If it’s Good for the Island The Guardian is For it WEA flurries below and 15 above, “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” THER Clear, becpming cloudy with a few snow. ; north winds 20. Lew-high five VOL. LXXV. NO. eed Gem a tea Gites Dowie = CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, JANUARY 29, 1962. NOT MORE SEVEN CENTS 12 PAGES JOSE CAICEDO CASTILLA, Bi , Colombian foreign minister, gestures during speech before the Inter-American Foreign Ministers conference at Punta del Este, Uruguay. He asked the ‘conference to break diplo- ~OAS Cuban Declaration : Is Short Of U.S. Hopes PUNTA DEL ESTE, Uruguay, the way for adjournment of the, key point—whether to oust the (AP) — Hemisphere foreign ministers agreed Sunday night to draft a six-point’ declaration | will be permitted to vote for or | legal study committee. eriticizing Fidel Castro's ms ma. munist regime and sanctions Washington wou The agreement broke a week- | long deadlock on what action to} take against Castro and cleared Congo Premier — p ste t \ Call’ ve For UN Meeting LAGOS, Nigeria (AP)—Pre. mier Cyrille Adoula of The) Congo has protested the Soviet call for a UN Security Council meeting on The Congo, saying : matic and economic’ relations with Cuba. Seated second from | right at table is Argentina | Foreign Minister Miguel An- | get Carcano whose country | joined with Brazil in a com- conference Tuesday night. Informants said delegations) against each part of the final resolution. Near-unanimous sar | port is expected for all but the) countries—rather than manda-| tory steps—under the charter of the Organization of American States. < 5c LEAVES CHOICE This leaves the door open for members of the go-easy seven- country’ bloc, led by Brazil and) eapees tthe detiarotion. The voluntary measure also would, relieve them of taking steps that might be unpopular back home. | . But a US. . delegation, source | expressed confidence that at least 17 states would vote “for the ‘even more drastic steps) embodied in the declaration. He said all 20 will back a state- “it can only bring further con- fusion.” : | Adoula asserted Sunday nvk of the Congo's provinces now are under central government eontrol and he believes Presi dent Moise Tshombe of the sixth provinee — secessionist Ka-| tanga—is trying to work out a satisfactory solution. Here for the Lagos meeting ot Adoula said he had made his ~ views known in a cable to UN Acting Secretary - General U Thant. He also announced he is going to the United Nations tnis ment branding the Castro re- gime incompatible with the in-| ter-American system. A unanimous vote also is ex: pected for a general statement citing the inconsistency and dan- gers of communism in the West- ern hemisphere. The U.S. source said tne toughest tactic to sell to the, holdout ‘has been the explusion or suspensid of *the gime from all agencies of (he OAS Representatives of the go-easy, seven-nation bloc and the hard-| line group led by the United) week “‘to explain the situation.” Glenn Disappointed, Says There'll Be Another -Day _ By BEN PRICE CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP)—U.S. plans to rocket As- tronaut John H. Glenn Jr.. into urday by a low-lying, leaden ‘blanket of clouds. After spending five hours and minutes atop a fully-loaded Attas boos- still smiling to his special he said simply: I be another eed” rs where there’ won't come before ursday or Friday. may- At a press conference space agency officials said the Navy | 9 Members Of One Family. Die In Buckland, Mass. Fire BUCKLAND, Mass. (AP) — Six children and three adults— all members of one family— | a two-storey convertea in this western Mas. | sachusetts village. » The only survivor of the blaze Was Robert Deome ae. Se : retarded child who cs-| the flames by plunging es ieee pane of glass on a States still are negotiating the’ recovery forces reported they could remain at sea this Friday, adding: 3 “The launch now is scheduled for not earlier than i fib tin ag two to 1 s. centres on the | goals, | introduction of voluntary meas-| of the ‘ures to be taken by individual | been in effect since April, 1961.| article in Sunday’s. Komsomol Ship-Jumpers , weekended in the sun, President ment at the And the President was fet alone. In Arlington, Ya.,. Mrs. Glenn was reported but — forward the next There were an.estimated 75,- 000 people strung out~ miles <a a of waitin Red Split 4 May Get Into Open | By JOHN MILLER .| MOSCOW (Reuters)—The So- viet ideological rift with China may be brought into the open | even before the new larger cen- | tral committee’ of the Soviet | Communist party ‘meets here for the first time March 5, a |Communist source says. | fhe source said Sunday de- | \tails of the split might be dis- Of Inc lran Accuses Russia Rioting DOG AROUSES MASTER IN FIRE BERWICK, N.S. (CP) Arch Corbett, a 7i-year old pensioner, owes his life to his pet dog and a passer- by. who roused him from Moon Spacecraft Pictures Expected Useless Quality Rocket Missed Target - By 22,862 Miles iting | elosed in a newspaper article, | paper Pravda. | TEHRAN — Iran has accused | “Agriculture is- scheduled as Russia of inciting student riots here and protested against ‘‘in- terference in our internal af- fairs,’’ Premier Ali Amini an- nounced Sunday. The protest was made by For- eign Minister’ Husain Ghods Na- \the main item on the commit- itee’s sagenda, but Communist |gources have said it also will |deal with Sino-Soviet relations — 2 | and de - Stalinization ree Official announcement o ie “state of the committee meeting ee to the Soviet embassy was contained in a five -‘line- oe \item published prominently on Amini told a press conference ithe front page of. Sunday’s issue that several Soyiet diplomats ‘ot Pravda, which gave agricul- in “embassy cars were seen ture as the only. item on the among demonstra during ! agenda. : the riots a week afte in which ~-A-report on this topic will be. More than 200 persons Were in- delivered by Premier Khrush- red. ; chev, the party’s first secretary. . He said Iran is. willing to A year ago he made a scathing maintain friendly relations with attack on party officials. accus- Russia “‘but its action in in- ing them of poor leadership. and citing anti-government elements even thefts of crops. ~ is contrary to friendship. — e result of Khrushchev’s , Amini said those alleged fo be charges-was a top-to-bottom re- responsible for the riots will be ‘organization of Soviet agricul- tried by a court martial. ‘ture. Last year’s harvest of Ringleaders of the rioters and Casro regime immediately oF | nearly 138,000,000 tons, however, demonstrators had planned to Pg mon front proposing hemais- .. pheric coexistence with Cuba while condemning Fidel Cas- tro for embracing Commun. ism.” : (AP Wirephote via radio from Punta del Este) in toppling my government and assuming power," he said But all plots have been checked by the government, he said, and it is in full control of the situation. The _ trouble- makers had planned to import plastic bombs ‘‘but once and for all we shall end -such troubles.” Previously, the government had blamed communists and feudal landlords opposed to Amini'’s land distribution pro- gram for the demonstration, thr most violent in recent years. Tran long has been a target of Soviet propaganda because it is a member of the anti-com- munist Central Treaty Organi- zation along with Turkey, Pak- istan and Britain. Some of the unrest has been “ attributed to Amini’s refusal to call for new elections until af- ter the political situation in Iran is stabilized. Among other things, Tehran student demon- strators accused him of ruling | illegally. _ to turn the question over to &/was only moderate and below “hang me when they succeeded the best-ever figure of 141,000,- + All 20 members are agreed) 999 tons reached in 1958. Meat on the immediate banning of| production also was lower last — from the Inter-American | year ; Defence Board. But this merely) xhrushchev's concern for this makes formal a black-balling| important and unresolved inter- the Castro regime that has/ na) issue was reflected oy an . Siete _ | Pravda, the Communist Youth RCMP Doubt 2% aw | The article said that in the |Baskhir autonomous republic, }south of the Ural Mountains, -|nearly 73,000 head of cattle, ‘LONDON (AP) — London's |279,000 pigs and 160,000 ‘sheep 50,000 bus drivers withdrew died last year beeause of bad their support Sunday for a one- husbandry. os day transport strike that threat- Khrushchev,“ whoa has been ens this metcopoliaWith travel touring the Sovict republics, was | Chaos today. ' ——— back here this week- The decision was a mixed to prepare for the March | blessing for millions of commu- — the first since the | ters who will try. to reach their = ee —— was offices by foot, cycle or private eos lected at the party con- car. They now will have buses ws Gaitanis 29, and/| gress last October. but the traffic jams, expected ames Dimitrios, 28, who said| Some 175 full members andj to be immense. will be that Total 1,000 ng | MONTREAL (cP) — Officials | of the RCMP and the depart- ment of immigration say they doubt the claims of two Greek sailors that there are 1,000 ship- jumpers hiding in Montreal works against them." > : An RCMP spokesman said the number of cases-handed over to them does not indicate “that-a problem of nee ex- hiding since, made the staie-| the arrival of the young guard fronting Londoners: “We get reports eve i the Stali . , : an. overs eee lsat work, is expected to operate “Everytime a ship comes into : commuter trains from the south many of them remained free. | Y oy 5 ] accepted from announced here Sunday ists."’ come. to Ottawa either before or; called meetings. they left their vessel ii Mont-|155 non-voting candidate mem- : i 7 much worse. real in 19) ane been in} bers take part, reflecting This was the situation con- ment Friday after surrendering | to the forefront of Soviet politics : in Torénto. | and Khrushchev’s destruction of crue Rieeute paseagere $0 during the shipping season,” ' one immigretioa official said. il | only about 20 per cent of its Macmi lan Plans normal services. Hundréds of port someone jumps." } eo. He Soa cee aut Visit To Canada o wihtrewn or bey cant we -caten| _ Britisk These normally - bring around anne <n capital. ; Prime Minister Diefenbaker~to+ The busmen-were ‘expected.at ‘visit’ Canada in April, it was first to support the unofficial A spokesman for Mr.. Diefen-| and locomotive engineers. But baker said Mr: Macmillan wil! | theit about face came at hastily after a speaking engagement at| Three years ago, the busmen New York, April 26, . Lenteed erase z disappointed than the 40-year- old astronaut himself His friends said he had been anx- iously awaiting ‘the “go” signal, At Palm Beach, where he es seem wees «+04 y ses ceo ’ S’side Ce. cvesoaceboaute 2 Eevee seeeeeeeneneee Kings Ce. ET skceinedl 4 City, ‘seeesquvonee. B. week strike} about 15 miles from here. London Busmen Drop Strike Backing Plan fwhich-was not supported by the | subway workers. The transport strike is the gravest challenge yet io the Conservative government's | wage-freeze policy. Bodies Are Found Of Missing Boys CLEARFIELD, Pa. (AP) The bodies of two boys missing in an abandoned clay ‘mine since Jan. 14 were found Sun- day, state police reported. The boys were Wesley Lowe, 13, and Larry Husted, 10. The bodies were uncovered | by dragline operations at about | 1:45 p.m. Sunday. Both boys were crushed un- der a rock fall. One of the boys was hanging on to the feet of other, officials said. “Volunteer workers lotated the. bodies 17 feet the surface, about 15 feet where a 'draghole had been dug last stoppage by subway workers week in search of the boys Discovery of the two youths ended search that started two weeks ago-when the boys were last.-seen entering the mine, - Bie after fire broke out in his home PASADENA, Calif. (AP) — , Scientists sald Sunday that (Ralph Tesoro nearby Goaceratt "Ranger 3 we aimed at the moon but missed, | took pictures of its target as it | sped past, but.they may not be | of acceptable quality. | Scientists of the jet-propulsips laboratory in Pasadena —é who, tracked ‘the ”’Ranger from tne Goldstone tracking statien on the desert north of here~made | the announcement of the Ran- | ger's results : | They Said that the 727-pound rocket streaked aleross the | moon's path this afternoon and | then hurtled into space beyond the fire. woke the dog by smashing in a window -and shouting. The dog jumped on Mr. Corbett, who managed to crawl outside through ‘thick smoke Mr. Corbett had built the fiouse a year and a hwf ago Canadian-Born Union President e Dies In U.S.A. in a sweeping orbit around the sun KANSAS CITY, Kan.. (AP) Trackers at Goldstone gave William A. Calvin, 63, Cana- the Ranger orders for the cru- dian - born president of the In- ternational Brotherhood of Boil- ermakers, Ironworkers, Ship- builders, Blacksmiths, Forgers and Helpers. AFL-CIO, died at his home in suburban Fairway Saturday following a heart at- tack. He had-returned@rom a_busi- ness trip to Washington and complained of internal pains Calvin was a member of the executive council of the AFL- cial manoeuvres while the -pic- tures were being taken. CIO. In the last. few vears he had represented the. federal . government on special assign- CP from AP-Reuters ments_as_a labor specialist to. 1,EOPOLDVILLE—The United India and South America. Nations reported Sunday the Calvin was born near Grand i . successful evacuation of all Bay, N.B.. where he learned white priests and nuns from the s father’s trade. Duging the Fi ; terror belt of north Katanga. rst World War he joined the } rr ing the flights to Canadian Army at the age of satety. ane iF er Maj Dick 16 and became a major whem .7awson, the British officer he was 19. He was wounded five . i , , , charged with a one-man mercy times and was decorated by the mission, was attacked and tae : e arvcrnmente tnt BelBiU™ beaten In the village of Mbu- . . lula During the But Lawson reported he and professional a Congolese officer with him years escaped and new are on their way back to Leopoldville to give a full report. In his mes- sage to UN headquarters here, Lawson did not say who his as- sailants were. Lawson has flown in and out of ravaged villages surrounded by mutinous troops for the last week. He has been’ unarmed 1920s he* was a hoxer for several ~ rnacki- Quits Canada MONTREAL (CP Tomasa Biernacki. the Polish hydraulics engineer freed last weck on a preferred indictment chargiag him with spying for a foreign power, left by air Sunday nizh! for Poland Biernacki May. ond Act and w 37 charged Was Secrets as freed when the judge ruled the Crown had no case against him under ihe charges The Quebec government. at the request of the federal gov- . ernment, immediately issued a OTTAWA \CP)—The national preferred indictment, quashea campaign committ f the Lib- |last Wednesday. eral’ party met Suri to put ams Ay, ty sf * € a ek oe 2 3 ; h. P s — ‘ ¥# Ba a Oe 1,000-seat theatre and on the , through a@ concourse beneath right the museum and art gal- | the raised piazza. In the left lety. In the centre is a giass- foreground is the existing Pro roofed memorial gallery that yincial Building. (See also will give access to all blocks | stories om page 6.) * tor and a student © | native of St | | Scientists said the rocket did® | everything perfectly except one important procedure: it didn't keep an antenna pointing at the earth SIGNAL WEAK As a result, the TV camera's signat to earth was weaker than it should haye been. The signal received by Goldstone, said: scientists. was evercome noise and scems meaningless Scientists »ere attempting to remove the noise and unmask the signal. But a spokesman said ‘there is litt!e hope that it will produce any beneficial results.” The trackers said the rocket passed the moon at a closest distance of 22,862 miles at 3 23 p.m. Sunday at a speed of 4.188 miles an hour Priests, Nuns Moved 7 FromNerror Belt and, much of the time. alone. UN headquarters said the 35- year-old Briton—attached to a Nigerian UN unit—volunteered for the assignment, a prelim- inary to large-scale UN military measures to restore order to the Luluaba river basin Lawson reported six European priests and four or five Euro- pean nuns from the Roman Catholic. mission town of Sola were safely evacuated to Bau- douinville Three European priests from the town of Lubunda were flown by Congolese troops to Stanley ville, to escape threats made against them by rampaging youths in the area After the massacre of 22 white priests and residents at Kongolo on New Year's Day. these terrote ists bands had been striking fear into even the soldiers whe started the massacres Election Strategy = Planned By Liberals — the finishing touches on a new mid-20th century plan of win- ning the next election. The Liberals will employ all « the modern techniques of moti- vation research and surveys along with slick newspaper, ra- dio and television advertising~ as well as the old - fashioned |forms of house-to-house can- “| yasses and political rallies The gist of the Liberal plan ‘| was given Saturday to the’ an- *|\ nual meeting of the Canadian | University Liberal Federation by Maurice Sauve, the party's Quebec public relations direc- of political science and practical! politics | + Sunday’s meeting of the cam- paign committee under the hairmanship of Toronto busi- ness consultant Walter Gordon was closed. Mr Gordon, ade (Continued on Page 2 Col. 2) Nfld. Native | Heads Students For Liberals OTTAWA ‘CP\—A 21-year-old John's, Nfld. who gays he has supported the. LI- beral party ‘ever since | was old enough to think politically ” Sunday was clected, president ?| of the Canadian Universtty Li- | bera! Federation Ed Roberts. a first year law | student at the University of Toronto. was elected during the final day of the federation’s an- nual meeting The new president was chosen despite rumors that his delega- ! tion might not back him pe- cause he had received a $75 cheque {rom Newfoundland’s | Premier Joseph R. Smallwood. He said the cheque was te heip cover his expefises at a@ Liberal advisory council meet- ing, and withdrew from the race when another candidate claimed it had been produced as evidence of unlimited finan- cial backing. He later reen- | tered. a