, MAXIMS GPA MERE MAN p--jr -. as the husband II. the wife II- T 5,, p, g. I. am. other Provinces EUSSIA PROPOSES BIG 4 CONFERENCE ON GERMANY an-leri Ohulothfown. hmmenide 815.00 per Innum. Elsewhere and U. 3. A. 312.00 per annnsn. r ' Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARIDTTETOVVN, CANADA. MONDAY, AUGUST 25, 1952 Smgll Israne Crashes In Toronto Backyard T.L.C. Rejects Plan To Unify Labor' Groups; Convention Concludes By JOHN LEBLANC WINNIPEG. Aug. 24 -- (CP) - Tiie Trades and Labor Congress of Canada Saturday knocked out the ides of a consolidation of Cana- d.an labor's forces. The largest and oldest labor group in the country. at its an. nual convention, turned down I move to renew an association with other central bodies. The action was a setback to the hopes of the Canadian Congress of Labor for n unification of Canadals 1,000,000- ndd workers. The C.C.L. has been trying for -ome years to work out "organic unity" of Canadian labor. Last year for a time, there was a na- tonal committee of the T.L.C.. the C.C.L., the Canadian and Catholic (loufederation of Labor to deal uith joint problems. The T.L.C. pulled out of this. Charges Undermlning Efforts Percy Bengough, president of the 602,000-membe T.L.C.. charg- rd Saturday that. the 350,000- member C.C.L. was trying to use the committee to "undermine" the Trades and Labor Congress. "They only wanted to co-oper- ate on the basis of how much they could take away from this congress." he said. He did not mention the other congress' tie-up with the C.C.F. Party. but this has been one of the 'r.L.C.'s objections to a closer link with the C.C.L. Traditional- ly. the Trades and Labor Congress stiiys out of direct politim. All the pruidcnt's complaints -mTEie s coT'l)-Q Corning. Events -1- ”Bnrn Dance. Morell, Wednes- day. Burns Orchestra. "Dance, Lorne Valley. Tuesday. Burke's Orchestra. every "Dance, Cardigan I-fall. Monday night. Webster's Orchestra. "Klnkora Hall, see "Angcls in the Outfleld", Tuesday night. "Ice Cream and Dance in tons West School every Tuesday night. "Try our Purina Finahoe plan. for feeding your hogs and poultry. Dillon dz spillctt. "Sandy's Drive-In Theatre, ihows Tuesdays. wednesdays and Fridays at 9 P. M. "Reserve Tuesday. August 26th. Lormfcot B Mission Picnic. at west 0 "Dance. Fort Augustus school. Monday. August 25th. MaoKinnon's Orchestra. "Special meeting in Argyle Shore School Friday. August 29th. All ratepayers requested to attend. "St. Peters Legion Hall. Tues- day and Wednesday. August 26th and 27th. Annual supper and Bazaar. "Regular weekly dance in St Mary's Hall. souris. every Wed- nesday. Ohalsson's Orchestra canteen service. "Buying live fowl. Tuesday. 8 to 12. Revell Dickieson, New Glas- KGW. "Regular dance at the Bonshaw inn Tuesday night. dancing 9.30 - c1r3A30. Rollie MacKenzie's orches- "Launching-School--Ice Cream ""1 Dance. Launching School, Monday night. August 25th. Turn- 0r'I Orchestra. "A Missionary Rally will be held in North Wiltshire Church on wed- "udnv. August with, at 2.50. Rev. 4- S Weir will give the address. "Lawn Party and Dance. New Merle. Good music, refreshments. Monday night. August arm. 11 not tine. Thursday. August lath.-in aid of school. p'fCome to Quaker Ful-0-Pep lllm show and fcedt-rs meeting, Monday. Aug. 25, 8:45 pm., at Ellis Bros. warehouse. Central RWIIU. Everyone welcome. pd- mlsslon free. h"p"lllVIR on n play? Need (Elli? Here's your answer: At- "NI Community rams Course. conducted by Mr. Michael Meikle- fhhn of Ottawa. When? Sept. 2nd 0 Gilt. Whore? St. Peter's Cath- gnl Hall. Charlottetown. Fee? 0 charle. Classes open to all ""0 have pl-y problems. Attend- '""7 Important -- Register at :3” WWI P. I. 1. Libraries for hr: admission and programme. """"dlMely. Time is limited. High commissione Britain's new High Commissioner to the dominion. Lieut-General Sir Archibald Nye. arrived recent- ly in Montreal, "thrilled at the prospect" of making his home in Canada. Accompanied by his wife and daughter. the former Com- missioner to India. will make his new home in Ottawa. Sir Arctu- bald succeeds Sir Alexander Cutt- erbucic. who, having held the post for many years. has been sent in Australia in same capacity. Fiveliilied in 1 Truck,-Car -Smash st. 1-IUGI-fES.l&5c.'. stilts”-24 - (CP) - Five persons were killed and six were injured Saturday in s. truck-car collision in this Ba- got County town. St. Hughes is about 60 miles south-east of Montreal. Dead are Dr. Francois Lan- gelicr of St. Simon. Que.. driver of the car. Mrs. Paul Emile Plouf- fe. St. Hughes. and her three children. Francine. 1l,,Guy. seven, and Real. five. injured and taken to hospital at St. liyncinthe. Quc., were Mrs. Langelier, 40. three of her child- ren. Louise. 12. Pierre, l0, and Michel, 8, Raymoude Colette, 19. of Charny, Que.. and Gabriel Plouffe, 9. Britain To Step Up Cool. Arms Exports LONDON. Aug. 24 -- (Routers) - Britain will step up exports of the year. the Treasury nnnounccrl Saturday. A monthly economic survcy said only that Brljaln ex- pected to improve her industrial production and achieve a balance for sterling currency in the sec- ond half of the year. ......?:.M ST. LOUIS, Aug. 24--(AP)--Flvtr month-olcl Deborah Pfrifer is down to one stomach. Children's hos- pital hero discovered Deborah had two stomachs after her mother. Mrs. Norman Pfcifor of St. Louis. reported the baby cried every time she lay on her stomach. The scc- ond stomach, which wasn't func- tioning. was removed in an oper- atlon. Running Far By Philip Clarke LONDON. Aug. 24 -iCP)- Rus- West in industrial production, study of the newly-announced so- Msny westcm European observ- swsre of the West's inustrial su- be content to wage only a cold war. Econo said that judging by Russia's new plan. announced by Moscow last Wednesday. "it looks x s u as if the Russians are planning not for peace or war but for what) the West cslls cold .war.'' The Conservative graph suggested that Daily, Tele- "since so- less world, it is unlikely that the soviet Government adventures which might involve it in a war." Russia announced s few years ago she was out to overtake the in- dustrial potential of the West. But figures of past soviet pro- duction. plus the new goals-given only in percentage of increase- show that by the end of 1065 Rus- coal and armaments by tho and of. sin still is running far behind the a vlet. five-year plan indicated today. ers believe optimistically .R.ussia is permlcy and for this reason will Britain's influential weekly. The viet production. with that of the satellite states. will be considerably than that of the 'capitallst'i will embark on any Two Me.Tin Tiger Moth Die in Wreckage By Don Peacock TORONTO. Aug. 24 -(CP) - Two pilots on opposite sides in the last war, nosc-dived their failing two-seater plane into B. tiny back yard in H. thickly-populated Tor- onto area Saturday and perished in the flaming wreckage. The small aircraft, about five minutes out of the city's downtown Island Airport. didn't hit a house or building and crashed only a mile from it crowd of some 200,000 who jammed into the Canadian National Exhibition grounds. The two men. waving and screaming for help, died seconds after the llglit aircraft burst into flames. The victims were Charles Mc- Kay, 38. the pilot. and John Pret- ner, 30. both of Toronto. McKay flew with the R. C. A. F. during the second World War; Pretner, a native of Yugoslavia, was a. pilot with the German Luftwaffe. No one on the ground. in the area near the busy west-central intersection of Bathurst and Queen Streets, was injured. The Tiger Moth biplane lift the grotuid less than 10 feet from the rear of the Markham street house occpied by the Steve Bablik family. Its tail came to rest on a board fence. , Saw Plane Crash Mrs. Bablk's daughter. Ann. was in the kitchen when the plane came down. she ran to a back bed- room and watched as the men scrcamcd for help. "I tried to figure what to do but. things happened too fast," she said. "I watched the men burn to to help." , Police said the two men rented the plane from an aerial advertis- ing firm which uses aircraft to trail slogans in the air. The plane missed two houses containing at least a dozen people. William Connors. 27, said he saw the plane spin from about 500 feet. "It was twisting around. but seemed to lovel off about roof- top level, with the engine sputter- ing," he said. "I saw the pilot fighting with the controls. Then all at once it seem- gcd to just flop." Big Aluminum Plant Planned In. Alaska MT. MCKINLEY NATIONAL PARK, Alaska. Aug. 24 - (APl-- Aiuminum Company of America said Saturday it will build a 5400,- 000,000 aluminum smelting plant in Alaska. i The company said the project hinges on the purchase of land and government approval. Leon Hickman, vice-president and general counsel for Alcoa, said. the plant initially will be capable of producing 200.000 tons of aluminum a year. Hickman said the plant will be in the Taiya Valley district. near Skagway. It will be privately fin- anced. He estimated the Talya develop- ment will require about four years to complete. Soviet Production Still Behind West Ilia will still lag far hehi d. If the 1955 goals are met. yearly Soviet production should be about: Oil, 70.000000 tons. The United States in T950 produced nearly 600000.000 tons of oil-about seven times the new Russian goal: teel. 44,000,000 tons. The U. S. in 1950 produced 90,830,075 tons of stel-more than double the soviet goaL Pig iron, 34,000,000 tons. The U. 5. in 1950 produced 64.58fi,00'i tons of pig iron-nearly double the so- viet goal. Coal. 373000.000 tons. The U. S. in 1050 mined about 556,000,000 tons of coal-about 40 per cent more than the soviet goal. Western Europeans may take some comfort in these comparative figures but the Russians are still building up what The Economist called "it formidable potential for the futiire to be used as they think fit." ''It must never be forgotten," the weekly addui, "that the soviet economy can switch resources from civil to military production, from consumer goods to industrial equip- ment with a speed, ruthlesness and secrecy that no government in the free world could how M match in peacetime! death before I could do anything,- At North St Fire of unknown origin complete- U destroyed a large barn and all its contents on Saturday morning at North St. Eleanors. owned by Frank and Dave Maccormack. The fire. which broke out a- bout nine o'clock, was first notic- ed by one of the brothers short- ly after he had taken a cow into the barn and had then gone to a neighbor's a short distance away. He then saw flames coming through the roof and an alarm was sent to the Summerside Fire station. both of which quickly re- sponded. It was found on arrival, Fire Destroys Large Barn Department and to the R. C. A. F.l . Eleanors . however, that nothing could be done to save the building. Fan- ned by a strong wind, the flames spread through the barn rapidly and in a. short time It was burned to the ground. Fortunately the wind was blow- ing in the opposite direction from the house otherwise it would in all probability have gone as well. Lost in the blaze, besides the barn, were one cow. is brood sow and ten young pigs and a large quantity of hay. It could not be learned if in- surance was carried. Replacement. value on the loss sustained would be an estimated 57,000.00. -S Break With Scouimasler. Two Scouts Trappedjii Cave ABERDARE. Wales. Aug. 25 - (Momlny) - (AP) -- A 40-year-old scoutmuster. both his legs crushed. lny cniombed early today with two 17-year-old Boy Scouts behind tons of rock and debris in it Welsh cnvc. Rescuers worked feverishly by torchlight to reach the trio. A rockfall Saturday trapped the tliree 100 yards from the entrance of a cave they were exploring 1,- 500 feet up in the Brccon Hills of Southeastern Wales. Seven other soouis who had just emerged from U10 05' spread the alarm. .393 ark last night policemen. firemen and minors from nearby pits jiad bored in tiny hole through the rubble and passed in morphine to casu the pain of the scout. milsl". Jim Case. and hot drinks for all three victims. The two scouts were reported unhuri. WeirdrSiory Told By Florida I Scoulmasler 0 WEST PALM BEACH. Fla.. Aug. -4 fAPt - A deputy sheriff and two Boy Scouts added .d.3. la”-A Slllllfflliy to a scoutmasterls Story of his encounter with 2. strange ohjcct in A rural wooded nrcn Tucsdny night. They told of scorched grass. strange -lights and showers of sparks in the arch where D. S. Dcsverszcrs said he was "blasted by n llflll of fire" from the ob. jcci. when he investigated flashes of light. DSESVCFKMS. 30. liardwsre sales- man nnd former marine. said he was qucsiloncrl Friday night by officers from Washington whom he refused to identify. The stroulmnstcr has described the object he encountered as shaped "like half a rubber hall”, about three fcct thick at the edges -"III hitzli cnoiigli at the centre for man in stand erect. inside. lie old .1 Palm Bonn-ii reporter that ho knows what the object was, but nddcd "it's better for me "03 I0 no any further for the public good because it might cnusc panic." Dcsvergcrs rcporicd ho was taking three scouts home Tuesday nllfht when he stopped to invest- igate the lights in nearby woods. He said when he flzislicd his light 0" ll"! 0h.lr-ct. he was blasted by the ball of fire and overcome. Deputy Sheriff Mott N. Pnrtin, summoned by the scouts, snid' the hair was singed off Desvergers' arms and. three tiny holes were burned in his cap. He also ggjd he found evidence of scorched zrsss where the scoulmaster said he encountered the object. One of the scouts, Charles Stevens, said the group saw 11 "big while light come down out 01 the sky" and "there were About six reddish lights around it when it neared the ground." David Rowan. another. said that soon after Desvcrgers entered the woods. something "went off and showered sparks all over the area like a Roman can- die." No trace of the object has been found. Investigators tiieorlzerl that it either exploded or disappeared rapidly. scout. . HONG KONG; Aug. 24 - (AP) A British arllllcryman has hocn awarded the United States arnfy's silver star for gallantry in Korea during the April. 1951, fight- ing nlong the lmjin River. U. S. Consul-General Julian Harrington pinned the award on Maj. Henry C. Withers, Court. Pound, Langton May Ask Parliament To Tradition OTTAXVA, Aug. 24 --(CP)- Par- liament may be asked to break with tradition soon by debating legislation concurrently with the Addres in reply to the Speech from the Throne. The government is understood to be coiisiderin,: this as one way to speed Parliamentls work which has been keeping members in long sessions. Canada has followed the tradit- ion that the Throne-Speech debate be completed before the Commons studies bills implementing the gov- ernment's legislative program. The legislation is forecast in the Speech from the Throne, read by the Governor-General at the opening of parliament. Parliament approves this general outline by adopting an Aridress in reply to the speech from tho Throiie. Debate on, the Address generally- stzletnzhatvover s six-or iclght-week period. This debate covers many subjects It. gives members a. chance to talk about problems in their respective constituencies. The result is that they have a load of work piled up' on the legislative agenda for the remainder of the season. Boiler Study Of Legislation One advocate of the break with tradition says it will give members st better chalice to study and de- bate legislation by getting hills printed and in the hands of mem- bers two or three weeks earlier. In past. sessions, the Throne- Washinglihi Forecasts Qffer MOSCOW, Aug. 24 -(AP)- Russia proposed today a Big Four meeting on a Gci'ni.'iii peace treaty The Soviet Government for the meeting with France and the German elections, and a time limit for withdrawal of occupation for- ces by the Big Four p0wcr:.. formation of an crnment. similar to the oucs March 10 in the Western Biz Thracp anibassariors and later There has been ascrics changes since then. Assembly which set country commission to study who-. tlicv Gcrmaii-wltle frct: i'ecoi'(i of that the on Gcririanyl disa grecmcnt argued power machincry could advance the sit- uation. Russia and l:'ast Gcrmanyl refused to have anytliiuc to do with the. U. N. coniniissioii i The latest. Sovict proposals worc contained in notcs linnded ihc ilirec Western Ambassadors in Moscow by Foreign lvfmistcr An-g drei visliinsky late Saturday. I Cool Reception WASHINGTON, Aug. '14 -(AP Diplomatic officials said tml.i Russia's terms for a mi: Fnu: 7(Conti1iuccl on page ll col. GJ lei Fighters Chase light CHICAGO. Aug. 24 --TAP) Two United States air force jet fighters. directed by gliound ob- servers, clinscti a ycllowis'ii light in the sky Friday iiiizlit but rt- portcd that is l.)lllllfCCI out when- tlicy started closing in on it. i Air force officers in the Chic- ago filtcr centre said the blink- out of the light. over iicarby Elgin. Ill., was reported siniultancously. by the pilots. . Elgin is some 40 miles north-I west of here. Speech debate has been broken to start bills through the Commons Fkgcbriitln-Lied on page '8”col.v6) Ground observers said that when the planes gave up the chase thc light reappeared and ascended. rapidly. Weather Cuts Crops In Most European Countries LONDON. Aug. 24 -r (AP) Europe's larder wont be so full this winter. ll Summer weather upsets have trimmed most harvests. But out- side Yugoslavia and some Comin-, forn countries food will not be scarce. For Yugoslavs things look tough. A 10-week drought slashcd one- third off most crops. However, re- serves from last year's big har- vest. probably will stave off a re- turn to ration cards. Already Premier 'l'ito's Govcrn- mcnt lTiIS banned cxporls of grains and fodder and is looking for Ways to buy or borrow wheat. The govenimcnt. estimates harvest losses at 100.000.000.000 (more than s.Ti0.000,000i. Here is a c,ountry-by-country roundup: Britain - 1 E5 subsidy for every new here hrokcn put more land under the plow than ever before. But grauaries will be no fullcr than last year due to the drought. Austria - With grain prices fixed. farmers are bringing in their crops early. Most yields are down due to the drought but re- serves will this the country over. Belgium - Normal harvest de- spite the wcather. Bulgaria-The Communist-com trolled press admits the wheat. crop is poor in quality and has flayed farmers for late deliveries. Chechoslovakia --- Josef Korasnar. minlste lll charge of buying farm oducts. forecast a bumper harvest. Denmark - Grain and fruit yields will be well above normal. France -- French farmers beat prolonged drought and foot-and- mouth disease to turn in average to good yields. The wheat. har- vest is estimated at 14 per cent up from last year. West Germany -- Drought has cut. crop yields and sent milk and butter prices soaring. Current forecast: wheat normal. fruits normal or better. vegetables poor to good. less meat and more oleo- margarine. l East Germany - Grain harvest likely to reach 90 per cent of of- Mairavers. Dorset, England. ficisl estimates. Rationing of most ICommuiiisi. ii!-wspapcrs show hui: ninin foods will continue. Greece - Good yields will kccp prices down and pcrliaps allow oi small cut in imports. The Ncllicrlniids - Dutch farms survived spring frosts to turn in crops better than last ycar. Italy -- Wcntlicv upscts have af- I fectcd yiclds only locally niiil. graiii returns are rcportcd good. Norway Fnddcr output i. slighllv above nvcmuc but grains. vc;:c,tnl)lcs and Il'illlS arc down. Portugal -- Gmiiis are up. Rnlllitllln - - Crops are icporlctl good but the Comniuiiist-i-ulctl inrmcrs aren't. happy about drcds have bccu jiiilcri on t'lini'i:cs inf sabotage or witliholdiiir: cinps tlinarslfrrmi tlic unvcrninciit ' Spnin- Good szraiii crop. 5Earthquak l BA.KERSFll'Jl..l). Cnlll.. Aug. 24-- tield community swept up the rub- ble today and counted daniagc rs- and 32 persons wore. iiijurcci. Meaniviiilc. tremor which shook Los Angcics early today was plnccd at nnly miles northeast. of Pasnciciin calmed no damage but. IV. of the night. City Manager Lclaiicl Guiiii said that the daninco from shock will be grratcr than that of at 3l5.000,ii00. tiinntcd at S2U,ilUil.t)t)il from l-iritiny '5 A i 1 War naiucs of more than 50 before the shnkcup ended. from Nationalist size of the army's command when rioliriif misled Puml” Mir been ordered. its actions fmed Qavam and restored Messa- Idcch to power. Prcmarr Eamon do Vnlrm of ill" H cys- nlimi, it will lhc, outcome can be lln Vlilrirn is '70. ii iliur l'icscnrvillz- and Aime Mall- iry were married Saturday and llicv nslmd that tho wcrltllril chl- lflilnlifinx lm conducictl "lllFll)'. to be held not later than C)ClOb0:2,cxpl()rprs cnliezilsuice Aug. 15 walked out of their Britain..umlcri;round prison alive and well Uni-19d 513”?-S l0:Saiii-may night. consider it peace treaty, forniatioii, The your men walked down from of an all-German government, all-Hue mountain uuajdgd to The Soviets said they would Cl.6-l(-xpcdltlon, said; "we knew cuss a German cicciions commis-Awe had (,9 (19, and we ware sioii a proposed by the three West-lpuui.-god, We slmply waited crri i)0vi'crs but only following iliclkmw we would get, out when the discussion of the DCTICD trcaty nnd;...,,..,. in-91 1911, The three i”lsG9I""3” SW0 .'w.ili me were never afraid." (The propo.-als apearcti to hr.-I bC:,nmng dcliwiied 1353 would last 9. long time. . reiPr'iPri-lsnici. "took stock of 01 9xEllllClC, saw that they would for three weeks with careful rat- (ln the United Nations Geiieinligomngy and then saw to it that gv. ill) 9- IIVI”-cry man had 400 calories a day. PIOLHOIIS on in mapping expedition for coulrg be llLI(l. the Wcsicrn Powers hum. stay and were trapped when Im”' rain, seeping through the , formed did not indicate Russiaii-proposcdimcm. ilranian Army l T!-ll-IRAN, Irdn. Aug. 24 -(AP)- Et?.'Cl'll0l'6l'llD mcetim: nn ticrmaii unity nnrl ll 'ctl. Irn:iz'kc(i for retirement by the Na- tionalzst Mossadcizh, now niinistev. lsaid all the 15 men retired-ran? lips: in rank from brigadier to lieu- Itcnaiit-general-were drawn from active duty and Pen" Dougall. 60. was found Qgrly sut. sioiicd because each had served as urday on 1 otflccr more than 30 years. the mack at thls Cape Bmmn com. munity 40 mice from Sydney. The move came after criticism was last seen getting off the train sources of the Friday night. R. c. M. P. are in- aml vcstigating and an , cu .lc.unl limit. De Valera Undergoes Eye Operation Jlrpiiiillc of Ireland. whose 93'?- siizlit. has been falling. was oper- nlrtl on Frizlziy. Prof. H. J. M. ,l-iiiclnnrl. )l'tcSllIfIli'll1l. (:4. British author. rliccl at his linmc Frldnv nliihl. )i.wsini;li.im urnlr 50 books. plnys I--ml pwnipixlnie, many of them on 11-... ,u-t-itr..lni:,v ni Tit-linln, 'll..iii no X e ll)arnvage At Bakersfield 20 Million in; at lcast Moiidayf '11iere is no Joy like calm. I -Maxiivis l era MERE Mari 12 PAGES Idornlng Dally Founded 1381. The Guardian. Five Cents. Underground Explorers Safe After, 1 MUOTATHA L. Switzerland, Aug. '.ii- (AP)-The four underground missing in hells hole meet rescue workers who had practic- abandoned their efforts. Zl.lv Dr. Alfred Boegli. leader of the what never and boys said he knew from the their imprlsonement Bncpli "We walrsed back to camp." he the supplies last The four men entered the cave a M- rocks, impassable pools behind Officers Retired brass in Iranis l20.000rm8I1 - uas thinned Saturday by the .iicnt. of i5 generals. includ- . mic. dismissed from the military of Tehran after his oops fired on rioters July 21. ' Miniiy other officers were report- wthout confirmation, to he Government of Premier his own defence said the would submit supremo the One source Council Oficially. an army spokesman .being with- in Iran's July crisis. rue llAGllE. Aug. 14--(AP)-- 'rvc, onc of F.iir0pe'I outstandinz doctors, pr-rformccl the oper- An informed source said he scvcrnl weeks before dcterrnlncd. LONG CRT-ZNDON. Buckingham. Aug. 24-IAPI -llnrnld J. ,xiuN'fP.l-1VAi.. Aug. 24 - iCPl - - 0 Days In will 3'? llelefled Swiss Mountain Cave Health Training Bursaries Awarded An rinnounccnivnt of the award- in: of five bursarics for speoial training in aspects of public health has been made by Hon. Paul Martin, Minister of National Health and Welfare. The awards are for the Provinces of Prince lidwzirri Island and Newfoundland. Of thc awards four were given to Charlottetown people. Two of them went to Albert Aitken and William MacDonald. of the class of Provincial Labnrnlory students here, for it refresher course in syphilis serology at the Federal Laboratory of Hygiene. Ottawa. The winners will start there next month. The third award for this purpose went to Miss Audrey Lovelace. St. Johns, Newfoundland. The other two awards also went to Clmriottetown girls with Miss l-jlizabeih M. MacDonald and Miss Anna N. MacKinnon. both of the staff of the Provincial Sanitarium. c winning a course of three months studying of surgical nursing tech- niquc and post-operative care at: the Nova Scotla Sanitarium in Kcntville. N. S. Four More Cos-e; Of Polio In N. B. FREIDERICTON. Aug. 24 -(Cl:-ll --Four more cases of poliomyelitis were reported in New Brunswick Saturday raising the total to 103. The disease has caused four fatal- ities in the province this summer. Two of the new cases were re- ported from York County and the other two from Wcstmorland. The latter county has hail eight since Thursday. The figures to data by counties: St. John 37, Kings 25. Westmor- land 19, York ii, Carleton four, Charlotte three, Albert three. and Queens one. mvasrroti'r(i-The-a'rn BARRACHOTS. N. 5.. Aug. 31. .. rCPl- The body of Roderick Mac- line the main railway H I! inquest has SINGAPORE. Aug. 24 - (Rout- ers) -- A man whose ago is of- ficially recorded as 148 had his identity card photorzr.-ipli publish- ed in Saturday's Straits Times. He is Haji llins Bin Hnji Mayeed. R blind Jiipnnrsc. According to tho Str.-iits Times. ”Thc oldcst man in ' the world" but he is not satisfied with the official record and claims to I'M 160. . fills Nome is Tuti. or GUYS ktio sew sous- fiimc. sliouiv as DONE But NEVER Do ANY- 'flllNCs THEMSELVES" I lrfAl.ll7AK'. Aug. N - (VP) - 'tlt might even take iintll Wed- fAPi-Tha qiinkc-iiatiercd Hnkcrs- pncsdnv to get all slinky walls down innd bricks and glass out of the l ,sirect." he said. Preliminary inspection showed at sharp sliocl:..Twn IIVDS wcrc loot .i:-nsi. 100 buildings badly damaged. Isnmc. wcakencd on July ill, were i i the Jilly 21 quakc. Ho, piaccd Hakv .Ccuigrcszntionni. crsih-id's loss in the earlier siioclcvcntist and Church of Christ. the epicentre of almaclc untenable by Fl'ldll)"B quake. Schools and churches were hit '15-iinrci. City School superintendent, John (Iomptioii said there is doubt Sl,Ri'l.lf'f1llVll('lllt'll' all students could be ac- thousands of pcrmns in the middielcominoriiiuzd at. the opening of the tall .&0l'il0SlOP in two weeks. Five churches hcid emergency l-lrlday-'sI,serviccs 1-Lscwherc. Churches made unsnlc are Catholic. Presbyterian, Scvouth Day Ad- Nlll(' of the 32 injured remained All stores and nfiiccs iii a six- pin liospital today. The July '21 mink!- block arca in the dmviitowii sector .i.nok 14 lives. it at Tehachapi. 35 were closed. The drop in comnici'- lllllllls cast. of here. cial activity added another intang- ible loss. Br-ismologisis at California In- lstitutc of Technology foresaw at Police Chief Horace Grayson said Ilcast another year of continuing the six-block heart of the down- shocks -- "most of them minor at- town section will rcmain closczi iin- ,trrsiiocks." Official for:-casts Issued by tho Dominion Public Vl'cntiicc Officl in Halifax and valid until mid- night Monrlny. Synopsis: while A summer hcai wlnxr cou- tlnucd in the Prairie: today, llm mime: were having thcir cool- cst wcathcr since Juno. Altnrnnon trmpcralurcs rrnmincrl near liv- sixiy dcnrcc mnrk Mill skics wt-i r cloudy in most rcxzirins. AI R disiurhnncc nu-r I.ll1l'7lflill moves norlliwnrrl, tho clmiilinc-.1 in the Maritime: will grnrluailt diminish. '1lnmpcrniiircs will rise to the high sixties Monday IlIlPIi- norm. Rcxzionnl Torccnsls' Prince Edward island -- Sunny with A few cloudy inlcrvals Mon- iiny. A little wnrmcr Mondnv. Westerly winds 15. Low curly Monday morning nnil high in iiin nflcrnnnn at. Cliarlnileinwn 50 and GT. lligh tide today at Charloi.ts-.- town at i.lil A. M. and Us l". M. lligli tide on the North Shore sl 3.22 A. M. and 8.28 P. M. summerslde tide eighteen min- utcs later than Charlottetown. Sun rises today at 5.26 A. M. an0 jsets at 7.03 P. M. v