. turned to their Kremlin posts af- dilmc wuwrdio "Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dow" NIATI-IE3 Ovaraal,baersiiItaslIaia heme-up in afternoon. Caehr,aadwbi& I5. Law-highatchaitlettatawnddandiil. A QEOTION 0!" I'll BLAZING Lantern Touches OH Blaze In large Barn At Red House on lad House. nine miles from sung, was completely destroy- Ii. Stand. and his son Bruce had just finished milking about 1 p.isi. Mr. stead started up to the loft with a lantern in his hand when some hay bangin, down became ignited. 'lIe Itasds tried to eating- nlsh the blue but could not hturday eveiing the the reserve senior and reserve large barn of Brenton Stead, grand female .charnpioa, and tye Junior male champion at the Provincial Exhibition this year. The female was Heathers Millie and the .lunior male charrmlon was Linwood Dia- mond. The latter showed as I senior calf and is particularly well bred. He is sired by Sykes Double Diamond and his dam is Carnell Honeysuckle. a cow from the herd of the Temple- ihe Junior male diamplon at cope with it, and turned their one of the best known of scot- efforts to saving their register- l ed Ayrshire caila which hclude land's Ayrshirv farms. There were fourteen head of .i BARN reidered cattle in the bani and two registered bulls. They also saved a qilg and her litter tliat were in the barn. The main l-.-irn was 62 feet by 12 feet and one more day would have seen the com- lietionofan additiondzfeetby is feet. other smaller bull- dings were lso destroyed, one contained a new hay baler which was saved by quick acting neighbours who hitched a trac- tor to it and hauled it from the huming building. At the outbreak oi the fire the wind was directly on the house and a bucket brigade formed by the ones that gather- ed qulckly were responsible for saving the house. The Souris Fire Department was summoned but the barn RUSSIA iieloicss Red Scientists Look To Trips To Moon, Planets Moscow (AP)-Russia's baby his posts is of "great scientific value" in charting the satellite. tar long vacations. PAPII8 lCs'l'A'l'lC The official Communist party S newspaper rrsvds filled ans press in Russia. the accounts heaped praise science, with credit go- to the soviet Communist aya- Llttle was said of technical de- tails. There were no pictures or driawlngs of the scientific mar- E On Moscow radio. however. a hint of the tremendous power which shot the satellite into space was given in a Soviet aci- entlst named Polyakovsky. He said: "The rockets which carried our satellite into its orbit exerted a force greater than that of any electric power station in be world." Port Of Montreal May Have Worst Season For l2 Years MONTREAL (CF)-The port oi Montreal. caught in a shipping alsnip. may end the 1967 naviga- the worst record la 11 years. an official of the na- harbin-s board said satur- thls year, is r g el y because Churchlu, Man.. and Vancouver are getting more business. Alto- gether. 23.l00.fll0 hushela oi grain have moved from Churchill and west coast ports. compared with only 7.liIl.000 bushels from st. Lawrence River ports. Shipping officials say that the samba oi ships calling at Mont- real has dropped by 3.5 per cent so far as compared with last year. Net tonnage has fallen by SIMS tons. I The export movement has shown the largest drop - almost twice as much as westbound ship- Iravdsls lead ' 1, add rlctu-yoiheiesbtunieaiathe insetanceandied-' SPACE TIIAVIL Scientists. in e a n while. liioked ahead to explorations of the moon and planets. The next step. said members of the Academy oi sci- ence. will he the development of a satellite which will return to earth with all its instruments un- damaged. E. Fydorov, an academy mem- her, said the Soviet Union is con- tinuing lts separate International Geophysical Year program to launch more than if!) high - alti- tude rockets to collect and report data from altitudes d I) to M above the earth. Radio signals-a series of code beeps translatable only by Soviet technicians----s picked up Sim day in shanghai. Manila. Auck- land. New Zealsnd: Bombay and ilingaporx-. lladio Moscow broadcast the satellete's schedule as it arbited the earth at about mom miles an hour. It clcles the globe once every 96.1 minutes. At 6:07 a.m. ADT Sunday the satellite was near Capetown and crossing the southern part oi the Indian Ocean, Moscow radid said. At H5 it passed Alaska. It ap- proached Chicago at I:l1 and headed for South America. "An analysis oi the rennin oi the measurement shows that the period of revolution of the satel- lite has remained practically con- stant, .which testifies to the neg- ligible influence of the breaking its prtigres." Moscow radio aaid. forces send aloft as part of the inter- Guy Mollet Refuses To Form Gov't PARIS (APl-Fourier prtlrner Guy Mullet refused Sunday night iotrytoinnnancwI"renchgov- The eodalist leader went to the Elysee Palace and told F. ” Rene Coty he knows the task is impossible because the new pic- milt must have special wars to deal with the oountrya eco- nomic difficulties. Othu parties such a stq. Coty said he will send for ex premier Rene Pieven hi the morning. The developments threw the French political crisis right back where it started Sept. 30 when premier Maurice Bourges - Mao- oury was deleatcd in a vote oi cowiidence. Plcven. 56. belongs to the small derriocratlc and socialist union of resistance. Few H9061. Pleven will be able to lorm a govern- ment at dis stage. But he i known as a born conciliaaor. was doomed when they arrived and the wind had shifted from the house. They put some water 9n the ruins to keep it from spreading to a near-by wood pile and grain field. The barn contained about one thousand bundles of hay at the time. and as it smouldered most oi night. six neighbours stayed on watch all night. ' During the fire Mr. stead re- ceived second degree burns to his leg. He was taken to Souris Hospital where he received treatment and returned home. The loss was partially cover- ed by insurance. Two chests or carpenter tools. owned by men working on the addition the barn were lost also. One oi the most rapidly ad- vancing breeders in show circles in the, past year or two. Mr. stead was preparing his best show cattle for the Maritime Winter Fair at Anlierst. it is understood that Andrew B. Mar- ltae of the Raedale Ayrshire Farm. Union Road is going to take some oi the Stead cattle to Amherst for the big Fair when the best show cattle in the Mu-ithne Provinces meet each year the first week in No- vemher. width Y tenor- Moclr Air Raid 8'l'..l0lIN'8. Nfld. (CF) - A civil defenta official said satur- day very few people took Fri- day's mock air raid and black- out here seriously. During the afternoon alert. he said. people went casually about their business instead oi taking shelter. Only a few cars cooper- ated by stopping. That evening blackout did not meet expecta- tlons. Mayor Allison Bugden said he was "well pleased" with co-oper- atlon at Corner Brook. Nfld. Rea- ldents remained indoors "to a person" for the mock bombing attach United States is reducing its armed forces and cutting its de- fence expenditures at a rate that is creating genuine concern in some quarters. scarcely a week goes by with- out announcement oi another slash in nianoowe strength, the cancellation ii a military devel- opmenl program or the abandon- ment of another military installa- tion. in recent weeks. the defence department has taken iitqis to discontinue four divisions. abolish la anti - aircraft gun battalions. lay in 08 naval vessels and close 14 depots, plants and other facili- trles. Hundreds of defence con- tracts have been cancelled and aircraft prorhictlon and rhlsaile programs lowed down. 2.500.000 MEN IN AltM.s Military manpower, which to- talled 1.800.000 Just a few months ago. will be brought down to 2.- Ont. Anglican Clergyman Dies TORONTO (CF) - Most Rev. R. J. Renison, fonner Anglican archbishop oi Moosonee and Metropolitan 0' Ontario, died Sun- day in hospital. He was as. The archbishop. whose name has been part oi the history of Northern Ontario for half a cen- tury, had been in retirement since his 19th birthday. He was elected archbishop of Mooaonee in 190, climasing a career that started at 21 as a missionary among the Cree and ojlbway Indians of James Bay. atioeaeded Most Rev. John L. Lyons at Kingston as Metropolitan at on- tario. Nfld. Women Sea Periscope port reaching here Saturday said two Bay de Verde wosnui spot- ted what they eved was a submarine perlscope about a mile and a half from shore. They said the sub dlsappea ed when a schooner have into view. About 12 sightings have been reported off Newfoundland this summer. CHARIDTTETOWN CANADA. MONDAY. OCTOBER 7. 1957 Political Implications Of Baby Moon Stir World U.S. Slash In Defences Begins To Cause Alarm . WASHINGTON (CF) - 'l'tie.6iI),000 including 900.000 army that the defence program must a'I5,w0 air force. 645,000 navy and lm.000 marine oorps by a series of cuts announced by retiring De- fence Secretary Charles Wilson. Defence planners are aiming at a force of 2,500,000 by the end of next year. Ania-lean newmapers have be- gun to voice a real concern about lbe kept within the Q38.000.000.000 budget approved by Cmgress. In-I dilation has boomed defence costs zand-to quote the defence secre- iiary -”obviously the people in the: .couniry are in no mood to spend more dollars." However, politics He believed. in part at least, to be behind the cities 5; Reds In East Germany And China Spread Propaganda LONDON (AP) - The world pondered today whether Russia has gained a tremendous polli- oal advantage in being first to launch an earth satellite. One British writer called the satellite a potential spy-in-the-sky and the C h.l ne 3 e Communist newspaper Ta Kung Pao said in an editorial broadcast by Peipiiig radio: , "The United States has hitherto bragged that it was the most the wisdom of reducing the coun-4 economy program. Congress willy em; mun ,, arm. But try's defence establishment at a be up for re-election next yearn m it is 1.33:; 3,1,-,,',d the so. time wh ll the Soviet Union ap- pears to is reviving the cold war. Political foes of the Eisenhower adlniristratlon also are criticiz- ing the retrenchment program. Defence scientists express fear that the economy wave will jeop- ardize the basic scientific re- search necessary to maintain American technological superior-' the legal limit, set by Congress. of ity in arms. ELECTIONS vi-ttomim: The IdlnlII'lllIl.i0ll'3 nnsuer is the debt limit in an election year, land the Eisenhower administra- tion will be undcr great pressurcl lto provide a cut ltl personal in- come taxes. The last cut was in 1953. The national debt also plays its part. The debt now totals more than s271,000.000.000 and by next spring is expected to aqproach Z75.000.0(X)000. U.S.- political leaders always have been reluct- ant to ask (lo-v1rc-s in increase Murdochville Strike ls MURDOCHVILLE. Que, (CPL A long and often-violent strike of mine workers at Gaspe Copper liines, l..td.. ended Sunday sight. 'l1ie announcement of the end ti the strike was made in Morit- seal by the United Steelworkers of America (CIA) and was later confirmed in Mu ochvllle. Rogernadanr .steelworkers IV resem-dive wilduneas .."?;"t-l”i'.....”"'--.alSi.'."'t-'v- on-o-b--2--a "--- 'l- ”" assassins the ' iced rnideata. voting kit the resolution. Despite the unions announce- ment af the end of the strike. not all the workers may go back to ST. JOHN'S. Nfld. (CPl-A re- with ALL FIRED Herve Berube. assistant gen- eral manager of the mine. said all were fired in August tcr they ignored a company bac -io-- work ultimatum. The mine has him! no men since the strike bemn March it andnone will be WASHINGTON fAPl-Tlig first earth satellite continued its beep- beep night around the earth to- day and a Russian researcher de- clared his country plans to launch a second where "in the nearest future." . Professor A. A. Blagonravov. a soviet satellite expert who has heen attending a scientific con- ference here. said the baby moon now circling the globe is not the device the U.S.S.R. promised to national Geophysical Year pro- gram. Blngonravov said the second satellite would be a geophysical year protect and that all informa- tlon gleaned irclln its flight will be shared with scientists of the world. ' ills statements, made in a tele- vision interview. left in doubt the question of whether Russia plans to share the knowledge it gains from its present pioneer in space. Blagonravov said first Soviet estimates indicated the present baby moon would stay aloft about one month. He said these calcu- lations were not exact. 'Hiere has been speculation that the object might rerriain in flight for many years. Blagoriravov said Russia did not announce in advance its plans to launch its first satellite because the first one was considered er- pertrnental. IUII LISITNING POSTS A in e r I c a n satellite trackers a head with a Russian Reports Second Sphere To Be Fired Soon MOON NEXT? With various sources declaring that the Soviet accomplishment paves the way for interplanetary! travel in the future. the United mqhtieecsimaliaeandnrikeano . Friday for a 10-day visit of good- Over tired to make room for retisriisig strikers, Berube said. About 1,000 men on be em- ployed in all. The company says thue were No on the payroll when the strike began. Since then there have been three dynamitdngs, one violent death and a full-scale riot during which a labor delegation was stoned am the union's otlces wrecked. Bedard said the union's execu- mltteeiirwoaedioendtliestrlka because of a Quebec Samaria Oourtdecisionsept. 14. INJUNCTION QUASHED The court quashed an injunc- tion obtained by Gaspe Copper Mines. Ltd. preventiru the One- bec labor relations board frorn acting on the wplication for cer- tification of the USWA. Now that the board is tree to act-and to recognize the union as bargaining agent if it wlnies e-the strike might have been con- sidered an obstacle to I oasi- linn. Bedard said. The USWA in Montreal did not innounce further plam. it said it l hoped the company will not raise l.ui-thcr legal obstacles to unitm certification. The company has until Oct. 14 to launch an appeal from the Superior Court decision. The mine has been in limited operation for several rnondm. College students. a few immi- grants and other workers were hired to replace strikers. NEITRU VISITS JAPAN 'IY)KYO (AP)-Prime Minister Nehru of India arrived in Japan will and sighlsecirig. Nehru is re- paying Primc Minister Nobusuke Kishiis recent visit to lndia. sai M90 scientific world bin in the polit- ical world as well." Western military men in Eur- betas ope generally took the view that viet Union to a growing extent. it can no longer throw its weight about anywhere it likes in the world." ENCOURAGE NEU'I'I!ALI'I'Y? Egyptian nowqiapers predicted it will promote the "neutrality tendency" Arthur Clarke a past chairman of its British in- tenplanetary Society said: "This launching is a tremend- ous thing. is is one of the great- est scientific advances in world history. It is bound to have colos- rcusaioiis not om in the an earth satellite would not be of use as a military weapon. But the diplomatic i:irraQond- ent of'London's Sulnlay Pictorial said "Russia diould soon be able to send in bigger and more ad- vanced satellites. They would plant a spy-in-the-sky to report on western ddence." ARGUMENT FOB U.8.5.R. Neuea Deutactiland organ of last Germany's C om m u nlst party sahi the launching of the satelite is a strong argument ior aligmrient with the Soviet Union. "The newest success shows that the technical lead of the So- viet Union can no longer be ov- ertaken . . . p iority of aoclallatic society and production over that of the cap- italistic world" the paper add. West German newspapers gave the story wide front-page display but did not arnrnnent editorially. In France the Join-rial du Di- lnancfie said the Soviet success is bound to have "military polit- ical and psychological conae qucnces" but added: "It is certain that the Ameri- cans whipped by the success of their Russian rivals will soon raw. other wonders ii i a Dulles And Gromyko In Talks Saturday WASIHNGTON (AP) - U.S. te nlicials aaid al- Canadianr American Trad ' Talks Slated To Open Today OTTAWA (CP)-1iop-level min- isterial talks open in Washington today on Canadian - American trade p. tlema. They come after two big meet- ings ln Canada aimed at angling more of Canadas' trade toward Britain and other Commonwealth countries. .. Four mlnlstc . will represent Canada at the conference. a re- vival of a Joint ministerial com- mlttee established in 1953 by Can- ada and the U.S. to settle their trade difficulties. The committee has met only twice. Canadas' maior grievance will be the U.S. wheat giveaway pro- gram. particularly the American practice of using that program to tie other countries to future wheat - buying contracts. Prime Minister Diefenbaker has charged the U.S. program is violating the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade. The meeting. however. also is certain to discuss the trade talks in Canada. FULL-8CAl.l-2 CONCI-Elli-INC: At Mont Tremblant. Que., last week. Commonwealth minis agreed to hold afull-scale moswealth trade and conference next year. meeting in Ottawa, Britain posed to Canada the gradual plernentatloii of a free-trade Canada agreed to send a trade mission to Britain to to step up this country's in the United Kingdom. This Canadian policy of tempting to swing a Canadian trade into the B orbit from the U.S. for-ma background for the Washlngla meeting. l Canada's representatives at! Finance Minister Fleming.-llxtetb nal Affairs Minister Smith. Trah Minister Church!" lure Minister Harknesa IIEADED BY DULLES They will meet their om-mafia number. in the U.S. administra- tion: State Secretary , Treasury secretary Anderson Cornme Lc Secretary Weeks and Agriculture secretary Benson. States was iqu d as pos- sibly being 'ln a position to launch an unmanned rocket to the moon in two months "at a cost of 811,011." This idea came from Edward Hull, an associate criiinr nf His- sles and Rockets magazine Hull said his informants were "tech- nlcally qualified" people. Hull suggested! the United states make such an attempt as a possible means of being first in that particular field. At Cambridge. Mass. Dr Fri-d Whipple. director of the Smith- sonian astrophysical rihscrvatory, said Saturday night the !llCK'e!!- ful launching of the Russian moon paves the way for sending men to the moon. and possibly other planets, within the next few dec- Ides. In Denver. the Martin Com- pany, key firm in the US. satel- lite program. announced it has fired a design specialist who criti- elsied the American rocket pro- grain. The discharged employee. G. Harry Stine. but said in a news- paper interview- "we have known in the rocket long time that the the us....'-' not Agriceb