Fdaximf of i More Man shared. 18 PAGE A A thing is bigger for being ilegrt Paratroopers And Transport Planes Menace The Tachen Islands TRIPEH. Formosa (AP) - The rhinue Reds have moved 11.000 paiatroopem and 120 tranBP0l1 planes to mainland positions men- mng the Tachen Islands. the in- VEIIOI ministry's news agency said Pr ay- Tiie Tachens. 300 miles north of F...-moss, were bombed by Red ii.ancs this month for the first tune The Nationalists fear the Communists are preparing to in- iada them. The Tachens anchor on rhb north a chain of Nationalists ;slaiids which stretch for 350 miles off ihe southeast coast. The Tatao news agency said the Communists dth Airborne division ii--..: moved 350 miles southeast by rail carly this month from Suchow iTiiI1iIihllI1i to Hangchow. Heng- rll'.ii.l' is 160 miles northwest of the Tucllelis. The agency said that its infor- rr-aiion came from underground s- Lll'Ct'S in Hangchow. 'I'hese .murcl's said some of the H.009 paratrooper: would be sent on .-nuilicast to Ninghsien tNingpo). lilli'. 100 miles northwest of the Ti-rlicns. 5 Ali bases st Hangchow and Nin- ghsian previously have been re- ported crowded with Red jet bom- bers and fighters. Now. the agency said. 00 transport planes have been stationed at I-Iangc-how and an equal number at Ninghsien. The vest pocket war was quiet Friday ebrcept for new artillery ex- changes between Red Amoy and Nationalist miles across the strait from For- mosa." the defence ministry ported. New Trouble With Shipments From West Berlin Quemoy island, .120 1'2- BERLIN (Reuters) - East Ger- man customs men have confis- cated about metal leaving West Berlin for West Germany this month. claiming the 1,750 tons of scrap shipments carried "erroneous load- ng papers." Allied officials re- ported Friday. Drivers of six trucks stopped by improvement In Drew's Condition. OTTAWA (CF) m pi-nvement was repor the condition of oppo Drew, in hospital for the in! with meningitis. iiniiv improving." zimive Conservative leader Eek "Ex-erythlng is going fine now," said a hospital official. "He's grad- He said there has been no dev- clnpmcnt to alter a prediction two dais ago that the 00-year-old Pro- will hr in hospital for two more weeks. -Coming Events "Parkdale Variety Concert can- H-lied. "Ringo and dance. Vernon iiiivr hall Tuesday. Nov. 30. "Regular Saturday night Dance. Peters Hall. Messer's Orchestra. Lodge. St "Rummage Sale. Boyne East German customs said they had been forced to drive to Bran- denburg. about 30 miles west of Berlin, where 150 tons of scrap destined for west Germany was unloaded and fed into blast fur- naces. The drivers were allowed ,.to return to Berlin a week later. they said. Allied officials said this was the first time in 18 months that there have been major difficulties with goods crossing East Germany either from or to West Berlin. The reason for confiscation was believed to be the extreme short.- age of scrap in East Germany, the officials said. Build Whaling Factory In Nfld. ST. JOHN'S. Nfld. (CP)-A new whaling factory is being built in Newfoundland by the Cold storage Company. , Company officials said Friday Bonavista Richmond street today 2 p. m. that construction will start gimme- "Wn-He-l..a Rummage Sale. St. James School Room. Saturday. November 20th. 2.30 p. m. "Riiinmage Salc. Baptist church Hall, by Dorcas Group today. -I oicinrk "Reserve evening of December tin. for Annual crippled Childrcrra lliirlinn. Yen's Theatre. "1. M. 'Mont.gomery Chapter I 0. I). E. Rummage Scale, St. -'.ill1PH Church Hall, Saturday, 7.00 .i m. ISLAND GRILL, Queen Street ii-.11 5228. Serving full course din- iio-: Specializing Chinese dish. Mslioiving tonight at Mt. Stew- 1.' --Never Let Me Go-with Clark Cable and Gene Tierney. "Reserve December 21st for St. l"I'lPl'R South School Concert in St. Priors Bay Hall at 8 p. in. "(take Sale at I-lolmans, Novem- nri 20th, at 2.30. Memorial L. O. E A. C "lleservo December 4th for the Hiliilrr River United Church W. l imury sale and bazaar. ”Crapaud Hall, Wednesday. Nov- :3, Quebec. day to two years for stealing religious articles valued at 3200. diately at Southern Bay. in Bonn- vlstn fat would be processed into oil at the factory and the meat will be frozen and stored Much of this will "Is mink food. bay community. They said in Bonavista probably be sold Two Years For Theft of Religious Articles (OP)-Lionel Cormlsr. and Georges Saucier, 0. Montreal. were sentenced Pri- in penitentiary QUEC Both men pleaded guilty last week to stealing a ciborium. chal- ice and patcn from the Royal 22nd Regiment Roman catholic chapel at the Quebec citadel in June 01 1953. They were employed on a construction project at the citadel. The articles have not been ra- overed. OTTAWA (CP)-A new national nose count will take place in 1956. It was disclosed Friday that the government has decided to hold a country-wide census every five years. instead of every 10. and the first five-year count will take place in June. 1956. In previous years Canada relied on the 10-year census for main statistical guidance. holding the five-year count. only on the prai- ries. The decennial census also guided redistribution of federal political rldings. Official riding boundary changes still will take place only once every decade. The riding; will not be affected by the five-year population changes. LESS EXTENSIVE Officer: said also that the five- year census will be slightly less extensive than the 10-year count. But it will mean gathering and training another army of some 18.- 000 census-takers who will start knocking on the doors of Canadian homes 19 months hence. . By that time. they estimate. Canada's population may total 16- 000.000 persons-compared with iii.- 200.000 in mid-1954 and 14,000,000 when the last decennial census was taken in June 1951. Thus. officials figure the popula- tion will incrense by some 2.000.000 in five years. almost equivalent to the 2.500.000 rise in the 10-year period between 1941 and 1951. This outlook for rapid increase and great population shifts led of- Rail Dispute Decision Ready orrawa, (GP) - The federal government's arbitrator in the railway-union contract dloputethal threatened a. general rail strike last summer Friday handed down his judgment. Chief Justice Gordon McGregor Sloan passed his findings to rep- resentatives of the dlsputants and to the labor department. under an agreement that they are not to be made public before 10 am. EST Monday. All recipients of the 15-page de- clsion declined to discuss terms with newspaper men. So did the arbitrator. after issuing copies to the disputanis in sealed envelopes in this hotel YOQPI here where he has been working on it since Nov. By MUIIII-II. NARRAWAY l'.lf'll”ll DHPYDOOH Rooms. 3 o'clock Great George Street. -""u. 2 o'clock. Sunshine .i.i:viiir W. A. Trinity Church. ltrrliicrday. Rollie 12.10 bc open for entries miik Hail every Tuesday cslra. "id mixing daily. Shur-Gain Service. at. Penn. iilll1Fl' 24th, Hot Goose Supper and l'laza.1r. Sponsored by st. John W A, "The Earl of I-Iillsboro Chapter l 0 D. E. Rummage Sale. Beatonls this "Cake Sal!-V Island Radio Centre. November Group l "l'):mcc. West Royalty Hallf MacKenzle's Uri-iicstra. Canteen Service. 0.80 In ”Th- Moran Bowling Club will to November Zili. A limit of 20 teams this year. send entries to J. 3. Jay. Pruident. "Regular Dance, suniey Bridge night. Music, Rollie MacKenzie's Orch- ' "Handling complete line of Bhur- i.aii1 Feeds. also custom Grinding .!'eed "we will load chicken and fowl "" my yard Thursday. November "lib. large! lots can arrange pick ggmgo prices paid. Joe Grant. j'Ri-serve Tuesday. Nov. 2!. chirken supper at home of Austin "mlsrsnat. K i t . - "I M C. W. ins ng on Sponsor "BUN"! fills Monday at Fred- "lflon. Tuesday. Brookfieid 9 a. :11. Milton 10, York 1 p.m.. Bed- "M 2. Tracndle 2.30. Mt. Stew- :" 3- Pi-quid 3.30. Fort Augustus . Walarvala 4.30. Vernon River. GI Pownsl 5:40. Wednesday. New anlfrw 9 a.m.. Wheslley River Holmes Corner 11. New Hav- canadian Press Staff writer LONDON (C?) -A bouquet of white carnations will be handed to the Queen today. symbolizing the seven happy years of Britain's most cclcbrated couple. The flowers. chosen personally by the Duke of Edinburgh, will be I! reminder of the all-white carnations he sent on their wed- ding day Nov. 20. 1947. . To celebrate this seventh sn- niversary of a marriage that brought a welcome splash of color to austere post-war Britain, the 28- year-oid Queen and her 33-year-old husband will spend the week-end with the Duke and Duchess of Gloucester at the country estate in Northsrnptonshire. HONORED AT DINNER There. the two dukes will be guests of honor at a private din- ner marking the centenary of the battle of Balaclava. organized by a descendant of the Balaclava generals. Balaclava. a village in the Crimea. was the scene of the crime of the light miside- What the Queen's anniversary gift to the duke will be has not been made public. The duke's gift, in addition to the flowers. is ex- pected to be specially designed Jewelry. Prince Charles and Prin- cess Anne may give flowers the! have helped to pick. The couple can look back with some satisfaction across the years to the bright November day when they were married in Westminster Abbey. Elizabeth was then a. dutiful rather diffident princess who mar- ried Mountbatten. tlonal trousers and an open-neck shirt in the former Lieut. Philip . man unconven- enough to wear flannel Sf. "I..Y.C. variety concert, Mary's hail. Sour-is. Tuesday. Nov. Kl. Time 8:15. Admission 50 cents. h "' 1 -m-. nonniaw mo. Dcssble 1 K013"! Cross 3, Emerald, 4. "Shur Gain Amateur Caval- CWWI 5. Remington 6.30. Paying csda in St. Msry'l hill. Sour-is. no fat! Pllr for young pigs over I. each. Will also buy smal- ' ”'"'l- Knud .'-ugensen, Fred- Oricion. Dec. 3rd at E p.m. Sponsored by Ladies Auxiliary of Canadian Lel- Ionl Admission 50 sale, of candy. and 25 cents. 9. White Carnations Will Mark 7th Wedding Anniversary of Queen Today stately Buckingham Palace. TRAGEDY FOLLOWS Tragedy touched the couple and made Elisabeth a queen when they learned Feb. 6, 1952. on a. tour in Kenya. that George VI had died in his sleep at san- drlngham. A year later. A few months before the coronation. Elizabeth suffered another blow with the death of Queen Mary, her 86-year-old grandmother. The Queen has undoubtedly en- joyed being sovereign. Though per- haps lacking a natural ease of manner. she has grown steadily in confidence. One big occasion in the Queen's imperceptible growing up to the dimensions of Britain's sixth reign- ing queen was her visit to Canada in 1051. On this tour. going from coast to coast in all weathers. she may have sensed for the first time the magnitude of her task as nominal head of more than 500.- ooo,ooo persons in some 50 lands. Rstumlng she said she had con- ceived for Canada and her people a "love that will never grow cold." Among her proudest possession). which she often wears. are two Ottawa Announces Census In 1956; To Be Held Every Five Years Hereafter flcials to press for the five-year count. NOT USUAL It is believed that few countries take a census more than once a decade. Both Britain and the United States abide by the decade census tradition. But Canada has attempted to be a model census-taking country and she claims a 300-year leadership in that field. It was in 1608. still a French colony. that she laid claim to the f f g Founded 18 " W. OANADA. ago though plans for it were for- mulaied last year. U. S. governments announced they have decided to build I (distant Canada's far north. The U. S. will carry DUI share of the bill. 72 SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 30, IBM (By Dave Molntoelf. Canadian Press Staff Writer) OTTAWA, (CP) -Canada and the United States have prepared plans for a third aircraft warning system-even before construction has started on the second. The defence department said Friday construction of the mid-Canada radar chain has not yet surveys for radar sites will begin "as soon as possible." Canada will become even greater 'The mid-Canada project was of- iclslly announced eight months Meanwhile. the Canadian and ..Dew.. early warning) line in construction and. of- lcisls here said. pay the major Meanwhile. one authority in title of the first country to take a name-by-name census limes. See tdurilgll-nd Suicide in Death of Mother. Child and suicide the deaths of Mrs. Adrien Tessier. 34. Sherbrooke. Que. in modern MONTREAL (CP) - Provincial police have described as murder and her son. Richard. 3, whose charred and de- composed bodies were found near Lleut. Maurice Vallquetie said positive identification had been made from the remains and per- sonal effects found on the scene. The mother and son disappeared July 27 arti were the objects of a widespread search st month. Police said Mrs. essier appar- ently killed her son and burned his body in turpentine. The boy's skull was found. saturated with tur- pentine. in a hollow 500 feet from the road at Little Lake Magog. near Sherbrooke. Friday. The woman then is believed to have committed suicide, police said. . FOUND THURSDAY Lieut. Vallqueite said homicide detectives Ubald Legault and Roch Dandenault found jewelry. money and personal effects on the scene which were identified as belonging to Mrs. Tessier. The woman's body was found Thursday by two farmers. eight miles west of Sherbrooke near the Montreal highway. Further inves- tigation turned up the boy's skull Friday. . It was not announced how the woman committed suicide but she was believed to have slashed her i wrists. The remains were brought to Montreal Friday for study by provincial pathologist Dr. Rosario. Fonisine. A coroner's inquest was scheduled for today. WIFE DEPREBSED when Mrs. Tesaler and the boyl vanished in July, her husband all first believed they had gone to visit relatives at nearby Compton. supply helicopters and crews to start the job "as soon as possible.'Z the department. said ment. Many of them will fly out of Flin Finn and The Pas in north- ern Manitoba. operate the mid-Canada system. system for North America began a southern parts of Canada. into operation this year. Though it is too far south to give much. if any. warning of an attack on Canadian cities. it can direct in- ferceptor fighter planes enemy bombers. A YEAR. OFF a year before the second. or mid- Canada, provide as warning of attack for Canadian cities-enough time. officials said. for evacuation of a major portion of their populations. mentioned publicly by Canadian of- ficials is that as the system im- proves. there that fewer enemy bombers attack- primary targets in the U. 5. would instead dump their loads on Canadian cities. close touch with the situation said that at present the most warning major Canadian cities could ex- pect would be 15 or 20 minutes before an enemy air attack. ACCURATE SURVEY Concerning the mid Canada ilne. which will follow roughly the 55th parallel. the defence depart- ment said that before construction can begin an accurate survey of radar sites is necessary. Delivery to the RCAF of Amer- ican-buili helicopters which will be employed on the survey began last month and crews now are being trained to fly these aircraft. ' While they are being trained. the U. 5. Air Force has agreed to in a slate- Cansda will finance. build and Construction of a radar warning bout five years ago. The Pinetree chain. located in went. against Officials said it will be at least line is finished. It may much as two hours One aspect of early warning not is more likelihood ng from the north would reach and In their view. the ha7.ard for started but that with construction of the Dew chain. It may give as much as six hours warning. The Canada-U. S. announcement said the Dew line will be built across the "far northern part of North America." it may be strung across the northern rim nf main- land Canada to hook up seven ra- dar stations in Alaska with others in Greenland. No date for comple- ion was given. The Dew line will be built en- tirely by the U. S. but. officials here said Canada will retain the right to operate it once it is fin- ished. whaiilgiiiid Al Pugwash AMHERST, N. S. (CF) .-A huge whale is aground at nearby Pug- wash point and veteran fishermen say the only thing that could save it from death is a large tug or an unusually high tide. The whale is about 35 feet long and estimated to weigh about 40 tons. B. C. Coastal Areas Plagued By Floods VANCOUVER (CF)-Victims of coaslaliBril.ish Columbia's surprise floods cleaned up Friday night, but faced the prospect of having to do it all over again. Grey skies showered only light rain over the coast Friday, the first respite in a week of pound- ing downpour which sent some sireams into flood and caused heavy damage in several areas. Now the weather bureau called for gales to sweep another storm over the coastline. Adenouer's Cabinet Approves Agreement BONN. Germany (AP! - Chan- cellor Konrad Adrinaiie-,r'.s cabinet ovcrrode a rebellion by five min- infers Fridnynnd approved ihe Paris agreements to bring West Germany into the Western de- fence alliance. Bills to ratify the agreements were sent immediately to parlia- mcnt amid predictions by Arlen- aucr and his party leaders that ratification will he completed by miri-January. But there were in- dications of rough sailing ahead. TUNIS (Reuters)--French troops Prince Edward Island Like The Dow Covers PRICE So Canada, U.S. Prepare Plans For Third Aircraft Warning System OTTAWA. (CF) - Operation ”Reduce''. the cutting of Can- ada": 25th Infantry Brigade in Korea to one-third its strength. is almost. complete. the army said Friday. Two more units now are at sea en route home in time for Christ- mas: the, 4th Battalion. Canadian Guards. commanded by Lt.-Col Val lmduc of Quebec Cit). and D-Squadron. Royal Canadian Dra- goons. commanded by Mal. A. l.. Macclonald of Toronto and Oil- HVVR. The first major unit to he with- drawn. the 2nd battalion. the ,Blark Watch. arrived at Seattle. Wash. Thursday after a year's garrison duty in Korea. The army said the. remaining formation: to be withdrawn are expected home for Christmas. SeMMcCEtiiT Slightly Improved waarrmoron (AP)-The con-I killeri 23 armed rebels in attacks in southeastern Tunisia Thursday. The French troops had one officer and one soldier killed and several injured. Six rebels were captured. French military authorities said Friday that during the last five But they never showed up there and subsequent searches-once in- volving B00 men-found no trace of them. Mr. Tessier said his wife had becn depressed for some time. child in Sherbrooke's traffic. She once expressed a wish to lake him into the bush where 'he'd be safe." Police said the child's skull and bones were covered with leaves only a few hundred yards from the wooded area where the adult scl- eion was found. Nearby. they said. was A charred tree stump and an empty kerosene can. nouann nuns " OSHAWA. Ont. (CF)-Members of Local 22 of the United Auto- mobile Workers (CIO) Thursday Voted 80 per cent in favor of doubling union dues for a three- Tfmnl-h period. to pull the union "out of a financial hole”. Officials said about 3,000 members cast ballots. Individual dues will jump to 35 a month for the local's 10.- 000 membora. Russell McNeil. president. said "lay-offs during the last four months provided a con- diamond maple leaf brooches pre- sented in Canada. stant drain on our resources." dition of Senator Joseph McCarthy. days 100 Fcllaghas. as the rebels whose nmni um 13 holding up are known. had been either killed. Senna consideration of A move ,0 wounded or taken prisoner. About censure him. was reported ”a llttlewihom "9 9m'”a”y "”"'”"d i” be improved" Friday. 1 There still was no definite word' from Bethesda naval hospital. how- ever. how soon the Wisconsin .Rs- publican will be well enough to leave the hospital. The Senate called an ll-day hall i'n the censure debate Thursday on: lthe basis of a medical report say- ling McCarthy's elbow injury had "b?"""” Frirlrly he Chr ii ;resultcd in "traumatic l7ursitis"li and treatment would keep him in hospital until Nov. 20. One of the rumors fioatlngl around was that McCarthy is crit- ically ill but a Naval Hos spokesman denied it. will " i'Arlolf ruuei-. . Hitlcr 9”” heard on 11 noon broadcast news of the West German supreme ad- n the area. They are the .'ird Regiment. Roy- Army Reports Reduction of Canadian Force In Korea Nearing Completion be withdrawn next spring. The 3rd Regiment, RCHA. on its return to Canada. will be station:-cl at Dr-hart, N. S. Meanwhile. iiil iUi(llPl'5 have sailed for Halifax aboard i.he Nep- lunia from Brcmerhaven. Ger- many. after a rour of duty with the is! Canrlrlian infantry Bri- gade. They are exported at Hali- fnx Nov. i Callslllussian I e 5 Move Childish iVASl-ll.N'GT()N. (AP; -Frencii Premier Mcndes-i-ii'anrc has tie- nounced as ”childlsh, unrealistic and even dangerous” Russia”: pro- posal for a 25-nation European security conference Nov. 29. .11 Canadian Horse Artillery: Tird .., - . -. .1 i.?;z”;.9nl:j' SCH: Signals. Two": re.il'-iiliigriadiafnnflio lmRnl1,l'h:iFiIl,'lPll:l'I'flf dian Ejfi'ginecT;a 1:: oirigufi-ooCpmf:' Mmdps-Franco Sam ( h P wen i . - ' .2 1- -. . - maining unltl the and of Dccem-'m-M A WE” be "my for Pa” h . d th ad T C 11 est negotiations but not "'va'l'P 9 tr ' m"5i"””' through improvised and spectacu- M"-i' '55 ""9 ""m ”"""'”"e lar conferences inicndccl princi- until the cnd of next month. REMAIN IN KORICA Remaining in Korea are Znrl Battalion. Queen's Own in: of Canada, and one field hulancc, with the necessary minislrstive troops for their port. Officials have expressed a hope that these remaining troops may lHope 500.000 Polio Vaccine' Doses By Spring i OTTAWA (CF) -Federal and- provincinl health officials hope t.ci have about 500.000 doses of the new salk polio vaccine manufac- tured by late spring. when results of a large-scale United States test of the vaccine are expected to be known. A health department spokesman said Friday manufacture of the! vaccine at the government's Con- nnught Laboratories in Toronto is proceeding in order to have .1 supply ready in the event the U.s.: test shows it is worthwhile. i The decision was made earlier this year at 3. conference of fed- cral and provincial health authori- ties here. Cost of the program is being shared by the two levels of government. The Connaught Laboratories for 3,.-some lime have produced polio vi- lrus. main ingredient of the vaccine. Until this year. however. the vac- cine itself was made in the U. S. The U. 8. test was made on. 500.000 children, half of whom were given the vaccine and thel other half it neutral injection. A small supply of vaccine also was made available to Canada and it was used in Nova Scotia and Al- berta as part of the larger trial study in the U. 8. l l the Rif- am- ad- sup- lStrasser Plans To Return To Germany Quite Definitely" Enter Politics PARADISE, N. S. (CP)-An ox- Dr. Olin Strasscr sairll hopes to return by isimas in the Europe he fled years ago from a vengeful The man who collaborated with in the early 305 said he "The senator is not critically ill." ministraiive court decision restor- he said. MELVILLE, Slsk. ice?” The' iMclville hockey arena. built in' H940 as a community effort ing his German citizenship .Hitler revoked it in 1935 sficr he broke wiih Strasser. ”I am very happy." the onetime at a Chieftain of Germany's nld "Black cost of 3120.000. was destroyed Front" organization said .”I have CHI! Frldly by fire which shot flames hundreds of feet into the air and threatened neighboring buildings. Origin of the fire was unknbwn. I plans to return to Europe imme- diately and I hope to be back with my wife and children by Christ- mas or New Year's." He has not seen his family since lU.S. Impressed By French Premier By HAROLD KING WASHINGTON (R e u to r s) - French Premier Mendes-France is winning his battle for popularity with the American public and over- coming the vague feelings of mis- trust which prevailed here prior to his arrival. This is the fa lgrowlng opinion among political and press leaders III. The. cordiailiy of the toasts at the dinner given him by state See- retsry Dulles Thursday night was one symptom of this impact. His reception by the Senate was an- other. Democratic Senator Mike Mansfield of Montana described this meeilru as "a very spontan- eous success." Republican Senator Margaret Chase Smith of Maine was "very impressed." The premiers speech Friday to 500 American reporters at the Na- tional Prcas Club was described by one seasoned Washington reporter apps rently been On this point Mendea-France has speaking with ficlals who are still basing their fort in lnrlnchina has been fixed in estimates of him and of France the French budget for 1955 and generally on the assumption that cannot be exceeded. France cannot do much independ- gntly because she needs American exceeds the French budget figure. 0 ar aid. If the cost of the Indochina policy it will. ihe premier considers. be up to the United States to act ac- cordingly. , brutal frankness in Dulles and Similar frsnknr-5.1 character-i1.v-d ::1,:"::,:.”:;'d7p '"f,or:m):'.'"" '1' Other Mlh government r!pre.Ient- the prFmll'r'.l talk with President A ' n "' P " ' p"' atlvou. Eisenhower on the Saar question. tion in foreign policy." HA! SOME DIFFICULTY He has emphasized that he has Mendes-France said point blank not come here to ask for money the agreement was a compromise and does not intend to do so. He and he was sure the Bonn parlia- The premier is run doubt having more difficulty in winning over certain sections of government of- has BYHOIIIII spend on the common Wei-fern ef-in it stood. ihe can reminded Dulles that of money France mcnt would ratify the Paris agree- menis including that on the Saar he lcft Europe. They are living in Swit7.crlanrl. OPPOSES ADENAUER The 57-year-old avowed oppnnerr. nf Chancellor Konrad Adenauci” said he ”quiic definitely" planncd to enter West German politics be- cause ”poliiics is my whole busi- ness; it is the whole task in my life." However. he said. "although 1 have kept myself informed on ex- ternal affairs. I have lost touch with Germany's infernal politics and for that reason 1 shall devote at least six months to studying the situation." i Si.rasser's lawyer said in Berlin after the court delivered ifs de- cision that he had advised his client not to engage in political activity immediately. CITES SAAB. DIRPIJTE I ' Sll'RS.'lPr opposes the chancellor's Christian Democratic rcgimc ho- cause. he insists. Adenauer's pol- icics are not guided by ”ihc farts." He cited current dickrring over the holly-disputed Saar which he said Germans "will never. never renounce." Strasser said agreement must be reached with France but such agi-or-men! must follow general economic or industrial lines and could under no circumstances in- clude "the giving away of 1.000.- 000 Germans to France." He said Adenauer had consist- ently evaded or ignored Germany's pally for propaganda." The French Icarler. approaching the end of far-ranging talks with American officials. delivered a luncheon address Friday at the National Press Club. Says Wliarson May Quit Cabinet WINNIPEG. (CP)-The Winni- peg Tribune said in a dispatch from Ottawa Friday that Justice Min- ister Garson may leave the cab- inet to become chief Justice of Manitoba. , ., E. A. MdPherson. chief justice since 1944. died Thursday in Ken- ora. Ont. The Tribune said it. has long been taken for granted that Mi'.' Garson would be named chief jur- rice Pat. the opportune time" and that there is every reason to be- lieve he would look with favor on the appointment." 5PAHKiNQ. A DULL BOY WITH A RAIOR STROP WILL MAKE HIM LOOK TORONTO 4CPi --Minimum and maximum 1l!l'I1D8l”Il.UIES2 Dawson .... 17 20 Vancouver 39 55 Victoria 50 56 Edmonton 24 38.. Callfary .'i7 52 Rcgina . 24 51 Winnipeg .11 311 Toronto Si 61 Oilawa 43 SR Montreal 50 59 Quebec 39 48 Fredericton 37 51'. St. John 540 50 Monctnn .'i7 54 Halifax . . . 42 52 Charlottetown . 33 - Sydncy . . . 26 51 Yarmoulh .. 41 55 Si. Johns - . . . . . . . . 21 42 HALIFAX (CP)-The Dominion public weather office here says a period of damp. extremely mild weather has begun ovcr the Mari- time: and eastern Quebec. There is either fog. drizzle or rain at many places in the forecast dis- trict. There is no indication of any break in l.hi.l wealherleither Satur- day or Sunday. Regional fnrccasts: Prince E d w a r d Island. New lnrunswlck. Bay of Chaleur: lntarmiiissnt drlssle and rain. in! palchesi extremely mllrl: .lIght winds Imv-high at Charlottetown I7 and 60. Moncton and Frederic- ton 50 and 60. Saint John M and 55. Edmundsion (5 and 55. Campbell- lon JR and 55. Outlook for Sunday: tent rain and very mild. iiigh tide today at Charlottetown at 8.41 a. m. and 7.07 p. m. summerslde tide eidhis-on min- Intermit- rightful nationalistic aspirations- one of ”lha fuels" that must bc taken into account uies later than Charlottetown. Sun rises today at 1.11 s. m. and ism at no :3. in.