l'El.EPllONE 3566 g Inosss seller with Guardian Wnnth-ls. DIOIISOG ndrforcInssi- fiedadldantasquicltrasulls. layer 12 PAGES DOCTORS ENTERTAINED AT llembers of the Prince !1d- Rouse Left to right are Mrs. L. Prowse. Governor Prowse and Dr ward Island Medical Association E. Prowse. Mrs. Dr. Young. Dr. last night were guests of his Hon- Morley Young. President of E.l. Branch of the Canadian sur Lieutenant Governor Prowse the Canadian Medical Associat- Medical Association. During the and Mrs. Prowaa at Govunmant ion from Lamont. Alberta; Mrs. evening. the doctors and their hit &i!.1atldli&11 "Covers Prince Edward Island LikeT The Dew" CHARLUTTETOWN CANADA. sxruanav, AUGUST 24. 1957 LE. Prowse. president of the P. GOVERNMENT HOUSE ladies attended the formal dance which continued until 1.30 am. The P.E.l. Medical Association will conclude a two-day convent- ion at Charlottetown today. CAIRO tReuiersl- President shukn el Kuwatly of Syria has asked the United States to stop meddling in his country's affairs. Ills plea. which appeared Fri- day In the Egyptian newspaper El Ahram was issued as Ku- wally prepared to return to Da- mascus after a period In an Alexandria hospital for a re- ported stomach ulcer condition. lie has been In hospital since shortly after a Communist party member, Col. Aflf Blzry. becama commander-in-cblef of the Syrian army last week. "The West. particularly the United States. should leave us aglont-.r"gIle said. "It should put Will Seek To Settle Boston Paper Strike BOSTON (AP)-Governor Fos- ter Furoolo announced Friday be it rolling a conference Monday of both Hldeg in the msilers' strike that line shut down six metropoli- Ian new .-papers for two weeks. Furcolo acted after receiving a letter from the Boston local of the American Newspaper Guild. more titan N0 of whose mombors have been made idle by the strike. The dispute has put LWI person; out of work. Representatives of the publish- an and of the mailers' union had so comment other than to say they will attend the session. There has been on meeting of the parties since last Saturday when the union turned down a publlshers' other of a (10.50 pack- age increase dwlng to next two years. The prssut scale is nus. lltltl) WEZIND It nothing develops before Mon. day to end the impasse, it will be the third consecutive weekend Itatllostonhashadnsiocsllu. day aewsappors. Papers shut down are The Morning and lvsnlag GION. The Morning Herald and Record sad The Evening Traveler and Amari- ltaoord asd Amsric can. The II are llaart . is loaday outlet of will The Advctisd. The Osrlstin Os only owet daily publlalll is the city. Friday resumed lc sale of its in Boston and PCP?" within a I0-mils radius. It had discontinued sales at the outset of President Of Syria Asks U.S. To "Stop Meddling" an end to allegations that we sre.mediate prospects that a meet- Communists. "The West should stop direct- ing its policies for the services of Zionism." THE WEST CONFUSED "I regret." he added. "that the West is unable to dlarngulsh be- tween communism and a policy of liberation and Arab national- ism. "The West appears to regard all those who do not follow its orbit as Communists." '-"The Arab countries will never tun Communist and can never become a base for communism or other foreign ideologies. They will never become a base except for their own people." Meanwhile. an authoritative Italian source said in Roma Fri- day that Col. Ibrahim Husaainy. former Syrian military attachs in Roma had asked the Italian government for political asylum. AOCUIID OF PLOT Tbs colonel has been accused by his government of taking part in as alleged plot against the present regime In Syria. He was dismissed from his post and told to return to Syria last week. la Karachi. Pakistan. reliable sources said there were no im- Acadin Reveals Expansion Plans WOLFVILLE. N.S. (CF) Acadia University Friday an- nounced s Ii.750.000 expansion program to cope with lag T ” for " woman." Prasmnt Wotan Kirkconnell sold Sydney Frost. presto t of the Bank of Nova Seotia and aa- tive of Argyle. N.S.. will head a campaign for funds. He will ap- peal to Canadian business firms. btllnass leaders in the U Rates and university alumni. Dr. said expanding to university's faculty will cost &.N0: hding the science department .000; a new men's rasidoacs stonooo: tnd expand. mg the theology department I100.- &. ” men and FLU IPIDIMIC CAPETOWN (Reutersl-Cape town's medical health officer. E. D. Cooper. Friday said that be- tween Law.” and l.l00.(lI0 out latioa now have Asia fact that only four deaths have bsesrepsrtod.besaid.means ttiatitwasatnildformofihs disease. "the grow- PE 1 tad longest ing of the five-nation Baghdad Middle East defence pact coun- cil would be called to discuss the Syrian situation. One source said It was felt In Karachi that the "situation In Syria is primiarlly a question to be handled by the Arab coun- tries. Any interference from the outside world might be resented by them." PEI Students Got Scholarships SACKVILLE. N.B. (CPl Awarding of 12 entrance scholar- ships valued at 8500 each and re- newable on maintenance or so- ademic standards. were announc- ed here Friday by Mount Allison University. The scholarship fund was estab- lished at Mount Allison by the late Herbert 5. Sharp of Sum- merslde. P.E.l. They will go to Thane Drum- mond. Freetown. P.E.l.: Jeanne Rebecca Duncan. Dalhousle. N. B. Robert Jamieson Estcy. Plctou. N. 5.: Graham Fraser. Saint John N.B. John Fraser, Bridgetown. N.S.: Gordon Nevil- le Henderson. Brookfleld, N.s. Msiorie Jean Murray. Kenning- ton. P.E.l.I John George Ross, Westville. N.S.; Mabel Scott. Bsthurust. N.B.; Barbar Sinclair Springfield, P.E.I.; Carols Mabel Turner. Glace Bay. N.s. and Geraldine Woodslds Kensington 4,730-Milo Trip To Nowhere LONDON (AP) - ''It was the and most comfortable journey I have ever made to get precisely nowhere." said Mrs. Joan Mitchell of Loughton as she stepped from a plane at London airport Friday. She had Just returned from a 1.7”-mile trip that took 10 hours. The BOAC stratocruiser set out Thursday with 50 passengers for Trinidad. A landing could ot be made at Gander. Nfld.. because of fog. and the pilot decided to return to London. Four Doctors To Attend W. M. A. TORONTO (CF) - Four Cana- dian doctora will attend the 11th general assembly of the World Medical Association in Istanbul. Turkey. Sept. 29-Oct. 5. the Cana- dian Medlcal Association an- nounced Friday. Dr. Norman ll. Gosse of Hall- fax. and Dr. E. 5. Mills of Mont- real are official delegate, of the CMA. Dr. T. C. Routley of Toronto will attend the meeting in his capacity as nsultant general to the WMA. Dr. Margaret Goase of Halifax is an alternate delegate. " L s from 50 national medical associations are expected at the meeting. VOLUNTEERS REFORTED Recor Clssrwblslistlsclllnaslntstapaviuas. lowusdIIiglIatClInrInttatownS0snd 75. Outlnskfariundaysunny. leading Actress In Romania Makes Escape MONTREAL (CP - A leading Romanian actress arrived in Can- ada Friday and told of s hare- and-hounds chase on the canals of Venice in her flight from her Communist homeland. Bvelte Nina Dlaconescu. 29. ar- rived by air Friday with Adrian Popovici of Montreal, the uncle to whom she wired for help in her get-away adventure. "My first message is to thank Canada for her hospitality and generosity." said Miss Diacon- escu. who described herself as the leading comedieune in Ro- mania's Bucharest National The- sire and a star in radio, televi- slon and films. The actress, who said she left behind her parents and a sister. was a member of a Romanian theatre delegation which attended an international festival at Ven- ice in July. 17 POLICE There were nine actors in the party and "we were ccompanled by I7 police personnel charged with watching us" Miss Discon- escue said. "I made my get-away July 25. But I had wired my uncle in Montreal when I got to Venice. The wire was only a few words but he understood. "We tied together after the last performance and it didn't take the guards long to notice I'd left. They set out after us. "We got into a gondola my uncle had hired. then transferred to s motorboat and finally to a taxi which took us to the train for Padua. Milan. Rome and then Paris. We left there for Mont- LONDON (AP)-A Dally Ex- press correapondent reports that thousands of Russian "volun- teers" are pouring into Syria. "My information." correspond- eat Aondla Wise writes from Da. mucus. "is that most of these men are here to stay-and fight for the Syrians when Syria feels real." She wants to work in Montreal the round-faced actress said. She had fled because of the Commun- tats although she received an as- eallentsa ...H. las dd -thing that keeps the Romanians front rising against the Communists is the the time has come to try to roll Israel into the sea." fear that it would develop into another Hungary. Atomic Tests In Russia And U.S. WASHINGTON (AP) - The United States Friday announced Russia has resumed testing of nuclear weapons. and then fired off another test blast of it; own. The R u s s is n explosion. de- scribed by the atomic energy " asof bi " 'slse. took place Thursday and appar- ently marked the start of a new series at the Soviet proving grounds in Siberia. The announcement of a Russian test firing was the first since last April. when the Russians set off five blasts within a space of two weeks. The Russians said those tests were designed to perfect nuclear weapons for use in am- lng various kinds of troop forma- tlons. IJTI ILAST The U.S. explosion. touched off over the Nevada desert. was the was of relatively low explosive force. The resumption of Russian test; came amid indications that the London disarmament talks are drawing toward a recess without any break in the East-West dead- lock over suspending the tryouts. P ” '-" " offe this week to call off nuclear tests for two years. but the Russians contended the proposal contained too many unacceptable condi. tions. The US. Atomic Energy Com- mission said the U.S. device. ex- ploded from a balloon L500 feet above Yucca Flat. was equal to about 10.000 tons of TNT. lt ex- ploded a; a blood - red fireball, faded quickly. and a mushroom cloud raced high into the sky. The AEC said fallout was sligb Among the 450 military observ- ers who viewed the test from trenches 3,000 yards from ground OTTAWA (CP Murdodtvlllc, Que. Violence broke out in Murdoch- etcrs backing the United Steel- Tlte head of the 1.000 000mem- ber organization, who joined the picket lines at Murdochville Mon- day. said later he made no rcp- resentntions to the minister but posted him on developments at the Gaspe town and asked him to help set up the meeting with Mr. Dlefenbaker. - Mr. Starr said after the confer- ence he would try to set up a. Britain Blasts At Russia In London Arms Conference day CAN'T INTERVENE Miles, Son Dies SCARBOROUGH. Me. meeting. possibly for next Tues-I At the same time. the minister said in an interview he regards the federal government as having no jurisdiction in the Murdoch- ville scrap between the United Steelworkers of America (CDC and Gaspe Copper Mines Limited. "The questions of a settlement of the dispute and of the presav- atlas: of law and order in Mur- dochville lie with the Quebec au- Motltor Swims 3 (AP)- A gasping, sobbing mother who back at Russia in the United Na- tions disarmament negotiations Friday with charges than he Sov- iet Union is blocking any agree- ment cxcept on its own terms. David Orms-by-Gore. the Brit- ish delegate. noted that Russia had Just exploded another nuclear weapon at its Siberian proving grounds. It is ironic, Ormsby-Gore said. that Soviet nuclear weapon con- tinued after the Soviet ' ' Valerian Zorin had upbraided Western powers last Wednesday for continuing atomic bomb tests. The United States. too. set off another test blast Friday. An American comment at the conference-the Isoth meeting of the UN subcommlt was that tests are not banned now. LONDON (AP!-Britain blasted. lost her tiny son after a boat cap- aimed stumbled ashore after a four-hour swim Friday. A heli- copter rescued her companions. Mrs. Martha Cole of Philadel- phia, unaware that her Infant son. Jeffrey. had tied fought vi- cious tides in a.thrse-gnlle . . In gasped out the story' how a 15-foot outboard motorboat cap- slsed to summer residents Mr. and Mrs. Pierre Desiardln of RUSSIAN S0l.U'l'l0NS The British delegate complained that Russia apparently seeks to make any ban on nuclear tests conditional on the West's accept- ing Russlss solutions for problems of lhtropesn security. The mood in the corlecnnce ap- peared somewhat depressed by the news of the nuclear tests. Boucherville, Que. klntmvn. Pa. and the craft capsized. Manley. WORST EPIUEMIC WELLINGTON. NZ. larly from the disease. 3.000 FLU CASES lath in the series which began llay Is. Like its yl ' sort. it zero was a platoon from the Queen's Own -Rifles. Calgary. . day. With her in the boat were Theo- dora Cbase. 25. of Springfield. Ilaas., her mother. Mrs. E. T. Mill!!! 0! Longmeadow. Mass. and Thomas 0. Cole. 25. of Jen- Mrs. Cole said the family and Ch"! WEN lolnl on a picnic in nearby Eagle Island when the seas began breaking over the boat. They decided to turn back Mrs. Cole said she decided to risk the swim to the mainland. leaving the men to support the IV:-year-old Jeffrey and Mn, Her - three companions were taken from the island by a U.S. Nd coast guard helicopter and landed in the grounds of a hospital. iReuIcrsl -Four deltba this week now are attributed by doctors to Asiatic flu. making it the worst epidemic of its kind here since I9II. School children have suffered particu- LAGOS (AP! - Two hundred y thousand cases of influenza havel been reported from all parts of Nigeria. it was announced Fri- Zorln listened to the British delegate without any sign of emo- tlon. and then relieved the gloom a bit by asking a number of ser- ious questions about the new Western yl posals. These would prohibit nuclear BECOMES CITIZEN BOSTON (AP) - Mrs. Okaana Kasenkina, R u s s I a is school. t T who jumped to freedom from a third-noor window of the Soviet consulate in New York nine years ago rather than be sent back to the Soviet Union, has become a United States citi- sen. Secret service agents ac- companied her at naturalization D:I'CTDOIIlGJ in court here Wed- aesday. - President. thorities," he said. "We cannot y as bargaining agent for workers. Claude Jodoin of the Canadlanl -Labor Congress Friday conferred with Labor M i n l s t er Michael ties." Starr and sought a meeting with Prime Minister Dicfenbaker on the turbulent strike situation at planned to tell the prime minis- tier, but it appeared likely he ldocilville -' ' included non- weapon tests for a period of two years. a concession to Russia which objected to an earlier 10- month prohibition proposal. It was even suggested that. if Zorin wishes. the negotiations might be adjourned for a week or more to give Russia time to make its studies-just as there was an adjournment w h'en American delegate I'Iarold.Stassen went to the United States for consulta- tions. Was Port Morlen Priest 32 Years GLACE BAY. N. S. (CPD-Rev. Peter V. McMulIin. Roman Cath- ollc priest in nearby Port Morlen for :2 years. died in hospital here Friday. He was born in Low Point. NS. and ordained in 1915. Actress Paulette Goddard To Wad HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Paulette Goddard said Friday that she and her novelist boy friend. Ger- many's Erich Maria Itomarqut. may be married in switserlsnd during the Christmas holidays. "Ah. St. Moritz is so romantic in the wintertime". said the thrice-wed 46-year-old actress when asked to comment on pub- lished reports that lie and Re- marque plan to marry. "Erich and I have no definite wedding plans." she said. "I be- lieve in long engagements." Miss Goddard glld she will an. pear in a Broadway play this fall. Then. she said. she's off to Switzerland and perhaps wedding bells with Remarque. He is the author of All Quiet on the West- ern Front. and Arch of Triumph. among other novels. PRICE Sc ail Losses In Sask. Are cl; Man., Alla. High Seeks Meeting With PM Over Murdochville Strike Insurance May Pay 4 Million EDMONTON fCPl-Hall losses intervene unless we are asked to; The congress head had nothing . M - b 5 do so by the provincial authorl- to say Friday about what hel:';c:l:':,J!e:rndlnA)b::l: :2 it creased from 1956 with Saskat- chewan's the highest on record. ville Monday. the day Jodoinlwould emphasize union claims hail munuc, company omcm. headed a group of outside pick-I that persons participating in Mur- report. To date in Saskatchewan about workers of America. which haslcsnadlans subject to deportation mom 1 ml ha” been recelwd been blocked by a Quebec. courtlby the federal government for . by' mecsgskmchewln H," Auoci. ruling from getting certification such action. ailun. more than double the num- ber received at this time last year. ”It is expected that the com- pany will pay total indemnity of not les, than S4.000.0(Il in 1957. a record amount in the company's 41-year history." said J. S. Gtsby. association manager. A. 5. Simpson. secretary of Ca- nadian Hail Underwriters Associ- ation, deacribedthe 1957 hail sea- son lg "disastrous both for farmer and hail insurance com- panies. WORST YEAR "As far as Manitoba and Sas- katchewan are concerned It is probably the worst year in the history of bail insurance." ha said. "It is definitely so in Sas- hatchewan." Hail so far has been recorded somewhere in the prairies every day except June 18. As of Aug 22. in Manitoba it had hailed it days from June 1. In Saskatche- wan from June 12. 56 days oi ball were reported and from J um I in Alberta. 43 days. Two sweeping storms July f and July 17 which moved across Saskatchewan and Into caused the worst damage so far. in Alberta. ltall.losses on in- sured crops are more widespread this year titan last. laid Glen El- dar. manasins of IN 53' Almost daily hall storms in at berta during August have puissd the percentage of losses highs! now than they were for the an- t.l.ra 1050 season. Asiatic Flu Cases Reported LONDON (AP)-A total of III American airmen stationed in England were in hospital Friday night with suspected Asiatic flu. but the fast spreading epidemic seemed to have compar lwu:y little effect on the British them- selves. NORFOLK. Va. (AP)-Eleven new cases of suspected Asiath flu turned up on the U.S. Da- stroyer Huntington Friday. ush- log it. total to ltd. She c as a crew of 21a. TORONTO (CP - Unable to wait for the atomic age's prom- Inc of boundless. easily-generated electricity. Ontario disclosed Fri- day that she is turning to coal to meet her immediate power needs. Chairman James Duncan of the Hydro - Electric Power Commis- sion of Ontario announced 3500.- ooo.ooo is to be spent during the next It years in build and lnslal the world's biggest coal - fired electricity generators - one near Toronto. the other near Hamilton. Another program would see the capacity of Toronto's Richard llearne thermal plant tripled In capacity by I981 to LZMOM kilo- watts. from its present 400.030. By 1000. when the two new ther- mal plants would be fully in pro- requirement will be 4 - tons a year for each plant. That . 5 Ontario Turning To Coal To Fill In Power Needs and when at full capacity "on! S000.(Ittl is about 70.000 railway csrloads duction. a vast new market for all But It must be brought in by lleast s,ooo,ooo tons of coal an- water." tons-would have been opened up by the three plants combined. tTl'-INDERS INVITED I Already tenders have been in- vited for the first two of the six generators the new Toronto plant would require. i Mr. Duncan said the operations will need large quantities of coal nuslly - and probably Il.000.0t'l0l Each of the two protected new plants would generate l.Nl).llJ0 lkllowaits-more than double the isupply expected from Ontario's portion of the St. Lawrence power :evelopment's output. Each would cost 8250.000. Their generating equipment likely would not be Canadian - made since no company in Cats- ada was in position to manufsts ' furc the whole unit. Such Installa- ltlons were under way. however. lin both the United Kingdom and 'the United States. Each turbo - I generator would have Shim)-watt Re rt Finding Red Plot To Tat: Singapore In Revolt Senate-lnvedigators Call OH -Sigma: -mm-H1-: mg;-dc;,o-;,5;;,-.,-igci-6,. .51;-,'.; Grilling Of Teamsters Boss ;;:;c';.; :35, gig; vl--- -M-M goveransst sa mm Vim! paper Friday it has new 'mg max wasnmcrox IAPI - Senate to do it. The inslrnrnentalities of? "Ed I R! Okldl lid '0 dnan. rackets investigators Friday 5"" 'PP""”"Y c"”d” "- ' Youths char .6 "T9 "3 XOR! U U '3' 7. 'iI''''I kl '''”I-:: called off their grilling of Team- puns gm) cgmnups . 9 X"-m '. mi N, men Union boss James R. Hoffa mm. pfgvjgugly acknowledged i a. M with the scornfnl charge that he made a mistake is assoclaungl Aeuss party rsslaeas use "TI! Vim" 0'' It "it """" "" "i''"'''" '"i'- DUNNVTLLIZ. 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