-” my Yard Thursday, Maxims of a" More Man Either an egg today or a lien tomorrow. 14 PAGES Mendes-France Suggests Big Four Conference For Next May At Paris Er FRANCIS W. CARPENTER UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP)- Premier Pierre Mendel - France Monday suggested a Big Four con- 'm-ence on outstanding problema- mii only after the Western Euro- ;.-nn nations and the United States nave ratified the London and Paris agreement! to free and rearm iv-..-t Germany. The French premier told the UN gztfmbly that a conference of Bri- iln. the United States, France and he Soviet Union could be held next May in Paris. He said the agree- -imiit.-i should be ratified by that our and added that an agreement m an auslrian treaty would he a '7litVy pi-clude to such a session. Rejecting with few words he ic- t"'lll Soviet propoals for a Euro- ...-nii sccurity conference. Mendcs- Fiance said that an agreement on A-i-atria "would do more to improve -on international climate than 10 nrrctacular nnnouncements of con- rniida purposes." Menrles-France": speech was ap- ;-lauded by all but the Soviet bloc -inli-gates. s DEATH ANNOUNCED LATER The chief Soviet delegate. Andrei Visliinsky, died of a heart attack imrnre Mcndcs-France began speak- iz but his death was not dis- closed until almost an hour after trio French premier finished. The Soviet attitude on Mendes- Fiance was shown by an attack by Pravda, the official Communist p.-ii-iv newspaper. who Monday as- I-'tllPfI him as an enemy of Euro- ;-can sccurity. in Washington. a state. depart- merit spokesman in effect backed Growing Color Problems in Britain Gaining Ground With Union Moves By Adrian Bail ('r)ViF7NTRY. England tReufersl- A growing color problem in Britain ruined ground Monday with a trade union move to impose discrimina- 'orv restrictions on the flood of colored workers arriving rlailyfrom Bl'lffIln'H colonies. Economic hardships in the col- rniea. especially in the West. In- rim. combined with the prospect of Mar jobs in . "full-employment" Rritain have brought thousands of colored persons to Britain in re- cont months. As cnioninis they are British aub- l-cis and therefore not subject to aviv immigration controls here. One hundred union leaders will m'”" ll"? Thllradlly to debate a controversial plan under which colored workers would be deprived 0! promotion prospects and work- ing security. "T0 Avoln TROUBLE” The plan will be placed before 'lW rcatonni advisory council of llriialn's 0.000.000-strong ,tradcs ' men Comzrr-ss by Jim Lensk. or- Mrilzcr for 60,000 engineer mem- bers of the Transport and Gen- crnl Workers Union. Lheask declared Sunday night he Coming Events "Fiance Fortune. Hall. Tuesday. trot 2.1. 'fDance at Gordon Lodge every Friday night. "Mcciulgan and Boyle big Pre- Chrtstmas Sale now on. "Geese and duck bingo, Wed- l'”."llI.i'. R o'clock. i'ortlI Rusiicn. "Dance at Forrest Hill, Wednes- flhy night, November 24th. '”Dance at Inkerman School. ll "lnml-1.v iiiszht. November 24th. p"Fliii::n and dance, Vernon Liver Hall, Ttic,sda,v. Nov. 23. "Dance South Rustlco Hall -very Thursday night. music Rol- lie MacKenzle's Orchestra. "Buying mixed grain daily. High- Nsl market prices. .1. Clayton llushee. Emerald. "Pantry sale i-Iolman'ii Thurs- 'lflli- 35th. 2:00 o'clock. Bunbury lnited Church. "Regular Dance, Stanley Brides Rink Hall 'every Tuesday night. 7:133. Rollie Macxenairs Orch- "Annual meeting Hackett L. 0. li Tuesday. Nov. 23. All members rilease attend. "Crapaud Hall, Wednesday, Nov- ember 24th, Hot Goose Supper and :37-gar. sponsored by at. John "We will load chicken and fowl ,, November --"fill. larger iota can arrange pick '10- To prices paid. Joe Grant. Sourls. "Cherry Valley Jamboree in E"""l Hill. Wednesdtw. Nov. 24. Local and Charlottetown talent. Curtain 8:15. "DEVI"! h Mount Ryan hall at Johnston's River on Wednesday Mzht. Don )IIeuer'a Orchestra. Mfldern and old time dancing. Dwm 9.-so to 12:30. "Shur Gain Amateur Caval- "Itle. in Milivlew Hall. Tuesday. Nov. 30. sponsored by Cherry Vhllcy Women's institute. Please, "Wld entries by Nov. 27 to Mrs. it icnccs published solely for propa-”smy 0" board tonight" UP Mendes-France. He paid the United States is prepared to meet with Russia whenever it seem; probable that such a meeting would be fruitful and after adequate pr-g. paratinn. Amll"nY Nuttintl. British minister of state and chief delegate, said that Mendes-Francs "expoggd in all its hypocrisy the blatancy of the Soviet campaign to pogtpong and so to halt ratification of the London and Paris agreements." OueenT. Mother Nears Southampton LONDON (Reuters)-The liner Queen Mary, bringing the Queen Mother home after her visit to North America. is expected on time at Southampton today. The liner is due at 4:30 p.m. EST but the Queen Mother will A spokesman for the Cunard line said there had been no really bad weather. "What bad weather the Queen Mary did experience was nearer the American coast." CNR MAY BUILD YARD HAMILTON. Ont. (CPJ-eA Cana- dian Nalional Railways spokesman Monday morning confirmed reports that the CNR had taken options on land in Saltflcct township for a possible future development which might cost over 51,000,000. William A. Howard, regional public relat- ions officer for the CNR, said a 20-acre parcel of land in Saltflcet was being purchased ”lir-c-riuse we may be putting a switching yard there." is putting the plan forward to "itvoid a great deal of troiiblc" ahoiild iinempinyment return to the lnriutilrinl Midlands. His plan has four main points: I. Colored workers should not, be given supervisory Jobs over whites. ' 2. They should not get. jobs if white workers are available. 3. There should always he talks between employers and unions be- fore any colored staff are em- played. 4. Colored employees should be it the first to be fired in any recen- alon. Li-ask expects the regional coun- cil of the TUC to support, his plan. which would then go to the general council of the congress in London. AIM!-ID AT MIDLANDS The problem touches most of the industrial cities of the Mldlaldli. Birmingham has nearly 8.000 col- ored workers and more are com- ing every month. Employers are welcoming the colored immigrants as there are an estimated 45.000 Jobs vacant.ln the area. But pockets of resistance are de- veloping among workers. There have been cases of bus drivers, con- ductors and electricians refusing to work with Jamaican recruits. Union leaders say tht-,v are op- posing the ne.vt'cnmr-rs, not just. be- cause of their color, but. hccniise they are flooding the labor market. They claim that. if the colored workers gain a foothold, the Jobs of many whites would be leopar- dizcd should unemployment return. SIXTY STAGE SITDOWN HAMILTON, Ont. tCPl -- sin.- more workers at the Canadian Cot- tons plant here staged a sitdown strike Monday and were sent home shortly nftcrwarris by mill manage-, meni. The strike lnri-cased tlicj nutnhcr now out of work at the mill to almost 400, which is nearly two-thirds of the employees. The latest dispute develohjd over com- plaints abnut work loads. in one of the. weaving departments. ' RD! The Pe's aper. ail Union Head Disappointed In . Covers Prince Edward Island- Like The Dew Founded 1 72 OIIARLOITETOWN, CANADA. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1954 PRICE 5o Ruling; Touchy Problem Raised Veterans Told Deadline Near For Insurance OTTAWA (CF)-A total of 36,561 veter.-ins' insurance policies with face value of Sil3.5'll.000 have been issued since the Second World War. the vetcrans' affairs department said Monday. At the same time, the depart- ment issued a reminder that the deadline for purchase of veterans' in 3 u r a n c e by servicemen dis- charged before Dec. 31, 1944, is the end of this year. About one - third of Canada's 1,000,000 Second World War veter- ans were discharged before the end of 1044. Those discharged later have until 10 years after dis- charge to purchase vcierans' insur- RHCC. Under the Veterans Insurance Act, life insurance up to 310,000 can be obtained by veterans with- out a medical examination. except in rare cases. RATES LOWER. Rates are slightly below those of commercial companies because the government pays administration costs and there are no extra prem- ium charges for occupation, travel or residence. As in result, many veterans not insurable because of illness or in certain occupations. such as air- craft pilots. buy veterans insur- anca. Of the. 36.561 policies issued to data, about 1,000 have been taken out by former servicewnmen and widows of veterans. More than i.ii00 (loath claims totalling 53.000,- 000 have been paid or approved. Truck Conference Planned Thursday SAlN'i' form, N.B. (ca) e An inter-provincial conference to dis- cuss uniformity in motor truck transportation will be held heir. Thursday. The meeting is being ar- ranged by Premier Hugh John Flemming. Attending the confer- ence will be ministers from the three Maritime provinces and other officials. it will be the second meet- ing of the interprovinciai nfflrinla. The first was held in Saint John Sept. 22. - Pravdf Assails Mendes-France MOSCOW, (AP)--Pravda assailed French Premier Mendes-France Monday as an enemy of European aeciirity. This is a departure for Pravda in the past it has referred in Mendes-France carefully and re- spectfully. Now. however, the official Com- munist party newspaper apparent- ly has removed the gloves and lumped the. French premier togeth- er with other prime targets such as U. 5. State Secretary Dulles. Pravda charged that Mendeli- Frtince. in rejecting Russia's bid for an all-European security con- fcrence had yielded to the "inter- by Chief Justice asked. granting only partially He said the railways cannot af- ford to meet their demands in the face of declining revenues, and he blamed the decline in large part on "distortion and imbalance" of the freight rate structure caused by the low "Crow's Nest pass" rates on export grain moving through the West. He suggested a federal subsidy to spread "some fair share at least of this burden" acres the national economy. Increased freight rates now are not the answer to rising railway costs, the arbitrator said. These have bccn uscd to cover previous post-war increases in the wage bill of the carriers. COMPETITION STIFFEII. But with competition stiffening, Chief Justice Sloan said. higher rates would probably only ”tend to increase "the. present imbalance and expose greater areas of rail- way traffic to outside competition." While his observations on the Crow's Nest rates went outside his terms of reference and constituted only an opinion he was em- powcrcd just to write contract terms for the dispuiaiits---they un- nucstionably will stir up political icprrctissinns. , ' Begin Washing Potatoes In N.B. HARTLAND. NB. (CF)--Opera iion of potato-washing equipment has started in New Brunswick. Carleton county has one washer and others will be functioning within the next few months, a liartlanrl shipper said Monday. Washing potatoes before putting them on the market has been tried to a limited extent in nlghboring Maincis Aroostook county. The price for New Brunswick iablcstock potatoes was quoted Monday as averaging 5260 per 165-pound barrel. with seed pota- toes selling for about .53. The 1951 crop brought prices up to hit) but many growers had to sell their 1052 harvests at a loss. Prices went even lower for last year's crop. resulting in a federal-provin- cial minimum price agreement. Rail shipments this year have shown a decline and started later than usual. mainly because of late harvesting due to unfavorable weather. . Pnlniocs in storage lrf the prov- ince are reported to total 9.014.000 bushels as compared with 10.814.- 000 a year ago. "The Prince Edward Island Po- tato Marketing Board is making eats of American aggressive plans" on his current visit to the Unit-cd States. It. concluded that the Western nations must "bear full responsi- bility" if an arms race results from rejection of the Soviet proposal for 24-nation talks. some changes in its admintsiratlon ,pnllry in conformity with the ex- ipressed itlahcs of the I.-lnnd po- tatn producers who voted on Nov- iember i0," said Mr. Donald A. Macboii.-ild, Bonnl Cliairmnii. yes- ltordny I The Board Selling ltgciicv which I (By John LeBlanc, Canadian Press Staff Writer) OTTAWA. (CP)--The politically-touchy proposal of it subsidy on western grain freight rates was made Monday Gordon Sloan of British Columbia in awarding non-operating railway employees a 07,000,000-& year segment of their fringe benefit demands. The chief justice. cabinet-appointed arbitrator in the long dispute that threatened a general rail strike last sum- mer, gave the 145,000 workers a fraction of Premier Campbell of Manitoba Bank Of Canada Deputy Governors .4 what they two of their four requests. promptly said there should be no subsidy to the railways until it is ”abundantly established" that their revenues are not meeting expend- itures. The west was prepared to "fight to the finish" to maintain the grain rates. Federal ministers who would be directly concerned with the ques- tion of a subsidy were not available for comment Monday. However, it appeared probable the suggestion would be discussed before the open- ing of Parliament, and Commons, debate on it was likely. The Crow's Nest rates are em-i bodied in a i925 federal statutcl holding them at levels set in 1897, when the CPR depressed the rates in return for a federal grant. They get their name from the fact the money was used to help the young company throw a line through the Rockies' Crow's Nest pass. While chief Juiice Sloan's sug- gestion did not specify his idea of the size of a subsidy on the grain rates, it appeared to go beyond the l 37,000,000 of his award to the em-: TORONTO (CF) - Two Toronto ployccs anti to contemplate some men were arrested as they slept in further amount that would basir:- their beds and charged with a hill,-i Three senior officials of the Batik of Canada have been promoted to the rank of deputy left to right: John R. Beattie, 44, senior deputy; Ralph B. McKib- tCP Photol. governor. They are, lbin. 40. and Louis RRSlillliSlx'l'. iPair Charged With Fur Theft Gardeners Want Permission To Patent Plants !Cape Breton Worried Strait Will Freeze HALIFAX, iCP)a-A Nova Scoiia government. official said Monday he doesn't. "anticipate" that the Canso causeway will cause. the straits between the mainland and y p OTTAWA tCP)-Market gardcn- C B t A1 d . f U I tally strengthen rallway finances. tlmfjtntrlizyfurs last week. rill”-'" M-5 Monday proposed that llltlyvhft blgitmatt rt:iif;nst):g:n -3-c rJsl.ies7t0 d(hiiP'B (-E-It I,-WE HOLIDAYS t y j G B t H gil)P.l"f'l'llIpfC(I to patent new plants lusll know. ' Fanglglaggleg zzlpand ev?,r”E)i”am gr i as their counterparts haxe. clone int 56......” quarters in Cape Brawn In the award. the justice: ,Bmjm:V 25 ” i -Ill" U"”"l Sta?” 1'” "W 135i 2"'ihave said they were 'vmTlPfI over - - ' years. L Gramnd five paid s'Mu""'vi Police said they found the trarle-K Uh” pm5pPC' mm m" ””5"”-'"' hnlld-Us A V08? 10? l'l0Ulil)'rl'alefl k h . .l- 1 th The proposal was contained in a would slow the cui-rerit so murl' W01ik9l'S---Wlln MW P9CelVe Ylonerplmf: WEE;.:ks(f::l:n1:g:11:,:i::;1,” ; hricf to tie ilsley commission by that the strait would freeze nnr. Hgalfll elllll SOUEM by the unions! i ' the Canadian Horticultural Council,l immobilize tho ferries that now WM in 3 "rue" supported by the Canadian Assoc- cover the stretch of water. iatinn of Nurserymen and the allied I-M, this moment. .h,,..;h. V.-91...... florists and growers of Canada. The day”, knm.-f (hf ommai 'm,.-L whc rnmmlslon. headed by Chief -lusgcnn tell until a thing like this has Holidays worked would be paid at double time -- the unions asked triple time. The arbitrator estim- ated the cost at s-i.2ai.ooti. seiecuonl News Briefs Selling Agency Closed By Prince Edward Island Potato Marketing Board icominued 0” Page 2 COL 1) l WASHINGTON mm - st-naWi”."'iJ' L. mimic! NW3 iSiim”ia'..ixi3”"9 'l'll'0llt:h its first winter? ? ' mm J . V h MC th - Id M siirying palen. c-npyrift . re F v ...., ..,g RESNQOIICIIC hfaiwfz-ntinxc t?erttryr :f:nd:5Mr..Ti. in-l'"""iki ""1 Industrial design lau 5,5-yo u()Lpg MpjE'1'lp1(; , , M . "I t h, ;;..u.,,5d,.H Thlrprnuncil suggested that the, ' LCIlIICIICd Monday ,,r;.."io::5p:?a1Pr.n:m int; he didn't ii-iconiivs-. of the patent. systemai WASHINGTON IAIN - Military i . :think he would get out until ncxtl the granting of a domestic monop- chiefs of the 14 NATO powers con- ! MONTREAL (Cpl - cl””d”5 u0"dm..' ioly on an invention for i7-years- vencd here Monday to study the inewest destroyer escort, the HMCS i ' lbo applied to the horticultural present and futures makeup of taestigouche, was launched M0n- wAsiiiix'c.To.v, (AP)-- Harold nerd, lwcslcrnHEurnpcrin dcfcnce force. h' Stassr-n, foreign aiti director, (Iii-l Hnwmfrv the norists an! m”, The military committee of the closed Manda)" the. United States Nvmpn ,”.g(,d mat the m0nOpo1y,Nortli Atlantic Treaty Organization snundin: ill” ”'"”"r"lpc.ritid be confined to 10 years. twill consider an evaluation of the on tlin pnszih-I Gmdnn Henderson. rem.cs(,min:icffoct of new weapons on the sin y. The ship, some of whose equip-' lmcnt is still on the secret list, slid, has in-an into the St. Lawrence river dl10rLly;Etirr)penn nations after 4 pm.. from the yards 0l,ilit.v of .iolriim: with ll l" ' hlnniin council, forecast these bencfitslaml '”mll"5l””” '''l "W d”l""dl"1 Canadian Vickers in the east end drwnlnpnimil i)r05Il'3"l l'”' ”” from patents on new plants: in-.forcc::. Canada is represented by of Montreal. i”"'"l"l"5 l" M'”' crl-nscd supplies of new and bettt-r.G9"v Chat”?-S F””lk”- The IND ll l-he 39-l""lh 0l. Ht -1-0,-Y0 .R L L, r1-H1 .4 V fruits and flowers at cheaperl TTT”-"””TT' 2:"-:;".:t""” by "::.:;:..... 2.2 -i..1.”r::::e:;.5.i':::.:.' J.i”5.3i.L';”iE.3”:32.1 053 an y -oru Xoshtrlas lube-ial party ucni. - . . 's being absor d by growing cities i Mrs. -5- 0- Kll0Wll0ll. Wile Ol thc,nvt-r to the opposition Monday as V , lrcar Admiral ln Charlie 0! Clint the drive. to unseat the 76-your-oldla-Pd l"du5l-l”l?-- ; iadrs naval technical ale:-vices; prime minister reached its clim:ix.l PlCKl;;.i.'s'D5Tl;0TP”F”T”-OREMEN l WHEN THEY FALL broke the traditional bo te o I . ON THE OTHER champagne over the ship's bow. KARACHl. Pakistan. lllftlllltril KITCHEN;-R. Ont. .Cp.gpi,.k,..... r W it The ship was named for another. --prim:-, ymnisii-r Mohnnimad Ali, , , divkmn ' EA-LO Q , at the siiikebound exttle i. Ideatroyer that served during the announced? .)Vl0n(iR3'pCi(l1'l(lilll'n of the Dnmininn Rubb” Cnmmnyl g"””'"""' "'5 0 Ltd. early Monday stopped all fore- , lseconrt World War and later was gold solve all the existing provinces of Pakistan and make the country a federation of two units--West Pakistan and East Pakistan. lrnen and salaried employees trying to enter the plant here. Harold Tis- chart, president of Local 296. United Rubber. Cork, Linoleum and TORONTO, tCPieThe Stratford Plasiilpno. of America, tCIO- Shakcspcnrian l-it-stival Mondayan-lC(Yl.l said the union took this ac.- riounced it has selected ”JuliuSitlon hecaiisc salarics employees. Caestu” and "The Merchant of and forcmcn ”wr-re doing the workj Venice" as its two leading produc- that could have been done by reit- tions for 19.35. iilnr ii-use cmiilnvce-s." sing of the entire Island crop last. season is being closed and lls lequipment. disposed of. "The. re.- iponslhility of selling Island seed lzintl triblesiock potatoes to the best. Tpossibio advantage at all times and lto maintain uniform price levels lto produceis throtighout the pro- dirlfniedf-Forces May Start Issuing ;lladiaiion Detection Devices Soon vats responsible for the mercharidi-i Tontwro mri and - filinimum rnaximtini tcmpcratuies. WAS THE "N0" MAN OF TIIVE UNITED NATIONS MVisI1insIty Dies OF Heart Attack chief US. delegate to the UN, sawiF'rench to visiting Premier Pierrey midnight Mendes-France. Vislunskv wan iiin: By WILLIAM L. RYAN UNITED NATIONS. NY. tAP)- Andrei Vishlnsky died of a heart attack Monday while preparing for one of the most important. debates in his career as the Soviet Union's leading orator. His blistering voice and brilliant mind had lifted him from the role of obscure bureaucrat to world fame in the East-West bold car. Vlshinsky was 70. He died at 0:30 am. IST at the Soviet UN delegation headquarters on Park Av:-nue here. He had collapsed earlier. after attending a dinner given Sunday night by the French detention. He was the soviet Union's first deputy foreign minister. with per- manent aasignment as chief dele- gate to the UN. He had spent some of his last working hours getting ready for a renewal of the debate on the atoms-for-peace plan with which President Eisenhower chal- lenged the Boviet. Union to prove its peaceful intentions to the world. The debate was postponed, as were all other UN sessions except I meeting of tribute to the colleague known as the "no" man of one United Nations. Visliinsky just before Sunday at at dinner given by the fine. good humor, laughing and Funeral In Red Square Seen MOSCOW (Reuters) Andrei Vishlnsky's body is expected to be flown here from New York for I Red square funeral and burial in a Kremlin wall position reserved for national leaderit. , It is expected Prime Minister Male-nkov, Foreign Minister Molo- tov nnd other Soviet government leaders will be pallbearers and will place the coffin in the wall behind the mausoleum where Stalin and Lenin rest. A decision is likely to be taken soon on Vi.shinsky'a successor as chief Soviet delegate It the United Nations. This is regarded as fairly urgent. because of the necessity of top-level leadership of the delqau tion in the atoms-for-peace dismis- lions. Western circles here believe that the soviet government may ap- point a senior official to the UN ob. though they noted that -the remiinm choice smeared to be WWW. limited to one of the four yanking sleuth bf 31 : tcnntinurid on Page !2VVrnl. OTTAWA t(IPl - The armcrl- tine ivpc tiscri for drmnnsli'.'iltnri D "M Mme MIRA- - W i . forccs smut ma,V start issiiini: iiiiitmscs at the Civil Dciriicn (n.- vjwjmzl 4') ,3; Laitimic iadiatinn detcrti-in clovlccs lciic -"ll Arllllllllr. 0lll- l””kV-S llk" V'W;W H m ',m Ito servicemen. it was learned Mon a pencil. clipsnpin t(tincJ:ncl(1t;DtmIlrl1 lllrg P.dmrjm"m -'1,g "W dav, some way a . . - -- H g' l The defence research board nnwicciits. By pccriniz thfhlllll WC CW1 Calm” in J? lis tcsting a Canadian - dt-signed of it. a person can obiainpa road ;"P5ki::'1"”" "dosimeter," the name givcn the ing of the amount of radiation in Wirilniiw gt; ;m .. 1small detection unit. if the device his immediate MM , V . . ' 5 ' "'6 ' lalkalile ” ”””l'5- L043” "M fits the bill the civilian civil dc- Ev measuring i-ndiatmn slmul-;r””'"'" 3 A” "Mr. Vishinsky represented one mjwp Mxanhmon Nam M .s5m.l.;.n.l.,..sly at different points in .vi0lla'.va 20 33 "K the wmldlh "sues" Downs wuhlsnme 300 000 of them. They prob. large area, civil defence workerslM'"l'””l ' 29: 33 """'”"'”""Y meliy lmd "Mum" ably would be mnniifactiired in Mlllrl (ll-Vf'Vt"r whim "iFll0"S lwr” Q.k.whN: 3" w fulneae," Lodge stated. "We who cM.'"d,,p rariioaciivoly ”hot' or "cool" and :lNlPl7l””n I vigorously disagreed with him re- The ,”.m,.d f,,,r,5 M, ,...,........,l. thus which would be safe as evac- -vpini '. nhn . .l.i '0 llDCCl9l'1 mil lowmlc t51""" Tm some doimeters but no policy has lIlll"l'l W'll'l” if. nlntr 7" sympathy of the U5. deletlntlon yet, been laid down ..-heir.” may, no -A -r-r” -r C: 'rl"oit ( , M”. " noes out to his widow. his dlullll-0"lwill be issued to all il5,000 so.-A gvgm, ”""' ' .2 .,., and the soviet delegation" viccmen or. say. one to each -Ya!-mgl"-h. 1” Vlahlnsky had been rt spectacular 1....” pmoon, , Jnhrfg W M performer on the world stage since Both the armed forces and the. i ' ' be prosecuted Slallinvp blood purle civil defence organization have-Get ' HAL”.-Ax ,(-pm gm. nnminim. two decades ago. He was a masterltu-en casting about for an effective, of withering acorn and bearing dosimeter. Several types have been satire .Hla rapier-like wit. won thelmade in Britain and the United admiration however grudglng. of-States and so far the civil defence mg cnllgngugg, branch has distributed about 300 for testing and training purposes ACTED ON ORDERS lI')F1VELOl' OWN Vishinaity'a death, while it re-, The cm. defence m,”mm..,m moves a colorful figure. from tllftlfm. months has hem M...” .0 pm, Wm '""- "" ""9 "me 9m"lchasc dosimeters but the ones so public weather office here says the 0'1'rAwA tori--one of the hli-iweather in the Marilimes Monday gcst Ottawa robberies in l'CfPnliil'liKhf was mainly cloudy as colder iyearii was executed by nrrvy safc- air flowed into the district from -crackers ;n By Ward Market unwthc west. and northwest. Olaudineaa knnwn in scores of passing j1F.(Ii'3.R--It expected in be variable Tue: In-inns They escaped with siri.rioo;r1a.v. and temperatures will P" loot, of which 86,000 was cash. from about n0I'mBl 10? 13'? Nflwmb" the central meat market. Rcilflnal l0l'9C3Sl5? Police said Monday they sprung Prince Edward Island. eastern 5 mm” 5.1,. "M, properly ,,c..,,.d -N.B counties. lower St. John river upon the course. of Moscow's relay. . M - ed h . .1 m -.h , "OM Vllh "'9 ""0?" 'Wld- Vl3ll' l I;rIit(hinarlirt1' the Sire :o'.1r::,Dlscm'ci1v of the robbery Saturday:”"'-Vi l,'"'b'f d”'”;',:"':fcc" 1:” insky, however brilliant his perlnr-lm (hnsp cmmtnes so inc dcfencepnight thwarted another in the snmr i"""l"- PP" W" -' 0'" I h b Vdi ' . 1 d . I ,"M gnorthwutisin afternoon. Low-high l,'&5er:';; d(:l::nu:r'y'"” " "'”"y Th IMNMCKHS hm” mm apart Charlottetown 30 and 40. Mom; - i - - ' ' i 28 40, I" d I to 2! What both the armed forces nndlhflrby market. hauled anot.hcrl3;;" .3..n'.";',mn urfnsuzyy n N civil defence want is a device thavslfe to the. front door and the-nil" i can be easily read and understood. jleft to find some means of carry-i High tide today at. Chariotiemwn He was the mouthpiece. abroad Dosirnatcrs now in use require sing it away. But police arrived on gf, 931 at m, and M0 p. rn. of the regime of Premier Grorgiirertain amount of technical skill to the scene to investigate the first sun rises iodav at 1.80 a. in Incl on Page I not. I) interpret the information they g'we.lrobbery and frightened the thlevesuseta at 4.38 p. rn. ' r mance, consistently carried out orders from the Kremlin to the letter. No Western observers cred- ited him with any decisive voice in Soviet. policy.