' TOP 00110 If it's Good For the Island who Commotion WEATHER . . _ OVercast. snow ending by evening; The Guardian IS For It northwest winds 15. northeast 25 in afternoon. Low-high 30 and 38. u ' . Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” VOL. LXXV, N0. 271 “mm :‘ufimhcx J£Jd%::"m:‘ Mm'“ CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY. NOVEMBER 19, 1962. "053.3an SEVEN CENTS 12 PAGES usss GOAT IN COURT driving an overwidth load of tree branches through municipality. The goal had to remain o u t side. Richards pleaded not guilty. contending Tree surgcon Owen Richards holds a goat. broom. mop and dustpan he brought to est Vancouver court to back his defence against a charge of PISHERMEN IN SPOTLIGHT i t the load was fodder for Claire. the goat. and was not illegal because overwidth loads of fodder are permitted. The case was adjourn-ed until Jan 10. Fine Weather Predicted As Nfld. Goes To Polls By IAN DONALDSON vof overcast developing late in ST JOHN‘S (Cp,_A break I the day with some suowflurries. In a stretch of bad weather intto 8 pm. but high winds m EXPECl-Ed I" come t"day asImany outlying areas may slow Newfoundlanders go to thelrcturns because of hardships polls in a provincial election. lfor people such as deputy re- Sunny weather is predicted Iturniiig officers who have to although there IS a W‘ssibilllylor telegraph office to report ——"—‘_——_— resu s Fishermen and some of .thcir problems othcrthan weather—are in the spotlight today in this province of 470.- Irow boats to reach a telephone I Islqnd Sheep Show Up Well o O ‘. . Liberal P r e m i e r Joseph At w'n'er Fa" IRoberts Smallwood. who says Twelve ribbons with one first i he is nearing the end of.a polit- and a reserve champion ram I ma] career which saw him lead was me victmw score of thelthc provmcc into Confederation Stewart sheep showing this year | with Canada in_ 1949 and_ then at the Roya] Winter Fair, Toplwlfl four straight provmcial onto {5 has been teamed {mm elections. pegs this one on the Allison StewarthDundstaiffnage. fisheries. who fitted and s owe t e ani.‘ . , mals at the big fair. iI‘LELS DUTY .. . A Stewart yearling 1.3m ma“; Although it would be eaSier second: they had second. {01‘ m9 - _- ’0 lake my 9359- fourth and fifth In ram lambs says the fiery: bP‘V‘UEd Prem‘ at the big fair and‘their ycar- 191‘. he feels "It 15 my duty to ling ewe entries finished {mu-uh Newfoundland to lead the gov- tenth. eleventh and twalfth in.crnmcnt for another period." a big of s . iThis "period." he has said. will Stewart ewe lambs placed‘be five years or less. third and ninth. The Stewart It was early in his career flock was third in its class andlthat Mr. Smallwood. now 61. their pen of lambs also took? helped organize the province's third placing. fishermen. And at a time when Pioneer In Aluminum Dies-In Miami At 95 MIAMI.‘ Fla. ' (API—Arthur i May 30. 1867. Davis was the top Vining Davis. 95. who helped scholar in his class at Amherst found the aluminum industry Collefle When he graduated m and became one of the richest men In the United States, died Saturday at his home outside M aml. é He immediately went to work for the Pittsburgh Reduction Company. found that in year to make aluminum by t . electrolytic process discovered by Charles Martin Hall. 9 Ohio scientist. I Hall‘s process and DaVis‘ leadership In commercial ven- resulted in widespread e The silver-haired man with a 9 voice had not been feeling well since Thursday. The vigorous. energetic little I about five feet. four Inches tall and 120 pounds- suffered a heart attack in 1956. tures three years ago. he collapsed us In a .borber'l chair in Miami. 991- Taken to a doctor's office. be They developed the versmlity was ordered to eat lunch daily. of aluminum and with. help from the Mellon \family of I meal he had aged u for "‘m- p. p Pittsburgh bonded the Atom- Davis. who had been mar- inum Company of America In fled Mice. was a widower and 1907. Davis became prcsrdcnt had no close living Telltlvel.:M Alcoa "me years tam Prjvlte mm"! "Nice! wm heI Late in Davis‘ life a part of Phis holdings was sioomom held here M l worth of Alcoa stock end-y. ME to Sharon, Mus. °n Voting hours are from 8 am. n i he says he's approaching re- ltircment it is the fisheries that lhas sparked today’s election. i He is seeking a mandate to {carry out a program providing :h a r b o r improvements. new lboats and engines. echo soun- 3ders. gear. docks. community rprocessing plants. bait depots. Iresearch. fishing stages and. bonuses for salt bait. ' There will be 42 members in lthe new legislature. six more than the last house. Redis- tribution earlier this year added the new seats. Ho ever. only 38 members will be elected today. Three Liberals, two of them in Mr. Smallwood's cabinet. were elected by acclamation when they Were unopposed at close of nominations Nov. 8. mean ing that 11.000 voters won't ihave. to go to the polls. And the election in the remote con- stituency of Labrador North was deferred indefinitely be- cause poor llying weather pre- vented planes from delivering tContinued on page 5. col. 5 Action 0n Cuban lets hand WASHINGTON (AP) — Pres- ident Kennedy is seeking a prompt reply from Soviet Pre- mier Khrushchev on removal from Cuba of about 30 jet bomb- ers capable of delivering nu~ Chinese 12-Mile Wedge Aims At Plains Of Assam . o _ \ Po 1 Winter Blast m CENTURY Blg Setback [Slams Brll'aln 9 ls Announced . (Reut- clear bombs against U.S. tar- ers — Field Marshal Vis- gets. _ lcount Montgomery cele- Kennedy is reported to have; s , _ rated is 75th birthday . . made clear to Moscow througlil LONDON 'ICPI — The first help the fishing boat Faithful Saturday and said he was By PETER JACI‘SON "0mm F’ghtmg commue‘l diplomatic channels that for thelblast of Winter Sunday gave , that had run into difficulties in heading for 100. ‘ NEW DELHI 'Reuter5’_ln' nearby _dia's defenCe ministry Sunday; The mmstry said the Chi- ‘announced “a big setback" m-nese also had launched a ma" ‘its border war—Chinese cap. .lOI‘ Offensive at the; Opposite.~ lure of a Northeast Frontieriwcstcrn end of India 5 Frontier ‘Agency strongpoint giving thefAflCnCy area Communists immediate c0111.; ll was feared that possession mand over routes to the Assamlof Waking WOUId enable Chl' Plains and Burma, jgcsc tjroopsf to habraisftheklndian ’ The strongpoint. taken Satur ee“ ers. mm 0 an 5' - ‘ ~ The Chinese have penetrated day by more than a dmswn 0‘ about 25 miles south of the Mc- Chinese. was Walong. a stra- . . . tezic village near the BurmeseiMahnn Lme “'vhwh Ind'a can”. United States time is running‘Brltain an icy pounding. the storm. When the gale grew out on the bomber issue and the} More than 100 Russian and ‘ worse. all three vessels took soviet government should make ;Polish trawlch took shelter off shelter to the leeward of Fame “5 position known without de. Folkstone in southeast Englandflsiand. But the crews were un- ay_ :85 a blizzard swept Britain and able to get ashore because of officials said the president, 1 the coastal areas. 'the mountainous seas. has not fixed any time limit for An RAF helicopter Sunday ‘ new moves if the jets are notvnight battled its way through BgfiNED HATCH .COVEBS taken out of Cuba. but it \vas.the teeth of a gale to rescucj hey spent.the night “ding”. considered significant in official I I9 marooned seamen. trapped . anc or‘ tearmg up 8.“ bummg’ quarters that the president haslfor nearly 24 hours in two me. them“ “0Y9” 0“ the" boats ‘0 58¢ 8 Press conference—hi5 first i boats and a fishing boat off the ' keep walm‘ The gale blew as He spent the day quietly at his home here. 70 miles southwest of London. i'cad- ing birthday grectings from all over the world. He said he was proud" of being 75. “Three-quarters of a con- tury. you know. Now for 100. that's the objective." ‘ wary sine Se L 13_f 6 ‘ t T _‘ t ard as ever Sunday and licli- “‘9 horde? . e p or p m ues gztigrm lashed east coast of Brit copiers were unable to take off Meanwmlet m southern Lad. Authorities said it seems oh-‘ several hours‘ The Sasllllizmloiitg Sino Indian l frontier. the Chinese began shel- ;ling Indian positions near the jkey airfield of Chusul and at» .tackcd two nearby forward posts in bitter fighting. TROOPS FALL BACK lfor n it be- ' - T‘V“ 0‘ “1" seamen—one With ‘came known one of the fi her- Vlous that. When he goes bdorela heart condition—were brought l h d l 1 1 b1 (15 1 the American people to make aim the mainland an" being'wfn a: war r0“ 9 a“ “9 report on‘ the Cuban situationfwinched a boa I. d the rescue I a 83‘” was made‘ N I I I A ministry spokesman said »that scuth t of the Chinese- at that time he will want to« f _; the DevonShir9 roast. have u n c er t a 1 nty over the . cra t. The other 17 were trans r ven men were rescued by Two Charlottetown men. law- of school text hooks up to grade 1 Mid Towangv at the western end i ht. i ‘of the Northeast Frontier. In- . iferrcd to Fame Island. a rocky l se - bomber Issue Clea” outpost three miles out in ,the‘breecnes buoy atit-er bemg‘ .. i stranded on the auXiliary tanker North Sea where buds arc the ‘ Green Ranger whic h ran [only form or me" iaground Saturday night near out of Cuba the weapons Ken“ Coast guards said the l'neillBideford. nedy considered offensive. the woum be able ‘0 Shelter.m “I With snow blizzards sweeping1 If Khrushchev has by then-: refused to make good on his commitment of Oct. 28 to take‘ - - . stone cottage on the island] . . .yer Ian MacLeod and potato . e . i . . ‘ preSident. it is understood. may where food is Stored for Shm‘many parts of Britain. the 3 dealer and rower Horace Willis. Mr. MacLeod 5 nomination asidian troops had'been forced to order new measures to deal . weekend death toll through. 3 . db Aib to N G thd i th 1 of with the situation. Among those lwreCked manners" RAFlweather causes reached 12 lWere nominated ‘0 ComeSI 560' i glove cly er m ‘ ew 135" WI raw 0 e” man? me under consideration is a block- 3 planet also droppe‘i further sup‘l Eight men and 3 hi 9- . r i d Q f th L'b 1;‘ how an lieconde‘j by Theopm. defence on‘ the se La ridge‘ ade ban on shipment of etmniplies. including cold weather . old b0 di d wh nfll’gadi on ‘ucens or e era llus Blanc Rustico. Mover .Se La 15 the major defence leum products to Cuba pThi‘I vival ‘ . bringing me a blfi‘cha o“ :hOi‘ 3 Party in the Dec. 10 election at I grlmg’lr- fill/(1:115 tW as Myroin I line on the road to Indias As- would deny jet fuel for the The lifeboals With 15 me'llwrecked fishermen capsized gt a we“ attended meeting atlero wa: oRuelngGsaiirtjhiaeli 59133311.?“ Plams at'Tezpur' Indus ‘ I s r I orward operational headquart- planes. Rustico. S I ' I ‘ after hm M i a m a i tr it” shut? ‘ ' ismfm ‘" the snodonia diStriCtiFred Kitson Meadowband andl . . I . aboard were out Saturday to i the entrance of Seaham Harbor 3 ngsm" Saturday mgl‘t‘ I ers. .Saturday night. Five of the dead‘ Mr. MacLeod's nommatlon tori Oher speakers included Lib-‘ The "massive" Chinese at- eral federal candidates in theitack on walong was estimated “’39 18 elem” Ira Lew“ 39d :1 to have been made by far more Amspn Glms‘ and ED .Reld' ithan one division. It was sup-' female? °f the P'E'l‘ L‘be’al ported bv artillery. heavy mot» 550013 1011. - - . Mrs. George Dickson of Mead_ tan and recorlless guns. he assemblyman w a s unopposed i r. Willis won out on the were lifeboatmen. Two climbers died .inf Wales. Their bOdieS were ‘ Richard MacPhce. New Haven. gfound 1“ «3 snnW drift. only a; Liberal leaer A.W. Matheson owbank was named presidentiqukesman‘reporied‘ He saig a i iqllal‘tel' of a mile from a ma'0 added another plank to his I of the district‘s association dur- : Chmese d] v‘ 51911 c‘lmpnses ‘ highwa. . The victim : party's platform during the labom 20-000 me“ “"3"de 5'1!" t1 porting labor battalions. ‘ inister Nehru asked people not to be perturbed v their country's reverses to Icrashed his car in a blinding meeting when he anounced that ed vice-president was Alber ‘fall of sleet in Yorkshire. ‘ ‘ l , his party was returned on Orr. New Glasgow and secre-l . Dec. 10 it, would ,pay the-cost tar-y. JP. Nova. Hunter River. 72:9 In Queens And Kings ‘ ing the election of officers. Nam- i tContinued on page 5. co. 9) The Progressive Conservativel Mr. Curran's nomination was . . 'the undeclared border war an party Satin-day night nominated; moved by Albert Acorn. Prim- IRUSSIQns Flre to make each set. back the - candidates in two districts; rose and seconded by Ma i' lcasion for renewing their re- First Queens and Third Kingsl Brehaut. Montague. Mr. for the Dec. 10 provincial elec-i Gowan's nomination was liege; l32nd Bomb Test 11 mo - ASHIN or ion J . . ‘ed by Bruce MacPhee. Montaw‘ . , I w ON inn» .— The. ‘ta'guei and seconded 'by F‘mnRTSoviet Un set off another I I nuclear explosion in the atmos-l phere Saturday. the Atomic Energy Commission announced? Quaiid, Walter Dingwell. George wasl Fogarty. Seven Mile Road; ' The two candidates spoke were made at a nominating con WI” Do I k The explosion was of low yieldl _ ' " ieway, vet. eric —producing a force equal to? ('1’ fr m AP-R ut “who” 1“ madman? Han‘ iPl‘afi. SI. Pam‘s. C-A. Shaw. 20.000 tons or less of TNT—and? pARIS o e "5 Ma“ Shaw 5 nom‘l‘au‘m. was? Modta‘guc. Richard C u 1' la y . occurred in the Seminalatinsk Ipresidem moved by James 5mm“ Clinton-i Georgetown Royalty. Paul Mrc- area of Siberia. the AEC said. solve to throw the invaders out. “I have no doubt ultimate vic- tnry will be ours.“ the neutral- list leader said in a speech. LIST CASUALTIES The spokesman said that in the latest fighting there was good .rcason to believe that Chinese on. In First Queens Premier W.R. Shaw of St. Catherines minated as councillor a 5 Frank Myers. Crapaud as A3. semblyman: he nominations 5 O briefly as did Hon M.J. Mc- ireal landslide" for the Union for } casualties were much higher — French voters gaveia New Republic (UNR), whichlthan Indian. Latest estimates de Gaulle anotherlis pledged to unswerving sup-igave 1ndian killed 01‘ missing “1’ ringing vote of confidence Sun-Eport for de Gaulle. to Nov. 16. as 1.623 instead of mid Second“ by Edward BT8d;l Donald. Panmure Island. .The lert,KeI.I¥’S Cross- Mr- Myer“ ‘ Daniel MacKinnon was chair-i nomination was move by Jack1 man. O'Connor, Hope River and sec-2 onded by Ivan Ferguson. Bon- teSt “’35 the 32““ 3“' day through uncxpectedly large F - the 2000 in 2500 re td rl- . _. i . re redictcd the UNR w iild ‘. ' . ' For e ea nounced Russu—in shot duiingisuppn" of Gaumst candidateslelectyzga members_a majooritylier. e 531 . the current senes‘ 1101' lh€-Nalional Assembly- --in the 481-seat assembly in the3 or thc "623' he addedl’ .12“! Some of France‘s best known two-stage balloting. which ends}were knqwn '0 have been ed l and details about the rest were 0 C . . . F 1 Sourls Playwnghf Honored irolmmans who had based 9'6"”th 5"“day‘ ’" 1M "‘8 ‘35‘5being checked. Asked if the Chi- . .. , ‘ . ir . irampaign on opposuion In de|assembly deem" the “\R nese figure of 927 Indian pris- ' . . _ lwon only 188 seats. . - Cam“ and h“ 5mm“ prcs'de“ : In the first 64 seats fillcd. iiie,°"e‘5 could he 59‘ °“ 33”“ s aw. Speakers included the. can- didates and Hon. Andrew B. , menac- nommaWin Performance At Ottawa . tial policies went down to de-. ‘the missing. the spokesman said copxfif’u‘ ti}? the 81 t. - feat. In the shakcup of political lRe b12221; “"1E 'Moulilfnlltelr’li i “if you believe the Chinese‘ the “1:3 Iago??? in OTTAWA tCP! --— Prize - win- clear group Voice of Women. mafia”; 395k ap'i11,plllndepeiident:plf aI‘l’leiisants 16. “521:5!” :gféigitiilvg“;errjtoflal . . . . ' . . i I . . l l ‘ a I Bradley, Bonsh', being elected mug playwnghts m the Ottawa also received the Solange Karshi Interim. Minimr Roger Frey. dical Socialists and allies army men just before me fa“ president. Other officers include: Ian Henderson, vice president. Doug las McKinnon. secretary. Art- hur McLean. county executive and Lea Reid. provincial ex- executive. Mr. Bradley presided. THIRD KINGS Thomas Curran. Peakes Sta- tion. Assemblyman. and Douglas McGowan. Montague. councillor. were nominated in the third dis- trict of Kings. They were nam- a-t a nominating convention Little Theatre's 24th annual one- act play competition were lion- orcd Saturday night following the premiere performances. of their works. Awards were pre- sented by John Stanhope Reid. high commissioner from New Zealand. Gold medal winner was Mr. Maurecn Orton of Hamilton for the symbolic 5 BX in History. I which takes an irreverent look at man‘s coping with the threat of nuclear destruction. Mr. Or- ton. an executive member of the award. presented by photog- rapher Yousuf Karsh in mem- ory of his late wife. Second rize. the Dorothy3 White award. was won by Mrs.‘ Adele Townshen of Souris.: P.E.I. Her entry was For the; Love of a Horse. 3 tragi-comw edy about the troubles of an. Irish tenant family during thel colonial days in her home prov- 5 f3 "3 The plays were chosen froml among 108 entries judged by) Mrs. Dora Mavor Moore. direc-i tor of Toronto's New Play So-‘ IHamilton chapter of the anti-nu- l‘callcd the mounting returns “a WHERE-TO-FlND-IT Announcement. notices 12 Births. deaths . . . . . . .. :l-l Classified . . . . . ... . . . . . ., 12 Comics . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 9 Editorials 4 City. Queens‘ 5 Prince County z Summerside .. 3 Sport . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 7-14 Womens' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. soc'ahSts one’ commumst’s I of Walong was announced. said: “Those who are occupying p rts of our motherland by force of arms shall decidedly be dislodged from every inch of our territory." He said India was "sad and angry“—sad at the death of In- dian soldiers and angry at the lChinese invasion. which was "naked, shameless and crude." R six. ,onc. A record low of only 56.5 of rance's regis‘tcred electoratei ivoted as a harsh blast of winteri :pounded the country. i Standing in the outgoing as— sembly was: 169 Gauliists. iiaI Conservatives. 56 Catholics. 41: Socialists. 37 extreme rightists.‘ 34 radicals and 10 Communists. ’1} Chinese Drive In India ciy. i Poses New U.S. Problems Fa med Danish Physicist Dies COPENHAGEN (Reutersl IFamed Danish physicist Niels Bohr. 77. died Sunday of coro- nary thrombosis. Bohr was a Nobel Prize win- ner and pioneer nuclear physi- 6 w .0 Often described as the "father of modern physics." he. was awarded the Nobel Prize for physics in 1922.' Bohr was awarded the "atoms for peace award" In 1957 for having exerted "great moral Iforce on behalf of the utiliza- ition of.atomic energy for peace- ful purposes." Bohr developed his theory of I the structure of atoms with Lor {Ernest Rutherford at Manches- jter University during the First iWorld War and their findings ’were established by 1916. ; Before the Second World War ‘he suggested theories which contributed to the birth of the [atomic bomb. and soon labora- itories around the world were working on nuclear fission. Bohr was smuggled to Britain lduring the Second World War and then went to the United States to help produce the atom bomb. ‘ Generally ranked second only tin the late Mbert Einstein iamong the world's great physi- cists of the 20th century. Bohr was stricken and died in his Copenhagen home ‘ in Bridgetown. Bum are being cut across times and Whites in a unique. vow being take to decide on the li t HlElP NAME NEW TERRITORY name of a new territory to be chopped out of the vast North- vote in Baker Lake housewife Miriam Mootna and waiting WASHINGTON (AP) — Red However. one of the possibiliv Chinese troops poised at points 1 lies on which U.S. military of- from which they might surge ‘ ficials were keeping an eye was southward over India and to-ithat the Chinese may attempt ward ndian Ocean ports possum press across the rich Assam new problems in thc Unitedlplains and around Burma to- States doctrine for containment’ward the Indian Ocean Port Cil- of communism ‘ ies. The ultimate objective of the This would create one more undeclared but xpanding war object In be watched by the al- which China launched against i ready heavily - committed U.S. India remains unclear. although I fleet. the intensity of the campaign . . stepped up in heavy fighting in I PRESENT TOKEP FORCE. the already invaded areas. I The "0"“.31 1”"- "M L's. One of the more immedmm naval force in the area between goals could be capture of the. the .wesmr" Pump. and th' Assam oil fields within short . Mmmrranea" '5 a “fly. detach' distance of one sector at me.mcnt of aboutthree ships. from Red Chinese campaign. The Sm the 6th Fleet In the Mediterrav viet Union‘s coolness toward 03“ This smelled Perm” her big Asian any could cm 0” Gulf unit consists of a seaplane a major source of fuel for both “WW and 'w" dFSIm-Vers‘ It! industry and the mimaw of function Is essentially to show - ‘ the flag. I the past. the policy has been for the U.S. to deploy a {substantial force of ships into area of any free nation Papa ls lnwted o o i TO VlSlf U.S.A. Ithrealened by Communist ex- ROME tAPl—Francis Car» Winston. for a show-of-force ef- Spellman. archbishop of few. has Invited Pope However. in this case. the John to visit the United States. .New Delhi government so far The Pope said he had alwayslhas asked for no help beyond wanted to goubut gave no in-‘some basic weapons and other dication that he might be ablelmilitary equipment. to make such a trip. The car-i Deployment of any additional presented the invitation 511.5. naval strength to the Indian Saturday when Pope John red area could impose in- to It"! picture mapped by lceived in special audience allzcreased burden on either the 6th RCMP Cpl. B.A. Deer ofBaker | west Territories. Casing her his turn is Peter Amevarwo bake. N “w. (Op Wtrophotoi Icouncil i i .' the U.S. bishops here for the Fleet in the Mediterranean or Roman Catholic ecumenical the 7th Fleet in the Western ' Pacific. or both. .