Sunny. becoming cloudy about noon and clearing In the eve- ning; cooler, Low-high at Charlottetown 45 and 63. layer mots, seller with r- ' dlon Want. Ads; Dial " 506 suit for classified ad taker, for quick results. Ii” , "Covers Pririce Like 11.. Dew" CHARLOT'rE'r0wN. CANADA... sA'.l'URpAY. SEPTEMBER s,- 195.; ' I ' ralclse ' REPORT Iiusstnims QUICK NO . r i A GermanyeMal(es I ew. APDeal F0r Reunificatiinf Similar Notes Are Sent To; Four, Capitals new that - West Germany made a direct appeal W "13 50Vr T-TFAGES , . MAY RETURN F0 LONDON SUNDAY Menziesl Mission To Bid Nasser Farewell Today Menzies is speaking for 18 of the 22 countries which attended the re- cent London conference. POSSIBLE COURSE! The Western powers appear faced with these possible courses. acctn-ding to lnformants:. i. simply to inform the secur- lty council of what has happened to create the present explosive sit- Rail Union To Protest C.N.R. ' nation In the dues area. 2. Ask the council to condemn Egypt for its act of nationalisa- tlon. which Britain and France csll an act of plunder andra breyh of international obligations. ' f in em there is "no truth" in reports that Britain is "under American prsssure"to we the dispute to the United Na- 0115. CAIRO (AP)-The Menzies mis- slllll talks with President Nasser ”have come to a complete end." . spokesman for the mission said Thursday night. The spokesman said the mission will only say gogdbye to Nasser today and will probably return to London Sun- day. t The ' ' '5 It C011- tirmed what had been reported in Cairo and Inndon earlier - that the mission headed by Australian - Prime Minister obert Menzies failed to find even a stanrtinl -Girl Lost In Woods Found ' Wet But Well MINTO. N.B. (CP) - Wet and Ont. Trapping Family On Move; Will'Cost b3,2OO TO COMMAND rectly 0PP059d throughbut the talks." FAINT HOPE lomatic quarters here. sies mission is abortive. point for negotiating peaceful let- tlement of the Suez Canal crisis. The spokesman said that for the live-man mission to leave Cairo without seeing the Egyptian leader at least once more would be "di- to the courteous atmosphere which has prevailed A faint hope that something may yet be salvaged from the Cairo talks was evident In Western dip- During the break in talks, the mission has been in contact with Washington and London. In the British capital, it was learned that the United States. Britain and France are sctivelydiscueslngtise possibility of referring the dispute to the United Nations If the Men- iiitherto. Britain has shown no desire to take such action. appar- omiwa (CF)-A ss,ooo.mem- her rallwnur union will protest to federal cabinet ministers and CN8 President Donald Gordon the 1'0 - tees to outside .3 3." The decision was nude End by the iolnt protective committee of the Canadian Brotherhood of Rll-IWIY Employees at the closing session of a five-d meeting. its-resolution crl clzcd the do- of thd government-owned line to turn over operations of the new Queen Elizabeth Hotel in Montreal to the Conrad Hilton hotel chain of the United States. Policy To The Federal Cabinet it also attached a CNR move to have car cleaning at North Syd- IIGY. N.S. done by a private firm and the leasing of the restaurant at Toronto's Union Sta- tion to Canada Railway News. The committee said some too ay restaurant employees at the Tori- onto station lost union contract protection and were offered em- ployment at about 10 per cent of earlier wages. "We are unalterably opposed to the present attitude of the gov- ernment and the CNR in these mltterl." said Frank Gillespie of Moncton, N.B., re-elected chais- rnan of the CBRE committee. To Landscape The Federal. Building In Surnmerside Cmdr. Charles Rodger Parker, DSC, 41. of Toronto and Victoria wllrcommand the navy's third destroyer escort HMCS Ottawa when it is commissioned later this year. The one a joins the St. Laurent and Asslhlboine, part of a fleet of 14 anti-submarine ships being designed and built in csns)da. (CP from National Def- ence . Dam, Causeway For Annapolis R. OTTAWA (CP) -- A combined dam and causeway costing an est- imated 82.750.000 will be con- structed to span the Annapolis River near Annapolis Royal, N.S.. it was announced Friday. A joint project of the federal and provincial governments. the proposed dam and causeway with exhatlated. it - year - old Loma Corey of nearby New Zion was found in woods one mile from her home Friday 14 hours after she had been reported missing. She is recovering in Minto hospital. A search party of more than 200 combed the district. Miss Corey was reported missing Thursday afternoon. RCMP. who directed the search, said the girl was found in heavy underbrush. Dr. B. E. Dysnrt said she was suffering from exhaustion and exposure. but her condition was "fairly good." CLOSEBT T0 MAB! YUBA CITY. Calif. (AP)-Jim Waliey. manager of Radio station RAGE, contended Friday that he has broadcast front closer to Mars than anybody else. The red planet Ihursday night made its closest approach to earth in years, and walley,broadt-ast a disk iockey WINNIPEG (CP) - A family of trsppers from the Ontario wil- derness passed through Winnipeg Friday on its way to new hunt- ing grounds in British Columbia. A patriarch in the Biblical tra- dition, 57 - year - old Orrah Kiel- czewski herded his wife and seven children through Union Station from the Fort Frances, Ont.. train to a day coach which will carry them to ll.C. For most of the children it was the first time they had been on a train. Even 25-year-old Orrah Jr. blushed and stammered when a reporter asked his name. "They aren't used to meeting strangers," Mr. Kiclczewski said. "They lived with us all their lives. None of them ever been to school, except by mail." Twenty-eight years ago Orrah brought his bride by dog team from Northern Manitoba to settle in the Rainy Lake wilderness, 60 Prince Rupert, . Pipestone River. they trapped animals for a living and raised eight children, ranging in age to- day from 26-year-old Wess to four- year-old Billy. One son remained behind in Ontario. He will follow the family west next month. "For years we've hankered for new territory," Orrah said. "We to neededuiew trapping grounds. It was getting sort of crowded in Ontario." When they left home their near- est nelghbor was a mere 10 miles away. Last year, Orrah boarded a ltrain, his first trip in 30 years, and went prospecting for new territory. He found what he wanted near Prince Rupert. Changing trains with the family In Winnipeg were three baggage cars loaded with dogs, descend- ants of the original honeymoon team. a 47 - foot home - made steamboat and household goods. Freight bill for the 1.800-mile trip will amount to S3100. we're going to slay in British Columbia." Orrah said "but we got a tent." we're not worrying." Mrs. Klelczewski. a small,.quiet woman, is expecting a baby with- in two months, but the family isn't worrying about that either. She hasn't ever "gone to hospi- I.” As usual, Orrah expects to de- liver and raise the child his own way. FIGHT COMMUNISM WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pres- ident Elsenhower lent his support Friday to a drive to carry the battle against international com- munism into high school and col- lege classrooms. The president sent a message to the newly-or ganlzed Committee on American Education and Communism say- ing students "must be taught to discriminate between the Ameri- can form of government and the let Union rrldsy in into the West in a new canlliiisn t0 .10 "Ill divided country. Russia was re- ported to have quickly t d down the new proposal. A long-expected note by Konrad Adenauer's government asked Russsia to negotiate wltht he West- ern powers in an effort to break the stalemate in reunification ef- forts. Identical notes were sent to W ” 4 London, Paris and Moscow. An additional five-page memorandum went to the Rue- sians outlining a plan for a de- militarized buffer zone along the Oder-Neisse line as proposed by British Prime Minister Eden a the 1955 Geneva summit confer- ence. - , OPPOBED RED BAN Accepting the note from the West German ambassador in Moe- cow, Andrei A. Grornyko warro ported as saying "the remilltarlo entiy fearing that the issue might become embroiled in endless de- bate. But there have been grow- ing demands from the Labor op- :.l:c1:l:,lce:n:c';or;'teclJt1emr:::r4g:,"o S.u'l.r-aiispeliitlire ml1::lneglslnoiIFIl)tll-ltllfl;.:lut(.:e:lI the "We don't have any idea where Soviet form." acres of msrshlands in the An- , nspolis Valley. it will also pro- ration and suppression of-freedom In rights" in West Gerrnlnypht made reunification impossible I this time. ' Mr. J. Watson MacNaught. the parliamentary Assistant to the Minister of Fisheries announced Friday that a contract has been hope that seine measures would be taken by the town of Summer- side to prevent dogs front run- ning loose and destroying the P"'l””" '"d '”'"'”'”d l'"" "l "' awarded to George Smith f th 1 and shrubs vld a perms t blih to I ' . l The soviet deputy fonts: l” ll l” we UN' , landscaping of the gro iqtsur: p'i:.li'.a thefg. 'ru.,wli,lechg,Y:uwb.: plade an olllen sndg lltaaydsquarg V ill-Cf clearly IIIGIDI4 Peceltt Iotli The government! decision IIIIW . undlng the Federal Building in a protection that should be accord bridge. Y by West Germany's constitutlmsai be known by Wednesday when Summgrgldg - gd mg only go um p-.d,,.1 gum. Many miles of dikes already p - , t court declaring the Commmunlst party illegal in his reference to suppression of rights. Russia showed no signs of back- Speciflcatlons of the contract call for shade trees to be planted all along the north. the west and southern boundaries of the land on which the Federal Building is Prime Minister Sir Anthony Eden addresses an emergency session of Parliament. rascn Arrrruolt protect the marshlands. But many require building, and the new structure is expec d to reclaim and offer better protection and dr ' to the marshes. lag lrounds but also tothe many other lovely lawns and flower gardens in Summerside. Negro Students Spreading In Paris. - iorelsn ministry situated. luseurmrnmtrr some .. mm, , ed .. 1 h, in n "M b. .. . Sturgia, Ky. (AP) - An Igly- of 150. . mostly 5. arm I on zixliuerselgla 1; edict we oumomm .u0eIl1 gas astnerida rizlialngtpanrz LONDOE Imam") 5 m,u.m.. Hari cash 5. tempered mob turned New "3Dut:kae;n:ee for KllI.HCl'0tl:(.l-lull, 11:3; zdtn-rauaryvay the three. two the Cairo talks. lie added: "What 11.: of mg bun , gym;-mg unemploymentfigures jumped by . ' A an dents back from anotha school had m:"""'u" 5 nu ';omh"'" Ram" um; prevailed .t C”. The Adenauer government stand- I W" 5flYhle' m'r'”:rgil"::cf"d' "''"Vm -53 ml-' l7.W0 in the year up to Aug. W113" "'3 l"”3l"”"" entering the small c n -- um - n in easinrn Tennessee where L hmy h"'i"l"”i' " gt. 7”. ..ston wi a cone, son A; . ,. . w . . . g , pg”, i . '. . .. , . H - . 4, H. ' , , bezweenioeonned states. nrIt- nm.u'irr'uu""”.uu'.”'v.rgrS?.T..u'ltt'””'”'””7''-”””'”'””'" ' V T595 "T ' i ' ” - ' "- trim Ines " ' -white studenteap rrtdsy.rhetoutuncmployosoa- urafor Britelnoethatdate was sin and France." gm, be . lfr. M N b said He said that France's attitude mm Fe ms t that when the project is complet- "' shoyeott" it to I United Nations reference ed the grounds" of the Federal as-z,opo.... 1...... op amp W miwuro (CP) - The big an WM "P l0 g . i . it . '" Ww" would depend "on the form the Budding will present a beautiful 1).. mm . July mm, 9.;-uy :5 swer to university needs is hard emu 1 2:31 .9 M "Fanny hm" proposal would take and on eppearsnce and one in which the comm M hy 15,000 my. up; cash for salaries, ii. 1''. iioerig. A imllll '3' cu” 1 m an , . A-. . ; i - . whether such a reference would people of Summerslde would feel am. who 1...; gun mg ychoop it manager of the research and de- siwgl" tun”, "Bk F w kl"? . v be justified." in iustlflnble pride. was 4' ated that the total work. Vclopment department of Du Pont in! "9 tmnwlm 3"” "W" V ' , - "”" '"' '""'"" "-"”' ""' M ""””””'” "W W'-""" 0' ""'"' -' We "' C”"' M” "M W” ”' ""”"" ” "” ”” '”'”"”' ””" l.awY0t' Disturbed BY 3teadY lnndon that U.5. State Secretary ad ,1 July Wu gtoqnoqy. My-. Mnnmthg axpmued an an address to the Toronto Rotary dldllln:.il:tItsrF'eelil.lul.liitmtI.iyeravu:l:.lo'; ugh. " on "Research and Can- :3 F&um:ll:'ncyd. mm 'u"' I H L I , conference "hm any h" cl" hi oonfhilmation. E V - . .' atia." Mr. Hoerig said the biggest wlgl "NF '3'" ” '" '3" a" t - I a;d.g.9l:u ' Nsssenwonatlonallsed e etindlg ..,tl p -v - - . v M comm iv o Commission For 35'-M M u-W3 W" "W"' W "”""m ””-"'''m is is 't:?ii'3.."'.:l :::r:.:..uru:"r:.. has insisted that the 100-mile watr list. and, in the case if his own minted Tuesday. was relatively vlnttlidt Tmib clulfmlll 01 the Joaquin .'r"' , 41. has taken ' raider his rights. REVIEW BY COURTS mntic way"-that is. through thin embassie s. up his post as Colombian sador to Canada. Former secret- ary. to Colombia's secretary of Canadian Bar Association's ctvn section. says he is dis- srwquesdbrthesbtplofmore company, the mate of growth of its the so countries must runain on research laboratories was entirely kw" ""9 't"'i9u"nV 1”” F can Egyptian control. Tharsd ties a Toronto housing expert are "unfit for animals to live gram. llswever. the piling the Info. " still ahead. no five-man conunlttee led II! I HALIFAX (C?) - City health committee or night re- solved a ht at 11 Halifax propan- llyl in." Dr. Gordon Stephenson reported he is making good progress in his survey of city housing, pro in limlnsry to a slum clearance pro- ggb sees: in a house-by-house inspection was Health Com lssioner Dr. Allan next year. The federal royal commission is called for in Term 2 of the terms of union under which Newfound- land entered confederation in 19W. Mr. Smsllwood received a let- ter from Mr. St. Laurent assur- hlm the federal government would try to "find Canadians of high distinction, broad vision and .3 .... under. .. to serve on the commission." The prime minister was reply- ing to a letter from Mr. small- wood which said a provincial corn- tmlssiod had been at work for two years preparing Newfoundland”- oese for the federal royal cont- . PROVINCE IEADY Mr. Smsllwtiod's letter said in part: "My colleagues and i feel that the time has come for me to advise you that the Newfoundland Nfld. Next Year part: "It is the feeling of the fed- eral government that the commis- sion will wish to hsv available for its work the full informa- tion about the first eight year! of union and the latest statistics which can be assembled based upon that experience. "For that reason we feel that it would be in the interests of both Canada and Newfoundland to ap- point the commission only after the new year so that when it com- mences its work it will be in a position to review the whole period of eight years specified in the terms of the union." REVIEW POSITION Tsrmitofthetarmsotunlon cells for appointment of a royal commission within eight years from Confederation to review the financial position of Newfoundla and to recommend possible tional financial assistance. dependent upon the rate at which it could acquire a capable staff. not all are going to be effective research scientists. "One reason is that our unlveaiv sllies are operating on borrowed time. Our professors,-are over- worked and swamped with under- graduste teaching loads. Less and less do we find the kind of intel- Iectual atmosphere conductive so contemplation - and to training comprehension of theory essential young people to develop the broad to good scientific work." FAl..l..-0IJ'l' FORECASTS WASHINGTON (AP) - The weather bureau Friday said it will make special public forecasts next week of the atomic fall-out ex- pectable in the event of an enemy attack on the Units! States. The forecasts will be made public at weather stations across the co n- try an a part of the Sept. 15 civil defence week observance. ville area were being einnmoned to their units. They will be taken to camp Brecklnrldge. near Stur- gis. to stand lry.for any trouble Monday. Mrs. Francle Armstrong. edi- tor of the Henderson. KY-. GIN!!- er and Journal, was one of the first to reach Clay. She was can rylug I camera but reported that a burly man ,, ched her and said: "Lady. you ain't going to take any pictures. We got women in this crowd who'll tale it away from you and smash it. And a far as that little squirt with you (referring to a reporta with lid) we'll beat him up." Mrs. Armstrong called state po- lice and asked for ptoectlon. She quoted Don Stufllll. lctlltl commissioner of 'publlc-"safety. as gaylnj "ru give you all the pro- tectlon I can with three men which isn't very many against .a crowd turned by a "cement encroach- ment upon and whittilng away of Government encroach m 2 n t I come "In the name of xpcdience or of economy or even of prtr gross,” Mr. Levlnter said. "Our vigilance must be directed not only to protect our freedom from being destroyed at one fell swoop from abroad - for which Canada is today spending " " of its yearly budget-but also to prevent its being chipped and whittled away front within." PASS RESOLUTIONS , The section meeting passed a number of resolutions urging re- vision of laws dealing with admin- istrative tribunals such as liquor commissions and labor relations boards. The lawyers said they feel It also urged that decisions of the citizenship minister under the section was looking into court recs ords and making outer inquiries to determine "just what inade- quacies and injustices result from the practices and procedure of ad- ministrative tribunals and from the failure of any right of appeal therefrom." HELP INDIANS W. E. Bentley of Charlottetown reported that problems of admin- istrative tribunals had not reached the importance in Prince Edward island that they had in other prov- inces. But his sub-section was par- ticularly interested in proposals for improving the lot of Indians. G. R. Matheson of Halifax re- ported "a real effort is being boards having quasi-judicial func- tions should operate ln the same me as courts in such mat- ters of taking of evidence, cross- examlnation and appeal. Mr. Levinter provided the meet- ing with summaries of reports from provincial committee chair- made to reorganize an active sec- tion." W. A. Gibbon of Saint John re ported steps should be taken in New Brunswick for simplifying procedure before administrative .tribunais and for reviewing the exercise of statutory duties by the foreign affairs. he served in SAINT JOHN, N.B. (CP)--Conn munity Enterprises Ltd. of Mont- real Frlday was awarded a 31.- 000.000 contract for construction of 100 new housing units In the city's north end by Central Mortgage and Housing Corporation. The Montreal firm entered a bid of 81.012338. The only other tender was received from Acme Con- struction Ltd. of Saint John for 31,040,337. y Residents are expected to begin moving into the multiple - family dwellings early next year with the last scheduled for completion by July til. 1957. WON'T END BTAIIMATI Them had been some ”1oose M099 W" "'Y0W'. 5"” M" . - 1, .- Indian Act should be subject he 1W-V- Vensweh "4 3'-"Bill!" i”' expect t is move to end the out sr. JOHN'S. Nfid. (CF)-Pro authorities would be ready at any 1-lk"ihI!Can-dmdesrlte I sh0r- wt; rl”;l';1".?l;q' ””'.'3l';,'.vm5:"T".:.f "':n"'"'”'uv':n”:':r ”:n':'. ml”: "haw review by courts of law. f,”h':m”'"'" ” W”"- (C9 West ' emate on Germany. Hou'”3 mler lmaliwood said Friday night time front now on to present their tile 01 Gniiineerl. was producins mid uj mm; aggrpliiow II ment' in a report 5, 1, man in a province-by-province break- ' believe the Russians are p. ,, he has received word from Prime case to the royal commission." lliuexcell 09 T933703 3193- but Z: "M an lung to 5. mew” ma he" amt” CEA .5, down. Mr. Levinter read reports to wait for years before agreeing Hanfux No, Minister St. Laurent that the royal It said Newfoundland placed This is not so. laid Mr. iloe- . 1'”? d V 1' mm .6,-km he mm "5 I... to the section meeting from cub- . to a settlement. commission to review Newfound- "the highest importance" on the '!E- W!” "9 '."'''m'F'”"t ', "3" on . ' leased Friday and will come be- "cm" cl'”h'"'91'- HOUSIHQ COHFYCCF 1'' WY '3'": '1"! In NIIVIIBN F" F0 A ' I land's financial terms of union commission's work. ' i 01 is: All --- 500 llllftlllllltl mm . CBA um"! mew” W J.”-yes J. mile, of 5;, John, . Moscow will not al seriously 3' nllna 3 Wm, cuud. Wm be at up .31; Mg, 5;, Ln.-any, map pug in Ph. D. degrees. but unfortunately from Bowling Green and Rueeell- duh ,,p0,t,d am; the Newfoundland lot In Salnf John with the question until after the the note made. public rial Democratic and cratic opposition "parties barrage of criticism. The Free Democrrt parliamentary group out had not gone one foot bayo West's stand as it existed ' lag the failure of the Geneva " ference last November. at it ii - their case. At Beechwood 2 Men Lose Lives In Accident Hydro Proiect I mm in N,wgo.,mn.nd, pr-inn Ed. courts. p FREDERICTON (CPi - RCMP 73 miles north of here. . ward Island. Nova Scotia. New Ulric G. l.aurnecelIK of Man-.besan drasglns the St. John River -mo on...-q,...p..gw...-1...... Brunswick and Ontario. Reports ireal said Quebec lawyers have Friday for the bodies of two Foun- and when . g. t F - -'-i '2": .'t:'”..': :t;"..r:::;mti.i::..cw.r: M mm 1- t- riv- 0 0 ' B i irlbudiliie ndlne tiauuheeri re- ill; had. bggl? hzidotnc themlast working on the tnsut hydro-eloe- ,,,T,'.;'..''",!,';',',,,';'':. ''L'",?,,'' y , - i ' ' dved from Manitoba. Seskatclr year. trlc project at Beechwood. about Nisp dd bud” P”; .' I ' e l n I e .'Anreport" NW3; tatue and I 3'"'t "'3',md '5' . - . on I t . -i ' dVlll'i(IItl0iCCldillIndlI'fIIIlSe'IN Ha I to N wenmn. norm (cm -um recall of On an other head. The coastal. and urges that it "mat on somehow Nutter out he 3' l";d;jff""”l::nf,ggm, ll 0 III U ear The gwicakazr. it -toooeatdartberesults Mall and Daily in Ihmitl 'W"""'P"'”-" it-rrcntytuoiuu.heo.enti.rtght - . W” 0 ' M miseiontoCeh'eriglitwlng.callfu- acIC.lIllU'lhIMNth " i v - sputum '3-uhugollv t-av-vw-r mm, ,, ,,,, M, M ,, ream. mun :"....... ..""..' .,.,,,,, m;,;: In Ruotolo Baby Kidnap Case "'3 ""”""'i "M '''l' " ""”' tn, -5... rnvhiltm -I-d "'0 "7"" 0' W NEW HAVEN. Conn. mu .. from the big liamden department l””"." "ll ut B. 3" """ b"'k""" ' investigators broke up along hud- store where Cynthia's carriage "u" '"””N"''' & fl” "" ' Flluua" Ml" die in the tragic Ruotolo baby was parked Saturday. ""'-"l'i'"'”'"' mi" "'3 WI '" " case rt-may without a hint of how The hem-'s mother. 83- "-ll;:: ”''''”''''l' W I close they are i;Ou:nlOI:liI0nc.omlh. """”"'W i Til-etmeiinte" cult-rt Ab- ""”'l""" w..dn.FfhY s."m Flitirrrt SS. Ullrhnnkliodld saylyafter ll investigators had a see- , "V" ll” To Ia Hts Luclty Day . three-hour costume in on poets in mind. they warn us- -a - 7., r - . Iellahlltv 7 em COVl.N.S.(CP! connected .v-its on i . an Wed- I- sl" . i -t .