Q 5 motor & WEATHER up 3'” .& 'u' 6''T''- Overud nejd It and drink. .r.:-'.".:.:-'..”:..-:...'-cc- ---------.--m , ' . I A sheeiternean,-Inudvrnrnseer ' ' "Covers Prince Edward Island Lilac 77:3 Dew 'f, i WN CANADA. TUESDAY, JULY 23, 1957 PRICE 5o cr IS, nxiivfnno v.- A 0'l'l'AWA.- 'l1te R.C.A.F. says l!.C.A.!'. had not carried out a ll- tbat the Mark V CF-100 Jet inter- ceptor (bottom) has been proved structurally sound by thorough an Air Force board of inquiry into a fetal Mark V CF-100 crash that u-and mu .1, gnu 11.. nu, the wing of the aircraft be struct- Inent followed a report that the urslly tested The R.C.A.F. said it wu able to duplicate exactb the stresses that would occur on a Mark V wing by using the shark er wing of the Mark IV CF-lw (top). CP Photo National Deiuee. Riots Would Spread Like Wildfire In Hong Kong LONDON (Reuters) ltiots could be sparked and "spread like a forest fire" in refuge-crowded Hong Kong. the government of the British crown colony said Monday. The colony's official report W use said .(M . crammed in the eoloeufs a square miles of usable lead: And 75.000 refugees are crossing the border from Communist Chine ev- ery year. . The pvernment said many of the refugees have been resettled In community estates. "Recent riots alone provide an indication of the possible i to public order that may be sparked off and spread like a for- est fire in such condition." the government said. "And it would he criminally foolish to overlook the epponunltiee which these en- tetes offer to political and even are subversive agitators." The retunese. aeuatting in slum huts. have intensified the prob- lems of vice--druu. prostitution. gambling and other crimes. But they also helped Hong Kong to survive eeooomical' . Trade with Comnsunyt China was cut effect an embargo on the export when the United Nations put into of strategic materials. Partly be- brought in by the refugees-the Drew Looking Forward .I BONPEACOCK C Preultaffwrler OTTAWA (CP) - Boa. Gcorlll Drew is looking forward to get- tingbncktowork. liis health has been restored. his d intrnente absorbed. ileis he in the middle ofviJ- oronspreparettonsto monthttierenksoflhe h-omwhlehpoorheelthtonk fireparntlons for the Cann- riisn high count to lrihh. The ivb is effective are i. but Enwreo l . son Edward. 1!. in sterile in Canada. He's a second- ll student at Mod- To Job The 63-year-old native of Guelph, ont.. spoke with vigor and cheer- fulneee, without a hint of the dis- appointment poor health brought to his political ambitions less than a year ago. it was last Sept. 21 that Mr. Draw. in a letter written from a Toronto hospital room. made known his "heartbreaking" deci- sion to give up the leadership of the Progressive Conservatives party be bid held since ms. "lt ll terribly hard for me." he Afterwards. while Mr. Drew was g from a series of Ill- thet began with a severe i iiglzigii ii cause of the labor surplus, new capital end new techniques- colony expanded end revolution- ized its industry. Since INI. the reput eeld. creased fourfold in that time and there have been :,soo new fee- tories. The Chine trade embarg knocked more than os,5oo.ooo off but by Hong Kong's trade to China this has been largely made up increased trade with other coun- tries. Two Policemen Shot To Death HAWTHORNE. lialif. (AP)- Two policemen were found shot to death Monday where they had stopped a car for a minor traffic violation. Authorities immediately began looking for a men they believed forced a 15-year-old girl to submit to secual advances in e lovers' lane earlier. Nenty sheriff's squad cars were Joined by teams oi police- endo. Beach and Herman Beach. The car the two policemen had stopped was found abandoned later. Killed in the gunfire were offic- ers Richard Phillips, 10. El Seg- undo. end Milton Curtis. 25. of Hawthorne. , Police said they pulled up be- hind the klller's car and Phillips got out to write a ticket for a traffic violation while Onrtis ra- meleed behind. Phillips was shot in the back i Under Control iii?! iii;-iii? l 1-avg; i before the sentence was passed, - ready serving a 10-year sentence y old Costss Demetrious. was sen- Green To See T. C. Highway OTTAWA (CP) - Works Min- ister Green has decided that since the 'l'renaCs.neda llidrwny now is hie baby he's going to travel it fit a firsthand look. l-le's flying home to Vancouver Wednesday end after a few days there plans to head back for 0!.- . . ' pm vidlng springs hold up, expects to be back in Ottawa about Aug. 15. The provinces are building the Trans-Canada llhighwny, but the federal government is sharing the cost. Complains Was Beaten In Jail NlCOSlA, Cyprus (Reuters) - Demetrskis Joannides. a 17-year- old Greek Cypriot sentenced to five years imprisonment here Monday for possessing arms. com- plained in court that he had been beaten in jail. Asked if he had anything in say the accused youth-who was al- on a similar charge-said: "I don't care what sentence you may impose. but I wish to state we are beaten in prison so that the world can hear." Another Greek Cypriot, 25-year- tenced to three years imprison- ment after pleading guilty to pos- sessing srrns. : LONDON (AP) - Britain sent warplanes morning over Muscat and Oman on reconnaissance flights Monday after pledging sup- port io the pro-British sultan fight- ing re" "' tribesmcn in the leaves For Ottawa Mr. W.R. Shaw. chairman of the potato committee of the Can- adian Horticultural Council. who left for Ottawa this morning where he will assist in the prepnb ation of an all-Canadian brief o n fruits and vegetables to be pres- ented to the " Tariff Board on July 29. The brief will be oi particular interest to the potato industry. . end will likely be sup- plemented by briefs from the var ious potato producing areas across the country. Violence In Bus Strike 'LONDON (Reuters) - A mass strike of 100.000 British provincial bus driven broke into violence Monday. with crowbers and stink bombs used in picket line dern-x onstrntlons. ' striker! dragged e none-stlking bus diver from his cab on the road t llkeston and Derby in northern England. anti as- saulted him wlth a crowbar. He was taken to hospital. in Cardiff, Wales. no slrlllcfl surged around six buses lcevlng on vacation fours. Theh hurled stink bombs and let air out of tires as women pickets shouted. "traitor" and "scab" at the driv have been recovered from Cem- eron Parish (county) and 190 per- hurricane killed at least five In other parts reported 11 deaths. agriculture commissioner. said the state crop loss was 820,000,000. The General Adjustment Bureau sured property was 8ll.000.000. There was no estimate oi unin- damsges to rigs alone in the Gulf of Mexico between 83.000000 and 35.000.(m. Persian Gulf. Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd (old the Commons British troops in the Arabian peninsula have been alerted and commanders "given discretion within certain limits to take military action." Socialists shouted warnings Brit- ain may be heading toward n "second Suez" and demanded Par- liament be told before any troops go into action. Lloyd accused "outside" forces of stirring up the revolt against the sultan and defended Britain's right to answer a friend's call for assistance-with troops if neces- sary. Lloyd told the Commons "no British troops are. as far as I am aware. at the moment on Muscat soil." Four of the RAF's biggest troop- carrying planes were moved to the Middle East Monday. The air ministry said the transports would "undertake whatever airlift may be required." Three British infantry compan- ies were reported prepared to move in Kenya, as well as aircraft in both Cyprus and laq. Two Bit- ish frigates were reported stand-- ing by off Muscart. the sultan's capital. Revolt in the oven - hog south- east corner of Arabia broke out three days ago when tribal fol- lowers of the exiled imam Gbaleb Ben Ali. religious leader of Oman. swooped out of the mountains and began attacking foothill villages ruled by Sultan Said bin Taimpur. 1.500 REBELS About 1,500 rebel irlbesmen have taken control of 5,000 square miles of the interior, and were reported to have isolated Odsiba airfield. only 15 miles from Mus- cat. The sultsn's private army of 400 men has British officers. The British foreign secretary did not name the outside forces jhe said were behind the rebellion v-but British newspapers accused lsaudi Arabia of arming the rebel tribesman. The foreign secretary was asked about reports that the rebels were fusing arms of American origin- .possibly supplied Saudi Arabia by the United States under a mutual aid agreement. "I have no knowledge that the arms are of American origin." lLloyd replied. "All we know is 'that they are modern arms in the jerea that must have come from outside the territories of Muscat." i Some British newspapers have suggested Saudi Arabia inspired the revolt in order to seize lands for exploitation by Ameican oil interests. Britisn has had treaty relations with the Oman and Muscat sultan- ate since 1839. but unlike the lab- iulously rich oil sbekhdoms of Ku- Iwsn and Qatar it is not a British I protectorate. Asks Russians For New Disarmament Concessions WASHINGTON (AP)-State Bec- retary Dulles appealed to Russia Monday for new disarmament con- ccsslona before nuclear weapons become available to even "the pettiest and most irresponsible 'Dulied said-"thin is set unlim-v rrrmernent talks in London have made "some slight progress." Ha keyed a half-hour nation - with radio and television address to what he called the imperative need of a first-step disarmament rrgreement. He called on Kremlin rulers to join in lifting the threat of global destruction before man "must learn to live as burrowers within the soariflng multl-billion dollar learn to live as burrowers within Audrey Cause Of Heavy Damages LAKE CHARLES, La. (AP)- The dead and missing from burri- cane Audry's June 27th rampage total 534 persons. Property dam- age was well over 840.(I'l0.000. in his latest report, Sheriff Henry Reid said that 32! bodies sons are missing. in addition. the of loulsisna. Texas - Sidney J. Mccrory, Louisiana inc. said the Louisiana loss in in- surcd droperty losses. Some estimates placed oil well Mccrory said the Louisiana livestock loss was 35.610 animals the earth's crust" or "a slave" to the soaring rnulti-billion dollar cost of modern weapons. The problem of controlling atomic-hydrogen weapons "may soon become totally unmanage- able" IIIIBIIHUID Western es and ltnssii"&II”or'rnaling' a start. Dulles said. "As matters are going the time will come when the petiiest and most irresponsible dictator could get hold of weapons with which to threaten immense harm." The secretary's speech was said to have been personally cleared and approved by President Eisen- hower. BACKED PROPOSALS .. Dulles reaffirmed end solidly backed the limited disarmament proposals advanced by Harold Stsssen. chief U.S. disarmament delegate. in months of negotiation future if the war threat is not brought under some international control. Mankind cannot long live under the shadow of such destruc- tion ss is now possible without great changes in existing-Imlyw cal. social, political and monl values. He said again, (on. that until the Eisenhower administration "sees convincing proof that the Soviets are serious about arms limitation" the American govern- ment will continue testing its nuc-l leer eapons. Appealing for a fair degree of speed in rca ” an agreement. Dulles said the "essential thing" is "actually to get started and to move (mm the phase of weari- some and unending lalk into the phase of actually doing earne- with Soviet representatives and mug- others at London. . He offered no ' in his speech but expressed guarded op- timism over prospect of East- West agreement. saying the Soviet i ' inn "has been talking with somewhat more realism and less bomber ." "The whole world faces a grim Volkswagen: Win In Ability Trials SYDNEY, Australia (Reuters)... Two Volkswagen cars were offl- cially confirmed Monday as win- ners of first and second places in a 6.011)-mile round-Australia reli- ability trlel which ended here Sun- lost day. The winning Volkswagen only three points in the trial over several "horror" stretches In Aus- oh aining liquor while under age trnlle's "outback." The second Volkswagen inst only five points. Third place went to an Australian-built Holden. it lost valued at more than 88.000111). 21 points. Cyclone From A Birthday Party TORONTO lCP) ?' "A birthday party that turned into a cyclone" was the way suburban North York polloe described a teen-age beer and vodka party raided Saturday night. Police said a 15-year-old girl, one of it girls and boys arrested. passed out in the police station. Police said more than a dozen youths escaped: by leaving through windows when police arrived after neighbors complained of noise. p "Drawers were ransacked and .ihc place looked as if a cyclone ;had hit it." said Constable Gor- don Baron. Two persons were charged with ian all those arrested were charged as found-ins. Police said the party was given by a 16-year-old girl whose par- 'ents are away on vacation. a ST. JOHN'S. Nfld. (CF) - The Newfoundland g o v e r in meat de- clarcd Monday it needs 817,000.- 000 a year more from the federal treasury if the province's public services are to he maintained at their present level. Newfoundland government coun- sci P. J. Lewis made the declara- tion to a royal commission open- ing hearings into progress made by the island province since Con- federation in 1919. Mr. Lewis said Newfoundland needs 353.000.t'll0 a year to main- tain present services and only 336,000,000 can be raised without imposing additional taxes. Unfolding a 633-page brief deal- ing with the province's problems. Premier Smallwood told tht com- mission flatly: "We are not ask- ing for money to enable us to make our services better than those in the other Atlantic prov- inces." "We would feel Just a little sin- ful to attain those dizzy heights." he said. "But the people of New- foundland want Confederation to be a success: they want a square deal." Mr. Smallwood said Newfound lend lost 8l0,0W.Ml annually in customs duties "as well as other sources of revenues" by joining Canada. "But we didn't know if the gov- ernment would be able to collect enough revenue to obtain the pub- lic services so badly needed in Newfoundland.” Aside from losing revenues. Newfoundland gained many bene- fits such as the old age pension. higher wages for reilwaymen and Says Newfoundland Needs M7 Million More Annually? British War Planes Zoom Over Troubled Gulf Area Demand For More Money is Made To Royal Commission civil servants and war veteran payments. HEROIC EFFORTS .. After eight years of Confcders tion, Premier Smallwood said. "heroic efforts to raise the level of public services have taxed our people. spent all the surplus and forced us to borrow heavily.” The province has spent 844.000,- 000 in federal transitional pay- ments (similar to those received by the other Atlantic provinces be- cause of geographical location and small populations), 810,000,000 in current account cash surpluses ao- cumulatcd by the government and 344,000,000 in borrowed funds on n 808,000,000 capital account to im- prove public services. The premier said Newfound- land's roads, schools. hospitals, health services. public housing. hydro and other public services are Just about where Nova Sco- tla and New Brunswick were in mm... Divided into three books, the brief was more than two years in the making. One book contains his- torical background. another re- veals the growth of services to the 1 present level and the third reviews i Newfoundland's contribution to the rest of Canada. Others who will help present Newfoundland's case are H. C. Goldburg. joint counsel and spe- cial economic adviser; business- man-iournallst Albert B. Perlin and junior counsel Douglas C. Hunt. W The federal government was represented at the opening been ings by Newfoundland's federal cabinet minister, w. J. Browne. '5 TORONTO (CP)-Defence Min- ister Pearkes, nnvelling s new let aircraft engine, said Monday it is "imperative" that Canadian indus- try "bulld up research and design facilities. in collaboration with the responsible governmtnt agencies.” "These facilities are esseriial for the developmtnt and , duc- tion of weapons and equipment for the defenct forces." he aid. The Iroquois, designed for use in the supersonic interceptor, the CF-I05. was pralsed- by Gen. Pearkes and by Air Marshal C. R. Slemon. chief of air staff of the RCAF. The unveiling ceremony was at the Orenda Engines Limited plant at nearby Mellon where the are glne is being built. The Cl-'-105. also known as the Avro Arrow. is being turned out in a sister plant. Avro Aircraft Limited. Air Marshal Slemon said the Orenda engine which powers the 56 Accidental Weekend Deaths By THE CANADIAN PRESS Traffic accidents and drownings accounted for almost all of the 50 accidental deaths recorded in Can- ada dubg the weekend. A Cendlan Press survey from 6 pm. local time Friday to mid- night Sunday showed that 17 per- sons dled on the highways and Zl were drowned. ' Hot, humid weather. especially In Ontario. drove thousands in many areas to beaches to escape the heat. Some never returned. in Quebec is persons were kil- led-the highest provincial foil for the weekend. Eleven died in auto accidents while four were drowned. Ontario's toll of it included nine drownings-six involving children . Two died from other New' Brunswick and Alberta no): had eight accidental deaths. Nova lcotie and British Colem- Clvil Defence Day Is Oct. 4 OTTAWA CP - The govern- ment has set aside Friday Oct. I an National Civil enesnced - Unveil New Jet Aircraft Engine CF-l00 interceptor lifts it to I ' height of eight or nine miles in seven or eight minutes. The lro quois. he added. will take the CF- 105, which weighs twice as much as the CF-100. to altitudes four or five miles higher in about half the time. And the Avro Arrow would fly more than twice as fast. "The potential of the lroquols in such as will enable it to be de- veloped to powers well in excess of the first vemons of the engine. "This is a highly important fee for in our constant effort to keep abreast of the threat posed by the increasing performance of the weapons that could be launched against North America." He said that despite the ex- pected development of guided mis- siles. bombers will continue to be a threat during the foreseeable fu- ture and consequently manned lnterceptng will continue an en- sentlal element of our defences." Canucks Invade American Island PORT ARTHUR, Ont vCPl- Forty-five Canadians "invaded" an American island in Lake Su- perior Sunday and "claimed" it for Canada in commemo rule on- other invaslnn said to have oc- curred earlier In the century. The men, we lug beards and mock police unlorms and period costumes. were members of the "Brothers of the Brush.” a Port Arthur group who have grown whiskers to mark the city's cen- tennial. to be celebrated July 21 to Aug. 1 - Their landing on lsle Royaln. c Mlch.. was unannounced except for customs clearance of their four a boats. 1 .- -r -”EW'55'.I4-'r.u. I45 red A idihrevli-Ir'r'”"""' ” ”s” .338 Arthur Liberation Army" marched ashore while natives and vaca- tioners watched in . 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