Wlexlms of 1 More Man” I Better lose to. finger a hand is races Digilessis Declares Quebec Province a Not like Others; Plays Sf. Laurent vALI..l:Y1"il:l..D. Que. -- (OP) - Premier Duplessis said Sunday Quebec province, due to its racial and religious background. is not a province "like the others". and will never trade its taxations rights for iederel subsidies. "It is a question bigger then Dupleesis. St. Laurent. the Lib- arals or the Union Nationals party," said the Quebec govern- ment leader. The Quebec government is pre- pared to co-operate with the fed- rral government and come to a taxation understandln based on an "equa footing.'' and Mr. Dup- irsais. But Quebec will neveg accept any proposal that will mean the people of French Canada get "handcuffs instead of reins." he added. 5.000 CROWD HALL Quebec's Union Nationals party leader made the "statements in a ii.-hour speech in a hall at Val- li-yfield's Roman Catholic semin- Ify. The quietly - delivered address. broadcast through the province. followed the inauguration of a 09.- 800.000 provinclally - built bridge across the St. Lawrence river be- tween Valleyfield and Cotesu Landing. The speech was scheduled to be given in the open air after ribbon- cutting ceremonies but arrange- ments were switched due to heavy rain. Some 5,000 people crowded ;ha seminary hell. Msgr. J. Alfred Langlols. aged Bishop of Vaileyfleld for whom iha bridge was named. presented Premier Duplessls with the Gold Medal of Diocesan Merit. Premier Duplessis nod Prime Minister St. Laurent for what he celled "regrettable and dangerous" statements made in a speech ,in Quebec Sept. la end which prompted the premlar's long reply. TAXES BASIC ISSUI The premier said the crux of the issue between his government and the federal authorities is pro- vincial taxation rights. D He said the issue is bound clos- ely to self determlnltlon for .a French-Canada and the feet "for mud. I0 years our fathers suffered the worst persecution for the right in naive their own language and their iwn schools.” "For years it was the governors who taxes. In those days respon- Dulles Arrives In London For Talks: g Meels French Premier Mendes-France By SEYMOUR TOPPING LONDON (AP)-U5. Shh Sec- retsry Dupllea flew into London Sunday for the nine-power confer- ence on German rearmament and called for quick results to prevent the collapse of Western defence nianninl. Dulles made a conciliatory ges- iiire toward France immediately upon arrival from the United States by personally asking to see Premier Mendes-Francs before the opening of the crucial conference Coming Events "Buying and cleaning timothy daily. Mcauigsa A Boyle. "Regular Dance Crapsud Rink. Wednesday night. "Regular Dance. Bonshew Inn. Tuesday night. "Dance Morell I-Iall Burns Orchestra. "See Augustine Cove Skyllners at Bonahaw Inn, Thursday. Sept. 30. Show time 8:45. p "St. John's Anglican Church. Milton chicken and ham supper, Wednesday. October 20th. "St. Teresa's Chicken Supper. Wednesday. September 29th. Sup- per 5 to 0. o'clock. Games. Dance. " Live Capone. chicken and ruwl. Tuesday. I a. in. until 12. R. 1.. nlokieson. New Glasgow. "New Wiltshirs District Visite- tion for Barton and Hamilton L. 0. L. at Klhg William. Septem- ber title. "See Georgetown Players pre- sent "Betty the Girl 0' an neartr m Brookfield llsil. September Ilth. Curtain I30. "Tessa Ralph and his Augus- UII Ikyllnera will be in Afton Wednesday. lepi. D at 8:30 on. Admission so and as. Dance er. 9 u t ”3'..'' I-isggert.y's. New -u s . Am lslrh. Meals istoaanaeieenaacingaftc. Alllpicas 0. w 1.. door pi-has will be given IWKV free b the lucky tlokst hold- ers at the big dsaoe. Isorell nail. lnniehs. jsal good music. he see- lhs you. tonight. and Chicken l "Ora ud hall Tuesday night. Sm. old um. fiddlin Ind step aaseias eeaiseii ea. w here will earueisate in sriomumi. ans ' radio. "ad your tries President wo- for. in 188'! for meat." "Today they would have us re- turn to the system of English gov- ernors - federal subsidies.” Premier Dupeesis said Quebec and Ontario by the union act of lean were Joined prior to Confed- eration. ' "If it didn't work for two prov- inces why should it work better now for 10 provinces." he asked. SAYS FIELDS SET OUT He said the Fathers of Confed- eration. men having different lang- uages and religions. worked out an understanding that the four orig- inal provinces and the central gov- ernments would have "hlearly de- fined fields" of administration. "There is no one government that can settle all the multiple Canadian problems. Decentraliza- tion ia the democratic way oi do- lug it. "This is a fight for responsible government and for the other prov- inces even if they don't see it to- dby.. One government would be ex- posed to socialism and even com- munism. We will never permit that. "The Quebec government doesn't ask for favors or privileges. It wants only the respect of its right under Confederation." Premier Duplessls said he was surprised that Prime Minister St. Laurent-"A' compatriot raised in Quebec"-had declared "all the provinces are alike." "Doesn't he know Quebec is not like the others? Everybody else knows it. "No English-speaking politician has ever gone so far as to say Quebec is like the other prov- inces." l plauded when he said: "There is no other place in Can- ada where minorilies are treated as well as in Quebec-and we will continue to do this." DEFEND U. 8. POSITION MONTREAL (CP)--A six-man delegation will represent Britain at federal hearings into textile tariffs y in Ottawa. Canadian man- ufacturers have protested that the present rate of duty on wooileris is too low and that the domestic industry is suffering. The Britons hope to forestall any move to in- crease tariffs. Tuesday. He walked across the runway to where the French ambassador to London, Rona Messigli. was await- ing the arrival oi the French premier - foreign minister. Dulles greeted Maasigli wsrmly'and re- quested an appointment "at the earliest possible moment." Mendes-France flew in 75 min- utss later. He declared: "I am quite sure we will do very good and useful work at the confer- ence." IICINT TIIP RESPONSIBLE A highly-placed informant said Dulles asked to see Mendes-France in an effort to allay the impres- sion that Washington "has been snubbing Pranca since her rejec- tion of the European Defence Com- munity plan. The impression grew out of Dullas' recent trip to Europe in which he visited Bonn and London and by-passed Paris. Two other delegates to the nine- power meeting are already in Lon- don. lixternal Affairs Minisisr Pearson of Canada arrived Friday and Joseph Bach of Luxembourg reached here Saturday. Gaatano Martino of Italy was due later Sunday night and Paul Henri Speak .of Belgium. J. W. Seyen of The Netherlands and West German Chancellor Adenauer are due today. , O00!) IIIUIIIS "n!PElATIVl' Dulles lold reporters the United States will go into the conference "hoping in goods results because it is imperative that there should be results." "We believe the initiative in these matters should be taken primarily by the European coun- trim themselves. He said the west -muse move rapidly in the crisis resulting fr in the collapse of the I30. in w h Germany would have been re- armed ,as part of'e sis - nation is alliance. . A "If we don't more rapidly things aegis fall apart farther badly." he as . in than three hours after reaching I.ond:.n. Dulles rigs. wire: roreign lease :1 Eden w out a common approach to the conference. - . Duliaa.appears ready to back ldan's effort to put German divi- sions on the line against Commu- nlet assrsasiari throuah the looser entry of West Germany into the North Atlantic Treaty Organisa- tion. lath men are also set to urge Mendel-Pranco to agree the grant of full sovereignty so the German federal republic as the elble government did not exist and that was what our fathers fought "The lnglish fought as we did ruponsible "overn- Prernler Duplessia was ap- w IIIKING APAI The P9 Police Seeking Strangler In Women's Death TORONTO (CP)--Police say a middle-aged woman whose nude body was found Saturday in a nar- row slley was strangled. probably just outside her home in west-cen- iral Toronto while her 19-year-old son slept upstairs. Dr. Charles McLean, provincial pathologist, announced after ap autopsy that ."ra. Mary Lipo- weckyj. 40 "died of 'a brutal strangulation." Acting police chief M. M. Mul- holiand, releasing the autopsy re- sults. said there also were indica- tions she suffered two blows on the head. She was not sexually molested. Police questioned her uncle. Sam Lewko, who lived in the down- stairs portion of her home and who worked with her in the kitchen of a downtown hotel. They also interviewed her hus- band, John. who went with them the chief coroner's office to identify the body and the son. CAME FROM UKRAINE New Tropical Storm lieporled MIAMI. Fla. (AP) -A tropical storm with winds of up to as miles an hour formed Sunday in the western Caribbean and began mov- ing in a west-northwest direction toward Belize. capital of British Honduras. It should continue to increase in intensity as it moves towards Be- lize. the Miami weather bureau said in an advisory. The minimum hurricane force wind is '15 miles per hour. The storm. the seventh of the Investigators said they learned (continued on Page 2 col. 4) seventh letter of the alphabet. By WEBB McKlNI.EY ROME (AP) - Premier Mario Scelba's pro-Western government won a crucial vote of confidence in the Italian Senate Baturday over a scandal arising from the death of an obscure party girl 17 months ago. The lie-to-97 vote backed the government's conduct in handling the case of Wilma Monteal, whose body was found on a bench south of Rome April ll. 1953. The Communist left and its Al- lies had joined with the extreme right in demanding that Scelba resign because members of his gov- ernment or their families were in- volved in the scandal. The vote followed Scelba's charge in a. Senate speech that the Com- munists are. using the case to try to "disintegrate democracy" in Italy. I ”They are -conducting a fight without quarter for their aim is the complete destrucion of the ad- versary." said Sceliba. "They in- still dpubta on anything and any- body. This is a campaign to disin- tegrate democracy." VOTE ON PARTY LINES The vote held strictly to party lines. Scelba's own Christian Dem- ocrats and his minor party coali- tion supported him. communists, pro-Kremlin Socialists. neo - Fas- cista and regular Monarchiets op- posed him. Technically. it covered not only the Montesi investigation but also the government's foreign policy. The reason for this was that Scelba was presenting a re-model- led cabinet to Parliament. Seek Damages from llussians wsssrrrzaron mp) 'rhe' United States Saturday formally demanded that Russia pay 31,020.- 295.0l damages for shooting down an air force B-29 plane off Hok- kaido. Japan. on Oct. 7. 1952, or else agree to submit the dispute over the incident to the world court. The fate of its eight crew members is still unknown. A 24-page note presented to the foreign office at Moscow by Am- bassador Charles E. Bohlen as- serted that the Soviets were com- pletely responsible for destroying lialian Premier Wins Crucial Vole Of Confidence In The Italian Senale A week ago Foreign Minister At- tiiio Piccioni quit in stand by his son. involved in the scandal. Thus the vote also supported the premiere pledge that the new cabinet will "remain faithful" to the idea of Western European unity, despite the demise of the European Defence Community. While Bcelba spoke his former foreign minister's eon. 32-year-old Piero Piccioni. remained in jail. He is charged with manslaughter for allegedly contributing to Wil- ma's death by abandoning her on the water's edge, believing her dead. Make Mr. Justice Arsenaull Life Memberi iC.T.A.r ” O WINDSOR. Ont. (GP)-A Que- bec government officlal Saturday was elected president of the Cana- dlan Tourist Association. Georges Leveiile, secretary to Premier Dupieseis and director of the Quebec provincial publicity bureau in Quebec City, was the unanimous choice of the delegates. The election was the final busi- ness of the four-day conventions Elected first. second and third vice-presidents respectively w e r e W. Gordon Wood. vice-president of traffic for Trans - Canada Air or the service bureau. T. Eaton Company, Toronto and Oliver 1.. vardy, director of Newfoundland tourist development. St. John's. Retiring president is Mr. Ralph R. Moore, deputy minister of eco- monio affairs for Alberta. The Hon. Jean Lesage. federal minister of resources and develop- ment. was named honorary pres- iderit. Named honorary life members were: Justice A. E. Araenanlt. Charlottetown. r. a. 1.; n. ci. esc- Neillie. Westmount. Quebec; Rob- ert J. C. Stead. Ottawa: W. J. Wilson. ,Gs.na.oque. 0nt., A. A. Gardiner. Montreal and Claude C Bonter, Montreal. CHILD KILLED NEW WATERFORD. N.5-. (GP) -Five-year-old Kenneth Hutchin- son was killed Saturday when struck by a soft drink delivery truck near his home here. An in- the unarmed bomber. quest is scheduled for Tuesday. season, was named Gilda for the' Lines; Prank Scammeli. supervisor WN. CANADA. - lIONDAY.iSEI".l!EM.'BEB. 37. IBM TOKYO. '(AP)-Nearly The Japanese maritime bodies recovered, 544 missing Kyodo news service reported there were 1,141 passengers aboard the 4300-ton railroad ferry Toya Maru when it was flung on its side by giant waves in I-lakodaie harbor. The safety board reported 400 bodies had washed ashore and 42 were aboard the ship, possibly crushed when railroad cars aboard broke loose and plunged across the decks. Almost all the Americans were servicemen or their dependents. 300 SAILORS MISSING The death toll may be heavily swelled by other ship disasters. Four large Japanese frelghters. were reported sunk in the violent storm in Teugaru straits. Each carried a crew of about 75-: total of 300 or more still missing. The typhoon. third to lash Ja- pan within two weeks. also fanned a fierce fire which destroyed four- fifths of the coastal city of Iivanai on western Hokkaido. Iwanai has a population of 25,000. Communications were tangled in the area, but the death toll was expected to mount when details of the fire are learned. , .'1 American LST (landing ship tank) with I91 soldiers from the 1st Cavalry Dvision was caught in the typhoon. The crew ran her ashore on a mudbank southwest of Hakodate and all aboard were re- ported safe. The Toys Marti had just left Hakodate at 6:30 p. m.. bound south for Aomori nn Honshu. the main Japanese island. Severall such big ferries. which carry whole trains. are the main link egress flfsugaru strait. The typhoon hit Japan's southern island of Kyushu at l a. m. Sun- day. raked most of the island em- pire. including Tokyo. then crossed westward into the Japan sea. Then. suddenly. it cut back just in time to lash Tsugaru strait with I Americans were counted as missing and presumed drowned when a rampant typhoon capsized a huge ocean ferry off - the northern Japanese island "Covers: Prince Edward Island Like The Dow, 1,000 persons including 56 of Hokkaido Sunday night. safety board reported 442 and 155 survivors. ing water up in giant waves in Hokkaldo's funnel-like bays. U. S. army headquarters con-i (Continued on Page 2 col. 4) Survivor Tells, Of Disaster On lap Ferry TOKYO (AP)-A Japanese sur- vivor of the Toys Maru typhoon disaster said today the wreck "was like a hell on earth." The huge ocean-going ferry was 355 hours out of l-iakodate and floundering badly at 10 p. m.. Yamazski. 48. told the Yomiuri newspaper.” "About four minutes later i felt: a terrific lurch and shock. "The lights went out. pitch dark. "I felt the floor list about 45 degrees and water began pouring into the third-class decks. "I was by the dining room and gropcd my way to a window. In the dark everyone was tumbled to- geiher all at once. Some were pushed over and some were step- ped on. ”The screaming and shoutins in the dark was like a hell on earth." BUOY SAVED HIM Yamazki continued: "There must have been about 700 passengers in the third-class section alone. ”l made it to the window near the door and had crawled about half out when a huge wave washed me out into the sea. "I gropedmbout in the dark and grabbed something that looked like a human head. It was a stray glass bupy from is fishnet. ”l hugged the buoy and tired to push away from the ship. ''I was lucky. I'wes washed it was the full fury of ll0-mile winds. pil- News Briefs From TAIPEI-I, Formosa, (AP) -Na-1 ilonaiisi. planes Sunday falnld fresh air blow: on Red China's- port. of Amoy while conjecture in- creased over whether and when Red planes will retaliate against Formosa. OTTAWA. (CF) -- The Citizen said Saturday three ministers of the Ontario cabinet will resign soon and that Ottawa's Mayor Charlotte Whitton will be ap- pointed municipal affairs minister. CASTEL GANDODOGO. Italy insurers)-The rope. apparently recovered from his recent indis- position. conducted a. mass aud- ience for i0.000 pilgrims here Sun- day. SCARBOROUGH. linsland. (AP) --Labor party leader clement Attlee called on the United States and Communist China Sunday night to forget fears of each other and de- exlstcnce is co-death": WINDSOR. Ont. (CP)-Conciiia- tion board hearings on contract dispute between Chrysler Corpora- tion of Canada and United Auto- mobile Workers' Union C10-CCL open today. clared the "only alternative to co- R ashore at Nanayehnma." Home And Abroad MONTREAL (CP) - More than 1.000 Kiwanis club members are expected here today for the open- ing of the service club's .'i'lth an- nual Ontario - Quebec - Maritime: District convention. UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. (CP)-- Andrei Viahlnsky is expected to lake the floor- in the General As- sembly this week to criticize the United States for its apparent de- sire io establish its afoms-for- peace plan outside UN control. ANTIGONISH. N. 5. (CP)-- George Arthur Septon. 21. of Ter- race Bay. Ont, was killed Friday night when the car he was riding in went out of control at nearby Jack's Brook. Russian Rockers Go U 240 Miles LOND N (Reuters) - Russian scientists are sending rockets to height of 240 miles. a Soviet recket expert said over ,Moscow radio Saturday night. The height claimed by the Russian expert, identified as Prof. Stanyukovich. is more than so miles beyond that achieved by the most powerful us. rocket thus far disclosed. By GERALD FREEMAN Canadian Press lief! Writer ,HALIFAX (CP) - When Vlaho Milosiavlch joined the Iloyaiiat gueriilas in Naai-occupied Yugo- slavia one wintry night in Ilia he knew he might never see his pretty wife and blue-eyed "five-year-old daughter again. He didn't see them for 12 years. The young musician left home as though he were taking a casual stroll. Shivering German troops didn't turn their halmatsel heads as he passed. He didn't start to run until he reached the woods around his native village of Siber- nik on the Adriatic sea. Vlaho met his family again Sai- urday. may were reunited in the crowded dining salon of the liner Vulcania. A mob of ftalian-apeak- ing passengers gr elightsdly as he kissed his wife. - Maria Miloslavich and Doris. nearly 1'! and a high school grad- uate, spied Vlaho from the ship's rail as he anxiously paced the deck below in a siiffly- ressed Cana- dian Navy petty car's uniform. He failed to spot them. Vlsho. who had -an pass. was beginning to men's Institute Crapaud. Dance much; . - - first set of business as tbi parlq. immidfsthn . despair as be searched lueklsealy through the dos llner's endless corridors. A movie camera for Doris swung from his shoulder. Then a pretty blond girl tugged at his sleeve and smiled uncer- talnly. "Paps." she said. Vlaho almost forgot to give her the camera. When they were through immi- grltion. Visho whisked them off to the home of his landlady. Mrs. Hector ldacI.eod.' They will stay there until an apartment is ob- ialnsd. Vlaho started a ll-day leave Thursday to hunt for one. but had no luck. He figured it would be better if they all went looking together. ' Now 40. Vlsho expects to get the final endorsement of his Canadian siiissnship wife and daughter have already His tackled English. "I will give them a lesson each day." said Vlaho. who speaks all Slsv la and I ages including Polish - . sad Ipaniah and Ital- ian besides fluent English. vlsbor has ioaitaee the illlhtefnik wenilll. is the rays s un- -Marahal Illinois- ). This Cbataih 'il' raiding truck eon- hut there were variations: ' had escaped. Th men fought their VWI. hand-to-hand seuffles. loag- raage sniping. "all kinds of fighting" says Vlaho. nsccsm: orrican A They lived in the woods. ter- rorizing the Germans. A man had to be Vough and daring to stay alive. and nfflcers were picked for ability alone. Vlaho earned an of- ficer's commission with "the Duke from the People." one of Muscle- vich”s six division commanders. The duke was a former mthodox priest who gained a fierce reputa- tion as a bush warrior. Vlaho called him "the bravest man I ever knew." Vlaho aayii Tiin's Communists often he rlad the Chetniks. By 1 the Reds had become the Clfblnika' worst enemies. As the Germans were driven out. the duke's division of 20.000 fighting men. with hundreds of women and children. found themselves nearly encircled by Communists. One avenue of.eacape remained open until the women and children way out. Plagued by snipers and hphus. thtleet out on the L400- kiloinetre march to an Ailled-oc- sona near Trieaia. . 0.0!) survived the escape and the two-month march. The duke, who ledithem out. new I Former Guerilla Joined By Family l publishes the Yugoslav-language paper Liberty at Gerhlg, Ind. MAKES MUSIC FOR. NAVY Viaho spent most of his time in DP camps after arriving in fully. but managed a stint in the RAF. In May. 1948. the Canadian consul offered him a chance to come to Canada. He jumped at it. He worked first on a farm at Peierborough. Ont. then got jobs in factories at Windsor and Ham- ilton. "i have many friends in On- fario." Vlaho says. "Our people are all over Canada and the United States." In 19.52 he came back to his two old loves. music and the navy. "They are all sailors in the village where I was born." Hie ambition is to give Canarlais navy a music tradition of its own. He is getting his chance in the Sfadscoha naval band in Halifax. "They like my marches in the band." he says. "I'm always work- ing on them. The music is Cana- dian. Not I: n g l i e h. American. French-Canadian. Canada is my inspiration." "Serenades wsltses. an overture that reflects Canadian life-I'm al- ways working on that . I hope some day people will a art to play (Continued on Page I col 0 i Of Fish In Storm Conflict Between Focal Point Of Labor Party Meeling By TOM OCIIILTBI-IE SCARBOROUGH. England (AP) Conflict between moderate Clement Attlee and left - winger Aneurin Bevan. with West German marma- ment the focal point of their fight. overshadows all other business be- fore the annual Labor party con- ference opening in this Yorkshire seaside resort today. Attlee supports the principle of a German contribution to Western defence. Bevan opposes it. A clear-cut defeat for former prime minister Attlee would shake his grip on the party leadership. Indirectly such a. defeat also would complicate the task of the Western foreign ministers who begin work in London Tuesday on- proposals for giving the germans guns. Because of its age and past pol- itical successes, Britain's labor party enjoys great prestige among other Socialist parties in Western Europe. If British Lnborites op- pose West German rearmament, Socialists in those other countries would tend to resist the idea. French rejection of tlfe Euro- pean Defence Community plan has thrown open the whole question of West Germany's relationship with the West. This acts to in- crease the importance of the deci- sion the Labor party takes here. Attlee and Bevan are aware of these facts. So are most of the 3,- 000 delegates and alternates gath- ering here. MODEIIATES PREVAIL Over the opposition of the Bevanitcs. Attlee's moderates got Alllee And Bevan i the party's executive committee last Wednesday to adopt 3. care- fully worded resolution on Ger- many. This will go before the confer- ence with the blessing of the party's official leadership. Its operative clause calls on the executive committee to consult with other West European Social- ists on how best to get West Ger- many "to contribute to collective security in accordance with the principles of the United Nations and in a way which would preclude the emergence again of a German military menace." The Manchester Guardian said approval of the resolution would give the Attlee moderates "a freer hand in shaping policy on German rearmament" than they ever have had in the past. But an Attlee victory is not cer- lain. At the recent Trades Union Congress in Brighton a similar resolution of West Germany was adopted by a margin of only 455,- 000 in a. poll of 7,699,000. UNIONS CONSERVATIVE The trades unions-main source of strength of the Labor party- tend to be more conservative than the party itself. of the party posts to be filled by the conference. greaicst inter- est centres on the contest between Bevan and Hugh Gaitskeil for treasurer. The job carries with it a seat on the party's executive committee. Gaitskell, a former chancellor of the exchcquer, has the support of the moderates. New Silbslance Points Way for Advances in Biology And Medicine By TOM OCI-IILTREE By RENNIE TAYLOR BERKELEY. Calif. (AP) -- A University of California scientist has isolated and purified a sub- stance whlch makes possible the speedy growing of e n n r m o u s amounts of living tissues in test tubes. The achievement points the way toward some spectacular new ad- vances in biology and medicine. This potent substance comes fronuchicken embryos. It is a pro- iein whose major component is nucleic acid. a compound olosely related to viruses, to the heredit- ary factors called genes. and prob- ably in cancer. The substance is not new. If. was first extracted from partly hatched eggs several years ago. but in crude form. It has been much used in laboratories as a growth pro- moter. 0 Isolation and purification in large quantities means there can be a great speedup of the production of special living tissues of synthetic methods. HARVEST IIOIIMONI-ZS? Conceivably this may mean that scientists will be able to mass-pro- duce pituitary gland or other gland tissues in test tubes. keep them growing rapidly for an indefinite time and periodically harvest their yields of precious hormones much needed in medicine. However. it. will take time lo determine defin- itely whether this can be done. The purification work was done by Dr. R. J. Kuisky in the univer- sity's Donner laboratory, who. with Dr. Morgan Harris. a zoolo- gist. reported the findings in a pub- lication called experimental cell re- search. The Atomic Energy Com- mission and the University's zoni- ogy department is supporting the undertaking. One immediate benefit will be is speedup in the treatment of se- Vere burns, Dr. Kufsky said. Sci- entists heave used chicken embryo extraclii in this way before. They theorized that the extract acceler- ated lhe growth of new tissue. over the wounds. The pure substance should make this an even faster process. Dr. Kutsky reported. The experimenter now is trying to find out if there is a detectablq connection between the growth sub. stance and cancer. if a link iii found it will constitute another big step in the fight against malig- nancy. - .a ALL THE '30 NEHEAD PLAYS ARE Nor -J ton -rile i3Asr-:-- 'BALi. FlEl.D . TORONTO (CP)-Minimum and maximum temperatures: Gets 14.000 Pounds GRIMSBY. England (Reuters)- Onlookcra scratched their heads and wondered what the trouble was when the trawler Chrysolite steamed back into this fishing port Saturday after only as hours at sea. Capt. Tad, Hubbard had filled his ship with H.000 pounds of cod by casting his nets in is storm. I-ns successful trip is the shortest on record here. Pllor Killed in Ontario Crash -OTTAWA. (CF)-The pilot of a Mustang fighter plane. part. of a London. 0nt., reserve squadron. was killed Sunday when his plane crashed near the RCA!-"s Uplands air base here. He was identified as F0. James Arthur Foot of London. a member Min Max. Dawson . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 41 Vancouver . 50 62 Victoria M (ii Edmonton Fifi 61 Calgary 50 M Regina .. . ll 71 Winnipeg . 47 71 Toronto .. . 50 on Ottawa . 40 50 Montreal . . 53 60 Quebec . . . . . . .. so 59 Saint John 54 61 Monclon .... 51 67 Halifax . . . . . . .. 54 (in Fredericton .. . Si 88 Chs.' " i .. 5.1 05 Sydney . . . . . .. 55 60 Yarmnuih .. M 50 St. ,John's . . . . .. 39 55 HALIFAX (CF) - The weathr-1 office here says an area of show. ery weather has reached western New Brunswick and is forecast ti: spread eastward over the re- mainder of the Maritimes. Regional forecasts: Prince Edward Island: Showers. i little change in temperature: llghl winds. law-high at Charlottetown s 49 and I0. Eastern N.B. counties. lowes Saint John river valley: Showeri- ending this morning: a little cooled light winds; low-high at Moncfmi Fredericton and Saint John 10 aha 00. High tide today at Ghsshtietowd at lit)! a. m. and 11.12 p. in. Summeraide tide e utee later than Charla tetown High tide today at the Nest Shore at us a. in and are p. , sun rises today at see 5.3. ' of No. ii) auxiliary squadron. eouaieilpn j hisenmindw E. SA-Imosl:iSI,OOO Perish Wise; Typhoon SinltsJap Ferry