" ls Scheduled .For Feb. ZZBlacklist . If it's Good For the Island The Guard tan is For it @1118 (portraits: ‘ WEATHER Overcast with a few snowi‘lurries. clear- ing in afternoon; turning colder; light winds. Low-high 2.3 and 30. “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” VOL. LXXVI. N0. 9 Authorized In Second 01 lawn. and tor payment of pos‘ago In A Class Mail by the Poet (1H1? Department. FRIDAY, JANUARY 11. 1963. mmmxz SEVEN CENTS 12 PAGES MemorialBldg.Sod Even’r Chief ' ' ° - - RB, 5.anfield And Lesage. Serious Cri5is Over Berlin A sod-turning ceremony 0; mark the beginning of construc- 1 tion of the Fathers of Confeder-l ation Memorial Building in Charlottetown will take place Saturday afternoon. Feb. 22. Dr. . Frank MacKiniion. Foundation president, yesterday. Scotia's Premier Robert Stanfield will turn the sod and the address for the occasion will be delivered by Quebec Prem- ier Jean Lesage. Dr. MacKinnon said Prcmicr \ Stanfield ‘will be acting in his \‘x capacity as ch airman of the \F conference of provincial prcm- _ iers. scheduled for Halifax later said i this year. Premier Lesage was‘ chairman of the 1962 confer- ence held in Victoria. B.C. . "The ceremony." said . MacKinnon. “will begin in I», Confederation Chamber in the ' Province Building and adjourn to the nearby site for the actual turning of the sod.’ According to Dr. "the day will also luncheon given by the provin- cial government and a dinner. given by the Fathers of Confed- eration Memorial C i t t z ens Foundation. D r. MacKinnon, include a "The official party will also he opened on .lan. 23 in a pub- by May 1964. Twenty-one c on- i "‘1 attend a performance by th e ‘lic ceremony in the Queen Eliz- ltractors have taken out plans." ‘ “19 {moral commissm" inVeStl‘ Memori a l ‘ the ‘ i y. , PREMIER STANFIELD Canadian Opera Company of Mozart's “Cosi Fan Tutti" which takes place at Prince of Wales College that evening. . “Tenders for the Memorial Building contract will he in by midnight. Jan. 2. and they will ~abcth Hotel. Montreal. The con- PREMIER LESAGE lizally ithe union—without a fair trial. tractor will be selected on Jan. .28 by the project's board of di- .rectors. ‘ i “Inc of the stipulations of ;the tender documents is that the building must be completed Gov’i 01 £th0 Demands Recall t 01 British And Belgia ‘- LEOPOLDVILLE tReuiei‘slm \‘The central Congolese govern- ment Thursday vlciiiandeJ 1h.- recall within 24 hours of the British and Belgian consuls in Elisabethvile. as the United Na- tions announced the start of a new advance in its military op- eration in secessionist Katanga province. Katanga Pre'sldéntMot'se Tshombe preceded an armored column of UN forces into Mo- ambo. an important communi- cations centre 110 miles south- east of the Katangan capital of Elisabethville. and other orces marched northwestward the asi Katangan stronghold of Kolwezi. i In Leopoldvllle. the Congolese foreign ministry said Foreign Minister Justin Bomboko called ‘Ill the British and Belgian am- bassadors and told them they 3 had until todav to remove their .consuls from the strife-torn cap- fital of Katanga. I The British consul is Derek iDodsom ' eo against Belgian consul Freder- tick Vandewaal had heen.issued 1 Wednesday. _ Vandewaal had not yet been ‘accredited to his post so the chlgians were told he would not gbe. acceptable. AGIVE REASON FOR STAND A bulletin issued by the offi~ i l Denies By ROBERT RICE The b front union chief stuck to his de- t the federal marine in- quiry even when confronted with a 1.100-name list of sailors said to be “black-bailed" from their jobs. The list was prepared by in- vestigators for Mr. Justice T. orris from the SlU's own files. Charles Dubin. counsel for the inquiry commission. waved the list before Mr. Banks and charged that. it was a blacklist of scam 11 who had been ille- dcprivcd of their jobs by Mr. Banks admitted that the SIU once maintained a "do-not- ship" blacklist. but insisted it was abolished in 1954 after the courts ruled it illegal. l a great many persons the DNS in 1949-50." he told gating labor strife on the Great Lakes. “1 never put anybody on the‘ DNS since then." Thursday's hearing was the‘ E 75th of the current inquiry. or-l dered by the federal govern~i ment after organized labor. complained about violence and strife in the marine union field. ' continues. n Consuls . cial Congblese news agency I‘garel Snaps ACP said the declsmn was due' to the political position adopted by the two men. who have been acting as guaranto s for Tshombe since his rot rn to Elisabethvillc from 10 days of voluntary exile It waslearned later in London m that Britain 30%“ representations to the Congolese government to allow its Elisa- bethville consul to remain in the Katanga capital. Tshombe preceded the UN column to the Katangan-Rhode- sian border town of Mokambo. stopping 12 times on route to tell his Kaiangan forces not to resist the UN troops following l ‘Idandef CAPITAL BUREAU OF THE GUARDIAN OTTAWA —- A prince Edward Island citizen's culture Minister Alvin Hamilton was praised here Thursday by Mr. Hamilton. in an interview with the Guardian‘s Ottawa Bureau. Mr. Hamilton said that e. has made a consistent practice of writing to hundreds of people all across Canada. asking them to make suggestions and com- ments on ways to improve agri- cultural conditions. “ role to the. P.E.I. man and he. was kind enough to re- ply.“ the Minister said. “His letter was an excellent one and contained half a dozen worth- while suggestions." Mr. Hamilton said the man discussed the. fact that. P.E.I. agriculture. was too dependent on potatoes and urged th at steps be taken to use more feed grain in an enlarged cattle in- o,“ Gustry. , All the suggestions flint have i i MONTREAL iCP) Sir Ar- thur Vere Harvey. chairman of n special British parliamentary defence committee. said Thurs- day he is "convinced the Sky- bolt wasn't ditched on account of technical troubles." Sir Arthur. in Montreal “on gel-sonal business" en route to ritlln after talks with officials of the Douqu Aircraft Corpor- otion in Los Angeles. .aid ii :‘ri n on the announce- Skyholt had bcen ‘ . 31 red and a later report which sold it exploded in the air. the British defence ex- Ind forum- nlr commodore the RAF. aid: ."1 have one. or two situations to make to our defence dinner when 1 got I! mot “III the film fl Ho onto the 11.5. government‘s decision to oil of! the bolt mid wholly leave 11.8. M Mr Consumed letter to Agriu Hamilton Praises be him. “It was a picnic. said Colonel Worku. comander o the Efihi- ' UN troops who trailed Tshombe. The UN took the town without a shot being fired. a '9 m i: 5 Letter merit are passed on by the min- ister to the. experts in his de~ ‘. partmcnt for study. He. said that 1 on more. than one occasion. such suggestions have later been in- :corporated in government agri- 1 cultural legislation. " 9 Opposition is watching my department closely to see if I am spending a lot more on my information and public relations services." Mr. Hamilton - mentcd. "But I have held th e line on this and instead use the direct approach by letter. per- sonal mceting and discussions with farm groups and leaders to find out the thinking of the Can ndian grass roots." He said that Opposition spok- esmcn have referred to him as bumbling and naive for some of the things he has said and done. "I suspect the truth is that am about as bumbling fox." Mr. Hamilton said. not make major speeches announce any new ideas without having discussed them thorou- ghly beforehand with the people most vitally concerned." ' Skybol’r Ditching Is Seen l Not For Technical Cause gap [in British strike capabilityi LONDON (CPl _. The com ibomber force as powerless as ithe RAF's Vulcan bombers. :program caused a crisis in the 3United Kingdom and defence service—expected to be about experts said it would leave a 19 0. Britain Plans To Build Four Polaris “'ASHINGTON (AP! A member of the British Parlia- t said Thursday Britain plans to build four submarines capable of firing Polaris mis- siles. He estimated their cost at about 8700.000.000 .luliiin Crilchley. a Conserva- tive MP. 1! the cool will work out roughly the some no what Britain would have had to spend to mount the now-discarded Skyholt nfissllc on Its Vulcan bombers. I I 31 l handonmem or me skybnn, |misslle becomes obsolete and Yanks Plan Mars Probe . WASHINGTON IAPi ~ The. United States space agency vised its program of interplanet- ary exploration Thursday. drop- ping plans for another Venus shot and ordered a Mars flight instead. The “complete success" of the Mariner II flight. which passed Venus Dec. 14 at a distance of 21.594 miles. was given as the primary reason for the change. Russia launched a Mars probe in December. This fact probably had an ef- fect upon the National Aeronau- tics and Space Administration change in plans. but spokesmen for the agency declined to com- mrnt on such possibilities. NASA said that insteid of re.- peatlng its Venus mi sion in 964. as had been planned. ef- forts will be concentrated “on further projects such as the Mars mission also planned for re- Fire In Palace LONDON tAPi—Fire blazedi through the roof of Kensingtoni Palace Thursday and broughti Princess Margaret out on the street—eagerly snapping photo- “ , Flames gushed sortie 30 feet into the air from the palatal roof. A loo-strong force. of fire-l fighters rushed to the scene. L smashed holes in the roof and. poured in water. . It took less than an hour to. bring the blaze under contnol.l Margaret. in headscarf and lop- 3 coat. stood almost unoticedt among the crowd of spectators; and trained her camera at the1 firemen. t MILK SUGGESTED; day that he has disclosed con-. fidential information regarding? Canada‘s NATO role. but called for a halt to the controversy A resolution that milk should replace pop in re- gional high schools. brought an unusual debate at the Federation of Agriculture meeting here last night. "I have seen one brand of po on a rusty bolt." Roland MacDonald. South- 1 ort I) “But the parents drink WP." Lincoln Dewar ob- i J: served and Louis O'Connor. Clinton completed the brief debate with “Some parents don't stop at pop either." The resolution carried. 1964. and later Venus missions judge of the Supreme Court. ofi with an advance Mariner space. Canada. craft." New Judge Sworn In OTTAWA tCPI—Mr. Justice. Emmett Hall. former chief jus-l tlce of Saskatchewan. was‘ sworn in Thursday as a puisnet i The. 64 ~ year - old. white-i thatched jurist took his place-in. Canada‘s highest court after a meteoric rise as a judge in the. Saskatchewan Court of Queen’s Benc the Snskatchewanl Co al. when the present Blue Steel before the Polaris comes into Submarines Critohley said that in the long run t I be greater be- cause of othtr measures Britain expects to take close an expected nuclear deterrent gap. This gap looms between the time the Vulcan bombers lose their potency about 1967 and about the time the first British Polaris submarines Ire ready. perhaps in 1970. He italic-ted the kitten prob- ably would foot the $700,000,000 British Cold ls Unobated snap that bit into Britain l'li‘f‘!’ weeks ago continued unabated Thursday and the weatherman warned that no relief is in sight. Most major roads throughout the country were clear of snow. although 70-mile-an-hour winds in the. southwest falls re- ported in several areas. » INSIDE TODAY Announcements. IMIces . 11 Births. deaths . . . . . . ., . ‘ Classified . . . . . . . .. 10. 11 Rural churches . . . . . . . . .. 11 Co .. . . . . . . . . . . .. 9 Finance. Market. . . . . . . .. 11 Ed :1: .: . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 5 cm- “‘09.. ........... ‘ Kings County ..... .. 4 omen ........... .. 8 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 9 Womens' . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 1 bill themselves t“ Predicted By Red Paper OTTAWA rcei — President: Hal C. Banks of the Seafarers" ' International Union of Canadai ; Khrushchev Confers urly. 54-year-old water-l M Alumni Dvorkin of}. looks Skyward through a hole in the snow on the side of his car and seems to be uttering a AS CALGARY STORM ENDS Calgary “WWHUQIBWP. will-:be no :M-milo-au-hour .wini‘is. more'storms like. the one. which ended yesterday. Four inches of snow was driven by 3;}... - as! #5? .. ' at”; ’2 'l‘cni- perafures were from 15 to 25 below zero. (CP Wircplioto) Breach OI Trusi Charge Denied By Gen. Foulkes VICTORIA ICPI G en.iplancs. Brit they haven't hnuglil‘ got into the dispute Charles Foulkes denied Thurs-the ammunition over nuclear weapons. ' G “It‘s time we stopped tliisisions w nonsense." he said Thursday in cnhakcr an it "There's no official secret. connected \\'II the fact that. Canada made an agreement with NATO." CITES OCCASIONS en. Foulkcs cited two occa- defence and former interview from his hometminisler George Pcarkcs told crc. the agreement was Gen. Foulkcs. former chair—i being marlin-Feb. 20. 1959. and ; Parliament man of the Canadian chiefs of‘ Aug, 5. 191-10, staff committee. said he has. The dispute flared last week hcn Prime Minister Dief- Thursday ~ With Poli WARSAW (AP) ——v Premier Khrushchev broke a train jour- ‘ncy to East Berlin for secluded ltalks Thursday night with Po- ‘lish leaders as the Soviet. ‘govcrnmenf newspaper lzvcstia :warncd that 3 Berlin crisis ‘morc dangerous than the one ‘ovcr Cuba may be coming. Since it became known that thrushchev would attend the. ‘ sixth East German Comniu'i st .party congress next week spec- iulation has mounted that the lSoviet leader would make it itlic scene for a new effort to ‘settle the Berlin problem. His stopover here. his first visit to the Polish capital since 1959. was viewed as a prelim- inary to a possible East bloc summit meeting in East Berlin. Tall. of such a summit in- creased when it was reported the Polish party leader. Wlady- slaw Gomulka. may attend. summit was indicated. how- ever. when Antonin Novotny. the Czechoslovak party chief. arrived in Moscow Thursday en route to Indonesia. Cambodia. North Viet Nam and Burma f. r a series of Southeast Asian visits. Khrushchev. is expected to .rcmain here until the weekend. iCAUGI-IT BY SURPRISE l The. Soviet leader's decision lto stop in Warsaw apparently ' no flags or banners out for him I and only a few hours before his : pic'in the official Polish press iagency said it had no details F f his visit. 1 The official Polish press iagciicy PAP said Khrushchev and his Polish hosts immedi- atcly went into seclusion at an undisclosed resort in Olstyn province. about 75 miles north- f Warsaw. ‘ The seclusion only heigtitrncd cials by surprise. There were an impression of the sci-hm. ness of the talks. I , lzvesfia said the issue in chrlin “is not merely prestige. iblli peace. or a military crisis1 ttawa by saying that if rco Will?“ may . . more ccnt remarks attributed to Gen. ‘ “Mm-V and d'mm” t‘.‘ "W" .Foulkos are “accuraipiy r9. (isomth than the one in the 1 .. . .ari scan, ‘ported . the General had no " suggest“. that Khrushrhw iright to disclose cabinet defencc again may urge that a United ; committee discussions. Nations command rcplacc .ANNUAI. MEETING IS HELD That it will not be a complete caught Polish government offi—i lllf“ sh Chiefs . French command. or what Mos- cow calls the NATO command, in West Berlin. Thei'c was some talk here that Khrushchev may take up the ideological split with Red China and some internal Polish party difficulties while on his visit. Wif— Centenary 7 Observed By CAROL KENNEDY LONDON (Cpl—One-hundred years ago Thursday. the world’s first underground railway was o cried here. changing the lwholc pattern of living in Met- ..ropolitan London Little ceremony marked the ‘centenary of the “under- ; ground." or subway. Likely, i few of the thousands of commu- ters who use the system daily i knew of the. ocrasion when they .set out from their homes for work Thursday morning. Messages of congratulation: lwcrc received by ndo transport executive from sub- .way systems in other world ,‘citics. The Mosc’ow system'cic ‘blcd "cordial greetings to em- ployces of London transport on the centenary of building the first underground system in the world." The first line ran from Bish- ops Road. Paddington. in West London. to Farringdon Street in the busy financial district. It was 3': miles long and was built in two years by title ‘cut- and-cover” method later used in building Toronto's subway. STARTED 1N SCORN The forerunner of London‘s huge underground syss tcm. which now carries 675.000.- 000 passengers a year over 244 miles of track. came rinto being present B r it i s h - Americane IContinucd on page '1 col. til Finances Pose Problem commander. on the implications . never attended a cabinet mccl-;whcn Gpn‘ Nnrstad said Can_ mg- “is 51-319mm” this WN’klada‘ is committed to a nuclear about, Canada's role in o f h“ . NATO role in NATO. . ; “an.” mm a . “ohm: or me, Gen. Foulkcs Inter f'OnlIl‘mf‘fI o r a r m e e e r a I o n cabinet and himself by Gen. AToiGcn. Norstad's statcmcnt. say- iing he had attended 1958 mcci-i ings at which Canada‘s nuclear“ role. in NATO was settled. Lauris Norstad. then year to the idea that farmersitioiiedwbccause the federatqu By NEIL MATHESON V . would he more ready to haveps helping to make peace With 0‘ "1" N""“ Atlantic Trealy- Farm and Provincial Editor Thai “'35 “(mile 9‘ dilloranl. . . i . 1 'Vin the 5.00 membershi deducted the hoof PFNIIICCFS- Bl“ 0m” thing" from a cabin” meeting]. Mali-Gem w' H' w" Miulklm {allth 1131:3222: foiorftlicmigle‘dcr: from$ their c rear: chequcs’spcakers failed to back the idea. he said. .53 "1, Tfil'm' " “ml GUM“) of Agriculture is facing now that they are rid of theand several suggested that tho “I "awn" mad" any di“"'"'iFOUIkcss disc-Insure was the new board of directors .548.th hospital insurance tax big packing firm might not con- s"re "I any discussion in cabi'lbrcad‘ Of mnndmcn with whom the problem was imposition. .sidcr the federation was doing “9" - Gen- Fn'flkes "cmrlm Ilm'llefi yesterday. following a dis-‘ It was Earl lngs. Mt. llcru‘aiiythin: to liclp the plant “It's true the government lias‘Gcn. Macklin is not qualified tot cussion that ram“! 8 . be” who suggested the packing \'\I‘|(‘Il it “as trying to help (110 agreed to a nuclear role for the criticize his statement. ‘suggcmm maL Canada Pack; plant he“. should (Imam a j be” producer; get better . . . . 1 air force. They bought the air- Defence Minister Harkness. prices for their livestock. crs should contribute $1.500 a large amount—$1.500 was mcn- Tlic too-cration sponsored the lhccf producers who formed jthcii- nwn provincial organin .tioii here last month. The fcdcration ended the year Willi an operating deficit of $011.09 \iliicli makes a total deficit of 52.89813 FEES DECLINE individual membership fee .- al $5.00 HDIQCE‘. fell. off in 1962 to $7,311.50 ' 1915.1, There was a almost $630 last year, tContiniicd on page .1 (ol. New Officers Of Federation Are Elected Sm Ill Mar-Farlane. Harring- |ton, was elrctcd preSIdent of ifllf‘ Iii-ll, Federation of Agric- 'iilturc hcrr last night. Jack Rodd. Milton. is first Vice-presi- drnt. Fcntoo Mayne. Emerald. t is second vice-president a n d :Gczirge MacDonald. St. Georges is the immediate past president. Eric Hammill. Emerald. is -: ipresident of the Prince County . lfcderation and Hugh MacKin- :non. Rollo Bay. heads the Kings “County group x Ladies on the executive are: “Mrs. Joseph MacLellon. Indian Mn 11. Marl- otlon of Agricul on here last DB. WALDO WALS - aimi- L‘s. partmcnt of agriculture who turc. Institute p r e s i d e n f. time Co-operatlve advisory night. He was introduced by is here t peak to the P31. , - Iniver. and Mrs. . services director. Halifax. Dr. ILL. Patterson. left. it Agriuilture Institute at n (Mtge 'Mrcgonxg' furl“ .m'e, 30mm?“ a centre. was the guest speaker the farm economics 11 n 6 Mon luncheon today In h l s "95' 9" o e e" loaf Dan MlcPhee. New . lugow It the annual meeting Feder- statistics branch. Ontario de- capacity as Canadian Agricul '1 “th dummy" use “emu .' x i > -' . k "at,