I 3- Pi-quid uo. Fort sugiimis e. IMexIms"o1'f L's IIV More Men when one door is shut. another opens. 5 i it I C " 12 races 1'; , FEDERAL TENDERS CALLED FOR PROJECTS IN THIS P OTTAWA. Jul I9 (special) - increasing aetiv of the Federal Public Works Department this month is reflected in the large number of calls for tenders issued kw the architectural and engineer- iig branches of the department. Among calls for tenders made public today are three for pro- gects in Prince Edward Island. one .s for breakwater repairs at New London. Queens County. Listed in ROVIIICE ., .r)ios:artssiental estimates at soc.- Tbe other two are in Prince County being breakwater repairs and improvements at Tignsh at an estimated cost of 825.000. and repairs to the breakwater at Mirn- inegash. Total planned outlay for the Miminegash project is si25.ooo, of which 325.000 was spent in the last year. All three Jobs are slated for com- pletlon this season. Mother Awarded ' UNB Scholarship FREDERICTON (CP)--A school iracher mother of four children, who travels 50 miles every morn- ing to attend the University of New Brunswick summer school, has been awarded a 550 scholar- ship at UNB. She is Mrs. A. P. Coming Events --con-an ban Picnic July rstii. "Kinkors. picnic, Tuesday, July -to "Picnic Green Road. Wednesday. July 28. "Rollo Bay Picnic. Wednesday, July 28th. "Dance, Fiat River Hall. Thurs- day, July 22. "Dance at Gordon Lodge every Friday night. "Cancelled - Dance Pembroke school tonight. "Dance. Fortune Hall. every Tuesday night. "Reserve Jilly dist. Tignish Parish Picnic. "Dance. Forest Hill Hall, Wed- ncsdsy. July 21. "Ice Cream. Springton School. Tuesday, July 20. "Dance Vernon River Hall. Tuesday, July 20. - "Dance Morell Rear Half Wed- nesday July zlst. "Regular Dance crapaud Rink. Wednesday night. "Tryon Baptist Church picnic. Wednesday, July 21st. "Ruerve Sept. 21 to 25th for was-lottetown Hospital Balaar. "Come to barn dance at Richard '(eliy's. Stanchei. Thursday, July 22. "Gil Henry's "Bssutena" draw- ing at'Ioa Oreun Festival, Winsloe. luly 29. "st. Teresa's picnic Wednesday. July 21st. supper served 4 till 8. Games. dance. "Ice Cream 1"estival.. Station Hall Thursday, Hishfield W. I. "Weekly dance Winsloe Station Hail every Tuesday. Doiron Bros. Orchestra. Canteen. "Reserve Wednesday. July lath, for Chicken supper and Bazaar, South Rustico I-Iall. "Dance South Rustlco Hall every Thursday night, music Rol- lis MacKensie's Orchestra. "Women's Institute Ice cream. -onial Alexandra school Tuesday, July 20th., 8 pm. Standard time. t "see Georgetown players present Betty the 0 i 0' My Heart." Bel- hall. El on July dist. curtain Winsloe July 19. N”IilI interested in the Crapaud axriibition are requested to meet ill Ci-apaucl Hall Thursday even- -Hs July 22 at. 8:30 p.m. "Institute Ice Cream social, hot drinks and sandwiches. David Mutgih-. Mt. Herbert. July 20th. Wet in ne. ."l'taguiar Dance. stanley Bridge Rink Hall every Tuesday night. :3-I-tic. Rollie Msexensie's orch- re. "Meeting of the New Glasgow illnk will be held Tuesday. July 20th to settle accounts.pei-tain- "Is to funds on hand. "Triton Baptist Church Picnic Wednesday. July 21. on Church irnunds. Chicken, Ham and Salad :ilTlP"' served from 4 o'clock. "Wanted at once, number of mod piss weighing over so lbs. 'wh- Pevine hllhast iunim prices. Wellinrron IlcNeill and son, aun- '.ain and Bell's Wharf. "Reserve Wednesday. July 20, dance Matthews and MaoLean's Warehouse. Souris. Modern and ').ld-Time Orchestra. canteen ser- "Ce. Adnii-loss Ioc. , "Bruins pigs Tuesday Brookfleld "-"1-. Hilton 10. York 1 p.m.. Bed- ford 2. '11-aoadie 2.30. Mt. Stewart TIME FOR EXAMINATION Hetherington of Codys. She and her husband are taking a course for degree credits. UNB president Colin B. Mackay paid tribute to "the spirit and persever- ance of Mr. and Mrs. Hethering- ton in View of the obvious physical and financial difficulties under which they are laboring to further their own personal qualifications as teachers." They rise at 5 a.m. daily and leave home at 8 a.m. to reach their first class. Last summer they were late for only one eight o'clock class and "this was due to a flat tire suffered on the way to Freder- icton." Radio Man Killed In Plane Crash ST. JOHN'S. Nfld.. (CF;-cor eph 1. Butler. founder and owner of radio station v0cM. was killed Monday night in a crash of a light plane at nearby Torbay vil- lags. Mr. Butler was the only occu- pant of the plane. Details of the crash were not available immediately but it was believed the float-equipped plane crashed close to Clay lake. He is survived by his widow and three children. Mr. Butlers light plane is be- iieved to have struck the bank of Great's pond as he took off in the float-equipped craft 10 miles from here. It crashed in flames. -Only an hour or so before he -had volunteered to use his plane ingie hunt for missing four-year- oi Tyrone Power. e youngster wandered away from his parents at a beach Sun- day. He was found asleep in a clump of bushes shortly after the . plane crash. ROMP placed a guard around the wreckage of Mr. Butler's Aeronaca and started a probe into the crash. Poison Pills Have Been Found TORONTO (CP)-Six thousand poison plus. believed stolen from a truck last Thursday, have been found. Police said Monday E. Winter. owner of the cartage truck. told them he received word from a customer that an extra carton had been left. When the customer ex- amined the carton. he found it contained the small pink mercuric chloride pills consigned to a dairy preservative in milk samples. After the pills were reported stolen from the parked truck. police scoured lanes skid went from door to door to warn parents to caution children against eating the pills in mistake for candy. They said the pills could cause death-within a few minutes. To Condemn Tactics WASHINGTON (CP) - Senator Ralph Flanders (Rep. Vt.) Mon- day postponed until July 30 his attempt to force a showdown Sen- ate vote on his resolution to con- demn the investigative tactics of Senator Joseph McCarthy. : At the some time the Wisconsin Republican began public hearings on what he described as an investi- gation of Communists working in US. defence plants. The hearing was enlivened by the ejection of a man said by one of the wit- nesses to be a Communist. Flanders' decision not to intro- duce his censure motion today as planned. resulted primarily from a desire that the vote "be massive and bi-partisan as possihlc," the Vermont senator said. Flanders gave several reasons resolution calling on the Senate to censure McCarthy for the way he has acted as chairman of the Sen- ate invsstigations sub-committee. One would be to give the other senators "an opportunity to exam- ine thoroughly th significance of the proposal an to make the necessary arrangements to be pre- sented." Another would be to avoid delaying action on President Eisen- hower's legislative program. Flanders said. however. he will deliver as planned a speech he pre- pared for today as a prelude to introducing the censure resolution. The speech. text of which was is- sued during the week-end. likened McCarthy's career to that of a weaker and " mateuri... Adolf Hitler. McCarthy's hearing. meanwhile. began taking up what the Wiscon- sin senator said were the cases of 88 persons who are apparently munista and who work in de- fence plants. He said he used the word "apparently" because some of them may be undercover FBI H ' . &En1.&9i: . Ill! Ilbenm MW: that s. 4, cus- i'' steel: for uu':i:7u Pli-mfs M 0-ch.ts1.ee ever is iiieI."s:xue its in between. lens somnung which planned to use them as a M” for postponing introduction of a 9 Agriculiuralisi Dies In Toronto TORONTO (CP) - The funeral was held Monday night of Andrew Arthur Macfarlanc-Brown, 63,. who claimed to be the last of the Mac- farlanc clan chiefs and who was credited with selecting the seed potatoes that promoted Prince Ed- ward Island's famous industry. His body will be cremated to- day. Later. his ashes. along with those of his mother who died in 1945. will be taken to Scotland for interment in a plot. in the Ionian islands where the Macfarlane chiefs are buried. A graduate of the University of New Brunswick, Mr. Macfarlane- Brown was for several years as- sistant plant pathologist for the Maritime provinces. He was later a teacher on the staff or Macdon- aid College at Ste. Anne de Belle- vue. Que. Surviving is a sister, "Wan Brown of Boston. PC Pariy Loses Seat in British Columbia House NANAIMO, Progressive Conservative -party Monday lost; its lone representative in the British Columbia legislature when Dr. Larry Cviovando quit the party and said he would sit as an independent. ”I am dissociating myself-- from the Conservative party and will sit as an independent," he said in-in interview here. "I doubt if I will ever run again. I have never liked party politics and believed I could do something for the constituency when elected." His announcement followed Sat- urday's meeting at Vernon. B. C. where the provincial executive by a vote of 40 to 24 passed I. motion of no confidence in national party leader George Drew . Dr. Giovando is the latest of sev- eral Progressive Conservative stal- warts who have quit the party in British Columbia in the last few years. Most notable were W. A. C. Ben- nett. who became premier with the Social Credit party. He was ac- companied by the late Mrs. Tilly ton. TORONTO (CP) - Ontario p'ro- vincial police said Monday traffic on the main highways into Toronto reached record heights Sunday On the Toronto-Barrie highway 400. an unofficial evening count listed 3.600 cars moving south in an hour, or one every second. Vermont Senator Postpones Move of McCarthy said he worked his way into the inner circles of the Communist apparatus in the Boston area as a FBI agent. mentioned Charles Wojchosky as one such Communist. WANTED CHARGES READ McCarthy interrupted him to in- quire whether Wojchosky was pres- ent. Wojchosky. who worked at the Allis Chalmers plant in Boston. rose and identified himself. Asked if he wanted to be sworn as a witness. Wojchosky said: "I'd like to know what the charges are. who the accusers are. I'd like to have time to prepare." He said a telegram practically convicting him had been sent to his employer and had Just about cost him his job. "I don't know who the stool pigkri-one and informers are." he s McCarthy became angry, saying: "You are not ning to come here and call an BI agent a stool pigeon." Then he ordered Wol- chosky removed from the room. saying he could come back later to testify under oath. B. (7.. (UP) - The- Moiher of Slain Bear-Hunter Testifies as Crown Opens Case Against Prospector PERCE. Que. (CP)-A 48-year- old American housewife, whose husband and son were slain while on a bear-hunting excursion in the Gaspe bush, took the stand Mun- day to testify at the murder trial of a prospector accused in con- nection with their deaths Mrs. Eugene Lindsey of Holi- daysburg. Pa.. said the last word she received from her 17-year-old son. Richard, and her husband, Eugene. 47, was a postcard say- ing they were ready to enter the woods with a friend, Albert Ciaar, 20. also of I-iolidaysburg. The bear-torn remains of the three hunters were found in July. 1953. a month after they entered the bush. Wearing glasses. a trim grey suit and red hat. Mrs. Lindsey's voice faltered only once during an hour's questioning as a crown witness at the trial of 43-year-old Wilbert Coffin. charged specifically with the murder of the younger Lind- sey. WRITING RECOGNIZED Asked if she recognized the hand- writing on the postcard as that of her son, Mrs. Lindsey replied with a quiet sob. ”I certainly do." It was dated June 11. 1953. the day before Lindseys and Clear plunged into the Gaspe wilderness to hunt bears. In mid July. the skeletons of all three were found. gnawed by bears (Continued on page 2. col. 8) Russia May Soon Call For New Four-Power Talks '3 GARY LEV! 'BERLINytReuters)-Russia me, soon call for new four-power talks on reunifying Germany. this time with East and West German ad- visers present, Western officials said Monday. They said the disclosure Sunday that Walter Ulbricht, chief of the East German Communist party. is in Moscow means a major move is in the making. Ulbricht showed up at a Moscow sports rally after a secret trip to the Soviet capital. One purpose of his mission is to consult with Georgi M. Pushkin, newly-appointed Soviet high com- missioner to East Germany. The two men were closely associated in 1949 when Pushkin became chief of.ihe Soviet mission accredited to the then new East German gov- ernmcnt. GROUP SEEKING TALKS But the chief Communist party newspaper here. Vorwaerts, hinted Monday that Ulbricht had even more important matters to talk over in the Kremlin. The news- paper gave streamer display to a Geneva report that a West German delegation of intellectuals had asked the Western delegations.at the Indo-China talks to approve a new four-power conference on Ger- many. This was the first such call pub- Iicized through any of the Soviet propaganda organs. Since the-col- lapse of the four-power talks on Germany in Berlin last February. Russian propaganda has been call- ing in vain for direct talks between East and West Germany to reunify the nation. - Vorwaerts noted that Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Vassiiy Kouznetzov talked to the intellec- tuals' delegation for more than an hour. Western officials here said all this points to a major propa- ganda campaign shortly for id meeting of the British. American. French and Russian foreign min- isters. ELECTIONS ISSUE The Berlin conference in Febru-. ary broke up over the iong-stand- ing issue of free. all-German elec- tions to select a unified govern- ment. Russia demanded that dele- gates from the existing East and West German governments meet to arrange for the elections. Western Chancellor Konrad Ade- nauer, with full Allied backing. con- sistent has rejected any confer- ence w th the East German regime on grounds it is not representatlve of the people it rules. WN, CANADA, 7 TUESDAY, JULY 20, 1954 GENEVA (Reuters)-An Indo-China peace appeared near Monday night as Western and Communist political leaders whittled down their di Premier Pierre Mendes-Franc sign" deadline. A wave of optimism swept conference circles during the day's round of behind-the-scenes negotiations. to solve two of the major pro of the war were reported on the verge of success. Mendcs-France. with just over 24 hours left before time runs out on the period he gave himself to get peace. was in hopeful moo , al- though he apoke guardedly when correspondents askel him how his hurried series of conferences WiI.I'i East and West leaders was going. ”All right." was his answer. When a reporter asked "Is peace is sight?" he replied ”i hope i so.' Meanwhile the Communist side predicted an early conclusion to negotiations. The Vietminh dcpuiy premier. Pham Van Dong, told French newspaper men outright he was sure a cease-fire would be arranged in "the coming days." -NEARER T0 RED STAND Foreign secretary Eden of Bri- tain dined privately with Mendcs- France Monday night. Diplomatic source said later they had moved closer toward the Communist posi- tion on the question of a regroup- ing area in the state of Laos. The nine-power conference was said to be virtually agreed on the question of armistice controlva problem which has hamstrung it since it. began meeting here just over 10 weeks ago. The iicklish question of a truce line in Viet- nam. largest of the three indo- China states. also seemed near solution. In a surprise move late Monday night the Viet Nam delegation for- mally proposcd an Indo - China cease-fire on the present positions under United Nations control. ' Conference circles regarded this as a desperate last-minute attempt to alter the course of negotia- tions in Viet Nam's favor. They thought the Viet Namese were al- most certain to accept-however reluctantly-any solution agreed upon here. Dong said one question still not (Continued on page 2, col. 6) Volunteers Join In Search For Boy ST. JOHN'S. NFLD. (CP)-some 500 civilian volunteers have joined the RCMP in the search for a four- year-old boy who wandered away from his parents Sunday at nearby Topsail beach. Tyrone Power. son of Mr. and -Mrs. Max Power of St. John's toddled along the beach away from his parents early Sunday evening. Many of the searchers using flashlights worked throughout the night poking among trees and heavy shrubs. Brief Respiii: from Sailing MARSEILLE, Franco, (AP) - Scrge Levitsiry, the man without ii country who has spent 11 months aboard a French ship without once touching land. got a brief re- spite Monday. French auihoritics granted him shore leave until July 31. Leviisky has been travelling steadily since last Aug. 7 aboard the French steamer Bretngne and has made about eight trips across the south Atlantic. He has sought. each time in vain, entry to France. Italy and South American notions visited by the ship. Levitsky's case is comparable to that of Patrick O'Brien. who spent months on a ierrybont be-tween Hong Kong and Macao. then be- tween several European ports be- fore obtalning asymm in the no- minican republic. The owners of the Bretagiie es- timated its expenses for Levitsky at ;1bsout 2,000,000 francs roughly 35.- I.-evitsky was born in Shanghai in "20 and is stateless-carries no passport and is acknowledged by no country as a clutch. ITOO CLOSE TO GROUND rince ii Lik F Peaceful Settlement Of, Indo: China Qluesliioln Appears Near Coven: Edward Island; a The Dow; lfrnsos.-sol r - . ..-Ow; fferences in the fact of French e's approaching "peace or re- Efforts l blems holding up a settlement Drew Prefers MADRID (CP) - ueorge Drew. Canadian Progressive-Conservative ,leader. said Monday night he pre- lfers not to comment on the vote lof non-confidence in his national , Monday, no request had been re- :Iead"9h.Ip re3Ist".ed Satumay by ceived here from the Geneva con- the British Columbia Party Assoc- fermcel iation. Drew now is in Madrid on final stages of is fact-finding tour of Europe. informed of Saurday's non-confidence and of a charge by provincial leader Deane Finlaysuii that the Conservatives had decided to leave provincial affairs in Brit- ish Columbia to the Social Credit party, Drew said: l'I have no comment to make on that. There are three extremely capable federal members from ,Bl'IlISh Columbia and they are iquite able to deal with the situa- ion here." The opposition leader said he plans to return to Canada early in August. He has already visited Britain, France. Switzerland. Por- tugal and Spain. and plans also to go to Germany. He said his tour is "to see what has taken place in the different European countries." particularly regarding trade, reconstruction and defence matters. TwoTHyers Die IN lei Crash I MONTREAL (CP)-A T-83 Sil- vcr Star jet trainer on a routine flight from its base at nearby St. Hubert crashed in flames Monday in a field at Lachenaie, Que.. kill- ing its two air force occupants. The pilot of the craft, from l0-I communication flight, was identi- fied ns Flt. Lt. J. A. H. de Niver- ville. of Ottawa. 32-year-old son of Air Vice-Marshal de Niverville. di- rector of air services for the fed- eral transport department. The second viciim was identi- fied as Flt. Li. G. J. Helmer, 30, also of Ottawa, whose wife and four children live at St. Hubert. An air force official at St. Hu- bert who was on the scene shortly after the crash said one witness told him one of the two men jumped from the plane shortly be- fore it crashed. I-le quoted the witness as saying the plane was "too close to the ground for the parachute to open." Body of one of the men was found some 300 feet from the wreckage. The body of Flt. Lt. dc Niverviile was found in the burnt wreckage. Witnesses said the engine of the jet apparently failedtwhile some 4.000 feet in the air. Postpones Visit To East Africa KAMPALA. Uganda. (Reutcrsl-. The Aga. Khan has postponed his visit to East Africa in September for three elaborate weighing - inl ceremonies because his doctor has. told him he should not leave France at present. it was disclos- ed Monday. Thousands of the '76-year-old spiritual leader's followers will ,have to change plans to celebrate VIIIS Platinum jubilee in Dnr-Es- Salnam, Monbasa and Kampala. The ceremonies will involve match- ing his weight in platinum. VA I.I'ABI.E MICTAI. Platinum is valued for indus- trial uses. as well as jewelry. ho- r-ause it is much harder than sil- ver and gold. on an Indo-China armistice com- mission. quest from Geneva. outlining the status of such a commission and what exactly it would be expected to do. no decision can be taken. , authority said. ”But we're waiting for information from Geneva. can't agree to something before we know what we're agreeing to." said Canada. India and Pdland are being asked to serve on an armis- tice commission, but at a late hour CONSIDER OFFER ports. Minister Pearson and his top offi- cials began consideration matter. but smiling Marie Dionne has come home from ii Quebec City convent to spend the summer with her four qulntuplct sisters. cloiatered sisters of the Sacrament Nov. porary vows as a novice May 24, said poor health. loss of appetite and homesiclmess forced leave. She left the east and Quebec City convent last Thursday and ar- rived home Sunday night spending two days in Montreal. enily and my appetite has also suf- fered," she said Monday. "I was very lonely too." HOME FOR. SUMDIEIT. rest of the summer, anyway. After I have regained my health I will decide whether or not to return to the sisters." tuplets. said he received a. letter Monday from the mother superior she thought Marie "a little too del- quirements of the added everyone was sorry to see her go. Marie might leave after receiving a letter from her last which she said she washomeeick. N0 MYSTERY Marie leaving the convent." said. "Arrangements for her to de- part were made in advance after she talked it over with the priest who was her spiritual adviser. nod to meet her sister Emile in Montreal and Journey to Callander l0 miles southeast of North Bay, to join the other quintuplets An- nette. Cecille and Yvonne. had some trouble other when Emilie became lost. college examinations visiting at this convent of the oblate sisters in St Agnthe. She became lost in Montreal and joined her lpalace for directions. OTTAWA (CF)-Canada is will- ng-in principle, at least-to serve informants said Monday. But until there is a formal re- ”We want to be helpful," one W o Press dispatches from Geneva On the strength of the press re- however. External Affairs of the it was believed that any deci- CALLANDEE, Ont. (OP)-A thin strictly Blessed 3 and took tem- Marie. who joined the her to after "My health has been poorly rec- "I intend to stay home for the Oiiva Dionne, father of the quin- at iihe convent in which she said icate to endure the vigorous re- order." She Mr. Dionne said he expected week in "There was no mystery about he Mi: Dionne said Marie had plan- They iocnting each Emilie had spent two weeks after Que, north of Montreal. sister after Montreal police sent her to the archblshop's -n....4 Cod.-Mackerel Catch Poor (Iniimiinn Press: Prince T-Iriunrri Island fisher- mcn rcporicri .VInn(Ia)' lli-at the rod and nmrrkr-rel catch is the worst in imrs. J. J. Larnhae of the fisheries department said the season open- ed well but. "slnrkerwri right. off." By FRANK WIGIITON LONDON (Reuters) - Without duction until ms. The test flight of the experi- fanfars Britain's first jet airliner mental plane, known as the Comet designed to span the Atlantic took III, was held as word was awaited off Monday on a successful D5-rnin- on the cause of a a rise of fatal uta maiden flight. prised to s into the air from the adjoining company field. . The new airliner is built to from London "to New York in be- tweenaeven and eight hours with i . ITOCH: witness. James Glade. W50 crashes of its pre ecessor, the Even factory workers at the de Comet I. Exhaustive tests have Hevillend plant at lfetfialf on Lon- been carried on since the crash don's northern outskirts were sur- of a Comet off Naples last April the advanced version with the loss of all It persons of the original Comet ietliner roar aboard. Thiacrash. coupled with one off Elba with In deaths in January. 59 forced the grounding of all com- mercial cornet flights pending the on gtopovgr in amgg,-, nm, 1; 1, results of investigations to deter- W "mm is I0 M N." are MP! W trestle P.:M-redo? of is-. .Wh.-.n. the we came down as I Giant AirITneriMakes First: Flight Comet I and If was slowed during the investigations but work went ahead to develop the prototype of the series III. BEHAVIOR "PEIIFECT" The shining new Comet look off In ideal weather Monday and scared over the English country- side with John (Cat.-i' Eyes) Cun- ningham. de Havilland's chief test pilot and Battle of Britain hero. at the controls. His co-pilot was Peter Bugge, a Norwegian who cs- caped from his occu led country during the war to y with the RAF. minutes later. Cunningham nn. nouncl-d that it had "behaved per- ft-rtly." The new craft is about 18 feet longer than the original Comet and carries from 58 to 76 passengers. It. is driven by four Rolls Royce Avon gas turbines, each of l0.000 vounris static thrust. A cruising speed of well over 500 miles an hour gives the Comet Ill much greater non-stop range than the series I. A fleet of the .new series has been ordered by British Overseas Airways Corporation. Pan-Amerl- can Airways has ordered three with an optioargon another seven. Canada Considers Request To Serve On Indo-China Armistice Commission sion to serve on such I commis- sion would have to be made by the cabinet. Prime Minister St. Laurent kept in touch with develop- ments from his summer home at St. Patrick. Que. One informant said he doubted whether any decision would be taken by the government before today at least. supposing an offi- cial request was received. CAUGHT BY SURPRISE Newspaper reports of the request caught the external affairs depart- ment by surprise. The request to Canada to serve on a commission was said to have been sent by Anthony Eden. British foreign sec- retary who is participating in the Geneva conference. . Canada withdrew from the Gen- eva conference some two weeks ago after collapse of the Korean phase of the talks and after main- taining a watching brief on the lncio-China part of the conference for some time, Canada is not A party to the Indo-China talks. MARIE DIONE HOME FROM CONVENT T0 SPEND SUMMER WITH FAMILY Soviets Protest - Tanker Capture If? XDNDON. (AP) -frhe soviet Union has protested a third time to the United states against seizure of the Soviet tanker Tau-pse in For- mosa waters. Moscow radio re- ported Monday. The United states has twice dis- claimed any responsibility for the seizure and the Chinese nationalist government on Formosa. has said one of its torpedo boats herded the Taupse into port June 23. The Soviet government has in- sisted. however, that the seizure could only have been carried out with the planning of U. B. naval forces which dominate the Pacifi ocean area around Formosa. HALIFAX (CP)-The Dominiin weather office here says the poor weather is moving slow caste ward. Drier air will bring prov- ing weather to the western regions by dawn and the eastern regions late Tiiesday. Regional forecasts: prince Edward Island! Little change in temperaturo;,west winds 15; low-high at Charlottetown II and TR. -- Saint John river valley. Bay of Clialcur. eastern N.B. counties: Sunny and warmer; west winds low-high at Edmundston 58 and 18.. Campbellion 55 and 75; Moncton so and 78. Fredericton B8 and I0. Saint John 55 and 78. Bay of Fundy: West winds 15!! clearing in the morning; visibility, on:-. in four miles in mist and rain. improving to 10 miles; tempera- turcs near . TORONTO ICP)-Minimum and maximum temperatures: Fishing is the :1-cnnd Iargpgl in. MIN "55 riiisiry in the prhYlnFP and while Duwmn "'”"""'” 53 M figiirrs on tho i'YITT'I'I were not v?'"c”,”V" 56 M available, any major slump would Vmnrla 52 on he a severe economic hlow- Edmonton ' AT 81 , Calgary . 17 R7 Saskatoon . 5: 3 Rcgina 5 Winnipeg 62 '13 Toronto . M 83 ' Ottawa .. 60 73 mg 'Monircal .. as '10 Quebec 3 WHITNEY. Tex. (AP)--"Uncle 55 Q Tiom" Rose, iol. is dead. just a 1431,13, 53 as little more than I year after his F,-ed”-iv-(on 57 (lg wiles dcnth ended what vras he- chui.-memwn , 57 74 iieved to be the longest marriage Syrinpy . M Q in the United States. ym-mnugh 55 Q5 UNI? Tam (IWI 5Und3)' In the St..1nhnls . . . . . . . . . . .. M '14 some little house near Whitney where III' and Aunt Easier had lived 58 years when she died on June 9. 1953, the couple had been married 80 years. They were believed then to have been married longer than High tide today at Charlottetown at 1.44 am. and 1.80 p.Ii. sum- merside tide id minutu later than Charlottetown. - High this today at the Null! Shore at 011 um. and Ill pan. sun rises today at as sin. and any living couple in the United sum: . .. . ....ii.a.....A.. sets at 7.8! p.ns. , u (The time lag Atlantic ljaflh .-:-,...-.'.::- -