TELEPHONE 8506 i Buyer meets seller with Guardian Want Ads. Dial I506 ask for dossi- fiod and tailor, for quiet: results who ftmtmoiimt "Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew". WEATHER A little warmer Friday. Liglstwlnds. low and high at Charlottetown 45 and 70. CHARLOTTETOWN CANADA, FRIDAY. AUGUST 23, 1957 PRICE 5o A MAGNIFICENT TRIP, SCOUTS SAY "We had a truly nsunlflclent mp - a wonderful experience. 'li'i;suk J. Coltdkt. Cll8l'l0"O' (Dull, one of three Scoutmasters ulm accompanied the Island swim to the World Jamboree in I-in-zlnnd, told the Guardian a-2 lll.llll. 'I'Iu- Island boys returned via Ill llC.-H-I plane which carried them from Moncton at the last lt'.Z of their homeward flight. Tlnir trans-ocean tlrip started hrre .luly ill. it the City Airport which they nunlwd at li:3O p.m. last night the South: were met by their quickly In order to rest after ,their long air Journey from the fUnited Kingdom. The return night left London shortly after midnight Wednes- lday but was several hours de- -layed en route due to two un- lschedulcd stops - the first in Iceland, and the second at Goose Bay. Labrador. Some of the returning Scouts were dressed in kllts which they had acquired in Scotland. Others had huge snowy sheepskins drap- ed over their shoulders; these they had picked up in Iceland Voyful parents and whisked home during their short visit there. The chartered M.C.A. ir- craft arrived in Moncton at i0.27 p.m. where they were met by a welcoming committee head- ed by Moncton's Mayor MM. Baig, a provincial Scout official. While in England the Scouts formed part of the 68 member contingent of Canadian Scouts attending the World Jamboree held at Sutton Coldfield. Among the 16 Island Scouts parriving home last night were ,left to right: FRONT ROW - iDavid Rogers, Charlottetown; p R 0 it s Davidson. Kensington: -Lloyd Matthews. O'Leary; Frank Costello. Charlottetown; William Hambiy. Charlottetown; IIACK ROW: David Seller, Charlotte- town; Scott Rogers, Charlotte town: Terry Manning. Charlotte- town; Raymond MacLean. Char- lottetown: ” Pendleton, Kensinglon; Roger Craig, Char- lottetown; Colin MacMilian, Charlottetown: Derek Buntain, Charlottetown. Messrs. Costello, Davidson and Matthews were the leaders at.- companylng the group. Missing from the picture are Scouts Walter Bethel, Frank El- lis. and John Ray. all of whom reside at Slcmon Park, near Summerside. Ottawa Announces Aid For Springhiii Coal Mine tll”r.tWA (CF) - Treasury as- ll-l.lllt'O of an estimated 3l00.0M null he provided towards main- ldillllli: operations of a coal mine at ilisnstt-r-hit Springhiii. N.S.. Pruuo Minister Difenbaker ID nmnnrt-rl Thursday. The assiltance will be provided until next March 31 to the Cum- bcrlhnri Railway and Coal Com- pany. which operates mines No. faint xn. t at Springhiii It was Ilndrrslood It will be used for No. I win:-ii has been having mar- '- lt-Im: difficulties. Wssistance for the movement of approximately 30,000 tons. it was understood. will enable the tnlilrry to remain in full opera- tmn " the announcemen said. lir. Dieicnbaker said the aid Illl iw used to assist the move- men' of coal to market. informants said Sprlnghill No. Hm bccn th. stened with cur- iatimr-nl of operations because of PM of its market with the CNR. slut-h has been converting to div-vi power. The Ir:-usury funds. they said. Illl lw used as an additional sub- rcntmn ircight subsidy - in lime slack coal to MOIIIICI for Ilrkvling in that area. - The second colliery at Spring- hill-No. I-was the scene of one of Canada's worst mining disast- ers last November. Thirty - nlno miners died as a result of an un- derground explosion. Harold Gordon, chief of Dosco”a operation. said in Sydney he is "very happy" with the Ottawa an- nouncement. "I am very happy with any- thing that will help the industry . and this is going to be very helpful to Sprlnghill." He said the summer season was usually slack for the mines be- cause most of the output goes to domestic markets. He hoped this new asslstanc would tie the mine over until business increased in U.S. LIVTNG COSTS UP WASHINGTON (AP)-The cost of living in the United States rose one-half per cent during July. the government reports. it was the Ilth consecutive monthly ad- vance. Food prices rose by one per cent. the labor department said. and carried the consumer price index to a record at I201 pcr centiof the 1947-49 level. the winter. Neither Premier Stanfield or Mines Minister Manson could be contacted immediately. Mayor Ralph Gllroy of Spring- IIIII was attending a citizen's meeting to discuss the depressed coal situation and could not be reached. However. a town official said Mr. Gilroy heard about the new assistance program lust prior to the meeting Cardinal Dies In His 91st Year VATICAN CITY (AP! - Glo- vsnni Cardinal Mercatl. librarian of the Roman Catholic Church and one of its oldest cardinala died of a heart attack Thursday night in his vatican apartment. The prelate JV!!! raised to the rank of cardinal by Pope Pius XI June 15, 1936. Only two cardinals in the Col- lege of Cardinals were older than Cardinal Mercatl when he cele- hratcd his 90th birthday last Dec. 17. They were Alt-ssardro Cardi- nal Verde. now 92. ind Jose M. (Taro Cardinal Rodriguez of Chile. 91. MAYOIAN visit l .folk. surmise Fesiivalef Bri- oflXIt'd'n' mdgaugwyhntzmirl tzieomsau-isg"c'ssristutsws's milsnovnresiolll castsssiu. ""- ...-.a as... o romeo Mama M . sherren is pad prest- not the reilxstoe Dastaus 4 at Women's X vlso-l'& Buildings Burn On Piciou Island HALIFAX fCP)- A forest fin broke out Wednesday on tiny Mother's Island near the mouth of tho l.aHavo River. And late Thursday night it was still burn- ing. although firefighters had slowed its progress. The blue broke out about noon and spread across the woodland toward a lighthouse at the other end. Officials said it likely would halted completely during the night. In another fire Thursday five buildings were levelled on Pic- tou Island as lack of water hampered flrefighting opera- tions. The farm buildings of Edward Glover. were destroyed along with most of his machin- ery. Hia home was saved. Murdochville Tension Eases; May lift Curfew MURDOCHVILLE. Que. (CPI- Two provincial police constables ggglgned to protect three labor leaders from attack were with- drawn Thursday night as tension lessened in this strike - troubled Gngpe community. The guards were posted at the local hotel Tuesday when report! circulated that non-strikers plan- ned to chase the men out of town. The officials are Roger Be- risrd. who came here when the strike at Gaspe Copper Mines Wu killed by the United Steelworkers of America tCLCl March it: Bruno MacDonald. another USWA official, and Teo G a g It 0 PITUI- dent of the union's Murdochvllle local. As tension abated. Mayor Emile Duhsmel was reported consider- ing the possibility of lifting the I pm. to 0 am. curfew. clamped on after a clash between a 450- msn labor delegation and com- pany employees Monday and a raid on the USWA's offices Mon- day night. WASHINGTON tAP) - The United States Thursday reluct- antly authorized 24 American newspaper men to go to Commun- ist China. It remains to be seen whether the Communist regime at Peiping will let the reporters en- ter. A statement ordered by State Secretary Dulles said no report- ers from Communist China will be allowen into the United States on a reciprocal basis. This could be a bling block if the Chinese decide they want equal treatment. But they prev- iously have invited American cor- respondent, to visit the Chinese mainland with no strings at- tached. The Dulles announcement des- ignated 24 news organizations and authorized them to send one reporter each to China on a six- months . or - longer "experimen- tal basis." VALIDATE PASSPORT! Their passports will be vali- dated for travel to Red China- now expressly forbidden in all American assports. At the end of the experimental period. Dulles will decide whether the idu works. Officials said the chief factor in the decision will be whether the reporters are able to report freely or whether they are so inhibited as to make their dispatches virtually meaningless. Public Inquiry Into Crash Iri About A Month OUEIWIQL-Trlwort Illn- istr I-tees said Thurrday a pub llc inquiry will be held in Quebec City "in about a month or more" into Canada's worst air disaster. Mr. Iiees spoke to reporters af- ter making a onehour tour of the swamp where the Maitime Cen- tral Airways DC-4 crashed near lssoudun. Que., Aug. 11 with I loss of 79 lives. He also said investigators an trying to determine whether ovar- loadlng was a factor in the crash. A transport depotment invest- gator had flown to Greenland and London to determine the weight carried by the four-engined air- craft which crashed during a thunderstorm while returning va- catloners to Toronto from Bri- tain. Mr. Hees interrupted a Mart- crash area. making the trip then in a helicopter from nearby An- cienne-Lorette Airport when he arrived from Saint John. N.B. "The most important part of the inquiry. of course. is to detpr: mine the cause of the accid . he said. "The travelling public which uses the air lanes has the right to know what precautions have been taken to assure all possible safety. The inquiry will ” ' without doubt whether there was it ne ii ence." . lie s:it-lghe is satisfied with the work done by the investigators. Meanwhile. J. 0. Noury- 99 partment of frrsnsport chief In- spector. said he expects to begin gripping the recovered pieces of the plane to Ancienne - Loretta Airport Monday or Tuesday- N01' HEAVY ENOUGH A riderless horse that crosses the finish line in a horse race is disqualified for carrying insuf- ficient weight. MONTREAL tCPl - Police bospitai to , tion a man about three abortive charter nights paid for by Canadians left Itranded on both sides at the Atlantic. Ills wife said the man was "a very poor” bnstaeoslnaa but not i The man himself, a Finland ao- tive. It. lay in a st. Jerome. .. hospital recovering from what doctors said was an over- Neariy&personswereof- feeted by the cancellation of three sultan Thursday in o Laurentianal Police Guard Man Believed To Have Muddled 3 Flights government-chartered Bill!!- The Maritime Central Atrwlyl plane will pick no the smr are vtded clearance for its landing ll obtained from French authorities. Nermany. the plane would have - left for Canada from some other 1 European centre with a full load of Hungarians immigrating to Canada. l The men under police IIIN ,was described as I MGITNII travel agent who dlsawnfd imanager brushed past I "do net disturb" sign on the door after he groans. he said. Three U.S. Agrees To Let 24 Newsmen Visit China No U.S. newspaper men have ally banning American travel been stationed regularly on the.there Chinese mainland since the Com-l The Associated Press desig- munisls look over in l949. natt-Li Juiiu IIt)(.I('l'lL'I(, nuvs sta- Lincoln White. state department V Itoned at Hung Kong, as ilS China press officer. emphasized there is correspondent. His career has no change in the U.S. policy oflcentred on the Far East. inciud-1 withholding diplomatic recogni-1 ing three years of reporting from tion from Red China and gener-I mainland China prior to the war. l Metropolitan Committee Has- Briel Meeting With Gov't immetiiatt-ly to give the matter. careful study before proceeding further with the discussions. Representing the Metropolit- an Committee were F..l. Storey, Chairman: Mayor J. David Stew- art. Councillors E.C. Johnston and A.W. Gaudet: B.E. Rogers. A representative group from the Metropolitan Committee met with the members of the Govern- ment yesterday to discuss the terms of reference in the Com- mittee's report. After a general dlsqission re- garding specific recommenda- tions. the meeting was adjourn- ed for one week at the request of Premier Matheson who stated that a special committee of the Government will be appointed Charlottetown Board of Trade: Commissioners Edmund Arsen- ault and Howard Douglas from Spring Park. The Village of Parkdale was not represented. Germs B Made O 011' WA (CP) - Internationall move t of germs by mall-in-I y Mail ptional A Canadian delegate said this country will probably remain ada- cludlhl dllelle - Clfrylnlt mlCi'0- mant against the idea of carrying ganisms-got approval Thursday germs by mail. The optional idea on an optional basis from one of W" mpporged .9 ., not to mod '3" 109 501315 0i 910 95'Nlll'I7 others. Canada felt there was a Arab States Planning To Isolate Syria, is Report Diplomatic Activity Steps Up Sharply LONDON IAPI -- Arab states friendly to the West we'e re-p ported T h u r s d ay planning to isolate leftilt Syria in an attemptl lu block the spread of Soviet in- fluence through the liiiudlc East. lnfurmed diplomats said that was the real meaning behind the flurry of diplomatic activity in- the region - activity climaxedi Thursday by the sudden flight of young King Hussein of Jordan to Turkey. At the same time. these in- formants said, Britain and the United States have decided against any open intervention that would seem to challenge lit.- tle Svria's 'wing to the left. UNWILLING T0 INTERFERE The reason for the repofted British-American decision is an unwillingness to interfere with what the Syrians-and other na- tions-might consider to be their internal affairs. British diplomats here said to have concluded it would be better for Syria's Arab neigh- bors - all strongly anti-Commu- his! to guard themlelges against new Soviet - inspired at- tempts to extend leftist influ- ences. To that and Arab countries friendly to the West already are reported consulting each other and British and American envoys in the area. informants say these Arab lands already appear to be gen- erally agreed that the Syrians should be quarantined even though this may serve finally to tuck the facade of Arabic unity. POLITICALLY IIIILATID To some extant the process at- UHIVOHII Pull! UIIOVI C0lIIN5U- diflnite danger to postal employ- "? l"1i0n'l "Flt wmmmw '9 es and there were better med- ""5 3 UP” 9d" 153"”, ml" iums than the mails-air parcel carrisge of biological material af- point for g,,,g.nc,.(,,r cu-ryiu 1" helfilll I W07” "Huh 01" such dangerous packages with times speaking tour to visit the' ganizstion expert say the lives of millions are at stake and the co-operation of postal authorities around the world is needed to meet medical range require- ments. Mexican delega'e Lsuno F. Ramines broke a two-day dead- lock in the congress committee by proposing an amendment that international mail carriage of "perishable biological material" be made optional for those coun- tries which want to adopt it. Orig- inally It was proposed to make the provision mandatory on union countries. CANADIAN SUPPORT Canada and the United States. who previously argued that mail carriage of germs posed a dan- ser to postal employees and even the threat of epidemics. supported the amendment. It was approved by the committee 62 to is with 11 more control. ANOTHER PIECE A vial carrying deadly germa could be just another piece of mail in a letter hag. he said. But as a marked parcel handed to an airline its contents would be known and it could be given the special handling it might require. in case of accident, it would be known that the downed plane was carrying dangerous germs and precautions could be taken. Dr. N. K. Jerne of Geneva. h e a d of WHO's biological stand- ardizatlon section. told the com- mittee quick transport of germs for rcsearch and other purposes was a vital medical need. lie said the "risk of being in- fected with tuberculosis or polio on a street car. walking along the street or simply shaking hands. is more acute than in the postal handling of such micro-organisms countries abstaining. The proposition will go to the full congress later In its six-week if they are carefully packed." In approving the optional pro- posal the committee agreed to set NGGNM fI!i'e.x lobservers said up it subcommittee to draw up committee usually are at r lrt packaging regulations in c0"m'm9d- collaboration with WHO. ready is under way. The 3.5M.- 000-strong Syrian nation has been politically isolated by its suspici- ous neighbors. But the ring around the Syrians may be tightened still further by the Lebanese Turks. Iraqis and Jordanian! who surround them. some of the counter-measures Syria's neighbors were said to he pondering include: Stepping up the political cam- paign In the hope of inducing the Syrian people to rid themselves of their Moscow bonds. Cutting economic relations with the Syrians to a bare minimum. Reducing all dllomatic ex- changes wlth the Damascus gov- ernment as much as possible. Increasing f r o n t l e r security patrols to ensure against illegal crossings. Western diplomatsin the Mid- dle East are making it plainly In Arab World tragic a view of the replacement of Syria's army commander and other senior officers by known leftists. Their argument is that thou developments have only continued a lung - standing trend, however potentially serious it may be. Even before the ousters and charges of U.S. plotting of the last week, Britain estimated that isyria had received something like Sl40.000,0(I'l worth of arms pfrom Russia. The British also claimed more than no Soviet technicians and advisers were in the country. These supplies lately have been augmented by a big program of economi aid that the Syrians claim officially to be without con- ditionl. Under this program Russia will help to enlarge the port of Leta- kia. build a railroad linking Latt- kla with the Baghdad line and with Damascus. develop a not- worir of roads and airports. sat up several irrigation and hydro electric power projects and ex- pand Syrian industry and agricul- ture. For these purposes the Run- ians will supply the skilled labor force. long - term credits and equipment. OTHERS COULD FOLLOW One factor In Western thinking is that the successful fulfilment of such an aid program-eapeet ally if the Russians do not exact too heavy a political and ico- nomic price for it-may have the effect of tempting some other underdeveloped Middle East state to follow the Syrian example. If thatwere lobapponoaabig small! scale. the entire Western British and United States of!!- cials are eager to determine the reaction of President Nassor's rs lime over the Syrian daveiop- ments. The Western sources presume the Egyptian "strongman" likely would resent the Russians ao- sumlng s paramount position In Syria. Western officials are satisfied. however. that Sysia's tightened links with Moscow probably will not spell any special military dangers. The Syrian army. corn- promislng fewer than 10 brigades. is not considered strong enough to take on any of its neighbors with the possible ' of Lebanon. BODIES RECOVERED understood they stand behind a co-ordinated program to quaran-i tine Syria. American envoys have invited; the Arab governments to express; their views on what should be done to deal with th situatIoa.? and British ambassadors an do. ing the same. CONTINUED TREND Beyond this. British and Am- erlcsn experts are not taking tool OSWEGO. N.Y. IAP) - After four days an nights of labor. workers r o a c h e d the surface Thursday with the bodies of fiieee construction men entombed in a tunnel under Lake Ontario. The three were killed in an losiol Sunday when they were about 5.- 000 feet inside the tunnel prepar- ing for a dynamite blast that was to put the tunnel into use as part of the city water-supply ryr tern. Job For Former Mayor Curley sosron tAPl-James Michael ' Curiey. nearly in years a pollti-i l P! if AMI) coin. to be Massachusetts labor relations commissioner at 37.500 a year. Last of the old - time political bosses in the United States, Cur- a lo) recently wrote his life's story and entitled it. I'd Do It Agaln.l Son of an Immigrant Iaboreri who died when Curley was i2.l Jim Curley left school early to. work. He gtruggled up the polltl-. cal ladder from city councillor. I All! hv.. He served four terms in Con-l gress. four as mayor. once asl Massachusetts governor. Twicei he went to Jail: Once as a youngl man who took a mail carrier'sf 1 I exam for a friend. once a. head: 4 an of an organisation accused of v,, mail fraud. Carley said he was M, an innocent figorehead and after "II, five months pnsident Truman "tr 8 pardtmed him. E r Coastal Vessel ix .- Raportod Afloat sr. JOHN'S. Nld. ICPl-A re- U iYA port re a c h i o g here Thursday night said the Northern Ranger: ” " has been freed from her perch I ( on Shag Rock. Bonlvista Bay. and I is steaming toward st. John's for ' as - -45-- 5-, , "Rs coastal vessel ran aground frlkv with 1! vlslengers absent. 0" 5! Donovtsta which took over the Ratiris R. John's - Corner, Map lot-ates Middle East eon- rnkrwtoliagseveral trteaaffectedinvarionsOPlf!'O! 5" . 5' attempts to tree the drlldodilfy -rlmrr of cm" in Syria by yggu. .la group at prosoviet officers. L ISRAH .. ,,,.,,,,,(.;'.,.rizrzfvvywu-,.,pc-v--....-p-:--....,....,...- -- . - , U.S.S.R. A cal figure. was nominated Thurs- I W rz . p day in his 83rd year by fellow: '1 Democrat. Governor Foster Fur- I” IN('ARy oi(:I'TT:,',”v ' R (VJHV lflutl hm! n'Q..' Anlt.u.i"”"' '. . . TURKEY V 1; lsxiun) ARAIHAI SYltlA'S. iinousougs Inverse. isexvectedil Hrsrkey. Igypt faces new prob- llemsssrs-suit. iuoaalsohdsstsoausaee IRAQ oooveovvv It :i x” I foo i ,, -ft W .4 .-- -7,...-.-.s vonanemtnntm.Q Joni-stansasaadli lAfIHA-