Maxims of a More Man W. m g cough cannot be hid. 12 PAGES The P.E.I. several railway companies ha will take effect on Nov. 9th. gins-c last April, because of the rnent South Viet Nam Ends Rule Of Emperor SMGON. South Viet Nam. (AP) Ngo Dinh Diem to lead the nation hward republican status. decided in a countrywide refer- sndum that Bao Dal. 42. round- fsced absentee ex-monarch who vote of confidence in Diem, one of Asia's most determined antl- Communists. The only question was whether Coming Events Visitation of badges at Canoe Cove tonight. Dance cancelled in link until further notice. Regular D in ii c at at Gordon Lodge every Friday night. t Masquerade Danes. lint-tune hall Wednesday. Oct. ltith. Prizes liteserve Monday. Nov. 1th for Little Pond Masquerade dance. lwingr bouquets now dy. as . G' F d . whoa. . omg sway r ay Masquerade dance. Xerig: Rai- erlisll. Tuesday. Prizes. Masquerade dance Kelly's cross School Monday. Oct. 24. Prizes. . The Abcgwelt R.B.P. No. 905. annual banquet at Kingston Oct. 25 at 7:30 pm. Dance to be held in the Beaver Hall. Montague. October 84. Mon- day is cancelled. Reserve Thursday Oct. 27 for '-'rIpaud Annual United Church not Turkey Supper- Masquersde dance Fanning- "'”0k 5011001. Wednesday, Oct. )5. Burks Orchestra. ' lint dinner in St. Peter's Bay lull. Wednesday. Oct. 36th. Spon- nrcri by United Church. liallowe'en masquerade dance. eaver Hall. Montague. Monday. cioher 31. Prizes for costumes. Annual chicken supper and ban- Ir. St. Mary's Hall. Sourls. Oct. i and 37. Bigger than ever Fun r all. s ,.;y::....ii”.; can aT3:i”f".l n. New oin....”"'j " L ”"””'t la a -High tea, 3;", t ilaiiiea Church. -.i-....”;,”',,; Qlgraetown. Wednesday, being. noggin. 9,4 A communion fro Go . B ' 305. um "f, at uaflvxal headquarters sa.id hi':;dst:im 33'. agreements with the Lebanon and M l”'w"cl"3 '0 "Bl Wmlln 0!! ovegmen A1” Nu nu up!" found loading from the scene of Egypt. which also have frontiers "gm" "'4 3 593530 '03 IP93"? gyi you”. i the attack to the Israeli border with Israel. It was reported that lfNd'"3uVlW W0" '0' W9 59"” 79' Syria claimed qna army officer Egypt is considering a similar Qulrements of the Atlantic Prov- ll'elIbO"lu1otlgm:l: atuwanoacova wbm W:NHlIH .:.t:a slag. ed ag merit" with Saudll.iAralbia. i Il;i;9cMr..”flAe'Lis.nucM;i,nn. I on w ti t eanw e. Israe rcme er ro- kill a his dinner Q Oel 0'0 Itself platoons took iiarteain Moshe Sharett flew to Paris Suns Vin”! Economic Council. speaking pit ii. iii. aiainbars please :0. Duration is which thus syi-- day to meet with the Big Three at the Maritime regional Fall con- ''''i'- hmm'.ll7 which I:-o burned. :01-clan masters beforle they longs fsranca of go Junior Cbamlar of z W raportad or e neva con erence. e Cilnmefco Charlottetown tur- :., glwthfnglza :: h were and he would call their attention daynight. llr. Frans Iaivar, Mn... ,k ,1, nu ” mm. D L nu.h& altar the to what he described as the se- cton. president at the Mu-mme ,m,,,.u, "M in" Milnalso nab: gs UN to l'l0ll.l Middle East situation result- Jaycees, pi-autos. Mr. Lloyd cinn- mg. my, ma h'dh"""” k3?” Unless :l.::l.n the upset of the balance :'::i.wl.le:lei,f':x. vice-president w a s nu-tins mnimi suvlns ah Worship Mayor Stewart. who llllI'L'l'IsIday and Wednesday N welcomed'the more than fifty do I ..i:.. ''''r n'::'." .... W" W Ferry T0 Carry i:.i::':.-.:."..": 'i:'.:. 'i':;':.::.:::: "I aiillaet for sick sar- P ' - ation at which an Worship has I IIaeanats."loiioi- 3553” A d h I pniiseiiihrmiionicenu ial .. . n In, , , gers ri Ve ic es gm W mi gm: S-ll-I-N . , o ' mu 3 eafsed oararaiony. . an- ”-'7' l"""' " '3': i::'.""'.....v "r?"...i'.i.i"'f't-:.ti' ":'Q"'i”"'"ii"iiei-'l7”?li?i. :::."i..':'i.'::". ........" '" "”:i.'.."' - it ch 1 .m. Iad- l l said a letter received earlier - " W , ' iiishnaniwaieaaiiaaoinnu ill-We h siiqna uh, A "'1' Canadian National 2 in '" c”"f,;:f: l”,,',f.,'."",'.l,',li','f.,'.i; did so that an wmhip iinouheei ':mn""k.; Ii ""4" V I ncountered in handling cMQm'&0I' 130 imi- . , new . a Iliow s .g, ;'.'.'Z -no mum use i ....,'..1',':,'.25?.l','.'.f,'.'.l?,.f..'i.Zi”. would new-ba E in be at his it ,E. ,,,h,i,",m,i,.n.gu..mMeocf,eo?:.t.a;Is;unt'a:'t..uia.: .4. intended maunrtus.q:':i..Q'i'.ju.s........h.mntmostasu'wausuwuaua Ill1'lIIl.Nlld..0oNUVIKUI.H gjfqpg-ngtun-ymgpag-logohofllolmijm nittadseils yd -y.umu-raagaiiieatsoiaraatn'oaiiaaIeaausaettv- Isharbiramba Id Isdaasagbaspoasibla tAtl;s'(t:sAI&ahhIassu-tietatsd. Iix laaqnas. my vtlelu oa , assoc an win as any adruy-..'" in. line an: at al satilasil StIpp't To Aggreed Charges Contract Effective Nov. 9th Potato Markettngwould make neces Board received word on Saturday night that Supplement No. l to their Aimed Chul" cwhwt with September by the new Potato' South Viet Nam abruptly ended the spotty 23-year rule of former emperor and chief of state Bao Dal Sunday and named Premier Nearly five million Vietnamese Crapaud . y the approval 'of additional .5. pre- vent discrimination. This was one of the first matters dealth with in s Marketing Board, which is apprec- been approved and stalled by the iative of the co-operation received Canadian Freight Association and from the Canadian Freight Assoc .iation in making such prompi This matter has been pend g'ai-rangemnts. This supplement to the former fussl of thc'Board of Transport agreement will provide a small re Commission to sPPF0V9 ll! Iilfee-lduction in freight rates to a num-i which would discriminate her of destinations in Central Can-1 contract are the same from all Is- against my Illlllll IMPPOI. orl ads. and bring up to date the orig.” land Points. ls MolotovO Will Anno MOSCOW. (AP)--V.M. Mnlotov said Saturday night he will an-, nounce in Geneva whether he plans to quit his job as Soviet foreign minister. Molotov leaves Tuesday for the four-power foreign ministers' conference which opens in Gen- eva Thursday. Western diplo- mats here have speculated about his future as foreign minister ever since he confessed an lives in the French Rivierra. had .. - .. sutllved his usefulness. .;g9lly i ;-t"3'cLi:' the mega” "W ""'"" t""'”d 5" '1' Affnble and. smiling at aigala "W ""1 ”9"dl'"0” ”' ” Kremlin reception for visiting D” md '" equmy 9'" Burmese Premier U Nu Molotov was asked by this correspondent whether he ' tended to resign. ''I will give the answer to that question in Geneva and from Diem's victory will be more C, -- i - H l" I" ""3 no llleevv.viss Illgl) mov' rtiipdlgcuss his I ' plans in further detail. In his confession in the magaz- ine Kornmunist. Molotov said he had erred "dangerously" in a major speech last Feb. 8 when he N. B. For Hol SAINT JOHN, N.B. (CF)-Search for a holdup bandit who killed one man and wounded another near Saint John Thursday was believed concentrated Sunday night in the Campbeliton area of northern New Brunswick and neighboring Quebec province. A warrant is s u a d Saturday - charged Clifford Edward Ayles. 25. with shooting with intent to kill Howard W. Cunningham. The war- rant made no mention of Allison Graves. 47. who was stabbed to death. Both men were held up outside a Saint John bank. Graves. driver of a Saint John Tuberculosis Hospital ambulance. was,ordered to drive to a side mad about five miles its i”:.”"i.' P" ”.'i'"".”.:'"””' 5P I Pl 0 0 .000 03331 ind 35.150 inybonds. in Clllllllnililm. 65-year-old business mlllller of the hospital. is recover- ing from a bullet wound in the neck. The ambulance was found in Burns. Condemns Israel For Kidnapping incident JERUSALEM (Reuters)- Mai.- ' Gen. E. L. M. Burns Sunday con- demned Israei for kidnapping five Syrians in a "'well-planned" light- ning border raid Saturday night. Then the Canadian chief of the United Nations Palestine Truce Commission left for New York by plane to report to the UN on the Israeli-Arab border situation. He will stop in Damascus for talks with Syrian officials on the raid. Gen. Burns said the new clash tragically illustrated the UN Sec- urity Council's condemnation of "a policy of retaliation." 7729 Guardian OCTOBER 24. 1955 OPEANIZATION REJECTS Moncton Mayor liq: Landlords After Fire MONCTON, (CP)- Moncton's Mayor Harris A. Joyce rapped "rent-hungry landlords" Sunday after viewing the ruins of a dil- apidated house where 's mother and four chilcken burned to death Saturday. The victims were Nks. Rose Jormier. daughters Maria. 10. and Corlne. 5. and son Alfred. 3. The mayor said the tragedy might "bring to a head" the ques- tion of a slum clearance project in the area. Such a plan was dropped three years ago after city council decided property owner's prices were too high. SIX ESCAPE!) Fire chief Murray McKie said a child playing with matches was the most likely cause of the blaze .lanl agreed Charge contract to . with I . . .. uni , ity rates which came into effect iiast spring. Rates to the major points oi'Tor- onto and Montreal remain the same as in the original agree ment. but there are a few striking reductions to other points such as Leamington and Harrow. where rates will now be reduced from .93 cents per cwt. to .82. Rates under the agreed charge n Way Out? unce Plans "the house is on fire" about 6:30 am. She went back to find three of the children and apparently was' overcome by smoke. The family planned to move in two weeks to Tnrnnin where the father. Eric Cnrmlr-r. 33. was premier. Moloiov's confession led to im- mediate speculatiun about his fu- ture. The speculation was height- ened by Moloiov's absence from recent top-level conferences in the Crimea at which the Soviet line for the Geneva conference world”, He .-eg.,,.n.v Sunday was believed discussed. However, two days after the Kommunist article appeared. FIRE IN 31-EAK HOUSE Molotov told reporters at a party for Canada's external affairs BR0ADSTMRE5i E"3""'d (AP) Fire broke out Saturday in Bleak minister- Pearson in Moscow: "Thgfe is no quemon 0; my re. House, said to be the dwelling used tirement." by the novelist Charles Dickens in his story of the same name. Serv- ants at the house discovered cur- tains ablaze in a sitting room. threw water over the fire and called the fire department. Consid- erable damage was done. Molotov. at 65 the last of the old Bolsheviks, has had his ups and downs in the Communist hierarchy. He has been active in Soviet government affairs since the days of the revolutin. CANADA. Search Extends Beyond dup Slayer the.saat. end of the city. REPORTED SEEN RCMP said the fugitive was last reported seen at Campbellton. more than 300 miles from Saint John. at 8 pm. Thursday. or about eight hours after the holdup. From that point he could have entered Quebec and continued westward. Police said Aylcs had lived in Atlioivllle, a community near Campbellion. lie was described as tall. thin and pasty-laced. standing six feet two and weighing only 145- He wore a blue raincoat. Cunningham recognized the ban- dit as a former patient at the hospital. The man said he had visited the hospital for an x-ray about a week previously and had only three months to live. Another holdup occurred in Saint John early Saturday when a man. whose description differed from that of Ayles. forced taxi driver Ronald Ross. 24. to drive around the city at gunpoint. The man fled without any loot and was still at large Sunday night. Syria said six officers were wounded and one officer and five soldiers are missing. An Israeli annoimci-mi-.ni said five Syrians are being held as hostages for five Israelis. An Israelis spokesman said four Israelis have been held since their capture by Syria 11 months ago and one other Israeli was kidnap- ped during a series of Syrian raids on Israeli territory in the last two weeks. itI:'i'litES Leslie Clare Moyer, for 17 years custodian of the mass of laws put on Canada's law books since pre- confederation. retires as clerk of the Senate today. his 68th birth- day. A native of Preston. Ont., he started as a S12-a-week newspa,-ei reporter. became a lawyer and later a prime minister's secretary before taking over the Sl3.500-a- year Senate post in December. MONDAY, The Royal Commission Econ- omic Conditions in the Atlantic Provinces begin hearings at the Court House in Charlottetown to- day. Members of the Commission who are arrived here by motor car yesterday evening are. seated: T rogger's Catch Still Mystery l NORTH SYDNEY. N. 5.. (CF) -The mystery catch of the 32- ton Glace Bay dragger Nelson Miles is now in 16 feet of water in the inner harbor here. Spec- ulation is that it may not be air- plane wreckage as first believed. but part of a ship's superstruc- ture. The M-ton dragger. owned by P. J. Cadegan Ltd.. arrived here Saturday morning after an 18- hour towing trip from Cape Smoky. in northern Cape Breton. a normal three-hour run. Capt. Raymond Carcw, 27, her Newfoundland skipper. said a heavy object picked up in the vessel's sweeping n ct Friday weighs between 5 and 6 tons. The wreckage-ship or plane- Is now marked by a bobbing yel- low buoy placed late Saturday after the crew out the net and dropped its hcavy burden in the harbor here. RCAF officers in Halifax had no record of aircraft missing in the Cape Smoky area. Their guess was that it might be a Un- ited Slates piano lost during the Second World War. A navy rrcxv will attempt to 1038 (CP Photo). raise the sunken object today. Mr. O. Lassier, Quebec City; Mr. W.L. Gordon. chariman of the Commission, Toronto; Dr. H. E. Graver, Vancouver; Standing: Dr. Andrew Stewart, Edmonton; Dr. Ray Gushue, St. Johns, Nfld.; Mr. D. V. LePnn, Ottawa. Commls Cooperate W CHICOUTIMI. Que. fCP)-Pre- micr Duplessis has given notice that his Union Natlonale govern- lnent will ask Quebec voters in a provincial election in the near future to support a policy of co- operation with the federal govern- ment "within the respect of our rights." The Quebec government leader. now thought to be closer to an -gieement with the federal gov- ernment than at any other time in his 11-year career as premier of the province. said Saturday he wants to extend the "bridge of co- operation" that would lead to an agreement with the federal gov- ernment as long Quebec's taxation rights are left intact. The Union Natinnale government is expected toscck a fourth suc- cessive mandate sometime next year. possibly in July or Septem- ber. The Union Natlonale was re- elected in 1952 for five years. but it is customary for an election to be called here every four years. JUSTICE CENTRALIZED While advocating a policy of co- operation with federal authorities on taxation rights. Mr. Duplessils struck out against what he called centralization of Justice and "indl-' Economic Council Manager The- raid came amid renewed diplomatic activity in the Pal- estine area. Syria is at present concluding Tl” ""d 9' 9' ill ll3V0ll-melli ..J the objectives of the Atlantic Pro- vinces Econemic Council which are: 1. To survey and study the fact- ors affecting the economic develop- ment of the Atlantic Region. 2. To stimulate united action on matters of common concern. mat- ters vital to the economic welfare of the Atlantic Region, and matters of particular interest to the Coun- oil. .1. To Act as a coordinating body for all organizations. agencies or individuals interested in the gener- al economic and social welfare of the Atlantic Region, or any Pro- Vince or Peri thereof. The speake made it clear that all the facts that he was Prue!"- lng at the meeting were backed up by statistical information. verify- ing what he said to be true. "Atlantic producers must face a world becoming increasingly cons- cious of productive efficiency and a continent where higher llvllll standards are demanded increas- ingly" sald Mr. Mann. "The Coun- cil is dedicated to a quest for ways aIdl'IIaaiiatolrfIPP0V9I slonalsre ductivit! thereby asaurlng in fat- ure years a more aouitabla region- al position. throulhouf the Nation Cites Basic Requirements telligant action by regional produc- ers snd investors. Public agencies. while they are of hay importance in creating an lnvironinent wherein future economic growth is practic- able. cannot be accorded exclusive priority in this regard." PEI! CAPITA INCOME Mr. Mann want on to show that from 100 to 158 the Atlantic Pro- vinces have a much lower per capita income than the rest of Canada. One exception was New- foundland wliare in 1040 the per capita income was 3472 and in 1&8. H60 -- an increase of as per cent. Nova Scotia increased from flltito Unit or 29 per cent; New Brunswick from 51 to 8757 or :2 coat and Prince Edward Is- At the same time. Mr. Mann Canadian average grasalva gains of III, shim. sun. limo or an Increase of it per cent for the whole country over the years I940-lit.'i.'i. inclusive. Or in other words the average for the Atlantic Provinces was 0734 compared to 81.24 for the whole of Canada. "We may never reach the Cana- dian average but we must certain- ly bring our per eapita income higher and do this by working for our betterment in every part of our Onfianed on page 2 col 4 3! New Duplessis Policy rout” ion secretary. The Commission has already completed bearings at St. Johns and Halifax and after sitting in Charlottetown will move on to Fredericton. New Brunswick. Barber's Film Lab. ith Ottawa rect control of education by others:" Mr. Duplessia's remarks were made in this industrial city of so.- 000. 140 miles east of Quebec City, on the first leg of a four-day tour of the booming Lake Wt. John area. which prnud residents call "Le Royaume du Saguenay" - The Saguenay Kingdom. He lnauguraicd a small bridge linking Chicoutlmi with the neigh- boring municipallty of Riviera du Mouiin. Mr. Duplessis then attended the blessing of a new school, one of three recently built. 4nd of a new white-stone courthouse, located on a bill overlooking the cliff-lined sagucnay river. it was at the courthouaa that Mr. Duplessis made his plea for the decentralization of justice. He made no direct allusion to a recent ruling of the Supreme Court of Canada invalidating 3 Quebec statiiic or to a decision of the federal cabinet referring back in the Supreme Court the case of Wilbert Coffin. Under the now-invalidated stat- ufe, the City of Montreal had eiiai-ind a by-law to force stores to rlnsp in Montreal on six Roman Catholic lmiy fir'l.VS cum". 3 Gaspe prospector con- vicicri of murdcring an American bcnr hunter, had exhausted all jmili-ial appcals, but his execution has bccn stayed until Dec. 2 because of the federal cabinel's move. The Supreme Court is to hear ' to the polls today to fill a Commons Covers Prince Edward A Island Like the Dew PRlC.E5c I Move To Cut French Ties IAARBRUECKEN, Saar (AP)-The Germa.n-speak- ing Saarlanders rejected Europeanization of their rich border state by a two-to-one vote Sunday and their pro- French premier, Johannes Hoffman. quickly resigned. The Saar's "No" to the Europeanization statutia marked its opening drive to throw off France's economic grip and reunite with West Germany. Hoffman, 64, h power since 1947. had urged approval of the statute. which would have put the Saar under a. neutral commis- sioner of the seven-power Western European Union (WEU) and maintained its customs and currency union with France. Final returns showed 96.72 per cent of the 662,000 - odd voters turned out and 67.7 per cent of them were against Europeaniza- tion The count: who master-minded the defeat I the project, declared: "We won for Germany. The Saar has recognized it is a part of Ger- many. This must be considered in which trapped Mrs. Cormier and three children. Six other Cormielj Yes-201.973 any cominl IOIIINOII 09 W0 Ullf guggegted the Snvlgt Union was children. two to 13 years old. No-423.434 question."- not yet a full-scale socialist natv escaped. . Pro-German forces showed under The pro-German leaders united ion. The speech was made at Mrs. Cormier's sister, Mrs. 7 the statute with a fiery back-to- in an appeal to "the French people the same supreme Soviet session Margaret Sellers. led them to Germany campaign. In the hours and peoples of the Western world 81 which Georgi 04- MBIEHKOV Niel! She Said MFS- C0l'mlel' before Hoffmann stepped out to- to understand the Saar peopla and confesed errors and resigned 83 roused title family with a 0117 day. they demanded new elections respect their decision." They said the Saarlandora "II to oust his government. They ac- cused him in the campaign of be- ing a traitor for serving under the French occupation of The Saar and for calling on Saarlanders to approve Europeanization. Heinrich Schneider. former Nazi Voting Today In .L'ively a Toronto Spadina Election TORONTO (CP)-when voters go riding. who west is prison for E Illoclllluua with I sored espionage ring. FORMER MPP Mr. Salaberg. so. i a form: member of the Ontario legislature for Tomato St. Andrew. a prov- and ovetrwheimlng majority have expressed their desire to be linked with Germany and their rejection of the regime of Hoffmann and of the present one-sided orientation of their economy." 1 A vacancy left by the recent r, meat of David Croll to the Senate, they will end a by-election cam- paign fought mainly on the busy streets of west-central Toronto. It was one of the liveliest cam- 'by loudspeaker - equipped auto- palgns in many years in the trail! tionally Liberal riding of Toronto Spadina. Posters. signs and ban- ners appcared everywhere. Party groups organized motorcades led mobiles and trucks which filled the area with songs. martial music and slogans of the four candidates. Vying for the 45,000 votes are Samuel frey. seeking to retain for the iherals the seat Senator Croll held for the last 10 years; Charles 1!. Res. Progressive Con- servative; Harry Waisglass. CCF; and Joseph B. Salsberg. Labor- Progressive (Communist) party. A Salsberg victory would again give the Communists representa- tion in the Commons. Their last member at Ottawa was Fred Rose, representing a Montreal district Handwriting Clue In Holdup TORONTO (CF) - Detectives Saturday pinned their hopes on a piece of handwriting as the most valuable clue in the hint for the gunman who Thursday fatally shot Walter Hewlett. 4!, a beer store clerk. The work "holdup" was scrawled on a beer order form the bandit handed to another clerk. "Relatives or business associates should have little difficulty in rec ogriizing the style." said John B. Nimmo. assistant chief of detec- tives. After the shooting, the gunman calmly stepped over the victim's, body and walked out without tak-i ing the beer store's 31,000 receipts. Telephone tips flowed through the police Switchboard. All were checked but none brought re- sults. EXCESS PSYCHOLOGY ridlng's today only about is per seat I Jewish. The rest includes many persons of Polish. Ukrainian. Italian and Lithuanian descent. lncial riding which covers part al the Spadina constituency. . Mr. Rea also is I mi-mar mem- ber of the legislature, having been elected in 1848 in Toronto St. Pat- rick. He has been in the insurance business here since 1934. l A 34-year-old sociologist economist. Mr. walsglaas is tent research director Q the United steeiwai-loin of America (C10-CCL). The 56-year-old Mr. Godfrw h I business man. president of the wool-and-waste firm of S. Godfrey Ltd. and associated with a smaller of other companies. He is an au- ponent of health insurance and increased unemployment insurance . - benefits and higher old age pu- tlii but sions. ' -Atione time as per east d pulatluu was Jewish CAN CARRY A mgomo, (CP) - iviinimum cc-riin's nimcal arizuments Der. 5 LONDON i )-A ministry at natures: and ll sixili stay of execution i0 education of clal. Dr. Marjorie md mmmum wme Mm, mg. February will be Efanied 0000- Wilson, warns of becoming "too 0",,” 9 I ---- psychology-minded.” At a meeting Vncouve, , & 97 EYE-CATCHER concerned with spastic children mew,” . 45 so Hovg, England (CF) - Sign she said: "We have reached a cam” , , 14 61 outside is barber shop in this Sus- stage where we are ovar-sensitive Reg”. & 3 sex town reads: "I-Iave1c.lose shave :l)::t"thO effect of events on chil- Fingrg , fl 3 .' r . o - heranot on the ma oguw. m u Montreal .. . 37 45 ws IN BRIEF ---M - " Fredericton . 1 9 int John 28 0 Moncton .. g : SHARP asnrnovaita Ami-aocxsr navica g:;;':; l--.-.-.-. r, ,, SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A FORT BENNING. Ga. (AP) - dhngwkwn . ' 35 Q sharp Earthquake hit San Fran- Lt. - Gen. James Gavin. U. S. st 1.0"” 33 Q cisco at all pm. PST Sunday Army chief of research. told a HALIFAX, (cm-Th. wan" llit l ti n h re Saturday mliiiiiten mmnued (M n In" - llie iirrriiyulaiaocwaiirhingeon a device office here says I hlsh lmslifi to destroy intercontinental rockets area is movllll Clflward im” LOST in IIOURS svonsv (CP) -. Tliroc syll- ney men, Frank Sheppard. Ernie Nowell. and John Dwyer were high in the air before they reach their target. PLAN rsznitr TALKS orrawa (CP) - Labor depart- div found early lunday in woods near i N. Grand Mira, about I miles from meat officers plan to confer here Re3l”'"'l hgzex: ..h .. here. after being lost for so hours. Monday on possible new action to "he. an” mud, ch.” A, pcma polkg. go; found the get the strlkebound ferry Princess 'm. "man "5 men in ii clearing huddled around Helene runniill lillll "P033 "3! 5 an gang"; warmer. a fire. They suffered no ill affects. 3!! of P'IMdY- 'h.g, 1g, uqmggh at New Ola: mop poggonmn Anoriirzn conrgnbnrstkc mg '3' " MONCTON (CF) - F I P5313 Ml" " "'93" - ' were in Moncton I-lospltoallr"pq,4p. rctary Hamid Macmillan of Brit- nigh tide today at Chariiottetoll night and many more recovering sin said Sunday that if progress at 8 a.ri-i. and 4:51 pm - at In in their boinu after members of is made at Geneva this week dco at 1-. die city's Jewish community suf-"toward easing international tn- Snmmerside faced a man attack of what was stem than may be another InNt- Chm believed to be food poiaoning.h'll0l'h03ll'0lll'9UIl0I1l- Fifw-also persons were affected. later: is the spring.