Wiaxlms of II More Main There is. roguery in trades but own. gr la 1:” IOPAGIS all TWO KILLED. FOLIRTEEN INIIIRED IN .- ROCK IFALL AT SPRINGHILL MINE P. C. Leader's Wife Killed In N S. R E Car Accident HALIFAX (CP)-The wife of Robert L. Stanfield. Nova Scotia's Progressive Conservative leader. was killed in a highway accident near Halifax Thursday night. she was 39. Mr. Stanfield was in Sydney with the party's n a t i o n at president, George Hees. when informed of his wife's death. Three of children were injured when Mrs. Stanfield's car left the road near Shad bay. but are reported in good Hospital rendition in Children's here. Mrs. They were married in 1940. Injured in the accident were Sa- rah, about 12; Max, about 8; and infant baby was at home at the time. Details of the accident were not available immediately. but it was believed that the car left the road Judy. 4. The Stani'ie1ds' and plunged over a cliff. Mr. Stanfield. 40-year-old Halifax lawyer and a member of the cloth- lng manufacturing family of Truro. was elected to the party's provin- cial leadership in i948. Mrs. Stanfield and her children hsdplanncd to picnic at the beach and return Thursday Halifax. One of the children managed to highway and hall a motorist. The accident. oc- orawl to the paved curred on a desolate stretch of highway flown from a rocky hill- side. There were no witness. the Stanfields' four Stanfield was the former Joyce Frazee. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Frazee of Vancouver. night. Her car apparently left the road and plummeted over a 20-foot embank- ment whlle they were retumlng to SPRINGHLLL. N. S. (CP)-Two miners were klled and 14 inJursd Thursday when a four-ton boulder thundered like a cannonbsli down a mine shaft hers and smashed into a "rake" carrying ogf.,hm men to the surface. ' The boulder killed Russell Gil- ray. 39. on the rake at the 4,400- loot level of the Cumberland Rall- way and Coal Company mine and Everett Knowlton. 52. nbout 1,000 feet further down as the missile ricocheted the length of the shaft. On the danger list in hospital here are Arlia Smith and Leo White. The rest received minor in- juries. All are from Springhill. Knowlton was the father of five children. Nobody so far knows what loos- ened thc boulder. The Springhill colliery, located in the provincial border county of Cumberland near the Isthmus of Chignecto. was the scene of the worst M a r i t i m e mine disaster when 125 men were killed in 1891. Stories of the accident are being ii-n will be held. WORK RESUMES TODAY One of the men who was struck by debris. Wilfred Rector. 27, told a reporter that he had only 3 hazy idea of what happened. Rector said he was working alone about 300 feet above the rake where the boulder rumbled down. ”I got out of the way somehow and all I got out of it was a dam- aged foot. If that stuff had hit me i wouldn't be talking to you now." The day shift of miners prepar- ing to go down the shaft imme- diately rushed to help bring the in- jured to the surface. Ambulances and two trucks from here and the neighboring town of Amherst took the men from the pit-head to hos- pital. Two doctors treated the men as they were brought up and four more doctors were called to treat those brought to hospital. Nurses from the night shift who had just finished work were recalled to as- Mrs. stsnfield's lnotha now is 3m in London. England. where she visited the grave of a son killed during the second World War. Train Accident In Newfollndand GANDER. Nfld. (CF)-A pas- reogar train collided head - on rhuraday night with a lumber train about 38 miles west of here and first reports indicated that all cars had left the tracks. The Canadian National Hallways train. travelling fr n m Corner Brook to St. John's, plowed into a main believed owned by Angie- slawfoundland Development Com- aany which was carrying pulp from Gambo to Grand Falls. The CNR office here, which re- ported that "it looks serious." dis- patched a train to the scene about 10:30 p. m. NDT. A doctor and several nurses were aboard. The collision was believed to have oc- curred about 7:30 p. m. NDT. Coming Events "Dance in Millvlew Hall, every Friday. "Dulce, Little Pond Hall every Monday. Chaisson's orchestra. ”Regular Dance. l-lowe's Hall, tonight. Music by Dolron Bros. "Dance gt Gordon Lodge every Friday nigh . "Dance at Mt. Ryan Hall at .l-hnston's River every Friday, Burke's Orchestra. "For this week only, Dance at West Royalty Hall changed to Friday. "Movies - Canoe Cove. tonight. 330. "I Confess". Starring Ann Baxter and Montgomery Clift. "St. John's Church Picnic, Crap nud. Wednesday. August 4th. sup- Dtr. Sports. Swing. "Dance. St. Peters Bay Holy Name Hail, every Friday night. Chaisson's Orohestra. "Unloading car Bulk wheat to- dly and tomorrow. s3.lb cwt. Bring bags. Dillon 5: Splllett. "mlying Fowl and heavy Chick- en. weighed and paid for at the door. A. P. Gallant, Rustico. "Unloading Friday and Satur- flly. cement. Special price. Also "I stock asphalt and cedar shilisles. wsgon rubber tires. P. -7- Noye 5 Co. "Here comes another real good mow to Morell Friday. Saturday. its "lave Happy". starring the Mars Bros. The picture that discov- Cfid Idai-ilyn Monroe. Be sure you Is! it. the whole family will like it "All. taxes owing Carleton sid- Inl school District No. so. not set- tled by July slat. will be handed to In Attorney for collection. By Order of 'Pr'IsIteee. "bobatag jnpper, hinge and other entertainment. North Rus- -W0. Wednesday, August 4. sup- ;:'l;.;lQlllncOs 6:30 (Standard "Showing at In. slum Pri- dlr and "Desert ion". mrrfas Allan nae. Arlene l. 2:2. .- . , . western -wi W. howls not ' -1,. 8. x The mine. a subsidiary of the Dominion Coal Company. remained closed Thursday by tradition but work will resume today. British Schoolboys Sail For Canada LIVEmPOOL, Eng.. (GP)-Forty British schoolboys sailed for Can- ada Thursday on the sixth tour sponsored by W. H. Rhodes, Erad- ford. Yorks. business man. Also aboard the Empress of Scotland were 10 Canadian air cadets who shot at Bisley. The schoolboy group. which travels ulider the auspices of a trust established in 1937. will visit Quebec, Niagara Falls. Ont., Ot- tawa. Hamilton, Toronto and oth- cr points before returning Aug. in. Rhodes is accompanying the party for ths first time since 1951. The Canadian cadets. nd- ed by Lt.-Col. Neil Dow of Wind- sor. N.s., competed with their sen- iors at Bisley on an inaugural army cadet Bisley trip. ” DAVID BY A NOSE ACTON, Ont. (GP) -only his nose was showing above water when A Toronto fisherman was rescued by police in the weeds of nearby Fairy Lake. 13 miles north- east of Guelph. Norman Shields, about 50, told police his boat be- came stuck in the weeds. He went over the side to try and free it and became stuck. too. By GARY LEVY BERLIN (Reuters)-A West Ger- man newspaper Thursday linked Otto John with Guy Burgess, the British diplomat believed to have fled with a colleague behind the Iron Curtain in 1951. The right-wing nationalist weekly Deutsche Zukunft of Essen said Burgess helped John. former West German security chief. to escape from Germany in the Second World War. This report came as the supreme West German prosecutor instituted kidnapping charges against Dr. Wolfgang Wohlgemuth. a Berlin doctor who vanished with John into Communist East Berlin July M 0 Police said proceedings had been started against Wohlgemuth-and other persons "for deprivation of liberty with intent to ondans-r the state." C ONLY A GESTIJRI: But since Wohlgemuth, a known Communist. has one into East Berlin. beyond a prosecutor's reach. West Berliners considered this announcement a gesture. aimed onl at bolstering the argu- ment of sncellor Konrad Adan- auer's government that John was lured across the border by deceit or drugs. .ohn himself said in a radio broadcast from East Berlin Wed- nesday that he "followed the voice of my own conscience" when he went east. Tile Deutache Zukunft backed up its contention that John once had important dealings with Burgess by reporting that the British diplomat met John in Spain in 191! when the German was leader of an anti- .-ldbl -storsseualt pieced together and an investiga- GERMAN PAPER LINKS OTTO JOHN C VIITH MISSING BRITISH DIPLOMAT ommunisll CI-iinag roteslis On Plane Incidents I - iilead bygivgryiiody Founded 1872 Welcomed 'At Government House His Honour Lieutenant Governor T0 CONFER wiiii OTTAWA. July 20-(Speclal)- Health and Welfare Minister Paul Martin is leaving Ottawa today for a tour of the Maritimes in connection with new health pro- jecls and to discuss disability pension legislation passed at the last session of Parliament with provincial premiers and welfare ministers. He expects to reach Charlotte- tnwn some time on Saturday and has arranged for conferences with P. E. I. Premier Alexander Meth- eson and Health and Welfare Minister Earle MacDonald. Dis- cussion will be centred on health projects in the Province and the federal - provincial arrangements concerning disability pensions. Mr. Martin will be crossing from P. E. I. to Nova Scotia on Monday but will return to the island on Wednesday when he will he the guest of honor and will speak at the centenary of St. Dunstan's College. Himself an orator of distinction and a iiichly-skilled liehater, Mr. Mar- Medal For Heroic French Nurse WASHINGTON. Eisenhower Thursday conferred the Medal of Freedom with bronze palm upon the French flight nurse who tended the wounded through the fall of Dien Bien Phu. The nurse. Lieut. Genevieve de Glaard-Terraube thanked the Pre- sident Thursday in a barely aud- ible voice and said she accepted the great honor on behalf of those who fought in the Indo-China for tress. then gave Burgess full details of Hitler's airdefence system. Burgess. formerly in the Brit- ish embassy ln Washington. later helped John to escape from Ger- many through Spain to Britain when the 1944 bomb plot on Hitler's life failed and touched off a bloody purge. the paper continued. The paper is edited by a former Hitler youth leader. Siegfried Zogl- mann. Burgess vanished in May. 1951, with Donald Maclean. one - time head of the American de artment of the British foreign o ce. The two are believed to be behind the PROVINCIAL HEALTH, MINIST 'r, W. L. Prowse. yesterday extend- ed his cordial welcome to the Civil Air Patrol Cadets of the United States as they called at Govern- ment House on their tour of East- ern Canadian centres. The visiting cadets from the country to the south made a deep impression by their friendliness and politeness and made many friends during the luncheon at The Charlottetown ex- tended to them by the P.E.I. Air Cadet Committee. PREMIER AND 1 NewHMove To Unseai McCarthy WASHINGTON, (CP)--A new move to unseat senator Joseph McCarthy (Rep. Wis.) will be launched after the November con- gressional elections, Leroy Gore, chairman of the ”Joe Must Go" iclubs, announced Thursday. i As outlined, this will be a far more elaborate drive than the one Hon. Paul Martin (AP)-President A uthat failed last spring. Not only tin was keenly interested in the -'will the "Joe Must Go" people be success of St. Dunstan's rlchatcrs after signatures from Wisconsin in the intercollegiate contests a voters, but they will also launch IHV mmlllll 880- a national campaign to persuade glltjizenii to write ktheir de:I:Ol'-I. e a m is to ma (9 sure i. a . if In Plane Crash Wisconsin votes to unseat Mocar- thy, the Senate will go along with QUONBET POINT, R. I., (AP)- United States Navy bomber the decision. Gore": announcement came as with ll men aboard crashed Thurs- day in the ocean ol'f Montauk the Senate prepared for what sen- ator William Knowland of Califor- Polnt, N. Y., but all its occupants were rescued. nia. Republican floor leader, said would be a "full dress delete" an None was reported seriously in- lured. moves to censure or investigate McCarthy. The rescue operation was canted out by an air force rescue plane May Be Strike In 1r?I:cRl:I)IfllDn!!llt'1elx3etl'I!II.e(dl0lAaJ'f'lso1.l0 miles at sea about 2:45 pm. EDT, and the rescue plane completed its op- VANQQUVER" (op) .. Brltllh Columbia's fishing industry. source eratlon shortly after 5 p.m. i ll lihood f tfm ted 50.- was based at Brunswick, Ms. 0 V8 or an N I i ”' ' C"T'""mm a ” ”' strike trouble. Shoreworkers in the fishing can- reiect a conciliation board award and to ask for a. government- MONTREAL. (OP) .-Vice-Arlrnm United Fishermen and Allied 51 ,1, 1!, Steve”, deputy sup;-r-me Workers Union ilnd.) officials said ceg, said Thurgday the submarine: era are asking a 20-cent general is still the greatest naval menace wage IIICFOB-IE. 40-hour Week. "'1- aell. the anti-submarine vessel will work rates. I'M-UI-OTY HOIICIAYI. have to do most of the fighting. compulsory checkoff and other aboard the cruiser HMS Sheffield. monthly Increase. hers on a courtesy visit, Admiral Last wage boost in the industry. subrrlarina but the West is better and present. pay is ”deplarabiy ba- prepared than ever to meet the low the level of other basic indus- lrnn Curtain. The bomber, a two-engine PW. 000 persons, appears headed for lieries and camps have voted to supervised strike vote. commander of NATO Atlantic for- Thursday the 3.200 CimnerY Work- ahd in the event of another war at moved overtime. sunranteed piece Speaking at a press conference concessions. Tendermen seek a :30 Stevens said Russia has about 300 union officials said, was in 1951 U-boat threat. ' tries in B. C." Man Burned In Vessel Explosion ST. JOHN'S. Ni'ld., (GP)-One of two Burin, Nfld., men, burned in an explosion on a fishing vessel last Saturday. died in hospital here Thursday. The other victim is in "fair condition”. Basil Bartlett, burned when a welding apparaatus exploded. died from the bums which doctors said covered so per cent of his body. Prank Isaacs, the second victim. has been taken off the serious list and is expected to recover. The two men were flown here from ,iBurin Sunday. in Piriiiiiiiied By Crashing Plane TEL AVIV. (Reuters)--Ten per- sons were killed and scores injured at the Israeli settlement of Naagan Thursday when a. civilian plane crashed into a building crowded with spectators during is ceremony unveiling a memorial to second World War paratroopers. Israeli Premier Moshe Sharett was attending the ceremony, but first reports said he was not hurt. C!.'I'INJ'lt:. Yugoslavia (Reuters) iaishop Arsenije Bradvarevic, 71- Montenengro, was sentenced here ,- ' '(By John llightower) C WASHINGTON, (AP)-Red China has rejected Am- erican protests against Communist on British and American aircraft over the South China See, it was announced Thursday. The state department, noting that ' fused even to consider the protests, said the matter "will not be permitted to rest there.” It did not say what new steps might be taken. One possible course might be in the United Nations. There the U. S. might use Red China's conduct in the whole affair to support the American argument does not deserve UN membership. fighter plane attacks the Reds had re- that Communist China The latest turn of events IP- peared to bear out President Eisen- hower's view, expressed at his press conference Wednesday. lvhlit the Chinese Reds are trying l0 Pl-9-Y the clashes in such a way as to divide Britain and the United States. For while Peiping refused to ac- cept the American protests. it apologized promptly to Britain for destruction of the British plane in- volved. Britain protested last Saturday. the day after Red Chinese fight- ers shot down a Cathay PM-IUC Mi" liner off Halnan island with loss of 10 lives, including three Ameri- cans. Eight persons were saved by a US. Navy amphibian in a. daring rescue operation. PROTEST T0 UN Last week-end. two American carrier-based planes shot down two Red Chinese aircraft over the area. The American planes said they opened fire after being attacked. They were hunting for possible sur- vivors of the airliner. Peiping radio Thursday reported rejection of the American protests and said Red China had protested to the United Nations over the shooting down of the two Commu- nist planes. At United Nations hearlquartars in New York. it was announced year-old Orthodox Metropolitan oflithat ,Yugoslavis. This action, the judge (Continued on page 2. col. 5) YUGOSLAV CLERGYMAN GIVEN LONG I PRISON SENTENCE AT HARD LABOR rs-ntiy for translating an nrtide from a foreign magaslne saying there was persecution in Thllrsdiy to Hit years hard laborlmaintalned. was also part of the slav state." Judge Petar Lekovlc. reading the sentence to a packed court room, said the Serbian Orthodox Church leader. after arriving here as Metropolitan ernmsnt in Yugoslavia.” The Metropolitan, a sprightly old man with black robe and white slight smile. GAVE REASON! The judge gave the following reasons for concluding that the Metropolitan aimed at overthrow- ing the government, based on the evidence of three of the priests in the alleged group: Bishop Arsenlje in frequent meetings before 1953 in his dmmg room and kitchen convinced them that the Yugoslav government was unstable and the monarchy would return. He convinced them that the sov- whioh case Yugoslavia would join the western camp. and that Presi- dent Tlto on his visit to London in 1953 might make concessions to the West. He made them believe there was dictatorship and persecution in Yugoslavia. HOSTILE ATTITUDE The judge said this was all aimed at arousing a hostile attitude among the population with the aim of overthrowing the govern- mant. Bishop Arsenlje received a sen- tence of six years to run concur- ICIaurcIaiIII' Wins Vote OF Approval LONDON (OP)-Prime Minister Churchill. overriding a rebellion within his own party. won an over- whelming vote of approval in the House of commons Thursday on his government's decision to pull British troops out of the sun canal zone. The House supported Churchill's evacuation policy by a vote of 25'! to 20 after hearing a government declaration that the polbliity of an fl-bomb war has made the dues base obsolete. I Ohurchill staked the life of his govemmsnt an a motion demand- ing swrwsl of the sgraainsnt with kypt (initlallad madly) which calls for transfer at the almo- man British amlsoa from sun in N0”!!! of 40 'mry rebels, argued in a voice trembling with emotion till! the whole British position in Bus: has been outdated by -''the ap- palling developments and the ap- Dlllisn spsot-holes which imagina- tion raises before us." ing up with the Id Conservative rebels led by Capt. Charles Water- house. Tha final voting tally shows that more than half of the Commons abstained. LABOR SKIP! CIIANCI , "Marci! to try to imagine in out- line now to portray the first few weeks of a warns it now.. would convince you of the obsole- scence of the bass." The official labor party policy wasto abstain from the voting, but five members "broke this ruling to vote with the government In abstaining. the socialists. who DIPLOIIB DELAY Labor leader clement Attlee spurning pleas made by Labor more than two years ago for a British agreement with lint. m'l'The prime minister knows that I better terms. in feet. on these very Ioroontha OiInI,I,Il.trsiss,aa,sallr,oas l have. long urged Oburchiil to get dlitotiilhltnadcaebancatopia. - .-.-1 -, overturn the government by tum-i lambasted Churchill personally for could have been settled on terms. two "years ago," Attlee said. "Ha delayed from doing what was risht and now had to eat hulnbia4 "We all hope that this may be a new and better era in the Middle East: but it does very little credit to the government." The seven-year British-slgyptian outline agreement gives Britain the right. to re-occupy the Sues key or any of the Arab states. The vast installations dominating the strategic waterway are to be kept in sood shape by British or Egypt- ian civihan caretakers under con. tract to the British government. LISTEN! SILINTLY The Imam - lowing chumhlil, who for years hurled the taunt of let Union was likely to attack, ini base in case of an attack on Tur-, "scuttle" at socialists demanding. i wonitnlsl-asiaaa Les. Ii;I for "conspiring against the Yugo- Metropolitan's aim of overthrow- -five years concurrent sentence for ing the government. The churchmen received another writing and distributing a memor- adum urging priests not to Join in 1947, formed aigovernment mass organizations. group of five priests with the aimi The court imposed a further two of "forcibly overthrowing the gov-lyears concurrent sentence for ,spreading religious hatred among Roman Catholics and eight: monidls .for insulting President Tito by beard, heard the sentence with a calling him a dictator. ,Vouih's Body is ilalien from Water YARMOUTH. N. 8.. (OP) -- The body of Carl Allen. 15, who drown- ed Wednesday night while swim- ming at Arcadia, four miles from here, was recovered Thursday. Man's Body Found ,In Tourist Cabin i WA'I'ERVILl.!l. Que. (GP)-John nnrroll. 5'1, of Chestertown, Md., was found dead Thursday in a tourist cabin in this town near Sherbrooke. 110 miles southeast of Montreal. Police said the men drove into the motel alone Wednesday and lcnted a cabin for a day. The Ion-ner of the motel found the body in-hen he entered to see if Bat-roll 'hnd checked out. Police said Barroll was probably in disbetic. An insulin kit and in- istruccions on taking insulin were found beside the body. They said Ian inquest will be held shortly. iiarmer Killed By Circular Saw PERTH. N. B. (CP)--Harold I- man, 43-year-old district farmer. was killed Thursday night when struck by a whirlln circular saw ; blade which had bro en loose from its axle. His 13-year-old son. Percy. who witnessed the accident. jumped into the farm truck and raced nearly a mile along a bumpy road to get help. When he and his mother returned. ldr. lnman was dead. The accident occurred when the saw's arbor-bearin s snapped. re- leasing the flywhee . Surviving are his widow. father. Covers ' Prince Edward Island Like The Dow, u PRICE Us Reiects AU.SI.i Duke Of Edinburgh Likes Heal Of Canadian Summer By DAVE MCINTOSE Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP) - The Duke of Edinburgh Thursday stepped into the heat-80 degrees and more-of a Canadian summer. He promptly shed his uniform of a marshal of the RAF and went for a swim in the nippy waters of an outdoor pool. It was typical of his homey, feet- up day after arrival at Uplands airport by RCAF plane to begin a three-week visit to Canada. The formalities were over in just 10 minutes. Governor-General Vin- cent Massey and Prime Ministcl St. Laurent greeted the duke on a red carpet at the foot of the air- craft ramp. They said they were pleased to welcome the duke back to Canada. He said he was pleased to be back. ROYAL SALUTE There was a royal salute, in- spection of an air force guard of honor. presentation of cabinet min- isters, diplomats and the chiefs of staff and then Philip. looking re- laxed and genial. was off to Gov- ernment House with a smile and a wave for the applauding crowil of 2,000. At Government House. residence- of the governor-general where the royal guest will stay until Sunday morning. Philip changed into civ- (Contlnued on page 2, col. 4) Patten-ts;Retuin To Their Hospitals TOKYO. (Reuters)-More that 800 tuberculosis patients Thursday returned to their hospitals after spending two days jammed to- gether in the concrete corridors of the Tokyo city hall. ' They have been protesting against a government decision to cut nursing staffs and reduce the time patients should spend in hos- pital. As soon as the patients had left the building. cleaners began to disinfect corridors and othei places that they had occupied. Exhausted by extreme heat and two sleepless nights spent on can erete floors. the patients left for their hospitals on the advice of doctors and city officials. s-."":.?. EOULDri;Te WE -; j ruislwemn-: HALIFAX (CP)-Tho Weather office here says there will be fine weather over the Maritime: again Friday. - New Brunswick. Prince Edward Island-sunny with a few cloudy intervals; little change in tern. perature; light winds; low-high at Fredericton 58 and 85, Saint John 58 and 75, Charlottetown 60 and 80. Moncton 58 and 80. Edmundston and Campbellton 60 and 85.- Bay nt Fundywllght winds; vari- able cloudiness and fog patches; visibility 10 miles lowering in fog patches to one half mile or less. Not much change in temperature. TORONTO (CP)-Minimum and maximum temperatures: Min Max Dawson . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52 M Vancouver . . 54 70 Victoria .... . . 53 66 Edmonton . M as Calgary . 30 87 Regina . 49 70 Winnipeg 56 72 Toronto . 67 73 Ottawa 61 R5 Montreal .. . . 6.”! in Quebec .. .. 58 M Saint John. .. . . 59 74 Moncton . . .. . 56 79 llalifax 61 7!) Fredericton . . 58 82 Charlottetown . . 61 78 Sydney . . . . .. - R0 Yarmouih '58 - St. John's 52 06 High tide coda at Charlottetown at lost a. in. a 11.01 . in. summeraidq tide :15: n min- s brother and eight children. rang- Inl in use tron: aim to if. g J, utas later than can is. High tli-is Hill! C in North Share at 5.42 s. in. and . ll. sun rises today at dd! nu setsat'i.tlp.m.. his . -w.-.....-...,a..........- , - 4- p:" .-g.---. ..a.,..... , - , 4.