T -T” ., TELEPHONE asoo , Buyer meets seller with Guan- dion Want Ads. Dial 8506 ask for classified ad taker, for quick results. 14 PAGES l TOP WINNERS IN SUMMERSIDE CONTEST Top award winners in the second annual summeruldu home grounds beautification contest sponsored by the Summerslde Lions Club with the cooperation of the Summer- aide Community Planning Associa- 3 tlon, seen at the presentation pro- gram on Saturday evening are. from left to right, FRONT ROW. Mrs- lra Hickey. cone 4; Mrs. Dun- can MacDonald. zone 2; Mrs. Jud- son Mackinnon. zone 1: Thomas 77w Guardian "Covers Prince Edward Island Lilza The Dew" 1 A E. Baker. winner of the Maurice plaque won by M. J. Scovcll in Mill trophy for the contestant with zone 3. and Judson MacKlnnon. the best kept home and grounds in The plaques presented to the zone Summerslde; Mrs. Thomas Baker. winners were donated by J.K. Cur- STANDING. Ira Hickey. Duncan ran. (See other picture and story MacDonald. David Mercer, holding on page 13). Photo By Wotton Seek Bodies Of 5 Killed lnl-Crash PORT MAITLAND. Ont. fCPn Salvage crows Sunday attempted to recover the bodies of five per- sons killed when I private. twin engined plane crashed in Lake Erie during I snowstorm Satur- day night. The plans. II from New route York to Detroit with a pilot and wine! two buoineuaeb-ml-this Iboard. went down in 12 feet of water 600 feet from shore. The crash occurred I short dist- Ince front an airstrip where the plane apparently attempted to make an emergency landing. Police said there were no sur- vivors. The salvage crew aboard the fishing vessel Colby was unable to raise the plane immediately but I diver report that he had Iightcd bodies in t e wreckage. Authorities said the plane was owned by the Peninsular Steel Company of Detroit. William Trader. president of the company. said those aboard were Wesley Hopp of Royal Oak. Mlch.. the pilot; Mr. and Mrs. Richard Kurt: and Mr. and Mrs. Mike Mc- Fadden. all of Grosse Point. Mich. No Volunteers To Aid Egyptians MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia Saturday decided not to allow any "volunteers" to go to Egypt to help fight Anglo-French and Is- rseli forces. A government statement re- leased by the official Soviet news agency Tass said: "The complete withdrawal oi British. French and Israeli forces from Egypt natur- ally c'imin.'itrs the question of de- parture of Soviet voluntcers for Egypt." AUGUSTA Ga. (AP) - Presi- dent Eisenhower Sunday night de- nounced Soviet terrorism in Hun- gary. He said it has moved the free world to "horror and revul- sion" and ' t completely repu- diates the United Nations human rights declaration. In a statement nndng today is Human Rights Day the eighth an- nlvimry of sdoptiouuormtne UN gtlmrfresldbtlt -hiiofed what has happened in liuxuary and added: "That these human rights hays been so flagrantly repudiated is cause for worldwide mourning. Eisenhower called on free people everywhere to "resolve on this day that the world shall never forget what tyranny has done to our fellow man in Hungary." The statement. issued at his Augusta vacation headquarters here. was Eisenhower's strongest so far on the Hungarian situation. It said the Free World this year "Eisenhower Denounces Soviet Use Of Terrorism In Hungary "has the most compelling IOEBOIII for observing Human Rights Day with renewed awareness and reso- lution, but it has little cause to icelebraie' that day. "The recent outbreak of brutal- ity in Hungary has moved free peoples everywhere to reactions of horror and revulsion. Our beam are filled with sorrow. our deep- est sympathy goes out to the court- us, liberty - loving "The terror imposed upon Hun- gary repudlates and negates al- most every article in the declara- tion of human rights. it denies that men ar born free and equal in dignity d rights. and that all should act in the spirit of broth- erhood. "On this Human Rights Dnyz it 2:: Three Week-End Traffic Deaths Reported In N. B. EDMUNDSTON, N.B. (CP) - Six-year-old Andree Perron was killed Saturday afternoon when a truck hit her toboggan at the bot- tom of a hill. Tommy Glenn. slid- ing with Andrea, rolled off the to- boggan when he saw the truck ap- proaching and escaped injury. SAINT JOHN, N.B. tCP)-Struck by I car while 0&3 iy Saturday " - -Knew.--O0.-e memb of th corps of commis- sionarios, died Sunday. An inquest will be held Wednesda,. FREDERICTON (CPI - Win- slow Crouse. 70. died Saturday night while being taken to hospi- tala fter I car struck him as he walked along the highway near his home at nearby Zealand Station. is for each of us to r anew that we are brothers in our father's house. and each is truly his brother's keeper. . . . "So doing, these honored dead 'sball not have died in vain."' OLD PROTECTION Oldest authentic door relics are pivots and bands from an As- syrian temple at Balwat. of about 000 BC. WASHINGTON (AP)-in I slev toward creatlng the first man- made moon. scientists fired an in strument-laden rocket 12.5 miles into the air from a Florida launch- ing site Saturday. It was an experimental prelude to next year's earth satellite pro- ject called "Vanguard." A modified form of the stand- ard Vlking research rocket. fired from the missile test centre at screamed up in I speed 07 4-000 Liner Arosa Docks At Quebec With 257 Hungarian Refugees QUEBEC (CPI--The liur-r Arosn Iun-docked Sunday with 157 Hun- garian refugees amid I ciu-cring. flag-waving reception from more than 3,000 persons. Cymbals and drums of the band Not the Royal Mid Regiment could group for an official reception by state and church officials. A heated garage has been con- verted into a reception centre and will also be used by the refugees as I recreation centre. it is equipped with television. radio sets Ind pl-wens 'l'r.-are dimmed the eyes of man! I veteran immigration Ind cit? toms official as the Hunlnflllll were transferred from the N- W,” 12:; to Ital-Inporsry. lodgings in ten i I Early igay. many leave by bus for Ottawa. nvwedne-day all an expected to be on the way to nev homes. Most of the otnm will I- ” winufgg gnd VIRCOIIVQT. FLED WI'l'll NOTHING no k, rl more 1-gf:gt:;u'li:O';eDeC'f:S ayboard the Arms Star. Most are destined fol Ontario only lain or seven of the KY0"! 19 lm in to to Can- hw fauna im coho. v was miles an hour before plunging into the Atlantic about 180 miles from the launching point. offshore from Miami. In this initial firing of the Van- guard project. scientists conducted tests of the automatic radio and electronic devices which will be used ln In actual satellite when the first of these earth-circling ve hlcles is launched next year. They also tried out a new launching ramp. bunkers and other equip ment intended for the Vanguard firings. DEEP SECRECY Jim I-Iaibe. reporter for tile Or- lando Sentinel. saw the spectacle. He said the 42 - foot; seven-ton rocket rose slowly and almost si- lently before it began streaking up and away followed by the pink trail of its rocket fire. He watched the rocket for about 40 second! before it was lost to view in the night sky. Before the launching. Halbe no- ilced that the Viking appeared to be one of two rockets mounted on After the lIunchlng,' In Washington issued In announce- oo0- meat containing some details. It said that when the rocket Native Of P. E. I. Q 1 Test Rocket ls Fired In U.S. Satellite Proieci reached a 50-mile altiiudc. I de vice carrying an automatic radio transmitter. ”minitrack." was ejected and tracked by scientist! at Patrick AFB as it descended toward the sea. Mlnitrack is I miniature radio transmitter which will be used in the earth satellite. (YITIER EQUIPMENT The Viking also carried. in I nose cone. other automatic "tele- metering” equipment and track- ing beacons. This conc was blown free after 450 seconds of night and its "reports" checked as if fell toward the sea. The modified Viking used in Saturday's test is similar to the first of the three-stage rocket en- gins series designed for the satel- lites. These will hurl the 20-inch sphere of the satellite into an or- VIENNA (AP)-The Soviet-com trolled government of Hungary dis. solved 3” 0l1P0sition workers' counslls Sunday night and age. lured a state of martial law throughout the country. The action was announced after communication; between key cut off for more than l2 hours. President Iatvan Dobi of Hun-l. gary signed the emergency decree of martial law. it was read to the nation over radio Budapest shortly after 8 p.m. ll llrovided that anyone caught with arms would be taken immed- iately before a summary court martial. Under military law, the penalty is death. The order was aimed particu- larly at the Budapest Central Workers' Council. which had taken direct issue with the Russian-lm- posed Janos Kadar government, all district councils and all county councils. I THREATEN STATE POWER They were declared illegal and ordered to cease their activities Qt-immediately. Workers' councils in individual factories will be permit- ted. A statement of the Kadar gov- CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA MONDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1956 OPPOSITION wOliKERS' COUNCILS DISMISSED Martial Law Hungary By ernment, issued over Budapest ra-t Those persons dio. said members of the Buda- and ammunition without permis- agreement. ”at- sion were ordered to deliver them pest Central Council had possessin arms tempted to deal with poliucallto tne authorities by 6 p.m. Tues- questions” and build a ”new slaletday ll they wish to escape punish- power organisation directedl against the existing state power."l ment. Failure to report the possession The government charged that at ' of these weapons by other persons workers leaders held, in recent days the majority of the Buda-i pest council had been "agitating! .'or new bloodshed. armed provo- cations and strikes." 1 The Central Workers Council is- sued a proclamation two days ago declaring that further government harassment of local councils would end in "a general strlife. blood-. shed and a new national tragedy." IMMEDIATE TRIAL Under the decree issued by President Dobl. suspects wiilxbe brought to immediate trial start- ing at 6 p.m. Tuesday for crimes of murder. manslaughter. arson and robbery. looting. damage to Public plants and utilities and all attempts at these crimes. The illegal possession of arms. ammunition and explosives also are ” t to summary militaryk trial. for which in Eastern Eur- ope the penalty usually is death. western Cm” and Budapest were the country - wide conference oil will also be considered a l'Flfl'lE. STRIKE THREAT The action came as a swift re- taliation for the calling of a iii- llUUl' general strike by the Buda- pest Central Workers' counsil Sun- day afu-. failure to shake the tough policy of Kadar. The council ordered the general strike from midnight tonight and appealed for world support to pro- lest the Kadar government. The ominous test of strength be-. tween the council and the Kadar g(Wt:l'fll'llL'nl. which the Russians installed Nov. 4. has been develop- ing for a week. Kadar has refused all council demands. obviously on tho advice of the Russians. The council. which has do manded the withdrawal of Russian troops and independence from Moscow. is Kadar's principal op- position. It recently suspended its demand for replacement of Kadar by former premier lmrc Nagy i.n WIATI-III Sunny, becoming cloudy In the light winds. low- high at Charlottetown 23 and evening; 40. Declared In Kadar Gov'i an evident effort to reach some Dispatches said the council had concluded Kadar was determined to use force. if necessary. to crush any opposition. SCORES KILLED Support for this view came tron: an informed source who scores of Hungarians had been killed and many wounded in clashes with police and Russian,- truops that day throughout the countryside. in Budapest. eyewitnesses sold !0u1hs attacked Soviet tank! Pls trolling the city streets after dark. Stepped-lip Russian troop move- ments in the northeastern provin- ces were reported by travellers Ir- riving here. Some travellers said constant patrols of Russian tanks and ar- mored troop carriers have been seen in all the bigger towns of the northeast provinces. Frequent ab mored patrols have been seen in most of the villages near Buda- pest. From these reports observers in Vienna judged the Russians are again concentrating military strength around the Hungarian capital and are bringing powerful PRICE Sc reinforcements into Hungary. FAKE FRONTIERS The arrest of hundreds of work- ers' council members has com- pletely destroyed confidence in the Kadar government's claim to want to win working class support. Workers are only doing mainten- said mac and there is no production. Many villages are refusing to pay taxes or make. food deliveries. Hungarian refugees arriving at the Austrian frontier town of An dau said Russian border guards have set up take frontiers inside Hungary in a new effort to stem the flow of refugees fleeing into Austria. They said the mock points are illuminated at night and baited with Austrian flags. The Russian have resorted to this ruse. the refugees said. be- cause they are unable to seal the border by night when most ref- ugees make their dash for free- dom. There are more than 72.000 ref- ngees still in Austria and the fig- ure is mounting again. Austrian police reported an "underground railway" that seemed to be or- ganizing and speeding the move- ment inside Hungary itself. Police Seek Slayer Of Mail Driver TORONTO (CP) -Police throughout Ontario were on the alert for the slayer of Weldon Boyd. 41, whose bullet - smashed body was found Saturday in his looted mall truck. Rewards totallltlz 33.500-incluth ing 51.000 from Boyd's employer - were posted for the killer's capture. Police said they believe lIe,wa.smmIona.B0VtL-.lInHlV- -i An off - duty policeman fo Boydis body in the rod mail val. parked on In cast-and residential street I block from I police sta- tion. Fifteen registered mail bags. some bloodstained. had been found earlier, slit and empty. 10 miles away in Scarborough. Boyd had been shot four times. twice in the head and twice in the back, with soft-nosed bullets. Police said a revolver was pres- sed against his body- 34.700 missing First estimates indicated up to 011.000 might have been stolen from the mail. Preliminary checks showed at least 34.700 missing but postal authorities said it would be difficult to assess the exact amount lost. A trail of blood Ipota indicated Boyd was slain It the rear of I honey plant, three blocks from the spot where his truck was parked. He was due to check into the downtown Union Station postal terminal at 7:15 p.m. Friday. Residents said they first saw the mall truck parked on the east- and street at 7:” p.m. Boyd's body was discovered inside shortly after midnight. Boyd carried mainly cheques, cash and registered valuables. Police said they believe his slayer was familiar with post office prac- tice and the driver's daily route. Only an acquaintance. they said. would have been admitted to the truck. Detectives thoroughly checked the truck and its ontents and questioned residents of the area where it was found but said they turned up no clues. Police throughout the province were asked to check garages for I car bearing blood stains. perhaps nibbed off from the stolen mail bit I10 to 400 antics above tho- earth ban. iwithdrawlng British troops on the laiert for I possible last-fling at- tack by Egyptians. tians were turned back. A squadron of tanks positioned at one strategic crossroads cov- ered all approaches with then ,guns. . . Most of the remaining British troops are concentrated in barbed- wire areas on the seafront and on the city's harbor side. Streets have been bare oi strolling soldiers since dawn Sunday, when Purl Said was placed out of bounds for all but on-duty troopers to ”avoid any incidents" with Egyptians. mscovr-:rt ARMS cacnr: The .. ' ..i-bounds order was is- sued after British troops discov- ered a big cache of smuggled arms in the Port Said area Satur- day. Sunday. I patrol captured an Egyptian underground printing press. British security officers said it was significant that the firms cache consisted of explosives. in- cluding detonators. sticks of dy- namito. slabs of gunpowder, hand grenades and bazooka rockets. They said that suggested the un- derground was waiting to throw LONDON (AP) -- The Duke of Bodford. one of Britain's best dres- sers. came to the aid Sunday of some of the world's foremost un- dreaaers-tlne vllorld Congress of dlsts. "I und':rstand." said the 39- year-oid duke. "that the nudists are having trouble in finding a place to hold their 1058 interna- tional congress. it occurs to me that Woburn could provide the ne- cessary facilities." Woburn fprounced Wooburnl is his grace's palatial estate in the nearby country of Bedford. the DEBATE SET FOR TODAY UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. (cm A resolution condemning Russian charter in Hungary's can our free lam was submitted h to UN (ion In it even though in his country's opinloaltialsaotstmngeoongh. ASINIBJICTION ldthatiauderaottelo cbsaceebowlll lie II its Resolution Blasts Russia El Salvador. Ireland, Italy. The Netherlands. Norway. Pakistan. mil. Swollen Thailand and the IAIID JUl'I' RBFITITION .Port Said was tense Sunday with drawing troops. SEND OWN POLICE in Cairo. Interior Minister Zak- Armed guards patrolled all aria Mohieddln told the newspaper streets within the British - held Al Messaa a big Egyptian police area. Everyone entering the scc- force was ready to enter Port Said tor had to show I pass. All Egyp- as soon as British-French troops withdraw. It is expected that the last sol- idlers to leave will be screened by in contracting semi-circle of tanks tas they more--aboard the slope. By the time the evacuation reaches its last phase. the United Nations will also have more than 2,000 men stationed in Port Said. Meanwhile. the evacuation con- tinued at I greater speed than most observers expected. The Brit- ish aircraft carrier Theseus and troopship Ascania sailed and three more troopships are due. Press reports in Cairo said the withdrawal will be completed by Dec. 15. About 2,000 European civilians packed their bags to await thi- arrival of evacuation ships. BURNS PREPARES UNITS The UN commander Maj.-Gen. E. L. M. Burns. flew to the inter- national depot at Abu Suweir Sun day to prepare for a further dllr tribullon of UN units. Meanwhile. informed sources in Jerusalem said that UN Secretary- General Dag liammarskjold has rejected Israeli conditions for with Duke Of-Bedford Palaiial Estate To Nudisis scat of his 90-room house. Woburn lAbbey- it has several thousand acres of green lawns. spreading trccs. lakcs and streams. "I'm getting in touch with the l organizer of the nudists congrcs. ' -said the duke. ''I'm going to tcll .him that I think we can accom- modate his congress." .PLENTY OF SPACE . The duke was speaking from an- yotlvzr of his homes, on the Island - Jersey, in the English Chan- .nel. lie was reached by telephon- ing after he wrote to The Sunday Pictorial offeri n it his stately grounds to the nudists. "Really," he said. "I'm serious about this. If they want to hold of space, you know.' "Tile food is up to them." hI to tourists." IUSSIAN SPACE M0 PARIS lftonzrsma on their congress on our lawns. l'll try to help them. We've got plenty The duke would admit he nud- - lots ire. said. "But of course we sell tea Told oi his grIce'I offer to let the congress come to his estate. Pori Said ls Tense As Withdrawal ls Proceeding PORT SAID, Egypt (Reutersi- bombs at the backs of the with- drawall from the Sinai Peninsula. The Israelis were dcmandinl guar- antees that Egypt would not use the Sinai Desert Is a spring for attacks on Israel. Cairo Radio reported that the commander of the Yugoslav con- tingent to the UN force has sug- gested I see landing at Gnu to avoid the difficult overland jour- ney to the Israeli-Egyptian armis- tice lines. In other action Sunday, Lt.-Gen Raymond er. apart clearing the Sues Canal. got his first look It the obstructions in the waterfront. PREPARE SALVAGE JOB Wheeler arrived Saturday to survey the massive job of reopen- ing the waterway. British - French experts have cleared the northern third of the canal from Port Said southward sufficiently to allow passage by all but the largest tankers. They said the channel 160 feet wide they have opened needs only one more foot of depth to be usable by big tankers. Although the British - French withdrawal is under way. no In- salvage units has been made. Egypt is opposed to permitting the British and French to work on gin work on the blocked section it controls until the last foreign troops have left. Berwick Editor, Publisher Dies BERWICK, N.S. tCP)4ohn 8. Scott. editor and publisher of the weekly Berwick Reigster. died in this Annapolis Valley community Sunday after I short illness. He was 76. Born in Kentucky. he first came to Nova Scotia from western Can- ada forty years ago. He served on the editorial staffs of the dd Hal- ifax Herald and Halifax Chronicle and later was public relations offi- cer for the Halifax Harbor Com- mission. Mr. Scott continued to publish his own paper up to a few weeks tago. His condition was not consid- & nouncement of withdrawal of the the canal and has refused to be- I10 Snow Stalls N. S. Traffic HALIFAX (CF) - Genuine win- ter roared into Nova Scotia Sun- day. dumping from two to six CIDIII. E hycar. Six inches was ' V gig i I Debert and Kontvllla ' ;'oderIta falls of three Royal Family Dies LONDON (Reuters) - Prince: daughter of Queen Victoria. died for some time with bronchitis. The spinster princess lived Ill adventurous life. visiting almost every country in the world and wrote several books on her trav- els. Her last book-My Memories of Six Reigns-came out I few weeks Princess Marie often shocked the Victorians by her democnti manners - especially once when she t t with I ” '” pedd- sluma of London's east end. Dies At Ottawa Dougall. veteran newspaper man and former president of the Par- liamenta , Press Gallery. Saturday following I lengthy ness. He was 70. Mr. McDougali was Parliamen- tary correapondent for the Chris- tian Science Monitor and the Ed- inburgh Scotsman. He also wrote for The Times of London and Reuters news agency. He was the son of Canada's first auditor-general. John Lorne III- Dougall. Dulles ls Optimistic As He PARIS (Reuters)-United States 2 S -i 2 :- s 2 Western Alliance since the Sec- tlid World War. 'i'he chief event of the week will Reaches Paris For NATO Talks secretary of state John Foster Dulles arrived in Parts Sunday to start what most European diplo- mats consider one of the most the Middle East. inches of snow over most. of the - marks: are heaviest J m parts oprovlnce recorded Oldest Member Of V V Marie Louise. st, oldest member i l of the Royal Family and I grInd- 5 H here Saturday. She had been ill ler at I charity carnival in the - Veteran Newsman or-rnwa (cm - Morris, Mc-i died ' ill- v 2 r t l l l . y. 1. 11 i