Q If it's For the island. l . {The Guardian is for it voL. Lxxv. No. no v" Autograph hunters mobbed the members of t e aimed RCAF Golden Hawks when they made ctr appearance at the C ottetown Airport Sunday. The performance was said to have attracted} tar:-or crowd of spectators than any other event in the Is- Sackville Delegates Agree’ ———l-I-—HIH—I.—-CW-Q’ 1 Auroeiu.‘ 0 T T L lI&lflfl land's history. An estimated .000 persons attended the show resulting in cars being lined bumper to bumper for approximately four mil. Granting the autograph hun- ters’ wishes here are Flt.-Lt. George E. Miller, left. Ottawa. and Sqd.-Ldr. Lloyd J. Hub- lsoomuanlallu Ours. |.DE HAWKS Islfodtlllos snslcllilsuassostsgss an E k hard. right. Alberta, leader of the group. Other members of the Golden Hawks include Fl Lts. B.R. Campbell. John . Fraser. Norman J. Garriock. A.F. MacDonald and Edward L. Mcxeough. (See -also pic- tures and story on page 3.) Britain Will Enter ECM By IAN DONALDSON SACKVILLE. N.B. forum on Britain‘s proposed so- try into the European Common Market ended here Saturday night on a note of certainty that Britain will join the slx- the University of British Co- (CP)—-A' nation trading bloc. umbla n ’ "The Probability 1! that Within three-day Mount Allison Univer- two years Britain will be a member." saids Dr. N. A. M. MacKenzie, past president of Financial Plan Annoys Socreds OTTAWA (CP)—-A two - day caucus of the Social Credit Par- ty's 30 members of parliament ended here Sat hlings of discontent about finan- res among the 26 Quebec mem- bers. Real Caouette. MP for Ville- neuve and e party’s deputy leader. told reporters after the caucus that he is not pleased with proposals that Quebec So- rial Credit contribute $75,000 a ar s p 000 ad ministrsttvo and edifcstlonal fund ‘'In the past, the national organization has never helped us." he remarked. Party Leader Robert Thomp- son. asked about the financial wrangle. said the proposal will he put before the Quebec wlng's convention at Trola - Rlvieres next weekend. He said two- thirds of the amount would be spent in the Que cies and only “M” would go into the national Mr. Thompson basis of paying tion dinin- lstrative and educational costs being ronogotiatsd among tho I provincial sooidl Credit wtnss. 3" SEEK $1.000 IIACII ‘ Hitherto they have contrib- llled onlytflo s ysartto support vi the national association. They wore balsa flood to pot depression under up an average of federal constituency for constit- uencies where the party is well - organized Two-thirds of the sum would be spent in each constituency with the remaining‘ one-third- about $200,o00—-going to the na- tional treasury. The party also would establish branch offices, in Toronto with responsibility for Ontario and provinces west. and in either Montreal or Q bec City with responsibility Quebec and provinces cast. Saskatchewan and- Manitoba provincial associations had sp- provsd the plan; it was under negotiation with Ontario. Al- berta and British Columbia. Quebec would decide on it at rrois-Rivieres. Mr. Thompson said the Social in-edlt‘MPs will meet in caucus again Sept. 25. two days before the scheduled opening /of Par- llament. in a caucus-ending statement. ue- for tlve government's austerity pro- §':'p£opouu immediate relax- ation of austerity. immediate tax reform and establishment of municipal development and import-export banks as counter 31.000 Del‘ . chairman of the sity Institute on, the Common arket l “The decision on wh . her she 'c-nters is Bri ‘n's." Dr. Mac- Kenzie said. "It is not Canada's decision. e in Canada. ow- ever. will accept her decision. keeping in mind our own inter- ests." He said the move likely will have adverse short-term effects for some industry in Canada but h over-all should be beneficial. ‘ The suggestion that Br.itain‘s entry would bring about the downfall of the Commonwealth was a central theme in the forum after it was introduced [by Robert Thompson. national tleader of the Social Credit party. 4 NEED NOT HURT The conference heard argu- ments against this position and Dr. MacKenzie in his conclus- ions said "it need not lead to any great weakening of the Commonwealth.“ The Commonwealth was con- nected by more than economic ties. "these ties include those of spirit. background and senti- nc O! 0 . Dr. Macxenzle said the Com- monwealth countries should be prepared to " he chances-we will get nowhere by refusing to take chances. refusing to e - perlment and by refusing to co- I! operate. _ Michael Wardell. publisher of the Fredericton Gleaner and monthly Atlantic Advocate o in opposltiui to Britain's plan. c. said Canada would lose mil- lf Britain‘ Failure of the Britain f in entering it be I "deroliction of duty.” .‘ (Continued at Rage 5 col. 4) I>_ot_;ricM wnnsro iessuwn V H Talk Revives In Ottawa Fal‘l.Electi.on Considered I osvs . ‘ .. orrllws (CP) _°"3‘.’!'.'...... °°;I;mnsdsrs. 'onos mops. tbs-owopyourhsnds morsstsco!’ the r 0 long-term results - “Covers Prince °""""" CHARLO’l'l‘E'l'0WN, CA-NADA, MONDAY, AUGUST 20, 1962. c fiunrdiun Edward 'Isl_andLike The Dew" horn . _“generally good" condition. WEATHEI '5? except change torafowcloudyintnrvaiq iDl!mPerat1nio;watwindl 15. Low-high 57 and 57.. - Smallpox Case In Toronto Sparks International Alarm TORONTO tCP)—-The 14-year- Federal, old son of an Alberta missionary , metropolitan Toronto h e a l t h lcautionary measure. following was placed in hospital quaran-‘authorities are planning dsilyfa repo on. ml. tine Saturday with case of t meetings to assess the situation than been admitted to Toronto The boy's father. Rev. James . hospital as a suspected small- Robert Orr, has been quaran- pox (. se ' in an east-end Toronto A pub] Will likely be isolated here sail was doubtful that 15 days. He was ‘the mother or the children. could have transmitted the dis-‘‘ ease to anyone on the trip west or after their arrival here. He said usually a person has to be an active case before they ‘ can be classed as a carrier. But if other members. of the family come down with an ac- tive case of smallpox here. ad- has smallpox. 8‘ _?_-[REE HILLS. /‘ml (Cm_ ‘ditional steps may be taken. ‘i will be made today to confirmiPublic health officials have NEW YORK tAPi—-The US. the diagnosis. vaccinated about a dozen per-;public health service Sunday‘ W. Ber|.iners Renew travellers who might have had health spokesman? the fined ic contact wit boy or his home and it . for at le James William Orr was ad. en route Al erta from a five-year stint in the jungles of Brazil when his son became ill. Three other members of the family who were with the boy— Mrs. Orr. son Joseph. 13, and daughter Dorothy, 9—were re- Ontario health minister Dr. ported under quarantine at the Matthew Dymond said Sunday tfamily home in Three Hills, Orr l been in dian boy pox. ' The victim. 15-year-old James l William Orr. spent some time 5 in New York on his way to Tor- Five Killed T On Highway HANOVER. Ont. (CP) -— Five Persons were killed and another! seriously injured in an auto- mobile accident about 21/4 miles south of here Saturday night. Rodi Blagdon, 35. his wife’ Angela. 30. an two of their. sons Randy. 9. and Rory_ 4. of‘ Kitclicner. ‘died in the crash. A third son. eight-year-old Ricky. is in lzospitai in serious condi- tion with head injuries. he fifth victim. was Charles Zippcl. 26. of Hanover. §Boy Survives ’Fall Over Cliff . ST. J_oHN's, Nfld. (CP) -- Georncsnrodge. 14. of St. ditiou in hospital Sunday follow- - 5 ill 100-f lifl ° " i.'.‘.“...“...“...:’.¥.f1’ .3. ......'.’:’.‘...‘’...£. Die In Fire After Crash l determined back injuries. ,lFlooci Takes Heavy Toll In Colombia BOGOTA. Colombia -Officials reported 41 persons dead and 136 missing Sunday- night in a roaring flood. appar-l ently from a burst dam. that trapped sleeping residents Florencia early Saturday. More than 3.000 of Floren- cla’s 20.000 people were .re-. ported affected. including thosei ft without homes or food. Doc- . fAP)—— chiti: broke out amon children who were! refugees mm the waters. More than l.000 cattle died and 30.000 tons of rice_were des- troops in two attempts to drag n to bloclrr the‘ return o Chatham men re deatl. Sunday when their light] airplane crashed into a hydro; field near here I Dca I33- ljenrv lDale Sparks. Stewart Sparks. of after its the four came up to him to ask for tiirections._ plane. Crlch-said t:he plane be- tors said an epidemic of bron- ; firms airborne but it could not i 2 c ear it onto. ‘ The New York City healthl idepartment. although s a y in g éthere was no cause for alarm, since the ' movements in the city were limited. set up eight ‘vaccination centres in.‘ Manhattan. The public for any persons who might have : ' contat w't na- believed to have small- . BERLIN (Reuters) .._ Angry I chased by hundreds of Berliners, West Berliners Sunday night when it entered the West halfz‘ milled around "Checkpoint of the my _ ; Charlie" in i U.S. sector. . lwashington said On. waiting to ambush a returning;AsK ACTION th U_s. at New york-S 1.119. Soviet bus already battered byl Another crowd of more than wild airport from Bra,“ on! a fierce stoning at the crowd’sl8,o00 West Berliners marched ‘ Aug 11 and spent much of the; hall. ion the city hall Sh0l|ll|lE- "Hf? day in Grand Central Station The Berliners were balked by , tion. action." “the United Na- before boarding a train for Tor-i West Berlin police and U.S.i (Continued on Page 5 Col. 3: ‘onto. 3 the wrecks of old cars into the ” 'i°‘“ii‘Space Twins’ Relax through the East-West crossing my the} d 'The Soviet vehicle. on s dat trip with relief guards to ::'.i:;:".::::.,i:.°;:°:‘::.‘.:::i*'Afier Huge Reception f John's. was in satisfactory con- t By JOHN MILLER _ MOSCOW (fieute,-5)_.R.ussia's.raise with the UN Acting space twins took it easy Sunday t1‘el8I‘l'-(_3*’-l’_l€1‘-'=1l- U Tham- ]after their seven-hour ordealghefe Wllhm "19 '19“ _”'_d3_3’5- before millions of earth-bound.‘ There ll?‘ been "0 "‘d‘°3“°“l ‘admirers Saturday, ;here-—despite Western reports—; . Maj. Andrian Nikolayev and 5 that‘ Khrustlltchev ll‘llC(llClS it; :33“ -- - l. 1 P ‘h. ..%var in e '9" ‘ CLIMON om" (CP) Tteiioiilitirciceii otiieavtit Mcllslitiivxiis m:.:tlAssembly in New York next’ memorable and exhausting wel- f month. _ ‘ I comes, were reported to beg Saturday s celebrations wound: relaxing with their families at up with *1 back-Sl_aDP'"R N’-C99"; . country homes near Mo5cnw_ _ilOl’l llfl ti.'i"l8 l\lI‘1€mllfl that lastcdi p ' xh 1, h‘ 'ed.ncary ree ours. d are Raymond J" sparks’ ithe rtfcncliaesrion 0fn§:l.l(il‘(::y'SsTll:f!.e ;'mThrls.uta' lll0uSal;1d r:icr]sn:: xlidsir . - . _ ‘ : egtermgcancie . Men" Sp‘;ll's',.,2:,' 35:2: liieerihwslliiliriiirarfilirllgollhzatllig sill. ‘ George‘: Hall raised cham- '_ iviet Union would .'gn a scpar- Dal-the tllasses in hone}: of th: The p]&ne landed in . field ‘[ate peace treaty with East }:Ieaven_lY brothers. e spac ' engine oVenhea¢ed_ [Germany if there was no agree-t W|ll.5- . . ‘ t Ray cricm 1g_ said one 0; mom with the West on the» with dramatic timmg. the lGerman question. Soviet government announced. ‘ The Soviet premier also re-‘that an unmanned satellite- entered we turned to his proposal that .‘ Cosmos VlII—had been success-L ' troops under the United Nations . fully orbited to collect scientific t flag should shoulder responsibil— I data on the upper layers of e t ties st Berlin--providing. earth's atmosphere. ‘h 1 cm le after taking off from at and his-three nephews, The man re - hydro wires. it turnc 1" we‘ _._hm.p.v M "Md them and ;‘ the troops were not from that Khrushchev welcomed . Struck the pole. bursting mo aggressive NATO milllaryi at the airport with kisses and« flames I I bloc. . 9 | hugs and then tlooktsecontd triage . Clinton is MY miles northwest » Mg? P0INT'h -d ad I ‘[39 I p Ellie nn;°_g:fie,e, or swim” servers ere most or , a, rove aong g | troyed. authorities said ltbat this would be one of theiroute. into Moscow. | I noonourlmtdsoccessttnoony supplistlbvflss. Sovietncws plottoodtmlsoooeslmby scene! l Wh- TOMBSTONES . PUT INTO KIT 7 JOHANNESBURG (AP) -- What is claimed to'be th . dis first "do it yourself" A tombstone kit goes on sale ere ay. Selling for £7 10d it is ex- Dected to shock traditional monument makers here whose prices generally start 10 times this figure. Consisting of fully inter- locking paving stones. head- stone, plinth and border. the t can be erected by an un- skilled person tha one hour. says inventor Hen- sleigh Walter. A8-year-old Jo- hannesburg civil engineer. Walter told the Johannes- burg Sunday Express: “This ' ea came me year when I was walking through a cemetery “I saw an old-age pensioner placing a jam jar full of flow- 5 C v-s - ford to perpetuate her hus- band's mcmory with m than a simple. wooden cross." Tribute Paid To Dead In ' lD'ieppe Raicl l DIEPPE. France tCP)~(3ana-. dians. Frenchmen and tourists, an anniversary tribute to thel men who died on the beaches} of Dieppe in the Second World} War raid of 20 years ago. .' They came by the thousands in the beaches in honor the dead_ and . c .r the survivors of. the nine-hour raid that com-i menced at dawn on Aug. l9._ 1942. and claimed 3.374 Cann-l dian casualties killed. woundedl or taken prisoner. l Two minutes before 2 p.m.: Sunday three jet fighters flewj low over the seafront and dropped wreaths marking the} moment 20 years ago when the: last gun in the battle was fired. the grey morning when they‘ disembarked from 252 little. elships sailing out of Englanditn and headed up the main Dieppe beach and the flanking beaches, in the face of heavy fire from the occupying Germans. Sunday. as they gathered on the broad strip of lawn separ-' sting the beach from the boule- vard with its bank of hotels overlooking the English Chan- nel. the sun was beating down, through billowing white cloudsl and the temperature at midday climbed to 80 degrees. ‘ . main commemoration ceremony shortly before. noon consisted of Roman Catholic and Protestant services before‘ an improvised altar midway: along the lawn and against its backdrop of the towering chalk- while cliffs that dominate the‘ whole stretch of beach. . - 12 PAGE One Boy Escapes Death «As 18 Drowned On Picnic Details Recalled Are Few QUINCY. Fla. (AP)-:-ssvesh teen children and their Sunday school teacher. on a churc picnic outing. were drowned Saturday when their small boat filled and sank without warning in a deep lake. Seven of the children were from a single family. Ages of the children ranged’ from five to 14. All were No- were drowned when the rear end of the outboard- ore ‘equipped 14-foot boat plunged e water and~ suddenly into spilled them into the lake. 300 eet 9 sh re. _ Eleven - year - old J e r o m I Maples. a small. shy. fifth- grader. was the lone survivor. He told Sunday how he grabbed a side f the boat as it bobbed out of the water and held on to it desperately until two fishermen rescued him. Jerome said he was sitting -next to the Sunday school super-“ _ ‘ on holiday h re from all verilfltehdent, 25-year-old Joseph Mam‘ m.‘.'.'.°t§.§§ the world cofnbined Sunday) inlB°”“’» ‘”h° ‘"35 °1’eratl“3 the''_ boat. when he felt the rear and suddenly sink as some of the other passengers moved sud- denly toward them. GRABBED BOAT "I.didn't know what happened‘ irst." he said. licking a candy sucker. “I heard a couple- of them yell out ‘help me‘ and they all tried to grab hold of Mr. Bouie. I was by myself and when I came up on of the water I was by the boat, and grabbed hold of it. I don't really remember much after that." Bouie was the only occupant of the boat who could swim. But he. didn't have aa chance. 'main points Khrushchev would F0’ m3"Y_'_‘f. ll“? _C-‘madlan Skin divers who recovered the ‘ Sec- 5 V€l9l‘31l-S 1‘€Vl51l1l‘E Dieppe W‘ bodies said they found one child dueihe first time. the scene wasjn his strikingly different from that of 0 arms. A small boy was n his back with his arms tightly clutched around Boue’s neck. A small girl held tightly his waist and a boy had grabbed hold of one of his legs. The 18 ' is given a mass burial Thursday at a small cemetery adjoining the Blessed Hope Church. WHERE-TO-FIND-IT Announcements. notices 10 Births. deaths, etc. . 3-ll Classified 10-1! Comic features City. Queens .........'.......'.'.~.'. Editorials ...... nce Co.. Sport QDUQUOQC - - - - --voous-sussssc- Mrs. Finkbine Is Said S‘l'OCl\'I-IOLM. (Reulersl ‘ Mrs. Sherri Finkbine was "feel-‘I ing fine" Sunday after her; legal Swedish abortion. l Her husband. Robert. said the. 30-year-old Arizona television: performer had no fever "orl complications whatever" follow-‘ ing Saturday's abortion of that unborn child which proved to have been deformed. The Vatican radio meanwhile ‘crime “It is impossible to give an- other definition of what. hap- pened yesterday st Caroline of Stockholm. Ewe den.“ the radio said. ' “Morally. objectively. it is an all the grsver crime because It was committed legally. "Nobody doubts that what happened in Stockholm yester- day was counselled by senti ments of humanity. but only a deviation from the truth can suggest killing for humanitar- ian sentiments." I-‘El-lt. N0 GUILT At his wife's bedside. Fink- bine commented later that “Sherri and I feel we have committed no crime." "i the views of the Vatican.“ he added. "At the some time I hops they respect snd,Pavel Popovtua. l uomxnuotuenrouo Ilstsvlsrololrsmmoscowl |fused In Arizona. because described the abortion as at I II _ line After Operation -mine also." He is a member of the Unitarian Church. Finkbine said both he and his wife feel ' xtremely relieved now that it is all over—-all the more so since we know that tho baby-to-be was in fact de- formed." The Finkbines came to Sweden for a legal abortion, re- the! feared the unborn baby would be deformed after a. Fink- .bine took thalidomide early In ;her pregnancy. Finkbine said his wife would spend up to a week in the hos- ‘pital. l "I imagine she can have otha ‘children later. . . . But other children are something we think about in the future Finkbine. a high school teacher and football coach. said the story of his wife's espri- ences has been syndicated tel use In many countries and an American women's msgssino. Redbook. was negotiating with the couple for United States rights to the story. "We had to do that or elsl spend the next three or four years must