391532388335 M l14eeé$ooooooo¢l3 '5'- 3 fl 'll it's Good For the Island. The Guardian is For it Eire @uuroliom “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” 1.1.1....” VOL. LXXV. N0. 258 \ ANKONIAN 03 of Elm sale of purebred Aberdeen- Grove 3. seen above with own- Angus stock. Herbert Mac- es' Malcolm Bailey of Ux- Ewen. Stanley Bridge. paid ‘brtdge. Ont. brought the high- $700 for the bull. The sale was est single price at yesterday's held at the Exhibition grounds a o | Good Prices Are Received .Florence Carpenter, 62. mother : lpital attendants said she suf- . n a e ifered a fatal hemorrhage in a lengthy battle against tubercu- losis. A Eighty-seven head of purchredIthc sponsorship of the Ontario Aberdeen-Angus cattle were alic-‘Angus Breeders and the P.E.I. tioned yesterday afternoon at Angus Breeders Association. an approximate average sale Auctioneer was Claude Cras- price of $255. The sale was heldl well. at the Exhibition grounds underl Highest price paid at the show Mikoyan Backs Cssiro's Te: 5 o 37747.?— u‘. HAVANA (APl-Soviet First to dismantle long-range missile Deputy Premier Anastas Miko- l bases in uba. And Castro. in you arrived in Havana Friday 1 a speech Thursday night in night after stating Russia‘Havana. claimed that “stra- stards behind Cuban Premierltegic arms"-presumabiy the Fidel Castro's terms for set-Emissiles—were being removed um . , UNITED NATIONS (AP)— ‘The United states said Friday so e Cuban cri5is. by the Russians from Cuba. He arrived at the Cuban cap-i The tone of Mikoyan‘s state- ital after a flight from New imenl did not appear belliger- Yor . In a statement modelent. but more like an opening before he left New York helmove to smooth the ruffled stated his backing of the Cuban 9 feathers of the Cuban premier. leader but made no mention of: the Soviethenélssl}: site:l in Cuba C that tone 0 a angerous, d international situation. ; e UC tro used to permit t d nitad Nations inspection 0 t e S missile sites toI ensuae th‘eir e prompt dismanting. e use. has demanded U.S. withdrawal from its Guantanamo naval; base and cessation of U.S. eco- I 113m“: measuge; agains‘t Cuhad. atacks by u an exies an . _ aerial and naval surveillance ll 13~C"“5‘de““$ a 50"“ Pm‘ on the Caribbean mend posal to permit the Interna- Nowhere in his brief stare. tional Red Cross to have a role ment did Mikoyan indicate that 1". Verifying removal Of SOVM the Russians are not prepared mlgflé‘t’s ggwm C33: would be to go ahead with their pledge W d out was not specified. P. B ibut this and other developfmentt‘s gave rise to expressions 0 op - erre "flan. glismihere ithatththeuiérlsisdostililsr uba nvovng e ..an 0 Join‘ Magaz'ne Soviet Union would be resolved. , TORONTO (Cpl—Pierre Ber- Possibilities under considera- tion.-tu columnist and 35”. tion included having the Inter- ciata editor of the Toronto Star. national R ed Cross inspect is leaving the newspaper and Cuba-bound ships to see the rat to unclear“ Mags. they are not taking new weap- . ons to that “country. and also Mr. Berton was managing Soviet-bound ships to see that editor of the magazine before they Ire taking home missiles 10M!!! Il‘he Star. He now be- already placed in Cuba. ' comes a contributing editor of Reliable sources said as U.S. ' an the Soviet Union were. I. . "They've ven use a page of agreed in principle on Red . ." Berton said Fri- Cross inspection of Cubaobound "It'll be slnillar to ships. but that the Red . :what no written for The star still was not completelv sold on but for *a national audience." the idea. .LIBE-RALS TO NAME LEADER . ' V ’ Ion). ~ . The space vehicle. packed o ‘with photographic and other set- ° ° , . . . i th h . r ' _ It was launched A . :from a space platform 'orblting O I ‘ ‘the earth. The platform was es< itlmated to weigh about six tons. a DAL WAanNGTON backer of Mr. Hill said helm AX (CP) — Nova be nominated ‘lf‘enougli most m meet here to- develops. N Fedes‘dl . er eorge cations are an, w pm _ fly to chums a new provincial The choice will be may!“ Norms: 1m Nova Septic Prcm- , graph Mar. whim“. mm" it, been. M mom; and a afternoon at a party mica fer Robert Stanfield. mu...”- um W- m i "w m"- .i sumsmi - i mom-Ms.“ ‘ rig eg w a on r Known alternates are W to m since the mo provincial elect-.1 WHEREJOJNDJT " East W. Urqdlut. 41. colmtry t . ‘ ton. loader and former premier : isom- m‘copo The :1 Lberal. iced-r. ism .. asciu .f'eslgned then Announcementl. notices . 11 Is masher of the legislature Lester Pearson. will deliver the after pariond moth his con- ' Births. deaths .. 3-10 it "use and Also bud rumor East. He Classified .... 10-11 hassle-two. willbeSenatorJan.‘lsmvice-praddentofl)al~ ......... .. s OMS.Oom.bl.New-residentoftbeNatlondthdentves-dy. . MM wanton law- eral Feda‘afion, and Allan J. Both the announced (‘00de mrwxe” - ~ - ‘ WEA THER Sunny. cloudy by evening; winds incre=s- ing to northeast 15. Low-high 28 and 45. Sunday: a few showers. oomph...” fi...‘l'..“:..f::‘."“:::. W'm-nh CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA. SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 3, 1962. SEVEN CENTS 12 PAGES JFK Reports Rocket Bases In Cuba Being Disman’rled h Charlottetan under the . sponsorship of the Ontario Angus Breeders and the am. iAslronaut’s Angus Breeders Association. 1 . iMolher Dies inf U.S. astronaut Malcolm Scott iCarpenter. died Friday. Hos- u q stronaut Carpenter. . was $700 for the bull Ankonian was her Gilly Son. She was di- LEVELS CALLED DISQUIIETING Maquarrie Makes Plea For UN Fallout Survey y JOSEPH MacSWEEN the only other speaker as de- :was urgently necessary to de- l57 COLLISIONS TIE UP FREEWAY LOS ANGELES (APi—A stream of fast-moving traf- fic rushed down the santa Ana Freeway into a bank of thick fog. ere was a crash. Then another. Then another. Then dozens more. By the time all traffic had crashed to a halt. 57 cars B UNITED NATIONS (CPi— [hate on the Canadian resolution itermine with scientific accur—‘ and (ru c k 5 had been A record increase in radioac- tive fallout in Canada during that no agreement had reached. on a nuclear test ban the summer points up the. need, of the 15‘member United Na- for a comprehensive study on lemphasnes the recent findings radiation. the United Nations was told Friday. Macquarrie spoke in b itions scientific committee that 1 resolution will win overwhelm- ; Canadian (1 elegate Heath lhealth damage from fallout. ing support. the' Gen- I may not be fully manifested for ' l . reporter i confident the Canadian cidem Thursday. “I w The measure. building on a‘ opened Friday. said the factlacy exactly what the effects onl smashed up. 15 persons een 1 radiation hurt. one critically. and 26 miles of freeway paralyzed. Said one victim of the in- 5 hit six times be- fore I could get out of the car." eral Assembly’s special politi~ Ldecades or even generations. ItI (Continued on page 2. Col. 2! 1 Tourist Promotion Plans Discussed By Association cal committee in support of a Canadian resolution. co-spon- sored by 40 other countries. urging a world-wide study on atomic radiation. Canadian health authorities. n their most recent report on radioactive fallout covering July. August and the first part of September. said that the average concentration of stron- tium 90 in milk reached record levels. u a r r ie. parliamen- tary assistant to External Af- fairs Minister Green. said the levels did not yet require “pre- t autionary measures" but were “highly disquieting." 0b of Elm Grove 3. owned by VOI‘CPd in 1945- J apan‘s Shintaro Fukushima. Malcolm Bailey. Uxbridge. Out. The hull was bought by Herbert n. O ., ”; Mars Probe Reported perating Normally female at the show was s . Mr. MacEWen paid the sum for Creditdale Blackbird 2. owned b . A. ee. Streetsviile. Ont. An approximate average price of $245 was paid for females. Tlhere war: lllbulls and 76 fe- ,. ma eg- 11'. I. _s E» ' MOSCOW w ‘Russla’ ’Mars- TwenlY-tWO-GT N19 RPM“ were bound spacecraft was said to be from Island farms. Highest Price continuing its fight successfully paid for m island animal was Friday night amid speculation 3400 he Price was Paid {Pr that it may produce evidence of York Noreen. owned» by Irvmg me on the "red punch" MacDonald. Little York 5 h e However.~ evidence on whether W85 llOllght by LESter Rankin. life exists there would come $300 was the highest Price paid seven months hence—the time 101‘ In I§18nd buu- BUd L0 required for the craft to make of Kilmuir. P.E.I.. bought Ban- the mp of 34,000,000 miles or doller 381‘ 3 from Il‘Vlng Mac: more. And. of course. this would DO d- . depend on the probe reaching Most of the animals were sold Mars and being able to carry to P.E.I.‘ cattlemen although is out its mission of relaying back few were bought by Nova Sco- close — up pictures of earth‘s tin and New Brunswick breed- nearest planetary neighbor. ers. A numberof Island breeders The Soviet Communist party bought several head each. newspaper Pravda ran an arti- The sale was held in one of cle by Ukrainian academician the cattle barns at the Exhibi- Nikolai Barabashov asserting tion grounds and interest in there is life on Mars. He argued the sale remained high through~ that unless vegetation existed out despite the chilly tempera- there the seas would have be- ture. About 150 people hovered come filled with dust and “ac- around the sale ring. . quired the same brightness and color as the (Martian) conti- m :3 f! t e nents." i The article also said a num- lber of Mars probes were J i lanned followln Thurs- ’3... night}, launching of the ‘ tion had been scheduled in the [rocket and its Lympound inter .i main political committee of the 3planetary communications sta- ; ion. ' The Soviet news agency Tass For Who rf reported that all Mars-I systems Riel» ates me Protestants. Mr. Ur- CAPITAL BUREAU were working normally and 0 THE GUARDIAN communications were operating OTTAWA — An $18,000 con- smoothiv_ tract for landing construction mscus‘sms ATMOSPHERE at Panmure Island was award— me 15 ed here Friday by the depart- went on. it would be more ment 0' I’llbllc WOI‘RS- primitive than life on earth and Announcement of the contract might. consist of dying forms of was made by Mrs. Margaret life which had adapted them- Mlcdonlld. MP for Kings. on selves to the less-favorable con- geli'a‘lf Foth Works Minister Hon, ditions. . 5 ' lon- ' (In England. the director of “9 Conant W" ‘Wll‘dtid 1° the big radio telescope at Jod~ Eastern (PEI) Contractors of re" Bank, heal- Manchester, Montague. telephoned Moscow after fail- Ml'l. MICdOfllld “M “l N ling to pick up signals from the work on the contract is expect-.1013“ probe. The director, sir ed to start shortly. Bernard Lovell. was trying to get more information about the spacecraft. explaining it was difficult to make con ct wi out knowing when the proba'a ,transmitter would be turned entific equ pment. was e eav- iest ever sent onen interplan- ‘ etarv flight. ‘ Th So'iet e rts have not same unis in a loo .1. hotel. 1."..cgwd‘mhgmw l, i..._ Speakers - there will Include itended to hit the planet. Indi- Prlnce (‘0an I 2". 3 '— .3; z I l O : quhsrt is a . I'- m I. Id m UM“ Summersida .. I “a”? ll _ _ Kings Co. 4 h- m aim“ “I m”. Women}.....'.'.'.'.'......'..'.. : a bad-Isa. ' ' ‘ V i In addition ~tmplioto’grsphing' the planet Mars. the space sta- tion is designed to send back data picked up on its way. Nuclear Test Vote Delayed Until Monday Pmposal for the establish- ment of a temporary cafeteria- style restaurant in this city in 1964. naming a new class to cover the entry of tourist homes in the rural beautification con- test. naming the executive e P.E.I. Tourist Association as a subcommittee in charge of housing arrangements for 1964 celebrations and continuation of Highland College and the welcoming pipers at Albany ere heard at the annual meet- ing of the Tourist Association at The Charlottetown yesterday afternoon. Charles Linkletfer. Summon side. was elected president for the coming year succeeding 5- re € Gordon 81am Braekley. Frank Via the Pellenin. Charlottetown,“ new first vice president; Earl Taylor. Oharlottetoum. secon vice president; and A. Walthen Gaudet. secretary - treasurer. continues in the post he has held for the past 13 years. COLLEGE PRAISE!) The afternoon business ses- sions heard high praise of the tourist attraction provided in the first year of operation of the Highland College at Rustico and strong support for its con- tinued operation was voiced. By JOSEPH MacSWEEN UNITED NATIONS iCPi— Canada moved Friday to win! the support of non-aligned coun- ‘ tries for its plan to break a deadlock on nuclear tests. Embracing proposals put for- ward by African countries. Can- ada urged an “interim arrange- ment limited in time“ for the 1 body that India’s Arthur Lall suspension of underground tests if comprehensive nuclear agreement is not reached by an. . A vote on the nuclear ques- United Nations General Assem- bly for late Friday but it was postponed until Monday as con- fusion piled on top of confusion. Procedures were so tangled by resolutions. amendments. sub-amendments and myriad suggestions in the lift-member commented the situation resem- bled a “spider’s web . . . and a X . . THIS PHOTO released ht New Delhi by The Indian gov- ernment is described as show- ing an Indian soldier digging FUND RfEACHiES 52.6 PER CENT Campaign chairman Brig. W. W. Reid last night an- nounced that by late last night 5127.91525 had been collected for the United Fund Apppeal. representing appro- ximately 56.2 per cent of the quota of $227.48600. The sec- vance gift and payroll sec- tions of Charlottetown. who early exceeded their quota were yesterday joined by the residential cauwass which collected $5356.50. about 117.1 per cent of their $5.000 target. At Charlottetown with $102,433.00 collected. that dis- trict was credited with 84 per cent. while Summerside with 321.148.65 had reached the 58.8 per cent mark. the spider is still spinning.” ‘——-—-——-—— siting ‘ . s . . a trench fortification tn the fighting area of Ladkah where Chinese troops have advanced An increase of approxin'iiitelyI 12 per cent in tourist spending‘l. last night by J. David Stewart. min- ister of Tourist Development as the meeting with addresses on the subject being given by Dr. Frank MacKinnon. principal of Prince of Wales College. William he announced the 1962 tourist figures at a dinner meeting of the Prince Edward Island Tour- Stewart said 59.420000 was spent by tourists in this pro- vince from May to October this DOUQIQS Takes year compared with 58.324000 in 961. Other figures noted by Mr. revealed that motor this year against Indian forces in border combs . (AP Wireth via radio from N be held regarding the importance as an attraction of the pipers playing outside the Albany tour- ist bureau as visitors arrived from the car fem-y at Borden. The general feeling of the meet- ing was that this should be con- tinued by the association. How- ever. a suggestion that pipers also be placed at Wood Islands was vetoed due to the difficulty in arranging placing of them at the pier theme. A large display of various types of advertising as well news stories written by visiting newspapermen. arranged by the Travel Bureau. attracted attention and led to am expres- sion of appreciatio to the gov- eminent. N i brochures used this year. DISCUSS HOUSING mittee. proposed of the tourist association act as Despite the weather of to st a subcommittee on hand}, 8 “mme'l' it “’35 Slam 0"" 5-000 1 arrangements for housing tour- People 'Bltended the cm1‘3‘3'1't9'ists in 1964. His suggestion was 5 ‘3 - strongly supported by Alan Considerable discussion was (Continued on page 5. col. 21 Spending Said . .Up 12 Per Cent from 231.000 in 1961 to 252.000 in i gone. is in keeping with our 962. (Continued on page 5 Col. 2i n by Charles Idnkletter. for the excellence of the color The province’s 1964 centennial plans were the main subject at Progress Report-'- ligsBright HINGTON fAPl—Pl‘esl- dent Kennedy told the Ameri- can people Friday night the Soviet rocket bases in Cuba are being dismantled. the missiles are being crated and “progress is now being made towards the restoration of peace in the Car‘ can." The president appeared on radio and television. after little more than an hour's advance notice. with a brief progress report on settlement of t e crisis that a week ago had the world teetering on the brink of nuclear war. e said it is "our firm he and purpose" that the progress being made will continue. Kennedy’s decision to deliver a personal report came after the defence department had given out essentially the same information. His brief announcement. run- ning just less than two minutes. was carried by all major radio and television networks. He said ‘I want to take this oppor- tunity to report on the conclu- sions which this government has reached on the basis of yesterday‘s aerial photographs which will be ade available tomorrow. as well as other in- dications. namely. that the So- viet missile bases in Cuba are being dismantled. their missiles and related equipment are be- ing crated. and the fixed instal- lations at these sites are being destroyed. .‘WILL FOLLOW PROGRESS " “The United States intends to 0 follow closely the completion of this work through a variety of means. including aerial surveil- lance. until such time as an equally satisfactory inter- national means of verification is effecte “While the quarantine re- mains in effect. we are hopeful that adequate procedures can be developed for international inspection of Cuba-bound car- goes. The lnternational commit~ tee of the Red Cross. in our view. would be an appropriate agent in this matter. "The continuation of these measures in air and sea. until the threat to peace posed by these offensive weapons is 1 ed to secure their with- idrawal or elimination from this l hemisphere. I "Progress is now being made towards the restoration of peace in the Caribbean. and it is our firm hope and purpose that this progress shall go for- war " Commons Seat jing to the Commons he left .and premier in Saskatchewan. 1935 to 1944. Mr. Douglas said: “Like the devil said when to be home again.“ defence ministry OTTAWA (CPi ~ New Demo- be do“ vehicles carried on the ferries cratic party Leader 1*. 0. Doug. .13s was sworn in Friday as a while the number of people vi- member of Parliament. return- the province increased “i F‘ on iyears ago to become CCF leader I Asked what it felt like to be back in the Commons. where he v2; sat as a Saskatchewan MP from 3‘ 0 John Galbraith. Canadian-.Pefled 50°“ _‘__ born United Stateis iimbnsFador.i [said American ight in antry I Iwcspons andnother equipmentlFirm ‘ Founder were being own from West 0 Germany and American planeslol“ A96 were in Turkey to transport , mountain Howitzers offered to lthe Indian Army by the Turks «The first of 10 U.S. trans- president of the Cabot Corpora- pnrt planes operating a round- tion. died Friday. He long was the - clock airlift of milltary‘president of the corporation equipment for India took off bearing his name. from Frankfurt‘s Rhine-Main world-wide operations in carbon Air Base for Calcutta. flying by black. produces a wide range of - l . apokes- 'man said Indian and Chinese pumps ltroops exchanged fire near WI- The proposal that the Interna- tional Red Cross be asked lay a role in verifying re- moval of the missile bases was advanced by the viet Union. The details of how this would e would have to be worked out. Cuban Premier Fidel Castro refused in a broadcast Thurs- day night to permit any kind of United Nations inspection or verification on Cuban territory. T efence department‘s earlier announcement that aer‘ ial reconnaissance p h o t o s showed work on dismantling the missile bases had started ‘ was appointed to the Senate. it's {was even briefer than the pres< g d * ldent's. Fresh Fighting Flares As India Builds Force NEW DELHI (Reutersi—An long—on the eastern side of the ‘American airlift of arms forlnortheast frontier agenc y—~ , llndia began Friday as fresh loutbreaks of fighting betweendhere was no change in the st- - iIndian and Red Chinese troops‘tuation. iwere reported from the eastern: 'front. 'Thursday but said otherwise Both sides were building up forces with a major clash ex- l BOSTON iAPi—Dr. Godfrey Lowell Cabot. 101. founder and which has chemicals and plastics. nor-ties, natural gas pipelines and makes and oil - well drilling equipment. t ,