9 oistikrs PURPOSE Soviet Russia Will Join in A Conference On Suez By ABTIIUR GAVSBON LONDON (AP)-Soviet Russia agreed Thursday to join the West- ern-sponsored Suez conference Ill dissatisfaction with its PllID05G. Londonebut expressed all around its composition and the date. The only reason the Soviet l0V' ernment has decided to attend, Moscow announced, is that it i sa "champion of peaceful settlement of international issues" and the London conference may open up a peaceful approach to the ques- tion of free navigation in the canal "The Soviet government can- not disregard the fact.” said I note handed to all foreign embas- sies in Moscow, "that an increas- ingly tense situation is develop- ing in the area of the Near and Middle East" and that Britain and France are resorting to ”gross and unjustified pressure on Esypt. ' NOT COMPETENT Russia declared she does not consider the London conference- to which Britain, as host, invited and 3) other nations-competent the United States, France. Russia to settle the future of tho Sues Canal. She proposed that the United Nations be expanded to i clude 22 other nations, among them Red China and other members of tha Communist bloc, several neutral states such as Finland, Austria and Burma, and every Arab stato from Morocco to Iraq. She also suggested that the con- ference date be postponed from next Thursday to the end of August. Moscow's qualified acceptance left out three of the 24 on Brit- ain's list to be heard from. They are Egypt, Spain and Greece. Egyptian President Gamal Ab- del Nasser is expected to give his answer Sunday and it probably will be "No." His nationalization of the Suez Canal July 26 set off the crisis that provoked a display of French and British military muscle. FORCE DE-EMPBASIZED Talk of force in the dispute was somewhat muted in Paris aid London in the wake of Prime Min- ister Eden's declaration in a radio and television broadcast Wednes- day night that Britain does not want to fight. He said, however, that Britain could never agree to Nasser's lone - handed seizure- which he called an "act of pin!- der." Qualified diplomats reported Thursday Edep had received a confidential message from Primo Minister Nehru of India, appeal ing to him to call off the British- French show of force. Eden was said to have replied that Britain has no intention of attacking Egypt, but is determined to keep the canal open to world shipping. For unexplained reasons. the British war office however an- 4 postponement for at least 24 hours of a massive airlift of the headquarters brigade of the 3rd infantry division to the Med- iterranean. Anglican Primate Regrets Suppression Of Freedom VIENNA tAPl--The Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr. Geoffrey Fran- cis Fisher, Wednesday accused Fiji Publisher Dies Suddenly AUCKLAND, NZ. here June 14. Sir Alport. three conferences of the Common wealth Press Union. Dining? Cor Wage Agreement OTTAWA (CF) e- Settlement of a wage dispute between the CPR and 000 dining car employees was announced Thursday in the report of a conciliation board. The employees are members of the Brotherhood of Ralrond Train- men. The union obtained a two-year contract with four wage increases totaling 11 per cent, ithe frst ef- foctive last April 1 and the final ' ona taking effect Sept. 1. 1957. The increases are, respectively, three, three, two and three per cent.- Starting Jan. 1, the employees also will receive 54.25 a month in lieu of company payments into a health and welfare plan which they had sought. VCP) - Sir Alport Barker, publisher of the only daily newspaper in the South Seas, the Fiji Times and Herald. died of a heart attack in hospital a New Zealander, started his newspaper in Fiji 5 years ago. He attended the last the Roman Catholic Church of suppressing the freedom of other churches in many parts of the world. The Anglican Church leader, va- cationing in Vienna. said at a press conference that the Angli- can Church strives to live in friendship with all the other churches. Voicing regrets about the slow response to these efforts by the Catholic Church, Dr. Fisher nonetheless said that notable pro- gress had been made for a closer co-operation in I number of large communities in Europe, especially in France. I admire the Catholic Church in many respects and I have made many efforts during the last two years to establish closer links be- tween the two churches." Dr. Fisher said. He added, however, that much of our regret, we notice in many parts of the world a suppression of the freedom of the other churches by the Catholic Church." Foot Caught In SIMCOE, Ont. New York Central Railway's New York Express hurtled inexorably toward them Thursday, farmer Andy Szaboda labored desperately to free a little girl's foot. jammed in the track of a level crossing. Motion Picture Revenues Are Up OTTAWA tCP)-Gross revenues of 46 Canadian companies from production of motion pictures in 1955 were 52,456,000, the bureau of statistics said Thursday. This com- pared with 32,106,000 the previous year. The 1955 output of pictures run- ning more than five mlnutescon- siste d of one theatrcall pcturc against two in 1954, 47, theatrcal shorts compared with 50, 338 tele- vision films compaed with 335, and 352 non-theatrical films com- pared with 963. Track I Girl Killed By Express (CF) - As the. He was unsuccessful and Eliza- beth Stefan, 3, of Port Colborne was killed. The childls foot and leg were caught between a rail and the boards of a private crossing on Szaboda's farm at nearby Lassa!- ettc. Mr. Szaboda worked frantically until the train was almost on them and had to jump aside as i thundered past. The little girl was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Stefan. Her mother was working as a leaf- handler on the farm. LABORITE TAKES BRIDE LONDON tAPl Emanuel Shin- well, veteran Labor party man, to- day married Miss Dinah Mayer, confessed admirer of Conservative Sir Winston Churchill. Shlnwell, 71, a mlniste in the post-war labor government. and Miss Meyer; 54. a London bank official were wed in a 10-minute civil ceremony. 9810 14.'Tbo Guardian Aug. .1956 Belgian Mino Has Become A Big Grave uancmnua, aeiurm, um- lionesoluvlnsthaasomen ai- tolnbed in the black hole 9! Map- gglle -lumped aim-piv Thursday Alter 84 hours of feverish work. rescue teams at the long won. 3'33 0' "19 Boil du Ca- sler mine were driven back by the intense heat in the smoking 3.1. lerles where they had hoped to find survivors. It WI-I. however. I temporary halt. The emergency aqua gun hoped that if they could shoot enough water along the galleries at the 901-metre level. the atmos- phere might cool and allow them to re-enter. This was the crucial point of the Operation. Rescue work had already been called off at the higher levels where the heavy density of carbon dioxide gas pro- cluded any chance of life. in the long grind since the coal mine burst into flames at 8 a.m. Tuesday, rescuers have snatched only six living men from the in- ferno. Nine bodies also hava been taken out. LITTLE HOPE A night of little hope lay ahead, Said one rescuer: "Tho mine has become a big grave.” About 135 of the trapped mm are Italians and a plane from Rome Thursday brought Italian Labor Minister Ezio Vigorelli and under-secretary of state for emi- gration Dino Del Bo. They raced to the pit by car and then climbed out to walk through the big crowd of mourning relatives who main- tained their overnight vigil at the closely-guarded black iron gates of the mine. inside, mining engineers ro- peated the story of the disaster to the Italian officials in an area crowded by fire hoses, electric cables, parked and empty ambu- lances and big red rescue trucks. Quietly, Vigorelli asked: "What chances remain?" Chief engineer Eugene Jacque- myns replied: "I cannot answer either yes or no." Priests moved slowly among the waiting crowds with words of comfort for women who stare into fists. Popoyo Films Are Purchased riounced Thursday it has from Paramount Pictures Corp. for 32,500,000. of Toronto, plans a and supply working capital. have never been used on televi- Only the islands 100.000 Turks IP- ltayed off jobs. There were indi- Monday. British military base: where con- struction is in full swing to build up the island as Britain's last big stronghold in the eastern Mediter- ranean. STREETS DESERTED 333,000,000 RAF base at Akrotiri, near the south coast, and a 528,- 000,000 joint headquarters for Brit- ain's Middle East land, sea and air forces The air force base em- ploys 2,200 Greek construction workers and the headquarters project 1.600. the island's seven Greek newspa- pers and two English-language pa pers. tinued publication. ermath of sulleness among the Greek population, Streets were de- serted and no major incidents were reported although the British Finds Trials Very Trying Martin Charlebols told a judge Wednesday that three trips be tween Montreal and Winnipeg for court appearances were too tough , t, p . for a man of 72. ' ' 1.-, making me p0sIHvely up That's what experienced potato growers plan to do. b95PeCi8c'ed Prise Plain common sense tells them it does not pay to gam- ble with untried fungicldes for blight control. 7 "link 1"" K01"! 10 have to have learned that it pays to stay with DITI-IANE The cost of DITHANE blight protection comes to only two or three per cent of the total cost of producing 3100 Domlnlw 0' an acre of potatoes. Can you risk your investment with uncertain blight control by unknown fungicides? Keep this in mind-only DITHANE can stand square- H, W” mked up in w,,,,,,,,,,,, ly on a ten-year record of proven blight control. Even in 1954, the year of hurricanes and serious blight attacks in many potato areas, DITHANE out- performed other fungicides. vlnced that only with the help of DITHANE were they DITHANE is a trade-mark, lug. Canadian and US. Pat. Off. an infinite nothlngless and others the s 1 lg h t, who lay exhausted on the ground. oncr told Sessions wet handkerchiefs clasped in their Fontaine. ask them to put me in the hos- pitai." address, was charged with re- s ceiving five Canadagbonds which were part of TORONTO (CP)-PRM Inc. an- the 51,550 loot in a safecracking pur- job last December at Harvey chased the Popeye film library Realties. at nearby St. Bruno. on a n o t h e r similar charge, The company, controlled by a brought to Montreal as a suspect group headed by George Gardner in handling bonds from the St. 33,945,000 Bruno theft. bond issue to cover the purchase Winnipeg for trial there. He was found guilty and had started serv- Tha purchase reportedly com- ing, nine months prises 231 Popeye cartoons which brought him back to Montreal. sion. around,” said Charleboia. Greek Cypriots Sfago.Sit Down Strike Over Hangings NICOSIA. Cyprus (APl-Greek Cypriots staged a general strike demonstration. Thursday in island-wide protest against the hanging of three of gum their countrymen by the British. ..,,'.o.. ..g,,',,,,g,,;-,if.-A".,, ' ' g' l youths. They was the fird to Q Id An! 1 l0thIll1lWI1l"l'”"'l9'",'tiuthrpruspdloolasoo. . 9"" -.'”v'”'"'i 3”” '1'" the prison men. who r- Cadets End Visit; "'4 l'c”""""m'G"””.' pantoaioa,:-ssdtliafonoralsorv- , i N0 FAMILY FUNEIW-8 ices or the omit Otthodoa non-mast. can .. om," Five more-Greek Cypriots are Church. its said they retained air will oonclua. took heavy precaution. again: under sentence or death. g their calm lathe final hours while their tlIl'99'W09k will of Cum n I ' A gang my, mom” wen Ag. other-prlsoiiarsdemoaatratod Izlnfetllnl MI!!! .1, troopualtswerouudreas zakkos. 25. Chartiaosl0U1!lIdIIn8tlwGl'0elIn- ff. - evcrirwhm Mobile units Michael, 83. and Iaoovos P , Chin 83 eadda In than Britain, , in-trolled town and villages as 1:. Tho bodies were not given to Norway. Sweden. Denmark gm The three youths died on the the mercury climbed" to I14 rig. Zakkoa and Michael wen up-' their families for burial because The Nsthirl-ndl-Thdrtonr of o.. gallows in Nicosia W50" 5h”'uV lrees for the second straight day. cuted for participating in an am- the authorities feared this would ul'l0- "19 W3”?! ",4 after 1 a.m. for rebel acts against British rule in the terrorist cam- of um gene"; .3, pr"n for union with Greece. '2: h o u r I later embittered The strike followed the pattern hush last December in which a rosultia "hqoos a last May British soldier was killed. Patataos demonstrations. They were buried after the executions of two Greek was convicted of shoottaglto death ' behind tho walls of the prison. Greek Cypriots who make up four- fifths of the island's 500.090 POIN- lguon, b e g a n the strike . and quickly halted nearly all Activiti- peared to be going about their normal business. Greek-owned shops. Dffic-95 Ind factories did not open. Construc- tlon workers and other laborer! cations the strike might last until Among the projects hit were Most important of these are the The strike caused suspension of Two Turkish papers con The triple execution left an aft- MONTREAL (CF) .- Henry Judge T. A. Charlebois. no listed permanent then returned to when police They're just pushing ma 9., Jr , and i.a' principal forolni countries. Many growers are con- . Tobe ratio , ' safe side - I am staying with DITHANE able to keep their crop safe from early or late blight during that season. When you buy DITHANE you buylmore than a chem- ical funglcide. You buy a product accepted and recommended by growers everywhere. You can depend on DITI-IANE-manufactured only by Rohm & Haas Company of Canada Limited, your partner in crop protection. Clillilli T0! ' Atlltllilll IIOIIM 8 IIAAS. C O H-PA I V or sauna. trot ws:s-rnn.i.. oimiaio. 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