: Maxims of a More Man Hearsay is half lies. T47-KEEs HURR ruin PIGPLI'8 I-as-an CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA. FRIDAY, AUGUST 12. 1955 J. IAD IV IVIIVIODV Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew PRICE 5e ICANE HITS CAROLINA COAST miorrupted by gash in his left leg. The 41-year-old fisheries minis aKRIxlR"l. Alistair Fraser. mmnc a dry dock at Petropav lnink. on fact In thc floor below. officials here said Mr. Sinclair ll Ill a cast as an extra precaution m. ('(7n!lill0ll was reported resume his journey in about days FR HER SIIAKI-IN UP in Fraser. 32-year-old I.I (iuv. SOII llflllsefl. but was hospital after treatment. It w Pctropavlovslt. a FFFIIVE sca. miles east of Moscow. occurred last Thursday b ht-cause of slow Coming-3.. Event -Forum. day night Cove-head Raceway. Dance Sinnott Road School.'Au list 12. llcgular dance F-'i!in.v, August I2. linmpton t'liui'('h Chicken Sup- pi-r on tl'r-dnesday, Augut 24. Rcuulnr I) a n c e at Gordon Lndcc cvcry Friday night. "l)zuicc at Oyster Bed Bridge Si-lmol. l)niron Bros.. Orchestra. unit! August 24th. Hvuillur Saturday night dance. St Pr-tcr's Hall. fllrlic-'ti'a V-ncn .Vlilc Bay chicken sup rm and bazaar. Wednesday. Aug jlttli limivtl-ir dance. Pill-iott Hall. Iat- Iurlxn August 13. imn-an Picnic Saturday August I-1 A: Anglican Youth Centre. Cra- pain (ukc sale at Holman'a Store on FHrla.i' August 12 at 1 p.m. Spon- l""'0 by Holy Redeemer C.W.L. . Sh"li'llllZ at Mt. Stewart Friday ”"I s'""Td5Y- "Kid From Left ”'I'lvr-lri'". baseball eomedy. glmiun Slnnhopc and Covehaarl i'"'imHnIt.v Hall. Saturday. Aug. l-7 llnnt-ing 9-H. ilnvning dance, Saturday night. Trivni Hall. Georgetown. O-I2. Ruriic Orchpgffg. Will be buying fowl every Mon- riai from 1 to 7 p.m. and Tuesday I W” luck up and pay at the farms Paying highest market prices A. P. Gallant. Ruatico. Annual chicken and" ham sup- Dei. Orwell Hall. Saturday. Aug 139- Sponsored by Ladies' Aid. Ser- Vlflll 4 to 9. . NOTICE" - All arrears of tax- !” "Win! Mt. Albion Ichool. Kind- Ygay on or before August 18. J -- or such arrears will be hand- ln for collection. hl"1'00kly Dance Wlnaloa Station Mu'Kgu'l:f'F'fldI! Iilht. Rollie no to iszso, ' "' E E 05 per has off ear. I. . New Glasgow. P . ,;,,'mVmlI'l:lms ltoro. Hun- m-mzleanant Valley Kin? in W"-...-:.'..'!".:.'."'..: W 3-hm!-v. Ara. is at a man and soft :loman'a In- m- AST. leg '”"lII supplied. labs '::..:"'r:..:-":..:-it Au” 13- Games 'and IlIIlI.l,e: Dbl”? ” :i'.:'...'" menu. M mfv Cam and pg: carload Ploaaar clalr's Russian odymy has been eastern Soviet port where he is in hospital recovering from a deep ter accompanied by his executive was Russia's eastern coast fun Canadians dropped some 15 3 tall. rugged Scot. was taken to il::;spllet;L,,;I;1hep1,I,icueS,i first Canadian minister to visit the major overseas as , ggllsltlflflry and he is planning to with 5 ”'0sd'Y "'9 '0 Pelpl" - The ,vacatloning at It. Patrick. Que, was informed immediately. RELATIVES TOLD FIRST Officials kept the mishap -inder informed Mrs. Sinclair who was vacationing near Vancouver and Mr Moscow. Mr. Sinclair. member for Coast- Capilano in British Columbia and Soviet Union, was planning to top off his month-long Russian toui Fraseris parents at Halifax. fisheries Minister lniurecl By I5-Fool Fall In Russia nr1'AwA tCPl - Junmy Sin ;was not informed until days later. there has been speculation that information reached here Mr. Sinclair will be available for . "Mom an m m Tuesday. and Mr. St. Laurent. talks with the Red Chinese if they so desire. The unpredictable Mr. Sinclair. somewhat bold and aggressive in his ways. started off by atler"ing an international whaling con wraps for two days while the: ialso ference at Moscow last month cud of then began an extensive tou lltussian fisheries and ports area 'o foreign visitors. Two weeks ago he flew from ulicn a stairway collapsed and the The first public information came Moscow to Vladivostnck after Rus- Thursday in a press announcement slan authorities lifted the travel lfrom the Canadian embassy at ban which normally bars Vladivos- tock and the Kamchatka peninsula 6! Killed in Fresh Clashes In Algeria PARIS. (AP)-While French rulers of North Africa deliber- ated on the fate of Morocco and its throne. news came Thursday of at least 63 killed in battles between French troops and us- tionalists in Algeria. Rebels have been battling French police and troops there since Nov. 1. Heavy reinforce- ments from Europe and Indochina have brought French strength to 125.000. but some 3.000 rebels are giving them plenty of trouble. Wednesday's fighting was among the bloodiest so far. REBEL CHIEF KILLED There were three main clashes. This was Mr. Sinclair's third4The biggest occurred in the oasis trip in 1 years i recent .v1.smir Fraser 0( Now; he is able to travel. The Canadian 5.-.,l.,-.. also wns ghnkan up gnd embassy at Moscow will make fglegged n-omiperlodlc reports to Ottawa on Mr not known here whether any Rus sinu was involved in the accident Kamchatka V ' g ,, pt-mnsula fishing centre. faces the '"'5' If" 3 U""'dl3" m""5'" "Id and is about 4.200 officials here said the accident communications. the Paliatlinn embassy at Moscow 5 was labelled for the first time an Your Saturday night Jamboree llrizular Slt)f'l( Car Dance 'l'ues- cl-ui: 43 nurses in North Dance. Mhuni Stewart, Memor- inl Hall tonight Burns Orchestral em - Dance ill Ilisonls New Barn. For I l1'll,L".""””Ll1 liLospEt' tune Bridge. A"cust 12. Canteen S lgicspital of Communist China and southwest of 4 some 2,300 miles U. S. Satellite 0 peflflligilalllsollistiirc said he still plans. 01 to return home via Peiping when, WASHINGTON mmppresiden, lfisenhower Thursday 5, Sinclair's progress. new secretary of the U. 8. Air ESTABLISHES FIRSTS , Force. . The Peiplng trip also will be the Q"”les' 61' MW '5 assmam secretary of defence for research . and development. Quarles will succeed Harold Talbott who resigned Aug. 1. ef- fective this Saturday. after the senate investigations subcommit- tee publicly explored Talbott's outside business raised a question of ethics. He is a former president of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers. As assistant secretary of de- fence. Quarles has concentrated on pushing guided missile pro- grams. The multi-million dollar earth satellite program which the White Appeal For Nur:es In Polio Outbreaks BOSTON. rAPr-An appeal for nurses went out Thursday as ;'liassachusetts' polio emergency ui epidemic-a "mild epidemic." in the description of Dr, Joseph P. Reardon. state epidemiologist. The Massachusetts State Nurses -Association said it hopes to re- Shore lcommunities and Cape Cod to, serve in four Boston hospitals where staffs are taxed. If not House disclosed with considerable nurses respond. a state-Afanfare last month comes directly 'under Quarles' supervision. to Call Montreal Man Drug W'”' M" Boss in Vancouver Area-"H VANCOUVER (CP) is a m e 1 Donald A. Quarles-top man in the earth satellite project-as the sing it along the edge of the runway McMorran as "the boss of drug distribution in Vancouver." Mr. McMorran made the chargr in narcotics appealed to Magis- trate Oscar Orr for ball. The men were charged after 21 Al Blanchard: persona were arrested in a raidlnllempt to provei on suspected drug traffickers by RCMP and city police. Anothel, ,man. Michael Findlay. wag uni rested Thursday and charged with itrafflcklog. The five who sought bail on the cnnsplracy charge are Trcmblayl Charles Talbot. Lucien Mayer James Malgran and Marcel Fre rested in the secret narcotics open Leo .lr.. They have also been charged nette. lwith attempted murder of Thomas lR.C.A.F. Fash - Robert-Klnna. self-confessed former drug Tremblay. 38-year-old Montrealladdict. only Talbot was granted rsteamfitter arrested Tuesday in s ball-set at s15.ooo. Ball for Mai- mass roundup by police. was cited gren was refused and Magistrate Thursday by prosecutor Stewart Orr reserved his decision on the other three. Lawyer Hugh McGivern. coun- sel for the quintet. said: "Regard Tho amlmoon 19. gr M;-;.n.w. :wben Tremblay and four others less of what the newspapers say son's, uigg, has been poggpongd charged with conspiracy to traffir about these men being drug king- pins, they are not here to be tried by the press." l Mr. McMorran replied he will they took over narcotics distrlhutlnn here last April. Also appearing with the five was .lean Paul Chevrier. already serv- ing a sentence for assault. who is charged with conspiracy. His case was adjourned to Aug Wednesday. 17 of 27 persons ar- ation were charged with traffick- ing and remanded to trial until Aug. 17. Ball totalled 140.000. ions Safety Barrier For Jet Aircraft OTTAWA tCPlvThe RCAF is fashioning its latest life - saving device 100.000-pound chain and aorne nylon cord. With these materials it is building a barrier to stop runaway planes. , A CF-100 Jet fighter will test the contraptinn for the first time in Canada at Ottawa's Uplands air- port in about three weeks. the air force said Thursday. It is expected to save lives in crashes caused when a plane loses its brakes on lending. overshoots to runway or loses its power on keoff. LIKE 0N CARRIERS The accident prevention device works on the same principle as those used on aircraft carriers to halt a plane it it misses the arrest ing cables on a night deck. The barrier is set up at the and of a runway. Stretching away from U. S. Prepares lloledlnduatrlal review of defence necessity of the expansion program. and chemical industries. - 1493 Ill. 11:. review will require "a The nylon every time. and the chain has to he moved back into position by heavy machinery. how much the banter would cost. A CF-100 costs about 8700.000. Defence Plant Expansion WASHINGTON (AP)-The U. 8.jmonth or more." defence mobil- government Thursday temporally lsation officials predicted. When it shut off federal help on more is completed. many of the expan- than tn.ooo.ooo.ooo worth of pro sion objectives may be reduced plant expansion. and some may be closed out en- Tbe action was taken pending a-tirely. lthat Treasury Secretary George Moblllsation director Arthur S. Humphrey was pressing for a Flemming ordered a shutdown on sharp curtailment of the govern- spacial tax benefits for new plantalmann program to stimulate ex- and equipment in in lnduptrien andlpanslon in defence industries by p "Iuapeaslon" of action in I tax incentives. Under the program Other business firms undertaking The latter group includes tre- proved. expansion protects could Drovolld investment pm- write off much of the coat. for tax h the electric power. steal. purposes. in five years. ill. abh-. aircraft Normally. a much longer do- preclatlon period is required for tax WTPOIQI. . is 100.000 pounds of anchor chain. The nylon rope and a steel cable cross the runway. When the speeding let hits the nylon lt trips a echanlsm that books the plane's undercarriage with the cable which is attached to the heavy chain. The jet speeds on. but as it gathers up more and more of the heavy chain stretched before it, the weight brings it to a gradual stop in about 1,000 feet. N0 SPECIAL TRAINING Airmen don't need special train- lng to handle it. The device was first used by the U.S. Air Force in Korea where the runways were short. There are kinks to be ironed out. is ripped to shreds The air force declined to say To Review The action followed disclosure IP- of Sidi-Aoun. at the edge of the Sahara some 150 miles southeast of Biskra. It began Tuesday mor- ning. and the latest casualty re- port put French losses at 21 sol- diers and the rebels' at 20-in- cluding Hamma 0Lakhdar. said to be one of the chiefs of the i rebellion. Another major fight was near I (Continued on page 2. col. 8) Death Toll Increased To 5 ln Truck And Car Collision With the death yesterday of l daughter of Mr and Mrs. Patrick l Murray. 59 Spring Park Road. the fatality toll in Wednesday night's accident at Clyde River was raised to five. making the accident what is believed to be the worst single mishap recorded on island high- l ways. A major accident involving a bus and a train at Abney in 1947 took four lives. and one near Mon- tague last year resulted in the death of three men. The Murray child passed away early yesterday morning at Charlottetown Hospital about five hours after the death of her broth- er. ten-year-old Walter. which oc- curred whlle be was being rushed in the same hupital: The child- ren's parents were both hospital- ized by the accident but their in- juries along with others in the party. are reported in be not ser- ious. All were expected to be re- leased yesterday. Patrick Murray. Sr.. one of the accident victims. was a 72-year-old farmer of Tyrone. Lot 85. He is survived by four sons. Basil. Saint John. N.B.: Vincent. Halifax, N. S.: Cecil and James at home; and a daughter. Teresa (Mrs. Michael Costellol. Saint John. His wife pre- deceased him several years ago. A O in Charlottetown. Leo Murray. Sr. owner of the fatal car was a 47-year-old pulp and paper mill employee from Augusta. Me. He was'born at Ty- ronc. Lot 65. the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Peter Murray. Survlvin" are his wife and threc Garry and daughter Nancy. His remains will be for- warded thls morning to Augusta l for burial. The funeral of the two children. Walter and Margaret. will be held tomorrow .morning from the Hennessey Funeral Home to the Church of the Most Holy Re- deemer where Reouicm Hloh Mass will he sung at nine o'clock. The remains of Betty Bernard. l4-year-old daughter of Mr. and Dav Tour For Russian Farm Experts OTTAWA (CP)-Canada is map lplng out a 11-day tour for its Rus ,slan guests to show them "Cana dian agriculture at its best." 5. J.i Chagnon. assistant deputy minister of agriculture. said Thurday. Mr. Chagnon. who visited a Mos- cow agricultural exhibition is year. has been placed in charge of usI'lflgEII1EfIil for the first Cana dian visit of a delegation of Rus- sian farm experts now touring the United States. The delegation. headed by Sovietl Agricultufe Minister Vlodimlr Nat-' ahevlch. is to arrive at Montreal Aug. 25. Mr. Cbagnon and a departmental committee is still working to the itinerary details. The Russians will see some of Canada's biggest wheat farms at the heart of harvest lisp: in the west. Mr. Chagnon sa . Murray in. Corner lroolt. Ndd. acts First Mayor CORNER BROOK. Nfld. fCPl --Allison Bugden defeated two other candidates Wednesday to become mayor-elact In this new city's first civic election. He and a council of elghtmenv hers will take office Jan. 1 when Corner Brook's new charter be- cornea official. light councillors were elected Wednesday. four by aoelansatioa. Ifr. Damn defeated a. : Reader. so closest rival. rm votaab l children. i , MAIIIVI axnosion immediately into a wool Truce Te SEOUL. (AP)-eNeut.ral truce teams Thursday defied South Korea's order to leave by Satur- day midnight and U. I. soldiers were reported setting up heavy machine-guns to protect them. A U.S. spokesman warned the situation could deteriorate rapidly ldespite South Korean government spokesman said: i "If the Koreans really try to. get in fthe truce compoundsl it's going to be bad." Reports from the southeast port, of Pusan said the Americans were ringing the truce compound: with 50-calibre machine-guns. Crowds of Koreans milled around- outside. some carrying clubs andl gas masks. I CONFERS WITH RHEE l Gen. Lyman L. Lemnitzer. UN S. Far East Commander who flew from Tokyo. met with Presi- dent Syngman Rhee Thursday Rhee says the Red Czech and Polish inspectors are spies and told them to leave. l Red China's foreign niinistry.l Mrs. Raymond Bernard were for- mic.-est; andl Margaret Murray, four-year-old wardcd yesterday to Hunter River where they are resting at the And- rews Funeral Home. I A coroner's jury empanelled yes- ,terday at noon by Dr. L. E. l Prnwse was taken to the scene of . the accident and to the undertak- i ing rooms and hospital where they I viewed the remains of the victims 1 They were adjourned until August l 15 at 4.30 p.m. Members of the. -jury are Messrs: Frank -J. Han-i Defy Ultimatum istatements against violence. The,plied angrily to U ams tin a broadcast over Peiping ra- ldio, charged Korean demonstra- tions were "aimed at outright destruction of the Korean armis- tice." It said the United States had "the unshirkable responsibil- ity" of protecting the teams. Dr. Hongkee Karl. South Kor- ean government spokesman. re- .5 Secretary of Stair Dullesi appeal to avoid vio- lence SAYS KOREANS ORDERLY Karl said: "It is the United States which has used military force. includ-l ing armored cars and chemical weapons in war array against civilian groups demonstrating in a peaceful and orderly manner." Demonstrations since Saturday have injured 22 US soldiers and 80 Koreans. Sweden. Switzerland. P o l a n d and Czechoslovakia. the truce commission members. have sent a letter to the military armis- tice comnilssion saying they would l continue their task and asking iii to take ".1pprnprin1e stops." 1 l I TO VISIT CANADA-A striking- resemblance to Queen Eiizabethl is apparent in this recent photo of her aunt. Princess Mary. The Princcss Royal will visit Canada early in October. CP Photo from U.K. Information. Causeway Locks Not Ready For Use SYDNEY (CF)-The first ship will not pass through the Cansop sen. Robert J. Constable. Bryan Cudmnrc. Robert Younker. Jnhni K. MacDonald. Arthur Ii Duvar.l and Hiram Atkinson t The accident ocurred shortly be-' fore 11 o'clock Wednesday night, when the auto from Maine. en route to Charlottetown. collided, wth a watering truck driven by James Bernard. The passenger car was completely demolished and the three-ton truck turned on its side. pS200,000 Fire Destroys Co-op Al Cheticamp, N. S. CHETICAMP, N. S. (CI-')e'I'he 200,000 plant and equipment of S ;the fishermen's co-operative herel I iwas destroyed Wednesday night -by a fire of undetermined origin. in was the only industry in this picturesque little fishing com- Cape Breton on the Cabot trail. It had recently been revived by (Mercury Fisheries in their ax- tperiment in catching herring a new method. Several tons !herring were lost in the fire. h of l have started in n net-storngr i room on the top floor of the pwnnrlen-frame building. . NORTH SEA METHOD 1 The fish plant was rented for the off-season by Mercury Fish- cries. This company. headcd b,v ,Britlsh interests and using drift- lers from Lowestoft. England. with Lnwestoft crew members. has, lbcen practising North Sea her-I icing drifting operations in the, ,Gulf of St. Lawrence. Consider-i ;ahle success has marked the company's initial operations and' munity far up the west coast oil 1 III the processing. The Nova Scotla government provided a 5300.000 loan to assist in the est hlisbment of the in- dustry. Elimination of a processing, centre for this important new' Nova Scoila industry is seen byl lgovernmcnt officials as a severe. lblow. Y, Clerks Plan Strip Seventy-five men were put outl brother. Mr. Frank Murray. lives 0' Wmk by the blaze. reported "ll Tease Strike NEW DH .Hl lRNllPT.'w'l Some 6.000 hird-grade clerks Indian government secretariat will start a "strip teasc" strike next week to back demands for more pay The clcrks will appear at work next Tuesday shirtless and unshaven; if their de- mands are not mitt after an- other week they will remove their trousers and go to work in pajama pants. 1 A week later they plan to replace pajamas by short un- -lurge catches of herring have d"W"" ""1 '""'”'d "'9" been reported The drifting oper- ""5 , ration for herring is new on Can; " ll” ”"”l9 I5 "ml '" 9"” ada's Atlantic coast and In thc ""55 "" 59'" 5- ”"'-V Wm fgulf. The drltters had been bringing their herring in to the fisher- mcnis co-operative plant here for Ni)-N-SUPPORT cuAa-(inn report for duty in loincloths with bed sheets wrapped it- rnlind their shoulders. Volkswisgen Opens Plant in The U.S.A. lrctary. ciuiscway locks for another two or three weeks. it was learned 'l'lulrs(iay. Removal of the coffcrdams will be completed within a few days but the area must be dredged following this operation. ' Three Drowned In Quebec Lake ST. JOSEPH DE LA RIVIERE BLEUE. Que. (CPD-Two child- ren and a H)-year-old girl were drowned Wednesday in a lake near this community on the Maine border, 110 miles east of Quebec. The victims were identified a Joanne Bruheau. 3. ' " Duhe. 11. and Diana Bellavance. Police said they believe the children were playing in the water and wandered in above their depth. Miss Bellavance plunged in to try to save them but also was drowned. RELEASE LAEOB OFFICIAL 4 LONDON (Reuters)-The Cen- tral Trades Union Council of the Soviet Union has released its sec- I. V. Goroshkln, 50. "to take up other work" and elected -V. I Prokhorov to the post. Tass news agency reported Thursday. -Prnkhornv is a secretary of the. lltlnsrow city committee of they Soviet Communist party. mm Other Portions Of Eastern U.S. Seaboard Relax WILMINGTON, N. C.. (AP)-Hurricane Connie, ill centre almost stationary off the coast, pounded the Caro- lina shoreline with high winds and huge waves last night. Houses were destroyed, power and communication lines torn down. fishing piers pounded to pieces, roads and bridges washed out-with the worst still to come. .Thousands of coastal residents huddled in rescue shelters. Open areas of the threatened beaches were largely evac- uated. Farther north along the Atlantic; seaboard. residents bre tiled a. sigh of relief as Connie's threat to them diminished. The liurricane alert was lifted north of i c servers reported waves 15 to I feet high. Tides at some places were running four to six feet abova normal and the water. driven by the increasing wind. washed can- ADI,- ware breakwater after f.!'n whole east coast had watched the his hurricane warily for hree days. Hurricvane warnings r ;w were "lying from Cape Romain. S. 0. lo the Virginia capes. (TAIIOLINAS MENACED The greatest danger now ap- peared limited to North Carolina and Virginia and the northern beaches of South Carolina. The weather bureau reported Connie still packed 100-mile winds near her centre, with hurricane force winds extending 150 miles to the northeast and east and 50 miles to the southwest. The centre was placed by the weather bureau as 75 miles southeast of Wilming- ton at 10 p.m. ADT and its erratic course brought no forward pro- SS. Wilmington had gusts up to 0) miles an hour by 0 p.m.. with winds of 50 miles. A light ship stationed in the Atlantic nearby reported gusts up to 100 miles an hour. Torrential rains fell in some places as the hurricane struck. POWER OFF All power failed in Wilmington shortly before 10 p.m. ADT, and- the power company was struggling to restore it. 1 Power has been voluntarily cut off in many smaller communities. aaa safety measure. Damaged! ommunl t-ion lines and evac-, uated beach areas made evalns-l als across beaches to inland streams and lakes. Greatest hazard appeared to be . ahead at high tide shortly after .'- midnight. Duwu in the Caribbean. where these storms are born, a new one given the name Diane stirred the ocean more than 400 miles north- east of San Juan. Puerta Rico. Diane was moving generally north- west at 14 miles an hour. with top winds of 50 to 60 miles an hour. STILL DANGEROUS At mid-day Connie had lost soma of her punch. Her centre wt.rldl at times had been clocked at 135 miles. They gradually dropped to about 100 as the eye flattened out ghtly. Storm forecasters quickly emphasized that she remained I dangerous hurricane. They said all precautions should be continued. As the fury of the wind mounted on shore. communication lines went down like tenpins. An emer- gency amateur radlo network sprang into action to speed relief work. Scores of Red Cross disast- Ir specialists. hundreds of Nation- at Guardsmen. and highway pat- rolmen, civil air patrol personnel and volunteers were in the thick of the storm or standing by. The first piers to go were of Carolina Beach and Kure Beach. on a long split of land east of Wilmington. All possible precautions had been taken in the Carolinas and tlon of early damage difficult. Greatest damage. as in hur- i::.'::.::"::.:i::i 322?”?-.."2:;lif --- c-m--I--w -- ---e-- some ---i::::::c...: ::”:.:::.. C:ii3f.' ' ' local officials "advised" evacua- sseTr'oJ::NFo:fl:' (Sir). A lion and saw to it that their advice . 's, . - was heeded. serious forest fire was reported burning near Port Simpson in Labrador Thursday. t Resources Minister Rowe saidl he had received a report saying Port Hope Simpson was "black- ened out by the smoke." it was not known if the village was in danger He said he had told his officers to get fire-fighters and equlpmentl to the site as best they could. 1 farther north. where hurricane Carol. Edna and Hazel hit last lLeader's Of Argentina's June Revoh BUENOS AIRES fAPl - Rear-. Admiral Samuel Toranzo Caldernni was reported sentenced to life iruprlsanment Thursday on a charge of masterminding the June lti revolt. informed sources said the all- prcme military council imposed life terms on Toranzo and six; other Argentine naval officials in; winding up the secret trial of 56 men accused of plotting the abor-' live rebellion against President STU'i'i'GART. Germany. (CF! -- Two U. 8. Flying Boxcars collided over the Black Forest Thursday during a troop-carrying exercise and crashed In flames. killing all 66 Americans aboard. It was the fourth worst air disaster ever rec- orded. The Flying Boxcar: C-110: are 3 feet high and weigh M fool. Nine of these transports were carrying U. S. 7th Army troops on an afternoon air transport mis- sion out of Echterdingen airfield. near Stuttgart. The air force said one of the planes developed engine trouble at 4.000 feet shortly after the takeoff. It lost altitude momen- tarily and then veered across the nose of another plane it the for- tion. The crippled plane went-down Black Forest. The second con- unued in level night for almost a minute. then plunged to the ground too. crashing into a clear- in about a mile away from the first plane. The scene of the crashes was just outside the picturesque vil- lage of Edelweiler, 30 miles from Stuttgart. Villagers said there was a "massive explosion" and both planes burst into names. Police. firemen. foresters and farmers hurried to the scene but were driven back by the turn- ace-like besi. RESCUE TEAMS RELPLIESS six army helicopters based in Stuttgart raced to the area with rescue teams. They were unable "Everyone was dead. We stood there but could not help. We all- cried like babies. 1 have never' seen anything like lt." The first boxcar to crash had 41 soldiers aboard. an air force crew of five and an air forcei it-admaster supervising the taking on of troops in the exercise. Onl the second plane were 14 army men. a crew of four and a load- master.- The worst crash in aviation history occurred June 16. 1053. when an American globemaster went down north of Tokyo killing all 129 persons aboard. Another U. S. Globemasfer crashed at Moses Lake. Vlasb.. Dec. I). llol. with a death toll of I7. The third worst disaster came on March 1!. 1960. when a Brit- ish Avro Tudor alrllaer returning to do anything except pick up of wrecks . It A policeman who leached tbalmatcli in Belfast crashed in whether Diana will folbw in Con- Ie aeana said: from an international rugby Wales. killing D persons. 1 ' be retired. Sentenced The remaining 19 defendantsi were acquitted. but probably will PUBLIC DEGRADATION ADDED The life terms carry with them the brand of "public degradation "i The sentences are subject to- approval by Peron ,' Ni: "”:a""”i..'""i.::::2 "ll Wmmmvm -- Stfsllfll piin tw'o- year term. forlmnxlmum .'mp""u"': fllivieri I I Mllh MI!- The revolt flared at the hcight,DaW30n -- 46 64 ......-u... - l v n f (1 Wm. (he Vancouver 52 68 MCHIBUCTQ N B" (Cpl -I diueliin DI Peron m which hundreds RfomFisenmnCiilh(iiKl,iet- Cleiiirch. Rebels Viclofla 52 37 RCMP have arrested Vincent Ba- WOLFSBURG. Germany, :CPi.. - t I . ied by navy and air farce elements Edmomon I 50 an bin of Montreal on a charge of The Volkswaflon Company. largest By the 80001101 0' "I059 '0 0I'lnage-d ah, and ground Macks Onicaigary . u . 49 35 non-support. Montreal police wllll single exporter of foreign cars to mants. p can Ronda President Pemn,.pRegm. ' W 37 .take Babin to Montreal to answerl the United States. . announced Rear-Admiral Anibal 0ilvlerl.,gWemmem h-0"”. u noon Jundwinnipe. M. 50 " the charge. Rabin is alleged to' Thursday it has acquired 'a fac- naV.V minister at "19 lime. drew 16 The army crushed thgrevom-rommo g 53 u have taken his child from his lory for assembly of its vehicles inpa sentence of 18 months ln-P!'lF0n- m' t sixphour Mme. Ottawa H p M w l estranged wife and to have headedi New Jersey. The company exports Terms up to three years were Montreal ' I 35 n I for St. Louis de Kent. where rel-l about 2.500 cars to the U. S. a imposed on 29 officers of the navy mmimf Quebec p . g p . so 7: atives reside. month. Ind 3" ("Ct Frgdencton , 41 Q7 "'0 , Saint John 50 60 a ax . . - ' D ' Storm Begins g",",:t”" :2 3 6 6 MIAMI. Fls.. (A P) - Another g';;Li;"””" ' ' 7, l tropical storm. Diane. has de- Yarmouth ' w 7, e ' veloped in the Atlantic about 400 8. Jam” 0 H N miles northeast of San Juan. ' ' i ' ' i ' ' ' ' i " yl Puerto Rico. the weather bureau HALIFAX (CPl-The weather reported Thursday in NI flrll Ids office says there will be very little visory on the fourth storm of the season. The advisory stated: "Ships reports indicate that I tropical storm has fonrled in the Atlantic and was located at I "am. EDT it a.m. ADT near latitude 23.0 north. longitude 82.0 west. . . This storm appears to be moving towards the west-northeast or northwest at about 14 miles per hour attended by wind: of 50 to 60 miles per hour near the centre and gates outward 100 miles. "Further intensification is ex- pected during the next 24 hours. with movement continuinlt him!!! the same." Diane formed about I10 miles 1 north and considerably to the west l of the area which spawned Connie. the great Atlantic hurricane now threatening the United States mainland. It is too early to determine change today. Hurricane Connie has weakened and now is moving into the North Carolina coast. It will not affect the Msritlmes today. Northern Nova Scotia: Overcast with fog patches, occasional dril- ale and rain; little change in tern- peratura; light aouthaaateriy winds: low-high at New Glasgow 57 and 75. . Prince Edward Island. eastern N.B. counties. lower Saint John showers In the normal: ohaage h temperature: winds: low-h H Ch 57 and TI. eaetol. ald Iaint John I! -d 7!. High tide today at Charlottetown at 3.51 am. and 5.87 p.m. At Rustico at 13.06 p.m. Dumnsorida tide is minutes later than cb'hwI. sun rises at no em. and 1 at 1.3 p.m. .1 RIO light aie's path. 63. river valley: Cloudy. with a few'