Covers Prince Island Likeit Edvard he Dew 7719 lGuara't'aIz Varlahlodaudlnaaselanrlng intlseovanlnis cool: north- west winds 15. low-Isiah 55 -and 12. , lo Pisces P CHARUOTTETOWN. CANADA, THURSDAY AUG. 2 1956 pmcg 5,, PONTlFF'S INSTRUCTIONS Pownal Bay Said NEHRU WARNS - - o ;,?, , , , . . -----e-.. Many -Barriers Removed Between Nuns And World By PATRICK CROSSE VATICAN CITY (Reuters)-The Pope has ordered abolition of some of the barriers which for hundreds of years have cut off nuns in the Roman Catholic Church's contemplative o rd e r s from the rest of the world. The Pontiff's instructions. is- sued by the Vatican's congrega- tion for the religious. were pub- lished Wednesday in the Vatican's official Gazette. They provide that nuns devoted to the contemplative life may leave their convents: 1. In time of danger from air raids. 2. When the conventa are requi- sltioned by the military or civil authorities. 3. To cast their votes in political elections. 4. To undergo an urgent opera- tion or to visit a specialist. 5. When a convent's finances make it imperative for the nuns to earn money. 6. To help in the care of souls. REFORM MOVEMENT The new instructions are part of a general movement of reform in these religious orders after dis- closures that many thousands of nuns in Italy and elsewhere were living in great hardship, without adequate food, medical attention or heat in winter. But the new instructions do not lift the penalty of excommunica- tlon. the gravest punishment the Catholic Church can inflict, for any nun of the "enclosed" orders who leaves her convent without proper cause, or for any other person who enters one of the "en- closed" convents without authoriz- ation. ' .' Among those allowed to enter these convents are heads of state and their wives. cardinals, doc- tors and surgeons -summoned to look after the sick, and priests who hear the nuns' confessions. The instructions institute a new classification among women's religious orders, to be known as "minor papal enclosure." G Hitherto the orders of "papal enclosure" may permit some of their nuns to go out into the world to help the other clergy in teach- ing the catecism, giving other religious instruction te a c h i n g children and preparing them for first communion. Britain, France To Call International Meet To Establish Canal" Control By AIITHUII GAVSIION LONDON (AP) - The foreign ministers of Britain, France and the United States agreed Wednes- day night to call an international meeting - including Egypt and Russia-to establish international control of the Suez Canal. The agreement was disclosed by a U.S. informant who said "the possibility of forceful sc- fion" has receded. .. He said that during U.S...state Secretary Dulles' meetings Wed- nesday with Prime Minister Eden and the British and French for- eign ministers the possible use of force to sure international con- trol oi the canal appe ed to have been accepted as "a last resort." Presumably only a hostile act by Egy against British or French s ps would bring military action by those countries. Dulles joined a conference of Western Big Three diplomatic leaders to hear British and French demands for the political support of the United States in case fight- ing flares in the wake of Egypt's nationalization of the canal. U.S. informants said one of Dullea' main s is to urge moderation British and They said hs. French Allies. . Ill anti?-Itllden Elli)- hower. to back any legl ate dip- lomatic means of ensuring the free and efficient use of the wat- erway by the ships of the world at all times. There were no immediate indi- cations whether Dulles was able to satisfy the requests of British Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd and French Foreign Minister Christian Pineau for mu political backing. However P l n e a u, emerging from a 45-minute private meeting with Dulles. told reporters Wed- nasday the interview was a good one and that there was "a great Improvement in the atrnosphe today." He did not elaborate. EDEN UNDER FIRE Word of the British govern- ment's readiness to enforce an in- ternational system of control over Dll (III And. U. S. pret and speak on policy matters He declined to be identified by name or rank. His report of this tough stand may have been released deliber- ately in the hope of both influenc- ing the United States to line up with the Britons and French and to put pressure on the Egyptians. Eden has been under fire from some of his Conservatives as well as political opponents for his gov- ernment's Middle East policy. Eden's political future could be at stake in the outcome of the Suez crisis. As if to underline tough inten- tions, the government ordered land. sea and air forces both at home and in the Mediterranean to stand by for possible troubles. Leaves of the crews of two air- craft carriers in home waters were cancelled. At least three warships are cruising near Cyp- rat in the eastern Mediterranean and-others were bcrtbed at Malta. There was unconfirmed talk that certain classes of naval and army and the United States, held an emergency meeting at the Inter- national Chamber of Shipping in London and declared the canal must remain an independent in- ternatlonal waterway to prevent, it becoming the tool of national politics." . British shipping companies ra- dloed orders to freighters and oil tankers heading for the canal not to pay their tolls to the Egyp- tians' newly-created Suez Canal authority but. as before. to the original-Suez Canal Co.,.ln which the Britons hold nearhr half the shares. A fear among diplomats here was that these orders - unless counter-manded soon-may event- ually compel the Egyptians to re- fuse to let British vessels through. Sue: was given out by I senior Brltiah official authorized to inter- That could bring British military forces into action. Fishermen And Employed To Be Protected OTTAWA (CP) - The l0Vern- msnt served notice Wednesday of legislation to make Canada's 72.- 000 employed and self-emvlwod fishermen eligible for unemploy- ment insurance. Labor Minister Gregg P1130 I resolution on the uC;a:dm:tna oaier per, preceding u on a hill which would authorise filter- men to be brought under the terms of the Unemployment Insurance Act. The measure. sought for rem hy mern s of Parliament from Other Seli- engaged in fishing notwithstand- ing that they are not employees of other persons . . ." The mea- ltlfg also would designate as an employer "any person with whom the fisherman enters into contrac- tual or other commercial relation- ship in respect of his occupation ask iiahermann . ." Moll D Mr. Gregg told the Common: in June of -last year that about 6.- others and that some 00.000 are self-employed. At that time he and Fisheries ooo fishermen are employed by ' U. S. Aluminum Workers Strike NEW YORK (AP)--The United States aluminum industry was hit Wednesday by a strike of 20.000 workers in 21 plants. However. a strike deadline was extended for 31.500 workers in 19 other plants where a separate union has juris- diction. The walkout was called by the United Steelworkers of America. which was simult.aneous',y en- gaged in drawing up new con- tracts to end the month-long steel strike. ' The new strike. result of a wage dispute, halted operations at 12 plants of the Aluminium Com- pany of America and nine of the Reynolds Metals Company. Meanwhile, the Aluminum Work- era International Union extended lts'strlke deadline 24 hours until midnight Wednesday night for 10 Reynolds and 9 Alcoa plants. The plants closed by the USW produce about 50 per cent of the country's aluminum. A USW spokesman said the un- ion is ready to resume negotia- tions but that no talks have been scheduled with either Alcoa. the largest aluminum producer. or with Reynolds, second in produc- GUATEMALA CITY (AP)- Honduran rebels seized and lost in army barracks in Tegucigalpa in a short. violent revolt this morning in which many on both sides were killed. reports from the Honduran capital said. Honduran Police Chief Gen. Tomas Neda reported in a tele- phone interview from here that the revolutionaries who attacked the barracks were led by members of the Honduran Liberal party. The Liberal party has been strongly opposed to Juan Lozano Dias, Dchief of state. fence." she sat . awfully gr Mn. lion's husband. though in the plant metre gun hit his tank near the mainly in ,-Britain and the West Indiesbutwentto'i'orontoini946 fl seachgndghsfn th Blind, firstJihosptt.al h To Purify Quahaugs OTTAWA 1Speciall- Satisfact- ory results have been achieved to date in an experiment with qua- haughs which the Federal Dept. of Fisheries is conducting at Pow- nal Bay. Prince Edward Island. This was apparent from a reply given to a question asked by Neil A. Matheson several days ago. The question asked for the in- formation available to d from the experiment. The repy indic- ated that the purpose of the exper- iment is to determine whether qua- hangs taken from contaminated areas will cleanse themselv when transferred to suitable clean- sing areas. It added that ”Pow'nal Bay is one of the areas found suitable for cleansing urposes and pre- liminary exper ments have" given evidence of effective cleansing to such an extent that transfers on a semi-commercial scale for fur- ther testing are planned for the near future." The experiment was requested by both Mr. Matheson and T. J. Kickham. M. P. Kings, after it had been explained to them that certain commercial operations of a considerable size were possible if permission could be obtained to take the quahau.-gs from contamin- ated areas and transferred to a pure water area where they would purify themselves. World Faces Death On A Collossal Scale & .Worse No Change In British Supply Of Arms To Israel LONDON (AP)-Britain's policy on sale of arms to Isreal is not related to Egypt's nationalization of the Suez Canal, the House of Commons was told Wednesday. Sir Robert Boothby, a Conserva- tive, asked whether the govern- ment would reconsid its decision not to allow Israel to purchase such arms as they consider neces- sary "for the effective defence of Israel." ' Lord- Hope. foreign undersecre- tary, replied: ”The nationalization of the Suez Canal is not related to that dis- pute. The government. therefore, see no reason to change their pol- icy as regards the supply of arms to the Middle East as a whole." Sight Regained, Woman Repeats Her Hopeful Flight By ALAN HARVEY Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON (CP)-A woman who recovered partial vision after a long-odds operation has made a sentimental journey to see an air- craft similar to the one which brought her from Canada to Brit- ain when she was totally blind. Mrs. Roland Pilon. wife of a Montreal soldier who was blinded In 1944. flew to Britain with her husband and two young children exactly four years ago. At the time she had no hope of regain- ing her slght and she wanted to be with relatives in this country. Then she visited a specialist. He told her be was willing to try an operation but warned that the chance of success was less than 10 per cent. But the operation did succeed and Mrs. Pilon now sees reservists may be called to the mm fairly well with one eye. colors. SAW TCA PLANE SIIIPOWNERE PROTEST To celebrate. she went Tuesday A group of water; uupownm Rjvoh In from her home Wallington, mg-no Efg?1t's "move. Ilepre- H d ' Surrey. to L0lld:l;rllIllf:::1. annex!-e sen lives pp interestai . a- , -83;, nine nations, including Canadoa on Ufa: iiiilitwalnd ltrimrllrcrntt :1 51' to the one that brought the family here from Montreal. "It was a"v thrilling exper- ”I really am atef ." totally blind, works in a factory and is considered one of the best . His wounds were suffered when a German Bs-mlllt- Leopold Canal in Belgium. Mrs. Pilon. the former Mar- luerite do Boissiere:-"'has lived -year-old at the Canadian National Institute for the Blind and later at a school for veterans in Toronto where she met her husband-to-l:.. .U. S. Federal Allocation OF Salk V. Ends WASHINGTON (AP)-The U.S. government Wednesday ended fed- oral allocation of Salk polio vac- cine to the states and territories. Welfare Secretary Marlon Fol- som announced this was done "so that more vaccine will he avail- able to areas where the demand is greatest.” Surgeon - General Leonard Scheele estimated that more than 40,000,000 children, and expectant mothers in the United States have rectelived atmieast one vaccine In- ,c on. w , r , havla, ,..n- .-.e,, .,.,m,.. . .. . The voluntary illocatlon system was established July 31. 1955 "to achieve the most equitable distri- bution" of the available supply for use among the moat suscept- ible age groups.. Under it. new supplies of vac- cine were allocated to.the states on the basis of their populations in the various prloriw groups. Highway Death f samr mm-. N.B. (CP)-'i'wo- First Canadian Penguin Born VANCOUVER (CP)-The first penguin born in captivity in Can- ada-the second in North Amer- ica-hatched out at the Stanley Park Zoo here Wednesday. Curator Alan Best said "we have no way of telling if it's male or female." It is dark brown and about the size of a tennis ball. The egg was laid 56 days ago and for the last four days zoo of- ficials have been sweating ii --ut waiting to see if it would hatch. Last year a similar egg was found infertile. It with its mother. She can look after it better than we can at this stage." Mr. Best said. The baby is from one p or , -em-' soo this summer." was , and the other has less than a-week to go until the end of its incubation period. The only other penguin egg ever hatched in captivity in North America-and there are no wild penguins outside the Antarctic- was born in the St. Louis, Mo., zoo in 1929. car his father was driving over- turned ncar buburban Summer- ville. The child was one of seven persons riding in Raymond But- ler'l.station wagon, which skidded glzndon Butler died in daaum zWedneaday after the "For now we are going to leave. .. 1 LIGHTING THE MAN ABOVE Fire This Morn Fire of unkown origin swept through a small residence at 73 Rochford Street early this morn- ing and completely gutted it. The blaze was first spotted about 1:15 by Constables Warren MacKenzie and Allan MacLeod while on their nightly patrol about the city. The alarm was turned in and in a quick search of the residence Constable Mac- Detention Of Survivor Said Unwarranted - OTTAWA (C?) - External Af- fairs Minister Pearson said Wed- nesday Unlted States action in de- taining a Canadian survivor of the Andrea Doria was unwarranted. He told the Commons the Cana- adian government felt that the national security of the U.S. would not have been prejudiced by the immediate departure for Canada of Milan Babic, Yugoslav - born rsident of Toronto. Babic, a naturalized Canadian. was questioned aboard the lie dc France as to whether he had ever on hose gravel. been a Communist W.L. Prowse yesterday officially opened the C.N.R. Museum Train, which was on display on Track -1 at The Charlottetown station. The train, consisting of two ancient locomotives and six museum cars. is the only exhibit of its kind in the world today. tally open to the public, His Hon- . our dwelt briefly on the comparis- on of railroad -travel of today and ; yesteryear. like the great country it spans" l he said "has come a long way since Confederation". corned by George R. Greenough, Superi tendent of the island Div- islon. invitation to all to visit the mu- - seurn. in his brief decription of l the exhibits he noted that five of the cars had been constructed in , the Maritimes. ' said. "you will all enjoy the ex- hlbits of the early days of our ing Destroys Rochtord Street Residence Kenzie was successful in helping an occupant to safety. Firemen answered the alarm quickly and although the fire had a good head start on them they had it under control in a matter of minutes. Occupants of homes in the vi- cinity left their houses in fear that the fire might spread but the efficient work by the firemen kept it in check. One residence immediately ad- jacent was in great danger as the blaze spread speedily through the small home, but it was wetted down ' ually and the fire was kept 'at bay. The house was the residence of Ernest aosby. NEW DELHI (Reuters)-Prime Minister Nehru Wednesday issued a warning that the world faces death on colossal scale from nil- plear explosions, "and what is much worse, the genetic effects of these explosions on present and future generations." In a forward to a government publication on 'Nuclear Explosions and Their Effect, Nehru wrote that other world problems because relatively unimportant when com"- pared with the nuclear problem. The book, prepared at Nehr-u's request. says that in terms of de- structive power the nuclear wea- pon is the cheapest thing the world has ever seen. "One single weapon by its blast effect alone would be enough to destroy completely any metro- polis," it declares. "By the sheer logic of the situation megation bombs and cities cannot coexist for a long time. . . ." "Even without war we have what are called nuclear test ex- plosions, which in some measure spread this evil thing over large parts of the world." Nehru wrote DIFFICULT '10 ASSESS The book was prepared by Dr. D. S. Kothari of India'ai Defence Science Organization. in' associa- tion with Dr. Homi Bhabha, in charge of atomic energy war and Dr. V. R. Khanolkar, he of the Cancer Research Institute in Bombay. After surveying atomic energy development and fission and fu- sion explosives, the book declares: "One thing that clearly stands out above everything else is 'that the range of destruction of high-yield nuclear weapons is truly colossal. The multiplication factor in com- parison to the devastation caused by conventional weapons is so big that it becomes extremely diffi- cult to appreciate and assess the seriousness and peril of the new situation." - It says that knowledge of the safety factor in radioactive fall- out is very incomplete and adds: "It is extremely important in the meantime that radiation exposure is kept down to the lowest possible VIII-I0. otherwise irretrlavabla harm may be done to what is lit- Crltlythe most precious treasure tt3:lIll:lIHIIlI -- the genetic bert- e. - His Honour Lieut. Governor T. Before declaring the train offic- the C.N.R. "Truly The several speakers were wel- .N.R. extending a cordial "I am sure” he Hold Official opening or A Museum Train Exhibits railroad, which existed at I time when this mod; of transportation was playing such an important part in opening up and assisting in the laying of the great foun- dations of our towns and cities.” Premier A.W. Matheson wel- comed the exhiblt and those in charge. commenting briefly on the operations of the C.N.R. within the Province, and noting that there were times when they had had their adversities. "Looking at the exhibit." he said jocularly. "it re- veals nothing to me: it is some- thing I have travelled on for the past twenty years to Murray Har- bor". He urged the children to take particular note of what they saw. "Although the C.N.R. is ex- panding in other parts of Canada. I don't think it will do so in PE. I." he added. Greeting to those in charge of the train was extended by Deputy Mayor. A. Waithcn Gaudet. who wished them a pleasant stay. The (Continued on page 2, col. 4) La Missile Will End Mutual 7 Deterrence. Of Nuclear Weapons, Warns Pearson the Merit as and British Colum- bia, would include fishermen em- ployed by others. those soil-om and those working or OTTAWA (CPl - External Ai- falrs Minister Pearson said Wed- nesday development of the inter- iag weapon against which. if used (' aggressively, there may be no de- fence or. indeed. no warning."- Thus the world, he added, could Minister Sinclair agreed that it , would be dnlrabls for fishermen i to be aliglbla for unemployment shares. - - lnrursncs.lIowwIr.the.v aid that continental ballistic missile will - ,0” W, . . The resolution dates CHFGIIIIG0 Dilly 9111010900 515915?! removeihe mutual deterrence on lg; comma balsncgfof - olirlbln would include sown! ellclble l which the world relieapfor secur- Russia might use out situation - ityg i for lpolltical black'r'nail alzd , lg 0 e told the Commons n open- smal wars "whlc won t -.; U0 so A'n1D . . ing a foreign policy debate: on our side the .aspoasibility of 5 ' r 3 - "At the very same time that converting these limited wars into I cO"FFnu.d U3. ' we rely on this (atomic) detcr- thermonuclear ones.” I rence-and we have to rely on it- "That possible situation ob Of Suez Canal WAIHINOTON (AP)--President Eisenhower said Wednesday the U.8.aimlntblussCanalcrlsis is to make certain of the con- tlnued use of that waterway de- spite its seizure by Egypt. In a press conference. Eisen- hower declined to disclose ths con- tents of any messages he may mu received. on what he cog: a very grave issue. from - sin's Prime Minister Eden and France's Premier Moliet. The president described the ca- nal as s waterway vital to the 11.8. As well as the soon- there is a frantic search going saonbothsidesforthe” thental ballistic missile, which will remove and certainly will minimise this mutual deterrence by the discovery of an snnihlliat- tainly has a bearing both on III, defence and on diplomds policlessnditl sInetofHI conclusion that atomic and atomic deterrence are 4 asough." Island Potato Crop Acreage'Up Slightly This ' Prince Edward island potato is up from about five to OTTAWA (CPI .. widnuiu was the Mist sitting rim of the l CIIITOIS IHIlM' 0! P III!!!)C- makingtttbaiongsstsics y- The session. which opened Jan. 10. is not expected to prorogus or later. Next 'l'lmrs- tiIA. 'dnsy. l".kmttwlllnntchthe W. ofthossasionof 10-day iqtulnmosslll am on via be I session in Canadian the longest smln; days of the uses suntan. an Indication of what the lllsloryr The record ill tit om can esssirlss of warm ”,'.',"; "'i ' J ',sLq,I. 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