TELEPHONE 8506 Iuyar Insets seller with Guardian WanfA-is. oialssos aeltforelassai- fiedadtakenfarquiekresulie. 12 PAGES Signals Regiment Leaves For Camp At Gssgetown, N. B. some of the more than one hun- dred personnel of the I Signals Regiment (Royal Candian signals) are shown leaving Brighton Com- pound early yesterday morning for ramp Gagetown. N.B.. where they will spend the next two weeks In camp. During this. their first year. at the New Brunswick Camp. the 7' ” t will be 1 along with No. 1 Airborne Signal Squad- rnn (R.F.). in providing Commun- ications for the umpires during Ea- erciae Eastern Star. Since J y. the Regiment has been carrying out an intensive training program in preparation for the . sponslbla pbsltlon it will occupy during the Exercise. Dur- ing May and June. wireless. line. and driver training exercises were ” t T every Saturday and Sunday. in addition to training on Monday and Friday evenings. The culmination of training was a two- week Command School, completed one week ago, in which 00 N.C.O.'s and men were involved. Following are the senior N.C.O.'s and officers who will attend the Exercise: Lt.-Col. K.M. Johnston. E.D.. Commanding Officer: Major F.8. Jenkins, E.D.. second in command; Major R G. Dumont Squadron Commander: Captain L.W. Ram- say. Q.M.; Captain W.L. MacKin- non, Wireless Officer; Captain II. W.S. Hughes. Tranmort Officer; Lt. M.L. McAleer. Paymaster; Lt. M.L. Breedon, Wireless Officer; Lt R.L. Boswell. Lines Officer Lt.-Col F..I. Storey. ED., formerl "Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew" WN C.0. of the Beginient. is also proceeding to camp During its second week. he will be assisting the Command Signal Officer. R.S.M. J.F. Smith. C.D.; R.Q.M. S. A.E. Richard; S.S.M. A.E. Stan- ley, M.M; S-Sgt LII McAulay, C.Q.M.S.: S-Sgt. P.J.A. MacDonald C.D.; S-Sgt. G.W. Schleyer: S-Sgt. R..I King: and Sergeants: J E. Howatt; P.V. illaclntyre; B. I. Mathcson; L.A. Montigny: P. J. Smith; C.M. Storey. F.A. Walsh; A. Wooldridge; A.l. Younkcr; J.R. Arsenault; E.C.F. McCabe; K.P. Wigmore; M.B. Doucette; 15 cnrporals and 65 signalmsn will also attend Bomb Scare Turns Plane Back To Sydney Airport SYDNEY (CF)-An Air France airliner with 53 passengers bound for Paris turned back Friday night to Sydney Airport. where firemen and airline officials searched the plane for a possible bomb. The aircraft was cleared for takeoff again after about two hours. Besides the passengers it car- ried a crew of seven. It was the second Air France plane to be searched here within 20 hours. Another Paris-bound alr- lincr carrying 28 passengers re turned here early Friday mon- In':. A scach of the plane turned up nothing. Two other Air France planes Il'"l'E' searched for bombs at 300- tun and Montgomery. AlI.. Thun- day night. The Friday night plane out of New York left here at 0:30 p.m. ADT after a normal fueling stop. It returned to the airport an hot: later. Elizabeth Prince of Charlotte. N.C.. a passenger. said the air- liner was just beyond sight of Nova Scotia when it turned back. "A steward came down and told each passenger we were going back." she said. "We didn't know what was going on but we began to wonder. We knew what had happened to the other planes. ALMOST SILENT "The word soon got around that it might be a bomb and there wasn't much talkhg. "The air was tense and you could hear every a lot of thinklng.' Passengers included five infants. Those aboard were asked to keep their seats for several minutes af- ther the plane landed. The Super Constellation taxlcd to a remote section of the airport before the search started. Even seats were taken apart during the hunt. The plane's crew jutesoned I. 500 gallons of asollne on the re- turn to Sydney. Ambulances, doctors. and air- port crash trucks met it on ar- rival. Aboug 1.00) pounds of freight that had not been searched was left behind at the airport when the plane resumed its flight. 'whispcr. We did Discontinuing Sunday Edition TORONTO fCP)-The Telegram announced Friday it is discontin- uing its Sunday edition July 13. ending a 20-week run as Canada's only English-language paper pub- lished seven days a weal; The first team was published last March 11. Publisher John hassett, Jr.. h an explanatory atatcmeng on Page I of Friday's Telegram. said the decision resulted from high pub- lishing coats ooioled with a dis- appointing circulation and adver- tising response. There was no immediate indica- tin! of the lrmact on keen weal- ond , uuou Toronto's three daily newqsapers and on a under eollact news on Sundays. Mr. Basset: said The Telegram lsshiftingsomeof its Sunday aa- fures-Weebnd Magazine. a eel- nred semis section and a TV see- tion-to its Saturday edition which will sell for to cents. This is roughly the same pattern the pa- per followed before launching the Sunday edition which sold for I! cents axrlwnnn aomon The Star. an evening paper like the The Telegram, has been issu- miz an expanded edition on Satur days selling for five cents. the name price as on other days in the neck. The morning Globe and Mail launched II expanded PIP" W snturdayi. selling at is cents a copy compared with the normal Chimp Cause Of Roaring Battle TORONTO ICPL-A male chim- 'orr employees cornered it in a ouiiding on the no grounds. Attendants fhalty returned it h 'he cage after a roaring battle. It In loose for four hours. Guard said. "This could have tum: might dsaaerons. elprflllls if he had,goy at any children. This chimp has the strength d three ".93." -. The fagitive. smaller than a If ins It for feet tail. is cause datermhingwhetberiIseatofthsprovincialattorney- isla-wfultopublislnhroadcastorseneral price of five cents. Harry Kim- ber. Globe and Mail president. said Friday his paper is "encoun- tering prblema" with its Saturday edition but "no changes are con- templated at present." The first edition of the Sunday Telegram ran of full-size newspa- per pages. in addition to Week- end. comics. full-length novel and thsTVsaction.Last" ” yitwas 40 pas-. . Attorney-General Roberts of On- tario declined comment on poa- slble effect of The Telegram de- cision on the court, cases. The Lord's Day Act forbids carrying on business on Sunday. axceptforworksofmercyorno oeaafty. Prosecutions under the act may be launched only with con- Throe days after the Sunday Telegram appeared. Mr. Roberts announced the paper was being charged under the act. simultan- eoualy he consented to prosecu- tions against the Globe and Mail. The Star. radio station CKEY and the CBC which operates radio sta- tions CBL and CJBC in Toronto. 'lhe Star gathers, but does not ptblish. news on Sunday. The Globe and Mali issues its first Monday edition Sunday nullit- CKEY. owned by Jack Kent Cooke who also owns Toronto Maple Leafs of the lntematlonal Baseball League. broadcasts news hourly. The CDC stations have regular Sunday newscasts. All the charges stand adjourned in magistrate's court pendins die position by the supreme Court of Calnda of an appeal by the CBC which contends It is not subject to the Lord's Day Act. Chief Jus- tice Mckuer of the Ontario So- preme Court ruled that it is and the qac carried the -we-I to I-0 higher tribunal. No Election For Several Years Want To Save Stuffed Snakes COIIONTO tCPl-The Iloyal On- tario Museum has wired Transport Minister I-lees asking him to in- tervene in a Montreal long- shoremen's strike in an attempt to save 810.000 worth of stuffed snakes. 4 The museum officials fear that mould or fungi will ruin the snake specimens if they are Ian on lion. in. reassess. Minister Back In His Office The many friends of Hon. For- rest W. Phillips. Minister of Wei- fare and Labour are pleased to learn that his health has improved greatly and that he is now able to resume his duties in his office. Mr. CANADA. SATURDAY. JULY 20, 1957 its common plant at Prince Edward Island Frosted Foods Ltd, will be ready for oper- ation by next May. according to an announcement made yesterday by Mr. George Wright who is re- presenting the company's inter- ests in Charlottetown. The first crop to be handled next year will be the strawberries of which the company will require about 100 acres. Following the strawberry crop the plant will swing into operation in processing peas. green and waxed beans, blueberries. broccoli. b r u s s - el sprouts. cauliflower, spinach, several acres of squash and un- known quantities of other veget- ables which may be available de- pending upon the availabi" y of markets for the finished produce. LABOR FORCE During the processing season. a large number of employees will be required to operate the plant. Of the total number. half will be women. Most of the frozen foods produc- ed in this new plant will be mar- keted and distributed by Iiccney Frosted Foods Limited of LaPrair- le. Quebec. throughout Eastern Canada. under the Zer-O-Pak lab- el. It is expected that the Sher- wood plant will supply the Com- pany's requirements in the Mari- timea and the Province of Ontario. Il,000.000 A YEAR When full operations are under way. it is forecast that close to one million dollars will be spent annually by the Prince Edward island Frosted Foods Ltd. in this province. This figure would in- snd the various services required. Mr. Wright stated that the con- struction program for new proces- sing facilities at Sherwood is now well under way. The General Contract has been awarded to M.F. Schurman and Co. Ltd., and the subcontract for plumbing and heating has been awarded to Douglas Bros. and Jones Ltd. Both firms have al- ready commenced work on this project. The architect is Arthur Heeney. .lr.. M.R.A.I.C.. of Toron- Phillips hll been cunv ' ' It the borne of his daughter in Knuts- board ship too long. ford following an illness with which . he was seized last April GoVtUp Conhden By HAROLD KING PARIS (Reuters) - The five- week-old government of Premier Maurice Bourgea-Maunoury won a vote of confidence Friday on a demand for increased police pow- ers to deal with Algerian terror- ists within France. The soot.-use vote for the 43- yearold premier lifted him over his last hurdle before the national assembly begins its two-month summe recess late next week. This will assure France of a gov- ernment through the height of the tourist season. But most observ- ers predict the fall of Bourgeo- Mauooury's regime sometime in October. In effect. whole policy in dealing with the Jl-month-old ationalist rebellion in Algeria was on trial. The spa- clflc vote. however. was on a bill giving police special powers to agents against the sso.ooo Alger- iana living in France. In the first six months this year, 78 Algerian: were killed and II wounded in the Paris region alone. EDIONTON (CPI - Idea I. credit I h e government's held in ce Vote republicans and the majority of Bourges-M ,'s aIdlCll3, ral- lied behind the premier. The government's majority of 97was not consli ed as i ,res- slve as it looks. Twenty-nine dep- utles officially abstained but more than 100 others-many of them foes of the government's Algeria policy-did not" vote. The special police powers ap- proved today are valid only during the lifetime of the present govern- ment. Its successor will have to seek their renewal if the powers are still needed. Married Beauty Gives Up Title LONG BEACH, Calif. (AP).-The United Statcs missed out on the Miss Universe contest because its ideal miss was a missus. Leona Gage. 21. elected Miss USA. W1izday night. surrelr dered her- to runner-up Miss Utah after contest organizers dis- covered she is the wife of an air- man and mother of two children. However. Charlotte Sheffield. N. of Salt Lake City, Utah. could not be among the 15 finalists in the Miss Universe contest Friday night because she dldnil compete against 32 international beauties in the semi-finals Thursday night. Miss Argentina. Monica Lama of Buenos Aircs. Hills in the semi- finals, will become the lsfh final- lst. Gloria Noakes. I9. of Toronto is one of the finalists. These were to be reduced to five Friday night be- fore the final choosing of Miss Unl- VCTSC. tludet-tecostofI1loducOilahor renovation of and additions to the property formerly owned by island Farms Services Ltd, who had commenced construction of a processing plant in 1955. Since that time. the property has been owned by the Prince Edward Is- land Government. FORMER STRUCTURE An existing building with floor space which had been moved onto the property from the Char- lottetown airport In I955 by Island Farm Services Ltd. is being alter- ed. This building when remodelled will house the actual processing operation planned by Prince Ed- ward island Frosted Foods. In addition to this space a new addition on one end of this build- ing will house a modern cold storage and provide storage for a large volume of frozen Island pro- duce. This area will also provide space for receiving the raw products from the farmers and will contain a cool room for lowering the temp- trature of the fresh product prior to processing. By so doing. the approximately H.000 sq. feet of. produce will be kept in excellent condition, preparatory to the freezing process. At the opposite end of the build- ing, a two story addition approxi- mately 80' x 40' will provide office space, boiler room and workshop, laboratory, lunch rooms and the latest in employee conveniences. SHIPPING SPACE Another addition will provide shipping space and dry storage for cartons and nihcr supplies. The project is under the supervision of Mr. Norman MacLeod of Schur- man's Engineering Staff. illr. Charles Boisner, also of St-hur- mans is the sucrvisor on the job. It is expected that the major portion of this contract will be completed by the end of the year. jTll9 winter montlis will be spent installing the specialized machin- cry necessary for an operation of this kind. Most of the processing equipment will be installed by Company personnel. With the completion of the plant more significance will be given to Canada's Garden Province, as a wider variety of its products will appear in most of Canda's retail food markets. WEATHER Variable eloudinaqdleiwersbaglnnlng in afternoon; very warm, wast winds 20. Low-high at Clftowli I5 Ind I5. Soy; East And Apart To Acce 1 LONDON fAPl -- Russia threw cold water Friday on a British proposal to set up study groups immediately to plan details of a partial disarmament treaty. i without giving a flat "yes" or 3”no" to the British proposal. Sov- wiet delegate Valerian Zorin indi- icated that East and West are still too far apart for working commit- tees to be of value. Zorin told the United Nations ,disarmament subcommittee if fthere was agreement on how long lhydrogen-bomb tests could be sus- pended there would be ”a good case” for setting up a committee to draw up details. So far there is no such agreement. He also declared if there was rlcs" agreement on how military manpower could be cut back to agreed levels Russia could "view with favor" the creation of a study group in this field. But be indicated fundamental differences still exist on how this step should be taken. Zorin did not even mention three other working committees which Britain proposed Wednesday in what Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd described as an attempt to speed up the four-month-old dis- armament negotiations. British and American disarma- ment offlcials differed in their as- sessment of Zorin's speech. British representative Alan Noble termed it "a negative reac- PRICE 5c Russia Does Not Endorse Partial Disarmament Plan Frozen Food Plant Will Be! Ready To Operate In May It is expected the frozen food to. Sherwood owned by Schurman.s' contract includes the West Too Far pt British Plan ltion to an eminently practical aug- l gestion." l U.S. delegation leader Harold E. Stasscn said he welcomed the fact lthat Zorin accepted the principle -that working committees would be needed. American observers also noted that Zorln for the first time ac- cepted a U.S. proposal to eventu- ally reduce military manpower might to 1,700,000 each for the Sov- leg Union and the United State: and 650,000 for Britain and France Zorin made it clear. however. lthat although he accepted these llevels as a final goal for a dis- garmament treaty he still disagrees uvith Western views on how they should be reached. All five powers on the subcom- mittee. including Canada and France, have agreed that in the first stage of disarmament Rue sin and the U.S. should reduce their forces in 2.500.000 each. and Britain and Fran e to 750,000. This step xsoul be carried out in the first year after any treaty is signed. The West proposes if there is sufficient: progress during the first stage toward settling political problems such as the reunification of Gennany, manpower can be re- duced in two further stages: to 2,- 100,000 for Russia and the United States, 700,000 for Britain and France. and then to respective lev- els of 1.700.000 and 650,000. Thirteen Boy Scouts and three Scout lcadcrs from this province landed at London Airport ycstcr- day on their way to join some 1500 other Canadian Scouts at the World St-nul Jubilee Jnmbnrcc at Sutton Coldliclrl In Warwlckshire August 1-12. The Island scouts are t . NEAR NORMAI ern aadwestern and a strip embracing parts of . Alberta l&atchewn ml may WASHINGTON.-Cast weather is United States wenher bureau have near-normal iompm-alum-s. in the Pacific ltday outlook. A section of am-S Elsewhere the outlook is for above 'msnd. in um... nlsting the crewsl manoeuvre could be nsedruccesr an atomic rocket blast of normal lof the three planes in the launch-lfally under combat Nmditions The'woald have on civilian in: formation, called the atomic plane was a mile distant when the we rocket exploded. l normal or much-above .hu lscouis from 80 countries at the? Lean: Colin (CP Wlrephde) l rocket shown as they boarded a Maritime Ccmml Airways mm, ,. Cm,,.,ll-irank Ellis, Slcmnn Park; I.lnyd' loltctovin enroulc to lloncion uhcrr tbcy were joined by mor-c than fifty fcllnvr Scouts from the other Atlanlic provinces. In all there will be some .'i3.000 Jamboree, Following the iamborec the Is- land scouts and the other Fanati- lans will four the Hnelish z'uuntv'v- side. The island scouts will arrive back home during the taller part of August Members of the PEI Contin- grnt are Waller Br-llvol. Slemnn ATOMIC TEST SITE. Nev. MP) The Air Defence Command blasted Friday plefe success TIIF nir-ttwair rocket burst in the Nevada desert at 7 am It was launched from a Vorlhrop F - A9 of more than l5.fIll feet Following the firing. the llr (le- auccessful. including effects experiments." The target was a predesigneted point in space Lt -Gen mandcr of the lir Dctcncc Com- accuracy and "the best weapoa l.aaunGcl'iE'lhe First Atomic Rocket From An Airplane J the sky with its new atomic mclzei pink and white smoke ring risingl and declared the first gently to a height of 30.010 feet. launching from an airplane a corrrswhere it quickly dissipated into a 1 ll? Atkinson. rom- ISLAND SCOUTS ARRIVE IN LONDON Park. Ross Davlson. Kcnslnzton: llaflhcws, 0'l.1-ary: Roscoe Pend- lcion, Kt-nsinglon: .lnl1n Roy. Sle- mnn Park. and tho rnllouinr from Charlottetown Derck Buntain: l Frank Cnslcllir Rngcr Craig; iwilliam flambly: Raymond Mac-p Vlrhflllan: lhlanninzz Scott Rngrra: lingers and l).1vid Scllcr. . IZMERGENCY DIET i Young "skunk cabbage." a wild grccn plant. may he catcn nftcr hollng in sex-cral changes of un- fer. Tcrry Davitl ' have " Explosion of the rocket sent i filmy cloud. The pilot of the launching plane. clear blue sky over the southern Capt Erie Ilutchimn. said he and even rock them but one of them rapt Alfred-commented that the heat "vcry little physical "felt like when you open a fur- Scorpion jet fighter at an altitude effect from the shock of the rocky pace door for A moment ” ;hi.- radar observer. Barbee. fclt let"! detonation." He said although the plane was fence mmmand said it was "fnllyi banking to the left in a swift es- didn't have a thousand people out Negroes' Voting Rights At Stoke By GEORGE KITCHEN Canadian Prels Staff Writer WASHINGTON (CF)-The veh- ing rights of more than 17.ooo,ooo persons are at stake in the cur- rent struggle over civil rights leg- t ithe”Unltad States lea- ate. They are United States citizens. guaranteed the right to vote under a constitution the Americans like to describe as the most dem- ocratic in the world. They work. pay taxes and are subject to draft and other laws like any other American. Yet, they suffer one disability. They happen to have been born with dark skins and that is enough to disqualify them in the minds of the bulk of white citizens living in the II states south of the Mason- Dlxon line. The voting rights of those 17.- 000.000 or more southern Negroel legiulatlon. although that objective is the real crux of the civil rights has become somewhat blurred in the vigorous filibustcrlng attack launched on the bill by muthem congressmen. They talk instead of federal troops being sent into the south by the north to enforce school desegregation laws. Ago Kl1an"s-Grave ls Carpet Lined ASWAN. Egypt flieufersl-The Aga Khan was buried Friday near 'the bank of the Nile River in a l grave lined with rich oriental car- jwts. The 79-year-old spiriual hcad of 20000.000 Nlnslcm lsmnilis was hnnorcd by 500 lcacicrs from Asia land Africa V The white marble tombstone. carrying the simple Arabic in- scription "here lies Prince Aga Khan." was lowered into its temp- nrary rcsting place while the new sci-t lcaricr. I9-ycar-old Prince ix.-mm and his father, Aly Khan. l lonkcvl nn.. Laicr the coffin will be moved in a mausoleum hcinlz built on a nrarhy hill rhnscn by the Arm llihan himself. Five men- embers of the Air Defence Com a d -ere directly under the rocket when it exploded. They came out of the NHSI area without even dust on their uni- forms. 1 Thcy said the explosion didn't vi ave Maj. Sydney Bruce saiflt "My nnly regret is that we icape manoeuvre. the flash waepthere to see Just what the effect 1 "quite noticeable." He plane encountered than normal shock wave hit it said the "little more " as the was. It's one of the best places to observe such an ' ' e that I can think of " f The officer: nderwem the G llc said he thinks the c-scape pericnce to illustrate what CKQ ”1'.:.'l'.' flows which might be heecul I daring l8. s" r1?;v- - 2....u3.V A1. -tV - -