34 PAGES No Official ' Report On ' Queen's Tour QUEBEC (CP) - Prime Min- ister St.'Laurent said Sunday he has "no official information" on a proposed visitby Queen Eliza- beth to North America. Commenting on a report from Washington: that the Queen and Prince Philip will visit the United States early in October Mr. St Laurent said: "The last official information I had was from the prime minis of the United Kingdom. "He said the Queen and Prince Philip would be expected to come to Canada first if such a visit were planned and said we would be notified as soon as such plans were made." The Washington report said the visit would last about 10 days and formal acceptance of an invitation to the Queen by President Eisen- hower would be received in two or three weeks. The prim-e minister's office in Ottawa said a visit to Canada be- fore entering the United F ates would not necessarily entail a royal tour. The office suggested it might consist oi alformal visit to Ottawa and possibly one or two other points en route to Washing- it. Mr. St. Laurent is at his Que- bec City residence. He is to ad- dress a rally tonight. part of his election campaign swing through Eastern Canada. EKPLOSION KILLS 'l SALVADOR, Brazil (AP) - A sailor looking on at the scene of an accident lit a cigaret and dropped the match into gasoline flowing from a wrecked bus here Saturday. Seven bus passeng . dies in the flames and 21 suffered serious injuries. "V TELEPHONE ssos ."VIr meats seller with Guardian WcnfAds. DiclI506 cslsforeIssssi- the! ad l-Isa. forguldt results. SDU Pas Elbe s List? is Announced Authorities at. St. Dunslan's University released yesterday the 1957 College Honors and Pass List, and. In addition. the list of slu- dents who completed successfully the work prescribed for the vari- ous grades comprising the High School. The College Honors and Pass List contains in order of merit the names of the students who have made a general average of 60 per cent in the year's work. and. for First Class standing 80 per cent and above in the course named for Second Class standing (is per cent to 79 per cent in the course named. and for Pass standing 50 per cent to 64 per cent in the course aamed. COLLEGE HONORS. PASS LIST Biology 1-First Class: Charles Campbell. Sister St. Lawrence Marie. Sister Margaret Marie. Beverley Howard. ' Second Class: Anthony Spence- ley. Lawrence Hickey. Sister Thomas Marie, Sister Mairan. Olga Dowlirlg, Ronald Bolger. Lo- retta Cormier. Lawrence Gallant. Passed: Desmond Mullaily David Walker. Rhoda Longaphie. Jeanette Peters, James Fleming. Mary Claire Smith. Wlnnifred MacDonald. Desmond Mclvor. Biology if-First Class: Leo Peddle. Second Class: Gerard Burns. Passed: Michael Qulgley. Biology 3-First Class: Thomas Grant, Gerald Monaghan. - Second Class: Gaston Roy. James Noonan. Leo Peddle. Kimble Jay. Brian Doyle. Passed: Maurice Gauthier. Chemistry l-First Class: Al- bert Young, Alfred Tsang, Tommy Wong. William Cain. Donald Glllis, Daniel Arbing. Alexander Dona- hue. Charles Roberts. Lawrence Sub Reported Sighted Near Newfoundland Fishing Port ST. JOHN'S (CF) - Newfound- lsnd residents have reported see- ing another unidentified sub- lnlrine, this time within I few hundred feet of the shoreline oi one of the island province's bus- iest flailing ports. . The Telegram Saturday quoted two olflve men who reported not log the undersea: craft last Thursday. V Gerald McCarthy and Russell Sheppard. both at Harbor Grace. said they watched the email as she slowky surfaced. manoeuvres." about the tricky harbor entrance on the west side of Conception Bay fond i then submerged. The submarine resurfaced a few min- utes later but again submerged af- ter pointing towards open water. McCarthy said what he saw Thursday was "positively a sub." He said the shape and contours of the canning tower and upper part of the hull were like those he had seen in nowas-eels movies- BAW PERISCOPE FIRST Both McCarthy and Sheppard related that they were first at- tracted by something like a peri- scopo sticking out of the water. As the craft rose. they add. the periscops was followedihy the conning town-and the lsllgwblack outline of a submarine hall. Both told RCMP and later The Telegram that the surfaced craft manoeuvred and turned for a few minutes while on the surface. It plunged back under water only to reappear several i later. lwoo. Maurice Gauthier. Second Class: Olga Doiwlnz. Shelagh lwyiloy. Winniired Mac- Donald. S' ler Marian, William Costain: retta Cormler. John Kennedy. Jeanette Peters, John Whalen. Raymond Hache. Mar- illne Michaud. William MacNell. Gordon Duncan. Richard Ays. Gerard Mcivor. Norman Kane. Paul Michaud. Rhoda Longaphie. Marie McGuigan. Eric Doucette. Basil Gillan. David Betz. Regin- ald Pendergast. Passed: Allison Gallant. David Walker. Mary Claire Smith. Robert Linegar, lan MacDonald. George Keays. George Kelly. Parker Lund, Merrill Rush. Edward Murphy. llubert MCKCUIIE. Claude Deares- lcrs. Francis MacDonald. l Chemistry 2--First Class: Ray- lmond Bryant. Gerard Burns. '-Nancy Glllis. Second Class: Eugene Wynne. l3l'Ch3'-il Qlligley. Anthony Spence- ley. Jean-Paul Roussel. Jean-Guy Lemay. Cyril McCormick, George Muiiaily. 01910151?! 3-First Class: Leo Peddle. James Noonan. Second Class: John Conran. Jean Paul Roussci, Gaston Roy. Passed: Thomas Grant, Plcton Bilodeau, George Muiiaily. Chemistry 4-First Class: Nancy Gillis. Gerard Burns. Brian Doyle. Second Class: Kimble Jay. Eu- gene Wynn. Michael Qulgley; Jean- Guy Lcmay. Commerce I-First Class: Fab- er.MacDonald. St. Clair Fisher. John A. MacDonald. Raymond Hickey. Second Class: Patrick Mcwadc. Wilfred Barlow. Robert King. Ger- ald Gallant. Passed: Robert Doyle. William Kelly. Brendan McGinn. Commerce 2.-Second Class: Joseph Revell. George St. Pierre. Passed: Len Dolron. Commerce 3-First Class: Fab- " er MacDonald. Wilfred Barlow. . Second Class: John A. MacDon- ald. Robert King. Gersld Gallant. William Kelly. Passed: Brendan McGinn. Rob- ert Doyle. George St. Pierre. Commerce 4-Second Class: John A. MacDonald. Brendan Mc- Ginn. Passed: Wilfred Barlow. Wil- liam Kelly. George St. Pierre. Robert Doyle. Faber MacDonald. Robert King. Dolron. Joseph Bevall. Patrick: Mcwade- , ,,,,f; . Passed: Raymond Hickey. -fan Gillies. Stephen Fitzgerald. Don- ald MacDougall. - Commerce 5- Second Class: Donald Mat-Dougall. Passed: Raymond Hickey. Joseph Continued on page 2. Col. 4 The report is the second in three weeks o: unidentified sub- marines off he Newfoundland coast. Two south coast fishermen re- ported sighting what appeared I be asurfaced submarine on April 3'. They said they rowed toward the craft but It submerged when they were within a half mile of audit. COMET LOSES BEARD PARIS (Reuters) - The Arend- Roland comet. discovered last year. has lost its "beard"-a lum-' inous projection in front of it es- timated to be mofe than 6.000.000 miles long. French astronomers said Saturday. They said they were at a loss to explain the "beard" dlsappearsnw. Commerce 5-Second Class: Leo 3 5 ttmdia "Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew" . I 1 CHARIIYPTETOWN. CANADA MONDAY. MAY 13, 1957 will Take Six Week: To Assess C-D lessons ARNPRIOR. Ont. (CPI - As. sessment of lessons learned 0.0-. log exercise Co-operationl, a coat. lwoasl ' J civil defence workout. will take six week, of- flcial llld Sunday. It gppgu-ed meanwhile. that Canada bad guy: Vlvd "V0 lwllothctical nuclear attacks with "only" 2,000,000 0., ualties. ' The h e s d quarters and communlcl. tions at federal. provincial, gnd municipal levels involved more than 3,000 professional and vol. unteer workers in all provinces except Prince Edward island, In participation was itary. Federal cd co-ordinator F. r. Worthington ordered the exercise tuminated at 9 p.m. ADT Satur- day, two hours earlier lhan sched- uled, when a string of provincial headquarteu. led off by New Brunswick. indicated they wen closing down. mainly mil- Four Die in Vain Rescue Attempt PEPPERELL. Ala. Deadly fumes beneath a textile claimed the lives of five men. Fire Chief G. A. Mitchell said they were overcome by gas from a pit into which waste from the Pepperell Mills Inc.. bleacblIIg' plant was drained. Police said the tragedy occurred when Bryant Jones, 38. dropped his spectacles through a manhole and climbed down after them. He was overcome and the other four died in a vain rescue atternpt. Cecil B. Ray, plant chemist. said the men were victims of a com- gsn sulphide Car.- "Owners ' Will Welcome This LONDON, (AIM-A Scottish sn- glncer was reported Sunday to have invented I device to prevent machines from wearing out and to make oil lubrication unneces- ssry. Tile People. mass circulatln undo! Piper. said: John I6 Gregor. 35. of basalts to it way gnu. '.'alh Ill . the people who'want to see him" about his invention. The report said McGregor has found out how to treat metal sur- faces to cut down friction almost to the vanishing point. It said the process puts a "skin" of one- millionth part of an Inch on metal and this skin rubs only lightly against another metal surface brought into contact with it. McGregor claims he treated his automobile engine with the pro- counlrywide test lof ed Mlnlmbl Ind Quebec. however, , (AP) , 1 mill bleaching plant Sa t u r d a y 0 . Daughter-I n- aw Variable cloudiness and mods oeleri light winds increasing in the low-high at Cllnrloftduwn 35 Ind 59. Premier ls Killed In Cras ' . - f"c:-2'3":-.”'1'u THE ABOVE photo depicts of- ficials of the Charlottetown Legion Branch following the laying of I ed Last Post and Reville. Legion Russia Seeks Jap Aid In Bomb Appocll LONDON (C?) - Rusals Satur- day night announced that it has asked Japan torioin in an appeal to the United States and Britain for an immediate end to atomic and hydrogen bomb tests. Sunday. the Japanese govern- ment sald It had turned down such a proposal but it refused to com- ment further. Moscow radio disclosed the ac- tion ill broadcasting details of I IIot)I.h dx:iltodPriJme MiniatordNo- bus 1 P Olin two can west-.1: reply to fa Japanese request that Russia end all nuclear bomb tests. Informed quarters in London Sunday said the British lovem- ment considers the Russian appeal to Japan a further Soviet propa- ganda move. These sources put the Soviet proposals to Japan in the same category as last week's sugges- tion by the-Supreme Soviet that an lnterparllamentary committee of Britain, the United States and cess in November. 1955. and since then has not replaced or event topped his oil. although the csr' has done more than 70.tl)0 mlles.l Arab political alignment appeared- lo be taking shape today win I nylng visit of King Saud of Saudi Arabia to Iraq. p These two oil-rich nations are1 drawing more closely tolelh" I". ier taking opposite sides in the explosive Arab rift over the West- ern - sponsored Baghdad defence. i. wllfeslern observers would not be surprised if King Hussein of Jor- dan new info Baghdad during land's four-day visit with King; Faisal. Lebanese repr tatlvcsi also are expected to loin in the talks. NEW ALLIANCE - The pattern apparently emerg- ing is an alliance of the dual Arab monarchs. Husselnp Sand and Faisal. with Lebanon's backing. This would result in the virtual isolation of Egypt and; Syria. the two nations of tile Mid-i Three Forest Fires Still Burn In N.S. BHUBENACADII. N.S. (CF)- Three of it forest fires in Nova Bcotls Sunday were still bursting at dusk. forestry officials here. said. . , None were considered serimll possible ars-lo. : Most troublesome fire was near Frcaeb vlllase. llsulu counIy,l where in fire fronts ltlhcd. Fires at Inland. Aatigotan cousty. and new-rless cotniv also continued is burs after dark. The lerland fire covered '10 acres but wow not con- slvlered lll (trot.-.: '-ffk-la'x a.. or elalmtalt MI tbs av-sol lav s'lq.1llt.-Tu but mail it was t- ag but at s lIsllf- s mm; VH1 rousn so-r or .. I wreath by Legion Pres” Spur- geon Lemi at the Cenotaph. where yesterday's parade halted en route to church services. The parade was in commemoration of 1 .--.-an ' : --lm-.:: . A ' ; .' 0. VE Day. From left to right are: Comrade David Mills. who sound- president Spurgcon Leard. and comrade Arthur Hale. sergeant- at-arms. Guardian Photo. impressive Legion Turnout Marks VE-Day The Charlottetown Branch of the Canadian Legion marched to church services under sunny skies yesterday morning, in ommemor- atloa of VE Day. Led by Legion President Surgeon Leard. about Wlmelgbtn . . 'Leg do olne along Grafton Street to the Cenotaph, where a wreath was laid by the president and Last Post and Rcville sounded by Comrade Dlv'd Mills. Preceded by the l7th Reccs Band. under W.0. Charles Mac- Gregor, the parade then continued along Grafton to Prince to Rich- mond streets. where the Protest- Anniversary Last Post and Reveille being sounded by comrade David Mills. Rev. P. McMahon officiated at the St. Dunslan's service. and com- rade William. Chaisson sounded Last r t and Rwelll Comrade moved .olf..fmm.lhc Lloyd .'Pmustau lVlI' .wal marker and comrade Toombs Roman Catholic marker. TAKES SALUTE Following services. the parties joined at Trinity Church and pro- ceeded along Richmond Street. where the salute was taken by His Honour. Lt.- Gov- T.W.L. Prowse in front of the Provincial Building. an! party broke off for services ..Vla Richmond-Queen - Grafton 8i Tflnlly Ulllled Church. 019 R0”streeIs. the parade marched to man Catholic party continuing the Legion Home. where it dis- Rum. should work out me but along Richmond and Great George lp...-sea. means of achieving the complete banning of nuclear tests atomic and hydrogen bombs. Soviet suppor. Egypt succeeded Iraq from other mcmbl.-.3 of the Arab bloc two years ago when Iraq Joined the Baghdad poet in lsolallngi along with Turkey, Iran. Pakistan ning UV" 330-000- and Britain. Streets to St. Dunstan's Basllica.l mg: The sermon at Trinity Church was the pa.-30, ,1 .preached by Rev. A.F. MacLean. pnjms .10"; am New Arab Alignment Seen Shaping Up In Mid-East LONDON (Reuters) - A new die F.tlst receiving the greatest and took over control of the coun- try. One major reason that Hussein seeks a meeting with Sand and Faisal is his need for financial .aid. Britain's annual subsidy run- 000 was cut off in March with the termination of Egyptian President Nasser then ,the 1948 Anglo-Jordanian treaty. succeeded in forming a military alliance comprising Jordan. Syria and Egypt. An indication might change came in F that the lineupi chrunry signed a military aid agreement. with the Unid States. FINANCIAL AID NEEDED . But the most decisive shift in Arab power politics occurred last 7'' monlit when Hussrin forced Jor-lrurrcnl stlcccss dun": leftist government to resign The United States since has con- lrlbutcd 3l0.000.000 in aid from tht Middle East fund set up under the Eisenhower doctrine. Saudi Arabia iis reported to have contributed twhen Sand visited Washington and Sl4.000.000. Saudi Arabia and Iraq. as "it- two Arab nations with the greatest. oil revenues. are in the best po-i sition to help out Jordan financ- ially. Tiieir moral support already has proved a factor in Hussein's against leftist :le-. menis within Jordan. Hundreds of citizens witnessed varlnus Vantage route. sunny weather a'nd the shining medals of the marchers contributing to its colourful setting. Sergeant - at - arms was comrade Arthur Hale. Russian Reds Tighten Control MOSCOW (AP) - The central committee of the C n m in u n l st Party has sent to its members in .lhe amled forces a circular nrder- ing them to tighten up on discip- line. ideological training and vig- ilance. A malor point is that meet-i ings of party members in the army and navy must not question .0l'(lCI's and decisions of command- ers. l The orders uenl in party cells in both the army and the navy. ,Thcy blasted alleged ”comnla- rcncy. lack of discipline and dis- organization" in the military es- iahlisllmcui. Text of the circular has not been. cri : published but find Star and R Fleet. organs of the army and navy. carried editorials Sunday based on the central committee's Instructions and indicating part of the contents. U.K. l'-Tremier Will Ilflake Statement Today On Suez LON lX)N (Reuters) Print statement in the House of Com-' lztmuglt on Sues Canal by Britlsbl ships, a foreign office spokesman announced Sunday night. Informed sources said semi!- lan is expected to tell ritlsh shlpowners they can use the cannli again. on Egypt's terms. The sources said Maanlllall will make it plain the return all British vessels to Sues will be done to give a practical trial tel They have signed I motion warn-. ”Minisler Macmillan will make sling the government of trouble lflsunday that Britain gives in. and several have but one was being Investigated in . mama tell a y on the passan threatened to leave the party. MET ADVISERS Macmillan met with six cabinet advisers this weekend to counter the revolt. with a Conservative working majority in the House of Com- mons of from 55 to It votes. the government is In no great danger being overthrown. But the revel eats up heavy An official source said in Cairo unofficial BriliIh- :Egyptian talks are ullder way for 'a resumption of commercial rela- tllml! between the two countries. I place In Bern. Swltserl l the British government. Egyptian assets in Britain and. Everett" Earlier. the semi-official news- in: the political independence of paper Al Shaab reported that Brit- the young republi 0 iish-Egyptian contacts have taken sides-ed as endangering poses and concern over and. on M!- ment of Suez Canal tolls in sterI- The statement issued Ill. Al Shaab added the results of days talks. struck hard at the con- muniuue said. Diem indicated the talks have been submitted togtinued military o E Helicopter Hits Power line, Burns ST. JOHN'S. Nlld. (CPlE Pre- mier Smnllwood and his wife watched helplessly Sunday as s belteopt carrying their son. his wife and her sister burst into flames and crashed at their mm. wood Ranch about 50 miles from here. Their daughter - in - law, Mrs. Ramsay Smallwood, 27. the for. mer Florence Boone of Botwood, Nfld.. and pilot Gilbert Wsss. 43. of Ottawa and Gender. Nfld., were killed. Ramsay Smallwood. 30, re- E9lV9d llfll dtkme burns. His ais- ter-in-law. Mrs. Richard Morrow. a visitor to the ranch. suffered broken ribs and a broken collar bone. Both were reported resting comfortably at the general hos pital. .. I The helicopter had been sent to Russwood by Enstun Provlnolll Airways Limited of Gander lulu day morning to give the vnmilsl a demonstration It is eonsldssd sheer luck he was not aboard when it crashed. Ho and his wife were watching frominfrontoltheirhousell the craft took off from the rod and attempted to fly under a 6.000-volt transmission line. The body and blades cleared easily. but the tall snagged tht wire. The machine burst intl flames and fell to the ground is a garden. ACOOMPANIED AMIULANCI The victims were brought to Q. John's in an ambulance accult- panled by Mr. Smallwond and I police escort. Mr. Smallwood later returned to Russwood Ranch. ., Ramsay Smauwood helps his father and his brother-in-law op- -erate ltnsswood, -largen farm in Newfoundland. .. '. Ramsay has four children. the oldest about seven. - , Premier Smallwood has two other children. Clare. wife d Rancher Edward Russell. a Rug.- wood partner, and William, A st. John's lawyer who won the Gran Bay riding for the Liberals in th last provincial election. Girls Bounce Out Of Window NEW YORK (AP)-Two little girls were bouncing on a bed. nufenfnlng and giggling. The win- dow beside the bed was open. Suddenly it was silent. Mrs. Louisa Crux then heard cries from outside, two storeys below. ' Mrs. cm ran downstairs and found her daughter. Maria. 5. 1) ing on the sidewalk with s frac- tured skull. She died three hours later. Maria's cousin. ,PauIa An- dillo. 7. was taken to a hospital with serious head indurles and e bruhn - '- Tr” ' ' -its Tbe girls apparently had been bouncing with their arms clasped around each others waists when they bounced out the window. Saint John Men Drowned in Lake SAINT JOHN. N.B- (C?)-John ;C. Peck. 50. of Saint John Eastern Provincial Airways sold drowned Saturday while fishing the helicopter was less than 1 when his boat capsized in Theoald month old but had served on null Lake, about 30 miles east of and mercy nights. yht-re. wass was a veteran of 5.000 fly. l -smv WV -' ins hours. 1.200 of them in helieg FINE THEATRE ters. it was the first fatal uey Auslraliais national opera house dent for EPA since the oolmnt, to be erected at Sydney, will cost began operating a bush style! Iclose to 83,000,000. in Newfoundland in lids. Human Bomb Dies In Hospital hl().VTREAl. tCPleAndra De- the neck down. .. ', blois. the ludicrously disguised! ix-blols was returned to hos- . dynamite-fcslooned gunman who:-pital from the courtroom. Later, ' became Montreal's "human he was transferred to the Man- bomb" three months ago. died in trcal jail at suburban Bordeaux. hospital Saturday. He was returned to hospital last Dehlnis died from the effects ni.Tuesday. a hullcl fired into his neck byl The blarre series of events a sharp-shooting policeman at lhellasl March ll began with Debloi height of the 25-year-old gun-lthcft of a taxi and ended with man's wt-irll cscaplldc. ldlscovcry of a time-bomb device ” Tltrco weeks after he had kcptlin Central Station while the gun- !, .('nll')ln)'PPS and customers of a man lay on ll hospital bed. A ll bank quakintz in terror for Zfllstray hit of insulation or lint hall lmlnutcs. Dchlols uas carried prevented the bomb contraption ' .inln criminal court on a stretcher from ploding at the height of sentenced to 10 years ln.the rush hour in the busy down- He via: paralyzed iromltown station- l l I and l.EiseSnl1owerm Gives New Pledg ' : Ol Support To So. Viet Nam ' WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi- n.llitsryu.'1orc;:s lngorth VI": N E h 0 3 so 0, . during e sst mos cm" N" W” " ed u country was partitioned at the viet Nam with a strong pledge of P"-ml H me nun .. . . wonlinut-d United States assitsnce'c.,,,f,m,c. .0 cat." 1. pg, Saturday. ' Although they said IICO In in a joint statement. Eiscnhowcs-lapparcnt slackelhg of OCI and lisiting President Ngo Dinlt ist-inspired hoetilltlel ll -- .- Diem said that any Communist Asia with the exception l-szrcnsion or subversion threaten-.ltingdom of ii. tINeb ' . common frontier with North "would h eon- South Vlct Nam) IE1 " v conthnx U nist subvsratvo cspebiHss the area and elsewhere." To counter this threat, the stability" in the area. M 'White House at the end of three! t ' buildup ottllo,Chtn- strong desire and his efforts .1 es! Cornmulfsts. seek cloak cooperation with It said that Peiplngis military other free nations of Ann. I .lllQ Egyptian plan for canal man-grumbtings the party. Pram were must but July 3. at-tlviw "constitutes a continuing: Eisenhower and Dlssn noted - agenlellt. Payment of tolls to fisbthglo the pnpstas-sup three days after Ptesldcnt Nss- threat to the safety of all in In-.tbe Southeast Asia Treaty I . Egypt gollmhu under protest highs: Isl lose the general north? nationalization tlogtln Asia." - Gd plutlon ISEATOI sblslla & The rit government nmlrr t two years an. of sees no. cvltsdqne cit C0l1IfI'Ill- glow. .. will follow two weeks of maultm Nasser luau: controls the renal, blplmatlc relations wersbmlres mt Cltlss's refusal to rcsssacof Article row at tbs sumo ,. thubythe8lnsCmdUsenA':-.deQu.&I:.IdNathuco.n.dihu:ii:v.hl lhsrresclrnrtt-itlleusasfforeo:d." tlconc wife! canal IIIQ a Hills on Cairo which we use to skate slwblsstfbsrsdsy. fnosfQpIlfsosfqsns,esdedlndIngsstPuIldd.lsf fbeanouncernentlaawaltoluantrm: Thetalkswereexpsstsdheroto issarl.ybya"sourcbets"- Nmssrh htlhgso Iavlngresultlnabrlusllsgrccmastto a gram of Conservative MP: who transit has bolus paid direct to pay Sue: Canal tolh to Egypt and ossot not to more esocmlossllzsnt Issunnq ssssruasslsts the partial nzelnsafnosnsgyy ts lsnllns rnsls-t Nassc. sews llaa urns; uses is no-la.