Six-year-old Terry Lee came a hero, then an outcast, among his Calgary school- Tignish Fishermen want I lSlAND NEWS PAGE Alberton and West Prince County Z—The Guardian, Charlottetown. Mon. Nov. 19, 196E mates. He brought what he thought was a kitten to school to show the teacher. It turned “ Ill-IER ms OUTCAST out to be a skunk. Here Terry gets the phew from the class- mates P Photo) Lobster ‘Limit' Reduced TIGNISH — A delegation of Tignish district fishermen will ttend the fisheries meeting hat will he held in Moncion Tuesday and present rcsolutions. it was decider at a :cnera meeting of fishermen held Sat- evening in the Legion commu- nity hall. Tignish. resolution requesting a change in the lezal size of lob- sters from seven inches to six and a half inches will he pre- sented along with others that will urge keeping draggers out- side thc fishermen's set gea and that the length of the lob- ster seas-ms remain unchanged. Wilson Shea. manager of the Tignish Fisheries Co-op. called the meezin‘: to order. and dis- closed the purpose of the meet- He asked for free and open discussions on all phases of the industry. that would he on ad- vantage to the fishermen ‘n this .— 5‘ Mr. Shea spoke on the gear being destroyed by the dragger! fleet. and stated it is a seriousi matter to the fishermen and‘ I urged them to present a strong l . resolution to the meeting all ,3. Moncton on 'his matter. Patrol boats should be requested to work on the dragger situation I A. Arsenault. Hubert Gallant, Milton Keough, Henry Doucette, besides looking after the short Terrance Gavm. Edward McAl lobsters he stated. ‘ a said a six and half inch limit on lobster would i l duff. president of Tignish Fish- a I cries Co 0 Delegates. to attend the Mone- ‘ Internal Problems Facing Russian Leade By PRESTON GROVER MOSCOW tAPi ~Premier Khrushchev sits down with other top leaders of commun- ism today to try to overcome industrial and agricultural prob- lems and a shortage of money While Khrushchev may bring up the Cuban crisis and othei cold war problems. her meeting of the Soviet Com- munist party presidium and central committee is to get facr torics and farms working bet- ter in hope that the quality and quantity of consumer goods will improve. But that will take money and the government so far has refused to take funds away from defence. Heavy industry normally has been well financed, but it is be- ginning to show signs of a lack of funds for renewal and mod- ernization. The last two years of rearmameni have hit heavy industry. as well as the con- sumer goods and farm equip ment factories. The proposals put forward for improving the situation seem to be the same ones that failed be- fore—that is, to shake up the administrative staff and the par y. Reorganization and stepped rs At Talks [up party activity were ordered ilast year as the remedy for lagriculture — and the country lwound up the crop year with a lharvest best described as medi- ucre. SCORES GAINS Soviet industry still is making steady gains. along with elec~ tricity and gas production. But ‘ these fields drain away so much capital that agriculture is starv- ing for machinery and fertilizer. Moreover industrial and build- ing workers throughout the land seem to show a lack of interest in hard work—for they get little reward for it. Things are better than two or thee years ago— excctpt perhaps for food—but most Russians have learned one way or another that they live poorer lives than Westerners and even the rest of the social- ; ist camp, except perhaps China. ‘ The central committee will have to consider a growing de- mand for better shoes, shirts and fountain pens. v e n Khrushchev has an American fountain pen. l Few here expect revolutionary ideas to come out of the central committee meeting. The most irevolutionary thing needed is capital. and the Soviet Union is M l short of it. WEATHER TORONTO (CP) —- Tempera- KAWASAKI. Japan (All1 Two oil tankers collided Sunday in a narrow. fog-shrouded chan- nel of Tokyo Bay and set off a gasoline fire that left the entire 36~man crew of one vessel, the Japanese Manakata Maru. dead or missing. A crew member of a barge caught in the flames also disap- peared. It was another in a chain of sea disasters that began on the other side of the world last week with gales in the Bermuda area of the Atlantic. Storms in help to eliminate much of the ten meeting will include Wilson the North Sea and the Mediter- short lobster problem. as most , Shea. Hubert Gallant. Joseph A. rean boosted the toll. of the lobsters along the north Arsenault. Alfred Perry. Fred shore and Skinners Pond area‘ J. Richard. Jeseph W. Doucette are in the six and a half inch 3 and Edward McAlduff. range. i DRAGGER SITUATION 1 Joseph W. Doucette. chalet man of the meeting. endorsed. Mr. Shea‘s remarks on t dragger situation. He spoke the loss already suffered by many of the fishermen in this area. No fishermen. he said. can go and ick up new fishing ‘ material after a loss as t ore is too much money involved. Roy MacLeod, assistant man- ager of Tignish Fisheries. said the smaller size limit could be a help to the fishermen in the area. if they would not land under that size. He also spoke of the damage done to fishing gear by draggers. Other fishermen expressing their views at this meeting were Ferdinand Gaudet. Joseph LONDON I'.-\Pi~-A new book by the Earl of Avonv-formerly prime minister Sir Anthony Eden—bitterly assails the late Neville Chamberlain for thwart- understanding in 1938 which Eden says could have avartcd the Second World Breaking a 24-year silence on the subject, Eden tells the story ‘ resignation as foreign in Ch :1 m h e rlain‘s government 18 months before Hitler attacked Poland. , In the second volume of his‘ memoirs. entitled Facing the Dictators and published by Cas- sel and Company. Eden pro- vides an account of interna- tional affairs in the 1.0305. Essentially. E d e n‘s break with Chamberlain at so crucial a period came because they dif- lered fundamentally as to how to deal with Germany. italy and Eden writes: (Chamberlain) believed the dictators (of those coun- tries) to be anxious for genuine agreements and himself to be the only man who could nego- tiate hem . . . strongly doubted whether either Hitler or Mussolini was in any way Interested in coming to worth- while terms with us and I wanted to strengthen our hand by every means. amongst which“ closer Anglo-American relations had a first place." BACKED ITALY The immediate dispute that Too Late To Classify FOR SALE — ONE REFRIG- erator, one 21 inch floor model _ television. one washing ma— ’ «one. an second hand in good condition. Quick sale. Phone - 4-0040 or 4-9889. 3'69 sans: coon QUALITY careless not: ’ 3 and; per Delivered W. . .the project. Eden Assails Chamberlain In New Volume 0t Memoirs compelled E d e n's sensational resignation in 1938 was Cham- berlain's readiness to recognize Italy‘s conquest of Ethiopia. But Eden discloses for the first time that he wanted to quit a month earlier—in Janu- ary. 1938—when Chamberlain stymied a project by the late U.S. president, Franklin D. Roosevelt. to curb dictator na- 5‘ O :3 Roosevelt had wanted to line e U.S. alongside Britain in He had initiated arrangements for British-Amer- ican naval co-operation in the Far East as the threat of Ja- panese expansionism developed. His plan was to appeal for a worldwide attempt to restore international standards. to slow down the arms race. to re-de- fine the rules of war and to reconsider some the First World War settlemnets. Active British support was considered 'tal. SECRECY IMPOSED Chamberlain and his cabinet intimates regarded Roosevelt's secret approach as "naive and woolly" and "woolly rubbish." Eden says. The plan in effect was dismissed. Eden says-he rushed back from a vacation to find that. without consulting him, Cham- berlain had cold-shouldered the idea in a message to Roosevelt and all Eden's efforts to re trieve the situation failed. The only thing that stopped him from resigning then was American insistence on crecy, which barred him fro disclosing publicly his reason for quitting. Some years later. he writes. he discussed the interlude wit former U.S. undersecre- tary Sumner Welles. "We agreed that a compara- never < .- a? after this date to avert that catastrophe, the Second World hone War." Eden says. Nine Britons died with the caipsizing of a lifeboat under a use wave at the entrance of Tanker Collision Off Tokyo Takes Heavy Toll Of Lives Seaham harbor Saturday night. They were five lifeboat men and four of five fishermen plucked from a gale-battered fishing boat. A Mediterranean gale ripped a cotton - carrying British freighter from its moorings in Naples harbor and battered it on rocks until it sank. tures issued by the weather office. Min. Max. Night Day Dawson 15 24 Vancouver . . . . . .. 39 45 Victoria .. 44 46 Edmonton 4 15 Calgary . . . . . . . . .. 21 26 Regina . . 13 15 Winnipeg . . . . . . .. 14 15 Toronto . . . . . . . .. 30 37 Ottawa 25 34 ontreal . 29 32 nebec . . . . . 20 34 Fredericton 31 35 SSaint John 25 34 Saint John 25 34 Halifax . . . . . . .. .. 31 37 Charlottetown . 31 35 hey . . . . 34 38 armouth . . . . . .. 30 37 St John’s . . . . . .. 35 39 HALIFAX (CP)-—The weather office says snow will cover most of the Maritimes today but not more than about four inches. Some rain mixed with the snow is likely along the southern coastal areas of Nova Scotia. Regional forecasts: Halifax and vicinity: Overcast U.S. planes abandoned the hunt for 15 men still missing from the 25-man crew which abandoned the burning Greek freighter Captain George northeast of Bermuda last Thursday. Seven of the crew of the explosive - laden freighter had been rescued and three bod- ies recovered. SHIP ABANDONED A number of other fishermen from the area are expected to attend. l he: jCoaches Accuse gO‘ne Another 0 O O For Llne Shifting TORONTO (CPi—It depends which brain-busting hockey tac- tician is talkin . To hear Coach Sid Abel of De- troit Red Wings after Satur- day's game at Maple Leaf Gar- dens. it was that d e v i o u s schemer Punch Imlach who caused all the manoeuvring with manpower. The Toronto coach. of course, blamed Abel for the line-shifting that had the fans noisy with impatience several times. “They tried to use the big line against our kids," complained Abel. meaning the Iii-goal Leaf lines of Dave Keon. George Armstrong and Dick Duff against Detroit’s new line of Alex Faulkner. Larry Jeffrey and Billy McNeill. “I wasn’t having it." “Abel tried to put Howe against Mahovlivh." retorted Im ac . c likes in his building what I like in mine. In any case. Imlach implied, Abel dazzled himself out of the game with his own tactics. “All that shuffling of lines doesn’t mean anything if you don't win," he said in pointed reference to his 32 success. To back up his argument that what counts is strategy, not tac- tics, Imlach said: “I even used Litzenberger, Shack and Nevin as a line—and got away with 0 what he but I‘ll do Tigers Wind Up Goodwill Tour TOKYO (AP) — The visiting Detroit Tigers wound up their 17-game goodwill tour of Japan Sunday with a 11-4—2 record. The Tigers were held to a 3-3 tie in 10 innings by the Japan all-star team in playing their final scheduled game at Tokyo Stadium before 29,000 fans. In the same general area, a British tanker steamed to Ber- muda with the 13 crew mem- bers of a Canadian motorship, the East Star. The East Star was abandoned after developing a list of 20 to 25 degress. Principals in the Tokyo Bay disaster were the 1.972-ton Mun- akata Maru, inbound from To- kuyama with 950,000 gallons of gasoline. and the 21.634 - ton Norwegian Tanker Tharald Bro- yard-wide Kawasaki Canal only about yards from shore, miles southwest of Tokyo. Gas- oline leaking from the Mana- kata Naru fed the flames of a fire which seared that ship and licked across the water. members of the Nor- wegian tanker's crew were res- cued. some after jumping over- board. Ten suffered minor in- juries. By nightfall rescuers had picked up the bodies of five men from the Japanese craft. These included the master. Capt. Hiroshi Kaiborl. The 5,132-ton British freighter Ashanti Palm sank Sunday with a cargo of cotton after being battered by heavy storm waves H N against rocks in the port of Naples. All 46 crew members had left vig. outbouned empty for the Persian ulf. NDG Leafs Take Crown MONTREAL (Cpl—Montreal NDG Maple Leafs rallied in the second half to capture the East- ern Canada junior football title Sunday with a 29-14 win over Sarnia Knights. The Knights picked up nine first downs to NDG‘s four in the opening two quarters and carried a 7-6 lead into the final 30 minutes. But NDG bounced back and won a berth in the little Grey Cup game next Saturday in Hamilton. The Maple «Leafs meet the Western titlist Edmon- ton Huskies in a sudden-death game for the national crown. They crashed and lacked to- the ship after the battering broke open plates in the stern CAN BEAT A NUCLEAR SUB A naval artist has touched up this conventional destroyer escort to show what the navy's seven St. Laurent class de- stroyers will look like with im- improvememts they say will enable the ships to tackle nu- with snow changing to snowflur- ries early in afternoon: rain mixed with snow likely on oc- casions: continuing cold: north- east winds 15 becoming north- east 25 in afternoon. Low-high at Halifax 33 and 36. South Shore. Annapolis Val- ley: Overcast. with snow chang- ing to snowflurries during morning and ending in after- noon; continuing cold; north wids 25. Low-high at Yarmouth 30 and 38, Kentville 31 and 35. Northern Nova Scotia. East- ern Shore, Cape Breton: Over- cast, with snow changing to snowflurries in the evening: rain mixed with snow likely along southern coastal areas on occasions: continuing cold; northeast winds 15 becoming northeast 25 in afternoon. Low- high at New Glasgow and Goshen 31 and 38, Sydney 32 and 40. Prince Edward Island. ex- treme southern portions of East- N.B. Countie s, extreme southern portion of Lower St. John River Valley: Overcast, with snow changing to snow- flurries in afternoon and ending by vening: continuing cold: wids northeast 15 becoming northeast 25 in afternoon. Low- high at Charlottetown 30 and 38, Moncton 24 and 35, Saint John 2 nd 35. ID '1 :3 Bulk of Eastern N.B. Coun- ties, bulk of St. John River Val- ley: Cloudy with widely separ- ated snowflurries: continuing cold: north winds 15 becoming north 25 in afternoon. Low-high at Fredericton 24 and 35, Chat- ham 20 and 32. High tide today at Charlotte- town at 3.14 a.m. and 5:10 p.m. t Rustico at 2:03 am. and um. Summerside tide eighteen minutes later than Charlottetown. Sun rises today b—l> E" gather in the fog of the 550- and it began to fill with water. at 6:49 and sets at 4:42. clear subs. The touch-up shows helicopter dcclos being added to the ships which the navy says will enable them to main- tain the same advantage over nuclear subs that the present destroyer holds over conven- ‘ 1.011116 your best buy “.82 75 Here’s a long line bra that sleeks you smooth as a whistle . . . and gives you alluring uplift under all your fashions. Cordtex inserts, elasti- cized straps and back. 32-38 A, 32- 42 B, 32-46 C, 34-46 D. Other long- lines to size 50 E. DOMINION “INSET COMPANY, LTD. Quebec ' Montreal ' Toronto ' Vancouver tionai subs. They will also be fitted with variable depth san~ ar, a considerable improve. ment over previous under- water detection instruments. (CP Wirephoto from National. Defence) 'Roa. TM MEN! Mighty Eddie Wins Twice SYDNEY (CP) — 8 Sydney. N.S., scored the only double win in Saturday harness racing bare. Smgie wins went to Whisper ing Bud. Pellaire Dodo y. sit Henley, Nokomls Belle, Ray Davis and Ace-mar. all own- ed in Cape Breton. 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