it it's Good For the Island ll'he Guardian is For it- VOL. LXXV. N0. 179 To Offer Evidence In Probe lnto,S.hipping Disruptions synosnnr rucn ‘ OTTAWA (CP)—Seven trade unions. the Canadian Labor izatlonal St. Lawrence Sea- way Authority and a big Tor- onto shipping line have been in- vited to take part in the special investigation ordered by the government into shipping dis- ruptions and labor strife on the Great Lakes." The man who will be making the inquiry-—Mr. Justice T. G. Nnrri s. 08. of Vancouver-— mm Anlaslmlaaleooadaa-lallb served notice on. the parties Tuesday that he plans an organ- mceting of his one- man industrial commission next Tuesday in Ottawa. On his initial invitation list 1'62 1. The Canadian Labor Con- gress. central federation of most major trade unions in Canada representing more than 1.000.- 000 workers. ‘ g The Independent Seafarers International Union of Canada, Mac CallsCabinet' To Plan Strategy LONDON (Re_uters)—The cab- inet met Tuesday to plan strat- egy to meet crucial develop- ments at home and abroad in Britain's negotiations for entry into the European Market. . Prime Minister Macmil- lan summoned the cabinet to discuss with Edward Heath. de- puty foreign minister, the Brit- ish position when the dead- locked negotiations with the six Common Market members re- o was forced to consider how it will meet opposition from its own back - benchers to the present trend in the negotiations when the subject comes up for full- zcale debate in Parliament to- ay. The opposition from within the Conservative party to the government's Common Market policy boiled over Monday night when a motion signed by 36 government members was presented after Health reported m in Parliament on the talks in Brussels. The motion. to be debated to- day called on the government to "stand firm and insist on def- inite assurances for Common- wealth trade. and on nance of the ‘power of‘ vlcn decision by the British Parliament for our agricultural and horticultural policies." t"I.AIMED SUPPORT It was the first time the Com- Common do ugnumgp. . _ 5: Ver- nouse‘vri-tuanv.‘w'so£d(.us But with negotiations in Brut; sels in the balance. Macmillan and his colleagues would be hard put to make concrete promises about what will be ne. with the parliamentary time- table in mind. an opposition La- bor member suggested that Macmillan would try to “bull- doze" provisional approval of British entry through Parlia- ment by calllng a special ses- sion in September instead of waiting for the _regular session beginning in late October. Accord Seen On Malaysia - LONDON (Reuters) — Tanku Abdul Rahman. prime minister of Malaya. announced Tuesday night that Britain and Malaya have reached agreement on for- g n of Malaysia. a new. state in Southeast Asia. 1 The ianku (prince) was beam- ing and obviously happy when he paused to speak to report ers‘after a -30-minute talk with Prime Minister Macmillan. at Admiralty ‘ r weeks of intensiv_e Anglo-Mal» yan talks aimed at-’ a five-ten-i= ritory merger of Malaya, Singa- ~ pore, Bruenl. Sarawak and North Borneo. ' j "I R‘“'’”' T“‘“"l’°" 3”‘ 6”‘ i age, a few minutes after it was .°..'.i.'...’i‘;:‘;:.':..‘:..i§'“?.?'2":.:‘;‘.::' = cm - , l . ' .k Wm‘ its strength wing chiefly Fa The roe et was purposely “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew" ———~ IoP$N!loID$l'j lfilflililflfdhfl-Ifli uh Trade Unions Are lnvitedlTO FORM PROV. ASSOCIATION Wits @l1fl1’Jfilifl1I CHARLO'l"l‘E'l‘OWN, CANADA, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1, 1962. ~gg°n which claims some 1s.aoo mem- bers. represents most lake sail- ors and many marine engineers on lake boats and is outside the Mr. Norris has roots in I’.E.I. His mother.yMarlanne Lawson. was the daughter at Rent’! Lawson. a former edi- tor of the Patriot. Eliza Law- son. another daughter. was the mother of Mrs. . . Rogers. Charlottetown. Mrs. T. Edgar MacNutt is also a cousin of Mr. Norris. Mr. Norris’ mother retained the newspaper tradition and she was a writer on the Victoria Colonist well into her 80s. I 3. The Canadian Maritime Un- , on. a fledgling affiliate of . CLC representing some 450 sea" llflfxlggnnf1¥{Cpzl‘:8e:l1:?:':)sn"lp;::l LostHypl1en" ‘Tests Aqency i; $18 Million United States last time in the‘ space race. prestige and $18.- 25 l k hi b t 'th . giignaxlbmong fiosouift ‘:8 lcommittee was told Tuesday. The error in a computer sagigorvgn support from an hkevequation led to the destruction J l 22 l V 4' Tl“ C""“‘““ B'°"‘°""°“d ivghlcle land itingzigdlllfcliilhlbltl: ldestroyed after it strayed from in the railway industry but with power among seaway workers., some west coast and inland sea- : vemc :f‘e't‘};e3’S";Uwm‘ 5“ °l’°“ disukeltional Aeronautics and Space --affiliate--svith 5. The National Association of Marine Engineers. in CLC affil- iate with some 150 members that once appeared to be merg- ing with the SIU only to break away amid charges before the Canada Labor Relations Board at the SIU had rigged the amalgamation vote and fooled marine engineers. G The Canadian Merchant Service G id. .3 2.500-member affiliate of the CLC represent- ing deck officers on Canadian shi s p . '1. The United Steelworkers of America. biggest union in Can- ada with 32,000 members. in- cluding seamen on some ore- carrying ships and stevedores on some ore docks. 8. The International Long- shoremen's Association, a CLC hers that has again coioperatlng; with the SIU. ‘particularly =ln itir;u(‘i ; its path and went out of control. Richard B. Morrison. launch director for the Na- Administraltion. told the com- mittee Tuesday the missing hyphen was not noticed in 300 test runs of the equation before it was used to guide the Atlas- Agena vehicle on the Venus probe. l Morrison said’ the ultimate ; responsibility forgzthe mistake! lay with NAsA.,.4out prodded by 2 the committee‘ to pinpoint res-1 ponslbllity be traced it to space technology laboratory. a US.- Air Force contractor. - "I don't know who the indi-l vidual was." he said, “but Il would imagine he-is a Selll0l'j engineer with a doctor's degree = in mathematics and. consider--_ able experience in celestial. mathematics." Voting Probe .,.,._________ Amerlcan_lakeports. in the tem- 9°5t“°“' Sm'CMU rivalry‘ iTelegram says there is — 9. Upper Lakes Shipping Lim- (Continued on page 4 col 7) ST. JOHN’S. Nfld. tCPi—Tll¢ i n possl- 5 3 biliiy of an investigation into the .; ‘conduct of the service vote in I men Market opponents had so- tually put their names to a mo- tion and they claimed support from at least 120 other mem- bers of Parliament. he anti-marketers were ob- viously anxious to have the vital sublect of Commonwealth trade -»-on which the Brussels talks are deadlocked—debated before Parliament adjourns Thursday for the summer. to LIVE, on one 0 Governor lrvinq Tanker ls Released SAINT JOHN. N.B. (CP)—- The 2.338-ton tanker lrvinglake was freed Tue ay from i Derch on a reef at the head of the.saint John Reversing Falls rapids. The ship. now used as a powerless barge. became stuck fast on the rocky underwater ledge Monday morning. Re- peated attempts by boats to pull her free failed. . Tuesday Irving Tug manoouvred alongside and pumped: out Irvinglahe' mitted the vessel to be pulled free at high tide. The vessel was being towed to I will mill at the fails when It went about 1.000 yards beyond and his nine years in iaii. and a er turning point iammad «itself on the rock. Wife:Troder Is Found Dead GREYLINGBTAD. South Af- rica (Reuters) '-— well-to-do farmer who last week ex- changed wives with his ‘ friend was found shot dea -la f M n the c be had t by telephone to his wife. who heard what she thought SPRINGFIELD. Ill. (AP)—- Hour flatter hour. Governor Otto Ker-ner w_ Tue ay question of whether he should permit slayer Paul Crump to die in the electric chair or allow him to live out his life in prison. aft ur. Crump fro chamber in Chicago Jail. where he is scheduled to pay the deathd penalty at 2:01 am. ADT Fri ay. 'l‘be governor set aside the en- tire day to study documents and secret recommendations sub mitted by the Illinois parole pardonboard. ills decision was expected late Tuesday or today. The five~man board heard 6% hours of testimony and ar- gument Monday in Chicago. It boiled down to: 1. A by‘ Crumb’: synr pathlsers that he has undersone a "miraculous change" dur savage criminal has been turned into a decent citizen. 2. A contention by the state that there is no absolute proof the prisoner has been 10- . habilitated. RECEIVED LETTERS Richard Thorpe. the lover- nor’a press aide. said Kcraes had received about 300 letters and ama — most of them favoring commutation of Crnsnp'a sentence. . cramp a 82-year-old Negro. was. convicted of murdcrilll Theodore Zukowski. 44. I lulfd. durinl a 831.000 robbery of a food plant In 1963. wgoil m an-alsnfn °° 9 - ' Lois Nlzcr, New York lawyer. year-old Isoet Members. dead , “ mhuh“d.m.andDoaaidPIleMoon "“°""“° "“'“" "" "°""’ wane-to-nun-n Iran 00.. . to tho MOW .b m‘.3:'.- . ' uu M 3” m W -.vn‘eao-cur.‘-‘.1: ‘ l.“ m ‘ can coasts ' o'::e.a.:a.n.e'a.a.a.a. 8 1- . ._u u the federal riding of St. John’sl West. ' The paper quotes reliable l sources as s a y in g approxi- : mately 30 service votes were er- 1, Oi Illinois PondersCrump's Fate cage lawyer. did not deny Crump’s guilt or challenge the handling of his case in the courts. roneously credited to St. John’s. West. They mostly involve over-i seas servicemen with normal; places of residence in ridingsa‘ (other than St. John's West. The Telegram says. ; Solicitor-General Browne. dc- ifeated by 24 votes by Liberal. "Richard Cashin in the ‘June 18 »‘election, has said he Will apply to the Newfoundland courts to. unseat Mr. Cashin. He claims; there were irregularities but. lhas not elaborated on this. 4 . .< -".5. DANIEL GASS. Cornwall, (standing) was the chairman of a special committee of beef catllemcn which reported last night to a general meeting I here with specific suggestions . for improving the marketing 1 situation. J. Lincoln Dewar. . New Perth (left) was secre- tary of the committee. e T W E A T H E R Mostly cloudy, a few showers. chance of thunderstorm by evening.‘ Low-high at Charlottetown 58 and 70. 10 PAGE Beef Breeders Endorse Public Stockyards Here \ Meeting Approves Selling On Formula. BY STERLING KNEEBONE in paid at Winnipeg. The for!!!’-' Guardian -Patriot Staff Writer A newly organized Prince Etl- . ward Island Beef Producers As- :‘ sociation will proceed towar 1 the setting up of livestock yards ‘ in the province, following the. Q. unanimous acceptance of a rec-.; fommendation to this effect at aj 1 public meeting ‘held in Prince of , 3 Wales College last night. ,ion of such meeting was presided over by George MacDonald. St. Geor- ges, president of the federa- tion of agriculture. Major Obstacle Removed To Ending Algerian Crisis By ALEX JOANNIDES ALGIERS (Reuters) —— Dissi- / stone l-‘All -mi lSCAUGH‘I' made a living. police say. by John B. Crowley, 35. of Pet- acborougb. 0nt.. a Canadian (right) who failed a tan in a ntladolnhie donrtmut Ii"! i and collected a 0750 ‘claim is anaconda to cotlbty defect- ive Charlca'D0lI¢herU. Crow- ley who dressed like abowbog deliberately falling down in some of the best stores in the country. then collecting unsur- IIICI. (AP Wlrephoto) dent Vice-Premier Mohammed troops holding Boudiaf to obtain lexports. ;Ben Bella bowed to Premierj ‘Ben Youssef Ben Khedda Tues-i day and released Vice~prcmierl Mohammed Boudaif. removing a major obstacle to a sett ment of the Algerian political lcrisis. i The release. on Ben Bella’: personal intervention. returned-‘ Bella's worst personal foe. . It came less than 24 hours} a f t e r Boudaif’s encirclemcnt l and capture by Ben Bella troops in his home village of M’Sila. 120 miles southeast of here. i Ben Khedda and two of his. key ministers had called earlier ‘ in the day for Boudiaf’s imme- diate release adding that his presence at ta 3 to heal the political split was "indispensa- b .. Observers said serious differ- ences between the two camps still exist. mainly over a polit- ical bureau that would largely supplant the Ben Kheddn pro- visional government's internal authority. SEEK SOLUTIONS . , his release. Observers saw Boumcnd_iel's statement as a further attempt to give authority to the bureau. Boudiaf and Krim were known to have stiff objections c political bureau as con- stituuted. l The recommendation was one lof 12 contained in a special re- ',port submitted to »ihe meeting‘ ;by a 13-man committee. namedl }in April to study matters relat- ‘. ‘ed to the marketing of beef. the ‘. improvement of quality, and the general development of the beef 3 industry in the province. The recommendation further v stated that the livestock yards; to be established by producers.’ would preferably be operated by experienced agents of commis-E sion firms. already established. in other parts of Canada. ‘ SELLING ON FORMULAS The meeting also approved the idea of trying out for a per- lod of "up to one year", selling ‘ the three top grades of beef cari- ; tie on a formula based on pri~-‘ ‘ula was one suggested by Cara ada Packers. ~ Leo P. Maclsaac. Mermaid. a member of the co said the livestock yards recommend-‘ ation was one of the most impor- tant submlited in the report. He said Prince Edward Island had great possibilities for the attrac- commission houses for the selling of cattle. . Mr. Maclsaac noted however that the Commission H o u s e a_ would have to have some means’ of getting support. and that the beef producers would have to give a large share of their cat- tle to the firm or it could not function. He suggested it might be advisable to delay the imple- mentation of the recommenda- tion until support could be as-_ ured. » . He said the committee thought of two ways in which this sup- port might be obtained. One, he ‘ said. was marketing legislation. but it was decided not to use this as it was felt the producers (would support the commission houses. (Continued on page 3, col. 3) I By ROBERT MAUTHNER . BRUSSELS (Reuters).— Brit- } ish and European Common Mar- 1 iket ministers will make an all- ; lout attempt today to break the .deadlock in negotiations for. :Britain’s entry into the eco-: 'nomic communiy. 3 ; The talks were adjourned Sat- urday after reaching a long- expected Cl'lSlS — Britain's Ed- l ward Heath and his six Com-.‘ mon M a r k e t colleagues ad- 1 lrnitted they had failed to solve ‘;the crucial problem of alterna-3 ‘five markets for Canadian, Aus- -trallan and New Zealand farm‘ However, g c n f‘. r a l opinion ' ‘among Common Market repre- Esentativcs is that the crisis has ‘ zbeen over-dramatized by the iBritish press and that there are lreasonable grounds for hoping the question can be solved this Sask., Alberta Move loAidDelormed Babies Governments of two Wetcrn provinces Monday moved to- wards care for drug-deformed babies as clergymen and politi- cians in Eastern Canada pressed demands that Ottawa accept the responsibility and provide aid. At least 40 deformed babies have been born in Canada re- cently. their rudimentary arms use of prescriptions containing the drug thalidomide. . In Saskatchewan. where no ; thalidomide babies have yet. been reported. Health Minister; W. G. Davies said his govern-‘ ment will care for the deformed ‘ babies if they are listed as ai_ dependant with the M c d i c :11 Care Insurance Commission. He ‘, said mother and child 5 Attempts at ironing out these differences continued in Algiers despite the uncertainty of Bond- laf's late. It was clear th could not have gone on for long without his release Grant is Seen For Academy In Oran. Ben Bella's political spokesman. Ahmed Boumendu I jel told reporters the seven-man 5 .polltical bureau appointed by‘ ‘Ben Bella .luly 22 had inter- ltervened with the Ben Bella WOMAN MAKES DOUBLE CATCH CUTTYHUNK. Mass. (AP A 266-pound swordfish with a 125-pound blue shark im- paled on its bill was landed by Mrs. Carlyn Cohen of New York Monday. Mrs. Cohen landed the LONDON (Reuters) — Prime Minister Macmillan announced Tuesday the government will ,make a £350,000 grant to keep ’the Royal Academy's Leonardo da donna and Child in Britain. The acadenliy put up the pic- ~ a lure for .-.ale st March. saying it needed £ll00.00t‘i to help its Jinances. Vinci drawing of the Ma-t would receive care. Dr. J. Donovan Ross. ta’: health minister. sat province will provide the same , care as is given to other mul-i tiple-handicapped children. No. records of drug-deformed births have been kept. but it was be- lieved there were about. 12 in the province. .ln Ontario, members of Par- llament and various church denominations generally agreed that the care of deformed ba- lbles was up to the federal gov- Alber- l d the ernment . MONEY TO START Anglican Bishop H. R. llunl. Big Effort Is Planned On ‘Market Deadlock’ But there is less optimist! about chances of completing tin. whole outline agreement by Sat- urday. At time. the same sources close to the six emphasize the ‘ mom for manoeuvre has be- come small. The six insist their common a gri cultural policy must not be changed out of all recognition. CAN NOTE INTERESTS “We cannot in the long run grant the Commonwealth coun- tries quantitative guarantee! (on imports) which even our own member-states do not have," a Common Market offi- cial said. “What we can do. however. is to give all assurance that we will pursue policies which will take their interests into ac- count." The official said the market m e m b e r .1 fully understand Heath's need to obtain formulas which would give the Common- wcalth confidence that if Britain enters the mar ct it will look after Commonwealth interests. Much of the discussion is likely to be about a suitable choice of words. he said. The formulas which Heath and the market ministers will try to work out. concern world commodity agreements the By THE CANADIAN PRESS (and legs blamed on pre-natal market's price policy and mu!- sitional arrangements until 1970. The six have proposed that: a world conference he called as early as 1963 to work out inter- national agreements the main commodities, such as car- eals, meat and dairy products. U.S. Indicates Atomic Tests To Continue WASHINGTON (AP)—UnttId States atomic officials indicated Tuesday they 1') n to continua high-altitude nuclear tests in the Pacific. Although the final decisiul still rests with President Kea- ncdy. an official announcement said "some weeks will be (needed to repair the launchiu . to and prepare it for the re- ,malning high - altitude tests of This led in a public protcst‘of Toronto said the government. ‘the domlnic series." and an appeal for funds which :has yielded about £450.000. ‘ The drawing is on view at ll..ondon’s National Gallery. The academy has owned the drawing for 103 years. It is a =, "Government assistance is the ‘occurred in full-scale .-tudv for the painting 4 lThe Virgin with St. John th ‘ the lusurp the responsibility of the “ran.” ‘Baptist and St. Anne. now in Louvre. Paris. A 1 l ishould carry most of the res- iponslbility and suggested finan- ‘clal assistance as a beginning. other views: Rev. Bruce W. Neal. Baptist: ‘best way . . . people helping other people. but we can never l ‘ There had been speculatiu ‘the experiments might be dio- -continued after three failures D lfour tries. H: i The third abortive attasut st Wednesday case a Thor rocket and its naelfl warhead‘wem intentionally‘ $- =t1-oyed on the launchiu pd-I Uohnstoa nine »» '... 9|‘ -