A Maxims OF A , MEREHMAN -er:-w-e . panlon. i The rotten apple spoils his cons- is, . ....ur: t'n...iottetown. eunnersldo 015.06 pcvannli. elsewhere -" in it t.l 50.00. other Provinces EEENI on and li.I.I. 811.00 per ennnnu 'i saver 74 Covers Prince Edward Island CHARLOTTETOWN. ICANADA. THURSDAY. OCTOBER 1. 1953 TO GIVE VIEWS ON AH-BOMB A Read Descends Almost Two Miles In Diving.BelI Big Increase In consumption Of” Beef fall than in other seasons. OTTAWA. (UP)-Canadians are eating beef this year at a record- breaking pace, with the price tumbling below pork for the first tune since the Second World War. ”'I'he price is beginning to tell." an arglculture departnuni. official said Wednesday as he reported a 100,000,000-pound jump in beef con- sumption to a high of 495,000,000 pounds in the first eight months of 1953. This is an increase from 359.- 000.000 pounds consumed during 1952, the year of foot-and-mouth disease in Canada. and from 349.- 000,000 pounds in 1051. Exports Down Through their heavier consump- tion, Canadians are virtually sup- porting the beef market. Exports are down sharply. Shipment in the eight months dropped to 14,000,000 pounds, down from 40,000,000 in 1952 and 04.000.- 000 in 1951. The United states, Canada's biggest meat market. was closed for most of 1052 be- cause of the foot-ttnd-mouth cut- hreak in western Canada. Canada exported surplus beef to Britain under a barter deal. This year the U3. has a big surplus of domestic beef and the American price is not sufficiently attractive to the Canadian pro- ducer, However. Canada now is lutting its annual peak in beef pro- duction and heavier exports may become necessary. Price May Weaken That. may mean another slight drop in Canadian beef prices to match American prices. Beef pricPs normally are lower in the inter, "Dance in'Vernon I-fall," Thurs- day. October 1st. 4"Dance. Mermaid School, Friday. October 2nd. Fraser's Orchestra. tonight. "Dance. Grandview Burns Orchestra. "supper and Dance, st. Teresa's Hall, Monday. October 18th. ...s. "Reserve November 18th for Tryon Baptist Bazaar and Supper. "Buying timothy daily. McGuig- an 8: Boyle. "Dance in Peake's Road School. Thursday, October 1st. "Barn Dance. Eugene MoQuil- lsn'.s, Eimwood, Thursday, Ooobcr lSt'. Canteen service. "Buying young pigs. Paying market price. Pius MacDonald. Mt. Stewart. "Booking Orders for lime and coal for fall delivery. Levi Young. Esmscliffe. "Weekly Dance Winsioe Station Hall, Thursday. October lat. Doiron Bros. Orchestra. Canteen service. "Hog Grower, 01.0! per hundred. when you supply grains Moduigan st Boyle. - "P. I. 1'. Hospital Nurses Alum- nss Rummage sale. Sshsrday Oct. 3rd. at s r-. lid. Kirk Lower Hall. "Come to Shur Gsin Amateur Cavalcade stage show, in York I-lsll, Friday. October and. Sponsored by York Women's Institute. i ---Q..: "show, sdoreli Hail. Friday and Saturday. "Al Jennings of Okla- hoins.". Don't miss this action-filled picture. "see the beautiful colored slides shown by Mrs. on Mscldiilan in Wiitslilre l-fall. !'rl- dw, October 2. Also good pro- gramme. I "Farmers lsir about the litur- Gain reed rlnsnos rise. for ticulss-s mill. gt: "' m use lhur-Gain. "Unloading car choice oedsr shingles, tbli week. now prise for quick -cam sole off ear. large gratlty Asphalt shinglu on hand. odd to sell. llbone R. 1.. responsible for the increase in its domestic use" the agriculture of- coming Reported "Cheaper beef has been largely ficial said. On a p und basis. cat- tle iast year were worth about one-third more than hogs. This year they are worth about one- quarter less than hogs. The current cattle-hog price rc- lstionship', he said, is about the same as it was in the 27 years between 1914 and 1941. since then the jump in" beef prices turned more and more Canadians to pork. The current high pig prices have stalled further advances. Pork consumption in the first eight months of 1053 totalled 418,- 000,000 pounds-unchanged ' from the eightmonths of 1952, although slightly higher than the 401,000,000 1051. 0 6 Exports. however. are at near record levels. They reached 5-".- 300,000 pounds in the eight months of 1053, almost triple the l9.900.000 in 1952 and l9,800,000 in 1951. lwolliiiie Boys Die In Ice Box 1 All Later, rested, Piccsrd talked eagerly. , 'T'I "we are so havlly." he said. "do WINDSOR. Ont... (CF)-Two lit- tle bcys were found dead Wednes- day night in an ice box stored in a tumble-down shack after their frantic parents and neighbors had searched the area for more than four hours. During the afternoon-longsearch several of the adults passed near gmningqsggidl a point of end. xii P0! .a.1. v-, . ' ' - charts and d99'll""m.”"' ,m' Harold Cooney. both 4. rate of the two bionde-haired boys was similar to that of at least. 18 children who died when trap- ped inside ice boxes in the United States in the last three months. Apparently none of the searchers paid any attention Wednesday to a large. black dog, a constant coni- panion of the two 'VictilI1l and their little friends, who stood near the shed and barked constantly while the hunters scoured houses. vacant lots and alley ways. The bodies of the boys were found slumped in the bottom oom- Scieoiistiays Only Siarl - Being Made - -Two miles beneath the surface of the sea there is s grave-like calm and stygisn blackness broken phoresccnca hinting at unknown forms of life. Wednesday by Prof. Auguste Pic- ard and his son, Jacques. the greatest depth living man has the frail, ee-year-old professor said when he returned to the surface to the steel diving boat he calls a bathyscafe. searchlight greyed away in the silent abyss. ago invaded the stratosphere by flying up 10 miles in a balloon, bobbed back. to the rain-swept sur- face of the Tyrrenhain sea too ex- cited snd too tired to tell of his experiences immediately. and howled gleefully across feet of sea to correspondents in an and fifty metres!" . ' under two miles. happy-and so tired. tell you nothing now, scientifically. Not until we can study the instru- ments and the results of this test. adventure does science never has a point of be- we have not yet go1W7Is.fsr ssltht bsthyscafe is capable of going. ' and Italian navy officers: absolute. It is broken only occas- Z' (Continued on ptdh 15 C01 2), Cheese Promotion Campaign ISLAND OF PONZA, Italy. (AP) nly by ghostly fuckers of phos- Thst was the word brought back from ver reached. "There was nothing else to see," "Even our powerful sunleae darkness of the 5. The wispy scientist, who 20 years He cupped his oil-stained band: 100 tnlian corvette: "Three thousand one hundre That's 10,839 feet--only a bit "But that doesn't matter. I can "But. one thing is certain: our not and here. nalekneas is Absolute Excitedly, Piccsrd told reporters "At 3,150 metres the blackness ls For ed 55,200,000 a year. for consideration at a open here Monday. The hearings will close out months. levelling-out program, 000,000,000-a-year due alter the class basis has been . the ice box and closed psrtment of the large ice box by Edmund Prswdzik, 33. I. tenant in the house near the shed. . Prawdslk interrupted his supper to look in the shed at the request of Mrs. Munro strschan, mother of Andrew. One neighbor took one of the un- conscious children in her arms and breathed down his throat in an at- tempt to revive him. Th! boys apparently become trapped when they crawled into the door behind them. Police would not coni- meat on a. theory by some lpectgt. ors that a third child may have closed the door from the outside some expressed disbelief that the boys could close the from the inside. heavy door ---................ SYDNEY. (GP)-Abraham sher- mln. 30,-You-old Sydney merchant died in was from of a car driven by lips of Sydney. struck by a. car. He Russia Threatens A No ' Korean Peace Conference Dr MIL. summ bospitsi wednuday alter stepped behind s bus into the min Kenneth Phil-I Uzlnldilri Press IM8 Writer rrlo. iurronl. N. 1.. (GP) -Russia indicated Wednesday there will be no Korean pesos confer- ence unless the West egress to consider Communist demands for psi-tiolpetion ' by so-sailed nations iiotirni the int" um face of this pious-V" IHCIIIH ales tbstjlbe coastal . ......s'..':... 1 mar n iiiisu-sites my , ms pt, I W p . placed the quepticn . of mltillh-of the conference at the balloon of its agondap "rho sometime voted.48 to dwith five abes:t.tieas for s-ooiuntbian This Month TORONTO. (OP) - Canadians will be deluged during October with publicity designed to prove their attitude towards cheese is wrong. If the campaign is successful. it may pull Canada's cheese industry put of the doidrums. All it would take, says I. M. Bigga, dairy pro- ducts commissioner with the On- tario Department of Agriculture. is two cheese sandwiches a week on the -menu of every Canadian. The October "cheese festival," biggest since it started in 1940, will trumpet the advantages of cheese on everything from television shows to brightly-colored posters. The campaign -is sponsored by the Dairy Farmers of Canada and the National Dairy Counsel. It has been successful in .the past, boosting Canada's per cspits consumpti n from Mi pounds in 1040 to the present figure of 5.0. pounds. the Chinese Communist and North Korean demands that neutrals be invited. . Henry Cabot Lodge. older 17. s. delegate, denounced the ltiuaien threat as s "mere manoeuvre" os- Odltofrightdl the UN in in: up till matter now. s urged the Io-nation political coni- iaittee not to change its mind. After the Ill-11! debate. tile committee decided on this order for its agenda, subject. of course. to the Australian proposal: - 1. Morocco. .2..Tuniits. riim two suileois deal with eotllliieidts mime rs-snob han- oiaig of its North African o'olonial' territories. . ' Maple Leaf gardens hers Wednes- Wednssdsy that eminent employer . Thursdays. until i have For British i M iii ' ' ' uni ens w ve , - us under the nevi” its .l n ' h V tuft woa- g orrawa. (CP)-The Canadian. equalized freight The company made the claim in a brief filed with the bosrd' series of hearings on rate equalization to country-wide ses- sions under way for several The board's equalization propos- als appiy only, at this stage of its to "class" rates, the basic tolls that carry about one-fifth the country's Si.- freight traffic and on which many other tolls are based indirectly. Adjustments in other rates are settled, in line with a 1951 par- liamentary directive. The board has set next Jan. 1 as the tents- tive'date for its class-rate scale to go into effect. 0. P. R. Says New Schedule Will cut Into Revenue. Besides the CPR. the Canadian Pacific Railway said Wednesday National Railways also has taken that a scale of rates proposed by the board of a brief made public Tuelday the transport commissioners would rs-,l0V9mm9Mr0WMd COHIDIHY duce its revenues by an estimat-iths board's fisum are too low ito maintain revenues at their pre- exception to the board's scale. In said sent levels. Both companies submitted al- Iernstive proposals for class rate scales. The Canadian agreeing that "desirabler objective", should take into account tical realities." Under the by the board, the might be that competition in eastern Canada, where rates would be pushed up to compen- sste for western reductions, might block the flow of some class-rate rail traffic. "This." said the CPR, "would preveni:.tii'e railway from fully recovering in eastern Canada the loss of revenue that would be sustained on class-rate traffic in Western Canada." . Pacific. while equalization is I said "prac- formuln laid down CPR said, it Unions Gail Tune. At Labor Party conference MARGATE, England. (GP)-Brib aln's Labor party. juggling gin- gerly with the hot potato of na- tionallzatlon. Wednesday defeated left-wing proposals which would in- volve taking liver a wide range of industries. . In what was genneraiiy regarded as a victory, for the big trade unions vovcr Laborfsj... rass- (ll- hesvlly against committing itself to a series or specific new sugges- tions for public ownership. The vote was the first major one taken at the conference. now in its third day. Outspoken Criticism The most outspoken attack against the enthusiasts for nation- alization came from stocky Arthur Deakln, boss of the Transport and General Workers Union. Deakin angrily described a proposed plan for. naiionsllning sections of the en- gineering industry Is "the worst abortion ever conceived in the mind of man." - Deakin urged the party not to take any action on the broad is- sues of public ownership that might divide it from the Trades Union Oongress, represtzitlng 8,000,000 workers. Delegates heckled him vigorously but the bluff union leader, who has weathered many political storm. ignored the din. The first major vote was on a proposal by the Foundry Workers Union to take over large sections Beer Terrific: Circus Poirons TORONTO, lat).-A bear terri- fied hundreds of circa patrons at day. It escaped from the arena ring and cavorted among tlld ring- side seats until it was recaptured. ..1.1....Ij-1-z-... i Nhd. Civil Servants On Five-Day Woolf 512' J01-lN'B. 'Nild.. (OP)--New foundiand's civil ssrvqllts - will wglka five-day week from now,on. emier sitnsllwoqd .. i t provincial igu- . -1 Illi- s.so pm. Mondays grough pin; Hide! "rd qturcays off.. Hitherto the! work six days I week. . cumin 'mm s c til vroaoars. -,Iri trodueed in the Log is is ill be mine .23 4 all types or liquor 4, of the engineering industry with the big unions casting their block votes the other way. The resolution was defeated by 4.409.000 to 1.707,- ooo, a majority of more than two to one. Five other similar suggestions dealing with the armaments in- indu. mining Vmscliinery, a . 7'. r ' i by lmnjorlties ranging upward from two to site. Consider. Land The afternoon session was de- voted to speeches for and against including the nationalization or rented land in Labor's futuio elec- tion program. This. -too. was de- feated-by 4,301,000 votes against 1.704.000-with former Agriculture Mlnister.'1bm Williams leading those opposed to the suggestion. Several delegates spoke passion- ately for state control of land. a project known to bar cherished by Aneurln Nye Bevan. The defeat of the various plans for specific nationalization means that the party executive, backed by the big unions, has won another round in a continuing battle against party groups clsmmerlng for a more full-blooded socialist program. It leaves intact the of- ficial stand on nationalization em- bodied in the party document. "Challenge to Britain." now being debated. The manifesto favors the dustryuair engines and air frames i i veryiiody R Like the Dew . , 1 New Plaiisfor Defence Ilnder Consideration WASHINGTON. (AP) -- Pres- ident nisenhower says he will give the American people a frank state- ment of what must be done as soon as he has evaluated the threat poised by Russia's mastry of the hydrogen bomb. The president ruled out war as any but a last-ditch solution of East-west differences. The United states. he said am- phatically Wednesday. does not want war. The only possible tragedy greater than winning an atomic war would be losing it, he said. Eisenhower spoke .out at his press conference in discussing the potential impact of Russia's. H- bomb on us. defence plans and global tensions. Utmost Importance Termini! the Russian l-I-bomb de- velopment a physical fact of the utmost importance to the world, the president said that more than ever it heightens the urgency of determining the Krvmlin's true in- tentions toward the West. It is more important now than ever, he said. to find out whether Russia will honestly try to reach an agreement on peace with the free world. Then. plainly alluding to Soviet charges which have hand some echoes in Western Europe. Eisen- hower said it is not true that the us. is pungnacious or has lost all faith in the conference table. He said the state department is studying how the U.S. can take ad- vantage of any opportunity to dis- cuss worid problems in it friendly and understanding fashion with Rusla. Direct Approach? The president's statement i-piped high-level approach to the Russ- inns-possibly even a Big Four con ference with prime Pinister Churchill. Prime Minlsur Malen- kov and 1':-ance's Premier Lsniei. Ominous Sdeiice in Kidnapping , KANSAS CITY, (AP)-An omln. ous silence closed in Wednesday night about the fate pf six-year- old Bobby Greenieske whose wealthy parents waited in the seclusion of their fashionable home for his kidnappers to make a ransom move. The trail of the son of Robert C. Greenlesse, multl-millionaire automobile dealer led novihere two days after his abduction from here by a woman who passed her- self off as his aunt. Police maintained a hands-off attitude. But they indicated they broad principle of public owner- ship but is wary of details. Two British LONDON. (CF)-Two British warships crippled themselves by colliding in the darkness of the North Atlantic early Wednesday during naval exercises testing the free world's sea defences. Thirty-two, ssiiors aboard the 0,000-ton cruiser swlitsurs were injured. The swlrtsure suffered extensive damage on the star- board side around the bridge siructurylome ammunition was exploded, I dispatch from the sum. said. and fire broke out, his was. is cltly- extinguished. p a,oi..hs ,vessel was the” 2.010- ttaveeu r Diamond, the first vIIrlIlp' Id to the Royal Navy un er the-Queen. The Diamond stiff ' e forward. but no vspoel her personnel. M Ittlck Allied that NATO ex- Crippled In i had reason to believe the boy still" wss alive. Warships Collision ' rasions. - Ironically, an official communi- qua issued several hours after the crash announced that 'tho Bwiftsure had been proclaimed "sunk" after receiving direct "hits" from the battleship Van- guard. Summing Up Results Meanwhile, defence chiefs be- gan summing up the first results of the three-stage NATO man- oeuvre operating on land, sea and in the air from Norway in north- west Europe to Greece in the southeast. . First clieckdtf came from the air exercise "l-leads Up"-ending Wednesday-in which soc planes of five countries including Can- ads cissheI- over Norway and Denmark. The air chiefs expect to issue I critique on "Heads Up” today. - . att.iitt:.c.rtei.tite:;W..”a' its a private Roman Catholic school be le wiso,fiies with the crows will MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN 1...: sbot with the crown. 16 races - The Guardian. rive cents nlornlng Daily funded 188'). HREATB in East Coast By Arthur Everett NEW YORK. (AP) - President Eisenhower hinted Wednesday he may invoke the Taft-Hartley law against a costly east coast dock strike set for midnight Wednesday night. The law provides an 80-day cool- ing-off period. However. there was some ques- tion whether the government could gst s Taft-Hartley injunction through the courts in the few re- maining hours before the strike deadline. Strike leaders have said they will abide by an injunction. if one is issued. Shortly after noon. the Interna- tional Longshcremen's Association announced that wage contract talks still were deadlocked. The old contract expires at midnight. "The strike is on." said Patrick J. Connolly, the union's executive vice-president. Every Port. To Close "Every part from Portland. Me. to Hampton Roads. Va. will be shut down at midnight tonight." Tugbcst men were expected to back up striking longshoremen and further cripple New York harbor. Canadians In OTTAWA, (CP)-Gsiiantry in action and plain hard work under trying conditions today won awards for Ell Canadians in the Korean war. A nursing sister is one of the winners: .Ci,tAtl9M . store . Ina. lb ids:-gfineiu rili-Frill Millfllr; ' rdeseit acduhree Military Med- als. referred to such operations as mine-clearing, wire-laying, patrol work and artillery spotting in me front line, and to efficient organ- ization work and morale-building. behind the lines. Besides the Military Crosses and Medals, the awards include one Officer of the Orddr of the British Empire (ORE). one Royal Red Cross. 17 Members of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) and five British Empire Medals. - Canadians in Korea now have won 186 operational awards; one Companion of the 0rd r of the Bath; three Companion of the Order of the British Empire; 14 OBE; six Distinguished Service Orders; one bar to the D50; 62 MBE; one Royal Red Cross; 28 Military Crosses; one Associate of the Royal Red Cross: seven Dis- tingulshed Conduct Medals; one bar to the DCM; one George Medal: 51 Military Mgdals; and 10 BEM. In addition, Canadians have won six United States awards. including two Legion of Merit and four Air Medals. Highest Honor Highest honor in today's list goes to Lt.-Col. Edward Amy, D50. MC. Royal Canadian Arm- cred Corps. of Kentvlllo, N. S.. and Edmonton. He wins the 0131': for services as general staff of- ficer with 1st Commonwealth 'Division headquarters. Col. Amy. 35-year-old native of Newcastle. N.B., won the Military Cross while serving with the Cal- itary Tank Regiment in Italy ooiTEiFu?a on P-age 15 coTa-- Recotd Retail” Sales Reported OTTAWA. (OP) -Canadian re- tailers rang up a record of 38,135,- soo,ooo in cash and credit. sales in the second quarter. of lids. About one-third of the buying was on the cuff. Cash sales in the three months or April-June rose 4.1 per cent; the bureau of statistics re- ported. instalment buying jumped 'I.d per cent. e Says Republican, Govlt Spffers From Paralysis IIONIRIAL,-EB-Albgu In-k. minimum wage rights. icy, fornil vise-president of: the " um" nu” . W -flerkley said the at.i.swrsnco sea- Deeilng with the relations be- tween Census and the U. 8.. Mr. way is esenttal to the economy of bcuclsusoo and the value liatas ,. - be do at, once. .rto- with I while the ill program -I. 1. - .which included all Ltna Ten-nastier. isw . nininun wine sales. May Invoke Taft-Hartley Law Do-ck -Strilre ' A 1051 wildcat strike of tn'E'.'.sms union lasted 25 days. tied up Si.- ooo.ooo,ooo worth of cargo and cost the port.of New York alone 340,- 000.00 in losses. A new strike is expected to cost 51,500,000 a day and-if prolonged- to affect. 800,000 persons in New York alone whose jobs depend in whole or part on the shipping in- dustry. . 12 Cities Involved The new strike is Mined at 13 eastern seaboard cities-New York; Portland; Boston; Providence, R.1.; New London. New Haven and Bridgeport. 'Conn.: Wilmington, Del.: Philadelphia and Chester, Ps.: Baltimore, Md.; and Hampton Roads. This time the ILA is without the support of the AFL. which kicked the union out last week for racketeering. ' The strikers also face a revolt within their ranks of longshoremen pledged to s. new dock union. chartered by the AFL to replace the-ILA. Three ILA locals with more than 2,000 members so far have bolted to the new organiza- tion, which bears the same name as the old. Awards Announced To 31 Korean War One Man Killed. In Toronto Cove-in Toaoum. (OP)-One man died ' and snothosr was injured Wednes- siey-wlicn-v;-tiurwers:-2-iburied-ifnrlt-ti" l is minutes by s cave-in at a sub- urban oonstruction. project. Jim Mitchell, 37, was dead when res- cuers reached him. His companion Les Wilson. 30. was taken to hos- pitai. TORONTO. (CP) - Minimum and m in temperatures: Dawson .... - .'ll.' Victoria ...... 51 56 Edmonton ...................... 27 50 Calgary ........................... 32 60 Regina ..................... 24 in Winnipeg ..................... 41. 62 Toronto .. . 54- 71 Ottawa 43 '18 Montreal .. 45 73 Quebec 39 80 Saint John . .14 5.1 Moncton g 30 -'54 Charlottetown 37 32 Halifax .. 36 54 Sydney 40 50 Yarmouth . ....... 37 '5.'i st. John's. Nfld. ......--.. 30 ell irsursx, (CP) -The irsimx ' weather Office says showers are spreading across the district frm the west and have-been repor from widely scattered localities as far out as Charlottetown. g Clearing weather is for-cast for Thursday in most regions follow- ingthe passage of the showers. inegionsi forecasts: Prince Edward Island: Cloudy, widely scattered showers oldies about noon. clearing in the after- noon: Idols warnieri south wind: is shifting about noon to west is. low liigis at Charlottetown is sad 0!. l lissiern NJ. I counties: cloudy. widely scattered showers endlnl Thursday morning. clearing in the afternoon; much warmer: south winds is shifting Thursday morn- Ing to west is; low-high st Mone- ton 50 and Oil. el. John river valley. Bay at chaieuq: sunny and inner wa.rmer;,west winds 19: low-hlgl-. at Fredericton and saint John M and de, ldmundston and Camp- beliton is and as, 0 tide tolls! st cbarlottetowi st 3. A. M. - shore. i V Iisn rises today at e.llyAc- ' sets at 0.50 P. M. . -