who mttorclimt 0 "73 "NM I'll! will Guardian Clear with few htarvols. 5-4 -4 him for said -win. light aoufiswaiarty wind-. - "Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew" ' 14'?-A033 WN CANADA. MONDAY, JULY 29, 1957 . riucs Sc Maior Earthquake Shakes Area' In Southern Mexico "I ' Mexico City Hardest Hit; M.P. 5 Are Assured Bus Canadian Embassy H" -.Priority Will Be Arranged MEXICO CITY um - Earth-itheir bedsb H M . Other u' dings rrac and ---w streets. than 100 persons were reported Officials said the fact that Mex- killed. ico City sits on a dried up lake This capital city was hit hard. M.P. for Prince who are in thctmainland. Province, got in touch by tele-' phone with Minister of Fisheries. The island Progressive Conser- vative Members of Parliament, ,have been assured that arrange- The three Members, however, acted in concert. and through Mr. saved it from heavier damage. 20 Injured In Dsrailmant WINNIPIO fa) - An impro- perly ast switch opened under the CNR's crack continental , - gar train Sunday. tossing all but four of the cars off the tracks and causing minor injuries to about so persons. laports at hospitals hers where the hjinsd were brought by am- bulance and other vehicles said about four appeared to be seri- ously hurt. The derailment occurred about 4 p.m. at Noose. as miles cast of bars on the CNR's main line. The Continental train No. 3 left Mos- treat for Vancouver Friday at I p.m. v FARMERS DECREASE ROME MP) - A stbady trend from muscklash: machines to do arm wor owar workers to a man. The latest Food and Agricul- ture Organisation yearbook said today 08 pa" cent of the world pqulation was engaged in vi- tun in 1987 but by 1050 the wasdcwnto50percent.Thsde crease has continued proportion- 'l I I gm". 1. mg or an gqugny .mc1. ll.Q.M.S. .l.T. Place. QUAITEBMASTEWI ent departments of the P.E.i. Regiment. Shown here are seated For the second consecutive year the Prince Edward Island Regt. (17 Recce) we. adjudged the best Militia Unit attending Camp Utop- ia for the week ending 27 July. 105'! and were formally ya sented with the efficiency trophy on Fri- day mornlnfs camp parade. Arriving on Saturday evening. July N, the troops were debusscd t ” the camp entrance and Lt.-Col. A.H. Psake. CD, marched his unit into camp. lad b their laglmmlal land under W0 1 C.l. lacdregor. Misc divine services on Sunday all ranks lmlblred for a full week's training in the field. inclement weather on Monday forced a one day's postponment oi the field trainill Pfolramma TRAINING stely since 1950. the yearbook said. On Tuesday the first of three schemes on a squadron Youthful Ex-Convict Held In Savage Slaying Of Brothers IROCKTON. Mass. (AP)-A 1)- year-old an-convict with a heard of sex offences was held without charge Sunday in connection with the savage shying of two young brothers The name of the youth was withheld. Police Capt. D. Edward Sullivan said a set of house and automo- bile keys found beneath and nude. charred and stabbed bodies of Ed- ward Paul Logan, ii. and his brother. John. 11, lad police to the youth The bodies of the t - -- bound with ropg at the wrists- were found Saturday in a burned wooded area of D. W. Field Park. Police believe the killer set fire ie the woods in an effort to hide tbe crime. is ill. Sullivan said. the youth in custody was sentenced to 10 years in the reformatory for an attack on a youngster. The attack occurred in the same park where the Logan brothers were killed. In that attack. a young boy was sexual unsuited. stabbed and al- wea the cIef witness against his vary. R.Q.M.S. G.R. MacNutt, Standing. Lt. S.W. Clay, Staff Sgt. H. J Bernard and Sgt L.A. MecDoug- all. In the background, T.Q.M.S. left h riilt MIMI R.D. McGlli- G.E. Sutherland. P. E. i. Regiment (T7 Reccel Again Takes Top Honours level were conducted. Major D.J. McCormick, 0C A . had command of the sodn for this ex- ercise. On Wednesday Major G.L. Monkiey. OC C Sqdn acted as CO for a Harhourlng exercise. The final exercise was conducted on Thursday when Major R..l. Mahar. 0C liq. Sqdn. assumed command for a conplete all-day "Sqdn tn the Attack" exercise. This completed training an a Sqdn level. and the remainder of the week was taken up in tank a: scout car driver Training for the week was under the direction of Major l:.K. Ken- nedy. CD. who is the second in command of the unit. Highlights of the week were the annual Regimental lobster dlnnar attended by all ranks on Wednes- day evening. Col F. A. Cooke. commander No. 3 Militia Group (Sydney) and his staff were guests of the unit; also Col Mor- gan. Commander No. 1 Militia Group (Nfld.) and the permanent camp staff. BAND CONCEBTI attacker. IICINTLY RELEASED The captain said the suspect was released only recently after serving six years. Dr. Charles Kane. medical ex- aminer. said each brother was stabbed "five or six times" in the chest and abdomen. He said it has not been determined whether the brothers were still alive when their slayer set firs to twigs and tnancbes which he straw over in. Dr. Kane said thorough chemi- cal tests will he made to deter- mine whether sexual attack was involved in the deaths. The boys were reported Friday when their father. Jean L. Logan Jr.. an Industrial engineer, could not find them at the swim- ming pool they had been visiting. about llt miles from the gully in which their bodies were found. The boys were tin youngest chil- dren in the family. Two sisters. willing with a stranger. Solemn Guatemalan: Pass By Body Oi Murdered President. GUATEMALA CITY (AP) - sq ,gi.Iii 5 3 i i i?:liiszav':- hriiiiiiiiiii iii" .... . iiil ii i i. :, E i! it E . Fiii is i A further highlight was the band concerts put on by the Regimental Band. Many most favorable com- ments were voiced as theso con- certs were presented. it will be recalled that Lt.-Col. Peaks last 9 t received at the armoured Corps Conference held in Ottawa. the Col. Ross Mem- orial Trophy for the best Armour- ed Corps Unit in Eastern Com- mand which takes in the four Maritime Provinces Both Protestant and Roman Cath- olic Padres of the Unit were able tcattend Camp Utopia or Alder- shot. with the troops of the Rent. Father F.L. Cass attending the latter. and Rev. C.R. Webber at- tending Camp Utopia. DANUIE NEAR FLOODING PASSAU. Germany iAP)-Parts of this old town on the Danube were evacuated ' t night as the rain-swollen waters of the river reached danger marks. Tor- rential .ainialls have filled many Bavarian rivers to the brlrn but only the Danube is threatening to spill over its banks Expect Early Conference On Trade OTTAWA (CF)-Prime Minister Dlefenbaker said Sunday night at- tar meetings with U.S. state sec- retary Dulles that he anticipates an early meeting of the joint Can- ada-United States cabinet commit- tea on trade and economic rela- tions. Mr. Diefenbaker said in s tele- phone interview that be and Mr. Dulles discussed "various matters of mutual interest." They also had discussed "various matters of mu- tual interest" They also had dis- cussed the "general problem of disarmament" in connection with the disarmament talks currently under way in London. Mr. Dulles was to leave later for London to decide whether the United States would continue on with the discussions. Canada. Rus- sia. France and Britain also are represented at the London talks. Mr. Diefenbaker declined to say whether he and Mr. Dulles dis- cussed the possibility of a meet- ing between the Prime Minister and President Eisenhower, but he did note that the last meeting of the cabinet committee was held in Ottawa and that the coming one therefore would be held in Wash- fnlfton. ments will be made for buses to receive priority on the car ferry. Heath Macquarrie, M. P. for Queens and Dr. Orville H. Phillips the Hon. Angtu Maclsean. Thcy1MacLean, took the matter up with had no previous knowledge of the the buses being refused priority. Nor They were given to understand that were they approached by any of- ficials of island Motor Transport. operator of the bus service to theion the car ferry. Department of Transport satis.'actory arrangements will be made to give priority to the bus I ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. iCP) - A three-man royal commission today twill continue its probe int N:wioundlsnd's economic progress since Confederation after spend- ing the weekend touring the Ava- lon Peninsula by car. Premier Joseph Smsllwood in- vlted commission chairman John B. McNalr. Chief Justice of the New Brunswick Supreme Court. and members sir Albert Walsh. Newi'oundlnnd's chief justice. and Professor John Deutsch of theUni- versity of British Columbia. to make the trip when bearings op- ened last Monday. Mr. Smallwood said he wanted the members to see first band the province's highways and the level of other public services. The same day the y-esentod a 833-page re- port, compiled after more than two years work by a special pro- vincial cominisslon. asking for an annual federal grant of 8l7.000.000 to keep public services at their "present low lava." Tbroun the week. joint eel H. Carl Golanharg of real told the commission New- fcundland's roads and educational system are the worst in Canada. When it came to modern conven- ienccs such as hot and cold run- nlng water Maritlmers are "twice as well off." Newfoundlanders had a heavier tax burden than the other three Atlantic provinces. a lower - standard of living and higher infant death rats. 12 PER CENT HIGHER "The cost of living is approxi- mately 12 per cent higher in New- foundland" and "on the basis of soun- Mani-ads Commission uSees Nfld. Services At First Hand alion in approximately 25 per cent greater per capita." The number of Newfoundlande . attending school or university was 12 per cent lower than Prince Ed- ward lsland. 10 per cent lower than New Brunswick and 20 per cent below Nova Scotla. Eleven per cent of the male heads of families in Nu-'oundlsnd had no schooling compared with less than two per cent in Nova Scoils. a little more than four per cent in New Brunswick and less than one per cent in Prince Ed- ward Island. Twenty-five per cent had only one to four years of schooling. "Newfoundland has had a long history of poverty." Mr. Goldm- berg said. "and this poverty meant the neglect of public serv- ices." PLACED BLAME The brief blamed the poverty on "tha low productivity of individ- ual fishermen eusaged in the shore fishery and using primitive meth- was the provinces mainstay well past the first ouar- ter of this century." Roads were no more than "dirt trails in places" and the 100 miles of pavements compared with "a paved country trial" in Ontario Deductlng some s,sso miles of lbld which would not be clggged as roads in other provinces. there remained 3.900 miles "or 9.9 miles zf road for each 1.000 of popula- ML" The Canadian " survey showed the s v c r a g a Canadian family spent 88: in 1951 for health capacity to pay, the burden of tax- BERLIN (Reuters)-East Ger- many offered Saturday to pull out of the Warsaw Pact if West Ger- many quits NATO. A government statement said this could prepare for the cooled- eration of two sovereign German states and eventually led to reun- fflcation of the country. East German Premier Otto Grotewohl handed the statement to all diplomatic missions in East Berlin. He also read it aloud to newspaper men from both sides of the iron Curtain. The confederation plan demands direct negotiations between the East and West German govern- ments-4 step West German Chan- celhlor Konrad Adenauer refuses to ta e. STATEMENT DUI Reds Make New Move To Lure West Germany Out Of NATO declaration on reunification. A four - power statement will be signed here Monday by West Ger- man Forein Minister Heinrich von Brentano and the British. U.S. and French ambassadors. Major reason for the heightened concern over reuniflcatl is the torrid campaign for est Gab many's parliament y elections Sept. 15. The Social Democrats. chief op- position to Adenaucr's Christian they. if reelected. will seek West G e r m a n y's withdrawal NATO in favor of an all-European security system. The Communist party. outlawed in West Germany, has been back- ing the Social Democrats in broad- casts from East Germany-even The statement got the jump by two days on a scheduled western latcd this support. Mock Atomic Battle Began Sunday At Camp Gagetown I -z s. 'i tiisiiii ti. :- 355:; ii light up like a Christmas tree. His force captured about it!) members of the let Black watch all herdd them into a prison compound where the guards hurled iii llii Canada. where dlere are lots of The last Canadian soldier from gin":-T'":".rYu."MmE':'” ""2: lies will leave for Canada this .. '”"."'n.""'h"n manth.Porthel(or-eanvetersnthe, 0'seseaioroflicersaidltstriaiss”""'i"'l""'d-”'i"”'""” His last army aeadaaasssa"""'"9""'”W"”"'l' ,,,,,,g,g,,,.,.,,.,-..ahsaadi-icepsddyflelashera nalmsseiuetensssntitusssrliiitdlnthltrinlivrttl-T50 sctusiiastueccsvsiussus.ihess-inyflritclasdlansvlilnflsf-I In wodsssveisessssaewIiansI4I'-a.a-sasttsaafrlaeeauflr ssri-aisstassa.assussstso-.trIIII'IC-alaalldlblnatrr. Flliihhj msssdhss&adheti)n Democrats. have served notice i from i though the Socialists have repud- V y under term 29 of the Terms of services compared with 372 in the Maritlmes and 828 in Newfound- land. For every 1,000 babies born alive in 1955. 12 died compared with 30 in Nova Scotia. 37 in New Brunswick and an average of ill for the whole of Canada. To keep standards at their "present low level." Mr. Golden- berii said. it will cost the govern- ment about 354,000.00!) annually. i"Wiihout imposing taxes more burdensome than those in the At- lantic provinces. the province can raise 817. 225.000 and export in- dustries will bring another 811.838.- W0" making the total revenue 335,163,000. 55KB ll7.0W.00O The brief is asking the federal government to make up the deficit With I 3l7.000.000 annual grant union with Canada. The term pro- vldes that a royal commisalon be appointed within eight years to re- view Ncwfouudland's economic Pfoitress and amass its future aaads. Premier Smallwood said would never have become Canadas without Term 29 Newfoundland 10th province in 1040. The commission was appointed by the federal government Feb. 22. Mr. Goldcnberg has suggested that a second commission be set up in future years to again review iihe province's needs. If the government agrees to iNewfoundland's request for 317.- 000.000. Mr. Goldcnber; said Fri- day. it will be spending 83.30 in Newfoundland for evry dollar it takes out. with 30 known dead and 450 in- jured. Many large buildings col- lapsed. The building housing the Canadian t y wasso badly damaged it may have to be aban- doned. The death list grew as reports began flowing in from distant points. A dispatch from Morelia quoted Governor David Franco Rodriques as estimating there were 72 dead in the southwestern state of Micha- acnn, in the regions of Arlo de Rosales and Coalcoman, about 40 miles inland-from the Pacific. Communlcatiais were severed between the capital and most of the quake area. But earlier reports of hevy cs- ulties at Acapulco were dissi- pated by an on-scene inspection. Damage in the capital was great. IIJILDINGS COLLAPSE it is estimated 50 large buildings hae collapsed and many more may have to be razed because of structural damage. Canadian Embassy officials who rushed to town were refused en- trance to the 11-storey building in which their offices are located. The building also houses the pent- house offices of William O'Dwyer. former New York City mayor. (Among the Canadians in Mexico City are Mr. and Mrs. A.A. Lo- mss and their two children. lie is formerly from Halifax and his wife is the former Miss Lean Palmer. daughter of Mr. lngham Palmer of Charlottetown. Mr. Lo- mas is a member of the Canad- tan Embassy staff. There was no direct information lad night .. as-ning their safety). Communications were disrupted when the first of a series of shocks struck at 2:50 am. Hours later the fate of many communitie re- mained in doubt. Then of the victims in the capl- tal were caught in the collapse of an apartment house. The injured list here totalled l72. Acapulco. Pacific coast resort city of 10.000 had a known death toll of two Mexican children. JARRED FROM DE!) The shocks in this city of 1.- lanes. Pie. John Hoshiri iii of New Westminster. B.C.. a member M0.0(ll jarred thousands out of And the South Koreans ill will not forget the Ciians who bmht in their land as they tend care the graves of those that dways he a part of Korea. in Grlton l ofwlh ihePPCLl..resneInberstbosssd- wfl vaacesfionb. mun.- Pse.leathMattIewsit)sfMna- I. Dlriusetewa. 'tresl.whoser-vuiwithibrloyal smer scam is the Canadian Cllldllll ReliIseIt.wsa'tformt Ialsal Korea. HIIRCEQI Isa-sinis-ssrasn The sponge-like floor of the city absorbed in great deal of the shock. A new building erected on the mpus of the Polytechnic Univer- sity collapsed. But other new buildings. all with large expanses of glass. withstood the shocks. sui- fering only broken glass and cracks. Officials said if the shocks had bit during daylight hours the toll would have been far worse be- cause cf flying glass. The new Continental Hilton Ho- tel. opened only last December. may have to close because the shocks disrupted the plumbing. The Hilton bore a huge crack starting at the street and widen- ing as it climbed to the penthouse nightclub. The 44 -storey Latin American tower. highest building in Latin America. withstood its first test. The structure. not fully completed .although occupied on the bottom floors, was built on an island-like foundation similar to the one used by architect Frank Lloyd Wright in the "earthquake - proof" im- perial Hotel in Tokyo. CHURCHES SUFFER Some of the city's ancient Ro- man Catholic churches were cracked and their altars damaged. Older buildings which have weathered other but less severe quakes seemed to have suffered less noticeable damage than newer ones with glass exteriors. The city was thrown into dark- ness. There was some padc as frightened citizens fled into the streets. Others screamed behind doors jammed shut by the shock. Fires. a rarity in Mexico Cit! because of the scarcity of oxygen mile-and-a-half attitude I emergency calls by dawn and had 15 others it couldn't get to. Officials began evacuat' pa- some evidence it might collapse. The building in Mitch Loon Trot- sky was assassinated in 1940 was among those damaged. The I-TACMHEE jarred saloo- grapb equipment at Dalhouele Unl- verslty is Halifax for an unusud four hours. One instrument eves failed to return to accurate scale. ” " Hefner of the universi- 's h sics d artmeng said it gas iisniiisusl f?" the Dalhouiil seismograph to register is-emons for more than two hours. He said the Mexico City quake first registered at 5:48 pm. ADT. Report Revolt loses Momentum SHARJAH. A r s b I a ll Tmcial Coast (Reuters)-British author ities said Sunday the rebel move ment led by the imam of Omar has "completely lost momentum" but that RAF jet planes may I0 sumo the attack. Sir Bernard Burrows. British political r e sl d e ni in Bshrcin. spoke to reporters about that des- ert warfare after flying over the battle area. Britain is supporting the sultan of Muscat and Oman in a rebel- lion that broke out two weeks alto when the Imam fsplritual ruler) of Oman seized the regional can Isl of Nlswa. RAF vmom jet fighters which last week made cannon and rocket strikes on rebel strongholds re- mained ai their bases Sunday. but Burrows said there may be more air strikes. He said the fight against the rebels is "going the right way and the sultan is quite optimistic about the outcotm " Brave Mid-Winter Weather To Vote IUENOS AIRES (AP! - Long is September, I955. Thirty-two parties have candl- dates is the lists. one of the