Till! I1 llshy. 3:11 El.) and tomorrow. 2:22 AJI. LOW: Toby, 8:83 PM, and tosnonvow, 8:50 A31. FRIDAY Clear, with a few cloudy intervals. Some anowf|ur- ries.Coldsr.I'.ow-highzo and”. The Qfihéning ifiatrint _”________7 vol. LXXV \ l-jw DELHI i Reuters l-Prime gnd Wi.'Sl to get out of their cold mar rut and adopt a new mental |ppl‘Iia('ll to the Problem‘ d in the nuclear age. P€_:l;:ak“1g in a foreign affairs debate in the UPPCT H0“?- _\ehru said it had become obvious it E coerce another by military means ]n\nl\‘(‘S the destruction of both. .\ehru referred to recent pro- Wat». by George Kennsn. former snush Socialist leader "ugh Galtskell for an attempt at dia- mgagement or detente" by with- lly DAL WABBINGTON ranadian Press Staff Writer HALIFAX «CPI — A provincial royal commission that invali- gated the 1955 abs! mine dimter at Springhiil, N.S.. recommends stricter mine safety resul-Hons snd better inspectors to prevent another possible catastrophe. .\’ova otia 1' E- A. Manson said Wednesday aid!!! of coal hon should be taken. The commissioners said a broken electric power cable gave off the spark that triggered a dust explosion llatluay and lmme Nov. 1. 156 The blast. which caught Ill men under . mind 3 deaths. Eighty-eight WEI‘! HIGH rescued after being trapped up to I ays. The investigators s a l d six loatlcrl coal cars broke away from a train being hauled up a slope and cut the cable. GAS KILLED I3 aflerdamp -— a poisonous gas — through the mine. Twenty-ml?‘ in-d from the gas. L‘ S ambassador to Moscow. and ‘ The explosion siiread deli”! '00 E. on our or not 'Nehru Urges New View I ‘Problems drawing troops from foreign a a. hltnlslcl‘ Nehru t0d8)' ‘-“Ted E33‘ b 39 SPUTNIKS DON'T HELP He added that the situation was not improved by the Sputniks. which opened the possibility of even more destructive weapons. it was thoughts such as these. he said, which made him issue his recent appeal to United States and Soviet leaders for a “new ap proach.“ including the suspension of atomic tests. Soviet Premier Nikolai ganin sent Nehru a reply to this letter last weekend in which he reaffirmed Russia's willingness to drop tests if the United States and Britain did the same. “I am grateful to Marshal Bul- Bui- Wants Stricter Mine Safety Regulations that won't unhook accidentally. A three-link chain is used now. I Other recommendations: Power cables should be placed and protected so they can't be damaged by runaway C011 cl" or rock falls Mine inspectors should be more painstaklng in their job. better trained and Physically IN? "3 make a proper lnIP0¢U0||- rescu ‘organized pnd trained iivinclal mines department instead of the company. They should in- over to. elude no men E. Grifnth, engineer with United States bureau of mines. ttsburgh. They said both mines ofthe but did nothllll about ad been train runaways before. Less than 10 months before the disaster a train had jumped the track. cut the power cable and. The commmmm huded by 3“,-ted . "mu 1 . H gone to Cape'Breton mines and‘ Halifax lgwyer Mclnnes. However. they said. the explo--othetg Nlitave wlef: No°\;ifs‘ceScsotia ma . better typo of mine car slon from an unfortunabsiUni me or en say ,,,.,,,m,‘ “on” 5. lcombination of circumstances for about 125 are still unemployed. depart ment and company officials knew‘ The-rs while to ganin for dealing with this matter at such length." Nehru said. He added the reply “deserves the fullest consideration." Nehru urged an international “coming together." GET OUT OF RUT “In international affairs _ have to think on different lines- and get out of the old ruts. I Nehru also gave India's sup-I port to Indonesia's claim to Dutch-held West New Guinea. ' Nehru said the United Nations‘ assembly's failure to approve a resolution urging negotiations be- tween The Netherlands and lndo-1‘ est; “was a great blow to the Indonesian people." which no blame can be attached to any individual." A survivor of the disaster. Con- ra ree. was praised for his "great qualities of leadership." He directed 55 men who barri- caded themselves in a section of the.mine around ir valve. They breatehed through slits in a hose attached to the valve until they were rescued 8 days later. The erground rescue - tiona recommended by the com- missioners were Embree's sug- gestion. The commissioners said the mine was sometimes worked when the amount of methane gas in the underground atmosphere was higher than mining regula- Ild. ' " ‘ ' ‘ ’ ““ The invatigstsrs said coal dust stirred up by the raunaway train probably provided the fuel for tb explosion. No. 4 mine has never resumed operation. Hamid Gordon. corn- pany president and general man- ager. said there are no sufficient markets for coal to make it worth repair the damage. The mine has been pemianently sealed. Some of the 500 men employed there have found jobs in neigh- boring No. I mine. Aofew have LONDON lfteutorsl -— some (I II attempt to swlott cracks in S” Atlantic alliance. The London Times believes the letters are designed to DOCS "9 drawing gm‘ West Is Urged To Negotiate idea of a Ions in central Europe gf ar weapons. 11: Dali Herald (Labor) com- “Itywill be in!“ '01” V the West disniisges Russia’: move -3.52.-:2--________ STBADY PM? LONDON (CP) -— Sir Jocel!‘ Bray has bssa re-elected to hh lull term as chairman of ID Thhsnes conssrvanci 500'" I 1. Edna W 41, gave first so. _ birth to It It-It child. fifih RIM“? abukh. Toymakars Roles Deaths Yesterday By The Canadian Press WINDSOR, Ont. Professor Ernest Wilby. 89. one of North America's most distinguished architects. LONDON. oat. -- Dr. William Joseph Tlilmann. Bi. physician for 60 years and specialist in obstet- rios and children's illnesses. WINNIPEG — Lt. Col. George Edward Cole, 78. fomier direo tor of the Manitoba mines branch. RITE R South Africa Col. James Stevenson — ton. one of the world's great auth- orities on African wildlife. tionspn'm%'rnisn:lahtbsvo_ ernaeullfir-no" ' him that WN, P.l.l.. CANADA THURSDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1957. / GETS LAST ANTI-POLIO SHOT Mrs. Stewart Ives. is shown receiving her final anti-polio in- oculation this morning at HMCS Queen Charlotte. Waiting in line are Stewart Ives and Allison K. Mutch. The physician is . Harold Stewart. Nurse in attend- ance is Mrs. Lewis Turner. Plan To Vote Under TORONTO (CPl—Evidence of a plan to cast votes under false names was given Wednesday for the first time in Toronto's voting- list scandal as election worker Bernie Price was convicted on l7 charges. The 27-year-old woman was found guilty of forgery. uttering forged documents and violating the Canada Elections Act largely on a statement she gave to RCMP officers in October. four months after a judicial inquiry into the case. in her statement she said. George Ewing. one of four other persons charged in the alleged vote-padding scheme, suggested she pose as his wife and vote with him on election d She said he offered her $50 but she turned him down. Miss Price. who had elected trial by magistrate. was granted Si .000 bail after Magistrate T. S. Elmore deserved judgment on an llilllh charge—forgery—until Dec TO BE TRIED Mrs. Kathleen Vollum. 50, who| had chosen judge and jury. was committed for trial on six’ charges. Ewing a 57-year-old hospital worker facing 12 charges. remanded to Dec. 18 for prelim- inary hearing along with Thomas Middleton. 48, facing 32 charges. Mrs. Nora Conacher Gamble. False Names Indicated 44, was remanded to Dec. 17 on 17 charges. The five were arrestpd as the result of an eight-day inquiry by Chief Justice J. C. McRuer of the Ontario Supreme Court which . indicated a scheme to add 500 "‘ false names to voters‘ lists in St. Paul's riding during the June 10 federal election. During the hearing all the ac- cused but Ewing—who didn't ap- pear — admitted signing false names to forms used to names to voters‘ lists. Mrs. Gamble told the chief jus- tice shc was the sole architect of the scheme and denied there was ever any intention to vote under the phoney names. like Mansfield laid ident Eisenhower faces the in Paris of making NATO into a "going concern“ instead of symbol of defence." Mansfield. assistant Democratk leader from Montan nd a men ber of the Senate foreign rela- tions committee. returned from a European survey with the convic- tion that the North At_lantic Treaty Organization is disinte grating. Senator Theodore Green. chair- man of the Senate foreign rela- tions committee. took a different view Wednesday. He said his ob- servations in Europe indicated to NATO is not falling Green said Eisen- out to provide some dramatic demonstration of lead- ership at the Paris conference to give the alliance new life. Mansfield said in an interview the job of making NATO effec- tive in going to be difficult. “The president still has a great amount of prestige in Mansfield said. “But he s goin with our allies. NATO can't con- tinue to exist as a symbol of do- fence and not a shield. LEAVING FRIDAY "The president has got to see that it is made a going concern. He has got to see that it becomes Pans- job meeting ope "a- that at that conference Eisen- to have to get down to bedrock,” Eisenhower w or -lniday for tin three-day NATO ning Monday. ‘ Mansfield expressed the hope hower "will insist on the estab- lishment of NATO scientific which will bring together the col- lective talents of the Western na- tions as the first step in remak- ing the organization." Mansfield said he believes Eis- enhower can count on the support of Congress. if any legislation is needed to establish such a and to get the interchange of scientific information under way. Receives New Appointment 8. M. Mclnnls who for the past two years has een Director of Visual Education for the Province has been appointed Direc r of Adult Education. His appointment under Hon. Keir Clark. Minister f Education. becomes effective immediately. Mr. Mclnnis had ten years expcrienc in the field before his original appointment as Director of Visual Education. RUSSIA BUYS TEA COLOMBO. Ceylon tReuters\— Russia Wednesday bought about 2.tlll.000 pounds of Ceylon tea. its first purchase of tea from Ceylon a really mutual defence organ--~ lzation." cine- Con¢sr_.n--. Ike Must Remake NATO Into A Assured Of Bad Weather Mail Delivery On Wednesday the Postmaster- Gcncral. William Hamilton. in- formed J. A Macl)onald. Con- servative .Vl.P. for King's. hence- pm] forth the mails for that part of the province will be carried by train as well as b.V the T981118!’ C.N.R. trucking service. This ad- ditlonal mail delivery service is to become effective on Decem- bc 15. Tins reply was given as the result of representations made by Mr. MacDonald to the Postmas- General. backed by the ter - anization in the country. Postmaster - General Hamilton in a letter to Mr. " “ " he said he appreciated the difficul- lics experienced by the people of King's as the result of snow- siorms. The present trucklnll ser- vice will be retained and in the event or threat of slormc. mails will be placed aboard the after- noon train. This system is expected to en- isure mail (i(‘llV(‘I'i(‘S to the resi- dents nf the county and be more speedier and certain during per- slnce the Second World War. iods of bad weather. _l\lEWS BULLETINS Swiss Choose Head Has Son And Grandson CHICAGO (AP) - A tssthsr ad dalfl W-bora to tsreachwltha .ldrs. hsrssventhchlldsfl .Irs.Iss W \. -£as-'*éa.'=*-r-- sh 4-a. I Jffidklldhw @u'dlysIItsndtheaX- cm the snishas. Boards of Trade and other org- ' M THAN MINISTERS ARRIVING THREECENTS Sets Stage for NATO Supports Call By Pearson LONDON «cw — The News Chronicle supports the call by L. 8. Pearson. former Canadian external affairs minister. for a fresh initiative in international af- fairs. The Liberal newspaper. which gives prominence to an account of Pearon's speech in Oslo Wed- n e s d a y. editorially it "agrees" peace prize winner that allied statesmen have concentrated too much on rockets and not enough on eco- nomic aid. too little on diplomacy and too much on divisions. "What is wanted in the West." says the paper. "and especially Washington. is a reawakening of the imaginative spirit of the im- ‘ post - war years when the Marshall Plan saved Western Europe from collapse and com- munism." Pearson was expected in Lon- don today on his way back to Canada. He and Mrs. Pearson, who accompanied him to Oslo. are to stay for a few days'at the of- ficial residence of the Cana high commissioner. George Drew. NO WAY TO WIN BACK GIRL IONDON (AP) — Henry Ferric Sadley reported to- day that getting your fans is no way to win back a girl fri ma __an a Hdtuatot. a reporter what happened next, he said. ‘'1 once told her ‘Tilly. if you ever leave me, I'll have my whole face tattooed In that no other woman will ever look at Fcrrie went out a butterfly nose. a tree on his forehead. a co'ed snake on his left cheek and a flying dragon on his right cheek. Then he went to see Till . ‘'I thought he had taken leave of his senses." she said. "I'm afraid it is all up between us." “The tattoos are perman- ent." said Ferrie. “so I think I Will 29! 8 lob with a circus help me forget." He opened his shirt collar. revealing a tattoo across his throabsaying “Cut here." and had on his Sunday Sport Approved \'A.\iCOUVl-".R <(‘Pt— heavy turnout of voters gave mmer— cial Sunday sport an estimated two-thirds majority approval in supply seemed destined for only token majority. A monopoly on city council seats by a group calling itself it the Non - Partisan Association seemed broken as two candidates. from a rival organization led vot- aldermanic seats. third largest city for ll years. With 70 of the 94 polls counted. Sunday sport was favored by 43.- M8 voters and opposed by IMBS. Fluoridation had the support of 36.066 and the opposition of I).- 614. The Sunday sport issue was be- ing submitted for its fourth pie!» iscite in recent years. Previously it had been narrowly approved in In of the three pleblscites The vote on both Sunday sport and nnoridatios was only to sound out public opinion. The provincial government. which hu the fin say in enlorcemela of the Lord's Day Act. has indented it may still now allow Vancouver majority approval. »:.'*m-.-.ma- To Look Into Problems Of Warfare In Space . lTl€lSlll’C. By JOSEPH DYNAN PARIS (AP)—West European foreign ministers began arriving in Paris today to set the stage for the NATO summit co/ rence next week. crowded diplomatic bill is a two- day session of foreign ministers from the Council of Europe. The council, whose aim is to achieve greater unity of its 15 members. will convene Friday. Overlapping this meeting. the seven ministers whose countries a members of the Western European Union will meet Satur- day and Sunday. The NATO heads of govern- ment meet Monday through Wed- nesday. On Thursday the six na- tions of the new European com- mon market and atomic agency (Euratom) will get together. One preliminary began Wednes- day. NATO’a military committee opened a two-day secret meeting to discuss supplying U.S. mis- siles to European allies. some of FIRST TO ARRIVE Halvard Lange of Norway. who will preside at the Council of Europe sessions. was the first foreign minister to arrive. He got in Wednesday to confer with members of the council secretar- Ia Selwva Lloyd of Britain. Victor Larock d , L1 of The Netherlands and Joseplr Deck of day. Hans llansu of Denmark so In- The curtain raiser on the. whom are reluctant to have then. .. tions-— Luxembourgwesedusto ‘ erands .i Curtain - Raiser Session Gets Underway Friday day before the council meeting opens. U.S.‘State Secretary Dulles also is due here Friday. Council of Europe members are scheduled to discuss merger with the Organization for Euro- pean Economic Co-operation re- cently suggested by an official meeting here of some European leaders. Membership in the council and OEEC are roughly the same and they deal with many of the same aspects of European cooperation. OEEC was set up in I948 to co- ordinate marshall plan aid and has since widened to other eco- nomic fields. The council deals with social. cultural. scientific and legal problems as well as economic unity. PASSPORTS ON WAY OUT The council ministers also will examine prospects of the council with such other European groups as the coal and and steel community. the com- mon market and Euratgm. The ministers also will sign a convention on extradition and an- other agreement to dispense with passports for travel within Weat- ern Euro . oregn Ministc Leopold I-‘igl of Austria will sign the European human rights con- vention. which was drafted be- fore Austria joined the ‘council. The signings will be.pu lie but the two-day medinf I WASHINGTON (AP)-The U.S. Air Force has created a special office to look into the problems. of warfare waged in space. It had in operation today the beginning of a small "director- ate of astronomers and officers and development branch. The new office is assigned the specific job of managing develqsment programs which do not relate to ordinary aircraft operations and missile programs. A directive signed by Lt.-Gen. Donald L. Puts. chief of research and development. said “the func- tion of this new directorate will be to plan. organize and man- age the air force programs in astronautics." The USAF defines astronautics as "the art and science of flying through space. or sending winged guided vehicles or missiles through space." was meanwhile. that President Eisenhower may be urged soon to speed up wnrlr in another area of research-—that dealing with development of ‘ weather control as IMPORTANT MATTER Staff representatives of the ad- ‘ mittee on wheather The spokesmen -indicated i thought the grou' My voted mainly to evaluating cape! iments in controlling wsatin' fa’ peacetime purposes. But, they added. the report might include ‘ made by Dr. Henry Houghton at Massachusetts Institute of Tech- o 2 drawn from the USAF's research nol gy “I shudder to think of the con- . . d apnorltusslan is- 'lemetbod improve Russia's climate could weaken our econouu and our ability to resist." NAME HEAD The order setting up the new USAF directorate listed a half- dozen pro are being- transferred to that office initially. It lncludai some items which were concealed behind code num- bers of vague names. But the list indicated the pro- grams to be transferred included projects such as the p “Big Brother." satellite or space platform which woul ac the -earth from an orbit high up trans- mitting data on what was happen- ing around the world. One proiec listed was the "ballistic missile , defence"——aPParvntly referring to USAF‘s anti-missile project called “ zard." Heading the new directorate la .Brig.-Gen. Homer Boushey. Bou- shey has been in the USAF since 1983. with most of that time de- voted to research and to testing _ . eport Eisenhower probably will be de- -aircraft. HALIFAX 4CP-— remained one of spots in North America today but cold air was expected to begin invading the area from the west he Maritime the warmed late this afternoon Temperatures Nova scotia U. S. Dollar Warm Spot Of North America