If it’s Good For the Island The Guardian is For it ‘OL. LXXV, NO. Asthorized as Second Class Mail by the = ~~ Ottawa, and for payment of postage w PPOSITION SHARPLY CRITICAL Stormy may ' | | ' Passage ls Given Industrial Corporation Bill By NEIL MATHESON Farm And Provincial Editor The most strenuous argument fof the present legislative — developed late yesterday aft oon as Opposition iothene clashed with Pear Valter Shaw, and several of his ministers, when Resources Min- ster Leo Rossiter sought ap- proval in principle orl second reading of an amendment to the Prince Edward Island Industrial Corporatiou Act, | The amendment requires that - rity authori three members of ty of the legis- not less than three The 21 private members the government shal] serve on ee pack up and go the board of five gan. os all‘of | home.” whom shall be appointed by Hon. Mr. Rossiter, Premier an Shaw and Hon. Melvin McQuaid comelained, ‘to $2 cena Be statement was pend “unfair a untrue or- Saree without the cutaciog of poration reports to ’ the legis- ogiaia | lature each year. Mr. McQuaid SEES Aurnenery GONE added that the auditor has the “If you pass this," Mr. Math. authority under the act, to audit eson i acta are taking away the accounts of the corporation French Army Moves To Break OAS Grip - Long mili-| which killed 45 Europeans and ticularly ‘hitter exchanges. ALGIERS (AP) - (ary convoys rollled into Algiers Tuesday to help French troops and riot police bring the 300,000 Furopean settlers of this strike- crippled capital under control. Army sources said about 60,- 000 soldiers — most of them newly freed from field duties by the cease-fire ending the Alger- jan nationalist rebellion — are being massed in the defiant tity It was clear that the supreme commander in Algeria, Gen. Charles Ailleret, and French High Commissioner Christian Fouchet are determined to break the back of the European Secret Army Organization and its resistance to Algeria's inde- pendence. Secret Army agents told re- porters the shooting Monday | PLEADS WITH SETTLERS and Saar to the Legislature. “No shou o the Lib- ie report wi be to the legislature cer- aig wilh there’s no opportun- ity to discuss it or vole on any © monies expended. “It makes of this legislature nothing but rubber stamps,” a criticized. BITTER EXCHANGES Premi ved or and Mr. Math- eson hoo! in some par- At injured 120 demonstrating for one stage the premier demanded the Secret Army. was “‘a terrible and received a retraction from blow below the belt.” One the Liberal leader, who charg- ad ed that the measure had been oe are so stunned we can- | Drought in at 4:30 in the after- not think of any reaction,” oe with the implication that as done to get the bill passed. “it s imputing improper motives Fouchet pleaded with French { the government,” the prem- settlers to abandon “the assas- if charged. sins of the Secret Army Organ- _ Mr. Matheson ti Com- tation? mittee , Chairma M. Alban “Those men lead you to death cares that the slate and tragedy and they know It,”| observed he had no choice he- Fouchet said in a radio-televis- cause “I can’t afford to go out ion address of this chamber at the present He said Monday's shooting | time.’’ He would have had to was that of “innocent victims | withdraw, he intimated, if he pushed to death by assassins."’ refused to accept the chairman's The Secret Army people he de- ruling. clared, “have nothing left to The Liberal chief was object- hope for but your sacrifice— ing, he said, to the fact that they know their game is up.’ the money is yy: —n in estt- Dutch Reinforce \/. New THE HAGUE (Reuters)—The ‘utch government announced Tuesday it was sending naval and troop reinforcements to dis- puted West New . said the move was being de “because of the continual ‘- and aggressive acts of nesia,” which claims the ‘ory. Parliament At A Glance Ky THE CANADIAN PRESS TUESDAY, March 27, 1962 Acting Agriculture Minis- ter Harkness announc a $225,000 grant to help wed oais to drought-hit * regions. J. W. Pickersgill (.—Bona- vista - Twillingate) tried in vain for more details of the Red China wheat sales agree- hint ship prai- , Wik Nielsen (PC—Yukon) *“oduced a bill to put an grimo in the Senate but it debated without coming vote. * Senate approved in miinciple a bill of its own which makes three revisions in the Canada Grain Act. WEDNESDAY, March 28 The Commons meets: at 2:30 p.m. to study supplemen- ‘ary estimates. The Senate Meets at 3 p.m Tishermen who have the nec- ca fishing trips, as the result xplained that it covered ex nditure for the life saving, efighting and in- tallations the fi regula- if business this year.” ishermen Offered Loans © Get In Tourist Trade say that the Tignish Credit Un- . |is the largest union in the en- is tire province. = = mates should be. That's s a way it al- ways has been in the past, it’s the only democratic way, contended. That’s the way this govern- ® ment has been doing with all too many of its projects, Mr uU j n e a ee a ae ip a her: the mates holding a aoe re the Estimates The announcement came in a i. Revenue and Expenditure at letter to the Dutch parliament eye level) where it should be, from Premier De he emphasized. Instead, he said several navy units nave |, S “it? i here in been sent to West New Guinea ea ef ee and added a “limited strength- jp, .nier Shaw came back oe. : a Tt also WAS with the charge that this is planned inthe territory. the sort of thing the Opposition The announcement followed [Leader and his followers do reports of Indonesian naval ac- (Continued on Page 3 Col. 2) Work Tax Eliminated By House Second reading was given to a bill in the Legislature last night that will take away the power of Charlottetown and the province’s towns and villages to impose a tax on non-resident workers. The bill, entitled an act to re- lieve non-residents from certain | palities, was prom coe an Minister J. David 5 Mr can said that Charlotte- town, See ‘and the Villa; ioners all had requested Seah | According to the act, no city, town or village shall have the power to impose a tax or license on any person who works in a community of which he is a non-resident Commiss- The act will not apply to per- sons who are non-residents of Prince Edward Island Heath Ends ECM Talks At Ottawa By ALAN DONNELLY OTTAWA (CP) Edward Heath, Britain's Common Mar- } ket negotiator, left for London Tuesday night bearing the Ca- nadian government's hopes for safeguards on Canadian export interests should Britain join the European Common Market. Following two days of closed- door talks Finance Minister Fleming told reporters that “only time will tell’ what trade terms Mr. Heath, Britain’s deputy foreign secretary, will be able to reach in a, Both Fleming expressed Pool with the a — ia described only as of information and vieds'¢ on the present and future course of the Brussels negotiations. Even less information em- erged following an _ hour-long talk between Prime Minister Diefenbaker and Mr. Heath. They also had a long discussion Monday. ae along the south coast. ment sources se a ships sent to the island w 2,497-ton destroyers coe | and Groningen, whic just jended a visit to ea Jae | Calif. They said two oth the seinanriiee Dolfijna me eee? now visiting the Mex- can port of Manzanillo, might follow later. SET UP BLOCKADE Dutch warships Tuesday set Threatened up a blockade at entrances to GENEVA (Reuters) — Russla rivers and bays on the south Tuesday threatened fresh nu- coast of the territory in a bid to | clear weapons tests in reply to ic Ag tn or four Indonesian any future American § atmos- ent Dutch spokesman, — eg Wee ween was made by So- ; th woes ‘te i ie the viet Foreign Minister Gromyko aocke yoy niohts. of Ba mS ‘as United States State Secretary . 8 — Rusk headed by plane for Wash- ington from the 17-nation dis- sei on dipraks now sia ed armament conference. ee ore ng sea If the U.S. resumed testing, oft by - hoor the ye he s Hel. Gromyko said, Russia “in the ica dane Duteh eset an Se of assuring its pa se- curity and world peace will be cee a ao iaiuvasere wae compelled to reply by carrying apparently landed from an In- out a series of its own tests.” donesian schooner attacked by peer i Saas th eum: Dutch plane last Saturday. ee ‘ : ference scored no real gains on either the tests issue or Berlin. British Foreign Secretary Home also flew home as the continuing parley prepared t drop from foreign ministers’ to permanent delegates’ level. Home asserted the meeting had made “a pretty gin- ning” in an atmosphere and = St. John’s Hotel Fire «Kills Four ST. JOHN'S. Nfid. (CP)—Four om Stewart siso promoted this persons died Tuesday night in a fire which swept through a It gave J.W. Don Campbell, PC-ist Prince, the incorporated villages if the in- through highways. Hon Stewart was the to the Credit ieties ‘he also two - storey wooden hotel at chance to Harbor Grace, about 25 miles jon is one of the oldest and it re and her 12-year-old daughter and two elderly persons, all unidentified. fi nm was ed have attempted to rescue WHERE-T9O-FIND-IT woman from a top window of 1 the + room hotel, but was driven back by the heat of the blaze No bodies canoes been recovered. The hotel, owned by | Mrs. Lorenzo "Pike, was booked to capacity. Most of the guests Sam Co. ; tessenerne, & lat the time of the fire were at- , Queems ......... “¢. 19 | tending a Newfoundland Senior POS... 5. c0ee -% ¢ | Hockey League playoff game Editorials ...-.6ssses+--. g | between Corner Brook Royals Sammerside weereees and Conception Bay Ceebees. POD Gg. 50s csessvvess ® fire was not im- Cause of the mediately Vr. and | Fresh Nuclear Tests By Russia : temper that were “extremely ‘ood.”’ Also on the bright side, Rusk and Gromyko—due to go home Thursday—issued a joint state- ment saying their two weeks of private talks here on the Berlin problem been ‘“‘both useful and frank.” RESUME BERLIN TALKS The statement said the Ber- lin contact would be resumed “in an appropriate way'’—ex- pected in a week or 10 days in the form of more Berlin “probe” sessions in Moscow be- tween Gromyko and Llewellyn Thompson, the U.S. ambassa- dor there. Home told the closed - door conference “we begin to see much in common between the Russian and American plans” for disarmament. However, Home also pinpointed the main problem—while the U.S. pro! als would move toward total disarmament in nine years through a continuous program, the Kremlin proposes complete disarmament in four years. Rusk told the meeting it could perform a great service if it | took three steps this spring: | Reverse the “upward spiral” | of destructive capability, te be | doubled by 1966 if unchecked; reverse the trend to spread nu- clear capability to more na- tions; agree on measures to re- duce the risk of war by accl- dent, miscalculation or surprise attack. External Affaire Minister Green of Canada proposed a raft declaration on the use of Stationing in space of devices for delivering mass-destruction weapons and would pledge coun- tries to give advance notice of satellite launchings Green asked the conference 9 act on the draft no later than today. Gromyko made his Thing in a statement for | broadcasting by United Nations tadio here he te te test-han vy the Russians, Srtieh are deadloc viet refusal to have any foreign inspectors checking pact adher- ‘ence on Russian territory. negotiations Americans and the Union of Municipali- | such | nuclear * Che Guardian “Covers. Prince Edward. Island Like The Dew” WEDNESDAY, MARCH 28, 1962. WEATHER Overcast with occasional] drizzle: north winds 15, diminishing to light. Low-high 38. 82 and NOT MORE SEVEN CENTS Start Is Forecast Th On New Provincial MAYOR, OFFICIALS SEE COURSE TRAINING en in oe hand- ling is observed by Mayor A. Walthen Gaudet, City Clerk John Butler, and Civil De- fense Co-ordinator, Louis Ran- ahan, who visit Char- lottetown armouries yester- ay, where the 3rd Special is nearly completed and a fourth course is be held tam in Sa and Sum ruiting is still eth cau: oe for this fourth course. Standing from Halliwell, Charlotte t o wn, chief instructor; Mr. Rana- han, Mr. Butler, Mayor Gau- det and Major Lorne Ramsay, commanding officer of the course. Trainees in the front row were not identified. City's Incorporation Act “« Amended In Hot Debate A stormy second reading was given in the Legislature guia day to a private bill, ending the City of Chartolbetown corporation Act, whose most controversial sections provided pa a salary increase for the mayor, ries for coun- cillors; extension of the mayor's and councillors’ terms and the right of City Council to close the right-of-way of certain pub- lic lanes. oe a promoted by M. Al- rmer (PC-Charlotie- peel ‘hed gone into the com- mittee stage for consideration in ae coat on March 15 re oe any eg of the Legiaiatare wanted further en on © amendment ANSWER QUESTIONS Mayor A. Walthen Gaudet and Sma of the council ap- before the bar of the House yesterday answer ueries on the bill. nthe main question in regard to salary increases was whether or not citizens of Charlottetown had been informed of the pro- posed salary raise prior to the last civie election ae gee told the House he atte di been eee up “as ented meeting last November and “had been given an airing in the press of 5 the province and had been com- mented on editorially. Also The Evening Patriot carried a sto: last week regarding dates and methods by which the propos- al had been given publicity. “Council felt the interval from last December to election time was enough for citizens to dis- GREEN OFFERED RED SUPPORT GENEVA (CP) — Bulgaria, an Iron Curtain country, play- fully volunteered today to help Canada’s Howard Green with his domestic political | problems After the Canadian external affairs minister had _light- heartedly appealed for csup- port on grounds that he would get in trouble with Canada’s parliamentary opposition if he returned to Ottawa empty- handed, Bulgaria’s Carlo Lou- Ganov took up the point He said he would be glad to support the Canadian plan— for a special committee meet- ing Wednesday on outer space —if it would really help Green returns to Ottawa Thursday. ,ecuss whether or not we were a fit body or seek other candi- ates.’ Opposition Leader Alex Matheson asked for hobbiabeend on the decision to raise salar- les. ‘MAYOR EXPLAINS “The task confronting coun- cil in running the affairs of the city," the mayor said, “has grown over the years and is a teriffic one now. There are so many functions connected with the office that it is common to work five nights a and sometimes six. City business will soon amount to $1,500,000 and it is felt that the extra $800 asked for councillors bringing their re- numeration up to $1,200 is very reasonable for the amount time they spend at their work. The fact that council was re- turned to office by acclamation indicates that the public felt the same as the council on this matter Stating that he had _ often heard it said that paying more Produces better elected representatives, Mr. Matheson said he didn’t think the Legis- lature had increased its capacity because of additional money to members. “T don't Matheson, (Continued on Page 5 a think,” said Mr. “that it is our busi- Col. 2) | gislation will be considered, NEW RCN RECRUITER IS TAKING OVER Chief Petty Officer, Joseph Paquet, left, of Charlottetown assume the duties of RCN recruiter at HMCS Queen Charlotte following the retire- ment of Petty Officer John Hemphill, night ‘ Georgetown, The changeover is now underway the supervision of Lieut. Cmdr. D Colgrave, centre, area recruit- ing officer. With turnover completed, PO Hemphill will HM sumed Gh | Queeeed ICS Stadacona, on where he will undergo the necessary routine prior to soing on retirement leave af- er 21 years of service. CPO Seems has 22 years service nd is of @ B-year engage- ment. | vance of it being | bill for first reading | Militia Training Course was | left to right are, Major G.F 'House Plans | in progress. Training for the Two Sittings The tentative schedule for the Legislature calls for sittings at 2.30 p.m. and at 8 p.m. According to the schedule, le- re- ports of House committees will be tabled and the debate on the budget speech will be continued. New UN Role Seen Possible If Funds Low UNITED NATIONS (AP) — Acting Secretary - General U Thant said Tuesday he wi!l ask the Security Council to consider possible changes in the United Nations’ Congo role if the re- sponse to the $200,000,000 bond issue is unsatisfactory. Thant told a press conference the UN operations both in The Congo and in the Middle East would be affected by a poor re- sponse. If this happens, he said, it would be his duty to report to the 11-nation council and ask for a new directive At present, he said, he has received pledges or purchases from 2 countries, Canada and not counting the United States, totalling $49,515,- 000. He added that if the U.S. senate approves the recommen- dation of its foreign relations committee, the total would go up to $125,000,000 on a match- ing basis. This would still be far short of the goal. | intent of “erecting an | on which West 14 PAGES is Fall Bldg. Enabling Bill Gets Approval Ry DON MacLEOD Guardian- Patriot Staff Writer It is ho that the first for the new provincial building will be turned in the fall, Pro vincial Secretary J. David Stew- art said in the Legislature last night. He made the statement when the House was in a committee of the whole, giving cond reading to a bill that will estab lish a men incial Crown building | corpora As tee of the bill, Mr. Stewart said that the coropra- tion Is being formed se the ovid- ng for’’ a new ne build. SITE PICKED Mr. Stewart, pointing out that a government committee ap- pointed to look into all phases of the proposed provincial build ing had recommended the block Kent Schsol : situated as a site. said that inal decision on a site rests oat the eee e Council. “The site recommen ; mittee must be atovad by the Executive Council.” “and I think it will be.” Mentioning that the committee had recommended that the Mont- real firm of architects that won the national competition for a design for the Confederaion Memorial Building be consider- ed as architects for the new pro- vincial building, Mr. Stewart said that represeniatives of the Montreal firm are expected in Charlottetown Thursday to meet with him on the matter. LONG-TERM PAYMENT In explaining the bill, which was entitled an act to establish the Prince Edward Island Crown Building Corporation, Mr. Stew- art said that if the building were financed directly, the gov- ernment would have to pay back the cost in at least 20 years “Since the building is expect- ed to serve the ae org the next 80 to 100 years,” Mr. Stewart, “we do not io that it would be fair to have the present generation pay for it. The cost should be spread over future generations so that there will not be a heavy load on this generation “The only wav to spread the cost is to a Crown ¢ would be amortized over 80 or 100 vears and cach year the including Legislature will approve a sum f money which w ill be paid to the corporation as “rental” on the building ! through rental the cost of the building {s paid off .the government will own it FOUR IN CORPORATION According to the bill , the cor- poration will consist of a prest- (Continued on Page 5 Col, 5) )4-Hour Notice Rule parks House Debate When is the Legislature in ses sion? This question was dealt with at some length in the House yes- terday when Provincial Treasur- er Melvin McQuaid introduced a bill for first reading “This bill cannot be introduc- ed today.” said Opposition Lea- der A.W. Matheson, ‘“twenty- four hours notice has not been given."’ He said that notice had been given on March 22 that the bill would be introduced But the House was not in session on March 22—it adjourned March 21 until 8 p.m. last night—so the notice does not take effect until 8 p.m. tonight.” COMPLIED WITH “The formality has been com- plied with,” said Mr McQuaid. that’ s all that is necessary.” “We have rules to go by.’ re- plied Mr. Matheson, “we re- quire 24 hours notice Provincial Secretary J. David Stewart said that as long as a ” bill is delivered to the clerk ot the assembly 24 hours in ad-! the House, that could be taken as sufficient notice. tr. Matheson again objected when Welfare and Labor Minis- ter Henry Wedge brought in a introduced in “I have the) same obiection to this bill,’ the Opposition Leader said, “suffie jent notice was not given.” Premier Walter R. Shaw ask- ed “when is this House is ses- sion? Isn't it from February 29 onward? 1 think these are sim- ple, delaying tactics by the op- position “There was a recess from Wednesday until Monday night —the House was not in session,” replied Mr. Matheson “Are we out of session every time we adjourn the House?" the Premier asked “My understanding.’ said Dr M.L, Donnell (L-4th Kings) “ts that the House is in sesssion when the members are sitting There are rules to be followed.” ABIDE BY RULES Mr. McQuaid said that the teens goes by the rules I hope you abide by the rules ~ the land better than you do of his House. the fourth session of this assem- bly—24 hours notice at any time during the session is g Both bills, however, did not get first reading vesterday the Senior Citizens Hoasing Corporation Act