If it’: Good For the Island The Guardian‘\is For it “Covers Prince VOL. axxv. so. 114 PC lleclder Flavs Party CALGARY (CP)—The acting leader of the Alberta Progres- sive Conservative party said Wednesday that the national party has lost sight of Conserv- ative principles. shirked its du- ties and wandered into indeci- siveness. Writing in the Calgary Herald. Ernest Watkins said the federal party should return to the draw. ' land 8"? the firs‘ gm“? ii‘ “if He said Canadians in the June 18 federal election “told politi dians very clearly to go away and do some fresh thinking. and I for one do not feel disposed to argue with that verdict." Mr. Watkins. 60. is the only Progressive Conservative menr her of the Alberta legislature. He said. ‘‘I believe that a great Conservatives are unhappy over how many of our duties as a party we seem to have shirked." . Watkins said the public age of the federal Conserv- tive party before the last elec- on was "one of interminable binet meetings,‘ indecision. d a rather irritated su hen the inevitable bouts of ad- rsity appeared." esoge Urges ' rooer Action QUEBEC iCP\ -- Premiei . ean. Lesage said Wednesday ( he Quebec government doesn't tend to use short-term, arti- iclal measures to bolster a de- lining ‘agriculture industry. "In agriculture. just as in any other spheres. the age of alliatives is definitely over." e premier told a meeting of gricultural ministers from the 0 Canadian provinces. "Proper action must be based :1 deep and e lghtened think ng. Even if it must ‘be done uickly. we must avoid the mis- of acting without premedi- ' e on. - - ulatioa of short-sighted pol- ies." _ Alilarlaalaalgoulfla-Iallhha F. L. WAGSTAFF of th e treasury office. Ottawa. Keith ' M. Johnston. Chairman Fed- United Fund'were among ' ‘ those who attended a meeting ‘ eral Employees Di vision. ‘ The 2500 federal government up an organization for participa- ‘ tion in this Province’: United Fund appeal. which launches‘ ployees di the first campaign for October in a province-wide cooperative aalkllwidjipaataaa l Mayor A. Walthen Gaudet. R. ' E. Seller. President P.E.l. fund raising effort. it was learn- ] employees of Prince Edward .Is- Gd 1333 highl- F. L. Wagstaff of the comp- oller of the treasury office In I ttawa is in Charlottetown to as- | sist in organizing the federal em- vision. He has organ- iz-ed similar divisions in many cities. in Canada. along the line tr 0 Ponlfloallqasbai. not-. llsland Federal Employees l :Organize For United Fund 5 CHARL yesterday afternoon of the fed- eral civil servants representa- tives charged with arranging for fund participation. 4 l l of a system which has been op-I crating in Ottawa for many‘ years. . At a preliminary meeting at’ the division held yesterday.l Chairman Keith M. Johnston 1 presided and introduced M r. ; Wagstaff and representatives 5 of the various federal depis. To Get ., 4. Gran esrrtzflsn. top advisers Friday to_'conslde1' whether iorelax U.S. terms for rprice an atomic weapons test - ban ‘treaty with the Soviet Union. Press Secretary Pierre S ger said Wednesday about 10 to 12 key advisers, including de- fence and diplomatic officials. will attend the gathering. Salin- ger descrihed the meeting as ,one of a series of inside-the-gov- lernment discussions on how the ,U.S. position on a te - ban ‘treaty may be modified. A prior cabinet-level meeting of all agency chiefs concerned with the nuclear-test situation is scheduled for today. The White House announce- ment was accompanied by these developments: 1. U.S. disarmament chief William C. Foster discussed atomic test-ban safeguards at a closed session of the senate dis- armament subcommittee. The chalrman. Senator Hubert E. Humphrey (Dem. Min A. re- ported Foster said the United which would result in the S fates has not yet decided whether to modl the safe- guard proposals and still he- former Chief Justice ies After long illness MONTREAL iCB)—Rt. Hon. - - - udean Rinfrat. 84. retired llief‘ justice .of Canada. died ednesday in Montreal's Hotel- - .» Hospital after a long lil- galned international ' as one of the leading jurists. _ man, easily be was recog- -as an authority on con- ttttional law’ and on Quebec‘! .. . lcntgdbcivil Code. in was ' rm ‘Rpestori-lng . la Continues . Janina canoonao 7 U * CAP)-—'l‘be freckle-‘i - ‘hifllaflter whose severed t; restored to his. list In hack rm» that . (99,! series of newt -. atloiil; ' 3 Dr. amid A. Malt mg lvacg. _yem-glold vera , -loIf3.r..__\tfl is admit ' _:at-‘ to» s for .modt. ‘_ K‘ of the a philanthropist. a "sports fan. a lover of opera, and good lit- erature. a lecturer. But. more than that. he was - a man of international stature. and and l'.’~ to the judicial committee of the Imperial Privy Council in 1947. carried right hon- orable. The University of New York was one of eign institutions to award him honorary d ees. / As a member of the Privy .council. he "made almost an- —-—wAsmi~l _ \ dent Kennedy -will fiidet with several .for- M Test-Ban Terms Look lure needed to prevent cheating. . 2. Britain’: fordign secretary. lthe Earl of Home. told Parlia- l for iment in London that the United civil servants here. mm lstates and Britain may now NRECTOR COMING gpropose easier terms for a nu- cclear test-ban accord. but said .on-site inspections still will be ineeded. s’tia fill!”-‘spot iaspeétioas 1 I Present at the meeting repre-; senting the United r‘und of i P.E.l. was President R.E. Seller 3 and R. J. Rupert. the publicity; director. l Mayor A. Walihen Gaudet whol brought the greetings of the city. g traced the events which led~io§ the final forming of a United! Fund organization for the prov- gincou He, expressed thanks to Mr. Wagstaff for undertaking? the organization of the commit-= tee which would be responsible. the cooperation of federal Mr. Seller. reviewed the or-l ganizational progress to date and said the recently appointed executive director would arrive c 3. The U.S. government re- 1 in the city this weekend and fol-l -mained silent about a report on lowing his arrival. the details. th . e May 1 French atomic ex- l of the organization would be re-‘ sert. I viewed. further consolidated and The report. which contains a : some re ‘ technical data on detection of‘ tion work would begin. iplosion in the Sahara De the distant blast, bears on the current test-ban discussion. l tenslve prepara- The federal employees divi-E (Continued on Page 5 Col. til ETOWN, CANADA, THURSDAY, JULY 26, 1962. Likely In Algiers I is com-dim Edward Island Like The Dew” Tough Fight Se-en! ALGIERS (AP)—Deputy Pre- regular army. the backbone of‘ mier Ahmed Ben Bella claimed Ben Bella‘s movement. because’ power in this new nation Wed- it sat out the war in exile bases nesday and was reported to in neighboring Tunis and Mor-f have sent his militant Arab occo. l troops storming into the_east- Krim and Boudiaf called onl ern cities of Bone and Constan- the population to “mobilize andl ' organize in each town and vii- lage to form a common front." “We have no intention of starting a civil war," Boudiaf insisted. I But he said that, while his tine. ~ Vowing a fight "to our last drop of blood." two ministers of’ the tottering regime of Premier. Ben Youssef Ben Khedda ac-| cused Ben Bella of a coup] d’etat. They called on Algerians; government does not want a to rally against Ben Bella. |head-on battle with Ben Bella's But reports indicated Ben. forces. “if the other faction in- Bella already controlled three-l sists we will defend ourselves." i0l1l'th3 05 the 0011151‘? d was 1 The French were anxious on- planning to move his headquar-l lookers. for the formidable Ben ters within two days of this cap-‘ Bella is opposed to Ben Khed- Ital. which teetered on the verge da’s policy of future collabora- of chaos. - The two militant leaders of the moderate Ben Khedda re-’ SPEEDIREADING . Rev. M. J/Belalr. a Jesuit ‘ priest. has made speedreading an important part of the adult I _ studies program he directs at ; “M with France-. St. Mary's University in Hall- . _ fax. He became. interested in Units Oppose spcedreading while he wa s gime are Vice-Prel ~ier Bela- - - I f 1-‘ cem Krlm and Minister Moham- mlncma O 8 Ha 1 ax Dam: . chlal school and began teach med Boudlaf. FIOHI barricaded ed B mg it to adults in 1955_ eadquarters in Tizi Ouzou. 65 m e a 3 (CF PHOTO) h miles east of Algiers. they de- Nogm-gon snvnlv cnnrrs Parley On Disarmament Smashes Long Deadlock WEA THER Cloudy, showers and chance of a‘ thunderstorm in afternoon, coastal fog in evening. Low-high at Ch’town 52-75. 16 PAGES U.K. Plan Is Used On Compromise By BRIAN HORTON GENEVA iReutersi—The 17- nation disarmament conference broke a leng_thy proc ural deadlock Wednesday by dopi- g a British plan for reconcil- ing still - divergent East - West views. The 12-point plan. based on suggestions made by British representative Joseph Godber. was work ' thur Dean and Valerian Zorin, American and Soviet co-chair- .men of the conference. j Although both East and West have adamantly stuck to their previous stands on disarma- ._ment and colltrol measures, the lnew work plan will provide ma- jchlnery for arriving at com- promises. The conference. which recon- vened last week after a month- long recess. now has agreed on .a procedure akin to that which icarried the 14-nation Laos con- TIZI OUZOU. Algeria (Reu- ters)-Some 12.000 troops loyal; to the provisional government were reported Wednesday to be advancing on the eastern Alger- . ian city of Constantine. taken over during the day by forces backing the dissident deputy premier. Ahmed Ben Bella. A usually reliable source said the oop were making their. , _ move in support Of 3 gnvem. LONDON. (CP)—Prime Min- ment minister. Belkacem Krim. islet‘ Mficmman Wednesday 99”‘ deputy to Premier P-n Youssef tinucd an apparently iucqessflll gen xhedda_ campaign to restore confidence nounced Ben Bella’: forces as fasc . They said the port of Bone was under attack by Ben Bella forces and there had been many dead and wounded in fighting at Constantine. in the interior. Un- official reports reaching Algiers at!’ both cities had been lured by Ben Bella's men. Boudiaf called on former guerillas who fo u g h t the French for 7%’: years to form re- sistance units. Many of these guerrillas resent the Algerian G at ''l’ ,Dairy People Enthuse in his government. But today he will face dis- g untied members of his own party as well as open opposition from across the floor when Parliament debates in opposition motion to unseat the Conservativci Concerned with i-ritioism from fhis own men after his cabinet lpurge. Macmillan pacified his ‘lbackbenchers at a luncheon By ARCH MacKENZlE processors and manufacturers. lw::ne:TSa:““cd WT". b".‘,k.c_ OTTAWA (CF) -- Increased It denied claims that a "M gptbackg predicted a T0". consumption of dairy productslfacturers rather than dairy gwm “ me ‘next ‘demon “.3 indicates a strong position and jfarmers are getting the benefit ' hinted‘ at details‘ of Pconomic fxceuelgl P; 1.338? gt.’ foéoffif :mI’¥“fgBV°’"£“%‘t 5;:35idie;' lmeasures he is expected to put ra e. e an airy - o owe om on ureau eil of Canada said Wednesday .0!‘ Statistics figures showing . ‘°'g‘,:f‘.,f3n‘°,‘if'§’y‘d. former Chan- in a statement on behalf of its lthat consumption has picked .(.,,“m. of the exchequc,-_ was me '1 ‘Prospects Excellent’, 5 G r C ‘U TWO HIGH GOV’T. OFFICIALS By I-_n'ra:a Jolnvsolr M W (Reuters)—At least 10 Soviet citizens. including two Reds Get Death Sentenc For ribery, Speculation l..1;1“l‘§..‘:S“€i:’..J:..::fil death was 8. D. Dyushaliyev. ccused had stolen state property Mac Progresses ln lry lo Restore Confidence , members to fall under the Mac- Imillan axe July 13 and major [economic policy changes are to be expected. Most observers predict a na- , tional wages board. measures ,1 tr protect consumers and some 1 means of giving workers a J sense of security and status. ,‘ With his backbenchers calmed ; as much as possible and Britons l encouraged by economic an- nounce m e n t s Macmillan will then turn to the powerful trade unions. ui In detail by Ar- 3 ference to a successful conclu- lsion this week. Delegations now\ will submit ,‘dl-aft clauses to the co - chair- ‘. men. who will attempt to ham- jmer them into mutually-acceph lable formulas. The reworked fclauses then will be submitted lie the full conference. ‘U Thus. any agreed clauses will have surmounted the most for- midable hurdle—-approval of the two giants of East and West. .COVERS MUCH GROUND T The 12-point program range! over international verification‘ and time limits of disarma- ?meni, nuclear delivery vehicles. _conventional armaments. for- cign military bases. peaceful uses of outer space. reduction of risk of war and establishment .of an international disarma- ment organization. Zorin Wednesday reiterated a long - standing Soviet premise that there could be no agree- ment on disarmament which did- not provide for the elimination of foreign military bases in the first stages. . Godber retorted that Zorln's -repetition of the demand “is only getting us into increasing difficulties." . Hospital Fire is ’d ra matic’ 1 NEW YORK iAT'l-—A hospital fire Wednesday caused a dra- matic mass evacuation of pa- ‘t’«)nts--on stretchcrs. in wheel- chairs or walking. Doctors com- .;pleted one major operation vir- tually In the face of the flames. - The only injuries. described .as minor. were to two firemen. l I l l 3 than a year ago for butter. prices 12 cents a pound while; WORCESTER. Mam (AP)-—The Schultz family has an excellent chance to win the scat ' legislature representing the city's 10th ward. Both Edward G. Schultz and his wife. Mildred. are lin various items including but- 3 mos, p 1. 9 m , n ,. n I of cabinet fer but that output and stocks; also are substantially higher As of ‘Vlav 1 the government llmplemented a $42.o00.000 - a - 4 year subsidy c u H in g butter I I farmers continued to get is sup- {port price of 64 cents a pound; <‘ for top grades. ‘ isumption of butter." said presi- .dent Pierre Cote of the Dairy‘ former Chfilfmfifl 05* We |'¢Pllb- . worth more than 3.000.000 rubles lcouncii. 1 seeking nomination fur me 115'! State Plannins Commie - (about $3,360,000) and had used ICONSUMPTION UP _.ea.__,,., ,5 a Dem“... and 31 ' -it to acquire foreign currency? (‘go the last three months. she as ,, Repubucam .' on. The newspaper said the ac- .and gold for speculation. l ontinued on Page ; Col. 2; | By G. MILTON KELLY WASHINGTON (AP) - The ;Senate investigations subcom- mittee accused Teamsters Un- ‘ion President James R. Hoffa ‘Wednesday of corrupt and con- ; tinuing ties with New York mob- 3 ster Antonio (Tony Ducksi Cor- allo { The report to the Senate pic- itured Hoffa as a labor lcader cwho doesn't care whether ’.Teamster aides rob and cheat lthe union or indulge in under-‘ the-table payoff deals Chairman John L. 'McClcllan Wednesday. One official was K. D. Deg- tyarev. a former department on). ‘ Among the nine sentenced to ma] trips to the United Klug- dom to join in the bearing of important cases. It was said he visited a new country every summer either on business or for pleasure. Be rep Canada at the Cor- onation of Queen Elisabeth II. and fraud. it was learned here . qunsnc col‘) -0.: of the navy’: senior officers says can- WHERE-TO-FIND-l'I lI.npt|ceI.l! -AIIIGIEXI little. lentil. etc»... 3- 15 Classified .. . II. II Fiaaaoe. markets 11 cm. W -slogan Wold’! "C. V.-anon Kn” andtauoun U City. vODCIOOIlIC".'.C‘ ‘ 8. -V is -2 homes tobehuilt eoa- throughout. the province. for Ahoveisanaxteriorviewof .. . gee. .-3 is ‘- - SENIOR CITIZENS HOUSING ACCOMMODATION is a drawing of the floor plan. orator and an electric stove. homes will have central Each unit will have a living the four-unit homes and below heating and contain‘ a refrlg- ’room. bedroom. kitchen. bath- - I at room and closet space and a utility room with a washer and dryer. First of the units he built in Sourll aad -Tlfllall. Jimmy Hoffa Accused Of lies With Mobsters had held up filing the report for more than half a year. lest the publicity interfere with the trial in which Corallo was convicted -June 16. At that time Corallo was convicted with former New York Supreme Court Justice J. ‘ Vincent Kcough and Elliott Kah- ': ancr. former chief U.S. attorney ‘in Brooklyn. on charges of con- spiring to ix a federal court criminal case. The subcommittee‘! unani- mous findings reiected Hoffa’| . sworn denial that. he had sent this word to Corallo. the alleged :'(Dem. Ark.) told the Senate be real power in -New York team- st Local 239: “I don't care if you want to i—-you want to steal. you want lto rob. go ahead . . . don't get caught. don't get. caught." RECORD MESSAGE New York City police tele- phone wirctappcrs had recorded this message as allegedly passed along In Corallo by Ber- nard-Sterin. another New York Hoffa aide \vhn had just con~ jferredlnwashtngton with lliof . lKhrushchevs [Toast Yanks MOSCOW MP‘ Premier Khrushchev and his wife. Nina. gave an unprecedented country house farewell party Wednes- day for the retiring U.S. am- bassador, Llewellyn Thompson. land his wi . , They al.e an eight-course ter- race meal amid “interesting and useful talk." the ambass- dor said. Khrushchev told him ‘to "go home and tell President Kennedy what I said." Thompson. who leaves for home Friday. said his talk with Khrushchev covered all impor- tant. issues between the countries. ‘ In all. Thompson spent five hours during the day with Khrushchev—-the most time ,soviet premier ever has lav- lished on a departing dlplomd. llt was the first time. too. lhe has invited a departing am- lbassador and wife to a family llunch at his prlgpte daeha. Us- ‘ the premlafutertaina fut eignera at a two /.