MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN -1.-:-. one else. You are never so easily fooled as when you are trying to fool some- ay '3 in P. arrier: Charlottetown. Snnuneriids E.L 89.00. Other Provinces and lJ.B.A. 312.00 per IIIIIIIIIIJ 815.00 per ennum. Elsewhere Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. MONDAY, MAY 4, CANADIANS BEAT OFF WHIELWIND CHINESE RED ATTAC in: maul no they who have not):- persunded to say it. MAXIMS I 0! A MERE MAN to any. and who cannot be 1953 16 PAGES Allies Select Palcistan As POW Custodian At Musical Festival llantsport. ll.S. Woman Killed mtmo, iCPi - Mrs. Joseph l.aBelle of Hantsport. N. S.. was k'.'.le,d Friday night when a car m which she was riding left the i-or-hrvay near here and crashed :-:'o a power pole. An inquest was ordered. s3o.ooo trill Kenlville. N. S. ICENTVILLE. N. S., (OP)-A fire of unknown origin flashed through the plant of Chlpman Apple Pro- ducts here Sunday night. destroy- ing the wooden frame structure in 40 minutes. Damage was estimat- ed at about 330.000. About 520.000 worth of equip- merit, including cider tanks and bottle stock. was saved. Firemen were hampered by lack of water and a series of small chemical ex- plosions within the building Covenliylhsg first Permanent Office Building COVENTRY. England. (Reuters) The first permanent office build- irrc put up since the war in homb- scarred Coventry was opened Sat- urday. 13 years after the city was almost flattcncd by high explosives and fire bombs. Lord silkm. town planning min- lver in the former Ilabor govern- mrnt. opened the five-storey. 31.- 100000 block. The Queen. then Princess Eliza- heth. laid the foundation stoneflve years ago in the centre of the Mid- land industrial city. where 54,373 houses were destmyed in a single raid on the night of Nov. 14. 1940. The city was raided 43 times in two years. The new block forms a comer of the central square around which the new Coventry is being built. Coming Events "Dance. Lorne valley. Tuesday. May 5th. "Happy Valley..- hall tonight. 8:15. North River "Regular Dance. Bonshsw inn. Tuesday night. Chsrlottetonians Orchestra. "Wellington players p r e s e n t "D e a c o n Dubbs”. Thanksgiving Hall. Tuesday, May 5. 8:00 o'clock. "Dance in Morell Hall. Monday. May 4th. Don Messt-r'.s Orchestra. Zlancing 9 till 1 A. M. "Just arrived. Carlosd double rr-cleaned oats suitable for seed. Benton & Macltae. Winsloe. "Dance in Morell Hall Monday. WY 4th. sponsored by Hall Club. -WW0 by Don Messer. "Corrsn Ban Hall. Monday. MAY ttrh. "Eyes of Love" three-nci comedy-drama. Dance. Bur'ns' Orch- Mira. Curtain 815. "Robert. Vlckerson will be haul- ing cream to Wlltshire Factory each Thursday. until further notice. "Danie Mount Hope School, M8? ith. Turner's Orchestra. Simnlofed by the Junior Farm- FYI. "Now booking Clover Seed. Also zflflfl-m;';;hI1!atr.h)l)ar1ey. oats, turnip . pl . I . Fwd km. west prices. Clerks C "599 CHM 'h'svcr-so Variety doncert in Hampton Hail, wndnu. p3Y- May tlth. sponsored by Dessbie omens Institute. "Hampton if 11 M” "iii. Cape Ti)averscw:lll'!.n1efldenr?e Drescntlng Variety concept won, Wed by Dessble w. 1, '"-T O Kinkors Dramatic C igtscnt lhvelr four-act play V! Ollenlant on Wednesday. - "Y 5th. Matinee 2:00 p.m. Eva. us”! the mm: 3.30, r m Specmmut n e Klnkora Hall. "Milne daily. good thrifty Young pig; food veal calillgil GENRE m'”'l"i Drlces. Wellington Wh"-I 42 5011. Runtnln A: Bell's .nv.dn,,d,y. Mny 8' content It flddlers Tracsdie 9 . H . p.m. En fl: 7:0 riecelved for boys and MN me 1303!"! and dancing. "rm" rose to Mrs. Wm. Lacey. cm". y t W- L. Trncsdie to right: Gerald Perry. O'Meara. George Crawford. Four Killed While Returning From Funeral AJAX. Ont, (CPI-Four persons returning from a funeral were killed Saturday when their car careened out of control on wet pavement and crashed into a con- crete abutment at the Ajax clover- lenf. 20 miles east of Toronto. The victims included two young girls. The dead were identified as Romeo Lnrocque, 34. of Fort. Rowan. Ont.. driver of the car. his two daughters. June 8. and Judy. i0. and Stephen Patten. 54. also of Port Rowan. Police said the four were return- ing f'rom the funeral of Larocquc's father in Ottawa. Witnesses said the car hit with such force that one side was caved in and the roof bulged out "like a cone.” Larocquc. I roofer nnd service station operator near Port. Rowan. 50 mllcs southwest of Brantford. left his wife at home to look after their baby. BRISTOL. England, tCPi--with the aid of his pupils. schoolmaster Ronald Clecvr: is halfway through aifour-your program to clean up the bed of the Malago river, so far. they have shifted more than 100 tons of mud and silt. TIMAGAMI. Ont... lCP)-A small fleet of canoes moved across Reb- bft Lake. 10 miles west of here. Sunday night in search of traces of the lumber trig White Bear which was feared to have gone down in 200 feet of water. drag- ging a steel boat and four lumber- men down with it. The 35-foot tug. powered by s 150-horsepower diesel engine. dis- appeared Thursday. But no alarm was felt for the safety of the four men until searchers in a plane Sunday spotted a barrel and an aluminum pikcpole floating on the lake. Believed drowned were Leslie Taskc. 23. captain of the tug; Fred Kozlk, 21, woods foreman for the Gillies Lumber Company; and lumberlacks Leonard Conroy. 19. and Edtwerd Hamilton. 01. Folk Dancing Group 2011. Ruth lViacLcod, Beverly McGrath. Laurie Jenkins. 3rd row: Ralph Shea. M:-rcLe0d, Nancy Cook. Allan Bagnall. Back row: Ronnie MacLean. Folk dancing group. Central Royalty, Grade 2, at the Musical Festival. Front row left Dianne Millar. Janet Roper, George Clark. 2nd row: Reigh Friz- Lorna Cheryl Knox. Norah -Barier's Film Lab. lllefenders 1 Of Luang l l l 1 . .. ,Eden s Condition ishows Improvement I LONDON. 4Reuters) -- Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden. conval- lescing in hospital after his second .major operation this month. "had ys less restless nlght". the foreign loffrce said Sunday. Eden. 55. had this first operation April 12 for re- moval of gall stones. His second operation last week removed fluid from his liver duct. which had caused persistent jaundice. Broadway Star Of Early 30': Dies NEW YORK. (APi-Katherine lxayi Carrington. 43-year-old star of Broadway musicals in the early '30s, died Saturday of a cerebral hemorrhage. Miss Carrington. A tall and beautiful blonde. achieved stardom in a 1031 musical. "Face the Music." Another triumph soon afterward was "Music in the Air." Four Men. Feared Lost In Lumber Tug Sinking L...-f--:: steel boat which weighed six tons. It. set out Thursday on an la-mile trip from the Gillies mill to I. large log boom in Rabbit Lake. about 64 miles north of North Bay. Both vessels were expected back Friday with 7.000 loge. searchers in Lands and Forests Department canoes Sunday also found a stool on which Take usually set while steering the tug. Floating near it was I put of the superstructure of the White Bear. two more pike poles and another all drum. The discovery led lumbermen to believe the White Bear exploded. filled and sank. dragging the other boat to the bottom. Tasks and Conroy are from que- bec Province. Kosik's home is in Ottawa. Hamilton has lived at Timagnml more than so years. All The tug was towing I 2.!-foot four are bachelors. Prahang Report First clash With Red Troops HANDI. lndo-China, fAPi-The French defenders of Luang Pra- bang. royal capital of Laos. sun- day reported their first clash with Communist-led Vietminh invaders closing in for an assault on the palm-lined town. A French and Laotian patrol ex- changed rifle fire with a small enemy unit about 1'1 miles north- east. of King Sisavang Vong's cap- ital. No casualties were reported. lnvsdcrs Regrouplng The main bulk of possibly 40.000 Vietminh troops continued to re- group and organize in the hills and mountains surrounding Luang Prabang. some strong elements are still 25 miles away. it. appeared more would be no direct attack until those are in position with ad- vance units now in to 12 miles away on the north and east. French transports continued to shuttle more troops and war sup- pliers into the capital from Hanoi. 215 miles to the northeast. Luang Prabang's 6.000 civilians worked around the clock with French and Laotian soldiers bolstering the town's defences. Ask For Transport: in London. British Foreign Of- fices sources said France has asked Britain for transport planes for Ilse in Indo-China. The request came on the heels of I Washington announcement that unspecified "critically needed" military sup- plies are being rushed to the aid of Laos defenders. Informed sources indicated there might be a. British token contribu- tion of civilian aircraft for the fndo-China airlift. In the British view. the sending of military tum. ports could result in a Communist Chinese decision to shift the brunt of their Asian expansionist drive from the Korean mountains to Indo-Chlna.Burma or Thailand. wanzizxmral"-a BPRINGHILL. N. 5.. (GP)-Mu. Florence Welton, nominated by the CCF Saturday for Cumberland Centre. became the first womgn candidate for Nova Scotiva gen- eral election May 20. The seat now is held by a Liberal, A. .1. Mason. Communists Ask Recess To Prepare Reply By SAM SUMMERLIN PANMUNJOM, (AP)-The Uni- ted Nations today nominated Pak- istan as the neutral custodian to supervise war prisoners refusing to go home after an armistice in Korea. Lt.-Gen. William K. Harrison, .ir.. senior Allied truce. delegate. nominated the Asian nation short- ly after the armistice talks were resumed after a one-uuy layoff. Communist reaction to the nom- ination was not reported immedi- ately. However, the Reds had named Pakistan-along with India. Burma and Indonesia-as their choices for possible nomination as a neutral. Ask Recess The Communists responded to the proposal by asking for a recess until 11 a.m.Tuesday (10 p.m.EDT Monday). The Allies readily agreed. Previously. the UN command had suggested Switzerland for the Job of supervising some 50,000 North Korean and Chinese Com- munist prisoners who have said they would resist bcrng returned home. 'r The UN wants the neutral nation; to take custody of the prlsonersl in Korea. The Communists wan them sent to the neutral country where their talk to them. Two Glace Bay Children Burned To liealh GLACE BAY. N. S., 4CPl-Two young children were burned to death early Sunday when firc des- troyed their home. The dead: Carol Anne. 1 1-2.and Elaine. 3. both daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Hedley. Two other Hedlcy children- Ruby and Laurence Juniors-were carried to safety by rescuers. Joe Harris of Glace Bay and Charles Sheppard of Sydney. Police said all four children were. alone in the house at the time of the fire. . Army Picks "Z" . Hour For Coronation LONDON. tReutcrsi-The army has officially given the name "Z. hour" to the moment Queen Eliz- abeth is crowned June 2. A colonel of army signals stationed in West- minster Abbey will tclephone the order that sends guns booming out over London at the exact second the crown is placed on the Queen's L l representatives could i lnortlrensiern Quebec, Colourful Scottish Numbers Featured On Festival Program The Scottish flavour winch open- ed the 1953 Musical Festival Fri- day continued to dominate the program Saturday. The skirl of the pipes and the swing of the kilt I Canadian Farm I. lhnve not been so prominent for -- many a clay and the heralded re- OTTAWA, (OP)-Canadian farms'viv:rl of interest ill Scottish classic produced more than ever beforeland country dancing runs every- in 19:32, the Bureau of Statistlcslulicr'e in evidence. it. was enough reported Saturday. '10 warm the heart of any Scots- The Pralries' enormous grain man-and it did. for Adjudicator crops were the main reason pro-lcalum MucLeod commented most duction went soaring beyond thelfavorably on the many fine per- record established in wartime l942.Iform:mccs. The farm production index. using There was colour, poise and the 1935-39 period as a base equal- action and the audiences showed ling 100, hit 165 compared to 164.2 their pleasure by generously ap- in 1942 and 155.8 in 1951. plauding the various individuals Increased production was also and KT0UP5r The 10131 danclnil W0 recorded for potatoes, sugar beets. shovccd promise. and the enthusi- maple products. and dairy prod- asni and spirit displayed bids well ucts. Decreases in output were reg- for the future popularity of this lstered for livestock, fruits, vegepiinnovairon to the Musical Festival ables, tobacco and poultry. .l7F0FtI'nm- Miss Dorothy Walker. Index for 1952 were as rollows.adJudrcator. summed up her re- bv prmxnces, with those for l95l;marks with congratulatory refer- in brackets: Prince Edward Islandlrnces to the efforts of both par- The Guardian. Five Cents Morning Daily Founded 1387. Savage Battle In T renohes 6 SEOUL. Korea 'CPl-Canadian troops fought off a whirlwind Chinese Communist attack that raged 2 1r2 hours insidc Allied llTlF'S on the vlestern sector of the Korean front late Saturday night and early Sunday. The 8th army said 750 in Lorri Reds were driver off only after "intense hand-to-hand combat in Hip trenches." Nor asually nounced. The 3rd battalions of the Royal Canadian Regiment and Princess Patricla'x Light Infantry bore the brunt of the Red assault. The Chinese made a feint toward the British Fusiliers with heavy mor- tar and machine-gun fire. but the actual attack never came. Artillery Barrage figures were a n- The fighting hcgan about mid- night Saturday with s 1,000-round barrage of Communist ilrllllPr)I 13 i119,9y; Nova Scotia, anzrtlcinatorrs and their instructors. 1335;; New Br” nswicky 105,33 Getting back in more detail to and mortar - fire on Common- (PORA); Quebec, 120.7 (137.8); On.ithe opening Scottish. numbers. wealth division position north- tario. 119.2 (131.6); Manitoba. 1s2.4.MaJo1' Macl-eod both in respect to (145.41; Saskatchewan. zesallus comments on plains: and dan- r2l7,.'i:; Alberta. 175,9 (i(-1(),9;B1"11.:(Yllli( tempered his criticism with ish Columbia, 129,9 .1271: Ilrelpiui suggestions. He appeared ... ldecidedly moved by the perform- ance of the youthful pipers and predicted "good things” for them in the future with encouragement land practice. In most cases he Prominent Artist itermcd the tuning. timing and p fingering c.xcellent.1eflcctmg credit 'T on their instructor. He exhibited MONTRHAV lCP' - F"'ed”lCk.a few pointers in the use of the W. 1-lutchlson. one of Canada'sr--(.h,.,merg- most prominent painters, died Fri-I M153 waiker B150 (mend a num. day night. at his home in near-'liy.b(,.. or mlpml sugpmons as me lglcuigw" Hugh” 5”" ll kins m'3ad,iudlcnicd the folk and square t- ' on etitions. sayln t at H15 ilainiinszs ai1W8'i 1” m3"-Vlgidmltlirliiuglitlpthe standard gwhich S;;'Yzi:glC:'g;feSgglxallm W” M m3”-V; has llf'Pll reached amazing. and , .. r r He first studied under Williaml?:;?c5:::k,thl::.c:nc;r;;.(;s:an;g; Bi'.l'mner at the Montreal Art As-is H W dmcigl mev sociation and later. for several 3 a . f..,f,.l;,- ..i..--.--LL years. in Paris under Jean-Paul. tcontinued on Duke 5- 001- 4' Laurens. In 1910 Mr. ilutchisonl"-'T'T moved to New York and becamci a leader of the younger group nil painters. He won many prizes. in-l cludlng the coveted Altman prizcl of the National Academy. Wreckage Of ting education costs ll it. is voted to power in the pro- vincial general election May 26. In a 16-point. platform released here. Sunday, the party declared it u 11 "follow an educational pro- gram which places great em'9hB5lS upon the teaching problem and the course of study," and urged fed- eral financial help for the prov- ince and municipalities "provided provincial autonomy is safeguard- ed." High on the list was a plan for closer collaboration with the neigh- ito mt-ct moun .....- l MoN'rrn-:AI., ice-.. Vi'reckageI of A Sabre jet. in which F0, V9;-. non Show of Sydney Ming-3, N, 15.. was killed last fall has been found near Lake St. John in the RCAF reported Sunday night. The body of the p.loi was not located. F0 Snow was on a routinel training flight from the RCAF base at Bnrzotville, Que, in thg Lake St. John district. when the plane r-rushed. An intensive search head. at the I:me fullcd lo locale anvlborin )'.'0VlllC8S of Ncw Bruns- . 5 S l signs of the pilot or his craft. ywiok. Prince Edward Island and lNewfouncllaud "to secure united CALCUTTA. tCPveOne of Brit- ainls famed new Comet. jet pas- senger planes crashed in a heavy storm near here Saturday and airline officials said all 43 persons aboard were killed. It was the first disaster in the brief history of commercial jet. air travel and the first fatal crash of a Comet carrying a payload. The four-jet airliner operated by the British Overseas Airways Cor- poration crashed only a few min- lites after it took off from Dum Dum airport here for New Delhi. It was on A flight from Singa- pore to London. Radio contact with the plane stopped six min- utes after it took off in a heavy rain. No Survivors A ground rescuc party reached the wreckage Sunday afternoon and reported none of the 31 pas- sengers and crew of six had sur- vived the crash. which occurred 22 miles northwest of Calcutta in barren country. Preliminary ire- ports said the crash mayhsve been caused by a fire or explosion shortly after take-off. The victims included 11 women. one of them the stewardess. and two children. The crash came on the first an- niversary nf Britain's profitable and dramatic 500-mile-an-hour jet travel service. The Slngspore-l..o,n- don schedule had been opened only recently. BOAC'8 eight Comets have carried 27.700 paying pas- sengers to many corners of the world in the past 12 months with- out a single death or injury. En Route Tn Coronation 43 Killed VVhen Comet Jet Crashes In Storm .-irtmn in dealing with common pr-c-hlorrrs. including the problem of frs-rclu rates.” in the financial field. the pro- pmlll promised elimination of "ex- ilrarrrznricc and waste." appoint- mczri ni an auditor-general rc- sponslblc only to the legislature. "more effective" enforcement of .thc securities act. and repeal of llhe mrlnnet ministersl pension plan. I It outlined co-operation with in- itinlrlilals nnd municipalities in the Coronation. Thirty-five of the ad were Britons. Three were Ameri- cans. The dcnd included: Edgar W. Batcman. senior scurri- Foreign Economic Policy related questions, "The commission." Eisenhower said, "should study all existing legislation and the regulations and administrative procedures stem- ming from it which bear directly or. our foreign economic relations. "Ths review should seek to determine how these lam: can be modified or improved so as to achieve the highest possible levels of international trade without sub- jccilutz parts of our economy to sudden or scr.ous strrrins.” Eiscnliowcr said that by increas- iniz two-- international trade and stimulating private investment abroad. the US. can strengthen the illicit! frcc world. "By so doing.” he said, "we can lr-s-en and ultimately eliminate the lrravr imrdrn of forcign aid which WASHINGTON. lAPi--President Eisenhower has asked Congress to set up a commission to make "a thorough re-examination of our whole foreign cconomic policy.” Congressional leaders already have agreed to the cstablishment of such a group, to be made up of three senators. three House of Representatives members and five persons appointcd by the president. Eisenhower snicl Saturday the commission should s:art, 11.: work soon enough to make recommen- dstions which Congress could act upon at its next. session A principal objective of tho rom- misslon would be to study tariff questions. Eisenhower has asked It one-vear cxteninn or the pres- Mnny of the passengers had been on their way in London for the ent Reciprocal Trade Iirrrw-mcnts Art pending rm-imr of tariff anriiwr now hear" should also east of Xorangpo between Little Gibraltar hill and the Hook. By 2 a.m. the Canadians had expelled all of the Cirirwsr: from their trr-nl-hes and forccd them to ulthdraw. The fighting was the toughest in which the Commonwealth div- ision has been involved since it returned to the line about .1 month ago. The charging. screaming Chin- ese. poured heavy rifle and ma- chine-gun fire into the Canadians and over-ran forward irenches. They were beaten off after the defenders skirmished with them in the dark with bayonets, tom- iny-guns and grenades. Ambushed Patrol A Canadian spokesman said the Chinese attacked about 11:30 pm. (Continued on pageI-5. Col.-isin Conservatives In N.S. . Announce 16-Poin.t Policy .........L.........-e The party also tvromimi ex- commission and encouragement 01 the tourist industry. ' HALIFAX. (GP) -- Th? NOVE ' Srntis. Progressive Conservaxtive pmdw mghwn” '5.” health and et t 1 id welfare program, closer. super- e lpru-it promises to seek federa a v1S.mn,. Of the pmvmdu nqum, Sow: curs EXPELT (0 at: given .-.A CHANCLOTHERS Just mute if. , 5 rrrb! NH 93” ill ” lulllkl WV” TORONTO. (OP)--Minimum and (m9 ”m"''. M ”” wpply "”m”'l'-Vilrnrrrrlig field. a "further adiust.- gxperirgcrrtald station near Sails-.mmt-r m munmpai 1-asponsibiil. maximum tempcrsturcs:m " ury. 112 an. r 5 . ., 5. at - A n. ral- Rev. Paul Snead. Methodist nun-1::.l,,..:l;?ar'f.;:.I:::.,,,f.T1:n: .,.::l,,.,?,( Dawson 32 41. ninnmzv in Malava. returning in his The industrial program included VWCWW W M home and film”)? M N.VHCk. N- Yul.r-nr-nrrmszclnent of existing and new l'7dlf?10"i01l On lPM'P. lludustrlcs. with greater use of (70 FIFTY - Fr('dI'rlck Mitchell. 55, of South- Nma scotja pm-ts, tednmi action Regina .19 52 gate. England. homo director ofjto boost agricultural export mark- Winhllwit 39 M the China Inland Mission. lots; investigations into forest. and Toronto 41 52 Miss Joan S. Cohen and Misslflsliirig indusries; and efforts to OHHWR 33 52 Anita Whrstlrr. Americans on alrievelop markets and uses for the Monlrtal 33 6" round-the-worlri tour. lprovlnceis coal output QHEDCC - 35 55 - p Saint John 23 56 . Mont-ton 26 62 l I l Halifax 37 55 0 UOSO Charlottetown 27 55 Sydney 27 53 Yarmouih 35 52 St. John's. Nlld. 30 39 HALIFAX. (CF)-The Weathel Office forecasts fine weather throughout, the liiariilmes Monday. Regional forecasts: Prince Edward Island. New Brunswick. Bay of Chsleur: (lieu with little temperature change; light winds; low-high at Charlotte- town 25 and 55. Moncton 25 and 60. Fredericton 25 and 85. Saint John 30 and 60, I-Idmundston and C-mpbelllon 25 and 60. Bay of Fundy: Light. rvrnris; clear with visibility 10 miles. Tcm- pcrntures in the 40s. High tide today at Charlottetown at 2.33 A. M. and 1.22 P. M, High tide on the North Shore at 8.25 A. M. and 10.15 P. M. Summerside tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. Sun rls:-A today at 4.58 A. M. and sets at 7.22 P. M.