tsisriious ssoe Iuyer niests seller (with .ou..as... Wont Ads. Dial -0506 ask for sinus. fiid ad falter. for quick r'ssults. . A . v - "Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew" t J? mttoroiia WEATHER Sunny with or few cloudy Intervals; milder; west winds 15. Low-high of Charlottetown 25 and 45. s reported here. A number of Nov bulsi's followers in Jordan's par- liament also were driven from thcl country. Some already have ar- rived in Damascus. . JORDAN UNDER CENSORSH IP h-f f tm d ned to Hussein's measures were de-l gyleia oands ?iustedm:)reI'le'll:')r Sulel- sfrlbed here 55 I pm'l"'q 90"” man Nabulsi was reported under del” I d b H . . . muse arrest. Irlq, rile y uS5EH.lSiCOUSlt:l. At least two clashes were re- K1118 Flllulr 13 Culed will He poned between "my mm, loyal West in the anti - Communist to King Hussein and pro.Egyptign Baghdad pact. an alliance bitterly army elements. Tanks guarded 0PPP59d by "'9 30Ve"”m9m' 9' the royal apalace. 55"” ""1 Egypt- , (Censorship imposed in Jordan LEGION PLEDGE! LOYALTY during the crisis caused by Hus- The Jordanian radio said the sein's dismissal of Nabulsi last Ami, Lgglon had put down n at. week has cut communications with empted army coupe against the that country. The reportsyfrom king pledged its loyalty to Huss- Damascus could not be confirmed ein. mltmliAlllImmJ id th kl e a e sources sa e ing Nfbl31:id' 1:33:10: acted after a clash between a des- stratlng wildly in Jordan's towns ET! Veilmelll l0Yll l0 Huliselll and on the western border with Israel. pro-Nuwar soldiers at I mllltarv A strike against the king's action base at Zarka. a town 30 'miles was threaunw. northeast of Amman. Jordan s cap Nawar fled to Damascus- He ital. . . conferred at length with foremost Three PTO-NEW” 0"lC9l'5 Wefti offigialstuf Syria. strongly allied killed. 10 wounded and I0 captured to HP. in the fighting l;etu;(een Jordanian 1. rtedblvl am ntsat ara. ge1i.i.eAl'lmTfdlynasi-iluvlihgm he liam.& rUn)i:ollflrmed l'EP0m slid 83' new chief of staff. other clash occurred between pro- other ministers in Nabulsi's Hussein and pro-Nnwar army ele cabinet also were detained. it is DAMASCUS. Syria (AP)-Kins Hussein of Jordan drove out pro- Egypilan elements in his INDY and government Sunday in a mil- itary coup d'etat. Maj.-Gen. All Abu Nawar. army FUNERAL! or SENATOR a tied to the waiting hearse by the pail bearers. Solemn Pontifical Requiem High Mass was celo brattcd by His Excellency Most clN'l'YRE Mourners are seen leaving St. Dunstan's Basilica Saturday mor- ning as the coffin of the late Sen- gtor James P. McIntyre is car- Rev. Malcolm A. MacEachern, Bishop of Charlottetown at the sen vices. Later services were con- ducted by the late Senator's pas- Pope Will Continue Fight To Outlaw Nuclear Arms VATICAN CITY (AP)-The Pope assured Japan's special I-I - bomb envoy Sunday that he intends to continue his efforts to have nu- clear weapons outlawed. After a virtually unprecedented lunday private audience. Dr. Mas- atoshi Mataushita told reporters he was "very much pleased" at the pontiff's attitude. "His Holiness already knew tor. Rev. George Mccormac. at St. Andrew's when the burial took place. House Resumes After Recess Premier A.W. Matheson and his two Ministers. Hon. Keir Clark. Minister of Education, and Hon. Eugene Cullen. Minister of Agri- culture. returned from Ottawa over the weekend where they held talks with Federal officials regard- ing tax-rental agreements. The Legislature will meet to- morrow at 3.00 p.In. after a ten- day adjournment to allow the Premier and his Ministers to make the Ottawa trip. Mr. Matheson will re rt to the House on the discus- si no at the Capital and immed- hls reception of the Japanese con- voy for 20 minutes on Palm Sun- day. He rarely grants audiences on any Sunday and Palm Sunday usually is a day to which he do- votes the greatest reverence. Dr. Matsushita. personal repro- sentatlve of Japan's prime min- ister. came here from Britain. where he appealed to British lend- ers to call off their coming H'- veloping " t lc fever . . . even assuming the form of something like hysteria." "The atomic fever is not a Euro- pean sickness." the broadcast said. "It has been brought to West- ern Europe from the other side of the ocean. It is hard to believe that the governments of the West- ern European countries, and espe- cially small countries. will unple- Crisis in Jordan Asking i F1 1 Ousts Pro-Egyptian Group : ern border. Xzmar was summoned to lIus- scins' place. which by then was si.rmunded by tanks under Hay- ari's orders. A royal dccrce was lsSliL'(l dismissing Niiwar and nam-' ing iiayari to replace him. ASYLUM IN SYRIA . iiawar was sent out of the coun- try with his wife, parents and chil- dren and reached Damascus Sun-- day night. . The Syrian government intends to give him and the followers of Naliulsi political asylum. T Syria's 3IIlb8SS3(.ius to Jordan Fouad Kadamani. arrived here from Amman with a message from Hussein to President Shukri Ku- watly. Its contents were not dis- closed. The reports from Jordan said wlld anti-Hussein demonstrations in three Jordanian cities, Jerusa- lem.Nablus and Ramallah. pre- ceded the king's moves against Na- war and Nabulsi. Some of the demonstrators shouted demands that Jordan be merged with Syria. At Ramal- lah. the crowd broke into the gov- ernment - controlled radio station and halted transmissions. Amman radio also went off the air. Previously. the Ramallah sta- tlon had reported an attempted army coup against Hussein. lately following this the nt' t for the coming year will be con- sidered. about my mission. He told me he had spoken several times against use of nuclear weapons and gave me a copy of his 1956 Christmas speech." In that address the Pope de- clared: ”only in the ambit of an institution like the United Nations can promises of nations to reduce armament, especiall to abandon production and use of certain arms be mutually exchanged under the strict obligation of inter-national law." I-Ie'endorsed aerial inspec- tion as a means of enforcing dis- . armament pledges. IIAIIE IIECEPTION In his 1965 Christians message the pontiff called for: "renuncia- tion of experimentation with atomic weapons. renunciation of the use of such. and general con- trol of armaments." bomb tests at Christmas Island. The appeals were rejected but Mat- sushlta said Saturday in Zurich he believes the British eventually would heed, "as a result of the moral pressure we are exerting." CONTINUING MISSION In The Hague. on his way here. he talked with ILS. Judge Green 1!. Hackworth. president of the In- ternational Court of Justice. about Ii-bomb blasts and he intends to fly to the United States to see Pro- sident Eisenhower. He said another Japanese mission is to go soon to Russia. which has been firing a series of H-tests this month. In London. where some opposi- tion Lnborites are trying to get Britain's first H-tests postponed. the government was confident of winning parliamentary approval for going ahead. Laborltes priv- ment on their own initiative such a mad policy and one so danger- ous for them all. It is clear to all what a tragic fate can feball these countries in the case of thermonu- clear war." ISSUE IN GERMANY In Germany. the verbal duel be- tween ugha eenllor Konrad Adel auer Gsrinslfs ing nuclear scientists over aim armament for the new German Bundeswebr continued unabated. opposition parties seemed determ- ined to make it a prime issue of their campaign for the September general election. Some 18 physicists have signed an appeal caulng on the Bonn gov- crnment to renounce possession of atomic weapons. The majority of West Germany's Use Live Cancer Cells In Tests CHICAGO (AP)-Human volun- teers injected with live caucu- cells show we have two kinds of d ' or immunity against can- cer, scientists reported Sunday. One defence is general. the other specific. The volunteers were 65 Ohio state penitentiary convicts who al- lowed cancers to be implanted Ill!- der their skin- So did 15 hospital patients who had cancers. Results of the human tests were Atomic Power Plant Delayed .et- . he'll?-3'-hii.t””' .....-. DI been lllpeltdod temporarlb to enable scientists to incorporate important new technological ad- vances in its design. Suspension of work on the u- Porimsiital station was announced Jointly Saturday by Atomic En- eru of Canada Ltd.. the Ontario Hydro-Electric Power Commission and Canadian General Electric, partners in the project. Officials here said the inclusion of major design changes will in- any direct evidence that proper- din causes destruction of the can- cers. but it's a possibility. The vigorous rejection of can- cer cells on the second injection showed the healthy volunteers had developed a specific immune mechanism. Blood samples still are being studied to see whether these men developed antibodies against cancer cells. Powerful anti - cancer effect of propggdin was shown in another independent newspapers backed . ed 5 M b D ch, M . . Vatican sources who confirmed ately admitted slim hope of farc- ti. 1 . - . cru” 9'” Plim" W" llll0VE 9110 "'"'”"”c "' ” "' ' report by Ml'I- Wlllllim T- Brid- Dr. Matsushitu's'version of the ing I postponement. though they lllel l;:rTiIl)tci:ta'llCA:defll;'ullr current emmne of ”4'500'0m' 5' somhlm Mk. ' Moo" "Id "" Dmald A' Curl” and C' C P. Rhonda of the Sloan-Ketter- ing Institute, New York, to the American Association for Cancer The completion target date will P"'”" ""'”"" Mm” "" "mm be delayed to mid-I960 from mid- mo. might refer to the subject again in his Easter next " S will insist on a showdown vote af- ter a two-day defence debate Tues- d.y mu .. . Chester Stock of Sloan-Kettering. Mice bearing transplanted can- concerned about the developments. The seriousness with which he On the lolvs of thc debate Mos- N.w MO or of The project is being built at Des Rgzgcgi the man," developed ;:?stwell'I'e0dglllc,le.n :;'nIrIilblsl(I1l(I).sesWl,1flcl.1 lsrds the matter was indicated by cow radio chided the West for de- Y fgihgflhegle-h1e40'tml:s ln0rtll- mm, The l;..p,,md um, boosts the amount or properdln in - ll 5 ex- ' the blood. Cancers disappeared in 67 per cent of mice treated this way. against six-per-cent in mice not given symossn. Zymosan does not affect cancer cells directly. but acts indirectly to stimulate an immune reaction. Dr. Bradner said. bio Trace Of Missing Tug HALIFAX (CF) - No trace ol the lI0-ton tug Glenfield. missing since Monday on a trip from Liverpool. N.S.. to Saint John. N.B.. was found by air and sea searchers during the weekend. Late Sunday. search and rescue headquarters here said two RCAF aircraft from Greenwood. N.S.. and Torbay, Nfid., had no luck in their hunt over the route the tug and her five-man crew would have taken. Poor weather stalled the aerial search Saturday but it resumed Sunday. cells soon were destroyed by the body's general defences. LACK MECHANISM When the same kind of cancer cells were injected a second time. they were destroyed even faster. A specific defence reaction came into play. When men were given a differ- ent type of cancer cell than was implanted the first time. these can- cers also disappeared more quickly than the first implants. By contrast. the implanted cau- cers grew in most of the cancer patients. until removed one to six weeks later. In four patients. the cancers recurred and grew until removed. Dr. Southam said the studies prove cancer patients lack defence 'i'neohanisina which healthy people ave. Blood studied showed the can- cer patients had less of an unusual protein in the load. properdln, whic is known to play a role in the y's defence hanism. The amounts of properdiii varied with ability to reject the can- cera- Dr. Iouthain said there's not yet Research Rocket Reaches pected to produce 20.000 kilowatts of electric power. GROUP STUDY The reactor's present design is based on. an outline specification established as the result of a fea- sibility study conducted by Atomic Energy of Canada. Ontario Hydro. Montreal Engineering Company Ltd.. Shawinigan Water and Power Company. Brasillan Traction. Light and Power Corn- paiiy Ltd. and B.C. Electric. The reactor will be the compon- t of the station which will gen- erate heat to produce steam. The steam will drive conventional tur- bines which. in turn. will drive electric generators. The announcement said lmpab taut technological advances have occurred dnce the detailed dssiga of the reactor was started. RUSSIAN NAVAL MOVES PIIEDERIKSHAVN. Denmark. (AP) - Russian warships have stasbd manoeuvres la the aarrow waters De Moncton Elected MONCTON (CP)-M. Balg was elected mayor of Moncton Satur- day. polllng 4.02! votes and do- featin Mayor Harris A. Joyce by I ma ty of 1.360. Miss H. Dell Mccauley. a re- tired t S . became the city's first woman alderman. She ed ward two voting with a record plurality of 1,200. other successful aldermanio candidates were J. Laurie Wil- liams. George H. Purdy. Vaughan E. Harvey. Bryan 6. Savage. Sherwood H. Rideout. George II. Lutcs and Leonard C. Jones. China Announces Huge Proiect On Yellow River is Launched HONG KONG (AP)-Communist China announced that construction started Sunday on a monumental project to harness the Yellow River. an ancient renegade whose raging floods have drowned untold millions. The roar of a dynamite blast signalled the start of work on the huge Sanmen gorge dam in cen- tral China - opening phase of a long - range plan to tame the ;iiou:it'iy river called "China's our Special broadcasts dramatlssd the ceremony at the craggy site where the Reds hope to raise a concrete dam with a reservoir big enough to halt the river's swift flow for four days. Russian blueprints envlaagb I series of 46 dams to wipe out the flood threat and also enable ship this to nsvigatti the full length Eden's Condition Satisfactory Following Operation Saturday h M of the river. They include power stations to generate almost six times the present output of all China and plans to irrigate seven times the farmland now under in- rlgatlon. The Yellow River has always been the unpredictable monster 41 China. It has reached its high banks more than too times and at least in times it has changed course without warning. Each breach and each sudden verrlng meant death or starvation to thousands. The multi-purpose Sanmen gorge dam In Hanan province. scheduled ls Charged With for completion in about five years. Murder lathekeyprolectofaainitial 15-year plan. It would halt flood- Lead waters baton they have I chance losweepdownontheheavilypop- ulated Iltrtti Chins plains which produce the bulk of the nation's foodstuffs. Thus cieks and biitcbcs closed Ndsn 0 ' sosroa (AP) -Sir Anthony wssaom . ohstrIc- 9' 1' d M ' ......, ,...,,,..,, .,.., . .. .... W. .3, . I u e ove I es bilnute liv . "" lg? . "nu s":.,”I-"'l,l,:mmo';: the livc. Ill causal 531-, n. '.. WALLOPS ISLAND. Va. MP) five times the speed of sound. monster." was to provide Informa- cwaun m” in " '3”; 3 - A bu two-beaded research Conditions were so good that it iiouon the heat which a space mis- . missile. get of its kind. was rose instead to ilo.lD tau and site woul encounter upon reQ gag fired here last wash to an altitude then disappeared off the radar teriiig in earth's atmosphere. gong gag Q. of more than in miles Its speed charting table which had ban ad- such ballistic missiles as the h- ggmag go; a. an "gig-. was almost 8.510 miles an hour. jolted for the anticipated I.Q- tercoullasatal Atlas and Tltaii. and who" 35, 3. pg. 3.lw-pound device. mots foot shot. the latei-mediate-range Thor and 11.. "pg gag gm gg than D feet long. 'I-eered off its "It was still going strong at 110,- Jupiter. would encounter this frie- sn. pg, laasabisg pod Vednsstlay with I am and hit at least truss toot. tioa when they began duct-ndlag mrth bur qgh m violence a great it literally shook alill travelling at twice the toward their assigned targets. . ug - 5. the . of sound," said Robert I.. Krl ger. In order to provide the deal engineer in charge of this pilot- lrss aircraft research station of the national advisory committee for aeronautics. "We'll have the exact altitude when we check our other lustro- lnformatlon the two heads of siuoo "monster" were instru- mented at 5! places on their sur- liiformalion the two heads of the saloon ”motlster" were instru- mented ai 51 places on their sur- 3"'"0ll0I in s bile he! ' ""981 fever attacks: Aa artificial bllery time In- tched in II! by Dr. Richard Cd tell of Leliey Clinic. who also per- '""'-il -run. Neirml ' r spa men watching mm bsltld atom Q yards away saw the device. its first stage a shhy silver and the rest a bright yellow tremble n takeoff. and upward trailing a fur- Formsr Medical Au'ii President Dies ' is .3-"mt": . til Ii. .-:5 ofwb . menu. f .K'eraldtlIiswasthe ' I K. E. iwl -4 O. was out of " s about I miles out. glztntrheiigmbei of measurements . t . ttwent andtariheriaaasvsrattempreooaasluisso wehad slssaad. search vebieleofthlsbpo. ItltatI' minitakaoltsspiaeb misadswaslhs to .nwuaMnu n:rdnml3 M osenissseasshsutaisuuaso iucllstatioasacanaasahisr. Iiniles eorthdlsj It r Newfoundland for safe on an ice pan. if the search was unsuccessful it would continue today. elist Francoise Sagan. gravely injured sunday when she! smashed up her British racing car SPEEI) I-1X(.'ESSIl'E Two Nflcl. Seal Hunters Missing ST. JOHN'S. Nfld. (CF) - An RCAF search and rescue lancas- ter and a USAF C-54 loft Torbay airport early Sunday to search the icefields off the west coast of two missing seal hunters. The search was con- centrated off the settlement of Bellburns. about I00 miles north of Corner Brook and 25 miles south of Port Saunders. The unidentified seal hunlers' boat was found empty Saturday. but it was hoped the men were RCAF said Speed Loving. Writer Gravely lniurecl In Rac PARIS (AP)-Spccd-loving nov- 2l. was an Aston-Martin. She sank into a tal. Doctors said she was suffering from severe shock. inlcrnal injur- ying and screaming-helpless to cs- T2 PAGES. 0WN. camps MONDAY. APRIL 15. 1957 PRICE 5. .. MANY CRIPPLED AND BEDRIDDEN If it 15 Persons Lose Lives In Fire In Home For The Aged Montreal Firemen See Toll Possibly Increasing To 16 Ii1UN'l'REAL (CPI-Fifteen per-t Montreal- Stills. many of them crippled and bctlridticn. died Saturday It broke out about 7 p.m The night residents had finished their eve- llllt'll fire swept through an east- ning meal and many were watch- ciui home for the aged. Firemen i ng television before retiring for lulu Suntluy said there was still the night. Several jJCl':Ulls. ilicu 3 bussiliility the toll might rise to perception dulled by age. hardly lti Tlit- I-i(lci'li' victims died moan- capc lllc flames that enveloped the iim-slot-cy building. Nine wo- men and six men died in the blaze but late Sunday most had been identified only by their last names. Only the heroic efforts of fire- men and a Roman Catholic brother prevented a much higher toil. Led by Brother Roch of the nearby Academic Roussin, firemen guided and carried several helpless old- slers to safety through dense smoke and flames out a back door of the building. ROOF COLLAPSES The gabled roof of the building. one of the oldest in the east-end suburb of Pointe - aux - Trembles. collapsed before firemen could complete their rescue operations. Luc Delormc. police and fire chief of the suburb. said the blaze apparently started somewhere in the building's wiring. Sparks were flying from glowing electrical wires leading from the home to a power pole 75 yards away when firemen arrived, chief Delorme said. The victims were cight women and six men. Late Sunday most of them had been identified only by their last names. Only the stone walls and part of the roof of the ancient build- ing-said by long-time residents of .the suburb to be as much as 200 years old - remained standing when the names were extin- guished after a three-hour battle. Most of the roof and the top floor toppled inward as the flames surged up from below. Mrs. Jean Henry, who managed the home. said 27 residents were inside when the blaze started. The 13 oldsters rescued were taken to another home for the aged oper- ated by Mrs. Henry. HARDLY NOTICED FIRE The fire was the worst in the province since 1951. when 35 per- sons died in a blaze at the Ste. Cunegonde home for the aged in ing Car Smash Paris indiistrialisinsagan is her pen name: her real name is Quot- rcz. knew abolll the bl8Zl' men broke in to rescue them Ulllll fire- ”I noticed that smo ke hat started seeping under the door.' said one oldsler who was WalL'll ing television with five other res idents. ”'l'licn the firemen ar rived and we were hustled out doors." Fire chief Delorme praised the work of Brother Roch. registrar and treasurer of the nearby boys' school. in helping to rescue the trapped residents. ”Flames were wrapping the house from all sides but Brother Roch and the first firemen to ur- rive broke down the rear door and rescued all the invalisd they found in the back room of the house," he said. Brother Roch. a member of thi Order of the Sacred Heart. learned of the fire through an alarm system recently installed in the college and connected with the Pointe-aux-Trembles fire de- partment. EVERYTHING ABLAZE ”I arrived just a few seconds ahead of the first fire truck." he said. "Everything seemed to be aflame. There was no way of tel- ling just where the fire had started." ”I went to the back of the house and I could hear moans and cry- ing from the people trapped in- side. We got in and we carried out as many as we could find." The flames and dense smqks prevented them from returning for the others. he said. J. H. Talbot, owner of a nearby restaurant. turned in the alarm af- ter noticing the glowing electrical wires leading from the house to I power pole. He then saw the house go up in flames. "It all seemed to go at once." he said. "The flames were leap- ing from the second-storey win- dows. The power line was ablau randueven the power pole caught lr('. Pointe - aux - Trembles firemen called for help from the Montreal East department after seeing how serious it was. They also were aided by local volunteers. Sees Trouble For Jordan's King MAYFIELD. England (AP) - Gcn. Sir John Bagot Glubb. ousted British 'ounder of Jordan's Arab Legion. said Sunday night King llussein would "have to tackle the crowds once he gets Many of the French rnnsldcr coma after being carried to a she represents modern voiith. She Hospi ,loves-and makes no secret of it. t-whisky. fast cars, American hoyi l friends, the English language. Am-t the army sorted out." Glubb was commenting on re- ports from the Middle East in- dicating that Jordanis king had moved against pro-Egyptian el- les. and trauma. She showed nolerican films, jazz and Amcricanlemellls and deP0fl9d M8l--Gell- signs of regaining consciousness. She was placed in an oxygen tent. Miss Sagan gained world-wide fame as author of Bonjour Tris- tesse and A Certain Smile. No other author has ever had such a tremendous success so young. The car somersaultcd on a clear road near Paris. bounced over a wire dtch aind landed upside down in a field. The Aston - Martin was one of four high-powered cars Miss Sa- T hereiwo men and a woman-worel country soft drinks. But her crowning passion is fast . cars. l Excessive speed doubtless con- tributed in Sunday's crash. police I said. 7 The young novelist has said: "I love in drive 125 miles an hour." 1 Last year Paris police gave her ya piihlic warning in slow down orl .lose her licence. y l Thruc passengers in lhc car with Ali Abou Nawar. army chief 11 staff. to Syria. Gluhb observed that he had lit- tle information on what was tak- ing place in Jordan. but added he felt King Hussein had "a long way to go" before gaining com- pl('l(' control. Gliihh observed that liiisseln'l financial situation would be pre- carious. with the recent end of the British-.lnrdan pact Ilusscin's was promised financial gen bought with royalties from her I injured only slightly. They had help from Saudi Arabia. Syria and books. The others were a German been staying at the country hnusel Egypt. Mercedes-Benz, a Buick and a Ford of fashion designer Crhslian Dtorl Thunderbird. Miss Sagan'ii father is a wealthy and gone out for a Sunday after- noon drive ncar Fontalnblcaa. Glubb said he believed King Husscin now would be anxious to get IJ.S. financial help. her visit in Charlotte- IOVI. rs. L. 3. Smart, National mdiIsl.0.D.I.IsII l.O.D.E. Piirsiosiir calls on aaulssyeall laysrllsw sown-uia"ris,i's'.. on Ills City ..'El'.-:-:' 45””: i A . : -7 el .... .....::.:;o.m-...... ...- ...........- ......--t. - -...-.......... .