined is-us wltli hls' vi-iird ending the Indo-Cliiiiii. uar,i now in its eighth year. Big Stake For Rebels , If the rebel chieftain. Moscow-i educated Ho Chi Miiib. iviiis. liow- ever. he will have inflicted a major ldefeat on the French and put the :Reds in a powerful bargaining po-l sition for the Geneva conference next month. The siege of Dieti Bicii Phu- Ilnst French stronghold in the Thall :pcople's country-now is in its l29th day. The apprnncli of the-' rainy season, which will tui'n the; dust bowl plain into A sea of red mud, poses a problem for bothl sides. Grnund fighting beconicsl lvirtually iniposslble during tl1e' ymonsoon season and the air wary lls brought to a halt. arfhy Cancels Toronto Engagement WASHINGTON, iAPr -- Seiialorl .fos'.eph McCarthy (Rep. Wis.) saidl Saturday he has been forced by "a combination of lllll0l'9Se0ll i"ll'-. cumstances” to cnni-el a scheduled speaking appearance in Tm-oiitii nil when it was ll little more than 20 miles offshore. officer killed in the blast. surroundiugiwilson, the rest of the ErlglIiEltOOlTl their beleaguered fortress of Dien'crew was forced by the fire in Bien Phu again Sunday, forclnglcome above and the flames were the Conimunisl-led rebels to haltlsprending out of control. preparations for a new liifantryjsmoke lldccks. the Vletminh had dug I networicfreigbtcr Mentor. the British car- 600 feetlgo from the dust iiowl bastion. Sun-ltauker Taiizete and the Norwegian fnrlverigcri -lo the moment. construction of pool-i aboard. off points for mass infantry char-idication of panic among the sol- ldiers or the women, crews of the h0WCVFl',71'PSClie ships said. hampered the Frttllchl aerial as-l calm - The rebels took advariiaEe'Apai't from a few men slightly HI- and supplia. The vietminli com- sea or scrambled down the ropes. i require or i four The explosion rocked the 14.051.- on vessvl shortly before 8 a.m., Three men and an in the engineroom were Within minutes, said Capt. W Acrid s pr e a d throughout the Sh.ips of four nations-the Dutch Italian vessel Socotra, the reiglitar Hemsefjell-quickly con- take the survivors There was not the sligliliest in-i The sea was throughout the operation. jiired when iliey jumped into the no one was hurt. The Empire Winiirush was on .u. s. on Killed ment or cancellation" of the te p They added thrit adverse wevti or extrzi caution b.V Ml?Ylll5'-5 might rioinv them I day or Mi. COll',zl'FS5l0llal sources have said. A second mnjnr H-blast. was origin-l zilly schediilerl for April 22, rindi that it would 13- larger than the' first nxplnslnn, which was three or four times more powerful than expected. Van Zaiidt said the March l blast. was equal to 12,000,000 to 14.000000. tons of TNT-between 000 and 700. times as great as the 'f-Iiroshlma, atomic bomb which killed 60.000 persons. In Highway Accident HALIFAX, iCPi - Twenly-one- year-old Eleanor Spencer nfLocke- hartvilie, near Wolfviilc. N-S-. W3-S lulled Sunday and two compan- ions were inyurr-d when their car went. out or control at nearby Boutiiiers Point. Helen S!.V1'i0UJ' 15 seriously injured in hospital and Regions Maloney is less seriously injured. Edwin MRl0n'-5'. also in the car, escaped in.lUI'5'..- lon '"1Tllfllz'lfl(l"f' and the soldiers who nrr defending Dien Bicn Phil." The White House annoiiriced tho 7lPlli'll1 wlnle State Secretary Dui- ler was pulling the fxnal touches nn s sprr.-cli which is expected is iiiclurle strong policy statement: the Imin-China crisis. China Seeks C Atomic lirogram TOKYO. IA Pl - Communist China has asked for Russian as- sistance in setting up an atomic energy program. Pelplng radio said Saturday. The Chinese-language broadcast heard here by Kyodo news agency said the Red Chinese already havl built installations for the study of atomic energy. The broadcast quoted I. report by Kuo Mo-Jo. chairman of the China Academy of Science. saying the Chinese have proposed to the Soviet. Union that delegates be serif to China. to oo-ordinate atomic re- search. Q Three Events Mark Start or New Federal Financial Year OTTAWA. (DP)-A new financial vnai: starts for the iT0l'9l'Hml'n: April 1. Besides the opening of s new set of books, the start of the 1954-55 fiscal year will be marked by three changes: Postage rates wiil increase. many, postal emDl0l'5E3 will go on a five-day week. and cnbiiint ministers" salaries will be boosted. For the general public, the most noticr-nble. r-hange will he. the in- crease in postage rains-one cent an ounce on first-class lstteis. A normal mil-of-town letter Will it rive-cent stamp. in-steal , a four-rPnt one. The cost of mgllingg within postal districts will increase to four rents from three. 4.. cents. instead of three. The post office is using part of the. income from the rate incressr-3 to provide A fiva--day work Week for its workers In some H0 coin- miinities across Canada. where lhei -10-hour work week is general in private einploynient, iid stamps on post cards will cost Meanwhile, Parliament Monday will start to tirly up some of the financial ninltcrs involved in end- ing one fiscal year and starting another. riiriiamoni. has not yet improved the governments main estimates for 1954-55 spending. totalling 34,- 49l.7.'il.000. Tllux the government will ask Monday for it cash ad- vance to permit it to keep operat- ing after March 31. Usually this is done by voting i-l2th of the estimates. Parliament this week will also consider supplementary estimates totalling 198,214,350 for the 1053-Til year. which must be approved by the year's and Wednesday. Estimates H) The supplementary estimates bring in 34.331.680.00 the amount. of government spending in 19.33-all for VllllCll parliamentary niithorityl iis reuliired. Besides. the govern-. uient. will have paid out. nbnutl s.'i0f).000.000 in old age security payments. which are covered by a speriil i3X PI y Boosts The start of the fiscal your aim brings lnln effect lP!1l5lRilf1ll passed recently bv Parliament adding din,- 000 II year in the mime ministe1"s is:iliii1v and 96 000 to the pay Oi Otllfrl pendtllirca for l9.'i4-55 April 20. He said he would try to. mmmt nmmmls 2:29 um Rppemann El ” hlcri The incrntisc, plus pi'cvioiislv- ' nprnvnd boasts of 54,000 lll par-i ' 7' , ' 7 ' linmonlary indemnities. will give! QIICCII Illgfld the prime minister 337,000 a year! and big cabinet. ministers 827.000 For the coming fiscal year, the. government. has tabled main estl-.' imetes of s-i.49l,75l.000. not includ-l ring the old age sPClll'll)' pavinentzj with later siippleiiieiitarins, ex-l could well go beyond the sri.0o0.o0o.o()o mark On April fl. Finance Minister Abbott will present speech, announcing any changes irui the taxes which will raise lh&i money i Dsnmurlt 44 COPENHAGEN. tAPi -- Queen Ingrid of Denmark celebrated her 44th birthday Sunday. The royal guard pnrsdetl through the city while thousands cheered the Queen, King Frederik and the three small princesses who sp- penred on the balcony. city or i;.ii.i Threatened By Flood BAGHDAD. ,Irnq, iReiiii-rsl-Em gineers fought desperately Sunday nllht in ARVC Bflithrlatl from being The cilll, whose popiilatian intals more than 1500.000, was completely isolated liter floods out all rnuis. It was threatened by water pour. ing through breaches in the left hunk of the Tigris. joined by s ton-ent that burst through the Di- ysls river at noon Sunday. More than 30.000 persons have bsen evacuated from low-lying sreiui sffecii-d or threatened by the floods. Unofficial estimates put the WNuoGIsutasoMM00.0oo. Revolutionary Council To Continue In Egypt By Ed Polish CAIRO. (AP) - An side to Mohamed Nsgtiib said Sunday night thn president. "bowing to the. people's wiil." hsd agreed in principle that Egyptls revolutionary council should remain in power and that the election of I constitu- ent. assembly and rebirth of polit- lclll parties be called off. Maj. Ismail Fsrld, persons! gm. rle camp to Nagulb. made the joint announcement, however. ss,jninI conferences between the revolu- tionary council and civilian min- ister: continued. llslsh Salem. guidance minister, also left the conference which had been going on for more than seven hours and addressed a crowd which shouted, "We went revolu- tion. We don't. wiint parties." Slit-In nirl. "I can promise you we tsrmy officers! will not leave parties would sou. We will eontlnus until the somipt ievscuatinn of imperialist British forces from the Sues Canal Zone land until the country is com-l , pietelv purged of corrupt ele-' I meni: ” : Two hundred polite nff;i-era gathered at their club in CfllI'0 and adopted a resolution supporting continued rule by the revolution- nry council. and opposing the re- birth of political parties. They lsdrled that if elections are held whey would "rerims to help in run- pninl it." as police on usually. called upon to do. The length of the conference in- dicnted an immense tug of war was on behind the scenes between Nagulb, who wsnts to reinstituto parliamentary government in Egypt. and major elements of the ruling his burl gel 3, i-Mam A Li-Mitt: SHAVER cave A WHTPPIHQ wt-rt-i i" A FKAZOR sfizoo TORONTO. and maximum TC?) - Minimum temperaiiiros,- in. M x. Dawson - Vrincoiiver 44 Yir'lm'ia 4.1 Edmonton 2: ('.il;:ni-y 3 Pegina ..,,., 1? Winnipeg 1- Tnrnnlo 1'. 4. Olimva l.'i 3" lilonlrr-ril ,.t 44 Qll0liCil 3 4.: Saint Jnlm . 1; W,- Xinnrlnn 15 '.' if-ilifax .. 91 4; Clirirlnlfetmin 1"! H Sidney 5; -4 Yniimiilh . 3!: 1: St. John's :1 3r Hkmrax. (CPI--The D0fllln'in.'l Dllblic weatliei' office here csvvs Fl has moved into the west. H rczions in at'lV.”lllCl' of I dis- iiirbenre OVPT Ontario. and Will iv fnllowrd by I hand of snmx'fliiri'i-.- and ramshnwers This weather will cross the district Mnnrlay Abnu-, two inches of rmow is expccty-d in the. northern regions. but in the southern regions there will be only It few flurries before turning to re inshnwnrs. Regional forecasts: Prines Edward Island. auburn N. ll. counties, lower St. Jain. 1-in-i valley: Snnwflvinies. changing is rsinshnwers Ilurlng morning: mu nmrh change in u-mpersinro Iouthessi winds is becoming north- west 15 In sfternoon. Low-high A Edmiindsfnn 28 and 82. Cllnpbg". tan :5 snd 32. Bay of Fundy: Soiiihaggt wlnd; 15 becoming mtithwest. ii shnir nnnri. than shifting in northwest. l! in evening: ennwfliirries. chlnglns in rnlnshowers about noon. Visibil- ity in miles lowering to one mile in sum: and four miles in rein: milder. Hllh tide today at Chsrlotte- town at 6.08 am. and 4.57 pm. revolutionary council which fears, ii return to elentloois and political lmssn I return to "I09 0' 39 Summerside tide is minutes l lain. . Sun rises today It till ssn. and into st 536 pm 'mp-r-H -