’ PGE 1 TAKE 1 SOVIET 3 \ If It’s Good For The Island The Guardi an is For lt rce Edward Island Like The Dew” TOWN, CANADA, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1965. _, | mor WEA t MORE SEVEN CENTS THER ons Cloudy, a few snowflurries clearing by evening; winds westerly 15. Low-high 20 and 27. Friday: milder. \ 22 PAGES VOL. LXXVIII. NO. 200 Authorived as Second Class Mall by th Casta and for Payment. of F F * wavese ont ova aawnas ‘Snowflake, a baby ~ Polar Bear born at ‘this, Philadelphia Zoo a week ago, is fed a special formula by Kathleen U 15, daughter of Zoo's Our; for of Mammals. “‘Little Gi Snowflake's mother, woos EAGER EATER gave birth to.two babies and promptly killed “one of_ them. Zoo keepers saved Snowflake from a similar fate by luring the mother into her outdoor pen and closing the door’ be- hind her. For the first few days it was “‘touch and go" for Snowflake, but the ee now seems to be thriving. I weighs two pounds and must be. fed every three hours day ahd night: (AP WiWrephote) OTTAWA SHOWS CONCERN Soviet Union Is Accused Deframi OTTAWA ‘CP*—Canada ace eused Russia Wednesday night of an entire!) unfounded cam- paigh of defamation: against West Germany. An external. affairs depart- ment official spokesman said it! is a matter “for grave concern that Soviet policy should appar- ently be directed not only to- ward the indeifinite postpone- ment of solutions to cardinal is- sues of European security, but - false toward cowing. itests at Camp Shilo, Man. ing W. Germany mistrust of ; The report, Robert -Ford, ithe Federal Republic of Ger- Canadian aon 3e in. Mos- | many as a partner in NATO by | \cow. was called. to = Russian an entirely unfounded campaign | 'foreign ministry sday to re- | of defamation against. it.” ledive the Soviet Sew The: spoke n was comment. | ing on a Moscow report Wed- EXPRESSES SURPRISE nesday quoting Tass, the, Soviet | The spokesman said it is “sur. news agency, as saying that |Prising” that the Soviet govern. . Canada is supporting the revii- |ment should publish, “almost as val of German militarism by |S00n as delivered, a communi- permitting. West Germany to cation made to the Canadian | leonduct cold-weather weapons | @mbassador. He said it appears that Mr. - Atomic Arms In Viet Nam “Not Considered By U.S. UNITED NATIONS~ (CP) Arthur J. Goldberg, U:S. am- bassador to the United Nations, said Wednesday use of atomic weapons by the United States in Viet Nam: was inconceivable | and had not been considered. He made the remark at a press conference marking the end of the 1965 General As- sembly session. He called the ‘assembly's work constructwe. Goldberg «said “although the fighting unhappily continues in Viet Nam, we will not lessen our efforts to move the ccn'‘liet, from the battlefield to the con-~ ference table for uncondi‘ional vwegtiations.”’ Asked what the role of the UN should be in bringing about: a settlement in Viet Nam. he urged continued efforts of UN o!cers and , individual mem- bers “through the medium of quiet diplomacy.” He said the United States is willing to negotiate the condi- tions laid down by Hanoi. for settlement of. the conflict. BRITAIN CRITICIZED The 13-week UN <ession. over- shadowed by the continuing criss in Rhodesia and —bitter criticism of Britain's handling of it; ¢ to an end early Wed- netd In final activity, the assembly condemned intervention in the affairs of other states and ap- proved a declaration condemn- int racial discrimination. The assembly also approved | - @ record budget e more than | £120,000 ,000. Earthquake a Is Reported | JUNEAU, Alaska (AP) — An earthquake apparen:ly cen‘red be'ween Kodiak Island ‘he| southern tip-of the Kenai Pen- insula on the south centra! Al- | aska coast at 11:58 am. PST! Wednesday, the Alaska Ceastet | office here reported. First reports were that some light damage was done at the | navy base and coast cuard fa- cilities at Kodiak, the disaster office said. linto”’ \foundland end P.E.I. each has “ministry. to provide an excuse Hfor the Tass’ report. The Canadian defence depart-| ;ment announced Aug. 17 that) | German technicians would go to {Camp Shilo to conduct ~ cold- | land- Weather trials of armored. ve- hicles. The Germans now are ‘at the camp. “Co-operation within the (NATO) alliance ts of course ex- tended without discrimination to oe the spokesman said. Delegates agreed the marks of the session were the” appeal by Pope Paul for ‘an end | to war and the decision against ‘recognizing Communist China. The session dealt with a re- cord 108 itenis, in marked gpn- trast with last year’s session, wh'ch was paralysed by a*crisis for West Germany it had al- over the financing of peace- ready \done for .ather NATO keeping operations. member! 's. ~~ Ford was called to the foreign ’ What Canada was doing new | Su ‘ecdse Potatoes In Income CAPITAL -BUREAU OF THE GUAR OTTAWA — Sharp increases in potato prices in the third quarter of this year gave Prince Edward Island and New Bruns- wick the largest percentage in- crease in farm cash receipts of any province, the Dominion Bur- eau of statistics reported Wed- | nesday, tatoes rose from $34.7 million | for the first nine months of 196’ to $64.1 million for the same pe- |riod of this year. All of this aie |is attributed to a substantial in- j jcrease in prices which arose out lof a short crop in the United {States in 1964 and the resultant istrong demand in that country for Canadian potatoes. |. For the first nine months of this year the P.E.I. total of all farm receipts rose to $30,299,00 compared to $22,696,000 in the same period of 1964 and $16,- ' 563,000 in 1963. | To the end of September this iyear receipts from the «ale of potatoes alone totalled $13,678,- 000° compared to $7,462,000 last Lead-Way Receipts from the sale of po | FRED MULLEY (— | PARKING SIGN | IS OPPOSED | PITTSBURGH (AP) — Use of colored markings to desig- nate the levels of a downtown parking garage bas touched off a civil rights dispute. The United Negro. Protest Committee wants a sign on the eighth floor, which is - designated as black, changed. | Each floor is marked with a colored strip and a_ sign above it naming the color in English, German, French and The’ sign on- the eighth Floor year and $5,796,000, in 1963. | says “black, schwarz, noir en oll M president oore, t ‘Co mmentator of the mealies, Se Wed- | _mesday: -''We it a re- [Dies Of Cancer | ticicn: we ven them tt ae lete the words megro and NDON (Reuters). — Rich- black.” ar Dimbleby. 52, Britain's we ie itelevision commentator, died of | lcanéer Wednesday. Hn. OW. Shepard, yive-preri- dent of the firm that operates | the garage, said he will be | | Dimbleby was known to mits | mlad to eliminate the Spanish ‘ions around the world for his | descriptions of Britain's great | State and: royal occasions. He had been in hospital here | for eight weeks. Earlier Wednesday, David announced Dimbleby was z S <a He had carried on a ret fight against cancer for \tive years. He. became. seriously..ill soon. after covering the visit of Pope ‘Paul t6 the United Nationa in ‘October. Dimbleby won praise abroad for his commentary on the fu- neral of Sir Winston Churchill in January, heard in. North | America via communications . satellite. | His* last major royal_event was in May, when he covered an official visit by Queen Eliza- beth to West Germany. | He won several national radio and television awards. coronation in 1953 for television in Britain was one of his out- |standing successes, MACNAUGHT IS MENT IONED Senate Appointment Pscomes Lively At Ottawa OTTAWA (CP)—With the new Parliament opening in Jess than a month, Senate fever is run- ning high in political-circles. Vacant seats in the red cham- ber are comparatively numer- ous—12—and most -of them have gathering dust for months. All but two provinces have openings Twice in the last week, Prime | Minister. Pearson told reporters casually tha’ he is ‘‘looking Senate appointments. Several factors point toward eafly appointments: —A whereby the prime minister velop in the next few’ months. one vacant seat Nova Scotia and Manitoba delegations are at full strength, 10 and six -séats, respectively, There has been specluation the two cabinet ministers _ who }were unseated Nov. 8, former jagriculture minister. Harry Hays,...56, and former minés| might be named to the Sen- | ~ Mr. Hays is from Alberta and Mr. MacNaught P.E.I. However, Mr. Pearson said Monday , Mr. Hays would like to, ‘seek a Commons seat in a by- of the day distributes Senate Such a vacancy could be [meat appointmeats soon after, an \created by elevating an MP to election to prominent party | the Senate. tradition has grown up ‘ election if a vacancy should de- volve a Senate appointment or . Guessing | One Senate prospect {s, Com: | jmons Speaker Alan Macnaugh- | ton, 62, who did: not seek re- | jetection last month and will re- ltire when the new Parliamest| lelects his successor Jan. 18. In | jthe past, many retiring speak. | lers have been named senatcrs. | Mr. Pearson | indicated _re-| or ee J. Watson MacNaught, \cently Transport Minister Pick- | \ersgill, 60, would like to be re- lieved of his heavy duties once he has piloted the controversial {Railway Act revision through ithe next Parlidment. There has ‘been speclation- this might in- ja shift to a less onerous’ depart- | Rene Tremblay, 43, who re signed last week as postmaster- ras atitone car tsa] ea! s re ‘ et oe “ ~aiftr °. _ONLY 2 cabinet colleagues. P.M. UNDER PRESSURE mons convening Jan. “18, Mr. Pearson likely is under pres SHOPPING ber closer to full strength. - AYS TILL. —British Columbia and: Al- sented in the Senate. With six - seats apiece, Alberta has Quebec has two vacancies out lof 24 seats. Ontario, New| -—With—the--Senate—and Com-t o sure to bring the upper cham- berta are greatly underrepre- CHRISTMA "sheeb Vpenmetes and B.C. two. wan, New Brunswick, . New- f= Another name that has. EF TAL, y now heads an Edmonton law general for health reasons, has been mentioned as a possible |. eae for the Upper Chamber. Keith Davey, 39, -_who-- sub- national organizer soon after the election and was asked by the prime minister to stay ion temporarily, has also figured jin Senate speculation. | popped up is that of J. Harper Prowse, 52, former Alberta Lib- |. eral leader. He» retired from the Alberta legislature in 1959 and \firm. § His coverage of the Queen's | translation if someone will furnish him with another word in the language meaning black. “We wouldn't think of of- | fending any body,” Shepard his som said. | ““Qimitted his resignation as Lib-| « @ \eral Falls Project Starts In ‘66 MONTREAL (CP) =" Robert | Winters, who has left the chair. | manship of ,the British New. | foundland Cotp. to become fed- | jeral trade minister, says struction is — to aan next year” the Churchill | = power pa in Labra- | “The project. will start pro | ducing power, according to pres. ent planning, by 1971,"’ said Mf. Winters in a Tuesday interview. | ‘ tA. Col. Frank Borman, command pilot of Gemini 7, and his wife. Sue. embrace 00 Feet from 'h elage’at the Sorat \@t-year-old comedian continued MRS. BARBARA CASTLE ROY JENKINS — B itish Cabinet LONDON (AP)—Prime Min-! The shift of Mrs. Castle Into ister Wilson shuffled his govern- the tough transport post was the | ment. Wednesday night, appar- only-real surprise in the shuffle, | | ently to relieve political strains which had been rumored for | within bis Labor party and the some time. Wilson waited until cabinet itself. | Parliament . adjourned Wednes- | Roy Jenkins was promoted | day for a month's Christmas re- from aviation minister to Home | jcess to announce the changes. Secret ‘ | Tom Fraser, who has - been cao we Staet comiees a criticized by Labor and Conser- | Weack Soskice. ‘Mrs. Barbera |vative- MPs for lack of imagina- | Castle was. shifted from minis | ter of overseas development to transport minister,— the first woman ever to hold the ) post. Hope Injured In 5-Foot Fall #ANGKOK, Thailand ian Bob Hope benches of the House of Con® mons.- Soskice was under criticism from Labor’s left for taking too legalistic a view of the home__secretary’s responsibili- |ties, art inelude law ioe: ; ment. a ~ leomes lord privé seal, a catch. ‘AP)— }all post. pele Lord: Longord gave up his sir base Wednesday and tere at |75 lord privy seal and will = | least- -two ligaments in hig left | ankle. Apparently not knowing at | first the extent of injury, the | wood moves to Mrs: Castle's job at overseas development. The aviation ministry is bee ing taken over by Fred Mulley, la. management specialist who \has been army secretary. ‘His successor in that post was not named. Man. Legislature Opens On Feb. 3 WINNIPEG (CP) — The fifth session of the 27th Manitoba legislature will open Thursday, \Feb. 3,. Premier Roblin an- the show for U.S. troops. The - accident occurred back- | _istage while Hope was waiting for his entry cue during his show at the base, 150 miles northeast of Bangkok. Witnesses said Hope was standing beside a door when an junidentified .person rushed through ,the door and brushed past the comedian. Hope lost his balance and fell backward off the stage. His fall was broken lby several soldiers who caught him. The comedian is making his |nounced Wednesday. The open- 114th annual Christmas tour to ig date is two to three weeks lenterain’ U.S. troops overseas. arlier than usual STR NT te td eee ‘ns ae vt S in Houston, Texas Wednes his famous day. One of the couple's sons, come colonial secretary replac- |i ling Anthony Greenwood. Green- fire For Christmas gested In Viet Nam U.S. Offers ” ~~ a” 30-Hour Peace ‘| SAIGON (AP)—The US. mili- | tary command in Viet Nam to- |day ordered a 30-hour -Christ- | mas ‘only in self-defence. | The Viet Cong two weeks ago \offered to put into effect a |ceasefire from 7 p.m. Christ- mas Eve to 7 a.m: Christmas |morning, to allow Americans and ,other troops in Viet Nam to observe Christmas. | The broadcast was qualified, |however, by a -statement- that |U.S. troops. should not carry | weapons, launch attacks or en- | gage in -spying. The announcement from the | American command was for a} longer peri rom 6 p.m. Dec: | 24 to midnight Dec. 25. A U.S. military spokesman said similar ese government military lead- ers. ISSUED ORDER The order for American forces was issued by Gen. ° William ceasefire, to be broken instructions have_ “|been issued by South Vietnam- | Westmoreland, commander a U.S. forces in Viet Nam. The announcement by the U.S, military spokesman said: “In keeping with the spirit of \Christmas and consistent with like instructions that have been issued by the chief of staff, (South Vietnamese armed forces, Gen. Cao Van Wien, Westmoreland has: directed that |U-S. forces in Viet-Nam will not fire at or on the enemy. except in self-defence during the hours fof 1800 (6 p.m.) 24 December and 2400 (midnight) 25 Decem- Songs 22 Some military and other offi- jcials in South Viet Nam earlier |had, taken the position that the Viet Cong announcement of a ceasefire waS @ mere propa- ganda gesture. similar truce periods in the past, especially during the Viet- tnamese celebration of Tet; the lunar new year, and these pe riods at times have been vio- lated. Farm Income Hits Rec |tion in dealing with transport} orTAWA (CP)—Farmers'’ to- \299,000 ($22,696,000): iproblems, returned to the back \ja) cash receipts from farming | tia $34,375,000 ($31,833,000); New operations reached a_ record ‘1$2,659,400,000 in the first nine months year, wp 5.4 per Most of the increase resulted | wheat Board out of funds earned WHEAT EARNINGS DOWN Wheat revenues to the farm- ers. were down substantially in | ithe months of this nist countries. DBS said afl provinces “but Saskatchewan shared in the nine-month 1965 increase over \1964 cash receipts for the same Farm cash receipts by prov- linces, not including supplemen- tary payments and with 1964 figures in brackets, were: Prince Edward Island $30,- | By HAROLD MORRISON LONDON (CP)—Lord Thom- son, the Canadian-born pub- \lisher, has decided to add ship- / building to his’ extenesive enter- |prises and incidentally help pre- iserve the jobs of some 5,000 Scottish workers. Economics Minister George Brown announced Wednesday that Thomson and _ another wealthy entrepreneur, Sir Isaac |Wolfson, are joining the govern- ment and trade unions and other ’ lgroups to take over Fairfields ishipyard in Glasgow. _The amount of equity involved The figures. /are .. gross j counting the cost of producing the commodities sold. from higher payments by the | ord Nova See |Brunswick $44,890,000° ($32,867, 1000) : Quebec $358,652,000 ($335, | ($335,384,000) ; Ontario $780, | 998,000--($720,221,000); Manitoba | $21°7,506,000 ($208,337,000); Sas- ees (9640,- The Viet Cong have declared | $634 504,000 : ; Alberta $455 365,000 Pisblications (CP)—The Globe Toronto's TORONTO and Mail, lin six. other. cittes, and. Addition of The Globe and |Mail to the FP group was |known late Wednesday in a announcement | by the two lishing companies. It said. that \officers of the various news papers in the group are un- Finaticial details of the trane- action were not announced. The FP newspaper group i cludes the Winnipeg Free Press, the Ottawa Journal,’-the Van- couver Sun, the Calgary Ab ‘bertan, the Victoria Times and Victoria Colonist, the “Leth- bridge Herald and The Free Press weekly Farmers Advo- jcate, Lord Thomson Joins In Aid To Shipyard is the equivalent of about $6.000,- 000 with the British government putting up 50 per cent and the private. groups, including trade “unions, putting up the other 30 per cent. It was not made clear how much of Thomson's money would be involved but it is un- derstood the over-all participa- tion would be sufficient to keep the shipyard in full operation for its 5,000 employees. The new company, to be known as Fairfield) (Glasgow) Ltd., will be under the chair- manship-of Scottish industrialist lain Stewart. INSIDE TODAY Comics s : Rural churcheer ... Women’s Editorials ......... access < Summerside ........... ont Kings, Quecns, City ....5 Prince County (cou WILL’ NEED LOANS | The new company will need extensive loans to keep it afloat imntit- money from new defence .and othere shipbuilding contracts Starts flowing in. Brown prom- ‘ised the government will make these loans available. “Tam giad to say that we ,now have the foundation for s "|financial partnership . between ithe government, private enters \prise and the trade unions as a result of which this shipyard can continue,” Brown said his statement. “.