TELEPHONE 8506 luv-r meats eeler wih Gutsrdias WoMAda.Diss Ilsuedferclsseb noses:-ia.to-....uuma.. one mumsidlimt "Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew" WEATHER Cloudy with showers Iered thunderiorms; and wldeiyesoh worm; south winds 15. Low-high of Ch'town S7, 75 '74 races B. C. M. P. ADMINIS Coniraciors Turn R.C.M.P. .. tan wt. '1 silillihh-T . TRATION BUILDING Building Over To P.W. Dept. Mr. P.S. Hunter, District Archi- mt of the Department of Public Works of Canada yesterday of- ficially accepted the Royal Can- adian Mounted Police Adminida raiiva Building and garage from hi.F. Shurmnn Company Ltd, Mr. Hunter-in tu.rn handed the custody of the building over to inspector E. . Martin. Officer Commandiing "L" Division of the R.C.M.P. Chari- lottetown. Royal Camdtan Mounted Police Board will official- ly accept the building within two weeks on behalf of the Force. Mr. Hunter in company with As- t ” t, R F sfstant District its own emergency power plant. The water supply comes ffrom a domestic well system with a field disposal sewage system. RIFLE RANGE The police garage will have ac- c t ion for 13 cars and a large paved area will provide park- ing space for several more. Under the garage is a regulation R.C.M. P. rifle and pistol range. An air conditioning system will insure a continuous supply of clean air dur- ing firing pratice. , MI. Sch Company start- ed the construction of the building in May 1956. The superintendent on the Job was Mr. Charles Boise- sr who in turn worked under the general superintendent for SCIIIIF mans. Mr. Norman MacLeod. The electrical work was done by Burke Electric: the plumbing, heating and mechanical installat- ions by Nelson Good the paint- ing by Eastern Painters and A1; pllcators. Moncton: and the roof by Northern Roofers. Ltd." Inspector Martin expects that will occupy the new building with- in a month. West made a careful lnspscti the building noting some minor de- ficiencies as he went. He said h e was well pleased with the building stating. made a real good Job." LOCAL SUPERVISION During the construction of the building, Mr. J.R. Macklnnon. re- presentative of the Department of Public Works of Canada looked aft- er ths inspection work. The two story brick and re-in- forced concr-ete'sltuated about a mile from the City limits on th e Mslpeque Road. it has been built to specifications of the R.C.M.P. Boardandissaidiobeoneoftisa most modern of its kind. The main floor will contain all the offices while the has provision for alesplngand re creation quarters for in men. in an emergency 24 men could be hous- ed .,g in the basement are the quarter ater stores. the identification n. the exhibit room, radio wor ps. The building is heated by tw goal buring stokers and has ' of "The contractors have UWIIQ ' Will Discuss Mayor J.D. Stewart and the Metropolitan Committee will meet with the Premier and the Execut- ive Council in an effort to ascer- tain what revenue may be avail- able from the Provincial Govern- ment in the event that the pro- posed amalgamation of the City of Charlottetown and Parkdala and Spring Park is agreed to. This was the decision reached at that" i don as to what the Provincial Government may do In the matter Councillor PR Mccormao added that in the event of the amalgam- ation taking place the Province would be relieved of certain fin- ancial responsibilities and the qu- estion is what oompensaung rev- Bylzeleciion in A Lahark Sept. 9 OTTAW (CP)-Prime Minister John Di baker announced Mon- day a silent hyelection will be held &pt 0 in Ontario's Lanark ridhi. where he lost a prospect- ive cabinet minister through death last month The byeisction will fill the Com- mons seat held since 1945 by Dr William Blair of Perth. Ont, the Progressive Conservatives' major spokesman on health for years and regarded as a certainty for the health minister's portfolio until hb sudden death Dr Blair. 67. died June 16. six days after retaining his House seat in the general election His death left Prime Minister Dlefenbaker at a loss for acandi- ministers named by the govern- ment hesd. but is being held down temporarily pp Veterans Minister A J Brooke at New Brunswick'a Royal coasituency Meanwhile. it has been reported that the office may go to Dr Percy Vivian. head of one of the medical faculties at Montreal's McGill University, who took On- tario's Durham riding from the Liberals Dr Vivian is a former Ontario health minister ONI OF TWO The Lanark election is one of two constituency contests due fol- lowing the general electoin of June 1o in If Mr Diefenhek- ar's party ssau-gbd with the larg- est number of Commons seats but without an over-all majority The other byelectlon will be held July is in Ontario's Wellington south where the Liberal candidate -died a few days before the elec tlon ' Khrushchev, IBul'ganin Leave- - Qn Visit To Czechoslovakia Proposed Amalgamation With Gov"r enue will it be willing in make available to the city. SERVICE COSTS The Metropolitan Committee in its own report had suggested that in the event of the amalgam- ation the Province should pay to the City certain moneys which would cover costs-in some cues partial ones-of a wide variety of services that are now provided by the province but would be the responsibility of due no if the areas were amalgamated These included highways, side walks. police ye tion. f ' health and sanitation Until the attitude of the Prov- ince la known on these matters it would be useless for the council to discuss the proposed amalgam- ation, it was agreed The Metropolitan Committee in- cluded Deputy Mayor A. Walt- hen Gaudet and Councillor Edwin C. Johnstons. representing the city Council: Chief Commissioner Ian Webster and Commissioner Percy Mac Donald. representing Park- dele. Chief Commissioner J Ed- mund Arsenault and Commissioner Howard Douglas representing sp- ring Park; Lt. Col. Ll. Storey and Benjamin E Rogers representing the Charlottetown Board of Trade and Provincial Director Claude smith of the Division of Town Salvage Crew Foils I-n Effort To Free Baffin HALIFAX (CPL-An all-out at- tempt by an expert salvage crew to haul the 34.000.000 ocean re- search vessel Baffin from a bar- nacied rock off Nova Scotin'a south coast failed Monday night The attempt was made at high tide The Baffin has been firmly lodged since last Thursday on Black Rock. a treacherous. mostly-submerged rock shelf off LaHave. about 70 miles southeast of here Foundation Maritime Limited officials. supervising the salvage operation, said powerful ground. tackles extending from the Baffin to the rocky shore at the mouth of the Lei-lave River. couldn't free the ship The Baffin. using her own winches on the lines. was in effect. attempting to free herself Another major bid will be made at high tide about 8 am today Since Sunday. a 15-min salvage crew has been pumping water from her cracked holds at the rate of 20 tons an hour while other workmen temporarily patch shattered sections of her hull Weekend Toll Reaches 66 By THE CANADIAN PRESS Ageidanu took 06 lives in Can- ada during the weekend only two provinces escaped contributing to the grim total No deaths were reported in Prince Edward Island or New- foundland. a Canadian Press sur- vey- indicated Traffic mishaps and drownings accounted for most of the deaths ' The worst single accident was near Huntsville, Ont, where a grandmother and three children were drowned when a boat huriled over a 19-foot high dam on the Muskoka River after its motor failed Ontario reported the highest toll. 3) deaths Sixteen were from traffic accidents while 10 persons were drowned and four died of miscellaneous causes Quebec reported 14 violent deaths. seven in traffic, six by drowning and one miscellaneous New Brunswick reported three deaths Two persons died in one The parking problem on Rich- mond Street between Queen -and Pownal Streets was one which -drew some sharp comment. Coun- cillor G.R. Foster said the widen- ing of the street had not given the travelling public any benefit at all. All that it did was to provide park- ing space for those working in the (Continued on Page 1. Col. 3) Recall St. John's Fire In 1892 sr JOHN'S. Nfld (CP)-Hero's haw Johnny Burkenpoet and chronicler of evordsy events de- scribed the start of a fire 65 years era that destroyed two-thirds el this city: it was on the but day of July l"Ihen the wind was-running igh And the sun sent down he golden rays 1 was sitting I my tea out a cit - "ma Cloonap. Th 0'Brien'e barn is all atlas" Planning A K M l Al'"" H traffic ” gllilhla b':f:er:mt.he council at is at mm. Dmnhm t and a third in an- '” for three of the five deaths in Nova Scotia BOLSHOI 10 LONDON LONDON (Reuters) - Russia's Bolshoi Ballet Company will prob- ably make e return visit to Lon- don in the near future, it was an- nounced here Seturday. No dates have yet been fixed. CHARIIJTTETOWN CANADA. TUESDAY. JULY 9, 1957 Russia Cool To U.S. Plan To.Suspend Bomb Testing WASHINGTON (CP) - United States officials reacted cautiously Monday to the charge by Prime Minister Diefcnbaker that US policies on wheat surplus disposal violate the 35 - country General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade. Washington spokesman, always chary about commenting on the 'actions of neighboring friendly governments, indicated they would prefer to see the text of the prime ministers remarks. made in an Ottawa press conference. before expressing an official viewpoint However the unofficial reaction was that the Dieienbnker com- ment wns not unexperied since Canada. even under the Liberal administration of former prime prlnfe minister St Laurent. ire Irish Gov'i Gets Tough i DUBLIN cm-uiem - The Irish government assumed emergency powers of internment Monday af- ter a weekend of arrests of per- sons involved in extreme republi- can activities A proclamation in the official gazette said the powers of intern- ment "are necessary to secure the preservation of public peace and order" The official announcement came after a day in which all signs pointed to a new tough drive by the government against extremist republican organizations. including the outlawed lrish Republican Army which seeks to unite ire land and the six northern states in the United Kingdom by force . Army engineers Monday put up barricades and barbed-wire at the Curragh military barracks near Dublin Reports said an internment camp is being prepared there to house a large influx of prisoners quently expressed dismay over the way the US disposed of its food surpluses on world markets "it may be that we have vio- lated the spirit of the general agreement but not the letter," one officials suggested. SPIRIT OF HOPE Interest also was aroused by Mr Diefenbaker's statement that the Canadian government would like to see about 15 per cent of its imports diverted from the United States to the United King- dom H o w e v e r. government sources suggested Diefenbaker ap- peared to be speaking ”more in a spirit of hopefulness than of tak- ing some concrete action" international trade channels are established by certain economic forces." one official said. "snd you have to do something very drastic to make any change in them" He questioned whether Canada is prepared to take such action Meantime, the Washington Post and Times Herald sided editorially with Canada and suggested Wash- ington owes Ottawa s "prompt ac- counting" on the wheat disposal problem as well as a "fresh look" at towering deficit in her trade with the United States "Unless the United States is pre- pared. as we think it ought to be. to reduce its tariffs against Cann- dinn imports." the newspaper says "there is no alternative for Can ads but to go elswhere. for some of its needs" Mr Diefenbakersl charge obvi- ously was aimed at the US gov- ernmeni practice of accepting lo- cal currencies in its effort to dis- pose of large surpluses of wheat and other foods accumulated un- der its long -standing domestic price support programs Canada has complained that this under- mines lier traditional markets TERMS DIFFER .. The terms of each such local Officials In U.S. React Cauiiously To Criticism cases the United States has re- qulred the purchasing country to commit ltseltto buy substantial quantities of American grain for serves to tie up that market for American grain interests in other instances. the local currency ac- cepted for US wheat promptly is loaned bak to the purchasing country on a long-term basis Congress recently voted to raise by 31.000.000.000 its appropriation to the government to purchase sur- plus agricultural products for the disposal program The appropria- tion now totals S4.000.000,000 a year Cruise Ship With 500 Passengers Grounds On Reef HAMILTON, Bermuda (AP)- carrying, 500 passengers. ran aground Monday on a coral reef off Bermuda Rain squalls and high seas impeded rciief opera- tions The 17.872-ton ship, owned by Pacific Steam Navigation Com- pany of Liverpool, England, ran aground three miles north of Span- ish Point en route from Bermuda to Liverpool The keel slid on the reef and the bow was raised when the tide ebbed - The possibility of transferring the psssenge n. if necessary. be came increasingly difficult as rain storms blew in from the south- , . The ship any immediate danger. although No one was reported injured Squsils reduced visibility and built current sale differ but, in some up high waves dollars at a' future date Thisl The cruise ship Reina del Paclfico. 1 west Two tugs stood by for an at- tempt to pull the Reina del Pa- clflco free at high tide But they she listed I degrees to the right Apparent Sii LONDON (AP) - Russia threw, cold water on United States prov posnls for a 10-month suspension. of hydrogen bomb tests Mondoyu it was seen by some observers as. an apparent stiffening of the Sov- iet attitude on disarmament. Soviet delegate Valerian Zorin. told the five-power United Nations. disarmament subcommittee in a 90-minute speech that a 10-month suspension would be too shot to: be of significant value. He re- -newed Soviet demands that the tests be suspends” immediately for two or three years. He insisted that East and Westl get together to work out some formula by which the use of nuc- iear weapons could be renounced. W e s t e r n delegates appeared shaken by the speech. They asked that no session be held today while the statement is carefully exam- ined. British Foreign Minister Selwyn Lloyd, who presided over Mon- day's subcommittee meeting, termed the speech ”disappolnt- Moch said it, ' u d propagand- FOLLOWED DECLARATION The statement. followed a dec- laration by Moscow radio that anyone who expected "conces- sions" as a result of last week's Kremlin shakeup would be "dis- appointed." One U.S. official commented that the speech would disappoint anyone who had looked for con- cessions but maintained at the same time that Zorin took no backward step. "Anyone who had expected them to step backward would have been ing." French representatives Jules- PRICE 5: ffening In Red Altitude On Disarmament encouraged." the US. informant: sa . Mixed with Zorin's criticism oi Western proposals was a declara- tion that the Soviet government is convinced of the possibility of a partial disarmament treaty. Rus- sia believes the subcommittee should be able to Work out all agreement on such steps as are now feasible. Zorin declared. He flatly rejected. however. a Western proposal made last week that scientists be put to work mapping out details of how a sus- pension of nuclear tests might be enforced. iRl2NEWED DEMANDS Zorin renewed Soviet demands that nuc' tests be banned im- mediately. without waiting for agreement on other details of dis- armament. He said Russia is willing to con- sider Western insistence that I ;suspension of tests be coupled with 'a cutoff of nuclear weapon pro- lduction-but at the same time he lthrew in another demand which the West has rejected: that the same agreement should contain a renunciation of the use of nuclea weapons. informants said Zorin declared an isolated. controlled moratorium on tests would clear the way for what he called a "realistic" ra- ther than a "fictitious" ending of nuclear arms race. After the tests have been stop- ped. Zorin said a linited disarm- ament accord should provide for: 1. A complete ban on the pro- duction of all nuclear arms. 2. Arrangements for destroying all stocks of nuclear arms. 3. A big power pledge renoune l ing use of weapons. BANFF. Alta (CPI-Mr Justice Henry G Nowlen, 62, the first Al- bertan appointed to the Supreme court of Canada. died Monday while vacationing at his summer PUGWASH, N.S. (CPD-A warn- ing to the world about the danger of an atomic disaster may come from the 24 international scientists now. meeting here. Nuclear experts from 11 coun- tries sat in their shirt sleeves and talked 'around a table in the Pug- wash Masonic Hall for the second day Monday. They represent the United States. the Soviet Union. Britain, Japan and other nations on both sides of the iron Curtain, in- formed sources said they are working toward an announcement of some kind. But what form it will take Isn't decided. Professor J. Rotblat of London. vice-president of,the Atomic Scien- tists Association. says they hope to think of ways scientists can help prevent an atomic catastro- phe to mankind. - The last of the group. Professor Hideki Yukawa. former member of Japan's atomic energy author- ity. flew in from Montreal. He brought an appeal from Japan's seven-man World Peace Commit- tee agsinst hydrogen and atom bomb tests. FIRST OBJECTIVE "Our first objective is a tem- porary ban for a number of months while scientists determine whether the tests are safe or not." v. 2' a i 4 arms ms ...."".:.-.'.'.':::r.'..' .."'.:'-:3." :.::r:. '.:.:.-'...':"'," """" Pugwash Scientists May Issue Warning'Of Disaster he said. " hen If the tests are proved harmful we propose a full and permanent ban. "We are in favour of the use of nuclear energy for peaceful pur- poses but opposed to its use for weapons of war." . lie said he hopes the scientists of other countries will be sympa- thetic to Japan's view. Professor Rotblat acts as Lord Bertrand Russehis deputy at the gathering. Lord Russell. 85, worked for two years to get some of the world's top nuclear experts together. His poor health pre- vented him from attending. A town council meeting would cause more stir in this fishing. lumbering and nail mining village than this meeting of the men who helped give the world atomic power. No one stood outside the tree- sheded hall - no policemen. no guards. no spectators. At the noon and evening recess a few cars drove up to carry the scientists to the nearby summer home of ist. He is their host. CIIALK SMUDGI.-1.! tr nee chalk smudges showed w ere Pugwesh kindergarten pu- pils cleaned blackboard brushes against the bricks. The meeting place was a temporary school room until last week. The big triangular-shaped tabla inside held books and papers. water lugs and glasses. Air fans whlrred in the windows. after Mondays talks. the scien- tists seemed more at east than on .. . - . .. W gether lunchandoneortwoposedfor aphotograpb. Peiping in summer. this time of year." IIIUITINPIGITI Cyrus Eaton. Cleveland lndustrialu ll'l;;igllVMaive Kills 200 In Europe On either side of the hall en-. . They as they walked out forl is cooler then: "We couldn't wear a coat there home in this Rocky Mountain re- sort 80 miles west of Calgary Death was attributed to a heart attack A graduate of the University of Alberta and a Rhodes scholar. Mr Justice Nolan was appointed to the Supreme Court in March, 1956 His appointment crowned a dis- tinguished 35-year career which included a period as associate prosecutor for an international military tribunal trying war crim- lnnis in the Far East He served in this capacity while holding the position of Canada”: prosecutor before the tribunal from 1946 to 1948 The Calgary lawyer. well-known in law circles throughout Canada and abroad, joined the Canadian Army in l940 NAMED T0 BOARD .. He was named vice Judge ad- vocate general at national defence headquarters in 1944 He held the post until 1945. when he was named to a special board estab- lished to review sentences of one to five years imposed on troops for military or civilian offences The son of one of the leading advocates of the Northwest Ter- ritories. Mr Justice Nolan was formerly head of the Calgary Law firm of Nolan. Chambers, Might. Saucier, Peacock and Jones A LONDON (AP) Europe counted at least ZN dead in s . lorried July heat wave But there Mihwlh Iilll C1080 c Niouilifd were signs of a slight cooling offi lists were incomplete, and it V l Britain. Norway and France re- lpnried relief in the -wellerlns t which started about July 1 I In Italy. Switzerland. West ghundgntormg brought M ." many and Poland the heat wavew ggmpenm,-9 go... to 3 big still held on Temperatures were down slightly. and there was ralnl an or predictions of rain But it was still hot and humid The heat wave had its most the aged at Venice There, is per- iii ii; :3; in M Mr. Justice- Henry G. Nolan Dies While Al was not conaide-G in Summer Home THE LATE JUSTICE NOLAN senior partner in the drm at one time was the late prime minister R 3 Bennett His appointment to the Supreme Court followed the death of his Justice W J Estey The late P J 1Pnddyl Nolan. Mr Justice Nolan's father. visioned the Northwest Territ before the formation of the - inces of Alberta and Sask ewan He was eintor of the gory Herald for a short time he came to the west from lre in the lbtlls in Austria Sunday while ming . 1 In most countries. the - peered likely many more L died of heat stroke and drowil ; than reported I in Paris, violent early u. , way - about ill degrees - will d 73 degrees Britain had sunny strict again Monday. but . breeze provide! natural air-conditioning and X the mercury in the 70s Things sure almost cold in Nor- clouds blotting out the sun Farther south things were dif-