Donit Trade L l MAXIMS or A MERE MAN The plsythlnll of our elders sailed business. are 5 (' f,nP.E . Charlottetown, luunsrids 015.00 3: llllllll. llsswbcro I. 39.00. other Provinces and IJ.l.A. 311.00 per snnsn.) Read by Eve Covers Prince Edwird Island Like the Dew” CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. TUESDAY, AUGUST. 4, 1953 Report Argentina ;BacIc In Market For Seed Potatoes See Administration Victory In U. S. Foreign Aid Bill WASHINGTON (CP)-The Seri- iiic Monday sent President Eisen- hower a 56.500.000.000 foreign aid bill which-although cut sharply under his original request-was . considered an administration vic- ltii')'. Final action on the hotly-debat- ed measure. designed to bolster .'i-iendly foreign nations against Communism. came in the waning hours of the 1953 congressional FPFSIOI1. The measure authorizzed SL531.- .'in'l.000 in new cash for military and economic assistance in the current fiscal year. which ends next. June 30. It also provides for iiriflldllllt 32.120.915.390 of unspent funds. That made the total for iC3rHin?Ev school Fri- ' 'Dance Iona East :la:.'. "Dance. Stmdclolumbia Hall. Thursday. August. 6th. . "Dance at Gordon Lodge every Friday night. "Dance. Lorne Valley 'l'uesday. Turner's Orchestra. "Ice cream -festival New Glas- ;ovt' Hall Thursday. August 6th. "Greenwich church supper. Legion Hall. St. Peters. August iith. every "Dance. Cardroes school. Wed- nesday nlght. August 5th. "Dance Sinhott Road School Tuesday. August 4. Ice cream, refreshments. "South Rustico Chicken supper and Bazaar. Wednesday. August 5th. "Ice cream festiial. amusements nlld dance in Mt. Stewart Legion Hall, Tuesday. August 4th. "Fe.nrier's regular barn dance on Tuesday night. A Power fans for xcntilation. Bus leaving I.M.T. 0:30. "Dance every Tuesday night. Stanley Bridge Rink hall. Music by Munroe's Orchestra. "Pantry Sale. August 8th. Moore A McLeod. Ladies of Brookfield Church. "lnman Reunion. Augustine Cove Camp. niday. August 7th. 1.10 P. M. "Now in stock binder twine and I)i'l1allE spray materials. Benton iincl Macmte. 9514 Winsioe. "st. John's Church. Crspsud. iuinual Picnic Wednesday. August 5lIl. Ham and Chicken Supper. "l)oii't miss the dance at K. of P Bo.l's' Camp. North Rustico. Tlxiiisiisy, Aug. 6. Dancing 9:10 to 12 so. "Dance in at. Peter-'s Holy Name mill. Tuesday. August 4th. in aid "Y St. Peter's Ball Team. Burns' orchestra. "ice cream social. sandwiches. coffee. David Mutch's. Mt. Her- bert. Tuesday 4th. In aid of school. "St. Teresa's Picnic. Wednesday. Allatist sci. supper served 4 P. M. till it P. M. Dance after. Burke's Orchestra. "11'armera ask about the shut Gain Feed Finance Plan. For par- ticulars contact your local food mill. Jarmsrs who break records use shur Gain. "Free dance. Beaver Club, Mlmlllue. Tuesday. August 4th. Sllonsored by Montague Young Pmkressive Conservative Club. Vlryons welcome. "Royal reeds produce greater Droilt from your pmiitry-market Mr chickens earlier by uslns loyal crowing Marsh and Pellets. Kelly Food service. CHIS . the y-2?: ss.as2,42ETs?io. Less Than Requested Congress voted s9oo.ooo,ooo 1953 in new cash than what President Eisenhower said was the "honest minimum" when he revised form- er President Truman's budget. The approved total was 33,000,000, 000 under the s7.soo,ooo.ooo Truman said was needed. Final Senate action of the House of Representatives-approved com- promise foreign aid measure was by voice vote and without the im- passioned. lengthy oratory that marked senate debate on the bill last week. Administration leaders in the Senate were forced to fight stren- uously in the floor debate to ward 0" repeated attempts to slash the funds deeper and to tie strings to use the money by foreign coun- tries. This year's foreign aid bill could be the last. The mutual security law expires next June 30 as far as new auth- orizations go. although the new bill permits spending to continue 1957 for military items and to 1956 for economic aid to free nations. The new cash provided for in the. new foreign aid bill is the low- est in five years. Last year it was 36.001.947.000. The peak was 67.- 621.Ib0.000 for fiscal 1951. More Aid To Asis The proportion of aid to Asian nations is doubled this year as compared with last year. The measure authorised t400.000.000 to pay for material built in France and used by French forces in fighting Communist forces in In- do-China. ,, The bill also makes special pro- vision for the buildup of North Ai- lantic Treaty Organization NATO air strength in Western Europe. The U. S. will put up :282.000.000 -about half the cost-of building about 1.600 jet fighters for NATO in England. France, Belgium and the Netherlands. PARIS, (CF)-A French pilot belly - landed his disabled Air France Constellation on a bench in southwest. Turkey Monday. sav- ing the liv '10 of the 4 "Clyde-I . ECO W meetiugP to- night. "Regular Meeting Hope River Credit Union. Tuesday, August 4th. "Reserve Friday. August 6th, for Missionary Rally at New London United Church at 2 P. M. "Dance. Hermitage School. Wed- nesday August nth. Frsziers Orch- eetrs. ' ' Dance. re.-fr:-es-l1Imeni.s. Kelly's Cross school. Wednesday. August 5th. "Diaries in Goose River new school. Tuesday. August 4th. Music by Chsluons. "Dance. Oorrsn Ban Hall. W nesdsy night. August 5th. McKensio's Orchestra. Wn-y cupr Purina Finance Plan for feeding your pigs and Poultry. Dillon at Splllett. "Clyde aiver. Fridsyv Ausust 'Ith. Mr. R. 0. Parent will lecture on his trip to Great Britain. Illustrat- ed with coloured slides. "In stock, new improved Fly spray for cattle. Greenshesf binder twine. cattle salt. All kinds potato spray. Dillon & SPl"0N- "Wheat -'lTrtloadlng car Bulk when at our Bummerslde Mill. Monday and Tuesday. August are and 4th. 03.25 cm." Bring boss. P. L. Morris. to' ihis unit positions. Included A popular man and a man with heavy resp onsibiljty in Korea now been signed is Capt. L. A. Dignan of Port Hill, P.E.I., Royal Canadian Regiment. Above. he is seen during a visit to one of in the photo are Sgt. Maj. .1. A. Brown, Springhill. N. Pie. N. R. '1". Giliis. Piclou. i Battalion. The L. H. Davidson. Glace Bay. New Waterford, Pie. A. 1. MacKenzie. Dominion. N.S.. Pie. C Barrett. Halifax, and Pie. L. A. Clow, Summer- D. S. Russell, Newfoundland, Island Padre In Korea pl Pie. H. side. P.E.I.-(National Defence Piiotcil. that the truce has Protestant Padre with the 3rd S.. Sgt. S.. L.lCpl. G) T. Burns. J. E. McPhce. Halifax. Pie. U. S. House Adjourn: WASHINGTON. (AP) - The House of Representatives ad- journed Monday night until next Jan. 6. Since it already had agreed with the senate to a sine die resolution. the adjournment ended the first session of the 03rd Congress as far as the House was concerned. Most Passengers Survive Crash Landing Of Plane sons aboard. The pilot. Capt. Raymond Terry. sent out an SOS early in the morn- ing saying his two left engines had failed and that he was about in make a crash landing nenr the tiny island of Kasterllorizon. off south- ern Turkey. Instead. he nursed the huge plane toward Fethiye. on the Gulf of Makrl. to the northwest. and nosed it toward the bench. He landed in the water close enough to shore for the momentum to carry it onto the beach. Four persons a Lebanese man and it Lebanese woman. an Iraqu busintm man and .1 Syrlzin woman-were killed and three in- lurcd. the airline disclosed. One passenger earlier reported misslm: has since been found safe. All eight members of the crew sur- F-(.Contlnued on page 15 col 3? OTTAWA. (CF)-Canada. and tho 'United states recently had some- thing in common along cost-of-liv- ling lines-clirnbing food prices. Rising food prices during May reversed a continuous six-month drop in the Canadian consumer price index. bumping it by one- half point. The index. based on 1949 prices equalling 100. now stands at 11-10. just 3.3 points below the all-iinic high of 118.2 in December. 1951. The June edition of the consumer price survey likely will be pub- lished today or Wednesday. In the U. S.. high food prices forced livliig costs to a. record higii between May and Julie. The Amer- ican .vai'dstlck rose four-tenths of one per cent between mid-May rind mid-June. placing it at 114.5 per cent. of the 1047-49 average. Before the May rise. Canadian food prices had been generally ens- lng. But in May pork showed sur- prising strength. and along with higher prices for fresh fruits and vegetables. other meats, bread and eggs. forced the index to its big- gest jump in 19 months. The old yardstick. based on 1935- 39 prices equalling 100. showed a similar trend. rising by 1.2 points to 184.6 anti reversing a steady. three- month decline. This coinparecl with the all-time high of 1915 iii l)e- cemlier. 1951. Higher food prices also were reflected in the May rise. Food prices exert powerful Ill- fluence over the cost-of-living ed-lNew Immigration Bill Rollie i Before U.S. Congress WASHINGTON. (AP).-A compre- hensive bill designed to remoid American immigration and nat- remove the inequities la-st y'dnTT)?Vilietspokesm:n for both major politinl parties to and dis- urallsation policy "into its iradi- criminaiions from our basic i'inmi- tlonal directions of justice. equity grntion and naturalization laws." and welcome" was inirodsced in Oongi-ess Monday. Eight senators and 24 members of the House of Representatives joined in offering the bulky legis- The bill would abolish the pres- ent national origins quota system of immigration. under which eiieh coiintiys sh re or the 154.000 aliens admissible niiually now is based lation to replace the controversial on the niake-up of United States Mccsrran-Walter act passed last population in 1920. year over former President 'n-u- man's veto. All the sponsors. except Senator would increase the Wayne Morse (Ind. Democrats but they said the mess- iire aims to carry out "pledges the western hemisphere. - Ore). are quols Instead. :1 new "unified quota system" would be established. It. number of immigrants admissible im- nunlly to about 261.000. including climbing Food Prices Are common To Canada, 0.5; yut-dsticks because the average consumer spends more for food than for any other family budget item. Thus. in relationship to other family budget lteins. food takes up 32 per cent of the consumer price index. Shelter, including rent and home-owiiership costs. is al- located 15 per cent: clothing 11; housrholri operations 17; and other commodities and services 25. During May the food sub-group of the consumer price index rose to 111.4 from 110.1. This compares to the peak of 122.5 in November. 1951. Shelter. including rents. climbed to a new high of 123.6 from 122 9. Other groups remained un- changed: clothing at 110.1: house- hold opei-ntions al1l6.6. and other commodities and services at ll5.1. East Berlinyefsa Continue To Receive Food BFLRIJN. tCPt..0i:e ilioiisaud East Berliners Monday i-eeelvcri free fond from the West while the Comniiinist 7riue auth- oritics- i'e-dlslributiiig food corms- h tindred calcd front East-7.niiers-lianded out about. 2,000 parcels. Coiumunist troops and police maintained a blockade to keep free Western food from the rest of East Gei-niniiy. The West's free food handout. which has benefitted many more than 1.000.000 Ellsf Germans in the last week. continued Monday for East Berliners who were able to cross into the democratic sector by siibirar or on font despite the Cnmmunists' ban on rail travel. The number of 10-pound food parcels handed out by West Ber- lin authorities Monday was twice the number distributed Sunday- when the Reds' travel ban angered East Germans but seared them away frrrm West Berlin. The East German government denied. however. that there had been riots in the soviet zone. The East Berlin food distribu- tion prngrsm was short. nvpd. Three hours after opening their stalls--niily to old age pensioners and unemployed from West Berlin -the East zone stalls had to close down. Will impiiii 265.000 110-lb. Crates This Year rmnnnaroron. (CPt - Argen- tina is back in the market for Canadian seed potatoes, W. B. Mc- Cullough. assistant agricultural di- rector of the federal trade depart- ment. said here Monday. . The former agricultural secre-. iary at the Canadian embitssy in Buenos Aires said plans call for imports of at least 265.000 11C- pound crates from New Brunswick. Prince Edward Island or Maine. In the last. three years Argentina. imports of seed potatoes have lleelli cut off by a dollar shortage. Now! good domestic grain crops have improved the exchange situation. Mr. McCullough also predicted larger shipments of Maritime pn-. tatoes to Uruguay and Veneziielnl this year. 40.000 See 1 New Air Base p LIMESTONE AIR BASE. Me..' (AP)-Some 40.000 visitors--10,000: more than expected-swarmed to' air force open house Monday at this vast sl00.000,000 atom bomber base near the Canadian border. Most popular attraction was a display of the giant. 10-engined range atomic operations. Specially-built ramps allowed sight-seers to roam the length of the craft's immense wing span and peer into the cockpit with its maze of electronic gadgets. Also on ex- hibition were F-89 and F-86 Jet. fighters. weapons. engines. radari that guides the 13-36 and variousi items'of protective and life sav- in gear. Australians Test- Firsf Sabre Jet CANBERRA. (Reuters) -- Aris- ti-aiia's first Sabre jet fighter made a successful test. flight Monday. Eric Harrison, defence production minister. said the plane is an im- provement of the original United states design. The fuselage has been modified to take a British Avon jet engine instead of the Am- erican turbo-jet. Mother of Three Is Mrs. Toronto TORONTO. (GP!-Mrs. Olga. Hsbbeshaw. 28.-Monday was chos-l en "Mrs. Toronto". The New York-born brunette mother of s three-year"-old son won a beauty contest before a crowd of 6.000. She received an assortment of merchandise. plus an expense-paid trip to compete in the "Mrs. America" contest next month at Asbury Park. NJ. Mrs. Toronto is five feet five inches tall, weighs 116 pounds. has a 35-inch bust. 23-inch waist and 34-inch hips. LEAVING ON FRFISE HALIFAX (OP!-The Canadian cruiser Quebec left here Monday on a 10-day training cruise. She will call at Bar Harbor. Me. and Boston. i QUEBEC (CF)-Tracy Boud- reau, 17-year-old laborer. Monday was charged with the slaying of Edgar Audet. co-operative store manager at New Richmond. Que. July 23. A spokesman for the Quebec at- torney-general'a department said Boudreau. now in provincial police cells in Quebec city, will be taken to New Carllsle for arraignment probably today. Audet. It 45-year-old storekeeper.' was beaten to death in his store July 23 by two men who B-36 jet bomber designed for long- x Prosperity ForWPromises Insertd I; Queen's County Llbuol Association 16 PAGES REDS TO FREE FIRST 400 PRISONERS WITHIN FEW HOURS Everything liidleadiness For Smootmli-Work FREEDOM VILLAGE. Korea (AP) -The first 400 returning United Natloiis prisoners waited out the day that seemed an eter- nity today-Just a few hours and only a few miles from freedom Final arrangements were polish- ed. to give the men a warm wel-v come. expert attention and swift ihandling when they are freed by force trmcllcd ihi'L.u:h the curtain. the Communists starting Wetl- jnesday at 9 a. in. L8 p. in. EDT Norili Korea since the war began Tuesdayi. The Communist Peiping radio heard in San Francisco said the first southbound train carrying pl'l50l1Cl'S reached the Red truce base town of Kat-song Monday night. It reported the group in- cluded American. British and other non-Korean sick and wounded. Operation Big Switch will return 12.763 Red-held prisoners includ- ling 8.186 South Koreans. 3.813 Ant-'1-Vi lei-icons. 922 Commonwealth includ-lcominunm mlm”-V mm 14 Canadians, and 342 o”m.s1pei'mitted to distribute Red Cross from nine other Allied countries. American prisoners will get their first real taste of freedom at this freedom village. near Munsan. where a huge warehouse has been turned into a processing centre. British prisoners will go to nearby Camp Britannica. and South Koreans will go to "Liberty Village". Soldiers. the camp worked until sailors and marines at the last .-minute ironing out details. A full iscale dress rehearsal was staged Monday under the critical eyes of lthe tlth army commander. Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor. lllulles' Plane Is Delayed TOKYO. (AP)-A plane csi-ryir-K United states state Secretary John Foster Dulles to Korea-delayfd more than 12 hours-took off from shemya Island in the Aleutians at 9:45 am. today. The Far East the plane was scheduled to arrive in Seoul after rt non-stop milli- some. 12 hours later---at 9:36 pm. tonight 8:36 am. EDT. Ttiesdtny. Du1les' original flight plan called for arrival in Seoul at 9 am. today- Absence of information here for a time on the change in the flight plan had caused growing concern for Dulles safety. The delay apparently was caused by bad weather covering most of the North Pacific. .500 raking7aIi In Pilgrimage MONCTON. N.B.. (0155 H Five hundred persons from New Bruns- wick snd Prince Edward Island left here Monday by train for a two-day pilgrimage to the shrine of Ste. Anne de Beaupre. Que. The group was led by Rev. Camille 1. Leger of Port Elgin, NB. REGINA. (CPI-The DON!) toll in Saskatchewan to date-80 cases and 10 deaths-is not yet. serimis enough for the province to qualify for an allocation of gamma. clob- iilin. now being used its it preven- miive against. the disease. Dr. George Kinneard. provincial reg- ional health services director. said .llonda.v. Quebec Youthxls Charged i With Slaying Merchant I f r-1rcetrhisvyiottngCso'n7o-give-thgn 530 from the cash linx. Boudreau was taken into custo- dy in New Richmond on Sunday. Police then drove the youth to Quebec where he was held for questioning. New Caillsle is about 400 miles east. of Quebec City. Slaying of Aurlet came at n time when police and bushmen scoured the Gaspe wilderness for remains lof three murdered United Siatesl bear hunters. Provincial police say there is no love is better than lute. ::4:A I Air Forces so iii MAXI MS OFA. MERE MAN Faith I better than doubt and The Guardian. Fin Cents . Morning Dally Founded 1801. '7' i ing Exchange A By Sam Summerlin MUNSAN. Korea. (AP)-Allied ipri.-oners were assembling today lust back of the ”bambon curtain" ifor the opening VVedi1r'.stiay of the illlsl po.-t-armistice exchange of iprisoners-of-war. Emphasizing the immlnence of the hour. an Allied Red Cross task for the first free-world glimpse of yiliree years ago. l The 30-man team was armed only Fwith comfort packages for the 12.- 1763 Allied captives to be. exchanged. Willie nods will turn over 400 Allied captives the first day. 1 The Red Cross team was headed ;for the 1':-ilu river boundary be- ltween Manchurla and North Korea, ywhere prison camps now are being lcmpticd of their prisoners. Giving aclmittaiice only grudging- the Reds stipulated that. only personnel be food and comfort packets. simultaneously Communist Red Cross workers were due to fly southward to see 74.000 Red Kor- ean and Chinese prisoners in Allied -(5)3: inued"7irTp'AigT'iTai't:Tai'37 ' tum MAKES Alt oto House Look New BUT I NoT so want AM on: TORONTO. (OP)--Minimum ind maximum temperatures: Dawson . . . Victoria Edmonton Calgary Regina Winnipeg Toronto Ottawa Montreal Quebec Saint John Monrion Halifax . Charlottetown Sydney Yai-mouth . . . St. John's. Nfld. . .. HALIFAX. (Ciel-The Halifax Weather Office says cloud devel- oped in all regions Monday after- noon and there were widely scat- tered showers over the eastern Maritimes. skies cleared in most regions Monday evening. A northerly current. of cool air twill continue. on 'niesday. The trend towards finer weather will continue as the high pressure area m'ei'Oniar1n moves slowly east- ward. Regional forecasts: saint John river valley. Boy of Chaleur: Clear with s. few cloudy intervals: little change in temper- atni'e;lllght. winds: low-high at Fi'cdericton 451 and 75. Saint John 47 and '15, Erlmundston 45 and 75. Camphelltnn 50 and 75. Prince Edward Island: Clan be- coming cloudy In the morning. clearing In the evening: continuing cool; light winds: low-high st Charlottetown 52 and 65. Eastern New Brunswick count.- ies: Clear with it few cloudy inter- vals:' warmer: light winds; low- high at Moncton 45 and '15. Bay of Fundy: Light winds: it ,few clouds with visibility 15 miles: l temperatures near 60. . ., L. . . 1 High tide today at Charlottetown at 448 A. M. and 6.56 P. M. 3 lligh tide today at the North 'Short- in 2.12 A M. and 1.12 P. M. Summerslde tide eighteen min- iuies later than Charlottetown. ' sun rises today at 5.01 A. M. and then connection between t.hs' two cases. A sets at 7.36 P. M. VOTE FOR LOWER TAXES - - - VOTE MCLURE and lVIacLEAN Inserted by the Queen's Count: Proxreuiva conservative Apoctsuoa