, MAXIMS 'ora ' MERE MAN ...:;:. Providence requires three things of us before it will help us - I stout heart. a strong arm, and a stiff upper lip. . 3, Carrier: Charlottetown. snmmerllrle 515.00 per annnin. Elsewhere in P. E. I. 59.00. other Provinces and U. S.A. 312.00 per annuna.l CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. FRIDAY, AUGUST 14, 1953 HURRICANE THREATENS COAST OFJNO TH CA cI'll-l.I'rCI1i" Faces .. Storm Over Korean Moves German Reds Blame Some All-III-ll West For Trouble Over Washington In I-lard Coal Mines A9'9e'"E'1! ' (By Fraser wigiitom LONDON. Minister Churchill, picking up the BERLIN. (APlvThe Cnmmulilsts said Thursday that rebellious min- ers are seriously crippling produc- lReuters) -- Prime Severe Storm Al lion in East Germany's only hard . ' reins of leadership after a long coal flclrl. the foundation for its a S, . . rcst cure, faces a rising political strategic lndilstry. storm against what critics have The field, located in the Cliem- termed his government's "danger- (vm ,clus and deceptive" agreement on 'llx'oren. shrucki Socialists and even my area. regulrirly pmduces 3.-. )00.000 tons a year. 1 Wnltcr Buchhelm. first secretary GRAND FALLS, N. R, severe electric storm Grand Falls in west central New la some Con- wf the party in the, area. said 'ln . ' servaiives have expressed alarm ill mines there has been an ini- lggflrltl) nnftlfnrll Sol plrmhlnver Britainls signing the 16-na- l"”'m”” iuop m dmlyl output and truciionv-in the gll'lll'il('(ll'llP ii(clrI-Winn docunmm in Washington none is filling its quota." He .h, D N 1 I 7 "July 27, warning that the Korean rllal-acct that slackliess among Com- '60" ”"m”m”S ('51 '”””d M 5T0" wllr mlzht Spread to Communist llllllllS' urlon officials was playing ,1 . Tliillil ii U1" C0mmu"iSl5 broke thin the liancls of the class enemy. ”g'."”" C-"915 Mmh hnpd uwdlle Korean UUCP. I-nmmmz the wesl boulevard highway there were either broken or badly (l8l'll1ll'.Z(?(l.l Demlmd Pullamem Meet man" western hunk Several trees on other streets were felled, causing ('lflllliIfZt' tni Pzlrliunit-nt now is recessed for liut Labor "rho clicmy not only has placed . -. -A . all l.'s liccnts and helpers in the hard Mr” "” lllie summer, ltlirough newspapers and telephone and electric embers nearby liouscs. m mill lnrlllstl'y." Buchlielm contlll- l l l., 1, .l l, 1 H m88B' llf'(l. "but they are actively carrying wl1i(,llml;")l"l:1nll:;,n 5 "MY. r;l'l':l' zincs. have demanded that Vii.-l)'P ”” mmr dlsmpuve mslgt ure, had part of its roof liloit'nl”n.mVC"ed to discuss Bnmms ”M”kl”Ie' "59 or mmersl disco” off. Several homes were tl:ilttngcri.ipOsmOn" U. S. Farmers WASHINGTON. (A P) - United States farmers will vote in a ref- erendum today on the question of whether they approve rigid gov- ernment marketing quotas on next year's wheat crop. In advance of the voting, wheat futures tumbled to the lowest prices in more than six years un- der a heavy barrage of selling on the Chicago Board of Trade. Much of the loss was recovered in late trading. however. Reports circulated in the wheat pit that private polls of farmers indicated the quotas might be beaten. in that case govcl-nnieztt price supports woiild be lowered drastically. son proposed the quotas to hold down wheat. production at a time when he said the United states has too much of ii. At least. two-thirds of those vot- ing must mark "Yes" on secret ballots to make the controls effect- Agriculture SecreItnl'y Ezra Ben! Voting Today On Wheat Markitilllghiolgs hive. - Agriculture department officials estimated that around 000,000 grow- ers are eligible to vote. Rejection of quotas would re- quire the department to drop sup- ports to 50 per cent of parity. Parity is a price designed to be fair to farmers in relation to prices they pay. The 90-per-cent support rate would be around 52.20 a bushel and the 50-per-cent rate would be about 51.22. In Chicago, September wheat sold today-as low as 51.75, the. lowest price since January, 1947. l Because of the existence of rec-- ord supplies and the possibllityl that another big crop would be produced next year in the ab- sence of quotas, the price could be expected to drop to the 31.22i level by harvest time next year, should the controls be rejected. l such a decline might well react: Rgainst Republican members of Congress seeking a re-election next year. bar -n Man Is an anlinsl that makes other. MAXI MS OIA MERE MAN 1:--- ' I gains; no other animal does this is dog exehsngu bones with an- 14 PAGES The Guardian, Fin Cents Morning Dsily Founded 1387. k-u.. ROLIN Siorln Pdfilis Winds Up To , 100. Miles An Hour l MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - The spa- Mlfl first full-blown hurricane sped toward the North Carolina coastl Thursday nlglit, packing winds of' 95 to 100 miles an hour. Mlle-a- minute winds lashed the area as the hurricane approached. ,lnl0 the 013911 Thufsdiy night 3 An advisory from the Miami growing U-5--Elimsh 313'": 0V" wegmer gureau sald that at 6 pllthe proposed seating of India at m, (EDT) the hurl-lmhe was nhoulltlie forthcoming Korean political 50 miles south of the Molrchcad'C””I”5””' - City-Beauford area. It was whlrl- . Ambamdnf HEW? Cabot bod-".6 ing northward at 15 miles an hour. BY MAX HARRELSON UNITED NATIONS, N. Y, IAPV -The United States brought out lJr., U.S delegate to the UN. saldl Gales exleml ouwlllrd 150 mlles the United States favored limiting from the hurricane center arid the ”p”59"m”V” DI me UN at winds will continue to increase and ' the Conference to. .munW'35 dvhichi leach hulrlcane force in me ml-fought. for the world olgalilzatlol; tire capes section of North Caro-lm Kama” . . . . line, the Weather Bureau said. Th” "””'d el””””” Md” Britzsh representatives declinedl Tgnker out o( control to comment, but it was under- 1 stood they still are firmly insist- The Moroccan tanker Martin was oilt of control and unable to get out of hurricane's path. The Mama said, she was pumping oil on the ocean. in an attempt to calm the heavy- lng that both Russia and India be included in the conference. Britain's Position sea, hm the gllhlrool lahkel. dld Bl-itzillis position is that the ex- hol ask asslsmhcel cluslcli "of Russia would be "un- The lmnlclme pull R zmgmlle l'l'IlIlEl'.C. As for India. they feel stretch of coast under siege, with ma" Prlmt? Minister Nehl'u's rep- smrm wamlngs llylng belween llPSEl'1l:ll-lVe-Wollld be a construc- Myrtle Beach. SC. and Atlantic me mrce m the pane)" 5 . of the tcr.l. they are operating rumor mills. Sllliflflflllllz provocative slogans ... .,lj,dL....,.-- They say the government "keptll itlie llcclarzition secret" through- City, N. J., and the twin red flags with black centers foretellililz a Lodge said he had no objection in Russia's inclusion on the side, and lnstlzalillg lhe minors to walk Run. the inwortant foreilzn affairs out. during their shifts-that is. to strike. "In the Karl Marx coal work-. walked oilt " - Tile. Chclllnilz coal area eni- tlraces Zwlckziii, Dclsllitz and Frei- lnl. The coal is indispensable to lnnny German enterprises manu- l.'lPllll'll'1f.! mncliinery. chemicalsatld other stl'atc-mu wares for the Soviet mid war economy. The Communist admission of mine strikes was made at a meet- ing of party leaders in Karl Siadt Chemnltz and published in the local party new:-:p:lper. i New Cnnflslcatlons A llr'W wave of police confisca- lmlls lllt East. Germans trying to rot back in their homes Thursday with free Anlcrlcnn foodstuffs from ll";-st Rcrlln. I Red police seized lheni as they crossed the Soviet sector border at Poisd.'unel' Platz in mid-city or got off at elevated railway stations ill Rllsslaii-o'ccupicd territory. Food and identity cards, without which fins: Germans are automatically lzahlc to Jail. were snatched away. ha l-1 Llebknecht and people 's-owned hard whole gbrigades have STOCKHOLM (OP)-Travel illlnnc Dcnlnlirk. Finland. Iceland. x'm-wny and Sweden has increased :2-cntly since passportl require- nelits were nbolishcd a year ago or cltlzl-ns nf these countries vis- um: their neighbor nations. Vis- (hrs to Sweden increased 25 per tent. Coming Events ”l);lllrc nt Gordon Lodge every l”t'lcl;iy iilgtlil. "There will be no Dance in Howcls Hall. Friday. the Gordon Lodge. in aid of school. "D:llicc- at l-irillliy nilzlil "Allcgwcll 11. B. P. Klngslom, - , , TORONTQ, (Cpl g A mxln every worker in Canada is united lwhlrii developed ovcrnlglit in snl- mid” 9” aw" Tmda End I-mbm Llllnll and egg slindwichrs uns re-ICOUZTCS5-" l l-lrlrlny, Aulz. l-i. "lianlplnn l'lllted Church Sup- l1"li on lYcdr.cr.day, August 26th. "Luscious red raspberries at lfmvatt's, Tryon. '”Come to the annual picnic at Anthony's, Bloomfield, August :'v;. "Long Creek 1-fall, variety con- .-:-rt Thursday. Aug. 20th. Selected talent. in aid of telephone. "We stock Dlthrine D.D.T. lilwnys and binder twine. Clark's ltccd Service. "Dane every Friday night. south ustico Hall. Canteen ser- vice. Chnrlottetonlans Orcheetra.. "Dance at Sourls North School on August Cll.-llsson's Orchestra. Line Road lath. "Homemade ice cream and dance. Ptsquld East. School, August lath. Burke's orchestra. "Try our Pii.r-ins Finance Plan for feeding your pigs and poultry- Dlllon dz Splllett. "In stock. Binder Twine, Dithanc and 1'). D. T. sprays 1-'.. J. Mac- Wuiclill, Vernon. ”lrri cl-min festival. bingo. llmrl-. so .lnmt-s' Ch ch. Town ll l1 1 1. Georgetown, edneeday. Almlat filth. "Showing at Mt. Stewart, Fri- day and Saturday nt 8.30. "Across the Wide Mlssciii-i with Clark Gable and other well known stars. This is n nice show, by Metro Goldwln Mayer, , u C. T. F. Convention Gels Underway MONTREAL. (CPI-Dean Neville, V. Scarfe of the faculty of science. University of Manitoba, told the Canadian Teachers Federation Thursday that school boards and boards of education have too much power over teachers and there is "dictatorship". Addressing the 3'.Iud llnllllnl con- ference of the federation, Dcall Scarfe said: "The teacher is for too like a . humble employee in ft factoryfaud the justification usually given for this state of”afIllil's is that. touch- crs are lncfllcient., ”We in Western Cnliada are anxious to see teachers so well trained and confident. that there is no longer any justiflcatl-in for this dictatorship." Prof. D. C. Munroe, di:'ectol' of the School of Teachers. Mztc;lon- aid College, Ste. Anne de Bclcvuc. Que.. said part of the fault in Canada is in not looking at edu- cation as a whole. There is far too lnuch division between differ- ent. kinds of teachers. he said. "We have been governed for too much by expediency in education and we seem to live under the shadow of the 50-pcl'-cent. stan- dard. By that I mean in ediicli- tlon anything is all right so long as it will get by. "This is certainly true lll school finances as well as ill teacher selection." Prof. Munroe said that lllstcaci of the leaching przlfcssioli be-ills: able to select. the best, 1? often had to take aliyone uhn u.is avail- able and uillilllz to teach. Food Poisoning Affects Ztlll sponsible for the wliich 200 people food-poisoning suffered at .1 picnic llf'rE June 27, Dr. L. A. Pcquegnat. medical officer of health. reported Thur-sdrl,v. - Within a short time after eat- ing the sandiviclies picnickers. mostly children, became violently ill and flooded hospital emcrxcncy wards. There were no dr-allis. Escaped German POW Surrenders In Ontario OTTAWA. (CPI-Heins Frommc is back in his home at Marathon. 0nt., free for the first time in seven years of the fear that his secret will look out. l An escaped German prisoner of war, he came to Ottawa Wednes- dgy with his wife and .three- year-old son and surrendered to the RCMP. lie was sent home on condition- al bond to await a decision whe- ther he may remain in the coun- lry. rrwn escaped PnWs who gave themselves up previoiisly linve been granted permission to stay. Frnmme. -'l2'.VPv'lT'"l" f"r"""' merchant seaman. 1”” ""PHIi""l ln (hp Red Sea in min. Fl-airinz mg phlp would he eliplilrerl. he tried to eacrlpo with others of the crew in a small boat. The! FOWNI into a British convoy. He was brought over to Canada in 1943 nnd got away from the ldchnie in Parliament Jilly 29 and 30. The 16-nation document was made public last, Friday. The outcry is believed one of ;thc reasons vvlly Churchill drove to Downing streets for talks with llirling Foreign Secretary Lord lS;ilisbur.v Wednesday. For the IDS! lsix weeks, the 78-year-old primal .minister has been recuperating onl ldoctors' orders from the strain of overwork. Press View The influential Times. an inde- ihclidr-nt. paper, sairl much of tile- lwasliington declaration was cor-' llreel and pralseworthy, but it di--I ,sl-rlhcd as "deceptive and danger-l ,nus" a sentence saying that n' lirr-:lcli of the armistice now ,"would he so grave. that. in all pmlmbility. it would not be pos- sible to confine hostilities with- Ain the frontiers of Korea." Citing Brilisli policy statements of the recent past, the Times commented: "The real eliargel lngainst the government. is that ill llclil. its name to something int lwhich it did not really believe." Bengoiigh Re-elected TLC President OTTAWA, rCPi-The Trades and Labor Congress Thursday cruslted a move which would have nllmved Communists to infiltrate iliio TLC activities. and with one exception swept back its leaders by acclamation for another year of power. At the same time, the 530,000- mcmber labor body heard Claude Jodoin of Montreal. in TLC vice- prcsident, declare he will fight for unity in Canadian labor ranks and will 1'-lever be satisfied "until Back into power for his llth tcrmlas president was tough and earthy Percy R. Bengough. '10- lyear-old veteran labor leader. liigaln head of Canadals biggest .labor group. l HLs salary was boosted to 59,500 to year from 38,500 'and his ex- pense allowonce was raised to :10 a day from 07. ltlien he got a job with the Mar- iIl.l10ll Paper Company. In 1948 he married nn Austrian-horn Can- ndilin girl from Fort William. Ont. They furnished their house. Their son was born. Heins Fromme did well all a painter and part-time photographer. But. there was always the fear that a chance word or an accidental meeting might bring it all to an end. Then in July Fromme saw his photograph in Week-End mala- zilie with an article on escaped prisoners. He sat. down and wrote to the RCMP. it. was through the same article that Franz Jr-niseh. ahout. 13. was laken Into cllslody at Hamilton .l..ll- 23. Ho. too, was a German ml-reliant seaman who had escap- cd from Cookiwllle camp. Six other escaped Pow: are still free in Canada. Fromme in this time has lost work camp at Cnclksvillc. 13 miles southwest of Toronto. tlircc .VNlI'5. lntrr. ll: worked a rear in llll liusli.l I l-I touch with his hnlicvrs. have sl zone of parents who. he escaped from the Germany to the British, Americans oin Greeks In Rushing Aid To Earthquake Victims l--- . -2 -.-.....j.... ATHENS, (hp, t rl-llmc ldylllc pending the opening of inland roman lslallds are how looklhg roads. Providing food and water like 3 hell on earlh. and medical teams most. urgenti among and hmellcans lulled lmgllnsk. . . . Urgently need bulldoz- side Greeks today to l.l,lle,.,. lhellllg gear and additional doctors. effects of five days of earthquakes , At mm Wimv the Greek IMH- thnt have left hundreds dead. hun-."”” m””9”-V WCNVEG FEDOIWS that dreds lnluled and Elmo” all the Argostolion was ”bcginnlng to sink 120.000 survlvorr homeless. l””d” Wl”9T-" 7-Merv Greek Ole The death toll, by 0b5el.v9l.sv.ficials said their best information l-gckgnmg, may be more (hm, l'000'lll'c'lS that such reports were based, 1;, 5, nmclals ml Kclnlllnlnv on niessuges about the crumbling! lamps; of lg. slrlckeh gmup," of cliffs displaced by the tremorsl notified me U, 5, elhlmssy mi An American flier reported that Athens that there are 400 known m" Wm”? isltmd "I KBIHHINH dead in mg lslahdls um blmest looked like ii huge forest fire and' towns, Argostollon alid Lexoiil'ioli.l-W91" Cmmks 0f the 00531 0011” be and countless others are buried iili-15"” 59105111"? mm ll"? 593- W31”! der the deb,-ls, 'clouds of dust mingled with swirl- The fire-charred ruins of those mg mloke Mid "amel - two towns represent but a fra - ment of the desolation sprlnqdi Misery A" Sm” , across Kcfrillinizi arid the nelzzll-L There was human isery on alli boring islands of Itlilaco fllld Znk- lsides-the dead. the dying, thel 11111105 uoiillded. the tr... -stricken. thci homeless and the hopeless. mm" or Smnk" nu" lsels of all sizes plicd the runvt:- plug.” or gmoke and lhl. nus, tween the islands and Patrai. with of landslides roselhundrcds of leetihuddled masses of islanders. many in the air. Cliffs crumbled and of them starinlr uncoml:rehens- slid into the sea. TClT0r-Sll'lCl(Pn!i"-'zI-V 3' "WIT "F53 HEM 01' the inhabitants, many thousands oflougslde world. For COUHUESS Ken- them without food or water, hudglcl-aiions their ancestors had lived died in thg mus, lto themselves on the islands. l of the Communist belligerelits- Red Korea and China-but saw no reason why theftusslans should be selected to represent the UN hurricane were on display for 75 miles between Morchead City and, Manteo. N. C. l As the heavy winds in advance, of the centre brougi.t blackened C . ,. skies and rising winds and tidcsisugggfgggliisdlgfynfgcluzglgaln m to North Carolina, coast guard I l planes flew through gusty wcatherl to drop warning messages to iso- .lated coastal residents and about 1100 vessels in the area. Third Canadian Comes From Red Pearson Backs India In Ottawa today Canada's For- .elgn secretary L. B. Pearson said he believed India should sit in the conference because it may have far-reaching effects on the Far East. in general. Pearson is president of the UN general as- sembly which meets Monday to choose i'epllesent-atlves for the K0- o rean conference. Indlals V. K. Kristina Menon told leportel-s that India is no .. . . lcandidrlte for membership ill the PA N M U N .1 0 M. (CF) - Pic. conference. Thomas E. Rnthwell of Dundas.i Lodge disclosed the U5. position 0nf., the third Canadian prlsonerlf-it s. priws conference after meet- of war released under the Koreanllllc: with representatives of the 15 armistice, rctilrned to freedom to-iother countries that fought ir. day. ; Korea. l Rolliwell. 27. and right. Ameri- He said no agreenient had beenl can repalriaies we-re,classed as reached on any point. Another: sick or injured. However, none meeting of the 16 countries has was a litter case. A Canadian Army list of men listed as missing or believed tak- en prisoner in Korea shous Roth- well, born in Wiilkerlon, Onl., en- listed in the 1st battalion of the Royal Canadian Regiment Oct. 2-1. been eel. for Saturday morning. Lfalher Rescues jl0 Children 1951. He was taken on strength for --.. Far East service Jilly 30. 1952. ASHLAND. Maine. (AP! - A and taken prisoner Oct. 23, i952.ifalher was burned severely Thurs- Husband of Mrs. Marion Rnih-lday but rescued his 10 sleeping well, he served in Canada dur-'chlldreli from it fire that razed the Second Wnrld War. their rural, t.wo-storey home. Fires had completed the de-i, slruction that the quakes wroughtl in Zaklnlhos, a city of 15.000 on the island of zakinthos. and Al'- gostolion, with a population of 10,000, the chief port of Kclalliilia. British, U. S. alid Greek ships and planes did rescue work. Hun-, dreds of injured were brought to. liospitals in Palrai, the ii:-nresti OTTAWA, (CF) A Montreal large Greek city. U. S. Al'fIl)"Cll'J,Ill0Pll told Tltursday of a pros- headqilartei's in Heidelberg, Ger- pcctlni: trip for rndiuni and uran- many, released 6,000 pounds oriium to Axel l-lclberg Island. 800 blood plasma for the relief wm-kflnllcs from the North Pole and Emergency Red Cross relief pup-ltliouszlit to be one of the last re- plies were being pl-elml-ed in spy. mnililliz pieces of Canada yet un- en couiilrlea - Canada, the UllllPdl(7h"”m'f'd hit the Ml)10FPF- States, Britain, Denninrk, Francc,l GNU!” l'Hi'0h5P"- Wesidvnt of nhly hlld swlgzel-land. In l,h.l llie Toner Conipnny Lld., a Mont. hollhclhg lhls at Qehem. lhe llm.il-cal engineering firm. described a gue ol Red Cross Soclellos nld two-wcck trip with three rom- appeals for more assistance hadig;I",i0"S-dngIE-(lAvlP”"gd- lD3”'3l'; gone to a score of nations. 1 ”” ti" 0- '”'f”" OW 9;”: 3 F. S. emu" Sums slur-V lof (ltlmva. and 1-.. E. Reid of l I lhlonircal. which enrled when the The U' 3- mms" Salem llmch Cnnso anipliibinli "Arctic Queen" Smamed 1mm Naples Vmh ”'”9(Atnill'licrl down Tuesday at nearby supplies. radioed naval hc:idqual't-ll-l,l,,h.ls alrpnrll era in London upon arrival: t "All villages on the islniid of non..." for 1'.-ll, Kefallinla levelled except for re- inforced concrete C0llSll'LlCii0ll,l 31,-, ,1h.-oily." ujd in Ml lnl”-. Which SHOWS IOFIOUS CFRCk5- lvlr-xv the trip was unrlerlaken be- "People -in panic and fear island lclluse on several occasions he saw will sink. They refuse to enter streaks of black rock which look. buildings to obtain available equip-lr-n like pllclililende---tile ore from ment and are gathered in groups nhlrh uranium and radium is near each iowli. .mnde--in flights over the moun- "Evacuiitlon appears iinposslblcliainnus island in United States r-'" '"'r'lrr T c- ' 'T Air Force planes. -His company. which has built conqii-eror of Mt. nu-leornloglral station! at a dozen points in the Arctic for the trans- . ti t t. l t cl ih. Everest To Wall ll-.”.”..'... .C”8l."2Si...,”.lZ'..f'f. mu: ..... the t” l. AUCKLAND. roe) 4 The well- Colr”Rowle.v. head of the de- kept secret of Mount Everest con- "ll" "lurch Mild" Aime "Ct hueror sh. Edmllml Hlll,”-y lh mllm lion. and Dr. Porsllrl, a resource: he's getting married. And lo lhc denarimnnl expert on the Arctic, dlmghlm. M another New zeallmd were invited along to make scien- moumnln cllnlhelh llifir slllriirs. Mr. Miilr. of the Wm.” sh. Edmllml ",.ll,,l.l lh,'Nalmmil lI1lll'l1 Board. went, in Sydney a week ago he lliiblllalilnizly I ""'l” " ""0 "'i'""'- Mi” RN” '3 3 denied reports he had a girl friend. T"W" C"- 9""""r- But on arrival at his home at Auckland he revealed he became engaged in Sydney to Louise Mary Rose. 22. a lnlslc student. Mr. Jacobsen raid the "pitch- The attractive brunette. daughter hlende" he sighted from the air of J, K. Rose. president of the New turned out to be "the blackeni- Zellland Alpine Club, returns tolnppearlng shale I ever saw hut Auckland thorlly and the weddlngifrnm a gr-nInsisI's Mint of View Trip Was Eileen: R at. 5 is set. for seat. 2 l llhe trip was a success.” Describes ProspectingTrip To Remote Arctic Island None of the children. ranging in iazc from 1 to fl, was injured. but illllllPS 1-lafford. about. 40, suffered lSPl'Pl'P burns on his face. neck and 'bctl1 arms. I His wife's night. llznlled as she fled lliousc but she rolled A and clothinz was the blazing in the earth "Tge';glTlTh.':,fmdlll5llTl5F,;h cxtlntzllished the flames. es- largC deposits of ligniie. a .softiCap1"g”U”:'-Vt Cosh all whole elm... of mm, mpll She. too. was taken to hospital sum. used for the manufacture ..f,m mm” b,”'”1 "I hm" 1”" Child- wallboard and plaster, and rorlti F”? Ch?” Lewis Danna” 53'd structures which seemed to indi- Hllmlld lit a. match white 1900”- call, ll", p,.l,sm” of nlll lnlz a cnsnlille-powered washing Tl", Cum ll," (mam! during l'ilHi"lllllF and the fuel ignited. I the last week of July. made the . "T"”:T-"Tm 1,.'lO0-mile flight to Cliiirehill. Sleep"-lg slckness Man.. and flew 1.000 miles north. to the transport department wea- Among Horses ther station on Resolute island. The .100-mile hop to Axel lieihorzi u'l,V,x'lPp;(:I W-p. ,,, lllamlnlm followed and the Caliso touched fzllnli-.-., lmrsebl-:-cder: and v-glpl-.L down on Mokka fiord Jilly Ill. Illilllllllx lulu. l,,lln,.l,,...l A wldogl The explorers found all ".lrciii-l,tl,,-m,l ,,,,.,.l,,,,llhn program ln Rt alpine" landscape, a 2.000 fool flP.K'pOl'.'-ll? attempt. in curb the: plateau covered with grass nnri .-pr-nail of slrmping sickness among an 8.000-foot mountain on the 225- thn prm-lncc's horse population. mil:--long island. Tlicroa were Now .-M.-1,3", ,.,,ldl.,ml. pmlwrll herds of miisk-ox and cariholl on ilnln, the outbreak has hrmlghl. the plateau and traces of wolf. death in at least eight horsesi hare and fox. Snow geese abnuliti- and hits affected more than ed on the coast. lntlicrs. . A-1&Mil1yiI)E1iwltVorkers Igiowg Out In French Strikes ny iiunla King l " 'l K0V""meM Dolmmnn PARIS. (Reuters: Fl-al'lce'sl”"d' R9” CW” 'V0Tk9" hurled anti-government. strike movementim" d"d' ulxulled toomooo work," ln pubgl, Less than half the civil servants! llc md prlvnle lnduslrlu Thu”, bank clerks and retail store work-l .1”. but there W,” lncreulnx rrs responded to strike calls. sen-l signs Premier Joseph Laniel wlll M l"'td” ""0"! POW” WOFKPFN wln hl, lmllle ll, l.mm.e ,ml,,,.l who began the strike movement. a Government menrulrei: lo counl- VWCR "710 W97" Vick 10 W0llk- eract. paralysis in public services: Bi” H"? Chm!” IWDPHBP WPI1” showed some success for the ilrstlnn amons Workers in railroads. um, -1-humllay, wllh lhl. ml nf.l1lll1P!. gas and light. wnrka, public. pl-mpg, poll" and Vjluntenllnv lpl.'rPnllh services. metal industry axed: ten were delivered. some malnline'PM'll "'0MP0l”'- Threatened llrlk-' trains rim and hundreds of army er! today include engineers. inc-' trucks kept traffic and food eup- tor! foremen and workers in ne- pllee moving, ilonal defence establishments in- Blxty convicts, under police eluding ordnance depots and army guard. cleared up Paris garbage inlclothlmz factories. Newspaper. arena where the summer helit.,prlnters scheduled in 24-hour slrikcl "made sanitary measures impera-lalartlng Sunday night. l l I ll: hi. l in: pair-lies: Growing British-U.S. Rift Over Seating of indie At Oonf erence . l Maritime Meeting of cooperative Services At Moncton MONCTON, N. 3.. (OP)-Strict adherence to the principles under- lying the growth of co-operatives and a strongly optimistic view of the future in spite of many ser- ious obstacles were the keynotes annual meeting of Mari- time Co-operative Services Ltd. which closed its two-day sessions here Thu:-sday afternoon. some 150 delegates lrom Nova .Scotla, New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island attended the two- day sessions when the activities of the year were reviewed and close attention given to various as- pects of the business now reach- ing nearly 311,000,000. The group discussion techniqlle was again used at various times to increase the active participa- tion of those attending. J. E Walsh of Coverdale, N.B., was re-eleced president of the organization and others returned to office included first vice-prev ident M. S. Horsburg. Ber-wick, N.S.: second vice-president, Arn- old W. Wood.'O'Lea.ry, P. E. 1.; directors Aurele Albert of st. Francois De Madawaska, and Aga- pit Roy of Upper Pokemouche. N. 8.. and auditor J. J. Mscxinnin. New directors are D. T. Mac- Donald. Shubenacadie. N. 5.; Colin Macnoliald. Antigonlsh. N5, Ken- icontlnuecl on Page 13, Col. 3) K '1'l-lE Vtssllvusf IQ A our Wt-lo can-aw Hayls His own A TORONTO. vcP) - Minimum and maximum temperatures: Min. Max. Dawsmi 44 68 Victoria 54 78 Edmonton 4'7 70 Calgary 52 H9 Regina 54 76 Winnipeg 59 'I6 Toronto 65 32 Ottawa 65 82 Montreal 66 I12 Quebec 61 82 Saint John 54 68 Moncton 54 R2 Halifnx 58 '15 Charlottetown . 60 w Sydney 58 79 Yarmnulh .. . 53 69 St. Jolinls. Nfld. . . 47 '10 HALIFAX. (CF)-The Weatlier Office says today will be mostly sunny. However. showers and thunderstorms are expected to develop in Prince Edward Island and New Brunswick this evening, Skins are mostly clear in Nova Scotla. but for: has drifted in on the south coast. Sun will dissi- pate the fng. him it is expected In return in the evening. Regional forecast: Prince Edward Island. New Brunswick cnlintlca: clone; fog patches in the morning; cloudy with scattered alioivi-rs and thumler- storms Friday i-vi-ninlt: Milt-lnllr lug warm: light winds. Low-high ('lIfIl'lfIHl'lnwn 80 and '18. Mnncion 00 and Slit. Saint. John river Valley. HEY "I Chnlrur: Sunny hi-coming cloud: with widely scattered showers and. tliundcrstnrrvis Friday even- ing; continuing warm: 118?" winds. Low-high at Fredericton SC and R1. Saint John 57 and 70. Edniundston and Campbelllnn 59 and 80. Bay eastern Mainly party widely Viimll Light wlmla. nu-lhllliv in miles. patches In near in the low. of lnwrrin: in for 7ern, temperatures 601:. High ride today at Oliarlottetown at 1.21 A. M. and 1.41 P. M High tide today at the Nortlt Shore at 3.38 A. M. and 0.00 P. M. Summerslde tide eighteen min- utes later lhfln Charlottetown. Sun rises today at 5.13 A. M. and sets M122 P. M.