WEATHER Clear with is four cloudy intervals; colder; northwest winds I5. Low-high otCharIoIIetawn I5 and 30. Want Ads. Dial 8506 ask for clossi- , TELEPHONE ssoa 9 Buyer meets seller with Guardian ? tied ad faker, for quick results. ' "Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew" CHARDOTTETOWN. CANADA TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5. 1957 5'-' PINEAU GIVES OUTLINE OF POSITION France Will Ignore Any U.N. Action On Algeria Declares African Area 1 - ls Legally Part of France UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. (CP) iernment remains adamant. Pinels , France told the United Nations mld the mmmmee M""d'E it: .- 1 Monday she never will accept the . Franc" E posmon "ma I" '1” Coastal Vessel Lost In C O I I R S R O n W i I C e b e authority of the world organization l chgcvgeedlluve never gccepb:d, WI , -The 10-man barrels of diesel oil. ;.lohn's. Nfld. However. her main with N35,-d to he, poucy in 5m;e.l do not accept, and we shall never First reports said the Kipswo esiland terminal was shifted to 10,." Alger” iaccem the compdence of mg . .-u Bngus Saturday when we Jammed Foreign Minister Christian Pi- United Nations with regard to s 3 O 12 PAGES HALIFAX (CP crew of the French coastal vessel Petit Bras d'or was rescued byy.-aped dumagv I-- i J. SAFE DESTROYED Three Sailors Drift Six Days On Rubber Raft MARSALA. Sicily (Reuters) - Three shipwrecked sailors. who stayed alive by sipping seawater while drifting on a rubber raft for six days, rested In a hospital here Monday and expressed their grati- tude to their rescuers - and to a book written by French scientist- adventurer Alain Louis Bonibiird. Hugh Edwards. the English sidp- per; French engineer Henri Ber- gez and Danish seamen Jens Niel- sen were picked up Sunday by the Italian vssscl Ernesto laoni off the south coast of Sicily. The men had been drifting in the area since last Tuesday when their 25-ton British yacht. Tslfun. foundered. Food and water sup- plies were swept off the life-raft right after it was launched from the sinking Talfiin. shortly after- ward. anotlier huge wave washed Nielsen and an Algerian deckhsnd overboard. The dcckband was drowned. METHOD FOLLOWED i Bcrgcz told how he suggested to Edwards that they should follow the .” method of survival. (in 158. the French sointlsf wrote a book called The Bombdrd Story telling how he orossod the Atlantic alone in 02 days - during 33 rd which he ate no and draiili so fresh water. By ripping the salt sea-water. Bombsrd re- ceived nourishmontirom plankton -microscopic plant and animal life living is the sea.) A Borges said he had read Born- bard's book. Each man drank three tsblespoonsful of sea water every two hours from six in the morning until eight at night dur- ing the six days. "it is due to this that we are now all right - tired and fairly weak. but basically in excellent health." Borges said. "I myself lrpst 1715 Bounds. but am feeling ne." BRITISH - JORDAN TALKS AMMAN. Jordan (Reuters)- Brltsln and Jordan began talks Monday on ending” their 1968 treaty and to bring about com- Pletc evacuation oi British troops frorri Jordan. A break at the Texaco Service Station on the corner of Eustsnc and Water Streets in Summer- aide was discovered by the prop- rietor, Mr. Tousaaint Perry. when he arrived for work yesterday morning. some S0 in silver and about tzoo in cheques were taken from the safe by using a heavy metal slicer to pry open the bottom edge of the door. in a rough attack which completely mined the safe. Entry to the service station was made by forcing the door of the meals washroom in the front oi the building and through a con- necting door sccoss was easily made to the sale which was locat- ed near a window in the office of the service station. Using a metal slicer and an axe. both of which were carried away from the station, possibly because they had proven to be reasonably effective in safe breaking. the handle of the safe and thci coin- bination dial were both pried and broken away from the door of tho asf . With. the slicer used as a pry beneath the top edger gt the door, persistent effort finally resulted in a small aperture directly opposite the metal cash box through which a hole "was punched. By tilting the safe which weigh- ed about 500 pounds the thieves Safe Wrecked By S'side Service Station Break were able to reach the money and SCENE OF BREAK Burglars In chequu. The break follows another re- cent safe stealing attempt at the Sally Shop in Summerside which was quickly dealt with by Sum- merslde police and resulted In two- year sentences to Dorclicster Pen- itentiary for two Suininorslt youths. Report 35 Abandon Ship Off Florida KEY WEST. Fla. (AP) - Dis- tress calls picked up by a com- mercial radio station late Monday started a navy and Coast Guard dash from Key West to aid 85 persons who are reported to have abandoned the Liberian frelghtor Nortuna off the Dry Tortugss. at 'he tip of the Florida Keys. At 9.55 pm. EST no confirms- tion of the vessel's sinking or her in the area lissil mi-coast Guard ssanm directing rescue hesdousrtrs. operation. The site of the reported sinking was 68 miles west at Key West. from which 0.8. Navy and Coast Guard air and surfscecrsft were dispatched. tin NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - A' nearly completed television tower I Quarter of a mile high collapsed Mondly. killing four men who were working mors than half way up. The tower broke into sections as it Cmmplod to the ground in the midst of s thickly populated area without hitting any llolljgg. 11.. main sections came to rest psi-.1. lei to each other unpaid. we Speculate On.The identity Of Moscow's Mystery Patient MOSCOWJAPD-Speculation on the identity of Moscow's mystery 3 1-35 F gig; NE 23331.1 i rill; 35.? i” ii? Wish. Ml deputy Premier and Jew in the soviet hierarchy. were discounted hers. Kaganovicb has been on . mu.- slberlan cement plants rec- gilt ftigiilgg 555' 4 Die When TV Tower Collapses transmitter building at its base. The new broadcasting antenna, finished up to 1:285 of a projected 1.379 feet, was being built for sta- tion WSM-TV by the John F. Beu- lcy Construction Company. Mus- kogee. Okla. The dead were identified as: Donald Ward Kennan. 25. Tue- son. Arlz.; Ray ii. Maxwell. 17. San Mateo. i-'is.: George Pmler. 33, of Union City. Tenn-; Robert Lee Kirshner. 30. Califor- nia. Mo. A fifth iron worker. Harold o'Negi, 29, Bonnehilll. N.Y.. iden- tified as foreman of the crew. was treated for shock. MY JOB'S SAFE Kcnnan. interviewed by a re- porter a week ago about the dan- gers of worltinz DI! 01! hill! IPMI. was quoted as snylflli "i would not drive a race car. Too dangerous. My Job's ssfs be- cause I know whstlI'In doing. "Besides. more people I91 H1101! stepping off curbs than in my line of work." Lee Ramsey. who uvcs near the tower. gave this account: ''I was in the yard. I heard I crackling. it Just crackled as it fell. it fell northward and broke up. The wreckage reached about Iblockiaflfthoftbofulllcnglb . it took about 10 1 bnsoffour Orenda Engines Start Series Of Nuclear Lectures TORONTO (CP) - Orenda En- gines Limlted declined Monday to say whether a series of nuclear energy lectures for its engineering experts indicated a move into the field of atomic - powered aircraft. Word of the lectures was con- talncd in The Orenda. house or- gan of the suburban Melton flrrn whose Orenda jet engine powers the RCAFis CF-100 interceptor. The announcement said 56 appli- cations to attend the lectures have been filed. A spokesman said security laws prevented him from commenting one way or the other on nuclear Gllkinea. The ' put to him was: "Gan Orenda say without qualification that the lectures do not indicate a planned move into the field of atomic powered planes?" However. he did say that Or- enda has "fairly close relations with Atomic energy of Canada Limited." the government's nu- clear research and development a, vs on no ..'.';c,'ha engineer 1 to than.” bsulsddsd. He did not any in what capacity. FIRM KEEPING ABBEABT The spokesman said Orenda "is keeping abreast" of all develop- ments in the field of atomic sir- crsft engines. American compan- ies have periodically disclosed pro- gress and one of them has flown an atomic inside a con- vsntionslly - powered aircraft. The we of the radiation shield that must envelop reactors is one of the toughest quantities facing nucies engineers trying to . build an atomic aircraft engine. In addition to the well-estab- lished Orenda Jet. the firm also is working on the Iroquois power plant which will be used in the RCAF's new Cf-105 dclt s- winged fighter. A New York newspaper reported a few days ago that it would have a static thrust of 20.- 000 pounds but the spokesman said he could not comment on the accuracy of the statement. ""' Car Dodges Dog, Kills little Girl MIDLAND. Ont. (CF! - Llndl Hudson. 7. was killed and a boy virijumd Monday by ii car that skidded into a group of. children when the driver tried to avoid iii a dog. said the dog, owned by girls in the group. darted into the middle of the road three blocks from the school the children DHVIT swerved on the ice and skidded into the children. "Rusty" Mar- sell.. I, was injured. llA'I' KILLS INFANT PARXS (Reuters) A six- ' - old baby girl attacked while asleep by a giant rat has died in hospital here after a nine- day fight to save her life. It was Monday. The rat at- lliuie Brunsau and then on her three-year-old sis- IU &Ital. who is still in bos- E 2 attended. Charles Trollope. 27. km all aboard the ships were cued. The crew of the Petit Bras d'or took to the.llfeboats after their 302-ton craft struck heavy ice 50 miles southeast of Loulsbourg N.S. on Cape Breton Island's eastern tip. About the same time the seven-man crew of the 408- tnn Bshaman freighter Maid of Laiiave surveyed their burning ship from the rocky shore of Cape Sable Island in Southwest Nova Scotla where she had been beached in a cairn sea. The Maid of Lailavc caught fire four miles off the island an hour before dawn Monday. Her glow attracted the attention of light- keeper Benjamin Smith who flashed word to RCAF search and rescue in Halifax. -- The third ship. the 350-ton ferry- boat Klpawo. crunched into the shore at Bell Island. N(ld.. a few yards from her dock. All passen- ers and nine crew members were off. . COULDNtT MAKE PORT The Petit Bras d'0r out of St. Pierre at Miquslon and owned by Psturel and Daort was aband- oned after an unsuccessful at- tempt to reach Loulsbou port with her engine room flooded. she managed to make is miles when .cspt J.ssa.laliorps of St. Pierre gave the abandon older. The Halifax was within 10 miles but took several hours to reach the two lifebosts through heavy icefields. Planes of the RCAF and a United States coast Guard plane from Argentla Nfld. maintained communication with the tanker. At intervals the men in the boats set off flares to ulde the rescue ship. The rescued men are expgectcd here early today. Ligbtkcepcr smith said Monday the fire in the Maid of Laiiave suing from New Haven Conn.. to Halifax. died after the ship was beached within a mile of her light at 5 a.m. Monday. "She Just seemed to skim up on the besc " Hnith said. lie said the ship might be dragged back into deep water if the fire didn't cause much damage. CAN'T GET BELOW "1 was aboard her but you can't get below the fumes are too heavy. Tbsy drove men out of the wheelhouse." He said Captain J. Jourdaln of Metliasn N.S. part owner of the ship and at lespt one crew mem- aiong with several hundred persons from the area Inspected the ship but the firs still smoul- I dared. The Maid of Lshsve carried 500 Hint Reds Ship Arms To Yemeni LONDON (AP) - Britain hinted Elly it has evidence the Rus-l sins are shipping snns to Yemeni troops who have been WIKIMI bor- der warfare with British forces - ' " - boring Aden. Foreign ry Selwyn Lloyd, pressed In the House of Commons INN! presd reports the Ye- meni vs Soviet arms. replledtl "i am at present considering the dvidence with regard to that matter and the advisability of pub- TES- the Imperial Halifax Monday after grounding and could probably be a day of disaster for shippIn,'. re-floated at high tide. The ierry,l along the Atlantic Coast. One sluplnow owned by the Newtouiiulaiid - was lost a second damaged by Transportation Co. once ran be- fire and a third ran aground but tween Woifville N.S.. on Minas Basin. pawn was batteriiig her wax ward her dock through heavy ice. The ice suddenly parted and she wcnt aground with engines full ahead. on what touched off the blast. A lishlng it) First intimation somet was TH Ioviet Union and Yemen wainfg calririenln a phone . Illlldsoouslisrclsltrt I IIIIS l.llllllllIIOhl'lIIsli. isis. " V ma . miner reported flinu sun and Parrsboro. At the time of grounding the K1- iii- Ice played havoc with shipping all along the in-wfoundland coast The Kipawo normally operates be- tween Bell Island and Portual Cove. about 10 miles from St. Portual Cove. ice fields. the largest and earli- est in a decade. stretch from Lat. radar and threaten to fill Concei- tion Bay with the next easterly wind neau outlined the French position in a long (114-page) speech in the wmember political committee He said his government had only agreed to inclusion of the Alger-i ian question on the General As- (The Petit'Bras d'or for the past semblys agenda so it could make few years has called the past few years has called several times during each surn- mer at the Buntain and Bell wharf in Charlottetown where she would pick up a cargo of farm produce while plying her course between Maritime ports and the French 59V9'3l its position clear before the dele- gates. Last year the French delegation 'walked out as soon as the Alger- l inn item was inscribed on the 10th assembly. There were rumors. Monday that a ti o t h e r walkout . might be in the offing if the AIl3II'i Islands south-west of Newfoiind-iAmca,, member, who nquegged land. ) Kings County Mail To Go By Train When Roads Are Closed "Arrangements are to be made with the Canadian National Rail- eays to provide alternate mail ser- vice by traln to Montague and other offices as and when such offices are deprived of service due to blocked roads." The above instructions have been issued to Postal Officials by Mr. Sarto Chartrand. Director of Transportation, according to a com munlcation received from Mr. 'i'..l. Wckham. M.P. for Kings. by the Montague Town Council and the King's County Board of Trade. During the month of January . ll -:. B considerably disrupted owing to and C.N.R. trucks carrying the mail were unable to get through. and the mail could not be sent by train since instructions for this service had not been issued. with such conditions prevailing and anticipating further disruption during the winter season, the Montaguc Town Council and the King's County Board of Trade brought this .pressing matter to the attention of Mr. Kickham who made the necessary representa- tions io Postmaster General La- Pointc with the above result. Mr. Chsrtrand has also instruct- ed postal officials to keep them- sslvcririfiirmad of road-conditions and. when roads are t ” to take the necessary steps to pro- the fact that the I.M.T. Buses iddo alternate service by rail U. S. Asks Views On Canada's Move Re Potato Tariff Boost WASHINGTON (AP) - Canada has given notice she wants to in- crease tariff duties on American , in special trads negotia- tions with the U.S. The state department Monday invited interested Americans to make known their views either in writing by Feb. 2''! or at public hearing March 6. Under a 1947 trade - cement. American potatoes are al owed in- to Canada free of duty from Aug. 1 to June 14. From June 15 to July 31 8 duty 0! STA cents on lilo pounds is charged. 37 Coal Miners Die In Blast Underground In Virginia Mine BISHOP. Vs. (AP) - Thirty- seven miners died Monday in a I mbling gas explosion deep in the Ian! Bishop Coal Mine that bur- rows under the mountaliis of the Virginia-West Virginia state line. It was the worst mine disaster in the United States since no died In a blast at West Frankfort ill. Dec. 21. 1951. There was no immediate word iireboss had reported the area free of hazard prior to the time the midnight shift went to work. Time of the explosion was set at 1:55 am. EST. About 180 men were under rroiind at the time but the I7 vic- ilms apparently were the only ones in the immediate blast area. users eovr stream. sconomv liii all . it as The U.S. has no free rate for Canadian potatoes. American dut- ies vary from 3755 cents to 75 cents a 1!!) pounds. Canada has been importing more than twice the amount of American potatoes it ships to the U.S. in 1955. 280,000,000 pounds of American pots were shipped in Canada while ll6.000.0M pounds of Canadian potatoes were ship- ped to the U.S. . Officials said Canada now has decided it can no longer permit American potatoes to enter the country dutyfrcc. look right-thcre was a heavy ac cumulmion of dust. This cal was believed to have come some dia- tancc from tho explosion area. The clcvalor on the Virginia side was jammed at the top and mlncrs began to file out on the wear Virginia side from s moun- tain iunnrl. RELATIVES HOPE VAINLY Relatives gathered at mine on- tranccs on both sides of the line They hold to a waning hope that the trapped men somehow had managed to throw up a bsrricsds. The Bishop community of MO I)!!- gan lts vigil while rescue teams moved info the mine from the West Virginia side 2”: miles away At 5:50 p.m.. l2 mine cars rolled slowly from the drift entrance across the West Virginia line. car- rying the bodies of the victims. Rescue workers. their faces and Algeria's agenda inclusion at this i introduce a condemnatory resolution. TWO OTHERS WALK OUT Two deiegatio " y and south Africa-already have bay- cotted this 11th assembly over the same principle. that the UN has -no right to discuss purely domes- tic matters. Hungary walked out when the assembly approved a resolution condemning the Soviet lintervention in the October revolu- tion; South Africa did the same when the political committee took up the question of race discrimin- ation in that country. France maintain that the Alger- ian problem is not one for the UN because the North African terri- tory is legally a part of France itself. unlike Tunisia and Morocco which adjoin Algeria. Tunisia and Morocco have attained a measure of self-government. But on Algeria the irenok pav- U. N. Delegates Worried By Israel's Stand UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. (AP) Worried by Israel's refusal to get out of Egypt without guarantees some United Nations delegates Monday looked to the United States to take the lead in a new day. on the deteriorating Middle Est crisis. The view as expressed by sev- eral delegates in private talks. Secretary - General Dag Ham- marskjold cillcd Israeli Ambas- sador Abba Eban to his office for an afternoon appoint 2 it was delayed while Eban held a hur- ried consultation with Foreign Minister Mrs. Golda Meir. informed s o u r c e s speculated that Ebsn had received-from Jer- ' the T ' A of the Israeli government to remain at Sharm El Shelkh, in the Aqaba Gulf sec- tor. and in the Gaza Strip. The secretary - general started action Sunday in accord with the latest assembly evacuation re quest to Israel. liammarsitjold denied reports that he was going to the Middle East. But it was apparent a senti ment was building up for him to go. INAUGURAL rsioirr ENDS LONDON iReutersl - A giant four-engined Bristol Britannia air- liner landed at London airport Monday to .ompleie her inaug- ural fllght to South Africa and back. N. S. Gov't Will on L. Stanfield slid Mandi! the government would not fiance "00 opening of a coal scam at West- git. problem which on the strength of international law we consider to be of an essentially internal as-I lure." NOT QUESTIONED BEFORE The fact that Algeria was part of France had never been ques tloned by other international bod ies, t ' ” g the North Atlantis Treaty Organization. "Since Algeria is by right A French territory." Pineau said "Its boundaries are those oi France. To separate Algeria fron France would be to alter my coun iry's boundaries." The UN: position "shqild be rather to guarantee respect fol those boundaries." Pineau said he also wanted to speak here on the question to point out that "foreign interference" in Algerian affairs had been the can of the bloody Arab nationalist re volt which has been raging for more than two years. c put uuiclitof the blame on R is and Earn- "Thers is no doubt, in fact. that in spite of promises given us. So- viet support of the Algerian rebi- llonlsareality-...ItisEgypt. howcvu, acting to some extent under Soviet inspiration. which has given the Algerian iebelliu the most continuous and effective support." EGYPTIANS BLAME!) lie accused Preiidciit Nsssei-'s spa ' . from among the it Asian-African countries who got the question on the agenda planned to follow Pinssn in the do- bsts. some form of resolution h almost sure to follow. leading to the prospect of another Frock walkout. Canada is expected to make a brief submission in the political Europe Enioys LONDON (AP) -- Western Eu- rope basked in some spring-like weather with temperatures in the 60!. coaxing the crowds out to the sidewalk mfes. In Paris. Brussels and Amster- dam the cafe operators brought out their sidewalk tables for an early start to the sprint! season. The thermometer in all three capitals touched an even 60 Mon- day afternoon. Berlln had a temperature of 53 -warmest Feb. 4 since 1830. Switzerland. with eight days of uninterrupted sunshine. shut down its famous St. Moritz bobsled runs this morning because of the melt- inll snow. Swiss resort OPQTIIWF moaned the sun because of the rush of cancellations from winter sports enthusiasts. All over Western Europe the temperatures ranged about 25 de- grees above the figures l0I' "00 same day a year IE0- ln london it wgs 55. Not Finance Opening of Wesfville Mine nsursx (cpien-emicr llnb- mining country to discuss the sh.- nation WI81'VlLLE NEAR IANKIUPI ifcsaldniinscloalngsandcim ' villa. N.s.. to save the Home tailments had left Wsstville. with County mining community MM I W '33- WW '3 -1,.nk.-tgptcy," than during years. Thepremicbasadbisdecisioa A due.Dasas onthcresultsofameetinfridnycoslaiicf llaroldtihdnt ofbominloo steel sndcosl Com- ssrlonsnhrramh puny and provincial overnmerit om may force absduim officlnlsandadeleutioafrunthc tbs Acsinscosi ouapsars mining region gr-out snag yaica alpha Ilr. committee. probably late today. . giving support to the French posl- . on. Mild Temperatures .'.-.......--,- p .....- -.1 -:'a.-