- MAXIMS OF! A ' I MERE MAN: jg...- '1'cil the truth. and so panic and confound your adversaries. ” I la r.E.l. 00.00. other Provinces and U.!.A. 513.00 our annual. . Oiuriottotown, luimsrsfds 010.00 per snsuua. lluwluu i y Everybody . scorer. Prince Edam Island iii; the new . S CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. MONDAY. NOVEMBER 9, 1953 . MAXIMS. oars MERE MAN um-n , r where there is no oonndcnce. than can be no boncgtry. The Guardian. Five cents Morning Daily E-'onnded 1807. 14 PAGES NEW FIRE OUTBREAK IN G. M. TRAN ISSION PLANT I3 Deaths In Surprise Snovosi:orm In The S. Explanations A Great. Moral Victory For The il.N. psullxlullgglld, Irrflgorllirlinlied Has New Worry .- Natlons has won its greatest moral LONDON. (Reuters) - Detect- victory in Korea since it took up the Communist armed challenge ives and government officials re- sponsible for royal security have in months ago. The victory was the smashing Communists last a new worry-Princess Margaret has decided to go out walking with defeat of the week in the prisoner-of-war ex- planations before the eyes of the three truly neutra1 nations serv- ing in Korea--Sweden, Switzerland and India, her dos, There were many heroes in the The PlFll'lCeIl took I Walk Friday battle. St. James' park. Just across the road from Buckingham Palace. In doing so. she broke an unwrit- ten rule that senior members of the Royal Family do not walk be- yond the walls of the palace, The gossip columnists say Mar- garet complained to t-he Queen that this rule was out of date. The Queen gave her permission to break it. Now Margaret plans more ex- peditions with her dog. And Scot- land Yard and the home office will . ” have to work out new security pra- cautions .- iiueen leads In Services For War Dead y y LONDON, (Reuters)-The Queen, "Damn m Vernon Hm, .rhu”,;n spray of blood red remembrance d'y' November mm I.I))I)RptEI)(1e::08.0tn lt:iwthseho(I:ltl)'lirIrxl1on(Nca1Iteil in onrlnem ation observances to the dead of two world wars Sun- day. She stood with bowed hcad be- fore the .whltc marble ccnotsph. , C , national shrine to the fallen. as am: mm annwuury sue Britons-rwobsyerved the traditional -now.-onrucaulgan and Boyle. gmygllgglqislzeggikfrom the first consul”. Dmcey Bomhgw nm. The short. moving ceremony in mm Xililiiiill iihiilit l2l:..:li'””'l2 orch"""' takes place every year on the gun- day nearest Nov. 11. official Ann- Among them were the disillus- ioned, vengeful. resolute little Chinese and Korean soddiers who marched into the intervtrw tents after three years of captivity and voted 97 per cent to spurn home if. it meant Communism. The others were the United Na- tions fighters who suffered and died during an extra year of war tn buy them the right to reject their Red masters. Ruthless And Cynical Powerful Allies in the stnlggle were the Swiss, the Swedish and the Indian neutrals. who showed up the Communist drive as a ruth- less, cynical and utterly heartless power play for the possession of (Continued on page 5, col. 4) Coming Events "Card party, Dunstaffqsge school, Monday, Nov. 9. "Weekly dance in Vernon River hall, Tuesday, Nov. 10. "Dance, Tuesday, St. Andrew's .t, D Ham ML stews” Bumsl. or. m'l'cllee Datllfe of Edinburgh and the """”' Duke" of Gloucester stood behind -usomh Rum” hm chicken the sovereign. Queen Mother Eliz- dlmm. and hm,” wednudgyuabeth and Princess Margaret wat- Novy 13. iched from the balcony of a nearby ..a.. government office. , ..D,mw Rh," New "hoo1' Close to the Queen during the. Tuesday, Nov. lotii. Turner's 0r- 99-'9m9nY W88 B xrollp of disabled chest”. , . veterans, some standing with the ...n. aid of sticks or crutches, others in socodlygunloadlna cu Mondgy wheel chairs. Detachments of the Md -muggy. 0” treated Acgdlgn three armed services surrounded nut. Court 64 son. Bedford. the memorml. "P t isi sl '-sea silufllyfy Noiellioelmilllf at; Moggadggh Eons Haven W. I. on ' Trial For Life "Masquerade, Dance, Stanhope- covehead l-lall, Wednesday. Nov- ember ilth. Prizes. 'mH'RAN. Iron, (A-P) -Weeping ..... and railing at Britain, pajama- ”Chlcksn Supper and Bazaar oisd Mohammad Mossadegh went in Fredericton Hall, Nov. 11th. on ill-ial Sunday for his life. He is starting at 5.00 p.m., in aid of accused of defying the shah, thy- Christian church, ing to overthrow the monarchy. and illegally dimolving Parlia- "Ecmernbrance Day services will ment. be held at Belfast Church Wed'- The wine '73-you-old ousted nesdny, Nov. 11 at 11 's.m., and premier wore grey woolen Pyiamss lonafat 2:30. All veterans please and A grey bat-limbo as he entered .ltimd,. the courtroom in mirror hail of ...m saltcnatsbad Bsrmcks near Teh- ”Fenner's regular barn dance PAIL Momidach M510"! 139”! Bill'- Tuesriay, Nov. 10. Bus leaving I. leflllif from 1 H5110? IHIIIOM. and '.u. T. 9:30 p.m. Door and bus he fredumtlv named for breath prizes. ' and was near collapse as he faced , C... a five-man amiy court martial. "All star shur-lGain Cavalcade In contrast was his co-defendant, North Rustioo Wednesday, Nov. 25 Gen. Tagbi Riahi, Mossadegfrs It 8 o'clock. Send entries to Mrs. former chief of staff, who was Slanley Doucette before November natty in black civilian clothes. .'l.rt. Despite his apparent weakness, the emotional Mossadegh vigor- "A Memorial aervloe will be ousiy challenged the authority of held at the Cenotaph at Kingston the court to try him and rang new on Sunday. November nth, st 2 charges on his old pot hate, Brit- P. M. All veterans are requested to sin. He never doioned 7-0 mention be present. the Britim by name, using, in- i stead his favorite phrase "Annual Meeting Summerflcld rlvll-" Credit Union. in sumnjlerneld Hall. Tuesday. November 10th. I P. M. Silecisl speaker. served. "our ”Kinkors Hall. fiddling, step dancing and singing contest. No- gemgaer st: Mcuh In out as to rs. S: n I '-w" J h B SIDNEY WEILAND O "'""." ”'""” m' y (mourn)-mommy; - lion ltuuian workers pond CnoW0. need o. large quanti.t.yd of mm.” mod mmml Maw,” AH; Md scum aeturdsy so Premier Wvinl iivc fowl. Buying I unui ill-I09-NV WWO4 "N '0"- 12.11,, 1,, mcuuon. N" ghugw. lijit of the Bolahsvik revolution "Shur-Gain Amateur Cavalcade. '”"” '”PI”' Mill - , In marked contrast to the pre- s "" 3”" N"'""”'' m” oision or the 20-minute mulury parade which led the procession. the civilian marchers urged in- somu the square. all down on the new-is Soviet Union Celebrates . Revolution - Anniversary" High nits, Flood Tides , Are Reported NEW YORK, (AP)-A surprise pre-winter snowstorm combined with jet winds and raging flood tides created havoc in the north- eastern United States Friday night and Saturday and cost at least 13 lives. Tides climbing five to six feet above normal high - water levels forced evacuations of thousands of families on the New York, New Jersey and New England coasts to in her ground, avcs 20 feet high crashed Eizalnst the New England coast. Winds of 00 to 70 miles an hour whipped the area. with gusts of 105 miles an hour recorded by the weather station on top of New Hampshire's Mt Washington. several summer lloimes were washed into the Atlantic ocean at Long Branch, N. J, - The storm halted train. subway, airplane and ferrybost service in much of.the New York metropol- itan area. Laguardia airport, threatened with flood for a time by waves pounding against a l3- foot dike, cancelled 08 flights. Calls For Help Fallen Wlil8!l01ii7 off electricity ;tn about 50,000 homes on Long its- 'land, leaving those with electric- ally-operaied oil burners without heat for much of the day. Six thou- sand phones were out in New Jer- tey. Hundreds of automobiles, some with women and children, were trapped overnight in snow and ice on Highway 17 north of Tuxedo Park, NY. Police with -bulldozers from a nearby construction project broke through to, them, Saturday. At iawst' five fishing vessels, three off New England and two off New Jerseyhcaugllt in the storm. radioed appeals for help. Coast Guard boats went to their aid. A number of small vessels were driven ashore, The ferryboat Gay Head wont aground in the Thames river at New-London, Conn. Waves hurled two fishing boats and a gasoline boat ashore at Provincetown. Mass. and broke them up. A 65- foothyswl was tossed on rocks at New Castle, NH. 0 AFTER FOUR. YEARS TIMMINS, (CP) - For four years Joseph Blruij worked.to save enough money to bring his wife and four children to Canada from Yugoslavia. The 48-year-old lum- ber mill worker was found hanged Friday in his home. Police term- ed his death a. suicide. They found letters from his wife which said the Tito government has refused to grant visas for his family to Intensify Search For Missing Ransom Money tigation and police refused to com- ment on the reports but police sources have saidthey are check- ing out all rumors that arise in the case. ST. LOUIS. (AP)- The search for the missing 8303.720 ransom money in the Bobby Greenlease kidnap-slaying case was stepped up Saturday night with reports it was sold by the underworld. The Globe-Democrat reported one unverified report was that the money was taken to Chicago and sold by professional "fences" for and telephone operators who were at the police station when confess- ed kidnap-slayer Carl Hall was brought in also are being reinter- viewed by FBI agents in an effort 30 to 50 cents on the dollar. to ring new lead,-; to the missing Another report said the missing ransom, money had been bought by a syn- Robert c. Greenlease. Bobby's dicaic to be held on a long-term wealthy father, paid the kidnap. basis before being put into circula- tion. This report indicated the money might not be seen for a period of 10 years. The federal Bureau ers 5500.000 in ransom but when Hall's suitcases were opened at the station only 5293000 was found. Hall said he spent 33,200. The rest of Inves- of the money is missing. Several Islanders Returning With Battalion From Qermany QUEBEC. (CP)-The liner Sam. o aria, due here today with 34 of- . . flccrs and 821. soldiers of the 27th I Canadian Infantry Brigade station- . . , To Prisoners I ...m.m. cd in Germany, has been delayed by all Atlantic storm and now is awaited early Tuesday morning. Those coming back belong to the Brigades First Battalion and will be stationed at nearby Val- By JOHN RANDOLPH Cafllef Camil- PANMUNJOM, (AP)-'Iihe Indian command. acting swiftly under a new get-tough policy toward the COm.illi.lnI5'l.S, Sunday night cancel- led today's explanations to anti- Communist Chinese in a showdown over what prisoners should be in- terviewed. ..A,i1r.0tmt.from the Reds was expected. when the full Neutral Nations Repatriation Commission meets. The NNRC also was to consider a petition from an 11-man com- mittee purporting to represent 22 Americans, one Briton and 332 The troops embarked from Rot- terdam last Monday aboard the RMS ”Samarla". Commanding the homecomlng draft is Lt.-Col. G. M. C. Sprung, MC, 40, of Ottawa, who has commanded the battalion for the past year in Germany. Upon arrival at Quebec City. the troops will be processed and immediately board trains carrying them to their homes for rotation leave. Troops in the draft repre- sent every Province in the coun- try. After leave, the battalion will concentrate at Camp Pet- awawa and will be re-designated South Koreans whom the Redsssy "5 ” comwnmt ”f the ""13" refuse repatriation. The petitioners gzzmed Ca"”d'”" Guards Reg” asked that incoming letters and periodicals be censored because the man allegedly was being used to "intimidate, coerce. slander and bribe" the prisoners into going home. Meanwhile, Allied and Conund- nist negotiators start their third week of euorts to tie arrange- ments for corwen-i ,.the overdue Korean peace conf ence. staff ad-visers were meeting in secret sessions to fix an agenda on the time; place and composition of the conference. The following troops are listed as coming from Prince Edward Island: Pie. N. A. Carpenter. Rollo Bay: Cpl. P. D. Cheverle, Spuris East: lCpl. E. 6. Craig, Kensington; Pie. W. J. Dalton, Fort Augustus: Lance Cpl. J. A. Doucetie. South Rustlco; Pie. G. E. Fraser, Fort Augustus: Pto. L. S. Hemphill, Georgetown: Pic. L. E. Logan. Johnson's River; and Cpl. P. D. McLean, Sourls River. Contrary toireports that de- pendent: of soldiers will be arriv- ing next Monday on the same ship, Army officials say that Ger- man girls who married Canadians CHILI) DROWNED ST, PIE DE BAGOT, Qua. (CF) Gilles Bcaudry, 8, of this Eastern Township village, was drowned Saturday in an excavation when a later date. - The two other infantry tolions of the 27th Brigade are come to Canada. lee he was Walking on gave way. due to sail for home later By The Canadian Press Winter moved in on Canada and the U. S. this weekend with icy winds and snowsiorms that snarled up traffic and played havoc with some air line services. Airplane engine heaters were used to warm up football players during a week-end game in Ed- monton. The itemperature was 26 degrees and s 15-mile-an-hour wind raked the gridiron. wintry winds blew in liasiem Canada. as well. A snowstorm and gave Ontario ,cnd Quebec enough snow to tie up road trans- port. The storm brought rain to -..m........................... burial Nikolai Buiglnin. Soviet defence minister, reviewed the rmuod troops and then opened the ceremony with o. is-minute speech in which he strsnsd the sovornmentb drive to intreass output of food and consumer goods gr. the home front; and accused western powers of blocking the road to peace. 1100 featured the khaki, Pllulc gray and blue-clad uvo lie!) detschaun -Willi rcnrobn from the top cl fmiinu . wodaoiiiar. um wmm may later mom. Pl-olden: vowin- iiov, min lnlnicbov. secre- hry of the Oonriiunirt party. and other 35 IOIGQPI. Winteryweatiier in Much Of tianada Over Week-end I the Atlantic provinces. noted the 1st Battalion. The Black (Continued on page 5, col. 6) Two Women. A Canadia ress survey showed , . Two Children forecasters expect cool cloudy . :r.:”tl:'u'..”.l ”l;l.5?i.”.J2;”.ll."ilJiI-05" In Fire in most sections Monday. I -a- However, th'e only really cold! weather is in the far north. snag TORONTO. (C?) ”TW0 ll'0ll'l91l in the yulmn rgported Sundgy ligand two small children were overnight low was 30 degrees below bllrned l-0 465111 Saturday nlsht zero, while Dawson had 19 below. when fire destroyed their three- In Ontario Sunday temperaiui-es,storey frame home in east-central hovered a few degrees above Toronto. freezing and were expected to be Twenl-3'-six other Deraom. all re- swirled in from the United states close to freezing overnight. Rising iated to the victims. escaped TWO were injured. Burned to death were Mrs. Tel- kzi Rlveny, Mrs. Mary Guuia. 30, a daughter. and Mrs. Guzda's two 1. In .' In" izshildrcn, Sonjis, 4. and Nicholas. F, , un mom I S L, In-jured were Mrs. N. i-iubnski, u.a.;"c'3'mli s. numbzlifutfl. mlrlor '"l0”l" dllllihlr" 0i M"- mlfmy accidents. Quebec City's week-end "id M” 39"” R5V9"Y- 39 3 was cloudy and cold and forccsst- d5Wm”'rI"'”'W- 30”" 7'9” "TM 1 d for cuts on their hands and lore- ed run or Wow sun ly arms sunered when they smashed ' Winnipeg had cloud weather WWW” WW1 '-MIT Mild! 111 lll during the week-end but no snow. 930” W lid l-hdf "With - temperatures Monday are expected to melt the last of the two to eight inches of snow that fell sat- urdsy. While the last coast but Sun- day temperatures in the high Boo and low 40:, tile west Coast report- ed with rhdings in the relatively balmy-in the lion. 35310” "- 3- K0?)-'1-IV!-Ill Forecasts said the wintry spell Richard. 30. of ftichibuoto Cope. in the East appeared to have was killed Sunday ni ht when A reached its peak by. Sunday night cur broke throush - rldoe suard urea. The driver. Alyro Leblanc. also Interior British Columbia sum of Richibucto 0190. survived. Pas- day reported an overnight low of sing motorists hauled both men 10 degrees. sero at Teie- from the car but iticbcrd could Desk sergeants, patxolmen. clerks; while they were serving in Eu-I . , , rope Wm arrive in the Country at received for the Zoih Roiol Agri- Operaiions Had l Just iiesumed After Aug;Fire DETROIT, (AP)--Fire struck Sunday night at General Motors" automatic transmission dlvisiml at Willow Run, where it was moved only a few weeks ago after a mul- ti-million dollar nre levelled CvM's Livonia transmission plant. Within an hour after first re- ports, plant protection man told state police the blaze had been brought under control. State police said they had re- ports, however, that "some per- sons" were injured. Tile plant is some 30 miles west of Detroit. General Motors leased a large area of the Willow Run plant and production of its hydranlotlc trails- missions. Estimates of loss from the Liv- onia fire Aug. 12 ranged from 530,000,000 to 360,000,000. Only a. few days ago GM an- nounced that transmissions were coming off the Willow Run as- sembly line. Russian”Wuiel Dies In Pjris PARIS, (AP)-Ivan Bunln, 83- year-old Russian writer who won the Nobel prize for literature in 1933, died of a heart attack Silt- urday nlght. Bunln took up ii life of exile in Paris during the Russian revolution. Bunin received the Nobel award -for the ensemble of his writings. His .works include ”Thc Village", "The Brotllers", "The Gentleman from San Francisco", and "Tile Grammar of Love." Fire iiesiroys Smaiiiiig Station SAINT JOHN, N.B., (CF)-Fire destroyed the small Canadian Na- tional Railways station at. Ham- mond River, is miles from Saint John. and left three persons imme- less Saturday night. Apparently ro- sultinr: from a furnace explosion, the fire started while the station agent, Mrs. Ralph Moore, her hus- band and son were visiting Saint John. The loss included a freight shed and was estimated at b5.0fl0 More. Than 12,000 livestock Entries Al Royal Fair TORONTO, (OP) - More than 13,000 livestock entries have been cultural Winter Fair which opens hag. here Friday. Agriculture Minis t e r Fletcher this Thomas of Ontario will open the month. They are the 1st Cans-yelifl”-t-day Show- dian Highland Battalion, rc-riosiir-I Some l,000 horses will take part in the fairs horse show, one of the fslr's top features. Tliere will also be a two-day dog slhoiv. Square dance contests continue throughout the eight days and more than 1.000 Canadian Girl Guides will gatller on opening night to be inspected by Lad5' Srrathcden. world Guide leader. The poultry show, the largest on tile continent, dominates farm ex- hibitions. Fbrult. vegetables, hay and seed grain entries make up a lcollsidcrable portion of the show. Total Canrldizin and United States cattle cnirir-s reached 2,775 when entries closed. KINGSTON. Ont.. (Ci?)-R. L. Way, director of historic Fort Henry. reported 152.000 people uls- ited the tourist attraction since last May 24, an increase of about 26,000 over last year. The old fort was reopened to tourists in 1948. rushed machfmery there to resumel Aldershot camp Under Striotfiuard Following Fires KENTVILLE, N. S.. 'CP)- AHI officer's mess and theatre on I (2,000-acl'c ramp Aldcrsllot were, . dz-3iro,icri in S('piiTLilP fires Satur- day. I-llremrn said it looked-likclln yarson or sabotage. I I Dzinlngc was PSllnlEliD(I at S2330.-, TT” 000 by army officials. l MINTO, N.B.. (CP)- A Mlnto l The ramp has hrr-ll PI7it'!?fI lln- rcslrient, Alanzo Lnvlxzne, was ,rInr slrivt, llriiliary gilnrd llIllIf,'Ir0lll?lllfI0l'l S.1tLIrdH.V lllll” TW"5dl1.V iRCMP (and special investigator: UH 11 PIIHFLIE Of lllftllklnk and on- 'search for clues and n man vvllottrring after he was found asleep was reported the Mlnl” seen fleeing from early Saturday in ' New Brunswick the arm, I:-'tore of the About 500 members nf the Liquor Control Board- IBlnr'k Vl"niCh Regiment were! The hack (M97 W35 0P?" and ,trainlng at Aldershot. but noncjsnnlc stock was reported missing. lwcre in the officers mess v.'he:l'IC3hll'EIll(T' had bccn m8d8 DY um broke out Saturday nlarningihlrfiils of a ladder to a roar will- Ior in the theatre 14 hours later. (low. TWO P0750115 were bG”9V9d It was the second fire in iiu-.,1o have committed the break. Imess lli little more than ii ,voar,lI.evigne had a blimp on his head. sin. pausad about 540,000 daynago lilrzugiil la have been caused .in June, 1952. There was no im- either by a blow or a tall. II'iif”3I.?.?f.”2”l I.'i?.'.” l1ifi.?C.3.",.:L".i "' . . Igrrss of their investigation. V Board of Inquiry o s . Army officials would neither confirm or deny whether a manf from PEI Breeders was seen running away from the camp after the theatre burst in- to flames. , . ' I h , . The) did say' however t at Flor the first time inyflve years there was no possibility that ihel , , S,,,.,md Maze could have hwnitillis Province will not be repre- caused by embers from the first. 59m"3d "1 the R03'al wmtuf Fair iTll9rQ was virtually no wind and T9” and BTe,l'h0l" nvpmes 1”" Vlt rained all day. "Vine mmpemdon , The Black Watch, in Germany Th? 7585C": .WC0l'd1-118 W ML 3- 'fnr two years and which trained W- C1355 58319? Llvesmck Mala? with the Second Canadian High- man in W9 Fade”-I D993-”'mem' 0! ilaml Battalion, is scheduled in Agriculture. is the lack 01 toll arrive at the camp from Ger- grade hogs this year. many Dec. i. In the previous four years of A military board of inquiry has competition island-type Yorkshlres been set. up, and the army said took the Todd Trophy twice and the defence deparimt-nt's fire the Brethour three times. In ad- mnrsh.-il is en route here from dition last year local breeders Ottawa. made almost a complete sweep of Tile fires were out of i'nntrolthea1a.tter competition when they, when the camp's fire department captured the first 11 places, rear-iinrl the scene each time. The Late 13,5; year the hog mum-,3 RCMP was investigating the carl- dropped and many breeders den lr-r blaze when the alarm was aided, Mung, advice age;-ed, up sounded for the other. dgsposc of their sgwk ,vu-yd" cease -operations. This was believed due to the prevailing high. price on potatoes at the time and the be-4 lief that this product would pro- vide s heavy source of revenue this year as well. However. mark- ets for potatoes slpmped greatly, and the anticipated income is not being" received. - U. S. Iirldng French Continue indo-China War By RUSSELL BIRINES HONG KONG. (AP)-The United States has begun a campaign to persuade the French to continue figiitiilg the war in Indo-China. Vice - President Richard Nixon carried thv fight. into the open last week in Indo-China with a series of puplic statements designed to chill rresvll demands in Paris for 'i a. norzntiatrd truce. Fr-onl the American viewpoint. the biggest single problem in Asia. now is to keep the long-growing French disillusionment with the -ivnr, now in its seventh year. from llending to an indefinite, Korean- ty pe truce. , Alnerican officials in Indo-China .r.ny an armistice without victory inevitably would allow the Chi- lulinists to capture all three as- sociatcrl states by political means. This they believe, would expose all of the rich and vital southeast Asia to ll Red till-rat trilni. 48.000 Front-ii and Allied troops have died , to prevent. - ..a-.m.- . i ;Coupie Kiliedlln Highway Smash NORTH BAY, t'lnt., (CID) KILLED ON STREET SAINT JOHN, N.B.. (GP)-Doug: ias Rowe, 33. of nearby Eastmoune, was killed Saturday night when he ran in front of a car driven by Frank Jones of Saint John. Nq inquest will be held. , MULES ihiiil; . ACTS iARE;'f. Q t STUBBORH at I . it'll-its n A TORONTO. (CF)-Minimum and - A-maximum temperatures: Buries Dead Sober, Silent Trieste ,,xnilll:: mnrrlml couple vius killr-til Min. Mai lullrli lilrlr our wont nlli of ("fill-lDnws()n ,, my, 121, ltrnl on It Slihlly hlgilvrily and ivasivj;-y,m-M a7 53 nlllilllcii iw nil nnrnmillgz cnr. J-jrlmcmt-on 23 35 The victims were Mr. and Mliolcalg,-H-y 34 so Hinnivs l-lands, boili 2-1, of Slit'II1illXVURpglnn, 25 19 Driver of the other car, l(nn- Tm-onto 30 33 nrtli C. Gray, 55. nlmmger of the ougwg, 33 33 S,vlvnnito mines at Kirkland Lake Montreal 34 44 land :1 passrnger. George Apoizer. Quebec City . 34 40 inisn of Kirkland l.:lko, escapcti 5;. John H 30 53 with bruises and shark. Mom-inn 37 53 Halifax , . .. 46 56 Charlottetown 37 53 Sydney . iii 51 Yarmollth 43 M John's 10 46 s;NAIJIFAx, (OP)- The -Danlnidn Public Weltht office here uysn dead rloters Sunrlay. marched behind the hesrses as the funeral cortegc filed through the hushed city. More than 100.- 000 lined the streets watching the procession. Street "lights were draped with black crepe. The Allied military government. had feared the massive and smot- ionai gathering might bring trouble. There was none. 'When the procession reached the edge of the city and tile he-arses turned alone up the hill where the dead were to he hur- led, the great throng quietly dis- persed. this port city. one civil policeman soon on the streets. trnl, guided the traffic. The police involved in ed. and Triestini violent dislike to all things Brl tiab. Father north. Filn ricn reported - . l I Killed When Car am fine 0 B My high dos and low ooa. aouth- S r e western Alberta temperatures were and that the mg: .1” or no railing and sank it fast in Weldon should no moderating temporat- creek. 12 mile: from nlchibiioto. Q . graph Oreo not be revived. Plans deli'Uniia, where four of day. rirrlpr-ri lamp posts and a few bui- -Tens of thousands of Triestinl 1” Rash” 1,, the pnvgrnent guy. ed as reminders of the violence. stirred by the bitter ltaiisn-Yugo- sliw argument over possession of Apparently on AMG orders. not was to be Only admin- istrative police, under Italian con- last week's rioting were Briiish-train- have taken a British and U. S. soldiers guard- ed government installations Sun- . fairly dry air will cover the Marl- lhs victims were killed hy riot 4 TRIESTE. (CPL-Solemn and police, bullets Friday. was vir- Ml” Illmllgry "'4 me ””'”"i ” sobered, Trieste buried its six yuany ,,,.,,p,yy only your now". 3911911 I DO- Regional forecasts: Prince Edward Island III. New Brunswick, Clear with a few cloudy Intervals: mild: iigllt wind. Low-iligll at Charlottetown 41 sail 55. Mansion :3 and 50. Frederica ton 28 and 50. Saint John 35 Int! 50. Edrmlndston 28 and 45. Camp- belltlon 35 and 4!. Bay of Fundy: Light winds: clean with I fr-w cloudy intervals; visi- bility i.'i miles; mild. High tide today at Charlottetown: - at 12.50 A. M. and 11.40 P. M. Summerslde tide eighteen min- utes ialer than Charlottetown. sun rises today at 7.0: A. M. ”l1'I. sets at 4.52 P. M.