retsrttour Assoc Iuyet meets solar with Guardian Want Ads. DiClI506 oakfotdcaai- find od taken for quick results. om mttmldii-not "Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew" Clanr with I few of Charlottetown 50 WEATHER Intervals. cloudy Cooler. West winds 25. Low and high and 65. CHARIUFTETOWN CANADA. WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 28. 1957 ;.-I a,,p- at I- -...t '.”.'u..."....a .-... -4. ..... HIGH SCHOOL TO BE COMPLETED BY NEW YEARS Dean Of U. S. Retailers Dies IHARSTONS MILLS, Mass. (AP) - Lincoln Filene. I2. dean of American retailers and last of an era of famous merchant prlflcel, died Tuesday at his sum DIET home. I-illrne resigned a few months ago from his position as chair- man of the Federated Depart- ment stores. an organisation of large retailing organizations he helped found. Fllene, born while Abraham l.lrlt'1)ln was president. was as- l00IalPd with his brother Edward in building up In Boston the Wil- liam FlIene's Son Compan . which calls Itself the war I largest specialty shop. Tile store, founded by their falhcr, grew under the guidance or the sons into a gigantic city nurrhandlsing institution with nu merous branches. Pictured above is an architect's drawing of the new high school being built in Charlottetown for the City School Board. It Is located on the corner of Long- worth Avenue and Birchwood Street with the front of the build- ing facing Longworth Avenue. The building is "L" shaped having a frontage of 239 feet 1 inch on Longworth Avenue and a depth of 201 feet 9 inches on Bircbwood Street. The main classroom section facing Longworth Avenue is 173 feet long by II feat d inches wide and three stories in height. It contains .twenty-one classrooms. Science Lab. Boiler Room. Wash- rnoms on each floor. Principal's Office. Teachers Rooms. Medical and Sick Room. and a Student's Council Room. The top of the "L", the two storey high section of building Rapid Progress Being Made On New Ch'town High School parallel to Birchwood Street is 20! feet 9 Inches in depth and in feet 3 inches wide. In the basemen it contains a regulat- ion size Shooting Range. Power Distribution Room, Cadet Quart- ers and Storage Room. The ground floor level con- tains the Auditorium - Gymnas- ium. the stage, Boys and Girls Shower Rooms. Metal Work Shop Drafting Room. Carpentry Shop and a small kitchen at the rear of the gymnasium. The second floor level con- tains two Classrooms. Visual Education Room. Music Room. Domestic Science Room. Arts and Crafts Room and Library. FIRE PROOF The building is of fire-proof construction having a structural steel frame work with all doors consisting of 255 inch thick rein- forced concrete gupported on bar Russia Rejects Westfs Newest Disarmament Plan S LONDON (AP) - Russia re- lrctcd the West's newest diarrh- ameni proposals Tuesday. The Soviet claim to possession of a wnrlll-ranging rocket missile was followed promptly by Russian charges that the West is prepar- ing for war and torpedoing the London arms talks. . The tone of a Kremlin state- mt-nt laid before the five-power United Nations disarmament sub- committee by Soviet delegate Valerian Zorin suggested the Ru alsns may be ready to walk out. Russia turned down Western terms for both a two-year ban on nuclear weapon testing and for the latest version of President i.lsenhower's open skies inspec- tmn Plan to guard against sneak attacks. Though Western dlpiasats bad rnnsidcred both proposals as tumor toward a compromise. lnrln laid Ruaglg reg;-dg an flie-mtlnlli-old parley as having reached a state of deadlock. In orders from Moscow. III de- manded that Asian. African and Latin American countries be ad- mmcd to the conference to "tango what he ealled its "pro- asnt narrow and one-sided com- position." with Russia on the sub- committee are the United States. Britain. France and Canada. DEPLORED TONE Western delegates deplored the tone of Zorin's It-minute declara- tion and said It showed increas- ing rlgldtty from the Soviet side. Torin was poker-faced as he read the Sov let declaration. which said in part: "Facts testify that the United Itates, Great Britain and France . . . are cnnductln preparations for a new war . .. "Ia I956 the total strength 0 the arfmed forces of NATO coun- tries reached 0.000.000 to 1.000.000 men . . . and the aggregate mili- tary expenditures in this bloc in II? will be no less than 858100.- Ofltfm to &l.000.0il).000." Zorin then reviewed the course of the negotiations in the UN group. He complained the West- ern powers. "on various far- fatched pretexts. are evading the conclusion of an agreement" to carry out real measures of dis- armament. He then submitted this reason- lnl: if-first and foremost ruling ctr- cles to! the United states. Brit- ain France and Canada) pre not interested in disarmament. "The United States and the other Western powers . . . are entering Into collusion before- hand with other members of NATO. including the (Konrad) Adenauer government which is carrying on the mllitnrlsation of the federal republic of Germany. "Furthermore . . . the United States and the other Western joist. Walls: -4- ssasss. -mg are constructed of Chipman face brick exterior back ed up b T and G sheathing. 2 x 8 at) ----'!g. insulation. lath and plaster .ymnasium walls are solid rr.- -nry consisting of face brick an inch Speedlile. Notable features include Ac- coustit: Tile ceilings tbrougllout with either Vinyl Plastic or Jaspe Tile floors. The complete build- ing is protected by an Automat- ic Sprinkler System with double alarms to ring both in the building and In the City Fire Hall. There is an electric time system throughout the building with automatic assembly and dis- mlssal bells. All corridors have Birch Plywood Dado to a four foot height. The building was desighend by Downie. Baker and Ahern. Arch- itects and Engineers of Halifax. N.S. Mr. W.W. Downie. Senior Partner in the firm is also the Supervising Architect and he has appointed Frank Ross of Char lottetown. Resident Inspector. RAPID PROGRESS The contract for construction was awarded County Construct- Ion Co. Ltd.. Charlottetown. on June 11. 1957 and rapid progress Is being made. The concrete folllldlllilna are all in place and erection of structural steel com- pleted. Masonry work is now un- der way and It is expected the building will be "closed in" very soon. The building is to be occupied early in the new year and ' will In the main classroom section following the Christmas Holidays. The County Construction Com- pany tender for approximately ssoo.ooo.oo was the lowest of four submitted. Supervision for the Contractor is being handled by General Superintendent James P. Rourke and Job Superintendent Herbert H. Handrahan. Norman F. Stewart is Construction en- glneer. PRICE 5:: 2 Pilots Killed When Navy Planes Collide n Runway PM Suggest: New Urgency In Arms Talks don tion." the rocket field. however. on-swg tCPl - Prime Min- ' ister Diefenbaker. Tuesday night on an announce- ment by Russia that she has suc . cessfully tested an . ental-type rocket. said it under- lines and re-emphasizes the ur- gent need for success" in the Lon- disarmamem negotiations. The Russian announcemcut was another reminder ”whether we be private citizens or In positions of 80V9"lm9"l "35P('"5lb””y- of mel Moscow that the Kremlin worked rapid development that sclcncelwilh unprecedented speed in is making in engines 0! deslruv winding up technical examination commentln interconiin Soviets Rush Economic- E g DAMASCUS. Syria iAPl - A .' thrce-man delegation flew to Mos- cow Tuesday to iron out details of what Syria calls a prelimin- ary economic agreement with the Soviet Union. l tThe flight of the Syrian (icic- .galion so soon after disclosure of lthc agreement on Aug ti led to llhe observation by Westerners III of the cost and scope of the prom- Whatever Russias' monooly tnlised aid. The report from Mos- --we-cow said the Syrian delegation may be sure that it will not long! mil?-l" make ""3 '9""5 of "W endure." The prime minister, who also is secretary of state for external affairs. said In is statement rocket development is being pressed for- ward elsewhere. especially in the United States, "and we can ex- pect that the day is not far dis- tan; when the design of missiles which can reach virtually any- where in the world will be widely understood." Nuclear weapons had intro- duced thc world 12 years ago to a new era In warfare and now "we must grasp the fact that when nations can produce inter- continental ballistic missiles in quantity yet another era will be- gin. Mr. Diefenbaker was referring' Soviet ment calls for Russia to provide tools. equipment, machinery and technicians for Syrian projects. These projects include develop- ment of the port of Latakia and construction of dams and rail- ways. agrcement final. The Syrian government said the agreement would not be made formal until it is approved by the cabinet in Damascus. As described in a joint Syria- communique the agree- In Washington. President Eisen- hower took up the Syrian situa- tion with Republican congres- sional leaders at his usual Tues- day morning conference. After- ward. Senator William F Know- land (Rep. Calif.) said Eisen- howcr gave a frank report and to the atomic bombs dropped 0 Hiroshima and Nagasaki dur- Ing the closing stages of the war against Japan. Mr. Diefenbaker said he hopes the Russian announcement will result in "redoubled sincerity and effort" In London to ensure that talks which in the future may deal with the ICBM. do not bog down ,tha.aanse way-that-shoauiesL M with other nuclear weapons ve. COUNCIL JOINS CONFERENCE OTTAWA (CP)-Canada's unl- verslties have decided to make- the Canada Council a member their central body. The council. tablished to aid cultural pur- auits. announced Tuesday it has. accepted thc invitation of the Ns-- tional Conference of Canadian Universities to become a confer- ence member. that the over-all picture Is scr- ioua. From Paris came word that units of the US. tith Fleet have been ordered to duty somewhere In the Mediterranean. The fleet has been sailing off Italy on man- oeuvres since Aug. 17. The fleet. an earlier London an- nouncement glld. is scheduled to data Royal Navy units in the east- ern Mediterranean next month for NATO exercises near the Boa. porus. the Turkish-controlled in- let to the Black Sea. The movement of two blacked- out Soviet warships through the Turnbull To Retire Oct. 18 OTTAWA (CP) Walter J. Turnbull, 60. deouly postmaster- gencral whose lmpendin retire- ment has been known for a year. powers want to use the subcom- mittee In order to mislead opinion. to instill false illusions, deceive the peoples . . . Zorin nonetheless served notice that the soviet Union stands by all its proposals for n first-stage disarmament agreement. He em- phasised It u a s I a still bellves such an accord should be pre- ceded by an unconditional Ameri- can-British-Soviet pact to stop a clear weapon testing at once. PERSONAL WORK A hologrsph will is a document Md written entirely in the personal hand of the testator. public Expect Economy Drive In U.S. Defences 'Will End WASHINGTON (CP)-RInata'a reverted successful firing of an Intercontinental blllldlt Ihllllld & :1 txpected to bring to a swift all the current drive to cut so Wtduures by the United states armed forces. in the same content. it on- litlllttrtfly will result in a cam- atle research and development. Past comment Indicates that 0.8. military men would nsotwibe 3-5 5 l: trated on the Atlas. which is do- WASHINGTON (AP)--A test of Its new vaccine developed to combat Asian flu was reported Tuesday to have demonstrated that It gives definite but not sure- Hre protection. The test was carried out on vo unteers at the Institution for De- fective Delinquents at Pstuxenf. A report on the experient was given by Dr. Justin M. Andrews of the National Institute of Health at a meeting of state health officers called because of the threat of an edpldemlc of Asian flu in the United States. Dr. Andrews said the volunteers were given the vaccine and then were injected several weeks lat- er with live virus of the flu strain. Dr. Andrews did not give exact figures. but another doctor famil- Asiatic Flu Vaccine Has Been Successfully Tested iar with the test said most of the voluntae . receiving the vaccine were protected. This doctor also said the experiments simulated the most severe epidemic the U.S. might expect. Dr. Leary Burney. US. ties. He said if the disease should be concentrated among certain , "this could present a problem in the maintenance of occupatio essential community services." Some 60,000.01!) doses of the Vaf'- . sur- geon-general who called the meet Ing. said the expected epidemic will be mild on individuals but could be serious for communi- wlll leave government service Oct. lit. It was announc d Tues- day. . Mr. Turnbull. who started out as a S500-a-year filing clerk in I915 and became deputy post- master - general in 1945, is leav- ing five years before the normal civil service retirement age of 65. In his last official job for the departmcnt. he is serving as president of the congress of the 96-country Univcrsal Postal Un- ion now in session here. No successor has yet been named to the 517.000-a-year dep- uty's job. G.A. Boyle was named associate deputy minister earlier this year and has been nlnnlrlg the day-o-day operations of the departmeng while Mr. Turnbull has been busy with the Postal ( Union Congress. mm Russians continue to build bigger cine are expected to be available by next January or February. but flu usually hits hardest in the- D --(SAC 170 VPTORONTO f)T"l'AWA l('P)-The l0th an- Iate fall or early winter. Dr. Bur- nual mvciing oi the Canadian As- I stay has estimated that as manyysocinlinn of Consumers will be as sr.ooo.ooo might catch the dl-l held In Toronto Sept. 20-26. CAC officials said Tuesday. .Eiliiliil-'l gill its i.l: fii.i .. CANADIAN IN MOSCOW navisn.ssasa-.I-tI..::ra. ODNXIII-8 sauna-sahauvuauarata fulmeatn lelanat Day . eesserstree.-epttoabaId'rhsnnstrtdttb W; i straits of Gibraltar led to spec- ulation in some British nevtspa-. pers Tuesday that a Red fleet is being sent to the eastern Medi- terranean. COURTESY CALL The ships are the 15,450 - tunl cruiser Mikhail Kutulov and a destroyer. The Russians have) said they are headed for Albania l on a courtesy call. cluding the cruiser Kenya. have! anchored in Trieste harbor for? what was described officially asl a routine visit. l Sept. 9 with President Camille Chamoun. lAgreement With Syria 1 In Beirut. Lebanon, the govern- ment announced three Arab kings -Saul of Saudi Arabia. Hussein of Jordan and Faisal of Iraq-l will meet in the Lebanese capi.al' It is likely they will discuss Middle East politics, especially the Syrian crisis. Diplomatic sources in London estimated Russia has sent 350 A dispatch from Trieste, Italy, military advisers to Syria along- said seven British warships. in-lwith S85.000.000 in arms. This they said. is in addition to the. 356,000,000 worth of arms ship. last fall. Defence OTTAWA (CP) - The manned bomber remains the principal as- sault weapon thnt would be used in any attack upon North Amer- ica. the chpirman of Canada's combined chiefs of staff said Tuesday In the wake of a Russian announcement that the U.S.S.R. has successfully tested an inter- continental balllstie missile Gen. Charles Foulkes said the announcement has not yet out. moded North America's current defence planning. There seemed no reason to doubt that the Russians had pro- duced a ballistic rocket "They have not made false statements in matters of this kind.” he said in an interview. .ZI'hs question on the ballistic rocket.-he said. is: "what is it exactly that they have got?" Tsss, the soviet news agency. said Monday that "a super long- distance. intercontinental. rnultt - stage ballistic rocket was ' t d a few days ago." Gen. Foulkes said: "We are apt . to judge everyone by our own-i standards." By United States standards. set- ting the pace for the West. an intercontinental ballistic missile was one with a 5.000-mile range, It was doubtful the Russian rocket was such for it would have landed outside their terri- fory. WORRYING ENOUGH "But a rocket with a range of i.0(l) to 2.000 miles would be akin to what we call an intermediate ballistic missile. The fact that they have even such a long-range missile is worrying enough." The fact was. however. that the Russians had one such rocket 3 tested. Its range was unknown.l So was its accuracy. And a bear-v ing error of one degree over a 5.- Ulhmlle course would land a mls. sile 30 miles from its target. The tested rocket was not a weapon. Making it into a weapon would take three to four years. Getting that weapon into produc- tion would take a still longer pe- riod. "The significant factor." Gen. Foulkes said. "is that while lllls' experimentation is going on the anl better bombers." Since the defence of North Am- tant Early Warning! radar line in the Arctic had to be still fur- ther perfected as a against them. "We b e I e I v s IDNDON (Reuters! - sources strongly discounted Tues- day night any possibility the Lon- don disarmament talks will he ndged toward the Soviet point of View by Russia's claim that it has as i..ercontinental ballistic missile and has overtaken the West In the ' weapons I-are Observers viewed the announc Items as designed to put preus an the West to move toward tbr' Russian demand for an unctmdl-' tlcnal suspension of nuclear wes- pana test for two to three years. But. these sources added. It is -are likely Western goves-Inneats will lean toward strevhentag '-'-'39-'-'-' (AP Ievietgeveramat secsasdt Westofreaponsfbvllityfartbels duccmhtbetalls thus far. defence of neglecting to safeguard sccrct documents. The parcel was found the manncd safely where Fawcus had left If. Plans Not Outdated bombc likely to continue to be the main threat for some time to come," he said. NOT PBUDENT "It would not be prudent to be prepared to deal with only one type of attack. And we would certainly look silly if we were to strip our defences against the manned bomber when the Russ- ians have one rocket that is far from becoming a weapon." Even in the ICBM era. he said. when m a n n e d and unmanned bombe . disappear, the DEW line would remain a vital link in North America's communications system. "The world is still round and - one has yet discovered a way of bending a radar beam. If we want to be able to look over the North Pole and see what is going on. and if we want to have ade- quate warning of an approaching attack. we have to have always Accident At Shearwater Air Station HALIFAX (CPI-A twin - Jel Banshee Interceptor, its pilot out of COIIiaL'l with the control tower because his radio failed. smashed into a laxiing Avenger aircraft on the runway of nearby Shear- water naval air station Tuesday and both pilots died in the flam- ing wreckage. The Vlf:liI'll5 were identified as Lleul. Edward K. Trzcinski. 29. of Hartford, Conn., a United States exchange pilot who was in mems hem” the Suez f-lghungithe Banshee, and Sub-Lt. Julian George Freeman. 21, of Batter- sea. 0m., 2: member of a Kings- ton reserve squadron now train- ing on Avenger aircraft here. The crash occurred as the Ban- shee came in for a landing. Its pilot had apparently missed red danger flares fired by the con- trol tower. The aircraft screamed down the runway and smashed into one of three-propeller-driven Avengers taxiing out for takeoff. Flaming wreckage was scattered around the intersection of the two runways. The anti - submarine Avenger which usually carries a three- man crew, had only the pilot on board. The Banshee is a single- seater. The navy says the Banshee pilot apparently attempted the landing after his radio failed and he was unable to contact the tower. Banshee pilots are being trained at Shearwater for duty aboard the new carrier Bonaven- ture. The aircraft were purchased from the United States Navy which uses them on some at its carriers. Banshees crashed earlier this this year in separate accidents. and the remaining fleet of 15 were ggl'0l.lHd6d for a time while a structural investigation was made. The Canadian navy la replacird that system. which provides a communications net w o r k from the Arctic right down to the con- trol centre at Colorado Springs. iColo)." The Russians' principal long - range aircraft. the Badger. the Bull and the Bison. were de- signed cxcluslvely for use against North America and yet bigger. better craft were being designed. The problem posed in the ICBM age was twofold: location of any missile and its destruction as liar north as possible. The two had to be accomplished within 15 to 20 minutes of the first warning. Basic work was under way but It would take a long while to pro- duce an answer. "That is no small problem." Truro Woman Fatally Burned TRURO (CP) - Mrs. Mary Sutherland. 67. of Truro died Tuesday from burns received when her bed caught fire Mon- day. ABSENT-MINDED AIRMAN RUISLIP. England 4Rcutcrsl-- An RAF nfficcr left a parcel of secret documents. some "of great value to a foreign power." in s seniority and a severe reprimand; after pleading guilty to a charge the Avenger fleet with new twist engine Trackers. Navy Day At Halifax Today HALIFAX (CP) Canada's navy struts its stuff here Wednes- day as Halifax plays host to the annual navy day. Sailors in war pain; will race whaling boats. small fry Casey Jones will ride the Dockyard Ex- press. a miniature train. and the public will tour and inspect the nsvy's giants of the water includ- ing the aircraft carrier Bonaven- ture and destroyer - escorts St. Laurent and Ottawa. "We of the naval service wel- come each annual naval day as an opportunity to show you what a year of close cooperation can accomplish." Rear-Admiral R. I S. Bldwcll. flag officer Atlantic coast. said. Air and sea demonstrations by frogmcn. B r i t lsh submarines bascrl horn and 50 aircraft will featured in the day - long event opening with a parade in the morning This your is for the kiddies. Twclvc hundred newspaper boys and orphans will go on a two- erira and of the NATO alliance'.s' railway station uaitiniz room. a hm” ""i” '" 3"- nl"RY ""3"" retaliatory capacity bad to be court martial was told TIlCsda)'.l against all weapons. and all rom- l Flt. Lt. Thomas Fawc-us. 35. was il0"3'"l '5” 3'”? W "CW7???" 0' binations of them, the DEW lDi!- l sentenced to six months loss of "'4' CFIIISPF Qltohcf. will vie for the Quebec Trophy. A sunset ceremony by nary bands concludes the program, overshadowed this year by the death Tuesday at nearby Shear- watcr of two navy pfiots. Wecternfhis accusation, made in . Vlglf rnent issued by the news agency Tass immediately after Mmlday' sian s ls l e m e um atndiousty night": claim that the rocket bad vaguc in such ma as the al- been tested successfully, was fnI- titutle and range of the missile lowed p Tuesday when Moscow and the size of the target area radio said the Soviet Union has overtaken the West In the devel- Air Chief Marshal Sir Dermot opment of nuclear weapons. Moscow radio accused the west of sabotaging an immediate stop- fest adreemenf INTENSE ('0NSl'l.TRTl0V The Russians” rocket announce- i more rocket program. " Intense Consultations In Wake Of Rocket Claims spokesman continued ' "It will be noticed that the Run- While Britainls air chief of staff Boyle. said he did not tab the USSR claim "as gospel, first impression here is that the report will spur Britain's long - 3 The rocket announce . it in mm. set off a ware of IfIllfflW'.lTl'9fil'lt"(l. will be discussed here consultation Isent circles. A defence ministry gpolxexmaa appeared to discount the Russian i aalnncemewt aosssewba. He said the soviet statement "does not necernartly mean that he theyanyetllrtghtofanort-rm tional weapon. but we must ex- pect continued The in British govern-int the luodav conference of Ca mom-reslth chiefs of air staff .who began their session fuck. it lso in It prom ncntly In defence his taking in I ac e In Cnnbcn. tralia. between Brftli Secretary Duncan Senna Australian R1 HT i Ieanea. ellfll - .1