If it's Good For the Island The Guardian is For it 70L. LXXV. N0. 90 WIND WHIPS UP WAVES 0 “La seashore scene in Manl- foba's southwestern farming community of Horndean waa ! caused by winds :ux‘in: to M i miles an hour Wind-whipped water from the overflowing More @mmfitin “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew" '.l M ' '1 m... _,..t outdo; Plum Coulee creek has isolat- M this farmyard in the area 70 miles southwest of Winni- Action Against Peronis’rs ls Pondered In Argentina (IP from Reuters-AP RUENOS AIRES r PrrsIdcnt .msr Maria Guido Monday night was considering a dccrcc call- Ing for a takeover by ihl‘ Ar- gentine federal government. of the admtnlstration of all the provinces . The decree was considered a move that would mark the start of a major drive against sup- porters of exiled formcr dicta- tor Juan Peron. Alejandro Barrara. general secretary of thc prcSidcntiai of- fice announced earlier that the decree had been signed by Guido But Interior Minislcr l-lrncsto Lanusse later rcjccttxi Bar- raca'a announcement as "pre- mature" and declared that "in- tervention in the provmccs In still under consideration by President Guido." Monday Guido withdrew his request for two morr years in olfieef Leanne declared this meant that before,l the week In out Guido would call for new presto dential elections. Thc law stip- ulatea the voting must take place within so days of the an- nouncement. Guido's sudden morr. rnminit amid reports he was yirlding to military demands that he wipe out election triumphs hy follow- ers of Peron. was understood to be part of the preparation for annulltng results of the March in votr WON VICTORY Peroniats won a latirixliric \vir fory in balloting for provincial and congressional offices~ touch- ing off the prolongn'i crisis that brought the country In the brink of the civil war. Military anger over the Per- onist gains led to the mcrtlirnvl of President Arturn l-‘rondm April 28 and his banishmcnt in a remote naval basc Guido took office the ncst day and began to press congress to pass a measure giving him un- til May I. lwwthc curl of Fron- Troffic ls Heavy iAs Seaway Opens MONTREAL ((‘Pl \ ~if‘r’id" stream of ships movrd through the lRS—milc St. Lawrencc Sca- way Monday as the giant inland watcr systcm finally opened to traffic. The resumption of traffic nus greeted with a st:n of rclirf from shipping officials who for two weeks have scrn vessel: delayed by labor and mct-hani- cal problems. Heathman dizt's term» to call elections for a successor. The S e n a t I already had passcd the bill and the Chamber oi Deputies was to act on it when Guido sent a message withdrawing the request. The interior minister said Congress would meet in a wind- up scssinn before May 1. the date the Pcronisis were to take nfficc. Even after srnding his mes- sage to Congress Guido con- tinued a marathon round of talks With political and military Icadcrs in an effort to keep the simmering crisis within bounds. The navy demanded Sunday that Guido sign decrees wiping out the Pcronists‘ victories. in an ObVlOll! move in put punch behind the words. naval chiefs ordcrcd a son-man marine unit to thc capital area for use in case of disorder. Is Arrested By Police In Seattle SI-ZAT'I‘LI-i WI" I'l‘llt'f‘ :tt' rcsicd Charles licnthmnn in this world‘s fair t'li_\' .\londnv cntlim: a lino-day manhunt tom-hm off by his confcssion to the murdcr of a [0-year-old boy llrathman. 3ft tuli'c lcnt‘ni to hang for thc "‘Ii‘MlnE. was taken into custody uttliout a struggle on a downtown strcct and taken to policc llcaduuar- tcrs whcrc officrra said 0 rcadily Admitted his ldcntity. \vn- or ti on i 3 Thr arrest was made If! “"3 doc mummies—st. patrolman Ted Fonis who rec- ognized Heathman from photo- graphs sent to U.S. police and sccurity guards at the Century :l fairgrounds. The manhunt started after a Vancouver newspaper published ifcathman‘s confession to the killing of Donald Ottley. a Ver- non. Bt‘ newsboy on Labor Day. ism. He was conwctcd by two )urics and sentenced to hang. The British Columbia Court of Appeal ordered a retrial after the first conviction and ac- quiitod him after the second. onnnas ARREST Attorney-General Robert Bon- ncr ordered the arrest of Heath- man under the provincial Men- tal Hospitals Act after the Van- couvcr Sun informed authorities of the confession Saturday 1% 'hours before it was published. The search lwitchod to Seattle after a bus driver said Heathman and a woman. idem tilted as his cousin. Mrs. Anna Willoughby of Vancouver. got off his bus at Seattle Saturday. Police located In. WI!- iloughby in Seattle shortly after ‘the arrest of Heathman. t Officers aid Heathman than the law could not do any- thing to hon. apparently a ref- ‘mnee to the law of Cradle Jeopardy. He was turned over to U.S. Immigration authoritioa who said the aext more would do ‘1’ w CfiARLO'I'I‘ETOWN, N PRAIRIE FLOOD WATER peg. Area Flooded In not ex- tensive. (CP Wit-rpm) Floods Cause Little Worry In Manitoba WINNIPEG iL‘f‘l -— Surface flooding from ice - jammed creeks is prevalcnt throughout southern Manitoba. with dozens of small lakes suddenly dotting ‘the plain. but officials in Winni- peg so far are unworrled. In Winnipeg. at the junction of the Red and Assinibolne Rivers. the water has reached first flood stage. but Cliy en- gineer W. n. Hurst says “flood officials feel that whcn this run- off clears it will all flatten out." First flood stage is lit fret above normal ice level and main dikes art- constructcd to hold the waler to a level of 2ft feet. Reports from Argo. V n, In- dicatr the Red alrrady has crested there and now is rc- ceding. l2 Homeless ‘In N.B. Fire 31‘. MEPHHN. NE. N1") - Twelve persons are homclrss and five busmcsom without prandses following a spectacu- lar fire wind: MW through a throe-ottrey brick building on King Street here Monday. There was no estimate of damage. Firemen from It four bor- Stophrn. M‘ILItown. N.B.. Calais and Mill- town. lilo-«forum the blaze III the old Jainism building aitrc an alarm wm rum in dmrtly offer lzm o'clock. No one was injured. Homeless are Mr, and hire. George Smith: Mr and .Vl‘u Norman Muodie and Mr. Mun- rlie's father: Mrs. Margaret Johanna and her whom—ago daughter: Mrs. Harry Richard. and Mr. and Frank Lewis and their two (shim. Airline Bid: For Expansion OTTAWA 'Cf’t A bid by Eastern Provincial Airways to extend its operations in Sydney. N.S.. and Halifax was rcporicd Monday by the air transport board. Eastern Provincial now mail a clan I cmnmerclal service serving points in Newfoundland and Labrador. CANADA, TUESDAY, APRIL 24, 1962. WEATHER Cloudywitbafnw flurriea;oolda; ramshowers or m mrthwestwtnda Z). Inw-hizh301nd45. fly FRED I. HOFFMAN WASHINGTON (AM—United Slates scientists and military chiefs. poised for a new series of nuclear tests. hope to find way: to pack greater destmc- two power Into smaller war- heads. Informed sources said Mon- day a major aim of the Pacific aerial tests. the first U.S. at~ mospheric test: in nearly four years. Will be to increase the efficiency of US. missile war- heads and nuclear bombs. The U.S. tests are expected to begin this week. Experiments looking toward more efficient warheads will come in what are called "wcapon cffccls" tests in which nuclear devices »— as distin- tinguishcd from finished wrap- nus—arc exploded under var- ious conditions. The Russians are lett‘vf‘d to have made strides toward greater warhead efficiency in thcir tcst series last fall. But US authorities feel the Soviet Union still trails the United Anti-Bomb Demonstrators J.S. Experts Poised '0 Begin Bomb Tests Staten in this Vital aspect of nu- clear weaponry. Al nudur warheads become 1more efficient—that ll. produce igreater blast: from smallcrt amounts of material—they in- crease thr striking effectiveness of the rockets that propel theml This is especially important int the United States. which in building its future long - range striking power around the I’m laris submarine - launched mis- rile and the land-based \Iinute- man intercontinental ballistic missile. The Polaris warhead. as now designed. can release the blast equivalent of about 400,000 tons of TNT. The Minuteman is rated at about ions of TNT. While ['3 military men say WRONG TICKET WINS $103.20 FORT ERIE. Ont l(fP‘ A Don‘t make speeches at bef- ttng wickets. You may not be as lucky as the man who i 115118! in make a speech ' about how he'd like to bet . five . . . . The hurried muiuel rlerk punched out No. 3 But the man didn't want No. 5. He explained that he simply wished to hot 35 on .‘\'n I2. The apologetic clerk sard he would try to sell the Iicltrt but if he didn't. the man was stuck with it He was. (,‘nurf’n T’nrtr. \‘o. 5, won Saturday and paid “0.1.30 to win. Red Activity ‘ Said Lowest In Province I 'I'RURO ‘0‘» President I o SEVEN 12 PAGE Contact With Moon Shot I Lost Shortly After Launch I Brain Fault Blocks iwo Goals 0f Probe CAPE CANAVERAL. F'la (Apt—31112 U.S. Ranger-4 lunar vehicle speeding through spacn with a faulty “brain” will prob- ably hit the moon Thursday morning. the National Aeronau- tics and Space Administration announced Monday night. The space agency said some seven hours after launching that tracking data indicath the. spacecraft probably would hit the. moon at 8:55 am. EST The announcement s-aid Ran- gcr<4 on its present course would pass about 900 miles above the top rdge of the moon and hit a the hack side~the part of the moon never seen from the earth. The annnunremcnt ialfl that an atlempt to send lignall to try to correct a malfunction in the spacecraft at 9:30 pm. this is enough to knock out Watson Kirkmnm." n, Nadia Monday night apparently failed. most targets. thry want bothl warheads made more patent to widen their blast range and to‘ deepen lheir ground penetration to get at Russian missile launch- ing pads “hif‘h may be dug in deep. Converge On U.S. Embassy LUNDf“ 'Iicutcrsl More than 10.000 foolsorc "ban'ths bomb" d c m o n s t r ators con- vrrpcd on the American Em- bassy Monday night to wind up a fourday. Flo-mile march from fIIl‘ atomic wrapons research station at Aldrrmaslon. Canon John Collins. leader of Britain's Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament. walked up the steps of thr- giant new embassy building in Grosvcnor Square With his cassock fluttering in the evening brcczc. paused and said a silent prayer. Canon Cnllins. preccntor of St. Paul‘s (to t hed ral. then handed in a note addressed in President Kennedy protesting the impending rcsumptlon nuclear tests at Christmas Is- land In the Pacific. The Grosvenor Square meet— Ing climaxcd the CND‘! most successful Eastcr March. with 50,000 dcmonsirators attending a rally in Hyde Park. PLEADS WITH LEADER! The note. handed to a door- man. was one of three the CND lhad drafted to the leaders of the three H-bomh powen. the US.. Russia and Brit-In. It said: "If you carry out the» tests people of this and future generations will suffer disease and death as a result of fallout. "It will mm the moi of a new Intensive phase of the arm! race from where there may be no turning back until the disaster of the thermonu- clear war is on us. "We beg you to reconsider your plan " Demonstrator! handed In a note to the Soviet Embassy ad- dressed to Premier Khrush- chev. appealing to him not to start testing again even if the Americans did. A third note went in Admi- ralty House for Primc \linistrr Macmillan. saying CND hoped he would continue in do all he could to persuade President -Kennedy not to resume trstiog or to uae Christmas Island - the British testing area in the Pacific. Macmillan meets the president in Washington Satur- day. Discount Rumor Mac Attempting To Delay Test LONDON ch-utnrsi Authori- tative sources here Mondav dis- counted reports that Prime Minister Macmillan was mak- lng a IaslAminuic bid to get a postponement of II‘If‘ L'nttrd States atmospheric nuclcnr fest! expected to begin this week They said the British position rested on the prime minister‘s statement in the Hmtsr of Com- mons last Thursiay concerning a nuclnr-test-ban trcaty. Mae. millan had said: "The rival point for us in the acceptance of the principle of .effectivc international verifica- tion . “The position is now that if thr ncutral proposals fat the G e a e v a disarmament confer- encel provide for effective measures of international verifi- cation. and if the Russians. even at this late stage. agree to this. negotiation will become possible, “if not. no negotiations can be fruitful and I cannot ask President Kennedy to postpone the tests," Douglas, Pearson To Fire Opening Campaign Guns I! AICI Marlllhlm be formally on- y. Leader Pearson. be- e tee - day sweep Prince Edward tat-ad W. is to launch ht W campaign at an 'i H“ fully at Charlotte- digit ‘V showing Mr, Pearson buy Iod- neadaytnl" F. landtwiuhg Thursday to N urinal-fro went coarfAsiarttng t menta- viile—for a run as in , and town on to John's He spends tho weekend in Inhinnon where he wil be a nest at the White House as one of the Western world's Nobel prirc winners Meier plln! this week to ronccntrote on Matthew-n and the YUP lender headn Into Alberta next week We *- Itnlll he will return In w- wane-roam I ‘ .iuued an initial travel och-Me Man later in the tampatgn —his headquarters are in Re- ~gina — and cmainlv for the Icampaign end There in no indication yet when" he will enter Assint- bola riding where Ham Argue. former VDP leadership con tender who bolted to the Lib ruin. Ms re-eleetion WILL ATTEND RALLY Mr Dicknbakrr attend: a rally at Moose Jaw Thursday and then wait: his own Prince Albert constituency where MI nomination meeting will be held Saturday night. He return- b Ottawa Sunday to meet British Prhe Minister Medallion My. Mr Diefenhalrer con ferret with tile enhtne in what was “tribal u a minkterial .Ielctflsmcbert‘ity Fleath htthrairh University said Monday orders for the operation of the Labor Progressive pa rty in Canada come from Moscow headquart- ers of the Communist party. Dr. Kirkesmncil told a sorvtce club lKiwanist the "above ground“ section of the Labor Progressive party was not the real party. He said he disazi‘ccd With the party‘s protest that it is authentically Canadian. Thc Communist party in ('au-! ada has suffered a reduction in membership. he said. because uf the 1956 Hungarian uprising and an anti-scmctir policy of the Russian govermncnt. Universities are prime lar- gcts for infiltration but there has not been too much of this in Canada. he said. Hl‘ said Communist actiiity in Print-c FA‘IwaM Island was nuictcr than in any othcr Cam titan prot‘im‘c New Brunswick and Nova Scotia followed. Dr Kirkconncll said it is dif- ficult to define tnith in an age of brain-wuhing He said "doc- torcd information" often an- pcars In the prf‘s‘l. Indians Hit . and Ranger-4 would continue on a collision with the "100". MAJOR GOALS HIST This eliminated the pmutuliw that two other major goals of the experiment could or ac- complished. These aims ncre the relay of television pictures as the vehicle neared the moon and the landing of an instni- mcnt package which would have relayed information on moon quakes and meteor hits Officials reported that at. tempts would continue to hr- made to correct the lpacccraft'a malfunction by sending radio command signals to the vrhicle. But they felt that there was little chancr. of success and that Range“ would continue on iintii it crashed and destroyed itself on the moon. Despite thc failurr of a ma. inr portion of the cxpci'imcnl. ('OUI'IO hitting the moon would be the first such accnmplishmcnt If! the Iroublrvriddcn US moon- shot program. Ranger-4 was hradcd through space at the proper speed in rcarh the moon about it 50 a in EST Thursday but ground sta- iinns were unable In recrch in- yformntinn from its systems to Bv Tax Boost 1 \‘I'IW D I". L H I 'Rciitcrs‘ - llighcr taxes and a big tin crease in dcfrnre spending were announced Monday bv Indian Financr Ministcr Morarjl Dosal in his 1952 budget Dcsai imposed a «cries of direct and indirect thus no in» dividuals. companies and goods to bring an additional rcvenue of about “50.000000 In the rom- ing year, Income tax on all companies will be raised by five per rent in 25 per cent and .Iurtax rain adjustcd in proportion, he said. Dcsai said defence expendi- tures in I962 would be about 3725.001000 This represents an increase of about smocuooo over last war and accounts for 75 per cent of India's entire hudgrt Dcsar rstimatcd indta's total revenue for the coming yrar at about SZ.7fll.W.W and rxpcndi- tum at about $2.9lf.flfl'l.fll0 The deficit will be wipcd out I?) the ncw taxrs. he said. Aw Fuelidi cum“. W F and Bil-we Vn'lw on I Can- dctermtnc whether it was ac. cooling commands front carth. An Alias-Agcna R rocket. launched fhc Taft-pound cold- and silver-plated craft from this MP5 Promised Increase In Pay OTTAWA it'f" The i‘iiwcn says Prime Minister Dir-fru- baker l< reported to havr tolrl a Progressive t‘onscrvalivc cati~ cus last week that a rc-elrctrd Conservative government would raise MPs‘ salaries to “€000 a year from mom The newspaper coy: some MPs at the caucus. a partv cnn- ferencn of p a rl I amcntarians had complained about the in- Mortuary of the present my lrvcl ll ll}! pidgct \ZlRf'll‘Q untilfl be tnrmsrd st Ihr same timr Judges have not had a pay raise since tom, the last rains for VP! and senator: was in IQ“. miles mind mm in their m1 any; the We won t a. na- sown... sun i too puma. FAQs. in .\-~ I on. felt centre at 8 It pm EST. The racket performed ll planned and early indications were that all was going nghl wtth the fli:ht The Iparccraft was launched successfully on the munded 24.3fm-milc-an-h0ur orbit course necessary to talul. it to the moon to land an instrument parkaze iIle'P samptime Thurs- dav morning. But, more than two hour! after launching. the us Na- tional Aeronautics and Space Administration announced that “the Atlas Agena injected the Range” into an earth-escapl trajectory Tracking informav tion indicates. however. that a malfunction occurred in the. spacecraft telemetry trn d l 0) sysIc-rr." PERFORMAM'H IINKNOWN The announcrmrnt said be. cause of the malfunction "it ll not possible to determine whclher the spat-rcrafl Is rel— pnnding tn commands. and thus pcrformancc of the spacecraft is not known at this time." If Ranzci‘ fails to reach the moon. II Will be the eighth straight ilml‘ that the United State: has shni at the moon and missed. If the shot proind successful. tho rnrkri “as to have taken 2‘: days on its trip making it! t'ontinucd on Page 2 Fnl. 3t Bush Fires Flare In 3 U.S. States \I'IW \Oflls' In!“ and brush fircs In th- hrolr Imi Monday in norihcnst unit-t fanned Into mrna rin : proportions by l Snf'lnT :alr Some homes and outbuildings ucrr destroyed but [in loss at Mr \ms rrporlcd Thr- firm struck I. New ,lpr- tr} .\r‘\\ \ork amt .‘Iassaf‘hff- <f‘ll\' Soldirrs and prisnnen urrr rrrrmicd to hrlp firemen In <0m“ “VII/“1K Tindcrdr" “midlands nosed 3 further threat and in \‘ew \orh Forest EFOI" three fort-st proscncs prrparcd to ban rampmg unless thme wnl an carlr ram him: in \cw \ork stall raced from Stair" Island "1 the south to the St Lawrcncr Vail" lfl thr north More than 300 ff!"— rm-n fouth the blaze in a fivo square milr area of woods and brush on Qiatrn island. I III-'- ouch nf \ew York City ’Calm’i Reigns 'n Algeria “fill-IRS ‘Rfilfrfl‘ ('an pamtivc calm reigned Monday in \l:cria in what was billmi u an unofficial truce between the trrrnnsi Secret \rmy Organiza- itnn and French authorities Three \lnslcms were shot to doath in Algiers and sh other! were kllori in Oran The aver- age if ring thr last two work! has been nbout l5 Vinsch killcrl daily In Algiers alone. with M” in M ‘ (to. mic-ido- an If. m ‘ lm‘ rat Pa‘ in.