TELEPHONE B506 3'-W0" NOON 0030' Willi Gwldim claerwhll feweIeudylmervls;fog fwd -d who f-rs-M -wits lslgiretdaerieftetewailendas. "Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew" CHARLOT'I'E'FOWN CANADA, MONDAY. JUNE 24, 1957 - PRICE 5c 74 PAGES The 11.8. Navy's fifth submarine. the Sargo. takes shape pictun I at the Mare Island naval shipyard Washington, 5H -susauromo atomic the Sargo Is In foreground in this leased by the navy in June 21. Tire Sargo is near San Francisco. :.The stern of the first atomic sub to be built In a West Coast yard. (U.S. Navy Phat via AP Wire- photo) Five Vacancies In Cabinet Filled OTTAWA (CF - John Dieta- balrer temporarily filled the- v ' In his cabinet Sat by appointin g acting ministers from among the already - named members of his new Progressive Conservative cabinet. At the same time. he told report- ers that while he is In London for about the next two weeks with De- fence Minister Maj. - Gen. G. R. Pear-kes. his external affairs port- folio will be handled by Justin Minister Davie Fulton and the da- fence department will be In charge of Revenue Minister George C. Nowlan. He has previously announced that the acting prime minister in his absence will he works Minister- Howard Green. ACTING PM On Saturday. the new prime minister also said that Mr. Green will be acting minister of defence production until a permanent ap- pointment is made to the poet. Other acting ministers: I. North crn Affairs Minister Douglas llsrkness win take care of agriculture until a minister is named. likely soon after Mr. Diet- :n;sk'er's return from London u . 1. Justice Minister Fulton wll hiandle citizenship and immigra- ton. . 3. Solicitor-General Leon Balcer will be acting minister of'rni.naa and technical surveys. 4. Veiarans Affairs Minister Col. A. J. Brooks will be acting minia- ter of health all welfare. Mr. Dietenbaker met reporters late Saturday after a cabinet was his second semi- nar-the preu h” two days, an unprecedented num- ber for a federal government head. He was sworn in only Fri- day. FEW ANNOUNCEMENTS Relaxed while he awaited his Sunday departure for the London Commonwealth prime mlnlste at conference. he made a few an- nouncements and chatted on a va- riety of topics. Major announcement - apart from his temporary cabinet une- up-was that the federal govern- ment is offering to contribute an a 80-50 basis with British Columbia In completing a 130-mile stretch of highway between Stewart and Cassiar In that province. The central treasury was will- Ing to contribute up to 31,500,000 a year for four years as a means of helping open up the north. Brit- ish Columbia should be able to start work on the protect this . meeting. it fssual - Dies Following Motorcycle Crash SUSSEX. N.B. (CPI - lineari- sclous since Ids motorcycle and a car collided near Sussex Thurs- day. David Cornaliru Hope. 35. of Halifax. died Sunday. The acci- car driven by Norton. MORTAR KILLS FOUR FORT SILL. Okla. (AP)-alfollr soldiers were killed and between l7 and 20 severely Injured Satur- day when. a mortar shell exploded on Fort Slil's cast firing range. As army spokesman said troops were staging a mock attack on shill. aide position. IIIPPOHBII by men- tar fire. when a short round fell among them. dent on a blind knoll Involved a clause. But as 1” l4 Killed In Crash Al 3. c. Airfield VANCOUVER (CP) - Fourteen persons were killed Sunday when a Pacific Western Airlines plane crashed and burned shortly after take off from the airfield at re- mote Port Hardy on Vancouve- Island. Airlines officials here announced the death total almost four hours after the twin-engined DC-3 was reported to have dut its nose into the ground; tipped over and burst Into flames. Stewardess Pat Wilson. 23. of Vancouver and three others es- uped. Their Injuries were appar- ently not serious. f The airline said the remains of is bodies were recovered from the clIll'l'Cd yrs K839. There were 15 passenge : and three crew membc on the plane. when it left Port Hardy, at the ex- r treme uothcrn tip of Vancouver Island. for Vancouver. An RCAF Dakota, which flew to the scene from Vancouver with a doctor and nurse. radioed back in air force headquarters here that the plane burned 'jio a shell." Only watu was available to quell the blaze and the air force said chemicals would have been the only thing effective enough to have stopped the fire. Mrs. H. Lcnnox. whose home is near the Port Hardy airfield, said In a telephone interview she under- stood from eyewitnesses that the plane had left the ground when It developed trouble In its lift mech- anlsm. "It apparently turned back and, while trying to land. its nose hit the ground and the plane turned over about halfway up the run- way." Mrs. Lennox said. She added that there was a "terrible" fire following the crash and "It's a wonder that anyone got out alive." Mrs. Lennox said her informa- tion. confirmed by PWA authori- ties. was that the stewardess. identified as Miss Pat Wilson. 23. of Vancouver walked out of the biasing ckage. She is believed to have suffered bruises and burns. Three others. she said, were dragged out alive by emergency rescue squads. Port Hardy is a busy commer- cial and RCA! station. of 2,500 persons. equipped with a small emergency hospital and rated one of the beat on the west coast. It is air nrili northwest of Van-' couver. FIRE-2.”! HOMELESS PUSAN. Korea (AP)-A gaso- line-fed fire raced through wood and cardboard shacks near the Pusan port Sunday, killing I2 Ko- reans. injuring 36 and leaving 2,- 000 homeless. The fire began after gasoline trickled from a broken U.S. army pipeline to nearby squatters' shacks. The names do strayed N0 dwellings. MELFORT, Saslr. CP) - Five children-the eldest 1: -- died in their beds Saturday while their mother fought a heroic but vain battle to save them along with summer. Ir. Diefenbaker declined to give a direct answer as to when Par llament would be called into an- which, among other would be cut. ' asap rrxrao OXFORD. England (AP) - Oa- ford University has appealed to former students for ll.'I30.Q In donations to preserve its an- cicnt buildings. Many buildings are to show their ass. .:..?-....m.m...m....-:1 tbdr father and baby brother from their 'Iamlng home. The mother. -35- year -old Mrs. Camrella Aubin. suffered burns over 10 per cent of her body as to awaken her sleeping youngsters. She was in serlou condition In hospital. Mrs. Anbln saved two-month: old Robert and awakened her hus- band. Albert. in time for him to escape without serious Inlury. but as she melted downstairs a second time. she collapsed into the flames. Killed were: Martin Andrew. 1. Clarence Jo- seoh. I. Paul Emile. 11. Thomas 51,500 Doctor Bill is Tossed Away By Medical Committee lands Safely On Three Engines vsadouvaa (cm-. A runs- Constel- BAY SHORE. N. .Y. lAP)-inf pneunloda on one of BennV'l Yau:IgnBenay Ifooper's3l.!ll doc- lung was clear-cl up. for waetaasedaway Drzltrissaidhewtinabont l"::;rn' ussiaiiw I la: ll lfijlr 3.335 ssrnuasr. ll. ICPI - Lswrarec. I. at 5 Children Dead, Heroic Mother Critically Burned Albert, 13 and Sharmalne Cecile. Mr. Aubin said his wife was burned in farming back down- stairs. .. as oviet Warsh ips Use For First Time Since 1917 UGZ Expect Lid To Stay On Political Pot Until Spring ..?T.l3.wi.J..Cl.oiEn.TiT.. ”.?li'l533 A on feel it is highly unlikely that' the top will blow of this year. ' DARTMOUTH. N.S. (CPI-'I'wo.Slie uas Ihroitled at Union High- . y patients who escaped from thc,uay. near Dominion. with a silk olgirey gseeneeralueelgtteitgmfn urwaal; Nova Scoiia Mental Hospital here. i stocking and a coat hanger. liall tho-ugh the gap between the Pm: holding a nurse at knrfcpoint. 'was committed to the Nova Scotia gressive Conservatives and Lnpvvere captured Sunday evening byyhospital after being found medl- mm is narrow. some mpymnk ill(fISflv)ii:uabout two miles from the fglillyinilgnflt for trial at preliminary . . . . . ::f;3;k::lep3:gpi::':b:;2'ffcgxg1 The nurse, 19- year -old Jessie Miller, from Annapolis County back Hum the spring of 1958 ISrmpson.of Glace Bay, N.S. borkc;N.S., was also in hospital on I Perm m M e t I C! i .away from the patients about half government warrant. lie had been P; 9 33 3 T 9 k 5 an hour before they were cap-it-harged with arson before his "'?"P3'- 01' any PNW i la 95 lured. She was found slumped oni mittal. minmns 0f d”n3f5 i0 "1" 3 "ma a lawn at nearby Gaston Road.l RCMP Inspector R. J. Hermann PMS" 0" I HEUOMI 503iE- "1039 hysterical and exhausted. 'of Halifax. leading the search. close to the scene say coffers of The patients, Maynard Hall of said a police dog from the Truro emptied by the last campaigning. New Waterford NS. and Thomas RCMP detachment picked up the when the. first session of Par- Miller were found within a half escapees” trail from a shirt one liament Will be called has tnotvhour in dense woods in the area, had thrown off near the hospital.5 been made known. Prime Mmrs- RCMP said. They were returned The patients took the pretty red- ief Dlefenbaker likely Wlll 8ss8m- To hospital. head student nurse from a hospi- ble PBTUEHIBD1 in Selltembc . The burly Hall. in hospital on tal tubrculosis ward about 1:30 0? 0010139? I0 801 8 Vol! of funds government warrant. was charged p.m. ADfI' Sunday and made her with which to continue govcrn- last November with the murder of lead them from the hospital and merit administration. Annie MacNcll of Dominion. N.S. across the grounds to nearby Diefenbaker Leaves For London And Conference OTTAWA ICP)-Prime Minister Diefenbaker. leaving Sunday for the Commonwealth prime minis- ters conference in London. said the Commouwcultlz has "a man- date for freedom" as important now as before the United Nations and NATO were formed. "I believe the Commonwealth has opportunities in the years ahead to assure and maintain freedom. . . equal to any of its opportunities In the past." he said just before his plane left Ottawa for London at 510 pm. ADT. The RCA.l"'s luxury C-5 airliner was carrying the 01 - year - old prime minister to his first major task since he assumed the reins of government on Friday. The Progressive Conservative leader. accompanied by the new defence minister. Maj.-Gen. G. R. Pearkcs V .C.saId he is looking forward to the London conference which opens Wednesday and lo the exchange of ideas which will take lace. Mr. Diefenbaker reiterated that he will press for the calling of a Commonwealth trade and eco- nomic conference. Through the years his party had believed In a Commonwealth "in which a maxi- mum of trade will be assured. NEW MARKETS "I believe such a conference is with good weather. night to Gander. Nfld.. for a one- Deibnce Minister Pearkes. who ihour refuelling stop before an SVA- visltcd London last year for can-'hour transatlantic flight. tennary celebrations of the Vic- The prime minister was ex- tor-ia Cross award. said he is look- pectcd to arrive at London at 11 ing forward to renewing acqualn- n.m. British summer time (7 am. tances and meeting mcmbe . of ADT). the British armed forces. About 200 persons were present Mrs. Die fe a baker and Mrs at the RCAF station at Uplands on Pearkcs were travelling on the the southern edge of the city to night. expected to take 14 hours. see Mr. Diefenbakcr off. Jules Leger. external affairs un- Among them were half a donut dersecretary; Robert Bryce. clerk of Mr. Dlefenbalrers cabinet. in- of the cabinet. and A. F. W. clurhng Works Minister Green who Plumptre. assistant deputy mlnls- will be acting prime minister in tor of finance. R. A lilackay. Can- his absence. . ada's permanent UN delegate. also Mr. Diefenbaker waved towards travelled with th group to attend the cabinet group from the steps a meeting of the UN economic leading to the plane and said. "I and social council in Paris. know everything will be wonder- nop AT GANDER ful with such a fine group." The prime rnlnister and his The plane is piloted by Sqdn. wife. who was wearing a navy Ldr. Gordon W. Webb. 33. of Hans blue suit and a matching wide- ilton. 0nt.. -"L. ommand of ufmmed hat. shook hands with the RCAF's 412 transport squad- assembled members of the diplo- ron. Hecxpectd to take a-A or matic corps before boarding the four hours for the first leg of the Report Royal Effort To End Ban On Divorcees At Palace been overlooked. writes Edwards. ''It is a powerful illustration of LONDON (AP-A London news- Menial Patients Escape, Hold Nurse; Recaptured woods. One had taken a carving knife from a ward kitchen. BURST FROM WOODS The girl was found by Murray Ritcey of nearby Gaston Road af- ter a boy told him she had burst from the woods bordering his farm. About I00 area residents. two naval helicopt a, two RCMP po- lice dogs and hospital staff mem- bers joined RCMP in the search. lnforrned sources said Hall started from his first-floor reward The nurse fell and he entered a tuberculosis ward where he met Miller and Miss Simpson. The three were seen crossing hospital grounds by sisters of charity from the nearly Immacu- late Conception convent. The sis- ters. believing they were a doctor. nurse and patient going to an ac- cident scene. sent children after them The children saw the trio enter woods about Z10 yards from the hospital but lost them A staff search was organised immedlatly and at 3 p.m. RCMP were called in. Area residents also joined the hunt. which spread through thick, evergreen wood near the hospital. They were cap- tured about 6:30 p.m. DIDN'T ATTACK Clothes torn and arms and face scratched from the thick bushes. Miss Simpson told reporters: "They didn't attack me. ”But each time the helicopter went over they said they would cut me If I jumped up." She said Hall and Miller hauled her under the bushes each time a helicopter went over. RCMP said the helicopters spotted the trio twice but lost them before pursuers could reach the area. Miss Simpson. still sobbing fer her five-hour ordeal. said she saw a farm and ran screaming from the patients. She couldn't re- member L ”- r they tried to stop her. RCMP said the escapees didn't put up a caught. A knife was taken from Hall. Labrador To Sail For Arctic HALIFAX (CPI - The navyis Arctic patrol vessel Labrador Will leave here for the far north Tues- day to support the sesborne supply of Dew line radar bases in Can- ada's Eastern Arctic. Six scientists aboard will carry paper suggested S u n d a y that Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip are trying to break down rigid court rules against consorilng with divorcees. Robert Edwards. writing in the necessary today to provide new markets and expand old marlu.-ts." It was especially necessary to "create a major increase" in mar- kets for Canadian wheat. The pres- ent huge surplus could be "very the confused and illogical attitude of the palace toward divorce." ers "who insist that divorced per- "The fire seemed to get in the front of the house by that time and the stairs were burning. She fell into the fire as she came downstairs." Mr. Aubin grabbed her and nil- ied hr through the front door and took her to the hospital. Lats she was flown to hospital in Sea- katoon. in) miles away. Coroner A. C. Chandler said none of the children had awak- erred. "They were all found in bed In the upstairs bedroom on the north side of the house." he said. "Two boys were In a double bed just by the double window In the room. The other two boys and the girl were found in a lower bunk located on the south partition wall of the room. They were quite badly burned." l Sunday Express. cites as evidence sons must be treated as social out- ihe Queen's "public and intimate association" with Douglas Fair- banks Jr. and his wife. both of whom went through the divorce courts before their marriage. 'The American couple enter- tained Elizabeth. Philip, Princess Margaret and other members of the Royal family at s lavist coun- try house party during the fash- lonable Ascot horse races last materially increased" this year .m..s......m.m...... Board Of Trade Meets At Halifax HALIFAX tCP) - Registration for the iilst annual meeting of the Maritime provinces boards of trade will continue here today. Officials aid that when reglstra- w tion is complete I10 boards of trade and chambers of commerce will have registered. Todsyls sessions will feature ad- dresses by C. H. Schoflcid. man- ager of the C nadian Chamber of Commerce. and R. J. Rankin. president of the Atlantic Prov- inces Economic Council. Sessions will and Tuesday night. Ascot or hold office at Bucking- ham Palace." He says there is overwhelming evidence that the royal couple both object to what he calls the "snub- bing" of divorcces. Edwards notes that Elisabeth and Philip have several relatives whose marriages were dissolved-including five of Philip's first cousins. ENLIGIITENED VIEW "Is it really likely that while so eelr. The next day the Queen invited the actor-produccr and his wife to join hcr circle of friends on the may of mg prgngy, funny my. lawn inside Ascot: my-I genclw this enlightened view towards or- IIN-l10Tmll1Y blfftd 10 dlV0l'f-Itdxvorce, the prince himself regards P9l'l0M- lit as a sin to be condemned with all the harshness displayed by the Rfmkmnnia EVENT Ssbbatarians toward his Sunday Til” ll I "I-'m"lilb'9 "3"'- game of polo?" the article asks. "'9 N" 'll-"mu"? ill 'Vl'lCi' ii" "Nor is the contempo may view about divorce absent from the West lethal-at sf "erlwe Queen's relatives. Quite the oppo- site. There are more divorced people on the Queen's side of the family than on the prince's. . . which certainly indicates that her family's attitude to this question is In harmony with that of the people." SERIES OF PARADOXES Edwards argues that the court attitude "exposes the royal fam- fact they have views of the church and palace. killer of the faith. she should ob- serve the laws of the church and 0l.Il '-7iiw"d” "'3" "" ”'"”"' M" the Davis Strait Barrow Strait outlook is dictated by church lead- "Id wemnzm. Chanel "mom. y map out an casts not fit to tread the turf at United 5”." mpply Sm" mov. coast. Fifty ships are in the supply hydrographlc and oceano- graphic surveys and research. Scheduled for survey this year are Late in August the Labrador will escape route for ing Into the Arctic from the west fleet. The vessel will go to Greenland In July to carry I-I. F. Feaver. Canadian ambassador to Green- land. and Eske Brun. head of the Danish government's Green- land department. from Narsars- sunk to Godthasb. Commended by Capt. Thomas Pullen of Oakvllle. 0nt.. and Hall- fax. she is expected to return here by Oct. 20. mm UNDERGROUND PARKING BERN (Reuters)-Largest of its fight when they were 1.700 See Show Of Strength As Answer PORT SAID, Egypt (AV)-Two Soviet destroyers and an auxiliary tanker s t e a III e r southward through the Suez Canal Sunday. They were the first Russian war- ships to pass through the water- way since the First World War Egyptian canal authority offi- cials quoted the Russlans as say- ing thc vessels were heading from Scvastopol, on the Black Sea. is Vladivostok. in the Far East. and may spend some time in the Red Sea." Speculation,immediatd' arose ' whether the voyage was intended partly as a show of strength. The Red Sea is the locale of one of the more difficult problems in current international affairs-the dispute over Israeli freedom of entrance to the Gulf of Aqaba. Egypt and Saudi Arabia. whose territories overlook the spot. claim the right to close the Tiran Strait entrance to Israeli shipping bound for the Port of Elath, at the head of the gulf. Israel insists on free access. PART OF ACTIVITY The passage of the Soviet ships Into the Red Sea is a part of can rent Soviet naval activity in Mid- dle Easiern waters. Thursday ans Friday six Soviet warships. in cludiug the cruiser Mikhail Kutu zov. two destroyers and three for pedo boats. sailed through the Turkish straits into the Medltcn ranesn. No one here knows whether the destroyers which went through the canal are part of this force. The Russians sold and sent three submarine. to Egypt and the Israelis expressed belief they might be used to enforce as Aqaba blockade. The " i vessels which passed through the canal included the 3.50Mon tanker Anadyr. a de- stroyer ldentflled as the Bessledny (No. 77) and another identified only by the Number 70. The Besslcdny ya umably is from the large 3 class of' soviet desiroyars which displace about us. A Russian destroyer last trans- ifed the canal from Sues to Port Said in 1917. Shortly after leaving Egyptian waters the Germans sank her. AI ralty spokesman said the British manoeuvring in the Middle East with "much interest." Some diplo- mat In London said they consider the Russians were putting on I show of naval force in retaliation for the visit to the Black Sea earlier this year of British war- ships. The Russians called this visit ”an unfriendly act." In 1954 the Russians sent ships Into the Mediterranean area in reply to visits by Brltidi and United States warships. Reports Atomic Bombs For Canada LONDON (AP - The Sunday Dispatch says Britain plans to bol- ster the Commonwealth defence force by giving tactical atomic bombs to Canada. Australia and New Zealand. "This would mean that Britain would keep the H-bomb while the three dominlons would have the A-bomb." the Dispatch says in a story under a banner headline on the front page of its early editions. The Dispatch says the British plan to create "an Inner Common- kind In Switzerland. an under- ground parklng garage for no cars has been opened here. I wealth atomic group" will be brought up at next week's Com- monwealth conference In London. VANCOUVER ICPi - A sur- vivor of the Pacific Western Alr- lines plane crash which took It lives said Sunday night the DC-I went into a nose-dive shortly be- ily to a series of paradoxes that rm 1; cfgghgd. gnu nu-tn; cannot do them anything but u-wing gun; on the ground. harm" He says the Queen and Peter Onuahko. II. of Edmon- I.Im feet." it banked left again "and went into what I would call a aoee dive." "'i9':"0ull-aid” ”"9"”' "lcouldseeihd:l'ou'nd::rlIi "ln'her':.wasnewosIiaI.&g .3 ' IDOVEIIIY -1 P3391505. '5W!tN0I'liIUI090li"evsryuewnnesgevsrtotkewerhneaeermagaewsbV.- Is hapaebd.staedsbehinriloadcdbea- PrsrgresstveOeaateQa&.a:athae:'ws3:e&H&l' t't".::'ta:"1'a.'er-aieqdjcae -Rh Anew , age as intatawaasusaai .. ggvmgwii.Iihavsst,Alm .n,.m” eumnshpsasae&ae&- waadsbrhalIevIr.lbokaadthedechr.l.kUwl 'III are It Ihistcloweahevla """ - .arersnpusa-usage-saarsi.s..s.rsenune..mreseon.run-.-arias. lrassae It s arntsuaasr-i-v--- ovmsld ass-assess-Ms!-It-swilc-smut-e 4. Survivor Describes Crash Of Airliner At Airfield In B. C. lhim. but lflamea got whoever "I went for the back door. SOMEONE ALIVE "There were a couple of othd people with me. "I remember thinldngz i went back Saturday In London an admI- .' navy is watching Soviet Naval . If i 2 A.5.;";rc.-a-v--