i ll it's Good / The Guardianil‘s For it For the island who watercolour “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” VOL. LXXVANO. 298 skveoir ISSUE DISCUSSED Authorised as Second Clu- Mltl by the Post Office Department. 0t lawn. and for payment of poa'aja ll. cash Titian To Rem NASSAU. Bahamas (Reuters) President Kennedy and Prime Minister Macmillan adjourned their discussions of the Skybolt problem Wednesday night and asked for "certain papers" to be drawn up for their further consideration today. This announcement was made ' the official British spokes- man. Harol vans. Asked whether an agreement In principle on the Skybolt prob- lem had been reached. Evans said: “I don’t think we can say that at this moment. i would say only that clearly progress is being made." ' Evans and Pierre Salinger. Kennedy's spokesman. b o t h agreed that “it is not improb- ! said Determined Pearson ain Nuclear Power lSparks ably... u... it... conference would millan's beachfront ham. atUpro go into a third day swank Lyford Cay Club 15 milesi OTTAWA (CPiaThe political Appearing at a' joint briefing from here. with Salinger. Evans said the. The conference originally wasl Kennedy flying to Palm Beach. lFla “mix ht m d the powder keg was given its worst president and the prime minls- ischeduled to last. two days. with i ter were in session for 4'}: ours. .. spen He added that the whole at Christmas holidays with his mm!“ in week” wedneSd” ‘“ this.time had been spent dis-.famlly. ‘1 “0133’ ammo“ “PM” that Calillsilhnagt f:he (Skfybolt'tissu'em stadi. rililm:1 lltgintister .Diefltlenbaker 'saw Opposition Leader Pearson. . owe romi.w1 e is ac e ue it arrive ere. to- with .11 rd _ _ ' exception of one hour devoted night for talks with Macmillan‘s 11m? 8:: d2“: gauging to~The Congo. The spokesmanl'r‘riday. i “mm mm a ‘ er“ said there was agreement‘~ No mention was made at thelbe’whes' accuse lh’ govem‘ “there was a grave danger of lpress briefing as to when the ment of Contempt of Parlia- a. further deterioration in the Macmillan - Diefenbaker talksiment, Situation there' in The Congo." would take. place if the Mac-f Prime Minister mefenbaker .' ‘ll - . -. . WAS GUEST 'm1 an Kennedy tan“ are pm tried to reply but was shouted Kennedy was the dinner nest of the prime minister at Mac? 5' By KEN KELLY OTTAWA (CPl—The accent will be on such subjects as keeping the initiative in deal- ings with the Communist world when Prime Minister Dicfen- baker and Prime Minister Macmillan meet in the Ba- hamas Friday. Diefenbaker. who ar- rii'es at Nassau Thursday evening. is expected to seek a briefing from Mr. Macmillan on the British prime minister's meetings with President Ken- Forecast Model I Of Holiday Toll OTTAWA tCPi The Cane- dian Highway Safety Council , forecast Wednesday a traffic ricth toll of 58 in the five-day ('ltrislmas period from 6 pm. Friday to midnight Wednesday. The Christmas toll last year was 3.1. w. Arch Bryce. council exe- cutive - director. said in a state- ment: "Unless every driver and ev- cry pedestrian fully and serious- ly realizes the perils of combin- ed festivity. excitement and cele- bration. Canada's traffic toll might well exceed our fearful forecast of 58. “But if they decide to drive and walk with sensible precau- tions at all times. our prognos- ticatinn will be. too high." Ottawa lo Aid lraining . nT'l‘AWA ICPi—The. federal Ind Prince Edward Island gov- ernments have signed an agree- ment to share the costs of the provrnee's new apprenticeship program. Labor Minister Starr announced Wednesday. "‘This new program will pro- vide broader op rtunities for "‘9 people of P. .I. to prepare for employment in a rapidly changing world of work." Mr. Starr said in a statement. Under the agreement. the federal government shares 50 per cent of provincial expendi- lures on apprenticeship training carried out in cooperation with industry. Nine provinces now Topics Are Seen Varied For Diel- ncrly during the three preced- tContinuod on Page 3 Col. 6) Jpenchant as Deputy Speaker ment's hill to establish an At-- Their recommendations have Gordon Chow". called re_ lantic Development Board re-ialways gone unhecded by the iceived second reading - ap-‘federal government. said the order. Mr. Pearson offered to hear a reply. but Liberal MPs kept up the racket. so long that Mac Conference w ‘ Mr. Chown then made a Lscheduied 5 pm. shift in House iing days and with President deiThe Congo where India has albUSlness- iGaulle in Paris last weekend.;large force that is wanted at Mr- Pearson “aiIEd the 20V- Hi on the list of topics is ihome in case the border war "nmem for mismanagement of the Cubs crisis. in which thelflares up again. “‘9 Commons and a travesty 0‘ Canadian government is under- Divisions in the Communist Parliamentary democracy by stood to have felt. that theiworid also'arc likely to come Contimlinfl 10 588k money Votes United States failed to carryiup during discussion of the in monlhly d01lal‘5 instead 01' I FORESEES ANOTHER BlLl. M.‘ 1k, 'b .-l k' ‘t ' acmillan ta 5 whic con _bae tng down and wihdrawmg He referred m the interim elude a few hours before Mr. lits Cuban missiles in the face Diefenbaker's arrival. the Ca- of President Kennedy's firm nadian and British leaders are action. expected to discuss the now-i from these interna- quiescent border war betweenitional problems. the Canadian India and China. lprime minister is expected to 000.000.000 the amount of money obtained by the government in this way. Mr. | b i i CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA, THURSDAY, DEC’EMBEhfii, 1962. "or...ng SEVEN CENTS longed. . Informed sources said tite‘iClOWn by the Liberal back -i peatemyTat lea“ 2° tunes‘ft’riproval in principle~in the Sen- senator from eastern Quebec. _ He bluntly predicted that the" [the prime minister yielded and imaged wi Senator Heaps Scorn By JACK BEST ihc compared (CPL-The govern- on a clear nigh OTTAWA ate Wednesday after a scornful attack from Senator Jean-Fran- projected agency will fail to. cois Pouliot. I n arm - waving speechI Noting that. the board is to’ th sarcasm. the ch-lwork in conjunction with thel; bec Liberal said boards to pro- lNational Ec on om i c Devel- motc the economic developmentiopment Board and the National. of the Atlantic provinces havetProductivity Council. Senator een so numerous “they coulleouliot likened the measure to ;laying good wood over rotten d b .. oszspite his misgivings. Sona- :io Pouliot. said he. would sup- port the. Atlantic bill on second . _ H . . . ‘ iand third readings if he were.: out adequate consultation With Cuba cum and its aftermath. SWIM: the House. a chancetoa INDFNT HALF EM ‘assured that Senator Alfred. its allies before imposing a Moscow has been the target of debate Item-bY-ltem Spending To .110 ( ) .n. iBmoks government lpadpr in‘i naval quarantine. strong criticism from t e Chi- estimates. RON CP ‘W‘ '3'“ ' ' As was done in the Kennedy- nese Communist regime fort ‘ nesday was sentenced to two 1 money supply bill under debate,l .which would bring to about $5.~i Pearson and 1 .the upper chamber. would he1 named to the cabinet. as min-‘3 istcr responsible for the board's ; activities. Sturley, 28. of Toronto Wed- Weeks hard labor planting ‘ trees for the city on the Cana- dian N ational Exhibition .MAY OPPOSE MEASURE .flzr cutémg tdhow" a ‘ He added that unless the. gov- : “5 mas ree ‘ ere' ‘ernment states who the. respon‘; 3‘" “9 may “"l he 3'31"- .sible minister is to he. he willi 0n Development Bd. 1 to stars in the sky‘ ' t." achieve any useful purpose. '- -' RELATED TO CONGO . This question is related to .tbe UN’s police operation in i ask Mr. Macmillan for his . latest assessment of Britain‘s bid to enter the European i33 Killed In lPolish Crash i ' CP from Reuters-RP WARSAW. Poland—All 33 per- sons aboard a British-made Po- lish Viscount airliner were re- ported killed when the plane crashed while landing at War- saw airport Wednesday night. The airliner. flying from Brussels in Warsaw via East Berlin with 28 passengers and a crew of five. exploded when it crashed about 500 yards from the end of the airport runway. Airport officials said four East Germans were among the passengers. he remain- der were Poles. There was some speculation that the plane struck a tall crane or other machinery being used to lengthen the runway for long-range jet use. weather was good. with no fog. This was the World's eighth major air accident in less than a month. The previous crashes took at least 206 and possibly 256 lives. In the last. previous mishap. a Brazilian piston-engine airliner made a ‘forced landing in the Amazon-jungle Friday with 50 persons aboard. Rescue workers still are trying to reach the any persons aboard survived. Candy Firm Veteran Dies .BRIDGETOWN. N.S. —— t’CP) — William Archibald Moir. for- mer manager of the Halifax candy and bakery firm of Moira Limited. died at l'ls home here Wednesday. He was 70. Mr. Moir mOVcd here on re- finement from the firm. His wife and one son survive. Participate in the scheme. 'scene but little hope is held that gotiations are stalled. Mr. Diefenbaker along the No. 2 official in the Deputy Undersecretary Marcel Cadieux. and the trade depart- nt's Com Market ex- pert. Assistant Deputy Trade Minister J. H. Warren. Mr. Warren attended the i‘London conference of Common- iwealth prime ministers with Mr. Diefcnbaker in September when the market was the prime topic of discussion. Since then. there appear to have been few developments in the Brussels negotiations on Britain‘s entry which directly affect Canada. Mr. Diefenbaker will be at- tempting to make an assess- ment of his own of whether Britain is more of less confi- dent of being able to protect the trading interests of her commonwealth partners in ne- gotiating terms of entry to the Common Market. iHopes Buoyed gFor Freeing IOf Prisoners i HAVANA (AP i Cuban ‘ Premier C a s t. r o Wednesday lifted a ban on sending food and clothing to 1.113 rebel invasion prisoners. buoying hopes that all will be freed soon. informed ‘sources said. is taking 3 to .of Prisoners‘ Mothers as shar- iing the negotiators' high hopes ifor a quick exchange of the lprisoners for United States food ‘ and medicine. l James B. Donovan. New York lawyer and chief negotiator. declared before taking off on a flying one-day visit to Miami. ’3. a ride: “I continue to be optimistic." To release the Cuban exiles seized in the invasion of Cuba in 1961. Castro has demanded about $53,000,000 in drugs. food and equipment RlMOUSKl. Que. (CP) —« About 800 feet of track on. the Canadian N atlonal Railways drain line were torn up when 34 ll! "clam cars were derailed ear Wednesd y 34-Car Derailment Delays CNR iraiiic y M At this season of the year the a .4. malls ston. NB. but other passenger trains were expected to be able to use the main line. The derailment was reported to have had little effect on the movement of the train from the ban government has been officially silent on the negotiations but informants said government circles considered the exchange was certain. Princess Plans Visit To Paris Lord March iHl. visit. a Kennith Palace would be mainland to Charlottetown. Ap- parently it was not held. Normally due here at 9 pm. the deapatcher estimated that the train would arrive in the city w 1428) last night. He in- dicated that the lateness of the train is not due entirely to con- lona on the mainland lines. top-over at Emerald generally convince a mutter-able mount of extra time. due to the annual heavy Christmas season move- ment «I INSIDE TODAY Announcements. notices 21 Births. deaths . . . . . . .. 1. 20 Classified . . . . . . . . .. . fl Comics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 1! Finance. markets a Editorials , . . . . . . . . . .. 4 City. Queens . . . . . . . . . .. 5 Prince County . . . . . . . . . . .. 2 Sunnerslde ........... .. a port . . . . . . . .. .. 18.. if Womens' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. s Common Market. on which ne-’ to serve the sentence. others have predicted another; I sucll hill in February. to meett Robert Stewart. busmess that month’s bills. agent of Civic Employees Union (CLC). Local 43. 531.1 later; “I don't. care what the. magistrate said . . . this man is not a member of our union so he can't work." Sturley was charged theft after police caught him “A shocking example of con-i tempt. of Parliament." said the} Liberal leader. He proposedl that the Commons reconvene right after New Year's instead! of waiting until Jan. 21 to come back. “in order to deal with thel ver. real and u. em I. b] g hauling away the 12-foot blue “CK”: the countlrgy." p 0 ems: spruce. Magistrate Donald 5‘ Graham put ' With the clock nudging 5 pm. Mr. Pearson finished. But his supporters began a desk-bank-. ing attempt to carry the clock? to the full hour—~and the change i on probation with Win weeks to he served working at the CNE next summer. “This would constitute violation of our contract. an a d with . oppose the measure on third and final reading. scheduled for ay. . Under the terms of the legis- Ilation—already passed by the iCommons the development: lboard will report to the govern-‘ imcnt through a designated min- to 5 er. Senator P (I u l i of contended ‘ ithat the. three Atlantic province. :lminisiers serving in the present;I lcabinet. are already too busy tof [take on the added responsibility; inf the development board. They. Finance Minister Nowlan. i' i [Fisheries Minister M a c l e a n . MacDonald. of reports e D said he didn't believe Sturiey had any idea the tree was five members. said they should time but “I just feel that if he . . . have been reporting to the gov- has a word or two . ‘ .. i “Jus‘réiss' f. t H d .t 5. our men would walk off the igshn Mlmsl" Hugh; r" [h own figs 3;." fe b'k ' job rather than work wit a i genatm. Pouli’ot noting p‘m” en as r' . ‘e e" 3 er non-union man." said Mr. E ‘ ' . . . h rose and held up his hand. the Stewart ifrom 1930 [Xl‘illl tthis 3/82? 1 Deputy Speaker said he is sure! .‘ . ‘Commons‘ an ic con ingen the prime minister realized the Maglsua'e Donald Glaham was top-heavy with Conserve. é i JENKINS liberals Elect Qiiicers town. wa MR. 5 yesterday ilsland Liberal Association. at a WEATHER Cloudy with snowfiurries; turning cold- er; winds northwest 20. Early morning and mid-afternoon temperatures. 35 - 25. 22 PAGES Yank Action Threatened Against Canadian Spuds SECOND READING GIVEN i; Dumping Duly By HAKOLD MORRISON lion provides that if US pots ‘ WASHINGTON (Cpi._A Li's. Hoes. to be shipped into Canada agriculture department official dllfms‘deightle; lam" ‘32‘617 ‘ . , - ' ny ves on: said Wednesday the United us. shipping point the“ th, States may be forced to take Canadian government is to col- counter-action against Canada lect the difference in the form because of a Canadian dumping of a dumping duty. This would duty against U.S. potatoes. .he in addition to the Canadian “We took our case to the Gen- tariff of 371-: cents a hundred eral Agreement on Tariffs and Weight. Trade and we Were sustained," The U.S. also maintains a tar- said Clint Cook of the depart— iii of 37": cents a hundred- ment.'s foreign agriculture serv-iweight 0 an annual quota of ice. “But Canada still has taken 2.500.000 bushels of Canadian no action to remove the dump- seed and table potatoes. The log duty. duty is doubled on lmportl “If Canada doesn't take. any above that figure. action within a montii. we w' , _ be forced to protect our inter- FACE (“101‘A ““T es‘s by reducing the quota on Cook said the department. will Canadian potatoes-t irecommend that the Canadian Cook charged in an interview quma he reduced if "‘9' duml" that the Canadian dumping duty in: “my ‘5 “0t "’mWEd- is a violation of GATT and The US. brought hanger; maintained merely to keep p0. against Canada of Violating tam prices high in a smaulGA’l‘T provisions at the GATT western Canada market. Heiconfercnce in yeneva last said the dumping duty apppiies imonth. it maintained that the only west on he Lakehead. dumping duty “impaired fulfil- ment of a potato concession ne- SAYS EAST OPPOSED gotiated with the US " “This dumping duty is being . _ ‘ The commerce department maintained for political pur-lhere said in a statement. that Jenkins of Charlotte-moses. even when eastern Cana-H'a panel report essentially sus- . electedrdian potato growers are op- tamed the U.S. case, and Cam preSident of the Prince Edward‘Dosefl in ii." Cook said. aria was requested to withdraw "I've already told the grow- the. additional customs charge meeting held in the Charlotte. , ers in Canada we‘d have to take in question or in work out some town Hotel and which had been 2 some action 14. postponed from Nov. .Other officers elected were: 3. Har- rs. B. E a r l e. l Charlottet o w n: acLeod. S u m— Mac- Vice - president for William Harris. Murray bor: Queens. Hg Prince. Neil merside: secretary. Ian Lend. Cbarlottetowu: treasurer Dr. W lottetown. Outside of the panting of thel . new slate. the remainder of the I Agreement 0" T a r ‘ “5 .sessjon consisted of the hearing l Trade that it remove a special any'wcstcrn U.S. shippping mint 0 f : duty imposed on regarding events th co. in provincial iPa-rliament endell MacDonald. Char: general that . election. said Wednesd if the duty isn't removed." He said the Canadian regula» dumping i i I l OTTAWA (CPI The (Jana.i dian government is pondering a, lsuggestion by the. G e n e r a l U.S. . and .lllan $2.67 per hundredweigbt, at U.S. potatoes lwest of the Lakehead. officials ay. The United States took the .matter to the GATT at. Geneva. lwhere. discussions concluded re- rangemcnts with the U.S." Cook said Canada appears to he ignoring the GATT findings. Ottawa Ponders GATT Removal Suggestion it is called the fair Value fol duty provision. in this case. potatoes priced at. 1631 face additional duty—on entry to Canada—to bring the price up to $2.67. On top of that is the. regular duty of 37“: cents a hundrcdwoight. The U.S. spokesman said the icently. GATT's findings in the extra duty is applied by Canada imatter reached Ottawa only re— only to kcep potato prices high ' Western Canada. Castro himself was described 4 ——--i by an official of the Committee worth $200 but. “Parks Com Hands 0" “'5' Mr‘ Dielenba' missioner George Bell would ker then stood unable to make . . have a heart attack if he zgxrfisisgédheigd ta: {Elgpsggggi‘eg knew people were cuttinz mcntcd by MP5 from other (3:3,. ms "905 for Chr‘St' parts of the House. He finallyi left the commons. . . tently. “ In Washington Wednesday. al , ispokesman for the U.S. agricul-i "-v THE CANADIAN PRESS 'ture department warned that crnmcnt on conditions in the At- 1 t. I At A Glance an ic region. ’ “If we have to have this legis‘ , with}; . . .. ,. i Prime Minister Dicfenbaker ilect Canadian produce growers tried to reply but finally gavr. tip as the Deputy Speaker vainly called for order over Liberal MPs'-shouts. David Lewis lNDP-A’ork Soutlii said the government. has taken a hypocritical stand on oppression of natives in South Africa and Angola. Jack Roxburgh (I. ~— Nor- folk! complained there is too much politics involved in the national fitness program. ‘lation now. it is because the‘ WEDNESDAY Dec 19 1952 I. . i . . . - , ‘ - ' ' .Canada Will have to remove the Maritime MP5 have been afiaid leera] Leader pearson' higher duty in a month or face to speak to the government or” amid a Commons uproah retaliafion. 'commum on page 3‘ CO“ H accuse“ the gm’emmenl n l The duty is of a ivpe that can . v . ' Shimme 1‘5 contempt "i" be imposed at the discretion of ' Parhamem' ithe minister of revenue to pro- 4 in season. ‘Atla The Senate gave second , , : reading to the Atlantic 09- PLATTSBURGH- -\-\- lAP'c- i velopment Board hill Twelve Atlias missile Sites ring- ' agreed to schedule final ap- int: P'lattsbu-l‘gh all“ fm‘t‘e base ‘ proval for today. became operational Wednesday , a as the air force assumed con- i Tfiunsnl‘" DM' “0 . trol of the $120.000.000 rocket he Commons meets at 2:30 pm. to continue debate ‘9omplex fmm General “mam. . . s Cor r tion. on an interim money supply 1° p03 General Dynamics was the. ‘ bill. The Senate meets at ll . pm M Kim, “nay approval m prime contractor for the huge 1h, Atlantic Development underground SllOS built to hold ‘ Board Bill. the 12 missilesethe first inter- lsland Butter Surplus Increasing Since ‘59 OTTAWA iCPi - Five prtiv- provinces \\ll(l.\f‘ consumption lincflmprmfl, Edward island. was greater titan production. with 77 per cent. followed by lquom‘c' mammha' SBSkatChe' Nova Scotia al 66 per cent. Now "a" “M “Mr” ”‘ Dmduce Brunswick at 20 per cent and more butter than is consumed Ontario at three per cent. by residents of each province. N0 “fillies “'“l‘f‘ Ein‘" the trade department estimated Nowmmdland ‘Wednesday. PEI EXCESS GROWS Figures tabled in the (Tom- Since l959. Prince Eduard ls- mons by Trade Minister Hees land's excess of production over for who . Matheson tL—— consumption climbed from 331 Lecdsl showed that on the basis per cent from 234 per cent. of uniform per capita butlcr Saskatchewan’s lo 93 from 17!. lconsumption across the coun- Alberta‘s to 95 from SR. Mani- |try. Prince Edward Island pro- toba's to 74 from Hi and Que.- 1duction exceeded consumption bec's to 67 from 46 ’by 251 per cent in 1961. Excess of i Alberta and Saskatchewan‘production in British Columbia fur - aby. a Vancouver suburb. She Sending greetings back is spending part of the Christ- home is airline stewardess passengers. express and Dianna Lewis of South Burn- mas season in Honolulu be Eiseflilcs FkOMll-IAWAII “ cent each. Manitoba's produc- and Ontario to three from is . tion exceeded consumption by cause of increased fllshis bf- 74 per cent and Quebec’s by fi7.consumption tween Vancouver and Hawaii. 1.- iCP Photo) over ent. British Coin or bill led the .ceot. 5 Missile Sites Become Operational consumption over followed. with production ex- declined to 77 from 84 per cent, ceeding consumption by 95 per New Brunswick to 20 from 2‘3 use to £6 per cent from 64 per A Canadian official said a GATT pancl expressed hope that Canada would remove. the extra duty shortly although no date. was suggested. Unless Canadian action is taken. it was stated in Wash- ington, a reduction in the quota of Canadian potato sales to the U.S. would follow. _‘ (‘tir‘lllllf‘lllal llv'illll’xlif‘ nllxsllFS the L'iiitcd Statcs has based east. of the Mississippi. The misstlcs “ill remain in their concrete Silos. unless them is an enemy attack. Then they would be iaunchcd to predeteiw mined targets They are capable of flying 16.000 miles an hour and flf‘llVOY'ln; nuclear bonds quarter of the way around the world in half an hour. Mast ms (tents of this Laka ‘(Yhampiain City of 20.000 and the surrounding area apparently have become accustomed to liv- ir.: in tho mlt‘lri oisa prime target area and to hearing the roar of B-32 bombers overhead. . SITES l\‘ TWO STATES ! The missile sun. all \iithin 3.3 miles of the air base. are at the Von York communities iot‘ Champlam. Moocrs. Ellen- hui:. Hat-rigor: (‘oi'ncrs Ohazy Lalo. ClaXl‘rlll‘Z. Siizarbush. Au- sablc Fha~m Rooiict and Wills‘ born. and lth Vermont com- munities of Aibiii'z and Swan- OI l-‘ach \lin, to loot Ill diameter and 174 trot drop Is lcnf'cd and i|.:lll‘nl](‘(i by mimics and guard dil’;\ rnn>ii‘lli'll-til hogan June W. 10th. and “a; olfit'ialiy cnm~ ‘pioird Doc 0 of this year. The l'oitod Hairs pili itn 2titl‘li l(‘B.\'. t:n lllc l-f‘lfii line \‘.llll tiic mmplctmn of the r.tlll$hll‘.‘:l‘i crmplcx Qllalllih’l authorities estimate the Russian: bane perhaps 75 to 100 lCR\l< Actii'iatitm iii tbr‘ Atlas squad- ron at Plallsburgh marks the in Nova Scotia. excess of cnr‘ of the first phase of die production L’“ missile hilll’lUD From now on. the new US. .ii'onlioiicd on page 3. ml. at i