the full time. Skate arm. I1 can-lat: Charlottetown. IIIHCICQI uuo pot a an. mug); in P.l.l. 89.00. other rrovlnooa an U.l.A. 1z.oo";m annunim Read by Everybody , Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA; MONDAY; JANUARY 4, 1954 U. S. SENATORS IN CANADA TO INTERV Reds Open New Year With Three Sma Children Lose Lives In Apartment House Fire At Saint John; N. B. Holiday Deaths In States Lower Than llsinl CHICAGO. (AP) - New Year's holiday traffic deaths in the United States maintained a slow pace wioh ; few hours remaining in the 76- hour week-end. By late Sunday traffic deaths stood at 245, At least 35 persons died in fires and 50 deaths re- sulted from miscellaneous acci- dents for s 330 total toll. The National Safety Council had estimated 360 persons would die lll trlffic accidents during the three- day week-end beginning Tihursdly d p.m. local time and ending sun- day midnight. Ned Dear-born. council president, said ”if thc present rate continues traffic fatalities will be held to that of a normal week-end." Queen And Duke Begin Vacation UJDGE. N. 2.. (Reutersi -The Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh today begun a three-day vacation at this lovely lakeshorc lodge. bringing with them black and white native ceremonial cloaks which designate them paramount chiefs of the Maori tribe. The clcaks-of flax fibre with black tassels-were presented to the royal couple before more than 10.000 Maorls in Rotorua Saturday. as New Zealand's natives put on the biggest welcome they oan af- ford a distinguished visitor. They even broke their ancient tradition: to allow the Queen to speak on a marae. a sacred Maori assembly yard, the first woman to do so. v The site for Moose Lodge origin- ally was chosen by a Canadian- Dr. F. .1. Rayner. ardent angler and sportsman-and hence the name t'Moose" appeared in a re- gion that contains no moose. Rayner many years ago built a fishing lodge on the site on the shores of Lake Totoiti in the heart of thc'famed thermal and trout- fishing region. The lodge was em- bellished with heads of moose Ray- ner had shot in Canada India's lied? Hold Election By Selig Harrison MADURA. India, (AP) - India's Couirnuiiist party. steering a mid- die course between its moderate and ten-orist factions. Sunday chose a high command pledged to seek power through peace rather than bloodshed. Sccrctnry-gencrnl Ajoy K. Ghosh, who has been holding the party to- gether since he took over two years ago as a shaky compromisi- choics between the two factions. was returned to power in a sweep- SAINT JOHN. N. 3., (CP) Three small children suffocated and their mother and another son are in hospital following a fire in a fourth storey apartment in the city's east side early Sunday. Fatally injured were Gary 1 Pull. 4. Ind Gail, 3. children of George and Emma Winchester. hi hospital are Mrs, Winchester with severe burns and her son John. who was burned on the arms but is reported in good condition. Two other children; who at first were thought to have been buriel in the ruins, were at church at the time. Mr. Winchester left for work at 7 o'clock and he said there was no sign of smoke or fire when he left. Firemen. who were called to the scene at 9 o'clock, were hampered in rescue attempm by thick smoke. Eight other occupants of the tena- ment made their way to safety un- hurt. The fire that swept tihrouh the attic axpartment was of unknown origin. "It only makes me sad when someone talks about it . , when I have to think of what happened this morning." said the 36-year-aitl father. In employee of the sugzr refinery here. "My main worry now is about my wife. She's in hospital badly burned and going to have a baby in May. I only hope she told the doctors about her condition. "My other children nre all right. They haven't any clothes, except what Carl and Wayne were wear- ing to church and what Jack grab- bed as he ran out of tho house. "All that was saved was tho dishes. and maybe the stove fan”. too bad. I had no insurance at all.” Winchester had been working on another flat for occupancy by his family. It's nearly ready. "It was horrible," said John 0'- Doll. second floor resident of the burned building. "I tried to get up- stairs but couldn't because of the heavy black smoke. I then tel- ephonr-d the fire dt-partuiont but it said cells had already been re- ceived.” ' A neicih-bar. Mrs. George Lewis. saw Carl,li. and Wayne, 9, walk- ing toward their ruined home af- ter attending Mass. She fui and soothed the youngsters. Konradhdenauer Visits Prisoners IFRIEDLAND, Germany, (OP) - West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer Saturday told 1,000 cheering Germans Just back from Russian prison camps that the peoplc of West Germany now arc. purified" of the taint of Arlnlf Hitler. It was the 77-year-old leader's first visit to the huge camp here where 2.600 ex-prisoners have ar- rived since Christmas to return to their homes in West Germany, He said his govt-rmm-nt would not rest until an estimated 102,958 other German prisoners were freed from captivity in Russia. Try Newiii-eans To Win Confidence Of Free World by Don Dallas LONDON. (Reuters) - A curious mixture of sounds came out of the Kremlin with the New Year. . There was the happy laughter of children, radio propaganda calling for an end to the cold war-and even a story of a human gesture by Premier Georgi M. Malenkov. The Soviet leader broke with tradition by opening the Kremlin gates this year for mass children's parties in the grand Kremlin pal- ace. They are continuing until Jan. lo. Daily, the Communist Santa. Grandfather Frost, distributes presents and candy to the kids. Maienkov was reported Saturday to have given a. token donation 0-! one clown about 20 cents to a Swedish infantile paralysis fund. thus following in the footsteps of Sir Winston Churchill and the King of Sweden. Stockholm officials denied re- porls that a Malenkov autograph would be auctioned to aid the polio fund. There is no record of any sim- ilar gesture ever having been made by Stalin. New Year merriment continued in Moscow Saturday for the third successive day, Under Stalin only Jan. 1 was a public holiday with pay. Malenkov gave them Jan. 2 as well, "in compliance with a uni- versal request." Moscow Radio, in a feature pro- gram Saturday, told Soviet listen- ers: "Fill your glasses-and mend this day merrily." The case of Lavrentl P. Berta, former secret police chief executed Dec. 23 with six associates, was thrust far into the background. Year of roses Current Soviet propaganda to me West stresses that 1954 should be a year of peace, with a. general re- laxation of international tension. Soviet press and radio editorials Shipslnirouble Near Europe. (Reuters) A rash of shipping mishaps broke out off northwestern Europe S u n d a y and Saturday night. in the teeth of fogs and gait--force winds. Eight vessels sent out distress signals or reported damage from high sons and overnight collisions. No lives were reported last. A small Danish vessel, the Hans Boye 282 tons radioed Sunday af- ternoon she was likely to capsize in a raging snowstorm in the Gulf nf Bothnia, between Sweden and Finland. From the same area came in distress signal from the 1,497-ton Edo. of Stockholm. who said she needed immediate assistance. A Polish ship. the Paznan 2,017 tons radioed for help Sunday mor- ning after lit-avy seas broke lhruugh its hatches in the Norlh Sea nff Germany". It later report- LONDON. ed the Icelandic ship Disnrfell standing by. The Dutch passenger liner Westerdam 12,149 tons of the Hol- land-Arnt-rlran Line. on its way to New York, returned in Rotterdam after a collision in thick fog off Calais, France. A hole about four yards long was turn in the star- liloard prnw, just above the water- no. lng victory for his middle-mad fol- lowers in party elections here. Coming Events "Dance in new hall. Mt. Rs-an. Monday night. Burke's Orchestra. Women Are By DOROTHY ROE NEW YORK. (AP)-The Duchess iof Windsor not only relinquished her title of best-dressed woman in the world today-she almost slip- ped off the list. The 1953 champion is Mrs. Wil- liam Paley of New York, wire of i:'llye':el'enld of Columbia Broadcasting Run" For several years it has been a see-saw battle between the two famous famlon ' ders. with Mrs. Paley nosing out the dudieol for first place in 194! and 1049. This time the duoheu barely made the list. tying for loth place with Marty Martin. Broadway star currently co-starring with Charles Boyer in the Comedy. "Kind sir.” Actually. the list has 12 names, sine. there also was it tip for ninth place. The international poll. which has been conducted av Dho New York Dram Institute lnoe 1040. tallied votes from more than 1,000 fuhioxi authorities our the. wand kl ar- rlving at us. new list. Mra Paley. a dauitter of the late Harvey Ousttlng. famed Boa- "Dance in new community hall, Newton School, tonight. "Card Party and Dance Conan Bonn 1-fall, Monday. January 4th. "St. Andrew-'s-Hall. Mt. stav- art. Monday. Jan. 4. Dance. Good music. "Ipaeial .. Meeting .. L 0. 1... Hunter River. Tuesday. January 5th. All inmibora request- ed to attend. "All interested in soldiers Monument. bring Brook. piano attend a meeting at Ooddlo Mun- orlal L H Manda . r on 4th, at 7.80 P, M. "This store will be closed Wed- nesday. Jhnuary 6th. account Holy Day. and on January 1th and bin. Thursday and Friday. for stock- taking. 1. F. Morris. Klnkora. "Double header at North River rink Inlay, Jan. 4. Hampshire vs. Mag Creek at 1.30 sharp. York vs. Dunataffnage 345. Turns must be on time or will not play Worlds Best Dressed Selected York fashion editor before her mar- riage to Paley in 1047. Compared with many others on the "best-dressed" list. Mrs. Pa- ley's wardrobe usually is not in- vish, but is notable for its aim- plicity and perfect tarts. Others on the durrent list: 2. Mn. Winston Guest, of New York and Palm Beach. 3. Mrs. Byron Foy, of New York. daughter of the founder of the Chrysler Motor 00., and wife of one of its chief executives. 4. Mme. I-Ienrl Bonnet, wife of the French ambassador to the United States. ll. Mrs. William Randolph Hearst. Jr.. wife of the publisher of the New York Journal-American. 0. Oveta Culp Robby of Houston and Washington, only woman member of the Eisenhower cabinet. 'I. Mme. Louis Arpels. of Paris and New York. whose husband is in the jewel firm of Van Clue! and Arpels. I, Princess Margaret. 0. A tie between Mrs. Henry Ford II, of Detroit, and Mrs. Al- fred G. Vanderbilt, of New York. lo. Tho Duchess of Windsor and ion kaln surgeon. was a New Marty Martin. "Peace Offensive" Fierce North LONDON, (Reuters) -- Fierce gale: swept 500 miles of Eng- land's North Sea coast Sunday and the coast guard warned that the storm was nearly as bad as the one which last January brought on floods that killed 307 persons. Wind-whipped waves, swollen by high tides, also assaulted dikes in Holland where last February disastrous floods took a death toll of 1,785. For the first time in 11 months the Dutch put their new storm- warning system into action. An- ”A", preliminary iilPl”L was flash- ed to flood control and police officials in Zeeland and south Holland. So far Sunday night along Eng- land's battered northeast coast police had not yet used the emer- gency warning system set up last fall to forestall another flood dis- aster. Waves Lash Gout Gigantic waves lashed the en- tire coast and sent many North Sea ships scurrying for safety in harbors. On the Norfolk and Suffolk coasts-badly hit by last year's sea invasion - a major storm English coast Lashed By Sea Gales warning flashed out to police and harbor masters early in the day, but later the alert was cancelled. But. in two spots in Norfolk the gales drove waves into ex- cavations prepsred for new sea walls. After Sunday morning's tidal peak coast guardsmen rushed to examine the sea fortresses built after last year's disaster, but (hr; 5 d ' hm mm M, e 1 g reported the defence: were holci- easllell-nM('yanr,;l;ltza' the fourimaex: U. eves Pakistan "has the P!'05D9f3l BY JOHN RANDOLPH mg. U-wasuggung team. flanked by the of becoming another Turkey in MUNBAN. (AP) - 'IVhe United The tidal r-on swept up the U g ambassador to mmd, wd strength and dependability .f0r Nations command today blamed River Thames toward London, RQMJP .,mc1,15y Wu bcmved free world Idiefences if it is SW01! this OOlTlif'fl'l.l1'i11.SiJtf1Ol” thoxcgufnp: co: swamping yachts and racing t- -m gh 1 ye Amercan a . g V pr soner t-xfpans cm, a at "me mg W) 0 mm” Sov 1 He said he has made hi! VWW5 again that all anti - Communist trainers. A few l4-foot yachts cap- sized. Crcws washed into the river were all promptly rescued. On the European continent, too the pleasant Indian summer wea- ther, which lasted through Dec- mg on seem-it organs to En - V Embfri 8"” WW '0 wintry blast-S international Roi! spy ring operat- e5i31b1l-mm? A'""lCm M3” m chairman nf the neutral nations The streets of Paris were ic.v.,in,; in Canada, Britain and the PBk15”ifi- , repatriation commission. flatly re- 590'” "t W595 W?" 5i3ll?d 5"” United States. . To wllhhold American .Md, be" jectlng a NNRC majority report all airliners grounded. Earner auempm to arrange ,, cause of the protest of Il1dlB.'ViCllld ohmgmg tho UN comnumd had The lsmiwraliire 81 R0m0- meeting broke down over Canadais l7? :'d1-Scoumgml "” "l0" mums tried to control anti - Communist: where people have been going insistence mm, oanmian Mucims willing to stand up and be counted prisoners by "agents prwocazg around in shirisleeves in the evc- shouyd be present at the conference on the side of the free Wofld. curs... . nings--was almost freezing. Berlin had three inches of snow. Some snow fall at Frank- filrt, West Germany, and icy winds whipped through the streets. By ROBERT S, F. JONES LONDON, iAP)- l-las something gone wrong with Scotland Yard? Britons are asking themselves that question at the news that four at the country's top detectives have in the -last' form-iiguil; resigned from "the Yard"-in theory. headquar- ters of London's police force but in practice nerve centre for crime detection throughout Britain. The four who have left are Com- mander Hugh Young, boss of the Yard's criminal investigation de- partment; Arthur Thorp head of the Yurd's anti-fraud squad; fing- crprint expert Cvt-urge Dunn; and superintendent Jack Black, second in command of the "big five"- the quintet of sleuohs who are cal- led out to lead the country's big murder hunts Britons, who vencraua Scotlulld Yard as one of the country's best- run institutions, are uneasy at newspaper suggestions that the re- signations may bp, due to disagree- ment among C. I. D. officers with new regulations brought in by com- missioner Sir John Nott-Bower. tr- cently appointed boss of the Yard. Uneasy Over Charge! And Nott-Bovwcr. himself uneasy at allegations of unrest among his police. has commented that at leist one resignation was due to ill- health, and has asked newspapers to soft-pedal the story on the grounds it may cause public alarm. Poor pay-after 22 years service a constables maximum wage is only around no (828) a wr-rk-- and slow promotion are the main reasons leadinx more than 200 pol- icomen to hand in their resign- ations within the last six months. But the nllcgcd headquarters re- volt is thought due to a new direc- tive from Nott-Bower giving ordin- ary uniform policemen the power to do their own detective work. l-lltfht-rto. uniformed police have had to turn over to plain clothes detectives ilhp investigation of any crime they are called to. Sweeping Tax llevisionin U. S. By Chulel F. Barrett WAS!-IINGTON. (AP) - Treas- ury and congressional staff ex- perts have agreed on major points in a sweeping tax revision pro- posal providing for almost 31,600.- ooo,ooo annually in tax cuts in many fields. Informed sources said Saturday only minor details need to be work- ed out before the proposal can be laid before the tax-writing House of lupresentativea ways and means committee, probably within 10 days. hr the first. time since 1076. the entire revenue code has been reviewed at one time. Thousands of pages of tax laws have been re- written with the aim of giving both individuals and business firms a better break. andlng con- flict: and confusion and uncer- tainty. and removing inequities. The streamlining program does not deal with major tax rates. But it provida tax cuts nevertheless for almost all businesses and in- dividuals in the form of new or bigger allowances. Britons Grow Uneasy About Scotland Yard nyitnyrotriezi Dies Suddenly in Ontario Lieutr-nant John F. Murnaghanm a 25-year-old Korean War veteranl from Charlottetown, died sudden-I April after 14 months service in, the Far East. became ill lastf week and rliofl within a few days of his arinilssion to hospital. l He hurl undergone an npcraiionl for a. kidney ailment a month ago and had apparently recovered from its effects. At Christmas ho; was able to attend Midnight Mass with his wife, the. former Hf-lonnl Morrison of Sumnicrslde. 1 Lieutenant Murnaglian was a son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Mur- nagliaa. Charlottetown. He attend- ed Queen Square School and Si. Dunstan'.s University. graduating from S.l'J.ll. in 1950 with his Bachelor of Science Degree Airmeniifound 0n Frozen lake WIINNIPEG. (CF)-T'wo air force men, stranded on a frozen lake in the Northwest 'Iieri'iim'ies. waited in 50-below weather Sunday night for the RCAF to speed equipment and gasoline for their rescue. The men. identified by the air force only as F0. Fisher and LAC. Dawn. set down on an unnamed lake Saturday after running out of fuel while on a mercy flight to pick up a sick Eskimo. The air force presumed the men were unhurt and the plane intact because a search craft reported 890'-Uni! flares fired into the Arctr sky earlier Sunday. The men may have to spend another night in the wlldsgbefore they receive fuel to get their Norseman airborne. They left the Hudson bay port of Churchill Saturday on a 400- mile flight north in the outpost of Baker lake to evacuate the critic- ally-ill Eskimo. The pilot reported to the Baker lake station Saturday afternoon that he was running low on fuel and was not certain of his posi- tion. He gave an approximate posi- tion and said he would land on a lake and remain there until located by search craft. Late Sunday an RCA! Dakota from Narnao. Alta, near Edmon- ton, reported it had located the Norseman. The air force plans to fly a ski- equipped Otter aircraft to the lake with fuel and engine heaters. But, because of early Arctic darkness. there were difficuliit-s in complet- ing the rescue Sunday. Meeting-Takes Ad Place in Eastem Canada MONTREAL, (GP)-Senator Wil- liam Jenner, chairman of the Unit- ed States Senate internal security subcommittee. arrived in Canada Mccarran Dem.-Nev. the Republi- can senator from Indiana stepped off the Washington-Montreal train and went into six hours of con- ference in a Montreal hotel before setting out on what was reported to be the last lap of his trip. cipher clerk. Senator Jenner has long sought an interview with Gouzenko, the man who fled the Soviet embassy in Ottawa in September, 1945, tip- and have the right to veto public- ation of secret matter. The Senate committee finally agreed to the main Canadian demands. The two senators, together with .1 committee lawyer and an offic- ial U. S. government reporter, were greeted at the station by Douglas Stuart. 1'. S. ambassador in Can- ada, and Supriniendent J. R. Lem-I leux of the lftCMP. l Senator Jenner told reporters who boarded his pullman car the U. s. investigators were still in the dark about arrangements for meet- ing Gouzenko. "We're in the hands of the RCMP," Senator Jenner said. 'tWc don't know where we'll see him or when." "We're here to find out all we can," the senator continued. ”Vi'e're coticcrned with the inter- nal sccurity of our country and we hope Mr. Gouzenkn may be able to assist us.” Not Talking In the afternoon. the presence lyy iln lthte l'?E:ldilWRVl'a Army lfos- l of house detectives-as tight-liprped GOW (AP) A Aomnz pi a as ri n.i'. gh RCMP ff -1), Hi. afyss e- n angryi ' . I The -l'"”"3 "rm-V ”m"""v wl””:i'oitpe-led the Ospl-gillslitiolrllll this: group of 5C,0i5 PDWW” "owed ytnognpihlfmlialllllrlil-Pi.wi(: ":IIl'li,:iliCrl?u Md ”'""Wd "M" K"” laii Gouzenko himself might have been Queen Ellmbelh SMUFGIY 101' 80” mn met governmpm shoum "E spirited into the hotel and be tak- ing part in the conferences. Later a reporter spotted the Can- ndian-American party quietly mak- ing their way d-ewnstalrs. When thr- official car failed to arrive on time they were ushered into a side room Superintendent Lemineux told the reporters there would be no statement. He would not say whether the senators were setting out to meet Gouzenko or whether they would be returning to the l'. S. Sunday night. I-lotel officials were under ord- ers from the RCMP not to talk. Laniel I Tries I While at St. Dun.sian's he wasl grenrps in ghc uepyfs mega g," a member of the Canadian 0ffi- 1; added; Q S ""3-V, Mter ml: um” the Prm" 0975 Tmlnlnl COFPS and after 0 The reference to Queen F.lir.a- Mlnmr" "ts back Rom M. sraduatioon joined the Active n beth of England 15w-1602 as a 5l”b"cl"n"'i ml" '" M"chi Army. In the spring of 1952 hel g horebear of Her Britannic Ma- "ST -l was lconirnisslonccl to a tour of --v-- leafy is entirely inaccurate. '. duty In iwrra. I "Queen Elizabeth of England N0 is SilrVH'NI li.V llii Wiir. one PARIS iR”1l91i5l '- A" lint-its riled unmarried and childless. The child and his parents. Sint-ernlpccted letlmr of resignation from anppslor and for-Phelr 0, M” sympathy is extended to his re-,Premier Joseph Lanicl has been nnhia Queen Wu Scntlnndlg Mn. laiives. refused by President Vincent Au- temporary monarch. Mary QUFDlllI riol on the grounds it would throw France info a governmental crisis , r:hich could delay the Berlin fmir power confcrenceg it was lf'Rrl'll"ll Stiiiday. L-tnlcl now has decided to call for a vote of confidence in the French Parliament Jan. 6. The re- sult of the vote will decide whether his coalition government. will stay in office. KUALA LUTMFPUR. Malaya (Reu- tersi -- Experts dismiss as non- lsense any speculation that north- crn Maiayals "ape-men" may be crosses between men and monkeys. "Biologically impossible," they snorted. An anthropologist C. A. Gibson- Hill advanced a new theory in Singapore Saturday: The grunting. whistling creatures may be civil- ized persons who had gone native Dr. Gibson-Hill, noted for his stiglias of Malaya and its people. set he got this idea because the "apemens" behavior was so differ- ent from that of the Malayan or of the primitive aborigines who inhabit the Malayan jungles. The tail. powerfully-built crea- turaa first were M'Ol'l Christmas Day by a Ohinese girl. Rubber toppers and other villagers have 3. since reported sighting them in the food. Trolak area. They said hot and females had moustach .matted hair which hung down had dog-like fangs. Senator Knowland Urges United States To Extend Military Aid To Pakistan Sunday for s much-publicized sec- ret interview with Igor Gouzenka. wasnmcmn. (AP) - The A9C0mN"li9d by 59n3"0' PM Eisenhower administration was urged Saturday by Senator William Knowland Rep.-Calif to ignore ob- Jectioms by India and extend milit- ary aid to Pakistan. leader. said in an interview he be- known to State Secretary Dulles. valve the dispatch equipment to armed forces. l inacriiralr-." New Type Apeman Found In Northern to unknown to south Indians. Malaya um, yam- their waists and that the males and Chinese-Malaysia three malnl MAXIMS OFA. MERE MAN What fortune offers let us accept with unmoved mind. I The Guardian, Five Cents Morning Daily Founded 1881. OUZENKO 10 PAGES For Collapse Of Explanations Knowlmd. the senate Republican prisoners be freed at midnight, Jan. 22. Gen, John E. Hull. UN com- mander. wrote a formal letter to Lt.-Gem. K. S. Thimayya, Indian Such an aid program would in- of American build up Pakistan's It would not involve Knowland declared. The state and defence depart- ments have been reported consid- ering starting a moderate program of military aid for Pakistan. Ind- ia's Prime Minister Nehru has pro- tuted publicly against any 511911 course on the grounds that it might upset the balance of power in that section of Asia. some administration officials have contended that Pakistan's neamess to Russia makes it an area in which a measure of in- creased military strength might re- strain possible Communist expan- sion in that part of Asia. Knnwland said he regards Pak- istan ns Wine of the key, important countries in the entire world,"y so far as concerns defences against Communism. Hull said the report was dulled and one-sided, It was signed by Indian and Communist lovakia and Poland. Sweden and Switzerland filed a minority report which I-lull called "much more ob- jectlve, factual and indicative of the operations of the NNRC." Heavyiessions Face Parliament O'I'T.AWA, fCP)-- Much of thd heavy legislation in the govern- ment'5 sessional program remain to be dealt with after Parliarnena resumes Jan. 12 from its Christa mas-New Year recess. Several major enactments. eithtw ScotsScold Queen Elisabeth introduced or forecast in th Speech from the Throne. are slit to be grappled with in House dad bate. some other measures, not o ficially announced, may be in th ting her history wrong. They said parts of her Christmas Day broad- cast to her people were "entirely extension for another year of l Emergency Powers Act, glvin the cabinet virtually unlimlte authority to direct moves affocm ing the Canadian economy. NOII mally, it would expire next Mag 31. The rating came from the St. Andrew Scott-t,v of Glasgow. which aims to foster Scots tradi- tions. It. was irked because Eliz- abeth called herself "Queen of England” and referred to the first Queen Elizabeth as her fore- boar. Aflcr declaring its undying ingr- alty to the Queen, the society's council said in a published state- ment that "it intensely deplores and emphatically protests against certain inaccurate terms and ref- Lut Word The last word in the Comma from Prime Minister St. Laur was--on Nov. 18--that; the He would be informed about this "i due. time." Meanwhile, it is understood government has not come 1:? clear decision on the point an of Scots, not Elizabeth of land. "The ngn of around Eng-i suggestion that the voy- Her Briiannir Majesty the world is being taken in the role -of Queen of England is not in accordance. with fact. its monarch of the homeland herl status is surely Queen of the; l'niii-d Kingdom of Great Bri-5 lain." Malaya , M HALIFAX, (OP)-Tho DOIIIIMQ M”la-V” mm” md mm” Mwlpublir. weather office here ybeen hcoma to catch one alive-kin, disturbance that brought Scientists at Kuala Lumpur said and mm to .11 at the Mm-ltlmq today they hope to send an expedi- Sunday is forecast to move ens. tion mm the innate to try to CaD- ward Just off the Nova scotln lure the creatures. who. they said. coast. Its progress is likely to lag may provide clues to the missing slow, and only gradually improv- liink in man's evolution. ing weather is expected today. i The scientists. of the department Northeast winds will continue to of aborigines here. have four clues chimp snow and some rain in Prinrn to go on, based on eye-witness Edward Island anti! nt.fhe;creiIr-iml accounts; bordering e u o . . wiv- . l. The creaturoc. rence. lbelore. They took fright and dived Resionnl forecutnt into a river when a Malayan mil- Prince Edward Island. eukrl itia corporal pointed a rifle at N.'B.leounil:a: S:UwhaIIIl situation them. no ramno mm c Inge n 2. Their fair skin. agreed on by M7310"! Fl” Wind! ” 'u""' all witnesses. probably means they rlurinx vmvrnins to north-It-I inm-. uimi in the deep jungle for But: Immlnr -ml mid-alien I.-nnia time. where. little sun pene- PU'W"'W"0' 0' ”i"'””W'V" I Moneton Ill and 1!. have semi rifles train through the foliage. They recognized tapioca not ”'r'”r”wm-”"-r High tide today at Charlotmnwi malu 4. Tney speak a language of at io.s7 a. u. and no P. u. and grunts and whistles, complete-'y smmna-3”. mg, ,1,m..,n mm than Charlottetmvn. sun rises races. Czochos- . today at 1.51 A. M. ad sets at 4.45 P. M, j I at 4 . ,