If it’s Good For the Island The Guard OL. LXXV. NO. 71 PM Is Under Criticism For Civil Defence Move one Mga ing Liberals Friday ae. ot ee sasad'be with his cabinet governinj country in event of nuclear war and not in his personal fallout shelter Falls; said fenbaker | should’t sit “ with ‘us fae in his fee and holding his wife's hi mi oe sement shelter at 24 sha Pallett, parliamentary secretary to Mr. Diefenbaker, accused Miss La Marsh of mak- ng a personal, attack on the prime minister. Miss, La’ Marsh denied thi She said she was mal at- ‘ack on the office of the prime minister for no provision being | made for the proper governing ian is For it of thé country in a nuclear war, at ee eee ae racemes om in event of nuclear attack on Canada he would remain in the fallout shelter at the prime min- Iste’s reskdenee here with his fe. ADDS DETAILS Adding more details Friday, jhe said that instead of the ini- tial plan, which called for all cabinet ministers to be in one 5 shelter, the present program is for to lispersed in “about half a dozen’ shelters |in and around Ottawa. An ef- | fective communications system would link them, | Similarly, he said, policy re- garding evacuation has been changed, ‘While “it was first eavy Spending Puts OTTAWA (CP)—A sharp rise in expenditures in February combined with lower revenues increased the government's budgetary deficit for the first 11 months of the current fiscal r to $355,900,000. nance Minister Fleming's monthly treasury statement is- sued Friday night showed that the 1-month deficit was $15, 500,000 greater than the $340,- 100.000 deficit for the 1960-61 | x collections and in non-tax Friday of pursuing policies de- fiscal year, In his budget last June Mr. Fleming forecast a deficit of 650,000,000 for 1961-62. G Young Mother, Dies In Fire SYDNEY (CP) — Mrs. Earl Murphy, 19, died early Friday when fire destroyed a two-storey apartment house. Nine other persons, Mrs, Murphy!schusband and children, escaped the without inj paaiation:s fire, walth levelled the | Gohicit ot Sia0eoeo tn rebes, | oct Whe protien of conkeel sure is sleep- plus of ai erore for the April. | of wanting February ‘The building in less than a ae awa:Deep In Red ment expenditures tend to pile up towards the end of each fis- cal_ year. Expenditures in February rose to, sam, from $160. | 300. year eae Bud tary, revenues were aA 000, down from $425,900,000 in February of last year | Most of the decline in rev- |enues in February was caused a drop in personal income mues from returns on in- vestments which vary month by month, LOWER LAST YEA\ April-February period current year compares with a $30,100,000 deficit for the cor- responding period in the pre- vious fiscal year, _ Budgetary revenues in the 11- nth period rose to $5,208,800 00: from, $5,103,900,000 a ye eatller, But budgetary expendi- tures advanced more repidly to of the United States.” > ape from — $5,136,000, wor », “Operations oF the diese. Ms ase tnece Rind-—not part had igetary account ry, but an accumulated een we blocking any chance for a treaty Che Guardian “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew™ CE. Frondizi Seeks Aid éIn Crisis BUENOS AIRES (AP)—Ar- gentine President Frondizi tection would call for a Pog called for help Friday from tic expenditure, there should be | @tmy Gen. Pedro Aramburu in some collective protection for | aM effort to save his regime— | children. He also called for | caught in a squeeze between tockpiles of food and strategic | military leaders on one side and materials and a wees sys- tao working masses on the tem of automatic wa Paul Martin. (L-—Essex East) ‘Aramburu, a. retired infantry said all Canadians should be | officer, caretaker given an equal c ‘to sur- | President after the 1955 down- vive any nuclear war. The gov- |fall of dictator Juan Peron. ernment should embark Frondizi’s lieutenants program of public shelters, | Said Frondizi wanted the popu- Walter Pitman (NDP-—Peter- |lar general and elder statesman | borough) said ft would be ei serve as mediator in Argen- to ridicule civil defence but that | tina's worst crisis since the re- ft would be Mitten to advance | Volt that ousted Peron. an alternative policy, He could | Aramburu served in this ca- not quarrel with what had been | pacity in previous Frondizi-mil- | dove bat the record showed that | itary showdowns and is credited Canadians with staving off military rule. on pa to construct fallout AS Frondizi turned to the sold- {maine ani ier once more, Peron-hating mil- Kary groups were reported gain- ing an upper hand in efforts to VU. 5., Russia oust the -old president ! Dead locke: On Test Ban with a. partially effective | 2+ hour strike to protest Frondizi’s GENEVA (CP) — The United |geeree washing out important States and the Soviet Union, | victories Pero nist candidates deadlocked on terms for nego- | gained in last Sunday's elec- | tiating a nuclear test-ban treaty, | tions, ‘The unions threatened to accused cach other in the 17-| extend the strike for an indef- nation disarmament conference | jnite period on Monday unless Frondizi rescinded the decree. stined to set off a new testing | pROP MINISTER ne Meanwhile another | cabinet | U.S. State Secretary Rusk sug- | member was dropped by F ested the Soviet Union may be | dizi, ‘A government spokesman an- order to arrange a new test nounced the acceptance of of the ferfes of ils own, The Russians | resignation of Carlos Coll Bene- denied this. minister of economy. Soviet Foreign Minister Gro-, Government sources said the myko said President Kennedy's economy portfolio was offered to conduct atmospheric |to Alvaro. Alsogaray in late April constituted | launched the policy of Date ‘aggressive act on the part aaah while serving as econ- om; Frondizi from June, 1959, until last April. Coll’s ‘resign: followed that of Alf D Vitglo_ as inter- minister returns | showed widespread Peronist vie- fories in last, Sunday's provin- cial elections: Vitolo had urged that Peron- | ist candidates be allowed to con- thought that evacuation od citi es was the safest action | the event of attack, residen' now = being told a ee | at home unless tl arrangements at a rea of ce | Opposition | Leader Pearaca | saidthat while equality in pr & | or at least make Frondizi only Ie s figurehead under military di- om the opposite direction, | perontat unions hit the nation The three nuclear powers, at. ting as a subcommittee, ported t! isagreement to, the } Tentire conference ‘Their argu- | | ments turned, as in the past. they showed signs) to keep the subcom- | However, ing in Bevot the fe | iod, There was an | mittee alive. They agreed It! tact in elections was not known. act Saeaaleted surplus of $8,300, | Should meet again Monday. | ‘A leader of forces in the north a Macpty's — ot 000 in the 11-month period last during the military revolt is John Murphy, who moved | year. *. against Peron in 1955, Aram- = Pie el fea ‘The fund, financed by special Shopping Area buru became provisional presi- s tax levies, is used to pay old ei dent Nov. 13, 1955, after military father, also John Murphy, still | age pensions to all aged 70 and Heavily Damaged |iccvers ‘ousied Maj.-Gen. Ed- resides in Charlottetown, 3 Beech | over, The deficit in February | uardo Lonardi from the care- Street. Mrs, Murphy was | was caused by the recent in In Montreal Fire | taker post. native of Sydney, the former crease in the pension He turned the eS ore Donna Cormier. from MONTREAL (CP) -— Fire, to Frondizi after the electi Former British Leader : Of Liberal LONDON (Reuters) — Clem- ent Davies, 78-year-old former leader of the British Liberal party and a member of Parlia. ment for 32 years, died Friday of a cerebral thrombosis suf- fered 11 days ago. Davies was Liberal leader from 1945 to 1956 and in was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize by 100 parliamen- arians in many countries on | behalf of his long campaign for world sovernns Born in Wales in 1864, Davies oe Parliament in 1929 dur- | illiant legal career that ation tllowed his gradu from | Cambridge University. He ined his Portionentary | th. In 1991 he left the grou} the Rational Liberate whe 5 Sore Party Dies Labor leader Ramsay MacDon- Ad's national coalition govern: ent formed to fight the de eae “returned to the Liberal |party as the Second World War | the drug store were saved. loomed and in 1940 played an important part in bringing down |the Neville Chamberlain Con- ee eae govermment which replaced by Winston Chure- | 's wartime cabin He took the reins rol the Lib- eral party in 1945 when oncegreat political party, was to 12 seats in the Labor Tandstide that followed the war he handed the party eee Grimond, the present the wanes of $6,000,000. 1956, there were only | supported | heartened 1958. He has since isonet : quiet retirement eee bet ae times Frondizi found for his help in atin rae! nd Frondizi had weathered 35 swept an east-end shopping cen- ire Friday, destroying 15 of the stores and heavily damaging four others. Damage estimates ranged from $1,000,000 to $2, ae A ‘one was hurt. of them up to now. establishments sed Wek 5: ANA of the Basle Hu B mb a Montreal. H. L. Whittaker, an official, said the bank's fun a ge lad Deeg locked in a. vault bi nich i supposed to be fre Orbit aie ate their way quickly ed along the row of shops and most Suggest attempts at salvage were driven Ae ck by thick smoke, But mail| ,LONDON (Reuters) — he ba bags in a post office branch at| there js some evidence that the Russians might be developing & Firemen reported looters were | active even in the midst of the| We four-hour blaze. But there wax| Bottions —° & S00 - Megs each 0 way of saying how much was) S99" PCM aeton, in stolen: ; of Lords debate two Hee ago, oad the Russians “May even be developing a 500 - megaton could be ex- The centre in suburban Pointe Trembles was opened in It cost $2,000,000 to build | and one source estimated that with furnishings and merchan- dise added total value was in “the he Guardian serious prospect of i papons which can inflict mas- Delorme, fire chief in| sive destruction without. leaving faced | , in % st Liberals in Parliament. His | the pole said the fire ap- once agnin reduces Lib parently started tn the. Kischen| (eet cots pam snest be Liberal |e membership to | oral mara ecrection viciory’ bes | centre, But couse was ot im- supporters. by those who are responsible for | FormerB.C.GirlMakesBid = wore fr he luck toon Flaherty had | ata. It's remorse—you Til parole ay and parole officer, rant tor rape, burglary and other crimes, Ris William O'Hal- Flaherty ounsel, eran = the wee Fi ‘appeal on “ipport trated |to think of your victims and ae | “mm board took his applica- | tion under advisement after hear- a civilian secretary is Nt um a o will be with me the | The Canedion girl first past _ ton a |ot ee a magazine that told y and establish a military Junta, | space | another British journalist, a CANADA, SATURDAY, MARCH 24, 1962. WEATHER Overcast, intermittent rain and drizzle; west winds 25, gusts to 40. Low-high 28 and 35, Sunday: rain showers. “gan SEVEN ENTS 12 PAGES Sneak Spring Snowstorm a Islands Traffic iret " ll DIES AFTER 12 STAYS OF EXECUTION Vincent Ciucci, seen here being visited by his mother, Mrs. Frank Ciucei a few day: ago, died in the electric chair New Ferry Scheduled For Wood Is. In 1963 at Chicago early yesterday morning. He had received i2 stays of execution. The state contended Ciueci murdered OTTAWA (Special) -- A sec- quite inadequate, and because ‘ond ferry for the Wood Islands- there was a great deal of agita- Caribou route has been approved to. have improvement in in principle bythe federal gov- that service. ment, Transport Minister “Does the Minister think the Leon Balcer announced here. contract is likely to be let quite He was replying to questions from J. W. Pickersgili (Liberal- Bonavista eee during discussions of esti a les of the transport departme! ‘Mr. Pickersgill ssbed it the department was giving any con- sideration to putting a new ferry om the route in view of the fact that the present service was Prince Philip Exolains Cause Of Remark On Daily Express soon so tha tit might perhaps be ready for the season of 1963?" Mr. Pickersgill asked. “Yes,” Mr. Balcer responded. Earlier, Mr. Balcer [peony that a sum of $25,025 has provided for manteation to the ferry Lord Selkirk operating between Wood Islands and Caribou, BUENOS AIRES (AP) *"T bloody well Prince Philip explained Friday) back and told him, ‘look here, how it was that he called Lord| that’s unfair of you.’ He ex- | Beaverbrook’s London Daily| plained that he had been warned Express a “bloody awful” news- not to mention The Express | paper “I said ‘well, look— i ie Canadian-born publisher! “He told me, ‘well, | has been accused in Parliament 00d newspaper. a ” persistently poking attacks| ‘I told him no, it was bloody jat the Queen and the Royal) awful.” Family. Last Tuesday The Ex-| Drink in hand, the prince press quoted the prince, om added, ‘'I know I am rude, but band of the Queen, as saying) tt is fun.’ The Express was a “bloody aw- newspaper, full of lies, sean-| stages of a 60-day tour of Latin dal and imagination—a vicious! America, also had something to say when the talk got around to revolutions, particularly the possibility of one in Argentina. “In =a we've had bet- ince’s explanation was S| aoe at a British embassy. re- ception for newspaper men. He | said the incident occurred at Rio Ld dictators and revolutions de Janeiro, an you'll ever have here,"’ he “Actually we were at a party wai po this and having a jolly good | ‘CHOP OFF HEADS' said.“First The Daily| Asked if he had ever heen In Mail man was introduced, then! a revolution, he said, “better anda revolution than a dictatorship. then a jolly fat’ Englishman | Our revolutions were very good came up—he must have weighed | ones. They even chopped some about 240 pounds—and was tn-| of our heads off.” troduced as being from The Ob-| “They're having lovely ones server. Later, somebody told! in Europe right now. Look at me that man isn't from The Ob-| France. They're blowing server, he is from The Express.| mailboxes all over the plac e called him | Philip, who is on the closing his wife, Anna, 28 and their three children so he could marry another woman. He was condemned to death in 1955. Parliament At A Glance By THE CANADIAN PRESS FRIDAY, March 23, 1962 dudy La Marsh Ni agara Falls) said that it wae Diefenbaker the plan is to have cabinet minis- ters scatter to various shel- ters so that one bomb could not wipe out leadership Transport Minister Ralcer said the government is giv- ing serious thought to a_re- duction a tolls on the Wel- land Can: Walter Pitman (NDP—Pet- erborough) called for a Com- mons committee to make a study of civil defence needs. Senator Walter Aseltine said army will be delayed be- cause the Commons did not pass suppler-entary estimates quickly enough. MONDAY, March 26 Commons meets at 2:30 p.m. to debate govern- ment legislation. The Senate stands adjourned until Tues- day at 8 p.m. Plows Answer, Emergency Calls A howling blizzard struck the province yesterday blotting out any traces of Spring that was evident in recent weeks. The surprise storm, reported to be the worst of the year, blocked most highways as winds reach- ing near 60 m.p.b. swi the light snow into high drifts. Motorists who were caught in the storm were forced to move their vehicles at a snail’s pace as visability was reduced to nearly zero. Many vehicles were left_abandoned on the shoulder: of highways. Numerous accid- ent were reported but only a few resulted in persons being injured. EMERGENCY CALLS One plow was sent out to break a path for an ambulance from Hennessey's Funeral Home in Charlottetown, which was head- ing for Fort Augustus to bring a person with a heart condition to hospital. The ambulance left Charlotte- town at 8 p.m, and at 12.30 a.m, had only gone seven miles with nine more to go. A plow was reported to be coming from Mt. Stewart to aid the ambul- ance in reaching its destination Motor vehicles stuck on the high- way was said to be hampering the efforts of the snow plow operators. In Charlottetown a plow had to break a path to the home of Dr, Douglas MacDonald on Nas sau Street in order for him te assist in an emergency oper: jion at the Charlottetown Hos pital. The doctor was taken te the hospital in the snowplow. During the height of the storm yesterday afternoon a two-car collison occurred on the east- ern end of Grafton Street in Charlottetown near “Buster's ‘Cnntinued on page 3, col. 5) | Girl Injured | During Fire In Souris SOURIS - was blamed for the fire A faulty oil stove at 10: 30 last night in the home of Mrs. Lena Robertson, is. ‘The alarm was turned in at approximately 10:30 and the Souris Fire Department answer+ ed the call. The fire was con- fined to the kitchen, and dam. aje was reported not extensive. Mrs. Robertson's 17-year-old daughter Theresa was burn about the face, arms, and neck, She was taken to Souris Hospit- al by ambula..ce where she was treated for burns and shock. Forecasters Admit Storm Fooled Them Completely HALIFAX (CP) — A severe storm whipped in from the At- lantic Ocean Friday, depositing heavy. snow-in wide sections of the Maritimes and a mixture of snow, rain and freezing rain in Newfoundland Weather forecasters here said the storm fooled them com- pletely. Even at § a.m, AST Fri- day they expected the storm to hang out over the Atlantic and they predicted a sunny day. But it suddenly veered inland and heavy snow started falling shortly before dawn. One death in Nova Scotia was ttributed to the storm, 46, of North Wa Ns ivasifeseal Gand Ohi Wieei blocked road a few hundred yards from his home. He ap- parently died of exhaustion after walking about a mile when his car became stalled in heavy a3 ‘snow. Driving conditions here were poor. “It's pretty bad in places,” said a police spokes: man. “Most people are playing it smart — they're staying jame."” DRIVING BAD An RCMP spokesman said all reports of driving conditions on Nova Scotia highways were “very bad.” Four to six inches of snow had fallen by 9 p.m. AST in eastern New Brunswick, Prinee Ed. ward Island and the Nova Sco- tia mainland. The weather office warned that another foot might fall before the storm blows into the Gulf ‘of St. Lawrence today. Newfoundland was getting sleet in western sections, snow in central areas and rain in the east Winds up to 70 miles an hour in northern Nova Scotia turned nine inches of snow into drifts eight feet high in the New Glas. gow area where stores, usually open Friday night, closed late in the afternoon. Jets, Armored Cars Thrown Into Battle Against OAS CP from Reuters-AP ALGIERS — French jets and or were thrown at nearby) lized world which is watching strong: holds Friday as the fanatical diehard terrorist Secret Army Orgai After dscns fell the sound of heavy machine-gun fire rat- tled from the nearby European el - Oued, — residents were reported a curfew and firing on stronghold of Bab - Ky mnuary patrols. Prefect Vitalis Clos of the Al- | of your country, for the future of your children, for the civi- you and judging you.” During the day eight French ion jets strafed snipers on Bab-el- pulled off one of the biggest robberies in ae in the west- Oued apartment rooftops. Ar- mored cars moved into the ter rorist stronghold with guns blaz- Fitteen Secret Army men. some disguised as police, held up the Banque d'Algierie at Oran and got away with bills worth ‘$4,760,000. BATTLE THROUGH NIGHT with de Gaulle in Paris “pitiless repression’ of the Se- eret Army insurrection, eight French jets swooped down to strafe snipers hidden among the chimney pots and a column of armored cars advanced slowly into the centre of Bab-el-Oued, their guns blazing The Secret Army is opposed to France's cease-fire agree- ment with the Algerian insur- gents which ended the Moslem rebellion and provided for Al gerian self-determination. The battle in Bab-el-Oued be gan when the troops moved inte called French troops rmored ~ a Agar appealed early Fri-{ cars and halftracks battled ‘* Sa after six soldiers residents to| through the night against Sec- Wii ae ay wounded ret Army terrorists in down- jiny > e as Bab-el-Oued an. ‘fighting “for the greatne of a 75-unit —otel behind the| PY. howe we mediately determined. eee en ol but “the evi. enough to affect | eo fee sare a rsh tl * vats out that wuiors. eo previously regarded | VIC as the best missile, arry Paro Ea canes weapon would WALPOLE, Mass. (AP) —, Miss MeKearney ae the | erty’s petition in writing were: face ne eal ee re Fran nate a ‘S-year-old | board Flaherty has been very Arthur T. Lyman Mas- ry Canadian girl wants to! frank with Apeselis, Commbashoner of eons : megaton thermo- * Garey & Massachusetts ‘convict, With feference to marriage rection; W. D. Achuff, former nucleat weapon tht caould be fas | smiling peter as she/ she said: “I have no. spprehen- warden at Walpole and now ¢xPloded 200 miles above its tar- joined ae a hearing = sion, = or fears of a life, warden at San Quentin; John | Set, scorching huge areas of the fore the Massachusetts parole with Joe _ Gavin. present end. | earth, would obviate all re-entry ae for tom ‘A. Flaherty, | PLEADS OWN C. Walpole geen, Reseell problems, The Guardian says. Pleading for an eat _ parole, & Ovrald another he darsctatred girl, formerty Piaherty told the board None ‘of convectian ee fe WHERE.-TO-FIND-IT & Fort St. Sen Peak semper. | now choltnse of the New York jassachusetts prison | She on working then as for the Ca- os the Yukon. | / HOME BUILT MODERNISTIC AUTOMOBILE Frank Thomas of Calgary designed and built this mod- can ernistic car which he says es as an electrically operated make a U-turn at 40 miles an | eanopy, automatic transmiss hour. The cat has such featur. | fon, | dual | dies town Algiers French officials said 15 sol diers were killed and 5 wounded in five hours of street ¢lashes. Secret Army casualties were not disclosed but one hos- pital reported receiving the bo. of three Europeans and was treating 40 Europeans for wounds, A plastic bomb shook | French tank posted at an inter- section. The tank replied with ‘all its gums blazing at a nearby building where Secret Army snipers were harassing French Official sources said the gov ernment planned to clean out the “abcess” of Bab-el-Oued, a working-class quarter populated by mainly — Secret Army and honey: secterist cook and army with mando centres dumps. Friday's battle in which The killing of the soldiers may Coninued on page 3 col * Lung Cancer Warning Given MONTREAL (CP) Three out of four deaths due to lung eancer could be prevented by non - smoking, Dr. Jacques Syl vestre of Sherbrooke, Que., said Friday in a statement released by the Canadian Cancer Society. Dr. Sylvestre, co - chairman of the society's medical advi ory board, said lung cancer is spreading faster than any other infection disease ‘in Can- said “the in recent years tip cigarettes in- dicates that the public is becom Sylvestre marked shift” toward filter - | French troops got ait and armor | in K more aware of the relation | support was only the first phase, between smoking retractable headlights and [tear ts 0 to come. the afternoon, mati President stp and can- “lmewever, the roe ot smoke filtration is still scientifically undetermined.”