who witmolimt “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Deal" CHARLO’I‘TE'I‘0WN CANADA, MONDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1957 TELEPHONE I506 ' Bayes meets sonar with Gnardhn W1-nt“ds. Dial8508askforolaasi- lledadtalrenforquickreanlta. :23 iii "°',‘.:';‘,:'EIvEcEN'rs BERLIN 12 PAGES Ajbrashesflclfilllbfifflu Depart-ru.0ttawa taken by The Film Daily, movie Newcomers Are Top In Film Poll NEW YORK (AP) — Joanne Woodward and Andy Griffith. two newcomers to motion pictures industry publication. The poll was made among press critics and television-radio com- mentators. Miss Woodward was selected for anoe in Three Faces role in A Face In the Crowd. The two films marked the first screen appearance for each. Miss Woodward and Griffith also were voted the two top “flnds" of the 1011‘. P. M. Arrives In The Bahamas NASSAU. Bahamas (Reuters)- Canadian Prime Minister Dlefen- baker arrived here Saturday for a vacation during which he plans to “relax and fish Diefenbaker. accompanied by his wife and secretary, new here in a department of transport Vis- count aircraft. He said he plans to return to Canada Thursday for Friday‘: reopening of Parliament SPRINGH-Ill BURNS SPRINGHILL. N. S. -— Am- Springhill. NS. business district businesses and six homes were 8 hcrst Daily News plier Ted Jolly caugh ing panorama of a b as flames swept Photogra- Boxing t the flam- ken minutes before flames reach town ed and Day. The picture was ta- destroyedtheofflceofthe - Last November. destroyed e 1,500,000 fire. 39 Springhill no- a mine disaster died in . CP Wlrephoto) Hamilton Man Found Murdered HAMILTON (CP) -— A wealthy property-owner, found dead Sat- urdsy l of blood in bk tiiw apartment decorated with Christmas cards. was struck ii the weekly Springhill Record. Nine Spring ill Begins I B . I - ‘ SPRINGHILL. N.S. (C?) —— As hundreds of curious motorists crowded into this oal - mining ‘own of 7.tIl0 Sunday. the task of cleaning up the debris of a dis- astrous Boxing Day fire got un- and town officials the replacement cost be at least 81.000 000. Flames still flickered in the cellars of the Main Street build- ings Sunday afternoon. more so after first alarm Thursday night. No one was in- lured Thd gloom um enveloped the towaafteritssecond x... the mystery of ll'e's " nup Job -edition on the street this week. Pat Maclseod. whose barber shop was destroyed. said compet- itor Leo White has loaned him an extra chair while Elmer Hyatt is Iroking room for him in his china P lifaclieod: “I'll be cutting hair again by “W .. Then reminisced: "Many years ago. a fellow Sprlnghiller was having a of UP TO SEEK AID Robert C. Coates. Cumbtrland ar ance. Main Street. leading through the town to the Cumberland Rall- way and Coal Company's two mines. was clear for traffic Sat- urday. Junk and scrap dealers have been‘oneb‘g';tiating ‘nth busi- IOIIIIIIII anyth usable lit in the rubble Ill‘ SNOWMAN JOKANNESIURO. I. Africa ha (Ieetua)—A da-snaa expedition. III by John Tunstsll. 45-year-old ml Vflk hgrg aaoiogist. left for Kenya to Investigate Mount Kiliman- IILLID I AGEIDINT SUSSEX. N.I. lC'Pl — George Drtlnlnond. QGOIIIFIIIY A. V. Roe Ltd. I Offers Aid . . I To Sfirfnglull rfALirAx (CP)—As Springhill. N.S.. reeled from its second die- asterlnayear.A.V.RoeCan- ada Limited. new owners of the town's coal industry. offered as- aiatance. The offer. coupled with a Nova scotia government promise of aid. will depend on results of damage surveys of Thursday's $1,5m000 The Roe move was made by ex- ecutive vice-president A. C. Mac- luipii Gilroy of Spring- hill said: "'My reply to Mr. sobey was: "Open No. 4 mine ou and r solved." No. 4 mine ' elosed Nov. 1. me. when an ex- d ed 89. It has not been Mayor Gilroy said he believes about 50 per cent of the fire dam- afi was insured and that about I pm‘ cent of the town's tax-pay- was yed. Speaking of government assist- ance. Premier Stanfield said he will make no commitment to as- sist the town until he receives enough information to reach a de- eiaion Mayor Sobey said he and’ Mr. Gordon have been appointed by “ti: company to investigate the Nationalization Is Big Topic At Afro-Asian Meet CAIRO. (AP) — Na "'°‘* disease has killed off 10 me pen- times on the head with a weapon and strangl with a scarf. an autopsy revea ed Sunday. Police said Eddie Shore, about 8. who lived the life of a semi- recluse. was battered almost be- 7 ted that Shore. a onetime taxi driver and Jewelry salesmah, had been dead at least two days more be his botbv was discovered. Three dollars were found in his pockets. Police. seeking to determine a m o t i v e, said apartment showed no signs of being broken into nor was it ransacked. Christmas cards on the walls and on a mantel greeted police and neighbors when they broke into the second-floor apartment. Harold Schure. the operator of a nearby antique shop. was be- lieved last man except the slayer to see Shore alive. Schure said he had coffee with Shore Monday. DISEASE HITS PENGUIN8 , VANCOUVER (CP) — A lung qulns captured in the Antarctic uring a special expedition. Zoo- logical officials fear it may spell doom for 46 others cattered in three United States and Cuadian aoos. NICOSIA. Cyprus British Governor Sir Hugh Foot rode on horseback through moun- tain-top villages Saturday in his campaign to bring peace to this strife-torn island colony. Foot. striving to ease the hos- tility between the Brltlsh and the Greek and Turkish Cypriots. rode it ernor in more than 25 years. He stopped often to talk with the startled Cypriots and at sev- eral villages was presented with bouquets of flowers. When one man shouted “go away." Foot quickly reined in his horse and shook e man's hand. THOUGH BATTLEGROUND The governor’s ride took him through Bellapals village. where last year thousands of British soldiers waged a c a m p a ign against a stronghold of the EOKA terrorist organization de- dicated to having Cyprus united politically with Greece. He was accompanied by other horsemen on his final get- acquainted tour before returning to Britain next week for talks on -the colony‘: future. Foot. 50. who took over as gov- ernor from Sir John Hard-ing less than a month ago. has travelled the island by helicopter. automo-‘ bile and on foot. talking with Cy- priots. WOMAN TELLS STORY At one stop Saturday. he was 13 way motormen which caused the II‘ ates the subways and city-owned ll -hour over a two-year (Reuters)—- promised to investigate the com- next week. plaint personally. The Cypriot newspaper Phile- leftheros says in a dispatch from Athens that Foot will recommend concessions to th is when he meets with British government officials TREDRESTRICT TRAVEL TO GoverJnorOfCypru'sMakes Dramatic Move For Peace The newspaper says he would urge "real self - government" for Cyprus “without the dictatorship of a governor” and that a new constitution should be drawn up a conference where exiled Archbishop Makarios would rep- resent the Grek Cypriots. NEW YORK <APJ—The Trans-‘ port Workers Union Sunday voted‘ to strike the city's subways and bus lines Tuesday midnight when. its current contract expires un- less a settlement is reached. The action came only two weeks after the end of a strike by sub- worst transit tieup in the history‘ of New York. Buses continued to run during that eight-day strike. The TWU. headed by Michael Quill has threatened to halt sub- way service many times over the years but the threat never has materialized. Almost 5.000 TWU members at- tended Sunday's meeting and the vote was overwhelmingly in favor of a strike. The TWU has been asking a 65- cent-hourly l n c r e a s e and the Transit Authority. which oper- bus lines, has offered 18 cents an The strike threat is also against guards on Christmas D a y. Foot eight private bus companies and PARIS (AP)-—France. with in- flation threatening. is reported seeking a $400,ll)0.000 loan to help industry pay for raw materials and head off a recession and un- employment. Half of the loan would come in the European Payments Union and half from the Interna- tional Monetary Fund. Finance Minister Pfllmlin took advantage of the recent presence in Paris of finance niinlsters at the NATO summit meeting to sound out French prospects. INFORMAL SOUNDINGS He made informal contacts with the United States on an interna- tional monetary fund loan, and with Britain. West Germany and The Netherlands over the Euro- pean Payments Union. These ne- Report France Seeks Huge Loan rled through in January. Premier Felix Gaillard's two- wuionth-old government is trying -to show it means business in put- ting the nation's tangled financial and economic affairs in order. The 1958 budget—which cleared its final parliamentary hurdle in the upper house Friday—is the tough t presented since the war. New Strike In N.Y. Threatens ltempt today to get an injunction the Yonkers Railroad Company. The Transit Authority will at- against a strike on the publicly- owned transit system. but Quill has said he would ignore such an order. AIDES WILL PITCH TN If he is jailed. he has said. the strike would be run by “second, Order; Allies BERLIN (AP) — Communist East G e r m a n y has imposed travel restrictions on Western civilians — including diplomats- travelling in and out of isolated‘ Berlin. The allies planned a proi test to Russia. I In an obvious effort to force, recognition from the West. the Communist r e g I m e announced that effective Jan. 1 travellers tlirough the satellite nation. in effect. it is another Berlin blockade, with passage of West- ern civillans in and out of the old German capital possible only by air if they refuse to gel East German visas. The regulations were announced in the East Berlin press. East German officials sent notices to e British. United States and French missions here. 110 miles behind the Iron Curtain. The Communists side-stepped a crisis similar to the 1948-49 Soviet blockade of West Berlin by ex empting the allied military gar- risons from the regulations. WON'T APPLY A U.S. mission spokesman said: must have East_ German instead by-step policy of granting of Soviet visas to enter and pass trappings of sovereignty to the 3 Quill told the mass meeting there would be “no extensions of the contracts on any lines" but an’ th was ready to “do our best to conclude an agree- ment." Moncton Man's Condition Is Still Critical AMHERST. N.S. (CF) r Del- phine Richard, Moncton ewspa- per photographer. remained in critical condition in hospital Sat- urday but four other victims of a ens?-Fridu at .&dfl- hill Junction. .S., were reported resting comfonabl . Richard. suffering from head in- juries. is with Moncton's French language daily l’..'Evengeline. The newspaper's editor-in-chief. Em- ery LeBlanc. is considered out of danger. He has broken ribs. Also in hospital are .1. .1. (Bo) Haley and Lawrence Webb of Am- herst. believed occupants of the second car, and Weston Carmody. who occupied the third car. The accident happened as the newspaper men ere en route to Springhill to co er the million- dollar fire there. It inc udes rigorous economies and increased taxes. TRY FIX PRICES At the sametime a three-man board of price dictators has been named to fix and hold skyrocket» ing prices as a first step in an all out battle against inflation. The lfltional Assembly deputies return from their New Year vaca- tions ln mid-January. Then Gail- lard faces trouble from his gov- INDIAN FIRE BRIGADE VANCOUVER ¢CPl—'I‘he Mus- queam Indian tribe plans'to form its own fire brigade for the Point Grey reservation. The move fol- lows a fire on the reserve Tues- day in which si children of widow Connie Louis died. The house in which the children per- lshed was out of reach of the gotiations will probably be car- ernment reform bill. at‘ -.;->:: - kl ‘. ,3 Vancouver fire brigades longest hoses. ._ ,_-__ .,. ME‘ 1 i . x i“" third and fourth level" TWU lead- 1 “We have no intention of apply- ng to the East Germans for East German Gov’t Issues Will Protest visas" Britain and France re- acted similarly. The West has refused to recog- nize lhe East German regime. Under four-occupation accords. accredited allied civilians have been able to obtain Russian visas for travel through East Germany. The Western Big Three in co- operation with West Germany have been opposing Russia's step- all the German puppet at e. If the Russians have not ar- ranged for any diplomatic ex- emptions. it would mean that about 350 allied diplomats and de- pendents here would be com- pelled to limit their travel to and from the West to air transport. Air traffic is not subject to Com- munist checks. The visa regulations also will hamper the travel of allied dip- Iomals and other citizens sta- tioned in Moscow and Warsaw. The Russians gradually have been limiting the number of visas issued to allied citizens travelling to west Berlin from West Ger- many. Despite allied protests the Russians have given visas only to those citizens who were attac to the military occupation - mands In West Berlin. l Miners Killed Only Few Hours Before Layoff AMONATE. Va. (APl—Elcven canvas-draped bodies were car- ried from the explosion-torn Po- cahontas Fuel Company mine at dawn Saturday. A few hours later a In-man team of federal, state. union, and mine company inves- tigators began a prob: in the dis- aster area—some 500 feet below ground. The gas - produced Friday nleht trapped in din-vest. subterranean chambers straddl- the mountainous Virginia- West Virginia border. Rescue Workers. with heavy oxygen tank strapped to their backs, burrowed through fallen rock. dust and fumes to reach 14 survivors and lead them to safety near mid- explosion 25 miners I‘ E ght. Pocahantas officials said all but three of the ll victims had just 5% hours left in the mine be- fore they would have been laid off from work indefinitely. The company said it was cutting 70 per cent of its force of 534 cm- ployees from the payroll at mid- night due to a shortage in coal orders. BLAST UNEXPLAINED Survivors said explosion of the gases. found in all coal mining operations. sent a shock wave re- verberating through the sprawl- ing underground reaches of mine No. 31. There was no immediate explanation as to what touched off the blast. This was the second explosion In Pocahontas mine in 11 months A February gas blast at a mine near Bishop, Va, also in Taze- well County. snuffed out 37 lives. FOREMA.\’ l.Al' DED auemcadss to gases and dust until A coroner's report gaxe the cause of death for the ll men Fri- day as asphyxiation 4 Thirteen of the trapped surviv- ors credited 44 - year - old mine ‘ forcman Woodrow l-Evans with: saving lIl(‘ll' Il\'(‘s through cml- i headed supervision in the blockcd off coal loading section. When the explosion hit,"€ l l l WF.l.LlN(iTON. New 7.caland| (Rt-uters>~Wcary explorers Sun- day reportcd slow going in efforts to reach the Smith Pole from (‘Ill-‘ ferent sides of the Antarctic con-. nent. Dr. Vivian Fuchs reported his British team only 15 miles in h ours Saturday through drifts of soft snow Fuchs radioed two of his vehicles were‘ breaking down under the “heavy, going." the Pole from the South ays. Meanwhile. from the group headed by Sir Edm American side of the frozen con- ‘ON! ttnent. it expected to cover the Other scientists are on the con- rernaining too miles in abut: is fluent to carry out observations. From Work Evans said. "my first thought was to cut the power in the sec- tion we were working to keep the danger of more explosions down. your foreman. Many of you have as much experience as me and a lot of you are much brighter than me. We have to figure a So let's get our heads tolefllcl-" Evans told how his man pd ‘ keen «It . deadly rescue 5 unit arrived. Monoxide Gas Takes Four Lives SHERBROOKE, Que. Carbon monoxide from a gee- fired refrigerator killed four per» sons whose bodies were found in an apartment house Saturday. the ickson‘s 81-year-old mother Efiel. There will be no aut pay. Police said the refrigerator flame had been turned up too high and the exhaust flue appeared to have been blocked. Erickson could have turned it up himself or it could have been turned up by a repair man, they said. The Ericksons had plained to owners of the apart- ment building that the refrigera- tor did not cool properly. Dr. Gagnon said the family had been dead at least since Dec. 21. Unopcncd Christmas presents la_\- undcr the tree when the bod- ies were found. SUSPE("I‘ ARSON MMDI-Z.\'llF..\l). England lAP\ ——Firc dcsiroycd the interior of a luxury ll0lI.<f‘l)Oal belonging to film star Diana llm‘.<' estranged husband Friday. Police say they suspect arson EAntarctic Explorers Report Slow Time In Heavy Going FIRST 0\'l-ZRLAND TRIP Fuchs is attempting the Tu‘~l overland cmssing of the while continent Hillary's job is in help Fuchs mcr the last‘par1 of the journey from the Pole in .\ft'- Murdn Sound. Scientific instrumem< (‘I-|I'TlP(‘l In Fuchs eight snow \f‘hi(‘lf‘s are collecting topographical and gla- ciological data along lhf‘ mine Hillary's part; is (‘(]llIDDf‘(l with three small tractors Tho work of The ll-man party is approach- path expedition: is part of inter- national Cf‘0pll_\~‘l(‘aI Year of- The Norwegian icehreaker Norael arrived at Dunedin Saturday with life of the Pole. the New Zegignfi I7 l-‘ranch scicnlisls bound for the ufi [fl]. Dumoniz d'l'rvi|le area on tfl _ lary radioed they had eovq-ya 44‘ Australian side of Antarctica. V f V‘ V I J‘ ‘_ llllles in their tractors sq‘-4].!) The "down - undcr" sis . ‘ -. at (V t -‘Viv Hillary reported Ila pug m, warm spell has melted the |fi- . {gfl J‘, 3, .- “ -_,.w..._, ‘l ‘,. i, V ‘I ’ ,‘ l he under the long tr‘ "3 hlpacked runways at the us. bg , . f .'::'.....°' '':'.''.......'''~ ':.*"~*- ......‘ *;°“...o"...."°: .....:'i.:°* . , dhe NEW PILOTIESS, FICTU-TAKING PLANE e-nuiimineaam-Ive-mm - _ ads mi. Us Air rates h Q3 lasvu Iuieflag flatter-in is fires its one Ilene autornaticalmera sin-ml o-tn-irk-my ea mvadgbt on cross. the Army mg lithe nvefln I fin. 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