l2 PAGES i To a lover of horses nothing is more attractive than a good horse. Here are a pair of beau- ties. They are Holly Harvester TELEPHONE 8506 WY" meats seller with Guardian Want Ads. Dial 0506 ask for classi- Iiod 04 NIIIOI. for quick results. and her foal. Both are owned by George Kitson. M.L.A. oi I-lamp. shire. The mare and her baby N AN ATTRACTIVE PAIR won the class for Roadster mare and foal at the Provincial Es- hibition. : Cold War Has Reached Floor Of Postal Congress OTTAWA (CF) -The mist. of the cold war see into the Uni versal Postal nlon congress Thursday as the Soviet bloc de mended entry of Red China and Communist East Germany into the world mall organization. Russia and spokesmen for her satellites didn't put forward a for mal proposal to give membership to the two states. But their argu ments that the Nationalist Chin rse and the West German delega Ilollg were not representative of their countries took up most of the day. At times the debate sounded more like the United Nations than the postal union. Chief U.S. delegate George Siedle. assistant U.S. postmaster general. observed that "we hav listened once a sin to the replay in: of some 0 ." g lie and the representatives of Britain. France. Italy. south Kn rcs. West Germany and others in the Western orbit reiectstl the Communist arnnaants. REJECT PROPOSAL An Egyptian proposition that a congress "working party" he formed to study the difficulties surrounding obiectiona to such states as Bad China and West Germnyasiaraathepostalor ganisatioa h concerned was de copies." SPOKE TWICE But be permitted the Soviet delegate and some others to speak twice. once on the China question and the second time on Germany. Korea's Pyo Wook Han said Communist China is an nggres sor state and Korea opposes her entry on the ground ltwould"be e flagrant violation of the prin ciple of luatice." The Red Chin no government didn't dare put Ill popularity to a test in a free vote of the people. but instead canted on "bloody purges" to eliminate those who sought seii government. Nationalist China's chief dels gale. Chieh Liu. said the nation- alists truly constituted the gov ernment of China. no matter how much the "chorus" of the Soviet bloc sought to refuge it. Mr. Siedle said the American position had been stated repeat ediy. He felt compelled to concur in what had been said by the Korean and Nationalist Chinese delegates. He got support from Britain's chief delegate. R. H. Locke. from France's Eugene Thomas and from Italy and others. West German spokesman said the federal republic had been con stituted by a free vote of its people as required by the postal convention. That could not be said for East Germany. llanuriisusnsusntikhtstdnAav---ist Girl With Acute Leukemia !'lll1.ADELl'iilA (AP)-A N- moaths-old girl. suffering from acute leukemia. has received what doctors say may be the first successful transplant of human bone marrow. The child is Laura MacDonald of suburban Diesel Hill. The transplant was made from her feaied It as 10 with eight abstan um slaug- tions. it was the second vote of the day. It was learned that at a morning session. closed to the press. the Soviet line bad all vnnced the same arguments in demanding that Red China and west Germany be admitted as ch servers. This was defeated but ac tual result of the vote was not divulged. Soviet deputy minister of com munlcntions. K. Y. Sergichuk. re iterated previous Russian argn ments that the Communist Chin no regime is the only true gov ornment of China and that the Na tionallll governmut cannot pro sums to speak for the millions of her Chinese on the mainland. iiis arguments were echoed in turn by Bulgaria. ltumania. Czechoslovakia. Byslorussis. Po land. and Albania. At one point Canada's deputy postmastergen oral and congress president, W. J. Turabnll. appealing for avoid ance of repetition. said some the speeches "look like carbon Too little 'FIu Voccinelleady MONTREAL (C?) - Canada . 3' . Mary. Laura was released Thursday from Fitzgerald Mercy Hospital with the leukemia no longer evid- ent. thouh doctors say it could return. ass was admitted in mid- June in poor condition from the disease. which is a cancer of the blood cells and almost always "Because little hope was held for her survival." a hospital spokesman said. "heroic meas- urns wre agreeduupon when it was discovered that Laura's twin. Mary. had the same blood Ups as hers. The decision was made to try and transplant Mary's healthy bone marrow to sister. "On July ll Laura underwent a massive dose of total body ir- radiation in an ,efiort to des- troy the diseased marrow imme- diately before the transplant. INJICTED IN BLOOD "The following day the chi!- of dren were taken to an operating room where marrow was drawn from Mary's shin bone and hip bone Into syringes treated with anti . eoagulants. This marrow was then injected into Laura's blood stre am. "lheysuagatsr responded steadily to the transplant and had no violent reaction. In ensu- ing days. there has been an an- eournging improvement in the condition of her blood." The attending physicians. who declined to be Identified. issued this statement: "This is not to becoostrusdss a cure for acute leukemia. "This possibly may be the first probable successful uansplant of marrow from one twin to another with the preliminary use of new anti-leukemic medicines and tr- radiation. and there has been a favorable effect upon the leuke- mia, the end result of which will require a much longer period to evaluate. . ." Recover Bodies From Cove-In DRIIDEN, Ont. (CPl wmrkers late Thursday recovered two more bodies from the cave-in that took the lives of six con- struction workers hers Wednes- day night. One body. that of Henry Drenth. remains to be recovered. The two bodies taken out late Thursday were those of Jan Bremcr and Inns Hovim. llescue workers had to cut through steel piping and timbers. I drugs such as tranquillisers. stim. WN CANADA. FRIDAY. AUGUST 16. 1957 PRESIDENT GRAVELY CONCERNED House Committee Slashes U.S. Funds For Foreign Aid Druggists Ask Tighter Controls MONTREAL (C?) - Canada's druggists Thursday called for more stringent control of new nlnnts and sedative: now avail- able to the public without a doc- tor-'s prescription. The closing session of the 50th anniversary convention of the Ca- nadlan Pharmaceutical Associa- tion was told many "dangerous or potentially dangerous" drugs on the prescription in the United States were freely available in Canada. committee be set up to work. The drugglsts recommended a; with the department of nationsli health and welfare to catego inc and resrict sales of those which might be dangerous or habit forming. Druggists were also warned to gtoclt up on remediesfor the symptoms of Asiatic flu as it might "afflict Canadian citizens? in the near future." The druggists expressed con- eern about newspaper articles promoting certain drugs without mentioning they require prescrip- j diet supplements. headache powd- ers and similar items through grocery and other stores. An- other resolution cslled for fur- ther restrlctlons on the sale of rubbing alcohol. Jean G. Richard o. Montreal was elected president. PAYS SL700 WITH COINS MONTREAL (CF)-A village storekeeper paid off a 31,700 bill in coins the other day. "This is the heaviest load yet," sighed an employee. He was off Thursday with a sprained back. The storekeeper. identified only as Louis. is 72, bearded, a bachelor and so suspicious of paper money he wont' accept it. He runs the village hardware and general store in an unident fled Laurentlans vilsge 50 miles north of here. Wholesalers with whom lzouis deals said Thursday he's been on a hard - coin basis for 50 years and his local customers have to stirs up quantities of lg mhlla I at In- tm-natlonal Paints (Canada) Limited. "ll'l want a boy to help carry in what I owe you." he told an employee. The coins were in regulation paper packs, piled in shoe bases In the back of his truck. John Vipond of the paint com- pany's sales department said Louis comes every year on the same day. "His business seems to battery every year too." The company counts the coins - there are never any mis- takes. said Mr. Vipond-after Louis leaves. Then they take the coins to the bank in gallon cans and a teller counts them again. Mr. Vipond said it wouldn't do to ask Louis to waits while the coins were counted. "we did once and he blew a hkfa:."Hs thought we didn't trust Mr. Vipond said Louis' iden- tiu is withheld because "lt's a loolish idea to carry that much money around." TRAIN DHRAILHD MIDDLHTOWN. Ohio (AP)- Taa cars of a 15-car New York Oeutrl freight train were de- ruled Thursday near here. rip- Pill ill! main It! the railroad's north-south line. No one was injured. WA! CHURCHILL KIN HAMILTON (CM -Edward Noel, 0. son of Admiral Robert Noel of the Royal Navy tions and over the sale of tonics. i, WEATHER Cloudwafewslsewarsfhlsevsnings IittIschangeintsmpsvature.I.ewand Wheat Surplus Higher Than Earlier Figures OTTAWA (CF) - Canada's wheat surplus is sharply higher than previously indicated and the year - end carryover may have reached more than 700,000 bush- els. it was learned Thursday. New government estimates, to be made public late today. likely will include revised production and acreage figures which will place last year's crop a lot higher than the official bureau of stalls- tlcs' estimate of 531000.000 bush- els. It appeared that the Canadian crop may have been underesti- years and that errors have been :unearthcd through last year's five-year census. The whole situation may be clarified by the government to- day. For months the bureau had been issuing figures that placed estimated total supplies at an un- pi edcnted 1.078.500.0130 bushels. compared with 993300.000 in 1955- 56. SUPPLIES HIGHER But it is understood actual l9l&57 supplies may have been well over 1,100,000,000 bushels and perhaps close to l,Z)0,000.000. With wheat exports estimated to have dropped to aorne 100.000.- 000 bushels in the last crop year from 309,000,000 in the year previ- ous and with domestic require- ments placed at 160,000,000. total wheat disposed of an 1956-57 may have been about m,ooo.ooo. That would leave a carryover on Aug. 1 of between 'I00.000.0(li and 800,000.00 bushels. in any case, the government has a bigger surplus problem than it anticipated. The biggest previous carryover W. The in the last"! years was ss.soo.oos in IQ. SEEK SPEEDY CROSSING LONDON (AP)-A group of air aaperts said Thursday Britain should develop an airliner that can cross the Atlantic in two to three hours and take off and land vertically. A special committee of The Air League of the Britt Empire said it is satisfied that such a plane "is a practical pro- mated for the last two or three de A. V. Roe Canada Limited to purchase control of Dominion Steel anti Coal Corporation is ex- pected to be discussed at a meet- ing of the Nova Scotia cabinet to- day. Meanwhile. two Cape Breton mayors and the executive of dis- trict 26 of the United Mine Work- other Msritimers. lhciudirtg two Dosco directors, in expressing concern over the proposed stark al. Mayor Dan Alex Mat-Donald of Glace Bay. Nova Scotia's big- gest coal town. and Mayor Owen Hartigsn of Sydney Mines. a member of the Dominion coal board. urged provincial and fed- eral governments to see that Nova Scotla coal and steel lndus- tries are protected if the deal goes through. Mayor MacDonald said: "Past experiences make Nova Scotlans wary of outside and monopoly control. Abandonment of Nova Scotin-based plants and centrali- sation of industry in Quebec and Ontario have invariably been the result.” PROTECT INDUSTRY Mayor Hartigan said the gov- ernments must protect the coal industry and not allow it to be turned over to interests who might not maintain it. The UMW executive said in a statement similar deals in the past "have always worked to the detremcnt U the laboring force and to the province as a whole." The officers urged government action is protect the lndusry. Iobu. mayor of stel- larton. N.l.. said they fear Avro control may lead to reduction of Dosco operations in some parts d the Atlantic provinces. TORONTO (CPl - Crawford Gordon. preeident of A. V. Hoe Canada Ltd. in a statement Thursday night denied that the company's interests in other in- duatries might be detrimental to the interests of Dominion Steel and Coal Corporation Ltd., the position within the next l2 years." COPENHAGEN. Denmark (AP) A soviet twin - engined airliner coming in for a landing hit a mist-hidden power plant chimney. shcered off a wing and spun crasily into Copenhagen harbor Thursday. All as persons aboard were killed. leveral passengers were qsweded into the air through a gash in the plane's side as the ship plunged into the muddy bay. Soviet govermnent airline Aero- flot. was due to land at Copen- hagen at 0:23 am. local time. from Moscow via Riga, Latvia. At 6:20 it struck the more than The plane. an Ilyushin-it of the gn company In which Roe proposes to buy a controlling interest. 23 Are Killed When Russian Airliner Crashes in Denmark II)-foot-high stack of the H. C. Oersted power station four miles from the airport. as A five-man crew and ll of the passengers were Russlans. at least three of them women. Scan- dinavian Airiines officials said. other paskengers were three Ger- mans, two Britons. one Norweg- ian and possibly one American. A team of airline experts were flying from Moscow to investi- te. The British Embassy in Mos- cow reported the two Britons were believed to be delegates to the World Youth Festival in Mos- cow. which ended Sunday. ers of America Thursday joined- W” company's proposal, and on com- ment that it might conflict with the interests of Dosco and the At- lantic provinces, said: "There is no basis whatever .Il fact for statements that our in- lvestment in Algoma Steel Cor-, y poration Lid. or our ownership oft i Canadian Car Co. Ltd. would be in conflict with our proposed in! Suffolk Farmer A head-on collision between a light truck and n two-ton truck yesterday afternoon resulted in severe injuries to Mr. Stewart Mosher, 45-year-old farmer of Suffolk. After being taken by ambulance to the Prince Ed- ward Island Hospital, he was flown to Halifax for brain sur- gery. A passenger in the Moshcr truck. Joseph S. Macltay of Sav- age Harbour escaped with a Canadian Dollcir Finally Reaches All-Time High NEW YORK (AP)-The Cana- dian dollar, which has been surg- ing higher and higher in value in relation to its U.S. c o u s in. reached a record high Thursday. At 31.05 23-32 in team oi U.S. currency. the Canadian dollar fl- nslly passed the previous bid! of No I utehliahsd in vonsher,- lm. just before the United mates went off the gold standard. Thurs- day's closing price was up 3-10 of a cent from Wednesday's final quotation. Foreign exchange sources here said they knew of nothing in the news to account for Thursday's fairly-sharp increase other than the heavy investments north of the border by U.S. companies and Individuals which have been go- ing on for aorne time. It was thought. however. that motley flowing into Canada from Europe tinny have increased in recent aya. Current Lobster Catches Good AMHERST (CPl - Fishermen from Nova Scotin and Prince Ed- ward lslsnd report better than avcrage lobster catches in North- nmberlnnd Strait since the sea- son opened Saturday. Prices range from 27 to 33 cents a pound depending on grade. Except for occasional gusty winds the weather has been favor- able. F is h e r man Bob Brander of Northpori. N.S.. was burned Tues- day when his husiage engine ex- plodcd wile he was lifting traps. He and his helper put out the falmes and saved the beat. Mr. Expect N.S. Cabinet To Consider Sale Of Dosco HALIFAX iCPl-The offer of Mr. Gordon, commenting on his, tcrest in Dosco. "As far as Algoma is con- cerned, all we have is an invest- ment interest. as do many other corporations. We do not take any part in its management. it is quite wrong to say or assume that there would be conflict of inter-p est to the detriment of Dosco and the Maritimcs..." Seriously Injured In Head-On Collision few broken ribs. Mr. Masher, driving his half- ton truck, was in collision with a larger vehicle owned by Wil- fred Dcnnla of Dunsiaffnnge and driven by John Charles Mac- Eacliern of New Argyle who was unhurt. The accident took place shortly before two o'clock about a mile west of the York Road on the St. Peters Highway. Mosher was going out and the other vehicle west. Hennessey's ambulance. ac- companied by Dr. Lloyd Cox sped to the scene of the accid- ent and took the injured men to the hospital. It is reported that Mr. Mosher was pinned behind the steering wheel of his truck so that considerable effort was required to extricate him. Moshers' injuries consist of a depressed fracture of the skull in the region of the eye. He has a broken left arm. chest in- Iuries and multiple contusions and abrasions. Maritime Cntral Airways on hearing of the injured man's condition offered to fly the pa. tient to Halifax by chartered plane. A later report from Halifax stated that Mr. Mnsher's condi- tion was sertous. He underwent surgery last night. who wttotnclaiott ,, .. "Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew" PRICE Sc Plea By Eisenhower Disregarded WASHINGTON (AP)-President Eisenhower made an urgent new plea for more foreign aid funds Thursday-his third this week - but the House of Representa- tives appropriations committee approved a cut of Sw9.850.000. The 50 - member committee acted on a voice vote-bringing the total of the foreign aid hill down to S3.l9l,893.000 Including carryover funds. C h a i r man Clarence Cannon (Dem. Mo.) predicted the House will go along with the latest slash for the fiscal year which began July 1, but minority leader Joe Martin (Rep. Mass) said "the president won't stand for this. It's too deep a cut." In his second plea for more money Wednesday, the president said he would have to call a spe- cial session of Congress this fall if United States Interests are leop- ardlzed by the shortage of foreign aid Iunds. RECOMMENDED SLASH A House appropriations aub- committee r c c o m mended the slash Wednesday night. In appeal while the full approp- i-lations committee was consider ing the report Thursday. a White House stat said Eisenhower was gravely concerned. "In the conviction that the na- ' tlonal interests of this country are deeply involved, he sincerely hopes that final congressional ac- tion will restore the amounts to those authorized by the Congress yesterday." Eisenhowe asked originally for ss.sss.ooo,ooo. congress set a call- Q of B.Id1.Hl0'.W in an cutaw- lsstion bill which the president signed. Subcommittee head Represen- tative Otto Passman (Dem. La.) said there are only Id of the I countries of the world not getting American help. "At least you'll admit that that is fanastic." Brander went to hospital for 5 treatment of arm and shoulder- ' burns. I Searchers Find Fuselage OI Plane At Depth Of 25 Feet ISOUDUN. Que. (CF)-Search era Thursday night reached the fuselage of a chartered DC-4 air- craft that craahed here Sunday and said the bodies of all 79 per- sons aboard were shattered be- yond recognition. Investigators said they felt the remains of all the passengers and crew had been recovered from the crater dredged in the soft swamp when the Maritime Cen- tral Alrways' plane plummeted to the ground. The fuselage was reached after mud had been scooped out of the hole to a depth of some 25 feet. The fuselage had been shattered by the blast that ripped through the plane when it struck the ground. littering pieces of the air- craft over a wide area. Mean w h II c the investigators continued to assemble surf-ace wreckage. most of it small. and police toughened their guard over distant cousin of sir Winston Churchill. died at his home Tues- day. Born in England he had liv in Canada for the last eight years. Mariners Breathe Easier, Long Iceberg Season Over Bol'l'ON(APl-Iarinsrsts-n- tasltcrth Atlantic sliv- I35? all 5 . .23 iiiiiiiii 'n . ii. I teapatrdmithbditd iasawgssmsa. E ilifiili . ii iii its ii” ii i ' idlwn. mswnsmnts &I8hIdQIb 1XldDvIIQaQ gjg.1sqdmQlsatmhuw.IG!Ishl. ' the two-acre disaster area abtmt 15 miles southwest of Quebec. RECOVER BLADES Two of three missing propeller blades from the Maritime Cen- tral Airways DC-4 were recovered by police at a residence in the Quebec suburb of st. Foy. They had been taken,for souvenirs. po- lice said. Capt. Alphonse Mates of provincial police said a num- her of bits of wreckage have ban returned in the wake of a police warning. Unidcntlfiable portions of bud- les were being added to the corri- mon temporary grave in which boxes bearing human remains were interred Wednesday. Louis Couture. Quebec engineer acting as consultant to the con. tactors handling the excavation. said Thursday the theory is that what is left of the plane is nose down in the crater. "Most likely the rear section and wing tip, snapped off when the plane struck." he said. "but the soft ground may have permit- ted the trunk section of the fuse- lage to bury itself without break- ing up completely." He said the 05 - foot fuselage probably would be up. Other authorities said it might its "only It or 31 feet under the guy. face of the soppy ground." I FEET DOWN ''I don't think that engine is more than four feet below the gaid one. pointing la a crater apparently formed by one of the four motors. The total working area is about I feet by iosion "beyond imagination" pa vlriu-d much of the plnaeen ID- psct and possibly might mattered the whole plan 1 rs nmoivca ateanisots d 1! homing vacationers ad hers.