;iSCOT, England Ilteutcrs) - A their friends rushed" across the lightning bolt killed one spectator track's neatly - barbered new and injured more than 40 Thurs- lawns. Others wandered dazedly day. turning Britain's most ele- in the midst of rain-soaked fright- gant hone race meet here into a sued group; pugmng um gwu-um bediam of meaning wounded and at the gay, of the com-u under . ililEhl9"9d- 3""3i"3 ""””d5' shower of hailstones that followed The lighlhllning. gloitning mlntgg the hon after a an en la sorm. crns A - - into a crowded public enclosure in m.1I:;n?,f,:lu';E,?tr:,5.fel,.m'.,E: hgfemta the centre of the Ascot track. chaos, cumin! the crowd, and ..E:'.:".?'i.i”':..k"?.';”?.E”1.532 g;;i;;5..;g;dic" to impact as the shock sizzleo along The storm bloke direct. - , , s y after a wire fence on which so ..s of me day! mun "cm a" Gold Lightning Kills One, lniures. 40 At Famous Ascot Track Queen was ”shoc)ied" and asked him send her sympathy to ”those who may have been ba- reaved." Today's soartnt ternperaturu, which stretched over most of west)- ern E pe. were accompanied by thick fg in the English channel and one ship collision. ,'t'he 1.187-ton Liberian ship Cyg- net. carrying Canadian grain. was abandoned by its crew as miles north of Goodwin Sands after craahing'into the 7.124-ton Pana- manian ship Captain Lukis. The -6- persons were leaning Blld',lllm'1erI into packed crowds behind. The bolt was felt for.200 y...-ds and left dozens of persons suffer- ing from burns and shock Three ersons were said to he s. -:';isly. urt among the many taken to ins- pital. 0f 44 taken to Windsc pital. 16 were admitted QUEEN ABSENT across the track from the my box where Queen Elizabeth ordinar- ily would have been watching the royal meet. She departed tradition by staying in London Thursday for a garden party at Buckingham Palace. The lightning bolt brought pan- demonium to Ascot crowds. al- ready drenched and buffeted liy t e before. Persons shouting frantically for By ARTHUR GAVSHON LONDON (AP)-The West was reported ready uednesday with a plan to limit Germanyls ai-ml ed forces to 500.000 men-even. after the country is united. -The cast zone of Germany. now controlled by the Commun- ists. would be demilitarlzed and made a buffer zone under allied proposals. informed diplomats said. The Western wish is to con- vince Russia that a unified Ger- many wlthin the North Atlantic Treaty Alliance need menace no- body. i y French Premier Edgar Faure drafted the plan for submission to next week's Big Four confer- ence at Geneva. The proposal would top a ser- ies of suggestions that Britain. the United States and France have in mind to make German unification more acceptable to the Soviets and to bolster the peace and security of Europe. PLAN CONDITIONAL 'The belt su-uc.. utmost directly) urwo other 1-mhmml cnsualueg from 3 torrential rainstorm minutes first Peer. West Reported Willing To Limit German Forces; East Zone Seen As Butter Vase. had been won by Prince Barle. a well-backed British bree- year-old. One more race was nin 40 min- utes late after the lightnini iiad struck. But track officials then cancelled the remalnng two events or the meetlng's third tay. KILLED KT BIILEY one of them killed-were reported at Bisley as thunderstorms crashed cross southern England on a day 30-degree-plus temperatures. One soldier was killed and another injured when lightning struck an army tent at the Bisley shooting range. The Duke of Norfolk. Britain's Captain Lukis was badly damaged and dropped anchor. Argentine Gov't Resumes Paying Catholic clergy BUENOS AIRES (AP)-Roman Catholic church sources said Wed- nesday the government has de- Red Cross Instructor candidates clded to resume salary payments are shown treading water during to some Argentine Catholic clergy- Royal Life Saving Society tests melt conducted from the new floats off The government apparently cut Victoria Park on Wednesday af- off financial subsidies to the church lernoon. In front row. left to right: last month. Church sources said Joyce Gardner, Cardigan; Center: 1-larietle Campbell. Suniiiicrsidc: Aldona Gallant, Borden: Back row: Florence Buoie. Tignish; Marjorie Dover. Dunstaffnage; Donna ' Cudmore. Charlottetown; Eileen Sutherland. Carleton Sidi- nE::,Fi'ed liyndman. Charlotte- Red Cross lnsirucior Candidates town; Arthur Callbeck. side. In boats are Angus Machareii and Red Cross is visiting his parents Mr. and S.W.S. Supervisor Miss Joan M”, Thoma; Evan; Murphy. Peukes ..tMr. Fred Handrahan and Mrs. Alex Grant visited Char- lottetown on July 1. Miss Louise Mattie. liorc-hes ter. Mass. spent a few days re- cently in this vicinity with friends. Mrs. Jane Grant. who has spent the last six months in Boston. Mass; returned recently to her home on Peakes Road. She was accompanied by her ' Lucille. who will spend a two- weeii vacation here. Mr. Leslie Rngerson. Montreal. P. 0.. arrived at his home on St. Patrick's Road. .luly 10. where he will spend his holidays. Mr. and Mrs Joseph Kenny daughter. I Friday. July 15. 1955 The Guardllin Page 7 real. PTEQE:-is 7sp'eiidingTbis;holi- winys with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Leo Rogerson. l Miss Marcella MacDonald. R iN.. Montreal. PO. is spending Eher vacation with her parents. Mr. and Mrs D. A. MacDonald i l Jimiiiy MacDiiiiald. Boston. ;Mass.. is spending his holidays ;with his aunt and uncle. Mr. and . ihirs. Walter Rogerson. Mr and Mrs. i.conai'd ('onnel- ly Sussex. N B are spending their vacation with Mr. and Mrs. Francis Coniielly. Mr and Mrs Augustine Clark- iii. I)fli't'lleSl9i”. Mass. are spend- ing their iai-atiim at the home of Mr and bits. Patrick Clarkiii. Peakes Road. Obscene Literature Case is Adiourned OTTAWA. (C P) - American News Company. charged with pol- sessiiiiz and distrihuiini! obscene literature vi as granted adjournment until Aug. 16. wihnui plea or elec- tion. by magistrate Glenn Strike Wednesday. The charges followed seizure I1! police of 2.401 paper-backed cop- ies of ll books from the agency and local newsstands NEW WORKMEN'S CENTRE TORONTO tCPv -- A rehabilita- lion centre tcrmcd ”me most mod- will be built by the Ontario work- inen's coiiipcnsaiinn board on I 65-acre site in metropolitan To- ronto. Lahnr llinister Daley an- returned to their home ,recently nnunred -1-hursda), from lNew York. where they have spent their vacation. Messrs. William. Leiiiiard and Tony Poirier. MlS('OllCh('. visited friends in this vicinity on July 10. - B.U Mr. and Mrs. Walter Currie. Charlottetown. spent July 10 at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Donnelly. Mr. Suniiiicr-l Life Guard Leo l-Jians. Hiisinn. Mass.. Wilfred Mooney. Montreal. arrived at the home of his Mr. P. Q. Photo by Margaret Mallett announced Thursday night he had informed the Queen of the Ascot accident. He said the lczmnol be united if it is free lafierward to join NATO. - In an effort to persuade the Soviets that a I united Germanyy iwithin NATO can remain a ;peace without threatening East Europe. other British - American- French suggestions have been prepared for discussion at Gen- eva. ' The informants said they hinge on the idea outlined publicly last week by Prime Minister Eden for extending to East Europe the arms control system devised by the NATO powers in the West. The Warsaw alliance of Com- ) similar pattern mountain range. niunlst states under this schemesumed their would be expected to adopt aprisons of control uponafter a month's absence. The in- their individual arms and armiesformants also said federal D0110? as far east as the Russian Uralhave released three Buenos Aires Faure Untoldsl Details Of Suggested Peace Plan these included salary payments to faihcr .ltily 10. where he will . about 900 of Argentina's 16.(l)0 spend his vacation. Catholic clergyman. The pay- Mrs. Wilfred Kiggins. Burden. rments had been delayed or dis- continued for May and June. The salary contributions had been paid by the government for almost 120 years to top Catholic lprelates and their assistants. The payments are small under current living standards. For instance, isantiago Luis Cardinal Copello, the 75-year-old primate of Argen- tina. receives 3.000 pesos (about .s2isi monthly. 1 The government also apparently (cut off contributions to private Catholic schools last spring. These iannual payments amounted to B1,- l000.000 pesos tabouf 56,300,000). A church source said then that the last monthly payment was made .in March and the subsidies for lAprii and May were overdue. I Since the June 16 revolt against President Juan D. Peron the gov- crnment appears to have dropped llts open campaign against the 'church. As another sign of this. church sources reported Wednes- day Catholic chaplains have re- spiritual duties in throughout the country priests from custody.- Slding. uses the chin carry in toiv Miss Eileen Sutlierland. Carleton in the Royal Life Saving Soc-ielyx the new lngliiss Aldona Gallant. Borden.) floats off Victoria Park on Wedncsw - tests conducted from Royal Life Saving Society TeslsgHeld spent a few days of the week of July l0 at the home of her par- cnLs. Mr. and Mrs. M. Handra- han. Mr, Joseph Grant. Brocion. Mass.. visited his brother and) A Vthuisn AN9 ii” sister-in-law. Mr. and Mrs. Alex: Grant on July 10. ll Mr James Mmiiiey. BllI'llPl1.! spent the week-end of July 9 at the home of his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Grant) and family. Bordon. spent is few days of the week of July in at their summer cabin on the Mor- ell River. Peakes Road. Miss Peggy Bradley. Charlotte- town. spent a few days recently with her parents. Mr. and Mrs Urban Bradley. Mr. and Mrs. Melrose. Mass. itors at the home Mrs. Ralph Grant. Mr. and Mrs. James Mooiicy Amazing new-formula DURA-HIDE does a whiter, longer I3 ling lots in one cont than two coats of many ordinary pained lYou'iI hardly believe your eyes when you see how DURA-HIDE: Mums whmywscnsationai hiding power and brilliant whiter white can beaui were recent vis-i.i'0lIl' home! of Mr. and just mu coat of DURA-HIDE covers solid over any color -and black. Hides all small checks and cracks. Provides a tough. vu&O lresistant surface that lasts season after season. In every way it dos I and family. Montreal. P. Q.. arc.l)etter ioh than any white house paint you've ever used. Silending their summer vacation Self-cleansing. non-yellowing properties in DURA-HIDE IIQ iii ")9 hm"? M M15 -'00" A keep your home bright. It's easy to apply. Doesn't sag. Try '34. A ”""'y' me. by the menu of famous Flo-glare Cotori-rev paints in 1,322 cob. My 8”er"00"- Gordon and Allison Birt. Cove- PIIM9 by Maligawl Mall?" head, are visiting their grandpar- , ents, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Birt I So'utliwAfrica Gives Order i ,The informants said the plans. By HARVEY HUDSON are dependent on Soviet asree-i PARIS (AP) - Premier Edgar mom to free election of a united) German government that would have the right to join NATO. The 12-division of 500.000-sol has been set as West Germany's contribution to NATO. Strict curbs which now govern West German armaments pro- duction also would be applied to a re-united Germany under the Western plan. said the inform- ants. Even such military supplies as oil would be controlled if a re- iinited Germany should become a member of NATO in terms of the Western proposal. The demilitarization of East Germany would. mean that a buffer zone would separate the German armed forces from their Communist neighbors in the East. No military bases would be allowed in East Germany. No soldiers would be stationed there. No armaments factories would be allowed, International inspec- tion teams would be set up at strategic points to ensure com- pliance. POLE! APART The Western powers and 'Rus- sia now appear to have taken up directly opposite positions on the role which a reunited Germany should play in Europe. The United States. Britain and ..P'I'lII0! lay Germany cannot be united unless it is free to join NATO. Russia says Germany v C.N.R. Pieces , Orders For 173 I Diesel Units - iti()NI'RtlAL e 'i-in Canadian National Railways announced on viednesday order for diesel mu. tive power to meet the 1955 pm-. lion of the five-year dieselizatiou Pmzram begun in 1951. 0 g The orders now placed with Canadian Locomotive Company, General Motors Corporation, Mon- treal Locomotive Works and Alco Products. call for a total of 173 units to be delivered to the rail- Wly by the end of this year. The total value of the orders amounts ta approximately sz5.ooo,ooo, The new diesels will be used is both passenge and freight um-. vices. and are part of the C.N.R. bisns to step up sffici y and azengthen its competitive pun. lines 1951 iii railway has mu-. chased nearly T00 diesels for use .lI;thi-ougli freight serviceu yard operations and on er runs, in keeping with its policy .of yehangiiigvnver to diesel power wliere traffic densit and im- mediate aiivingii justly the cap- ital expenditures involved. Canadian Locomotive Coiripa . Kingston. has received orders M 1) tllti HP road switchers. eral Motors Diesel. London. . . build 32 1230 HP switch gill CB 1150 HP road locomotives. ntreal Locomotive Works. ;M"mV'elI. received orders for so .1000 itr-mil units and so iooo P med switchers. ,; Mco Products. Schenectady, has "GUI for three ion HP switchers dier maximum is the same that living- Broad outlines of the plan were Faure Wednesday proposed that- the Big Four agree to reduce their armaments and use the money for raising the world's standard of approved this morning at a meet- ing of the French cabinet and will be presented when the chiefs of government of Britain. the United States. Russia and France meet next week at Genva. Faure asked: "Why not. parallel to a program of general disarmament, begin immediately by taking a certain percentage of the military ex- penses of each of the four great powers-to set an example-and put the equivalent amount into a four-power fund open to all and used not for destructive. sterile and negative purposes but for gent erous. social and positive under- takings?" The premier outlined his pro- gram at a press conference at- tended by more than 200 reporters Wednesday afternoon. N0 SPECIFIC PLAN In reply to a question. Faurc and did not propose to present a specific plan. If agreement can be reached on the principle, be said. then a four-power plan can be worked out for its application. Asked if Britain and the U.S; have given his proposal any back- ing the premier replied simply that he did not believe his ideas were far removed from public statements by President Eisen- hower. ) Faure declared that the money transferred from defence purposes to the new fund could be used "for development of countries or regions of the world insufficiently developed. to the betterment of the life of the most unfortunate populations. WOULD FULFILL VOCATION "Such an initiative. which i have drawn up as an example. seems to us to be of a nature to dissipate much of the world's skepticism and would fulfill for the Big Four their world vocation." From the French point of view. the premier said the work of the Big Four should be concentrated "at the same time on solution of the Gerrnnn problem. Organization of security and a formula for dis- armaent." The problems are so closely link . Faure said. that one can ha ly be solved without simulta- neous settlement of the others. He explained that the necessary reuni- fication of Germany could be accomplished -only if agreement were reached on European secur- -hr on in us. lines sf the W ,,e . y- said he was only launching an idea' V mi? ALL 1” W055 ity and that security could be achieved much more easily if there were agreement on "general. simultaneous. real and controlled disarmament.” l'itewWdnts Peace HAMILTON (CPI-Marshal Tito if Yugoslavia is the one man in the world who really wants peace. a Serbian exile told a colorful gathering at memorial services for wartime Yugoslav leader Gen. Drazha Mikhailovicb. Drbrnslav Jevdievich of Rome. Italy. stopped here to stiei d Drazha clay. marking the ninth an- niversary of the death of the Gen- eral. He now publishes an "N"- Communlst newspape there. '0.000 copies of which are smuggled into Yugoslavia each week. Jevdievich is the sole survivor of 15 Bosnian students who were im- plicated in the assassination of Archduke Francis Ferdinand of Austro-l-liingary in 1914. the event that tnuchcd off the First World War. He says Tito desires peace "be-y cause in any event of war with the. West the people of Yugoslavia will not simnorl him. "Neither would the Yiigoslavs support him in a war against Russia. although this is rather a remote possibility." Jevdjevlch says that Tito is it one-man boss in Yugoslavia and still strongly Communist. lie de- scribed the recent meeting between Soviet Premier Bulganin and Tito as talks not between two countries, but between two Communist au- fhiirltlcs. ”The important iiiiestion seems to be which of Russia and Yugo- slavin is the best interpreter of miirxism today." he said. "Tito has always fancied himself as the leader of world enmmiiiiism --"i that is why his first break with the Soviets came." Jevdjevich also criticized the neutrality of such countries as In- dia. He felt neutrality would un- doubtedly weaken the united front of the free world against com- munism. He told a cheering audience that the spirit of Gen. Mtkhsllovlch was still very much alive. He said Yugo- slav wartime Chetnik commanders were stationed today in France. Germany. Italy, Austria. Greece. and Turkey. "And should there ever be war I am sure 'l'ito'ii military forces will support a movement by the people for freedom and' democ- racy." he added. For Sabre Jet Fighters goverliiiicni to equip its air force with the most modern types of OTTAWA (CF) -- South Africa( rircraft available. has placed an order for an undis- closed number of Canadian-pin duced Mark VI Sabre jet fighters. it was announced Tuesday. The South African high coiiiniis- sioner's office said deliveries of a the swept-wing fighter by Cana- dair Ltd., Montreal. are scheduled OTTAWA. tCp;,., Sena”... James to start April i. 1056. First aircraft ii. King was ”almost an institu- delivered likely will be flown from tion" in British Columbia. M”"”9"”'I i" S0””l,AlT1C8.bY Pilots fence Minister Cnnipiiey said of the South African Air Force. Thursday in a tribute to the :i2 The 3300.000 single-engine plane, year-old former speaker ' of lllf an improved version of the Mark Senate who died in an Ottawa hnr Vtsabre used in Korea. also is pital early Wednesday. being Drodiiced by Candair for "His kindliness. his undci-stand the Canadian air division in log and his nobility of characio: Europe. Design of the plane is became proverbial."' said Mr. classified but it is known to lie Canipney. ”llc livcd the sort of able to exceed the speed of sound. life any man might wish to live." The announce---e--i said the -- -- South African defe ce department HARDLY NOTICED selected the Mark I after giving Tidal friction in narrow seas is consideration to all the best jet slowing down the earth's rotation fighters now in production. It was eby about l-l.000th of a second per the intention of the South African century. ITribute To NOW! Goon;-Wrcan TUBELESS AT A NEW LOW PRICE 0 with Goodyear's exclu- sive 3-T cord and Grip-Sed construction -increases blow- out res. tarsoa- pun.- tnre deliiys. 0 Buy one, or a set- you can mix 'em or match 'em. 0 White sidewalls also available at alrglit uses cost. NOW ONIY 15 ( v ..”)i f -' -i-is-.21.: X W H ANDYOCR IECAPPAILIKI I t-5906-7OnIlt IMCAWS INIIOIIAI TIIIS -VOG 8iaa6.00x!6 Goodyear Pathdndernow Nth 813s3end yoirraoappablotire Imcassehnsfossussritviii i ) l i ) Dew ISLAND WH TLOCK -TIRE" suiiiici: TIRE sigii A'l;3lll .- F-ti-. - l l ill). E GARAG CHEVROLET oiosidfiaii KONTAGU r it is on ooney PACIFIC G-RTOVUP M. a it hit. H ry M H p Montreal. P. Q.. are spending The British Solomon islands prn- their vacation at nu. mg of lectorate. h including Giiarialcanal. Mr, and M,-,g phmp M00393), has a land area of about H.500 sqii:-ire miles, Mr. Fitancis Rngersnn. 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