TELEPHONE ssosi luv-v masts seller watt Guardian WontAdn.DinlI506eiforelessi- nddtdllfttorquiekresulth. :4 PAGES . EIGHT KILLED 0 SOMERSET. K1. -Eight young- engine after a day of Joy-riding. which burst into flames. The en- sters were killed when their rattle- Five of the youngsters. aged 12 gine dragged the auto a half trap car was rammed by n treight to 17. were pinned in the car, mile. (AP Wirepheie) Says Man Will Reach The Moon In Present Century 4 ly DAVE MclN'POBl Canadian Press latff Writer orrxwa (CP) - Dr. John E. Keyston. new vice-chairman of tin defence research board. Ieys 105! may well go down as one of the two or three most important dates el FINANCE IS PROBLEM The main hindrance wu lack of money. Construction of a space ship to carry man to the moon-- "a flight of about two weeks"- was too big a project to be handled ;'Why climb Everest?" he re- ed. MARS LONG VOYAGE Dr. Keyston said he isn't thlnk- an ing-yet-of space travel beyond the moon. which is some 140.00! miles from the earth. who mttarctiutt "Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew' WN CANADA, WEDNESDAY, JULY 24. 1957 Crash Of Navy Patrol Bomber HONOLULU (AP) - A U. I. I0 dlately after takeoff Tuesday and crashed in the Pacific 300 yards eff Barbers Point naval air sta- lion. The navy said than was no sign of an nurvivors but eraslr boats and helicopters wese eaarchlng the non. Divers checked the wreckage in shoal water I feet deep. Find Bodies Of Driver And Girls HOBBS. N.M. (AP)-Searchers found the bodies of two young wo- men Tuesday several hours after a truck driver was found slsln on a lonely highway west of here. Officers said they believe the bodies were those of Dorothy Fern Gibson. 23. and llrbara Lem- mona. . both of Hobbs. There had been signs of a ter- rific struggle where truck driver 1. B. Cantrell. Tl. of Carlsbad was found early Tuesday. He had beenshotdtleastfourtimesbya .22-calibre weapon. The women's bodies were found a considerable distance from the spot where Cantrell'a body was discovered The truck driver apparently had stopped to help the two women travellers. whose car had a flat right trout tire. Says Nuclear Ban Worthless LONDON (Reuters) - Foreign Tuesday. Fuehlingen Heath near here. Veteran strap - hangers agreed which hangs in mid-air from a rib- bon on concrete was unveiled in the first full-scale demonstra- tion of his revolutionary monorail system, Swedish industrialist Axel Wenncr-Grcn took the controls to whisk reporters at 50 miles an hour around a 1.900-yard line on reinforced concrete. Developed by German engineers Wenner - Gren's monorail is de- signed to complement or replace existing city and suburban trans- port systems. The test line consisted of a con- crete beam 31 inches wide and 11 inches high supported by pylons spaced about 16 yards apart. The train. two cars holding IN passengers each. is stabilized on the rail by rubber wheels which grip the beam. The chassis of the cars overhang the beam on either side. Alweg hopes to sell its monorail system to the city of Sao Paulo. Brazil. which is negotiating for a 3l50.000.000 alwcg system. To Help Treat Heart Disease TORONTO (CPi - Officials at Toronto's Connaught Laboratories said Tuesday research will begin Aug 1 to determine the effective- ness of two new blood by-prod- ucts. one of which may be helpful in treating heart disease. They said it is still too early to comment on the usefulness of the products. described hionday by Dr. W. G. Miller. a national di- rector of the Canadian Red Cross "M transfusion service. in an inter view in Vancouver. One product is M t en. which helps dissolve blood clots and may be useful in coronary it ddaarbttatwavnll LONDON (Reuters) - Parlia- ment Tuesday night supported the government's policy on disarma- ment nftcr Defence Minister Dun- can Sandys said results of nuclear tests in the Pacific last May will -enable Britain to manufacture megafon t t . The vote was 322 to 382-a mar- gin of so for the government. It came after a day-long debate on Britain's policy at the five-power disarmament talks here. Sandys said the Pacific tests provided enough information to al- low Britain to manufacture war- heads. carrying an atomic explos- ive foroe equivalent to 1.000.000 tons of high explosiye. for "air- craft bomb and ballistic rockets." IUSSIAN PLAN WOBTHLESS Foreign Minister Selwyn Lloyd told the House earlier that a third world war fought to the finish "would destroy organized society" used. Lloyd said a Soviet - proposed agreement for an immediate ban on the use oi nuclear weapons would not be "worth the paper it was written on." Neither side would behave that in the ultimate recourse. the other would refrain from using nuclear weapons. he Russia has called for a two- or three-year suspensibn oi nuclear tests under international control, independent of any other disarm- ament moves. even if atomic weapons were not said els-anebyovunatuauehutne listi-Ht-Itr::d:-..leuv4IlatI PRICE Se Megaton Warheads Equal Million Tons Of Explosives Train Hanging In Mid Air From Ribbon On Concrete (Reuters)-A radically new train the monorail. dubbed the Alweg system. has the virtue of silence -due to pneumatic tires which grip the single overhead beam of Says Tests Enable Britain To Make Megaton Warhead: The Western powers at the talk; hero-the United States. Britain. Franceand Canada-insist that a suspension of tests must be tied to an agreement on halting the manufacture of nuclear weapons. Failing an agreement on test wispension. Russia wants a com! pletc ban on nuclear weapons. de- struction of existing stockpiles and a solemn pledge not to use then: ever in war. Lloyd said this would not be ac ceptable. i N0 MORAL DIFFERENCE The foreign secretary said hi could not agree that nuclear wen puns should be outlawed whilt conventional arms in large quan tities remained. "I do not accept there is a moral difference between sending LON bombers to destroy a town with high explosives and sending out bomber with an H - bomb." he An eurin Bevan, the Labor party's spokesman for foreign af- fairs, criticized the government for linking disarmament with re- unification of Germany. Russia would not agree to re- unification of Germany if Gen many were free to add to the strength of the Western alliance, Bevan said. . .o one would suggest that any- one In the House of Commons was prepared to risk a single British life to bring about German reunt flcatlon. he said. 2. cases. The other is LEI l ,' which may help in treating Wil- e e son's disease. a rare malady N0 DCCISIOH In caused by lack of copper in the Talks in mIII'l hiltorsh Mars is the planet closest to the Tint ll the year in which the of dollars and only a major na- earth. Its closest approach to ll 0!! Illilllllti i-ll! 0016? United States is scheduled to tion could undertake such a cost. earth still leaves a gap of 80.000; WW” W "M 0" WOIPOIII it Do!- launch an earth satellite which "But If you ggkod me when mgu jl) mun Jet Squadron ls ILRIC CAIIPIILL WILLIAM MACLENNAN will circle the giobsoutaideths willreaohthemoomlwould any lnthlseantury ltlenotas --n ,n',b.b1, mum uh N, in a dlsdaanenseat debate. ood. "We must find out whether plas- Set For Germany field of srnvlty. . for fit to Man... 30 I4 ' i- "it means um man will no may a um... um to gun f,'..T'...d : ,.'..;3 b.,,..,-- ,,.d”; ”The conclusions from these LEAVING FOR OTIAWA Ininosen can be -dmlnmered In uonrnnar. (cm - run be- m-mm (cp) - -11,. 3cAp". 1053.; be unhboung," nu me” 3,,-.u,,L --1-M moon '0”, N . facts is that the poasbilltles of sufficient concentration to do any 3,... .3, cmm N.uo,,.1 pm. "0. H, cmlm M um" mud". Englishman said Tuesday in an in- terview. Successful lenachlng of the satellite would be the firm step in man's'npnquest of space. Dr. Keyston. who based the Dartmouth. N.S.. for seven years before coming to Ottawa last month as vice-chairman of the do- fence research board. said there are no inherent imposaihlltttas ta giiigi is ,glood'staglng area for a flight to are." Does he believe in the existence 1 I... Jae." said are ll-yeanddx set- time entlnt and sparo- playwright. "lt would be incredible to think that spacemen came within a few feet of earth and didn't land. Think ofusgettlngallthswaytothe moonnnddsennotlsndhgeait" Want Eguivalent Of Full Pay For Wiured Workers HALIFAX (CP) - The Nova 5 r 3. 5 E panaliaadferanlnillfiforwhich "it is to all intents and pur- poses a cost-of-living bonus and as such is the responsibility of the community at -large," the can lllldlal fr waoons pnr'poees."'r To Decide Fate Of Idle Mine STELLARTON, N. I. (CP)- The fate of idla Mac.-Bean mine at nearby Thorburn will be decided by a joint cor-npsny-union survey to present a brief before the Canadian Tariff William lacnnnnan, Searltown. president of the Potato Marketing Board and Elric Campbell. man- ager of the board. Mr. Macho- nsn is a member of the tariff and trade committee of the Canadian Horticultural Council and also of the potato committee. Their brief, which represents the P.E.l. potato industry general- ly. is endorsed by the Federation of Agriculture, the Potato Produc- In Association of P.E.l.. the P. Leaving for Ottawa by air this l.I. Potato Dealers Association inurning and. in principle. by the Provin- clal round mt cent tariff. on U.S. pot- atoes and. for the present. the re- storation of the 1.500.000 quota for Canadian potatoes entering the United States. it was observed that in the year now ending the limits of l.Il0.tl)0 bus. seed and dtlJ.tI)0 bus. table stock were prac- tically filled. so that when the re- duced quota becomes effective Sept. 15. Canada may well find that it will be a limiting factor. Tuesday ht at a meeting of United Mine Workers and Domin- Ion Coal Company representa- tlvu. One union official said that the outlook at the mine. idle for IR! DITCI The Blue Nile. one of two rivers which forms the Nile in Africa. has carved a canyon which is 4.- no feet deep In places. IIIGII PRICE! Pr-ospectors In Dawson in the Yukon paid as much as 810 for a good." one ruearcher said. "As for wruloplasmln. it's still more Government. .- ." .!."”P"i&'! -i ' 11., in mm n . y.;'j ilil I.ll5t7ld lve it is." The by-products might be avail- able to hospitals In about a year. "Israeli Crew Member Is Held PORT SAID. Egypt (AP)-The Danish freighter Birgitte Toft sailed out of the Suez Canal Tues- day night with a cargo for Israel but without an Israeli crew mem- her. The sailor-writer was held by Egyptian authorities. Capt. Hans Lolk told reporters he was "upset and astonished" that Egyptian police had not re haircut and 83 for an en durlnstturnea the man. Raphael Eylon, the gold rush in 1890. to his ship. wayn and unions regarding pro- , layoffs have reached no de- nlbcsnes Janette. 'f'here would be nothing made public by mutual agreement. he added. while the talks continued. They adjustments in as-lsting seniority rules of about LII) CNR personnel faced with layoffs. Their unions approached the federal government. which July 12 said It will finance n sp cial work program to ease the threat which the CNR attributed to - duced rail traffic. Men at Montreal. hfoncton. N.I.. Winnipeg. Edmonton and Port llaan. B.C.. were involved. onnarsisrr uutn Lake superior. largest of the five Great Lakes. has an average depth of no feet. will move td Baden - Solllinnn. Germany, from its base at Jltn-th lay. Ont.. next month. ah' force headquarters said Tuesday. It will be the fourth and last or- l00 squadron to Join the I2-squadv ron RCAF air division in France and West Germany. The other eight squadrons are equipped with Sabre M Movement of the four CF - ll squadrons to Europe will be con) pleted aboug eight months behl the original schedule. The aircraft will fly across Atlantic via Goose Bay. Lebra and Keflavik. Iceland. They fly non-stop from Iceland to -- new base. As No. 419 leaves North Mechanical Shellfish Digger Has Promising Potentialities Q Encouragi results in the opera- bee and it is pointed out that ha I tion of a mechanical shell fish methods of dlllllll. result in digger were seen ,esterday af- destruction of the young - ter-noon when a Fisheries Research which are buried below their usnd Board craft proceeded off Tea Hill depth. . In Hlllsboro Bayto dig bar clams. in the oneratlon of the mechan- i . . in areas where clams were res- tell dlsser. I-he mlchine ll let I! - - . aonably abundant thedlgging app- the proper depth and I forced . aratue was able to land the shell- stream of water from a number j fish at the rate of one bushel in of powerful let streams keeps the 7 four minutes. Mr J.li. MecPhail son in supension eneblmg the I who is in charge of the experl- small fish to seek their proper dep- mental work being conducted th. in island waters. explained that he U.3. SPECTATOR - , An interested spectator on yea- , . S . with the location of the clam beds tcrday's trip was Mr. Douglas Ile- j 3 ' .31 egg;-ggug the opman mg: gny- Nichol of long island New York. , . Q; ngmn. on g eommgpclgl bqglg Ifr. McNichol. I former C-II&III f could expect from so to 7: bushels caused in the mains Ind!-In r.. a day. - The ship will experiment in the yearly trips to Canadian Blologlo rm , . . said. proper functioning of WOULD IA!!! MAXIHUM The labor group urged elimtu. to lacourage the injured worlr- than of the present five-day walt- Mlllllltllkll Association. prw- man to return to work as soon as lng period before compensation lg notenoaedtheprssent70pcosnthlghthatlheineosneoftbelniured' wIl'&hnearhistake-bomapaymumlncorneallowadaperaonrr toproloaghisabeeoce ceivtngcornpensattonherslsedte ." "MID from CIMN and trat the H. Ilcxlnaosnwbobegaahearius P. if. Covert. liallfasr lawyer. burial allowance be case. The is- operationoftheWorkmsn'Cons-snesentedthechnbrlef. pensatlen The manufacturer's association nnce of at least IUD. aleoaaidthetincreueslnpar from accidents in elation. the Nova lcotia load- Ollidlly submitted years comefromthe buildersAssocistionandthaIaIt- brid.ltuHtMneuntNperguernnnnmdtMmodnceaxiBouddhaoeudondtbe the . Aatand. E i E Denies Meeting With Premier lll0RlACRE8.l.C.fCP)-A -rs. Caaadlea am. no ieederofieloesefheadom wuetoa-IoHvPNInI-rite . for soft shelled clams and at stations to keep in touch with g qaa ugs before leaving here in any new dc ' ants in methods ,.-,f r g . . ngnet. it Dr. Carl Medcof of the st. And- l!w's N.l. Biological station was nltmg on the fishing expedition as was Mr. Sydney Bu-hoe, President Donkhobrnn sun rsssoay H1, seasgeutyaniooustao aftheP.E.l.!'lsheries!'ederation. 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