i ll Lil's Good For the island .The Guardian is For it @IIt£@itm0ttfiIio1itt 52 and 75. “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” Medicare Discussion Continues SASKATOON (CP)-—'I‘he rul- ing council of the Saskatchewan College of Physicians and Sur- geons met behind closed doors apparently discussing Care Insurance Act proposed by the government. Britalnjs Lord Taylor, at- tempting to mediate the dis- pute. said earlier he had been CIIARLO'l'I‘E'I’(lWN, CANADA, M61~TfiXl?, JULY 23, 1962. " l75;j§§BE SEVEN cams ‘ By KEITH KINCAID . ment—-that of the Atlantic ad- ;Seen Topic For Premiers .eral ‘grants to the region but.‘ WEATHER Sunny with little’ temperature change, light winds. Low-high at Charlottetown 12 PAGES U.S. Try For Venus Probe (Ends In ‘Flaming Failure’ Boost To Atlantic Economy Booster ls Faulty assured by doctoit there would S1-_ _;oHNrs_ Nfld_ (C-p)__ be 3 declfilfill "099 ‘Ely {Wt ‘:9 . The long - standing problem of Oulel‘ ¢°ll¢¢l'lllll8 5°‘ °?‘°“t, Y i’ how to -bolster the Atlantic Re-3 P-m- EDT H°W9V°l'-, 9 ‘me , glon's economy comes under an-‘ 933594 Wmllllll ‘ll? 9“l°l°l °°m' ‘, nual top-level review here to- lmlll ‘mm elthel‘ “'19- lday at the Atlantic premiers’ l annual $35,000,000 special fed- An informant indicated’ both confe..ence_ . 51595 W9“? ‘am? °1°5e- Missing from this year's once-a- justment grants from 0ttawa~ now is said to consider the mat.-: is considered likdy to come up. ter closed. A special premiers‘. Prince Edward Island has‘ meeting and an appeal byl-~ strenuously sought an increase;P.E.i. to Prime Minister Die- .in its 10-per-cent share of the.fenbaker failed to improve the ‘ province's position. CAPE (ZANAVERAL. Fla. (CP)—The first American ended in flaming failure nearly 100 miles above the Atlantic Ocean Sunday when the booster I The labor pee, and deem“ ”, th . in be P . ‘ rocket deviated from course architect or Britain's national §i‘i§f.‘5.‘i.i1’.'l.‘I.‘.‘.“Iv.uw...ti'§i‘§'.ifiT: 3"“ was d°l*r9ied- . health s¢lieme- will in 'l- who is ill. The Island will bel °’l§jg:ff ;:‘§§;at‘i';' l°l‘Vl¢“’ he l"’1“°l‘“"Y 33'?“ t° represented by provincial Secre-| 3“? 3ll°“l°l‘ day when asked by tary David Stewart and Treas- Dr. l-I.N. Dalglelsh, president of me, Melvin McQu8id_ the 5ll_9kll“ll°W3‘ll C°“°3° M There is no formal agenda for 1’llY9li-‘llllls am S“l'3°°’l5- '- i the closed-door talks. but if thel After five days of intensive * meeting follows its usual trend,‘ behind - the - scenes neS0tia- . economic considerations will tions, government officials and l predominate. Areas where the do ctors fa c e to four provinces can co-operate inl face for the first ' rince , uniform legislation, such as talks broke down just before the I highways and education. are governments compulsory medi- l also expected to be touched onewas learned ‘as. night Draggem cal care insurance plan went The conference is usu ally. operating in the m.ea'whe..e me into operation July 1. held in the fall after the an-1; car was located‘ were blame,‘ launching to the mysterious. bright planet. They hoped to make the attempt within a felt weeks. The $8,000,000 Atlas-Agcna B j rocket and $4,000,000 Mariner I .. net Shuffle in July 1962 Hem spacecraft were consumed in a ' ' {yellow-orange ball of fire when '3' B'°°ke was elevated '0 the the range safety officer at Cape post of home secretary. A Con- Canaveral pushed a button to servative member of Parlia- e1€Ctl‘0iliC31lY lfinlle dyllflmlll ment since 1948, he was creat- charges ‘ill the vehicle. 8 privy Councillor in 1953' The pieces of the shattered became financial secretary to IS ELEVATED - In a sweeping British cabi- Have Heavy Gear Loss l ALBERTON BUREAU were six draggers operating in OF THE GUARDIAN the area during the week. v‘ Two Albcrton South fishermen suffered heavy net and other fishing gear losses last week. it. (Fisheries regulations permit , foreign- owned draggers to come 1 ‘in lo the three-mile Canadian limit, although Island draggers and otilers of less than 65 feet can come im-1.0,-5, amwugh me rocket and payload fell iiifr. the tossrlili CARNIVAL QUEEN ls CROWNED Miss Beryl Maclnnis. 10- 1 year old raven-haired. brown- eycd Stnnmerside girl was ‘crowned "Mics Prince Ed- imo Island lotto" by Cheryl Ozon. the Queen of the 1961 Lobster Carnival at the Lobster Carnival Headquar- ters. ' Summer-side. on Satur- day afternoon ' . e coro tign was held foil ' n‘g‘~‘» plan. , Lord Taylor. invited by the CCF government to study the situation. said "final difficult details" remained to be re- solved. He did not elaborate. Salmon Elude featured the young ladies i with this year’.-. princesses. Miss Betty Jean Callaghan. rside and .Miiss_.M'ar- a parade that two ' TENS! CAT-AND-MOUSE GAME Sunime R "l" Sella Gallant. Egméiit Bay. Of Aggression On Border. By GORDON MARTIN NEW DELHI (Reuters) India and Communist China‘ Sunday accused each other of aggression as the tense cat-and- mouse gains in the long-dis-‘ puted Kaslmnir border area; flared into between.‘ their frontier troops. . The Chinese said one clash was continuing. India claimed two of its men were wounded Saturday when Chinese intruders fired on an Indian patrol in the Chip Chap Valley area of Ladakh, Kash- mtr. But the Peking government-— Productivity Council ls Stronger, Ily ROBERT RICE l OTTAWA (CPi—-The National} Productivity Council seems to.‘ have survived its early growing pains. Created 19 months ago by not ‘ f Parliament. the 25-member. council crept through an uncer-f lain lnfincy. stronger and more vigorous ‘ Trapped Men Dead In Mine ASHLAND. Pa (AP>—'rhl-cc men. trapped in a mountainside mine Saturday. were killed by I no known as black damp. A fourth survived after four hours in the polluted areas a wasreportcd In good condition In hospital. A rescue crew from a fire company of William Iletalnger. 37: Frank stuffs. 30. and Clayton B Q. Maurei-.”I!. Richard Cappel. 25. was re- vived with oxygen. Metabigarh brother. Donald. owner of the mine about two miles south of here in «I com- niunlty ca-lied Lavellc. col-L lapsed n he the; ms. Elfitoo. was under tloc-g Vigorous now. the council of labor, man- agemenl. government and pub- lic is walking steadily. ‘‘It will be off and running in a few months’ time." hays E. F. L. Henry. its newly-named executive director. Indications are it may soon be running in advance of gov- ernment. leading the way in grappling with basic economic roblemst . The council is launching a pioneering research aimed at producing a common set of economic facts for the whole Canadian economy. This is regarded as in bold step with far - reaching conse- quences since disinterested eco- nomic research is the basis of long~range planning. This .con- cept of planning. long viewed with distaste as sociallatic. ap- SENDS TEAM ABROAD The council has also sent I top team from labor. man!!!- ment. government and educa- tion to six European nations to search out the reasons for Eu- gopean productivity and eco- nomlc development. ‘ . e The mission left I-rtday. will return Aug. 4 and reP0l‘l I) at the next full session of the council. I¢ll€¢llll9d l°" ml" (3,; right after a council-spon- cored labor - management sem- gi-lganizcd labor in Canada 1,“ long advocated such a gtudy mission to Europe. feel- ing it would show Canadian his business how Eurovfilll "P0? and mmremtnt “'9” °"h“‘“‘ uni problems in an atmolli 81'! C mature respect and spill!» am policemen were ed. lChina's Sinkiang province — lsald the Indians were the ttruders and had f" first. It I also said the fighting was con-‘ itinuing v . Both sides demanded the with- l - B I ‘drawal of the other's forces from the area. Protest notes were handed the . Indian embassy in Peking and the Chinese embassy in New Delh . Prime Minister Nehru con- ferred here with hls army and air force chiefs after top de- fence and foreign ministry offi- cials had discussed the Ladakh which claims‘-the valley lies in situation. The Indian note also referred to another incident in Ladakh Saturday. this time in the Pan- golig Lake area. It said Chi- nese troops ired on Indian troops but the Indians did not fire back. , The Chinese note said if In- dia ignored C ina's warning over the Chip Chap Valley in- cident. it must “ re- sponsibility for all the conse- quences." Saturday's c rmed clashes were the first in Ladakh since 1959. when lilne Indian border The latest clashes followed the current Chinese siege of an Indian outpost in the Galwan Valley of Ladalth. It began 12 days ago and no shots have been fired there thus far. The Indian protest charged that wlille performing routine patrol duties in Indian territory an Indian patrol in the Chill Chap Valley area ucked by Chinese troops with light machine-gun. mortar and- rifle fire. resulting in the wounding of two members of the Indian patroi" Carmcin Dixon N.B. Premier ST. JOHN'S. Nfld. (CP)-— Premicr Robichaud of New iBrunswlck enjoyed fishing this ‘week on the Gander River. one of. Newfoundland's best salmon lstt‘e‘ams;'but he —fa1’led“‘to‘=:lsnd ;a salmon. Visiting the province for the Atlantic premiers conference ope ' . ay. Premier Robichaud and his wife m Gander. Mrs. .' re Friday fro _ Bobichaud said they enjoyed the l |ndia,Cl1inaHur_lCliatrge trip and landed a number of trout. The premier hooked ii salmon i but lost it after playing it for‘ 1!) minutes. ‘ ‘meetings has led to disagree-l ore convenient to meet car- this year. ‘ ition to anchors and other equip- , _ .ment. he estimated the loss at t W11; bdfat '°m"f“ lust ftwl‘l‘« upwards of $1.200. i uf°.....?..2i§i’.§Z?.?§f§‘°i.°v?..l "is W “V6 ‘° mile‘ E “ma B C ut 8 some cl .offshore and he hat brought itl . to th‘e {cu} lead .dethi°Si°: almost 7,000 pounds of cod and 2 just coincidence er‘ 58' S 5‘ bake on Monday. reports indica- ‘_ ‘ ted. . WONT GO AS BLOCK Wilbur Fraser lost his com- ‘ “The earlier date should noll plete gear consisting of 15 mac- : be interpreted as meaning intkerel nets. in addition to an- us. “.".‘.‘..’.‘’‘.‘3.‘ f“"i‘l‘l° ‘."°""l "1 . . _ o core as l . I .utpmen I a block." the source said. “Thel was s ' located eleven , two meetings are in no way re-5 01’ 12 milefi Offshore. ‘ lated. Each is on his own whenl 14003.1 l'6D0I‘tS indicated tli€’I’C all the premiers meet " ‘ """ APEC officers .‘ " who. in prev- Pro pa nda lous years made public submis- . l l lier l lsions to the premiers, will not . attend this year. Their contri-{W F d <’ bution will be confined to A short l motored -‘ mailed statement ufging me‘ GENEVA lCPl—-External Af-; premiers to continue efforts to-.'f8ll‘S Miflislef Gwen of Canada ‘ convince federal authorities of. 531 p the need for an Atlantic capital 5 Propaganda Wat‘ is building ill’! ‘ fund and 3 regional deve]op.!over disarmament and this‘ melit bo d. l A problem which at previous‘ 31- tlwould ruin honest negotiations. . Green said in an interview he has learned there are “some lDeGaulle Delay .NatoCliangeNod. PARIS (AP) —- President dei Gllllk Weill N11 Of his W8)’ Sat-i to make the decision then. butl armament principles u n a n i- ‘ some three and one-half hours urday to emphasize that France. will not be just a rubber stamp} suggestions" the 17-country dis- larmament conference now in ?session here should adjourn in‘ ‘ September wher the United Na- ‘tions General Assembly meets ' in New York. ‘ The Canadian foreign minister said he will stress in his speech to the conference Tuesday Ihc, necessity of keeping ncgotia- ; tions under way here as w lllaleml‘-lll did H0‘ Wen Dromisc called for in a statement of dis-l 3: ill rather spoke airily of "one of 3 mously adopted by the l04-mem- l the next" cabinet meetings. tber General Assembly last fall. 1 Frederick Dixon. Moncton. N.B. M . . .mol.or boat overturned. fphew but was not seen again ed drggzskaiiiiltlieiiiain sglzfltttogss ‘ Pliiliilinzldsietinlilgcoihfoniihe I l°{."'° d§.S""°“°"' “"39” ‘““"'°'5v like "W59 OPE" the treasury in 1954 minister °°°"“ 5°"°'a‘ '‘““‘”°‘‘ ‘“"°' ‘ . . . . '1 pton raser reports he lost afing out of Lunenbu,-g for .x. f h - d 1 '1 _ down range. weeks ago in protest against the but the premiers say they find. 20 of his 32 fishing nets, in add_ ample, can not come inside the ?nent°l;:ln1%57a‘naud°::ie§‘;:|;.:_ The failure was a blow to 12-mile limit, a fisheries depart- tary to the treasury and post- ment spokesman said. master in 1961. : lwo Drowned Sunday. ln Pond Al East Baltic The. efforts of ii father to save his two sons from drowning cost ._ him his own life, when he and 'a 12-year-cldqnephcw drowned l last night at Dixon's Pond, East Baltic. approximately 12 miles from Souris. The two sons were saved by another brother wh o rescued them in s ro boat. Dead are John Dixon, 40. of Dixon's Pond is approximate-l (Continued on Page 5 Col. 7‘ .‘ Tight Money Policy Meant , FY FORBES RHUDE ; d Sunday there are signs a 3 East Baltic» Md his nephew-l Canadian Press Business Editor ]‘Administ1ation Frank Dixom 12-year-old son of» The Canadian Imperial Bank. of Commerce may have coincdl a new phrase to describe the"l condition in which money is hard to gel. . In its July commercial letter. issued last week, it said: “The rapid rise in bank loans I l during the past year has almost ; exhausted the ability of thel chartered banks to enlarge‘ loans and. while funds are avail- ' able in the capital markets at a price. a period of financial; tautness has settled on thcl country." ' lxon. IS nephew and two sons. William. 5 and Dav- id 13. were thrown into the wa- ter when their small outboard Mr. Dixon grabbed his two. sons and held them above his head until another son. 10. who witnessed the accident from the shore, came to their rescue in a row boat. After the boys were put into the boat. Mr. Dixon went looking for his ne- W 0 project officials who labored for months to perfect the most com ' and sophisticated space payload ever devised by the United States. If Mariner I had worked. it would have sped across a 224.- ooo.ooo - mile interp anetary course and passed within 1o.ooo miles of Venus on the intended target date of Dec. 8. CLOUD MASKS SECRETS The space craft's delicate measuring instruments were to have reachrd electronic fingers . the dense cloud layer! which for c c it i. urle s have secrets _of the planet from earth's prying eyes. In hangars at Cape Canaveral are another Atlas-Agena B and a Mar’ r II spacecraft. The National Aeronautics and Space la mate them and fire the rocket before Sept. 1o—the last day of a 50- day period when the earth and Venus are in favorable positions their orbits about the sun for such launtrhings. The period started Satlu'day. It will be early 1964 before scientists have another launch- ing opportunity. Asked at a press conference if Sunday's failure would delay the Mariner’: shot. an official said. “a lot depends on the evaluation of what went wrong." until his body was recover later. The accident occurred at approximately 6.15 p.m. for the appointment of Gen. Ly- man Lamnitzer as supreme commander of NATO forces in Europe. There seemed little doubt. that France will eventually endorse President Kennedy's choice. but de Gaulle notice he will not be hurried into it. A statement from de Gaulle's office showered praise on Gen.l j Laurls Norstad whose resigna- tion as commander was dis- closed Friday. It conceded that the supreme commander should be another American. then 3 Q. Q. “The' French government is currently exam ing the pro- posal whieh the American gov- ernment has made to it and to the other goveriilnentil of the North Atlantic Treaty organiza- tion. as to Gen. Norstad’| suc- eessor. “The decision of the French government on this matter will be taken in one pf the next cabl- net meetings." . In other words. Lemnltu-Jr’: appointment will not be con- firmed as olnckly as Washing- ton-and the NATO secretariat —-may have expected. Kennedy named Leinnltzer as the new U.S. commander - in- chief in Europe. This post and A Europe usually go together. The French cabinet normally meet on Wednesdays. and offi- clals of the Elysee Palace said there are no plans for any sea- slon earlier than next Wednes- day. Furthermore. the Elysee i 1 Dies Sciturda CAPE TORMENTINLVN. .. —- (CPI - Prominent Maritime businessman Carmen F. Dixon of Sackvllle died Satcndl! nllht at his summer home here. He was 50. Mr. Dixon. a lifelong resident of sac e. was president mugging director of Atlantic Who! I Lknlhil. He took control’ tbvflnn in IN? fol- VIHEII-TO-FIND-IT Anoncsniclls. comics. features »'Om8I'I page 7 ling: 00.. 4 W} W -up-one ' uainoeaouonon. . so sea.-ou- -oanasooonou . Owllll 1.1.. Dlxw Villa P”? r 5* SENATOR liosauclc ls ACTIVE AT 34 Senator Arthur Roebuck. 84- man of the busy divorce com- ar pposcd to ye -old Liberal. is o mlttce. he is his own best ar- the government‘: plan to have gument. He runs a law prac- retlro at 78. Chair- flea in Toronto. remains at -l l MOSCOW (Reuters) —— The? Soviet Union has announced a? tnew series of nuclear weapons. ltests which Western observers Lhere say may be designed to; lperfecl the anti-missile missile‘ lnussia has claimed to possess- ‘ since last fall. 1 The Soviet announcement Sat. l urday night. specifying no dates for the start of the tests. said TRussia would employ the latest types of weapons in the series l which it declared was 1»! reply‘ ‘to the latest American nuclear 2 tests in the Pacific. It was recalled that Premier, Khrushchev told A group of. American newspaper ed l to r s here last week that the Sovieti Union had an anti-missile rocket which “can hit a fly in outer‘ space." Mcanwhllc. another in Mar element was introduced into the what amounted claim to have developed a sub- marine mlssilc like the Amer- ican Polaris. first stlcccssflllly fired from a submerged U.S. submarine in 1960. There was no reason to doubt the Russian claim. Western ex- perts sald. ‘ 'll'IRED IN ARCTIC A Soviet announcement Satur- Iday said Khrushchev had fwatched submarine firings in ‘the Arctic Ocean. The Western .expcrts believed this was one s -laris-type missiles from sub- merged Soviet submarines. The experts said that while .thc Soviet Union had possessed .-missile-carrying submarines for three or four years. until now [its missiles had been thought tlve as a labor conciliation ex- 5 capable only of being blasted "3"" play’ 5°" ‘M "M" mPliilsrls has been cor eaoro) ‘ publicised as a top "deterrent" .. «:- ~ . IIEWSPBDPTS -~ !'of the first test firings of Po-' New Test Series Started By Reds weapon that s.'lIl‘iS mamiig the world underwater could not be knocked out by any I-I-bomb strike at nuclear missile and air bases) The Snvirl announcement on resuming nuclear tests was published Sunday in Russian unlike the last. series of atmospheric Soviet tests which began Sept. 1. 1961. and broke an unofficial three- year moratorium. Last fall‘: tests were referred to by Soviet news only some weeks later. Huge Oil Deal ls Proposed TORONTO tCPi ~Shell Oil Company of Canada Ltd. Sun- day annouviced its wholly-owned subsidiary Hesper Oil Co. Lid.. has made an offer to Canadian Oil Companies Ltd. to purchase all the latter‘: assets and busi- ness for npot-oximalely S114.- .000. Hcspcr would also assume all the liabilities of Canadian Oil Companics except for liability in respect of income tax aris- ing as a result of the sale. Canadian Oil Companies mar- licls its t|I‘0flll(.‘l.\ across Canada under the brand name of White ose. The proposal also provides that if an amalgamation of the two companies is effected within a specified time. sale of assets will not be completed but holders of the five- and four»- per-ceilt prcfcrencc shares and . common shares of Canadian Oil jwould receive redeemable pref- Eorofth .9... erencc shares of Canadian Oil. in ipauiy. at 0190 a dare. '