Ioyaseseetseelevevisll dien I VlautA&.DlssIIS06l& cleani- 'WlA'l'I5Q IlghffIy' dthmlalldeem l5nssdM. 0uile&farSu.SIsowesa. VulehIeeInu&GI winds. i.ewessdi& The Qarfoltetowa B a p t i s t church has purchased the P. W. rurner property, shown here. as a site for the new church they plan to build next year. the Guardian learned yesterday from Nelson Good. chairman of the building comlnlhn. The site, on the corn- er of and Fitzroy Streets. is lently located diagonally across-the street from the present church structure. - The present plan is to rent the Turner home until next spring when it is expected that construc- SITE FOR NEW BAPTIST CHURCH tion will get underway. The hope is that the actual construction will begin in May and that the new church will be ready for occupan- cy within a year from then. to accommodate the present con- gregation and there is no room on the present site to expand. the Guardian was told.' The present which is alongside the church. is 83 feet by ill feet. The Turner property is no feet by no feet. Although no definite decision has been made yet, the new site is Building site. including close enough so that the present the parsonage parsonage can be used if it is s o desired. one member of the build- ing committee told the Guardian The present church is too small Iiowevc. Mr. Good stated that the decision regarding a parson- age is one for future planning. The other members Committee of the Commonwealth Finance Ministers Meet Sept. 28 OTTAWA (CP)-Commonwealth countries have agreed to a con- ference of their nuance minsiters to in Canada. Prime Minister Dielec- bsker announced Friday. The four- day meeting will he held at Mont- Tremblant, Que.. starting Satur- day. Sept. 38. "Preparations for the conference are proceeding." the prime min- later said In a statement from his office. Mr. Diefenbaker proposed the September meeting during the Commonwealth prime ministers conference at London a month ago. One of its aims will be to discuss the Canadian govern- ment's hopes for a full - scale Commonwealth trade and eco- Couunonwe-lit Into a Iirousur aomio conference next year. lfldllll ll'0lIP- Fllflhu. I lot at at.” on-id "' ctos-eluII' tlnsuchdollar in September to attend meetings of the world bank. and will come government plans to prepare a draft agenda for the major trade conference and have it distributed to Commonwealth members to,.the.Iaptesnbn- meetips of B- nan ministers. Government officials have said Canada may propose the use of tariffs and capital as twin mea- sures to promot increased Com- monwealth trade. .. It is felt that some more effect- ive system of tariff preferences would be necessary to bind the I! that all Commonwealth countries have accepted the invitation. He said formal invitations sent to them following the London prime ministers” have been accepted. Cosnsotnlwealth finance minia- tara will be in Washington earlier countries as the United States would have to be redirected into the sterling area markets of the Commonwealth. Official thinking is also along the lines of -establishing a permanent Common w e a I t h organisation to watch and advise on the expan- walls Trade. prior year Canada more from the U. .' ported is that country. That un- balance was higher than the 0743.- dlI.000 trade deficit in the first half of last year. ..In, trade with all countries. in- cluding the U.S., Canada's trade deficit was 837I.W0.lli for the first half of the tuillhwi a That slon of Commonwealth trade. A major concern of the new or car's circuit breakers to "cut out" Canada's trade with the United states-by far this country's big- gest customer. in the first six months of this t t'I51.0tll.0ii0 was na- year earlier. factor was behind Mr brthlscoun Dielenbaker's can a month ago to shift it per cent of her United States buying to the British market. The question of boosting term a" Commonwealth trading bloc would raise the ques- tlon of commitments under the General Au-eemant on Tarrtfs and Commission Probing Nfld. Finances Adiourn To Oct; If. JOINT. ltfld. (CP)-A three men rnlyal ensmlnsion investigat- ing Newtoudland'a financial pro- lreee since Confederation ad- rned lrlday until Oct. 7 when Chief Plefeeacinha versity of Dritid umbia. Chief Jtnica McNalr told pre- vincial repreoentatfves the com- misaioners may want further in- '"ii".....'"”' "li'n'”" "33" .l" V ve cooper ." a. Professor Danna and federal Army Recruiting Up Sharply Following New Boost In Pay O'l'I'AWA-(OP) -. Army.recrult- in: increased seal-sly in the last two weeks ef July, apparently as a direct result of boosts in armed bmearnmtle esldus leevlll Es d-I-pd-cam increase Ell ii. I 5' lit! sits? It is 1 ls. province -of Newfoundland." snent counsel Roland A. hie of Halifax thanked the pro- vincial counsel and Newfoundland- cs for their hospitality and com- plimented Premier smallwood on the high calibre of his deputy min- istors who testified before the commission. Mr. Smallwood who attend most of the sessions. told the commis- sion he felt it was his duty "to tell you how deeply you have im- pressed l the people in this GIDOHY PICTURE The premier said he was sorry the nature of their work gave them a picture ef Newfound- I ii.;i5l light; it i .5 iiltz L... lit?” 3 3 i! ii -3 7 :3 .i 1 33 3;: ital; ,. ll ii I l glitz- yl . . N .al government had extensive powers i l il l E l. i l 3 "l ,l ll hope and cheer. God in heaven knows we need hope and cheer and have needed it for centuries." The province has asked for an annual federal grant of 811.00).- no to keep public services at their present levels. The request the activities l. iliiii r is it ire: .-ii srlrl are 8. H. Burhoe. secretary; Rev. H.L. Mit- ton. C.S. Scrantui, Carl Burke. Dr. J.A. Clark. Robert Nlchollon. Jr. Charles Iiamsn ar. up from WN CANADA. SATURDAY, AUGUST 3. 1957 Trapped Seven Hours In Car In 5 Feet Of Water DRYDEN. Ont. (CF)-A 5-year- hours in an overturned automobile in five feet of water. was rescued Thursday but two elderly compan- ions died. Gordon McArtilur aald he sur- vived h be ' t to panic old Dryden man. trapped for seven and found a corner of the car which was above water and al- lowed him to get enough air through a crack in the floor- boards. He was rescued by his nephew, John McArthur, who happened on the accident scene. Deed are Ole Baun. st. of Sioux lookout. Out.. and John Richard- son, 66. of Dryden. The trio were driving along a private road when their car mis- sed a bridge and plunged into the , Wabigoon River. to miles east of e. Baun and Richardson were trapped in tile back seat and drowned. McArthur. the driver of the car. was able to straddle the steering wheel and keep his head above use water level in one corner of the car. He was near exhaustion when rescued. He was released from hospital Friday. 74 Iniured In Subway Panic PHILADELPHIA (AP)-An ex- plosion and fire in a crowded sub- way train Friday touched off a acrambllsh rush by pasaellse I in which scores were cut by flying window glass. Seventy - four persons were in- jured. none severely, during the panic-filled seconds following the blast. which occurred at the height of the morning rush hour. The six-car northbound train- Jammed to the doors - was just pulling out of the station in North Philadelphia when the first of a series of loud blasts rocked the train. The Philadelphia Transportation Company said a grounded cable under the leading car caused the with several loud reports. There also were electrical flashes and heavy smoke. lame of the passengers pan- icked. A few took off their shoes to the station platform. Women screamed. shattered glass and blood covered the platform. Three of the air can of the train were already past the station plat- form. The train crew opened the doors of the last three cars and there was a rush to safety. Boy Drowned -In Swimming Pool SYDNEY (CP)-Kenneth Crane 10, was drowned Friday in a swimming pool at Rotary Park. a new youth playground opened this summer. His body was re- covered late Friday night from about five feet of water. He was Sydney's third fatality within a 24- hnlir period to smash windows and climbed outs Formally The formal opening of the Hills- boro General Hospital will take plaoe on Wednesday August 7 ac- cording to an announcement made yesterday by Hon. M.L. Bonnell. Minister of Health. Premier A.W. Matheaon will lay the cornerstone of the h i”' which is one of the most modern active treatment centre of its kind to be erected for the care of emotionally disturbed persons. It was while Mr. Mathuon was serving as Minister of Health that the idea of providing more up in date treatment for emotionll dis- turbance was conceived and the modern 78 bed hospital of today is a fulfillment of that idea. DIAGNOSTIC SERVICE Up to date diagnostic services will be provided by the hospital which is equipped to care for the physlcal as well as the mental illness of its patients. Among the services it will give are complete X-ray and laboratory service. electro cardiograph and basal me- tabollc recordings. The hospital treatment will be ordineted with the work of the Mental Health Clinic of the De- partment of Health. It will provide snrne out-patient service including shock treatments. The function of the hospital. Dr. Bonnell said. will be to treat, people who have reached an acute stage of emotional disturbance and who have a good chance of re- covery within a three to six month period. Of course any physical nu. ment from which the patient may lie suffering will also be cared tr. -IOQITAL KAI!--v Jiillsboro Hospital will be under lighthouses Hit By lightning WESTPORT. N. S. tCPl.-I.lght- houses in isolated parts of Nova Bcotia felt the fury of Thursday's electrical storm, it was learned Friday. The Peter's Island lighthouse near here was reported struck by lightning four times. Shingles were ripped away and a beam split as lighthouse keeper Fred Moore watched from the window. The fierce storm blacked out all lights on Brier island and repair- men had to be rushed in to fix a fog whistle damaged on the North Point lighthouse. l of Opened August 7 I .the administration and supervislonl psychiatrists will be available. Dr. A.J. Murchison; On the; Also on a consultant basis will istaff will be psychiatrists J. C. 1 be Dr. R.G. Lea, Dr. C.A. Coady, 'I'herlnult' R.G. Foraythel A. A.lDr. Temple Hooper, Dr. W. L. MncVicnr and MN. Beck. The MacDonald and Dr. Todor Gen- consultant services of four Hall- cheff. Dr. R.H. Barrett will actl fax physicians including a neur-; as part - time dentist for thel ologlat, a neurosurgeon and two! hospital. Fire Rages In St..Stephen, N.B. ST. STEPHEN. N. B. (CP)- Shop. run by Frank Reynolds. :1 fire iburnln:Lsout(ol'ct::IroIlq lnl Fire departments at Calais. Me. e bus ness trio 0 t s ew y . Sm h Brunswick-Maine border town lladl ::.lu;::i'p,::n' Jug, Sim. P n d""'0Yed "V0 "0"! "id '0"? The buildings involved are all others are afire early today. Four M on, uorey, The men, of mg glelmtments were bnttllna the fire was some 200 yards from the 310- Int ti i B idge. Smoke The fire broke out around 11:20 pone,-2; :5. or ml; burning bum. am. and spread to tour store: lngs as the crowd watched fire- wlthklln 10 i;nln.:tes- In Iesbsl than fighters work on the raging in- an our s s res were aslng. ( , Tide water in the St. Croix River. "10 on which the buildings are sit- uated. prevented the outbreak ' from being attacked from the Manly" Monroe tear. ' ' . ....... ......I.... from 3...; Sand Recovermg rt. Me.. 35 m es awa . arriv i , ifllelp local fire ngmelyl. -NEW YORK (Arr - M-nlyn Bot-h ule Dominion Stores Ltd. Monroe still was hopeful Frldlr and Tally-I-Io store had been com-V that she may YE! MOOIM I pletely destroyed. The fire all mother. She lost an unborn baby Ctawfords Store had been ex-. Thursday night by miscarriage tinguiahed. 3 and an emergency operation. Flames broke through the mail "She wants as many as she can of the Dominion Store ahonlyi get." said her husband. playwright after the outbreak and at 12:10. A.-mu; mu”. '1 real the same l'7l.3 Marilyn's ll'ilItIcr- in law out Shoe Store had been either Mrs. Augusta Miller, added: P3511"! 0' '50"! d9"'W'd- "She's a young girl. she'll have some. people from the fire area 5.51,”- nmved bedding into a nearby hotel Dry Hun.” Dubmw. one of two ” "ml P"'9"'d '0 ""9 "V" doctors who operated on the mm '""'"t T!" mm" 1'" by blonde. 31- year -old movie star. fire are in an area where rebuiid- , ing took place following a dis- astrous firs in the winter of 1932-83. The fire is thought to have started in the Dominion Store. in the main business section. and the bulldltpgs involved al;edefra;nt;vcon- funny n one I ater ' S'tlruegt.onl.)tl(ler buildlngso in the SP” W" "Wmd ml" "my urea were m”.u.n,d'1cM.,to,." well at doctors Hospital, although involved :.t l2:l0 a.m. were: 3'" l3 "'''d ""1 mihuy 3”l"V' The Dominion Store; the Agnew- - M135 M05700 W" 9P"''-” 0" "She certainly can have more children and shes very anxious to have more children." Marilyn. herself. has been any- ing publicly for a number of years itbat she eveniualw wants a big a soda fountain and china shopi "the baby could not be lived -Ml Q”;-H by H, w, cm-k; Fjghlon it was urgent to protect the life of rs-och, fun by A, E, Andrews, s the mother." She was five or six women's clothing store; Cl'aV- week: presnant and the baby was lord's Drug Store; and the Gift. expected next March. F WIINOS ARE INFORMAL AMONG CAIAVANEIS what irate. Iebwn hr term "idewnll cam.” . Jill: ' t l sown nus. Releelteile newt. Hrs. Ietlwswobera is -MI-anti" -tmifvanelcedu-eorlslularottse dtlsieariseesttanlagtheeara-ia.-.... ups, an. Wally litm- gurp". shoe store; 9.. 1-,.ny.Ho,.after physicians determined that dmo .make a full report at once on his isensal' Roam Russia, Canada, U.S. Hillsboro Hospital To Be LONDON (CP)-The West pro- posed Friday that world peace in-l apectors roam Russia. Canada. the United States and most of Europe by plane and aground to guard against a sneak H-bomb attack aeuted this malor plan for the North Atlantic allies in a two-part proposal before the UN subcom- mittee on disarmament. If Russia rejects it. he suggested there could be this alternative' Inspection of Arctic circle territor- ies plus most of the European land mass from Ireland to the Urais, and Pacific territory cover- ing the southern sections ofAlaaka, the Soviet Kamchatka Peninsula and all the Aleutian and Kurile Islands. D es. who flew off for Washing- ton riday night. broadened Pre- sident Eisenhower's open skies plan in a bid to break the dead- lock in disarmament ' ions which opened here 4 months ago. "If we can eliminate the threat of surprise attacks. I don't think we will have war." he said later in a British TV broadcast. ”. . We have nothing to conceal. If Russia has nothing to conceal. she will accept the plan. If she has some- thing to hide. she will refuse it." BTUDY PLAN ..soviet eelegate Valerin zorin told the subcommittee Russia sill study the plan carefully. He sug- gested, however. that the plan is unfair to Russia and favored th West in that it did not allow for Soviet inspection of American. NATO and SEATO bases in Japan. North Africa. the Middle East and elsewhere. British sources described Zorlns' off-the-cuff eamnseat as unfavor- able with his immediate reaction I that of "entries ed misgiv- ll loviet informant said later the Sawmill And Barn Destroyed CNTERBURY. (CF) - A bolt of lightning hit the sawmill of Atkinson and Delong one mile from here late Friday afternoon during a heavy downpour of rain. burning it to the ground. Henry Acker. Canterbury, one of ii men working in the building at the time. was injured by the lightning but is not in serious con-I n. A company spokesman said the company will rebuild the mill as soon as possible. The loss of the mill is estimated at 36.000 part of which is covered by insurance. CHIPMAN' N.B. (CPI -A barn and granary belonging to Almond Darrah. Red Bank. two miles east of there was burned to the ground Dulles Presents Plan To Disarmament Subcommittee U.S. State Secretary Dulles pre- trolling i T? 3 main threat to Russian securit) rests in bases which would not bt open to Soviet inspection under the plan. This informant also said Run ., sin is disappointed because Dulles till ' concentrated on methods of con- 'i. disarmament rather than , on cutting down on arms. He said ' ' conrtol was meaningless without substantial disarmament. ' Dulles unfolded what in effect was a four-point plan. i , 1. He offered to open Canada .-1 and the United States to ground: and aerial inspection provided the same facilities were available all over the Soviet Union. 8. If Russia objected to this. huge areas of the Arctic could be exchanged for i , tion purposes. 3. If Russia agreed to either pro- posal. and subject to the approval of the countries concerned. the in- section system could be extended i to an area stretching from the At- i lantlc to the Ural mountains. nat- ural barrier between European . and Asiatic Russia. 4. If this "uropean area was too -3 sweeping for Russia. a more . limited zone could be worked out. providing it was shared equally be tween the West and the Oommu- niat bloc countries. Dulles, who spoke on behalf of I the United States and other Wests. y en membe . of the subcommittee A -Canada, Britain and France-. nrged that a committee of experts i be set up at once to study the. technical p. blelns involved. , SUPPORTED PLAN . ..The three other Western dele- gates all spoke in support of Dul- i lea' plan. which has been the sub- iect of almost non-stop confeleneu since he arrived here last Inky. The first inspection area If include all the territory of the un- tinental United States, all i - including the Aleutiana. all &- ads. and all the Soviet Uniu. The alternative Arctic would be all territory north Arctic Circle in the Soviet" I Canada, the United (Alaska), Denmark (G end Norway. and all terrl -- Canada. the United States - Soviet Union west of I40 - west longtitude and north of - grees north latitude. This is roughly equlval - Alas a similar area in . the rest of the cha Peninsula and all the flan and Kurile islands. EUROPEAN ZONE ..The proposed European would be bounded on the - latitude to degrees north. -- the west by 10 degrees west - tude. and in the east by 60 d - east longitude. This is approximately equiv to a western boundary along - west coast of Ireland and the Al do Friday afternoon when struck by lightning during a severe electric- al storm. No Paper Monday Monday being observed as Natal Day and a Civic holi- day, the next edition of The Guardian will be Tuesday. Aug. 6. lsntic coast of Portugal. an em boundary along the Urals. a southern boundary taking in - -C northern parts of the Medlterran-, ean countries. . Under the No. 1 western scheme. Soviet inspectors would be free . fly over allied territory and comb the ground for evidences of w like activity. Western inspect would have the same freedun . '. side the Soviet Union. 3;- Dulles emphasized that the pro- posal to embrace Europe was su , lect to the consent of the ---' involved. At the same time. made it plain that he was off - his plan with "the concurrence l ' , I U. S. Ambassador To Cuba J On Mai For Visit To Rebels WASHINGTON (AP! The United States ordered its fledgling ambassador in Cuba Friday to and disputed visit Wednesday to the city of Santiago. a centre of rebel sentiment. The United States at the same time ya iaimed its "traditional licy of non-intervention" in Cu- 's current political strife. But his is standard Americas prac- tice h each a situation and gave Ittle Rah clue as to whether Anlnuador Earl ILT. Smith wae' noting under instructions or pulled a blender when he journeyed to ntiap. Smith went to Cuba as ambas- mdor a little more than a week 3. He presented his credentials to President Batista on July is and the state department said he laid Retina that he expected to travel around the country begin- prlnclple" of the European allies. : :- sl. police. -; Thursday afternoon. It was -- cloeed Friday. Cuban Am - Miguel Angel Camps called -- Roy Rubottom. assistant secre ' Smith. Press officer Idncoln Wh said that Angel Camps had infested but simply made an - tsnderdoed it i v-an but runs clv-l,nn-uansrys-ya-slant. mare-siukltnittesneead 3-gnaw. IW.QbIf&II&&"Xll-;”:-GK