Maxims of a Mere Man I On the sea sail. land settle. 14 PAGES REDS TRY RECORD NUCLEAR on the 7729 Guardian 24. 1955 cHARwrI'rE'rowN, CANADA. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 100,000 Indians Turn Out To Cheer Russian Leaders Khrushchev. .pired riots. Bulganin addressing the stadium crowd as "dear friends." said Russia was ready to co-operate amic reconstruction." Both he and Khrushchev praised the "great the Soviet Union." Hn;4&ne contrasted with sa- vage ;riota Sunday and Monday wh'ens'l1.- persons were killed and 50 injured as Communists and BOMBAY (Reuters) -, A crowd of 100.000 cheering Indians Wed- nesday night packed Vallabhbhal Patel stadium to see and hear Soviet Premier Nikolai Bulganln and Communist party boss Nikita The Russian leaders arrived for a 48-hour visit some 24 hours after the end of bloody. Communist-in-y with India "in the field of econ- Irlendshlp between the peoples of other left-wing groups demonstra- ted against government proposals to divide Bombay state- 3Ul8anin and Khrushchev en- tered the stadium in a blarc of buglcs and glaring spotlights. The crowd cheered wildly and chanted Indian-Russian friendship ' slogans as the pair ascended a 12-foot rostrum. "We have come to visit this great city. to meet its citizens lpersonally and see your achieve- ments in the economic. scientific and cultural fields." Bulganin ear- lier told welcoming crowds at Bombay airport. OFFERED PEARLS As they stepped out of their plane, a cloud of white "peace" doves was r leased to the accom- paniment of wild cheering. Then the two small daughters of Mayor N. C. Pupala ran up to offer bou- questa and shower them with tiny pearls. Following the airport ceremonies the visitors led a motorcade to the stadium in the centre of the city. The 12-mile route was lined with cheering people. Mayor Pupala. in his speech of welcome at the stadium. called Bulganin and Khrushchev the "two great sons of the Soviet Union." Bulganin replied that Russia "C0mPl8tel,v sympatblzea" with the "legitimate desire of the Indian people to attain economic inde- Pendence" and then promised Rus- sian "cooperation" to bring this about. The Russian leaders have been touring development projects in the Pllnlhb: They will visit other cities in India before returning to New Delhi Dec. 9. This year's Victor Lyall Good- her husband Cattle, Hors s JOHN'S. Nfld. (CPi - The sons al vessel Blue Prince arrived here Wednesday bearing "three or four" dead cattle. Vtwo dead horses and nine cattle so badly injured Iiey had to be shot. in-ought here from Charlottetown for local butchers. The two horses had been bought by woods opera- tors. All were victims of a storm that Wortrook the Blue Prince on her way here from Charlottetown. Ralph Murrln. agent for the Soci- Tbey were among to cattle es Killed lniured During Storm ely for the Prevention of Cruelty said the injured animals had to be brought here alive because of in- surance regulations. The captain of the Blue Prince "could not touch them." He said the cattle could not is shot until the captain "calls the veterinary surgeon." The injuries to the cattle were "not the fault of the shilph or the men who shipped them. ey had plenty of straw and plenty of food. They just happened to strike bad weather." Planner For BONN (AP) - Lt.-Gen. Adolf lleuslnger Wednesday night was appointed chairman of a new so- preme military council In West Germany. Lt.-Gen- Bans Speldel was named chief of a newly-created armed forces department in the defence ministry. Coming Everits Reserve Friday. Nov. 25th dance Mlllview Hall. . Bingo and dance. Lot 00 Hall. Thursday. Nov. 24th. llope River bingo cancelled for thls week only. Unloading Springhlll coal at lllllton today, Vernon Gillespie. South Rustlco Ball tonight. last dance until after Christmas. Dance and card party. lfall Friday night. Pantry sale at Simpson-Sears Friday afternoon. Nov. 15 at Mo York Point W. I. Pantry sale Friday Nov. 15 2 p.tn. :4: Holman's. Kingston Baptist W. Iona Pantry sale at Simpson-Sears fvridlay. Nov. 25 at 7. Argyle Shore Union lload W.M.S. pantry sale 3 A. MacDonald's Friday 25th. pm. See the "Smiling Bill" show in Nlw London Hall Friday evening. Nov. 25. 0:8). E-m supper United Church :fI;l'll.i. girursdny. November Barn dance: Cardigan. Thur, (lay. Websters orchestra. P. A. Ivstern. Canteen service. Dancing vs Thursday Jouth Rusflcory Ball. lduaisimy; Rollie MacKansla's Orchestra shur-Gain Cavalcade which you advertised for Thursday ni than bftglt postponed until rldoy ng , Unloading carload of bulk what It Hunter's River today and Thursday. R. L. Dickinson. New Glasgow. Hampton United Church Wom- !I'I Association Pantry sale at Ptowse Bx-os.. Friday. November 3th I p.m. Pvkgpusii meeting lti:fston rldly Minn an installation Ind initiation. Cornwall Hall Nov. 18 at 8:1! P-HI. Slides on Korea. Japan and Africa. sale of candy. Sponsored it I-' Aid. Abegweit R. B. night. E1- of officer: he held In the cm llll. F1-1 ' N y ' ....” Mug: hgrvmgtl. I van ..'”'"Wlns at Moron mass -Mo. '- P"I0nh.0I0 have most on- illIII;"'I'hoIln0fTha tlnuad throughout the colony. West Germans Name Top New Army In a sweeping rerrrganlzatiuu of the ministry that is planning the buildup of the new 500.000-man Wehrmacht. the government set up four new departments-one for the armed forces and one each for the army. navy and air forces. Heusinger will preside over the council which consists of the chiefs of these new departments. In this position. he will be the top military piano in the crea- tion of the Wehrmacht which is to be integrated in the Atlantic AI- liance. ' Maj.-Gen. Helmuth Legeler was appointed chief of the army de- partment. Lt.-Col. Werner Panltxkl chief of th'e air force. department and Capt. Karl Adolf Zehnker. chief of the navy department. will Scholarships of 5100 each distinguished and widely-known were presented yesterday by Dr. Charlottetown physician. It is ten- Frank Macl(innon to Prince of able in second year Prince of Reprieve For 0 Wales College students Frank Wales. Dr. Woodwill was an old Blg Burke (centre) of Spring Park and valued friend of the College. Frank Burke. a son of Mr. and and Alan MacI(enzle of Charlotte town. Both are second year stud- ents with excellent records in scholarship and extra-curricular activities. GLASGOW (Reuters) -- Screen Tarzan Gordon Scott swung Wed- nesday to the rescue of Charlie. a five-ton Indian elephant who may have to be shot if his owner can- not find someone to take him off his hands. Charlie is the only animal left in a Glasgow zoo which closed down in September last year. Catering for an elephant-sized appetite is too much for owner Andrew Wilson. who has already paid out more than 921.000 for Charlie since the zoo closed. Now. with Charlie almost down to his last bale of fodder. Tarzan- as in so many of his movie roles- has come to the rescue. with at least a reprieve. As soon as he landed In Britain Tuesday. Scott telegraphed Wilson offering to make up any deficit in a C250 appeal launched by Wil- son to help keep Charlie alive. Back came Wilson's reply: "Ac- cept Your most generous offer. Charlie's bank balance down to Mrs. Wilfred Burke. entered the College from Spring Park School with distinction in the entrance ex- aminations and achieved high The Goodwill scholarship was standing in first year. As a son of provided by the will of the late the well-known musical family. he Mrs. V.L. Goodwill in memory of excells in piping and highland Believe Wreckage That Of Missing BOSTON (AP)-An overturned ricane force of 75 miles an hour. orange life raft, scattered plank- LEFT NOVA sec."-A ing and other wreckage were found when the Dayton, on her way afloat Wednesday. indications that from Nov, scotla to phuadelpm. the North Atlantic has claimed withaload of gypsum. first flashed another victim -probably the in distress signal. she gave her Liberian freighter Dayton and her position as 75 miles east of British West Indian crew of 24. Gloucester. The ocean's tumbling wastes had Charlie's ultimate fate is still un- decided. There bave been vague reports that he might go to a zoo in Canada. and a shipping line has offered to transport him free of charge when the Atlantic swells die down in the spring. The freighter. a converted LST (landing ship. of the she was in distress in a wild storm. Cape Cod. caught by wind exceeding hur- Reds Arrest Mountaineers . OWEN BOUND. Ont. (CP) - Town fathers are ready to offer a factory site to any manufacturer for one dollar. Mayor E. C. Sar- gent said they are even williniz Lonnon (Reuters)-Two British NEWS IN l3RiEF '9 NIVMCE "W l'l"lli"v mountaineers and a' Nepalese sherpa have been seized by Chi- nese C mmunist troops In an un- explored part of the Himalayas. it was disclosed here Wednesday. Britain is consulting the govern- QUEBEC (CP) - Premier Mau- rice Duplessis re-iteriated in a sharp a t a t e in e n t Wednesday a threat to slap price controls on PESSIMISTIC APPROVAL TORONTO (CP) - Ontario has given pessimistic approval of I federal government plan for build- lng the northern Ontario section of the proposed natural-gas pipeline from Alberta to the East. PLAN PROSECUTION TORONTO (CPl - The provin- clal labor department said Wed- nesdny Dresden restaurant opera- tor Morley McKay. 57. will be prosecuted for allegedly refusing to serve two Negro students from the University of Toronto- VIOLENCE CONTINUES NICOSIA. Cyprus (Reuters) Anti-British terrorists Wednesday blew up a bridge on a main road out of Nicosia and urled bombs at the homes of a rltish colonel and two army chaplain s in Frame- sllate as outbreaks of violence con- ment of Nepal on moves to get them released. a foreign office spokes it said. newsprint in Quebec Canada's big- ,ADENAUEll BETTER gest newsprint producing province. BONN (AP) West German WINNERS OF V. L GOODWILL SCHOLARSHIP Dr. V.L. Goodwill. I dancing and has appeared In 1.11-merely. one week's keep: boeorwhippcd forrdurnlnto angry. placed the Dayton: mutation lighted if you could come to Gian. slashing waves that at times meas- distant-t gow to meet Charlie." ured higher than so feet. tank). was last heard from Sun- radar island on George Bank, a to try for positive day night when she radioed that fishing shoal some 110 miles off h Chancellor Konrad Adcnaucr will resume his official duties Thurs- day aftcr seven wcet..- of ulna! WANT IMMIGRANTS OTTAWA (CPI - Prime Minis ter St. Laurent and the cabinet Wednesday heard a delegation from the Canadian Chamber of Commerce suggest that the govern- ment take aggressive action to migrants. particularly from the United Kingdom and France. SEEK TO END TIE-UP DIGBY, N, S. (CPI-A new ef- fort to end the Bay of Fundy ferry tie-up was launched Wednesday by the Dlgby Board of Trade. its main feature is a direct appeal to top officials of the Scafarers In ternational Union (TLCJ, whose members in the crew of ihc CPR icrry Princess Helene seek higher step up the flow of desirable im- bl The arrested Britons are Sydney Wlunall and John Harrop. Nothing has been heard of them since lhg Chinese Communist soldicrs de- scended on them on Oct. 22 on I disputed section of the Tibet-Nepal frontier. ' Wignall is leader of an expedi- tion climbing and surveying the Himalayas. If is sponsored-jointly . ihc Mountainccring Club of North Wales and a provincial news- paper. the Livcrpool Daily Post. The two Britons and the shorpa. a mountain guide. were taken to Taklakot. a Chinese garrison town a few miles away from the place where they were seized. News of the arrest did not emerge from the remote mountain fastness until two days ago. Other membo . of the expedition made a forced march through the lllma- layan wilderness to get a message The controls would apply only in Quebec. said the prcmler. adding: "We may have to consider news- print distribution control as well." Speaking to a delegation from the Quebec Federation of Labor (AFL-TLC), Mr. Duplessls said: "The Quebec newsprint man- ufacturers must provide newsprint to the Quebec newspapers at price conditions that take into account their status as co-owners of the forests. "Those people would like to lead clients to believe there is a short- age of newsprint so they can boost their price and they insinuate that if production is now increased they will be unable to supply the Indus- try. "Well, if those people want price control, they're going to get it." The premier addressed the legis- lature in similar vcin Tuesday PHY- dent Eisenhower got another glow- ing report from his doctors Wed- from his Sept. 24 heart attack and President Gets Glowing Report From Doctors GETTYSBURG. Pa. I AP)-Presi- nesday after a 50-minute checkup. They said he continues to pro- gress satisfactorily in his recovery shows "no symptoms or evidence of fatigue from the activities of his office or at the farm, "The president is sleeping. re- laxing and resting well." said an announce rent by the physicians, Maj. Gen. Howard M. Snyder. and Col. Thomas W. Mattingly. (-hief heart specialist at Walter Reed Hospital in Washington. This was the most comprehensive i ii----- of the yr ” t it. included electrocardiogram and" blood chemistry tests-since he stepped up the pace of his official activities after his return from his seven-week stay in hospital in many public performances. Alan MacKenzie. a son of Dr. and Mrs. .l.W. MacKenzle. entered Prince of Wales from West Kent School with high standing which he maintained in first year. He is also a competent musician who plays both piano and clarinet and is a member of the Reece Band. He is one of the second year re- presentatives on the Students' Council of the College. Photo by Margaret Mallett. Sighted Craft area were so bad 52 men were marooned for five days atop the tower. They were brought ashore Wednesday. The wreckage first was seen by one of two planes sent aloft by a New York insurance company, confirmed later by the second and again confirmed by a coast guard The last faint message picked up amphibian which flew from the Salem air base. The cutter Acushnet. pulled from Wreckage was spotted Wednes- the search Tuesday midnight when flat-bottomed day about 15 miles west northwest the coast Texas tower. man-made hunt. was redirected to the spot guard gave up the active identification of e wreckage. The Daytona was skippered by The storms which lashed the Capt. Lie! Markeson. iDuplessis Re-iterates Newsprint Price Threat leaders came as be commended them for their stand against em- ployers who. "blinded by gain.” demand that employees work on Sunday. SEVEN BOOST PRICE It was the latest development in a month of newsprint controversy during which seven Canadian prod- ucers have announced price in- freases ranging from 03 to 35 a on. At Montreal and Quebec. news- print producing spokesmen dc- cllned comment except to say that the province has the authority to impose controls under the British North American Act. Canada's constitution. Prior to the increases newsprint was delivered in New York at 8128 a ton. Basic Canadian price was 8122- Quebec newspapers. how- ever. had won special price condi- tions. Although details of individ- ual arrangements have not been announced, it is known that some newspapers paid 5117 a ton. pick- ing up the newsprirrr at the mills. Similar arrangements worr- back to civilization: night. His statement to the labor cus Laaons HONORED AT of giving lander-GIarlotte0ownIIotel.Ilhndtablolr. I. the eeabausn.ufttorlgIt guests Dndeorgetlsher. baldatththHIre:Irs.IIaMIGulI. Promo. Eugene calla. Lient.-Governor c.WHght.IrI.'I',W.I..Prowso. worked out in Ontario. Mi-s.loamsculloa.lr 0 Denver. . Says Automobile Dealers Complain WASHINGTON (AP) - Senator Joseph 0'Mahoney (Dem. Wyn.) said Wednesday many automobile dealers complain "they are on the brink of disaster" becaus they are being forced to handle "more cars than they can sell on a sound fi- nancial basis." He said the Senate judiciary anti- trust and monopoly b ommlttee is "being flooded with letters" from dealers who complain of "pressures placed on them by the General Mo- tors high command." He said these dealers are forced to grant long terms for repayment on new cars "and exaggerated ex- change values" on old cars that are traded in. O'Mahoney said that most of these dealers and many independ- ent manufacturers and distributors of auto parts and supplies com- plain that th ey "are being queezed" by General Motors pol- icy. OKtMahoney. who has been con- ducting several weeks of public testimony on what he calls a study of General Motors. said GM execu- tlves will be calleddor public testi- mony after the subcommittee has assembled "the facis." "Chortle" May In Book In Aviation MONTREAL (CP) -"Charlie" may be back in the lingo of world aviation soon. the Inter- national Civil Aviation Organiz- ation reported Wednesday. A statement oudined the ox- porta of muitl-language civil authorities to find an inter nationally accepted phonetic al- phabet to avoid con usion when letters are spelled over a radio- telephone circuit. Following studies headed by Prof. J. P. Vinay of University of Montreal during 1948-49. com- munication experts from all over the world met here and adopted an alphabet replacing the traditional "Ahle. Baker. Charlie. " .:'Alfa. The new alphabet began Bravo, Cocoa. Delta. . . Subsequent studies. however. now have resulted in recommen- dstion: for the adoption-effec- live March 1---oi several alter- nate words-Charlie. Mike. No- vember. Uniform. and X-ray. re- incr AEC said. the United States has set off-in Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew”. Likely H Was Exploded WASHINGTON, (AP)-The Atomic Energy Com- mission announced Wednesday night that the Russians have set off another great nuclear explosion-”t1he larg- est yet in the U.S.S.R."-carrying a punch equal to mil- lions of tons of TNT." The AEC did not say that it was a hydrogen bomb explosion. which it appeared to be on the basis of the force credited to it. The first known Russian H-bomb blast occurred in 1953. ' years ago may be gained from the DEVELOPMENT EFFORT fact that the original U. 5. atomic "The Russian tests indicate an bomb was officially said to have - 1,. intensjvg 9910.. by me had the strength of 20,000 tons of Soviet government to develop their NT nuclear weapons potential." the AEC confirmed in mat they er ploded an H-bomb in August 1953. BRITISH REPORT The greatest nuclear explosion in 1954 at Bikini Atoll-was estima- of 15,000,000 to 17,000,000 tons of r unspecified millions of tons in its new announcement of Russia's not possible. However. some growth of the deadl came into being idea of the c y weapon which Before Farm EDMONTON. (OP) -Alberta's farm sclentlsos Wednesday cau- commlssion against recommend- ing an expansion of farmlands through conversion of forested areas or further investment in land irrigation until more food markets are developed. The vhictal institute of agronomis expressed the view that farmers can get: more out of their land with less money by increasing efficiency of present acreages rather than by Can- ada pourtlng millions of dollars into the develorxnent of new high-cost farms by chopping down trees or bringing water to dry areas. The farm scientists were the last to appear before the royal commission as it wound up a three-day session In this capital. It flies to Calgary for new hear- ings izhere today and Friday. Earlier. Mayor William I1awre- lak. vice-president of the Cana- dian Federation of Mayors and Municipalities. proposed that the provinces shoulder the burden of Record Exports -- For September OTTAWA (CP) - Canada's ex- ports. boosted by increased sales abroad of minerals. metals. chemi- cals and forest products. jumped 16 per cent in September to set a record for the month. The bureau of statistics rcporied Wednesday that domestic exports in September were valued at 3383.- 913.000 compared with S.'i30.765.000 a year ago. The September figure brought the export total for the first nine months of the year to 33.145.506.000 compared with S2.- ll16.800.0f)0 in January - September last year and only slightly below the record nine-month total of S3.- plactng Cocoa. Metro. Nectar. Union and Extra. Leadership the rural is a most George of "Your role in training (youth of this Province llmporisnt nnr." said Dr. Fisher In addressing a group about tilt) adult leaders of 4-H clubs who atlcntiod a dinner last night .15 the guests of the Prince. Edward Island llcpartment of Ag-I riculture, hold at the Charlottetown Hotel. Hon Eugene Cullen. Minis- ter of Agriculture presided. A fcature of the evening. which: was honoured by the attendance of the Lieutenant Governor of the Province. was the presentation of the T. Eaton Trophy to Wayne Cameron. Head of llillsboro Calf Club. Due to illness. Wayne was unable to be prescnt and his turnb- er Arthur accepted it from Mr. Sheldon Carson. local rranager of the T. Eaton Company. The guests who attended last night's dinner represented the ma jority of those who are giving lend- ershlp to the various youth clubs throughout the Province. Hon. Mr. Cullen said that the Department of Agficulture has long realized the splendid work this devoted body of men and women is doing and it was only fitting that their work should be recognized in such I manner. CONDITION! COMPARED Dr, Ftghsr, in a word tour. took his listeners to some of the coun- tries of the Far East and Middle East, describing as he went the conditions that exist in these coun- ties. He then made a comp!!!-w of conditions no they are known non. Bheldoncarson.Ilrs.I-cirbt. across Canada and especially on Mrs. George Fisher. Prince ldward Island. , E-'--S 'I- i--t . -ru. ma 5-. -rim 4-H Clubs Emphasized 150,600,000 in 1952. Role In or. "is the bread basket of the whole Eastern Seabord. We have unlimited markets. but in order to capitalize we must increase pro- duction and improve the qualkty of our products". He pointed out that BLAST ted unofficially as having the force fence ministry Wednesday in TNT. Since the AEC spoke only of explosion. achievements. a comparison was nounced that in the last few day! a further nuclear explosion has oo- little over 10 largest yet held by the Rita Want More Food Markets paying all the hospital and other tloned th e Gordon economic by .PuIclLg' l -Bomb The Russians claimed, and the LONDON (Reuters) - The 1:; eported a new Russian nuclear The announcement said: "The ministry of defence an- urred in the Soviet Union. "This test is thought to be "'3 Expansion social welfare oosia new bone mimlctpalltrles. DIFFEII. FROM EAST Touching on the agronomlstf brief, commission member Omen Lussier. Quebec City forestti expent. said the agrologlstr ap- proach to forestry questions ap- peared to differ from the If proadh in eastern Canada. He said the agronomlsts pro- posed developing a transient lab- or force. moving from irrigation projects in the summer to for- -.,......-....-,.- ... -.5-.g?'r:'rh?"'”f . - . eetry work in the winter. In the East. the view was that force!!! work should he a year 1 iihat these workers be stabilized in their employment by setting up special forestry communities. Dr. Hilton raid the problem in Alberta was not the same as in the East. In part: of Alberta's forests. muskeg limited the amount of work a foreetrymnn can do in the summer. He us- ually had to wait for the win freeze-up to get firm ground TOROM0 (CPI-Minimum and maximum temperatures: one way in which adult Icnrlurs could acomplish this was in pre- paring the boys and girls for thel task that lies ahead. l Dr. Fisher told the leaders oft the services which are available. to them through the Department such as counselling in dnlrying. poultry. agricultural engine:-ring. horticulture. field crops. forestry and veterinary service. He said that the department was willing and anxious to give assistance whenever it was requested. "Your program is elastic and leaves plen- ty of room for imagination. but the example you give in your com- munity life will hr. perhaps the greatest contribution you can make on behalf of those you are lead- ing". said Dr. Fisher. Mr. S. C. Wright spoke briefly concerning the T. Eaton Trophy which is awarded annually to the most outstanding 4-H Club mem- ber in the Province each year and allows the winner to compete for the T. Eaton Scholarship which hi turn gives onc Canadian student the privilege of taking a full course at any agricultural college of his choice. Dr. Fisher was Introduced by Hon. Mr. Cullen and thanked by Mrs. Mayloa Manning. supervisor Mm. Max. Dawson ... ... ...40b - Vancouvu .... ..- .33 36 Victoria .... . 50 43 Edmonton . . . . .. 16b 12b Calgary .. , 511 Regina . NI Winnipeg .. 0 Toronto . 53 Ottawa 31 Montreal .. . 38 Quebec 29 Fredericton . . . . . . . . 17 30 Saint John .. 21 34 Moncton .. .. ...13 1'! Halifax . ... .. 23 36 Charlottetown .. .. . . 21 3 Sydney .. . . 28 32 Yarmouth .. .. 25 37 St. John's .. .. .30 , - HALIFAX (CP)-The weather office reports a band of rain. snow and freezing rain will cover most of the inland regions early Thursday. spreading to Cape Breton by afternoon. Precipita- (ion is expected to be mostly rain in the southern Marltlmcs. but there will be some snow and freezing rain in New Brunswick. Colder air will reach the Mari- tlmes Thursday afternoon. caus- ing winds to become westerly and bringing an end to the pro- cipilation. Regional forecasts: Northern Nova Scotln. Prinpo Edward Island: overcast: rah. beginning In morning. coding by evening: ranch milder; southerly winds M shifting in evening to wait til. Low-high at New Glan- gov : and CI. Chnrlottatows I and . High tide today at Charlottetown of the Prince Edward Island Wo- men's Institute and for .a number of years tending in the field out the Province. of leadership of girls work through- sun rises at 4:17 am. and 5:37 pm. Smi- merside tide eighteen minutes ht- er than Charlottetown. at 721 um. and at: M 0:37 p.l.n.