msmouessos lvyuesssIsssIsrvIhOu-deni iW":!'-Nit. NIIIl& adfevclassiv .fisdadtdst.fesquidssstshs WEATHER Icleodywifhwidelyssattersdshowsss. ” unis change in temperature. low- r wttmtdiimt . .. ........... . .. . .' ."Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” . ' cHARwrI"rE'rowN CANADA. TUESDAY, OCPOBER 3, 1957 I PRICE Sc .a w-- v Ii”:9n l2 PAGES S'l'El.LAB'lON. N.S. (cm .- gained control of Dosco. Mr. Sobey said in a statement Roe has secured more than 1,000,000 shares of Dosco stock and will take control of the giant steel and coal complex in line with their August purchase offer. Mr. Sobey. mayor of this north- srn Nova Scotia town and presi- dent of a chain of Maritime gro- cery supermarkets. was. with IL A. Jodrey of liantsport. N.S.. a leader in the Ight to block Roe's purchase. "I opposed the acquisition of sonttol by Mr. Sobey said. "This succemfully overcame the opposition presented to them and have new obtained . t and with it tbs responsibility for the continued successful operation of running Dosco. largat employer in Nova Scotia and economic mainstay of about 30 per cent :1 the province's population. I03 BTATAMENT "Roe has stated it will be their policy to strengthen and maintain the separate identity and auto- nomy of Dosco” his statement said, "and that through their sa- sociatlon with the .llawker-Sid- deley group in England will be in s position to stdastsntlally strengthen Dosoo's business con- tact abroad." V lie urged all Nova Scotlans to cooperate fully with use new owners "in their endeavors to maintain and expand." There was no immediate indi- cation of what would happen to a Do I c o sharehoiderr protective committee formed recently unda the leadership of Mr. Jodrey. Charles D. Eaton of Burlington, Ont., s Dosco shareholder. has launched a court action to stop Dosco share and debenture trans- this tremendous industry." Mr. lobey said Roe faces a "tremendous responabillty" ta fers on behalf of the committee. Ros offered owners of the more Oppo”nentTo Dosco Sale Admits Roe Has Control than r,ooo,ooo Dosco shares. its sIsaresofvRoestockand810.5ios saeh Doseoshare. IXTINDID DEADLINE During recent weeks. Roe has been reported drawing nearer and nearer its goal of 5: per cent of Dosco -outstanding common shares. An original Oct. 1 Jead- line to obtain control was as- tendsd to the close of stock ex- Ros president Crawford Git- Wednesday. don Jr. announced a week ago Roe officials were satisfied 51 per cepted their offer but no official Roe announcement was expected until Oct. 0. Dosctfs almost 10,000 employ- ees have an annusl' payroll of 870.000.0(XJ. Corporation holdings are concentrated in Nova Scotis, including 10 coal mines with an annual output of 5.000.000 tons and giant Dominloh iron and Steel td. plant in Sydney. The nine Dosco steel mills have a 1,000,000 ingot ton capacity. There are also 30-associated companies and subsidiaries. Satellite k9kM CAMBRIDGE. Mess. (AP) -- Audlhle signals from kliussias earth satellite failed appear during a scheduled crossing -Monday night in the lnlnetlete area of Boston. the &nlthson- lan Astrophysical observstmy reported The scientists had predicted the satellite w d pass over the observatory at 11:40 pan. E.D.T. Normally the beep-beep ale nals from the satellite are heard bout seven minutes prior to and seven minutes after 5.. ewmg mp, IHoffa Says Documents Not Burned. IHAMI SEAOH. Fla. (AP) - James R. Hols said Monday teamster union election docu- ments. said to have thrown into an incinerator, were not des- troysd and have been sent to Washlni-on. The teasnsters president - elect said Senate rackets committee marten who heard the papers were thrown away had them- selves found this was incorrect. Hoffa said a maid in the Eden Rec Hotd. Miunl Beach conven- tion headquarters. put the docu- ments into a trash receptacle. but they were sound in time. The Associated Press originally rqiorted that Senate rackets in- vestigators were told the papers hsd.been burned-but said later the papers had been reported to the committee as merely thrown into an incinerator. "I understand they found all the papers." Hoffa said. "There's no truth to the story they were burned. The teamsters sent the papers on.”.. Senate r a c k e t s investigators said when they asked the name of the maid said to have thrown out the papers. they were told she had since died of a heart at- tack. The Eden Roc said a clay maid who worked in the teamstera Eden Roe office died of a heart attack Oct. 8. I Frank Dol an. managing di- ector of the hotel. identified her as Mrs. Jane Lockhart. 52. He said she was not stricken while at work. The convention opened last T d and general sessions ad- journed Saturday night. Brother Of Bishop Dies BROAD CXJVIE MIAPEL. N5. (GP) - Donald A. Mncliacftern. In brother of Roman Catholic Bish- qa Malcolm MacE hero of Charlottetown died at his home here Monday. He was 73. Survivors of the lpngtlrne far- mer include eight children; a brother and retired priest, Rev. Donald" MscEachern of Antl- gonlsh and a sister. Siuer Louise Flosvnee. a mssslaer of the Sis- ters of Qaritv. arrangements have . lflclsl speculated that the Rus- :i t Scans U.S..-aatoss -"ssvisIw- has tested a new type Hbomb. in the midst of jublatlosr ov cial announcement from T-ass agency said: ”in connection with plans of experimental work for the crea- tion and perfection of atomic d hydrogen weapons. in the viet Union on Oct. 6. 1957. there took place a test of a mighty hydrogen warhead of new construction. "In the interests of safety of the population and participants in the experi,ent. the expl0&m took place at a great height. "The test was succesaiul." FIRST REPORT Japan's central meteorological observatory first reported the ex- plosion. it said the bond) was larger than 10 megatons. rep- resenting a force equivdent to 10,000,000 tons of TNT. or about the same as a US. bomb ex- ploded at Bikini Atoll in 1956. The Japanese said the blast took place in eastern Siberia. .. . .5 as Ip- posedly sought to take advantage of interest whetted by the recent firing of a ballistics missile and Friday's satellite launching. - (A U.S. defence department of- sians have been trying to squeeze hydrogen bonms into smaller and more practical packages. Two years ago U.S. workers brought the size down so it became prae ticsl to Install an H-bomb in the nose of a loin-range missile). Pravda noted Monday that I took the satellite only 16 minutes to whip from New York to Mos- cow. it said this means the Unitel States will have to change its tune in foreign affairs. SIGNS (l' EYITQIA ins Haas of hysteria." on com- nrunl newmaper said. Soviet Union Explodes wssruuovmu mm - Ameri- New Hydrogen Bomb MOSCOW (MP) - The Soviet the Soviet Union announced this lifted the satellite----as following charted the Court of file SUV”-'1 Union announced Monday night it summer. - 1 By Monday night the sateilitetmiies behind. had gone around the earth more Russia's earth satellite. the oKl- than 40 times. The Moscow radio said the launch the satellite first because can scientists working with com- plex mechanical brains have it around the globe. lagging 62) satellite as it circles the earth at 18,000 miles an hour. Anoher broadcast said Rus- More revelations are in the off- sian scientists were able to inl- ”'Phe naval research laboratory activating rocket - presunrabiyuhe Communist system makes. the third stage of the rocket that) scientific work easier. New Co-ordinaior For Civil Defence In Canada Is Named 0T'P-AWA (UP) - George s. Hatton, a 58-ycarold Canadian who rose to high rank in the Brit- ish army. is to be Canada's next federal civil defence co-ordinator, government sources said Monday. A native of Petenborough. Ont., and graduate of Canada's Royal Military College. Mr. Hatton will succeed Mai.Gen. F. F. Worth- ington, who helped build Canada's present civil ” ' organization from scratch to its present strength of 220.000 before retiriig Sept 17 The new coordinator has been deputy head at CD headquarters hcres.lnce 1&5. lteiidile sources said the gov- ernment's intention is to'announc the appointment soon. possibly next week. and that meanwhile Mr. Hutton wil continue too'per- ate the office. Health Minister Waldo Monteith is the minister responsible for it. TWO-MONTH SURVEY The new co-ordlnator returned only last wed from a survw ol l.-lurqaean GD organiza- tions. ranging imm Sweden to GEORGE S. IIATTON Bdglum and the United Kingdom. ished out the Second World War "My paramount impression." as commander of British troops he said Mondly. "is how civil de- in the low countries. Since 1910 he has been active in civil defence. working initiaiy .W hnu&. witziislrlohallodsdulowdaisf mini assvasi-0Dadvi.serteHAIUrealGea. ety (1 conditions. Sir Sidney Klrhnsn. Brihin's commander-in-chief of civil de- minitrack system now is produc- ing very.satisfactory data," the navy reported Monday night. puter machine at the computing centre and the quality of the resulting orbit information will enable us to give scientifically accurate minute- by -minute pre- dlctions for altering the optical and radio trackings ystems." Moon watch scientists at Cam- good progress with their compu- tations. But later a spokesman said the scientists were having "difficult- ies and the computer is not able to determine the orbit this min- me." - They had expected to have the pattern of the omit soon after data obtained from observations H s "3 E 5 E E ? giant electronic computer at the Massachusetts lnstitue of Tech- nology. HAD HIGH IIOPES They hoped not only In trace the path of the satellite but to fix its position in outer space and possibly give its exact shape. The Soviet stphere is shootim easterly direction. it follows a fairly steady course but because the earth is turning beneath it the satellite in etlfoct moves 1,500 mites westward withe aoh orbit. The " ' ” use "They are being fed to the com- bridge. Mass. earlier announcedl across North America in a south-i American Scientists Plot Orbit Of Soviet Satellite Astronomical Observatories Will Seek Photograph Soon ney also is lno rbit. Mosrow add the rocket is circling the elrtl at about the same altitude as he saellite bill a a distance of about 62.0 miles. "This distance will alter in the future," the announcement said. rlt did not say wlw. but the dileh ence in drag between the two ob- jects would be one reason. MAY SNAP PICTURES within eight or nine rhys. Asa- erican astronomical obsorvatorlu may get photographs of the his: moon. These will be made during a dawn or dusk passover. periods i when Ihe satellite wiu reflects us- ,. light from below the horizon. , Dr. J. Allen Hynok. director of the optical tracking program for the ---i-haonian lnstitutlosfsasr trophysical observatory at Casu- bricige, Mass..'said a station M isouth Pasadena. Caiif., will be ' the ilrst ready to make pictures. T in the three days the satellite has been aloft scientists say din have a good "fix" on it and en .plotlts courtseuotoaweekis advance. A spokeunan It jnava-i research ldioratory said navy researchers now know when E E: '5 E i i 3 Hire satellite their readbgs as J precise to l-l0.0wth of a second. lrcounn AND nourvn - , I High above the sclentlie & lmar. the mooriet continued to twhiz around the earth at 18.3 lmilesan hourlnwbatihe scientists deactiled as "I circular orbit." Its beibt H been estimated to range minirmsm of 4m miles to There has been some tainty about the weight of "putrrlk." the Russian word iiirii I I rocket which carried their said- lite on the final stage of its Jour- Electronic Computer Fails To 1. Give Answer; Errors chine to determine tau CAMBTUDGE. Mass. (AP) - ,: earth satellite. 'll:rves vii IG- iet i ” wens J T I . washlngon as codlrnaint Iidl welds: 104 pounds. . -raruvrno sass lnformation gathered from moon They were: TEST U. S. More of u.s earth mam. mu within . few days is hunk” "hm. Mung 3, larmoh the vehicle which will Defsnssbspartmentsbows '03 MW "1 "10 V"'3"'''d instrurnentaunn. with dunmy Western powers. with nose cone at- second and third stages. and British Columbia's population, estimated in 1055 at 1.305.000. has grownflpereentintheiauln years. theUnitedStstsshss 8nv.rla's foreign minister charged a used financi tar! lyria and sent its its heat to nearby waters. 'l'he.Syriin denied ants Secre- tary DulIes' charge that dtipsnent olsovietsrsnstosyriaisamenf ge to nelglliors eqeeisliy Tha- sarsturg consist of a. prototype of the , first stage. except for some test "great quantities of arms" mun Syria, Israel Give Views To U. N. On The Middle East uurnnn NA-rrom, N.Y. (can out Syria as the instrument of so- callsd Soviet penetration in the region. the (LS. state secretary omitted tg all the assembly 1. "Purely: interference in the internal affairs of Syria. which bps taken the form of sdrversive activities. . . 1. financial, politi- cal and military pressure used against my country to try to make it accept political subordi- nation to the United Staes." Dlar said. "the solidarity that Y. He said Syria nought Soviet p'ff;o';'r;g"'.'3' ”"” " "9" .sus.-has mm '0' "v'd'k"" '."m 1" were made latelylgfir view to reel whlcl he said received mun” 5"". an huh H... lie said Syrian policy "aims at He noose sner lsrsel's foreign non--lisunent with any of the and in firing position at have the external appearance of minister. Mrs. Golda Meir. said Null?! 01' N0" 05 90""-" the Canaveral. Fla. rnis- the final launcher. u.s. Navy srelt-power rivalry ll IIIINIII silc test center. The ltsvy 1.1- Photo via AP wuwhoto- spiral toward war. Mrs. Meir insured to all coun- the Middle East in a seas; tries and sartlculu-Iv the powerstoule great their lduance "not Fdhier Says Annette Dionne Will Be Married On Friday iaosm say. on. tors-ouu Diosns, father of the Dionne quin- ilorsnta may not attend. He said Annette. 23. Is in as me declared both the &wiet Union and the West arepo urgh arms into the Arab countries, "which openly and rqaeetedb ex- press their intention of attasmng and destroying Israel." DULLE3 ACCUSED ' Smallwood Says a native of Drummondville. Que.. and a brother of two girls who attended school with the quintup leis during their childhood in A private school set up in the fin- mer Dionne nursery building. No rasimaim, ST. JOHNS, Npd. (C?)-Pro mler Joseph Srnallwsnd said Ill- day "for a long while to some the government Is Id will is give a very sympathetic less-IQ to requests for considerable it of money is start new at d- Orth satellite. orrawa icr) - scisnusu of turns runs and. rsdsraziillll 2-- - that any equipment igned to the Canadian Defence lustre! cad mun" lean! are maintaining a comd h -b:"'..mI..':”.. IIQIIII watch for th Rldh ' i to deqien the days: of misunder- stamlng. but to Wit! It." She sa : ' deserts of the Middle East arsinneedofwater,notbonb- en. The tens of millions of its inhabitants are craving for the means to live and not for the im- Bitar said while Dales sindetl IIIIIIIEMI Cl delul-" Canadian Scientists Mark Flight Of Red Satellite accurately Rib. ditlesai no nun . 0' "'.:":"; "" ussr'.msn-IIswold.U -ul-is .3-I -"'V,, ,. ,3 esnesi plants hscvlel fsilcri at M sass. mi run-ouss.su.Ancsms-Ilw fhpremscmseetheb it I iii i t... II . i .3 gitiig mrirr. I exorile necessity of coexistence. i of the arms race and renunciation of their cold war policy." Mal.-Gen. P. Pokrovsiry. on Moscow radio. has descrbed the rocket which carried the satellite as 5 per cent more powerful than the intercontinental missile New Eruption In The Azores islet opposite Fayal mowed new first burst into life. sending Plane Turns I Back Safely - Pan American c I i p p e r which showers of lava and ashes Mon- htcte would have 37 rocket at. day. Panic spread amnngiand- gines, would carry two tofour 905- men and would orbit around the The islet rose frail the Atlan- earth, Sm ruling out in space, i tic last week when the volcano 15,500 miles an hour. Fayai Islander. running for shel- tween ss.ooo.ono and sro.ooo.ooo ter. Wind blew red hot ashes to- depending upon the number pm- wsrd Fayal. c s u s l n g serious duced, the possibilities were Darrell C. Ranicir, hae:d of the Illlolllutacl he 1 group in weapons , e- ot r personne. Fitted with a fourth angle. the vehicle would be capable d still and two associated ear deeper penetrations into the urn serodynamioists, Ric h a r E. known, and possibly laudngs on the moon. panment craft Corponstlon, Akrn. Ohio. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Al Knigil Plrtv - with U.S. leaders facing "the in nor a retired rnsJor-(eneral-fin- fence. 'I.i Manned In Eigh WASIHNGTON (AP) - 'n-tree American scientists say it will be of the Goodyear Air- and Sunuel Black. Moon Years The orbit at. 500 rrdles altitude would be the lowest practical one econorrdoaily feasible within six for surveillance, BORTA. Azores (AP)-A new to eight years to build and launch volcanic eruption on the Asores s manned gueiuts. was similar uses. An earth orbit 1.0m rnilesorsinspacewouldbebefw The proposed tiree - stage ve- tor for comrnunicatiosn. Later sateilites could orbit as high as 22,tl)0 nilea. The cylindrical Inw of the third stage of the vehicle would be joined with other thl-rd-stages Each space drip would cost be- that are put into an orbit. to build a space terminal. This conceivably could be expanded eventually to a length of perhaps The three scientists disctnsing 1.500 feet and a diameter of silt feet. to house up to 5.000 tech- niciam. observers. visitors uni watdi scientists In Alaska and Australia failed to provide the or- bit of the Russian earth satellite Monday night when fed into a giant electronic computer. insufficient or inaccurate data was blamed by Dr. Fred 1.. Whip- ple. director of the Smithsonian astrophysical observatory. Dr. Whipple told a press con- ference one of the three observa- tions-two in Alaska and one in Australia - "may have been in error." I He said one of the sightings re- ported by American scientists in Alaska was made under "ex- tremely difficult circumstances" -through a hole in the clouds. The t2.742,000 mechanical train was expected to provide scien- tists data which they believed would give the path of the satel- lite. its locltion in outer space and possibly its exact shape. Earlier, Dr. Don A. Lautman. directing the computation at Mas- sachusetts Institute of Technol- ogy. reported the scientists were encountering difficulties. SAW SOMETHING ELSE Dr. Lautman listed two possible reasons for the failure of me me- i. The simrtings were not of satellite or the third stage d rocket used to launch it. 2. The information from sightings were not sufficiently curate within the limits of allowed by the computer. "'l1rere is iIs'thtIt til puter is operating properly." t Lautman said. "We are not - ing up. We plan to check our formation." Lautman said earlier the putstion wgid be "fairly s u - for the ma inc. Engin e of the machine it would take scientists weeks or months to figure out orbit on paper. SIX KILLED IN (IRAQ UNIONTOWN. PI. (AP) - K persons were killedsunday II& when their twin-engined plane crashed near the top of shrouded Summit Mountain. in in a heavy rain. the came down in a wooded about seven miles east of snuthwestem Pennsylvania ei- muniiy. Fire OIIVQIODOG X strlckcn plane. turned back to Honolulu Monday when 215 hours on its way to San Francisco is n d e d safely. a spokesman said. The plane, my-r 834 wlthld persons aboard. reponed an ovarmeedlng tn-opeiler. Ca pt. Arthur 0. Eichler. of Los Altos, Calif, called for a coast guard escort after turning back. be able to track any iateiilte Is