If it's Good For the Island The Guardian is For it who @ttmdtom “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew’f WEATHER Cloudy, with widely separated snowflur‘ ries or rainshowers; milder; north winds 25. Low-high 27 and 39. VOL. Lxxvi. NO. 97 mn- can”: _a-- nu ing-T103;- o-urumn annLorrnTowu, CANADA, THURSDAY, Midi—ism}. ~033ng SEVEN CENTS 16 PAGES“ Three members of the. Char- lottetown delegation to Board of Trade area confer- ence at Summer-side yesterday give their names to registrar Alexander Campbell. left. sec- relai'y of the Summerside Board of Trade. Standing left to right are Mayor A. Walthen Gaudet. Hugh Simpson and Frank J. MacDonald. The conference was addressed by Alfred Parke: of Moneton, ex- ecutive secretary and man- BOARD or TRAE ELEGATES R-Eeisrrk E.K. MacNutt. local district ‘ marine agent. department of transport, saiid ast night. “our icebreakers no sooner clear one ship of its ice trap, when we. .get the word that another has i suffered similar difficulties." Mr. MacNutt r that the Wolfe, which left Char- late Tuesday night. the Sourls dragger 1 Colville Bay from the ice sev- .' eral miles off the northern en- ; trance to the Gut of Canso. and 0 er of the Maritime. Board ‘of Trade and by Robert Erb. manager of organization. ser- vice depa'rtment. Canadian Chamber of Commerce. Mon. trcaL ISee story on page 3.) Pearson Racial D .bilingualism in the federal civil- By KEN KELLY I OTTAWA (Cp) ..- The pal~a.KSCerCe and for federal-provin-l mount concern of Prime Minis- cull relation“ ter Pearson with the strains on; 2. Blcuuumnsm was one of Confederation has been empha-ihe three questions consideredl sized by . of stepslat the cabinet's first workiogl taken in the. first'few days oflsession The object. Mr. Pea Liberal government. son said. was to decide how a informants say they heraldiroyal commission could be set Launches Moves I M l DISCUSS QUEBEC ,’ ter 0 o o nership. ’l‘wo ministers~Veter- ans Minister Roger Teillet anitoba and Fisheries Minis- H. J. Robchaud of New Brunswick —— claim French asl their in other tongue, though' both speak good English. 4. In his first broadcast after assuming office. informants say} son made a point of‘ of: in historic Westminster Abbey I had led her through the Gut to r the Oanso l j gerThZagyl yesterday and after IS SURPRISE ‘ bucking very eaivy ice reached LONDON (Reuters) -— Prin- i cess Anne, Queen Elizabeth's 33mg" '0 his: the fiSh-iflg sea- lz-year-old daughter. caused 3 ' e as. m. “mmce the main surprise at Wednes- Eewi day's wedding of Princess Alexandra to Scottish busi- nessman Angus Ogilvy. Though recent photographs of Princess Anne have shown her growing into a lanky girl. she appeared sophisticated Wednesday. At first glance. the, guest! 4 t t and television viewers had difficulty in recognizing the composed young chief brides- maid. who kept a regal eye on the four little girls and two lrilted pages who toddled up i the Abbey behind the. bride i For the first time in public. Souris Dragger Freed; Fergus locked In Ice , 0c . fe reached the dragw . the look at 12230111 the after: noon. The Colville Bay left Sourisl been further efforts to seek co—opera-" tion from the provinces a from English-speaking Canada: to heal divisions of whichro-l cent violence in Quebec arsl symptoms. . son 5 Among additional steps may} he federal-provincial consulta-. tion on the terms of referencel ‘l commission inquiry into bicultunalism and. anSliJ.,. proposal that that study be made a joint inquiry of the federal and provincial? governments. lo the first half-week of the; new Libe ral administration.l there were these concrete thus-3 trations of the i portance Mn. Pearson attaches to this ques-‘ tion: I. In naming his close friend] and adviser. Maurice Lamont- agne. to the cabinet as presi-l dent of the Privy Council. Mn} Pearson assigned him speciall responsibilities for developingi Canadian Unity Problem Said" Solved SASKATOON (CPI — - Co - op-| erators look with pity on poll-E ticians who seek an answer tol Canadian unity. Martin Legeroi of Caraquet. N.B.. told lilel annual Co-operative Union all Canada congress Wednesday. ‘ The answer to such problems can be. found in the co-opera-, ll\‘P movement. said Lee serc. president of Le Conseil. Canadian de la Co-operation. l The CUC and Le Conseil arai the national associations of; Canada‘s English and French-t language fro-operatives. 3 Mr. Legere told 250 delegates: cm across Canada: t "I feel at this moment Cu- at a very in the rela- s difficult crossroads Mac NaughtSees No Slight In Cabinet Appointment CAPITAL BUREAU GUARD OTTAWA — Prince Edward IIland's . new f e d e ral cabinet minister denies that the island ills been situated in any way by '“3 lPWlntment to the relative- lai; minor post of solicitor leach J. Watson MocNaught. MP- elect for Prince. discussed his new Ottawa role in an interview with the Ottawa Bureau of the Guardian. IAN fair treatment from the Liberal Government of Mr. Pearson." 09 Bule on W] rm l elington the Island polotof "Nth: coin; is “"9 mediu- ‘ I sit“, m::.hollnet.1'heposltlonh null-mam: AHm oftbe 'mbOllflhglllmalltbdll- Juneau: and worn. able to Phantom l ‘ that p to h—N ill) with the least possible de- ay. 3. Selection of cabinet minis- ters from“- outside Quoboo‘ war governed in part by Mr. “Pine ' views on the importance of the French and English parts emphasizing that no purpose lsi more urgent than to understand; and overcome the problems di-l *VidlngEnglIsh and French Cone Ida and to ensure the Confeder- ation partnership "will become richer and he truly equal." l irradiated Potatoes OTTAWA tCPi~Personnel at the four most northerly weather stations in the Canadian arcitc will eat fresh-tasting potatoes this summer. thanks to a Cana-Ifour remote points. ‘ dian-developed atomic processfngle $311592? tdemftlggpl 3811:“ “if: file seine ii. a mill uing experiment in conjunction with Crown-owned Atomic En- ergy of Canada Limited. Before being shipped north by t the potatoes will be ’by gamma rays from a cobalt-60 source to ep em f i sprouting and spoiling. will be] E By Co-Ops treated in a mobile cobalt»60 irradiator developed by the tions between our two main commercial products division of ~ ethnic groups. Atomic Energy of Canada. The "When politicians have to radiation inhibits sprouting in pledge themselves to undertakelstored vegetables—a factor that some time-consuming inquiries ‘withers vegetables and peed: to find out what is wrong with decay—without rharmful effects Confederation we co-operators to person! Satin! the treated‘ loo at them sometimes with products. ‘ 'In place. Princess Anne wore her hair swept up on top of her head in a simple “top-knot“ with a broad.- white band holding it im‘ Father Released As Kiddies Buried,l r [DEPUIY SPEAKER! .' Lucien Laimmr‘reux. 43. will i l be nominated as deputy t speaker of the. Commons when it meets May 16. Mr. La eux is them or Stor- . , 1 MP f WELLAND. Ont. (CP)~Johni mom riding. (GP Wil‘iefflhofm. Smagata. 41. father of five chil- dreii who 'were burned to death1 Pearson Talks f e To lontario Hospital in Hamilton} lWNnesday so he could attendl Sunday. was released rom th his children's funeral. Welland police held Smagaial m in cus tody after the fire. then transferred him to Ham on da INSIDE TODAY Announcements, notices , Births. de tbs Classified . . . . . . . . . . .. 14. 1. Comics Finance. markets Edlorlals Kings County City. Queens .. . . . . . . . . .. Summerside Prince County . . . . . . . .. S rt . . . . . . . . .. y no charges will be laid. 15 . . . . . . . - ........ xv Women's . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . “@NHMQ and _ . ll- ShJPPEd north this year t0 theiton Monday for mental exami~ ‘ . , _ tion. The police said Wednes-lda‘y he “'1” meet W’th Prime With Mac, JFK Are Arranged i. OTTAWA (CPI-r Prime Minis~ iter Pearson announced Wednes» .Minister Macmillan in London ;next Thursday and Friday. Mr. Pearson will fly to Lon» don May 1 from Toronto after addressing the annual meeting of The Canadian Press April 30. An announcement from the prime minister's office said a' detailed itinerary and list of the official party would be nounced later. WASHINGTON [CF I —Pres- ; dent Kennedy announced Wed-3 nesday he will meet with Prime Minister Pearson at his sum- mer residence at Hyannis Port“ Mass, May 10-11 for their first] nN pity when The potatoes will to Eur- fumml conference. I i PODS sailed from Charlottetown be-‘ fore midnight. I. FERGUS STUCK About the same time word was received by the depart- » meit that the MV Fengus. which plies between Pictou. Charlotte- town. Snuris and Newfoundland. was locked in heavy ice outside ..Pictou Harbor. Mr. MvasNutt said that he. had not issu any instruction to the skipper of the Wolfe regard- ing the Fergus, but he expected that she would divert in her course back to Charlottetown. and break the freighter clear. In outlining the extent of the ice around Island shores. Mr. IMacNutt said that there hats ‘ almost no improvement in the picture during the past sev- eral days. In fact with prevail- ing .northeasterly winds more: 0e Is being erved along thsi north shore 1‘ The heavy ice stretches from? west of Canvendish. around; East point across to Cape Bret- ; on and down no the west of Harbour. He said that there is little indication that the ice is eberioratin What is needed to start this action is . wamgeather and good rains. . i Funeral Held l For President 30f Israel JERUSALEM [Reutersl ' dent of Israel. was buried A 21.gun salute was fired “i found it travelling east toward: a plain wooden coffin was low- ered into the grave. Ben-Zvi's prayer shawl and Israel's blue- and-white national flag. , hundred girl soldiers placed wreaths on the grave of the president. who died Tues- day of cancer. He. was 78. Toronto Youth ls Acquitted TORONTO ICP) Patrick Garrity. 17. of Toronto. charged with non-capital murder in the Dec. 21 slaying of Garry Gra- ham. 19. of Toronto. was quitted Wednesday by an tario Supreme Court. jury. The. jury deliberated hours before announcing verdict of not guilty. Graham was stabbed in the throat during a teen-age battle after a pre-Christmas party at an east-end Toronto technical school. Mr. Justice D. C. Wells. in his charge to the jury. said it might . 'der a verdict of man- slaughter. but the jury made no mention of this in its acquittal. c. On- 4V its without costly investigation. we eka on Ellesmere Island some have found that in Canada it is 750 miles from the North Pole, possible to live side by side. inlMould Bay dn Princc Pal :ck peace. in'harmony and in love. 'Island. Isachsen on Ellef Ring- by being simply and withoutlnes Island and Alert at the any showing off plain Cana-lnorthet'n tip of Ellesmere ls- dians, respectful of our fellowdand.‘ itizens." 5 Last year 500 pounds of Irradi- . He said co-operation is ablated tatoes were sent to Eu- expresslon of religion and heteka. Kept under good conditions urged delegates not to be led’of temperature and ventilation. astray by “the temptation to be they lasted out the year wl too materialistic." ivlrtually no spoilage. turn to public life." Mr. Meow Naught said. recalling his three terms as so before his loss . n 7 to Dr. Orville Phillips. "'My interest in politics is deep and I h I ve always believed there is a strong connection be- tween politlcs and the law." lie said he hoped to work to- ward a strengthening of the At- lantic Development Board to make it more realistic and he feels that the act aubllshiog it may need amending. “The major need of the Matt- times is more industry and on. of the oblectives of ill meat will be to sstdsllsh _ male that will be more condu- olvetotheopenlngupofmdut- trial plants." the solicitor gen- eral said, " "IrCAUOIWAY PLANO Hobrandod an “utter nose" cabin: to! the Lha- als have not been no firm in (wuss-sou.» to ensure that. the Island gets AMPLE OPPORTUNITY In. fact. Mr, mm o u g ht agreed that us solicitor general be will not be as we 0 with responsibilities as he in a major folio. him greater freedom and more time to pursue matters of spec- lal interest to,P.E.I. people. He said that It was flttina New. ck member wn Would in! Hedard Robin-nib a former provincial dlnector of fisheries E r I03- . WM meowsheandhew Angus Ogilvy. fro-Motown at WWW ah ninth-maroo- Abbey; (AP Wirepboto vio ind. wereman‘tedeaf’l- cablebanlmtodon) HL ‘Yitzhak Ban-Zvi. second presi- Wed. nesday on a hill in Har‘Hamen' ouhot Cemetery. west of Jeru- 1: salem. beside his father’s tomb. l l l A De Hcivilland To Build Jets TORONTO lCPI---De Havil- land of Canada Limited an- nounced Wednesday it has won a share of a 565.000.000 contract to build medium - range DC-9 jet aircraft e— sharing the job with Douglas Aircraft of Long Beach. Calif. HARRIMAN Couple Charged With Robbery QUEBEC (CPL-Esther Wil- liams. 21. and Gary Hill. 19. who said they were heading for Halifax to seek parental consent to their marriage. are. to ap- pear for trial May 19 in the beating and robbery of a taxt Kennedy Expands Efforts To Save Laos' Neutrality l Harriman Mad-e By JAMES CARY f v . WASHINGTON (AP! —-- Pres- countries. including the Sowiet ident Kennedy announced Wed- Union. nesday he is sending a top dip- North Viet Nam tic trouble shooter in Mos- Geneva accorcis that established loma c w to be if off the mushroom- - ging crisis in Laos. The. defence . department. in an accompany- ing display of force, ordered 3. . troops and some. jet planes into neighboring Thai- land for manoeuvres next month. Kennedy told his press con- ference State Undersecretary W. Averell Harriman. now in London. will arrive in Moscow this evening “with a short mes- sage for Premier Khrushchev from me explaining the pur- poses of his trip.“ He did not. explain further the message’s contents. But it had been reported earlier that Kennedy was considering an ap- peal to Khrushchev to help stave off renewed civil war in Laos and the explosive East- West crisis that would follow. Harriman. who has just com- pleted meetings on Laos with French Foreign Minister Couve de Murville and the Earl of ome. British foreign secre- tary. will confer in Moscow 3 with Soviet Foreign Minister . Gromyko. Kennedy said. 'SEEN AS DANGER The. president made. it clear .he feels the threat to the non- ‘aligned coalition government in ‘iLaos from military moves by pro-Communist forces endan- gers all Southeast Asia. He emphasized that Laos is Special Envoy tralily was guaranteed 1‘ Communist China and through the the present government. He agreed that if it should fall to the Communists there would be a danger to Thailand‘s borders. and increased Red pressure on Cambodia. South Viet Nam and Malaya to bend them toward the Communist world. POINT UP CONCERN These developments up worldwide. concern: The defence department announced that a battle group of army infantry and another of paratroopers will take part in pointed i—a .Southeast Asia Treaty Organi- zation manoeuvres in Thailand. Planning for the exercises has been under way for months. but it. coincides with movements of us. 7th Fleet. units into South- east Asia waters. 2. Britain's Foreign Secre- tary. the Earl of Home. told the House of Lords the Soviet Un- ion was frustrating British moves to restore peace in Laos. He said the military drive of the pro-Communist Pathct. Lao has "placed in great. jeopardy" the Geneva accords of last July that. established a nonaligned. coalition government in the Southeast Asian kingdom. 3. The U.S. Marine 3rd Divi- slon and US. Army paratroops on Okinawa. America's biggest military complex in Asia, were i driver in suburban Levis. They a sovereign power whose neu- placed on aler. pleaded not guilty. was found in a ditc tied-handmnd‘hot; Police they stopped his taxi an rested the. occupants when they l the Maritime l ! Miss Williams fold the court mour- l body was wrapped in a Jewish; Sh? “’85 working 85 ’1 Infidel in 1 Montreal. Hill l attending school said he was there. l Hydrogen Power 0 ’ Claimed Nearer l LONDON (Reutersl The R u s s l a n newspaper Pravda claims a breakthrough for So» viet scientists toward controlled? Ithermonuclear fusion—in effect l a controlled H-bomb explosion. 1‘ The communist party newspa- per quoted Wednesday by the official news agency Tass. says. scientists at. the. Kurchatov In- stitute. of Atomic Energy had induced temperatures of 40.000.- 000 degrees centigrade. in a . lasma—gas confined by a mag- lnetic field—and maintained it | 'for a comparatively long period. Object of the research. which. parallels experiments being car- ried out. in the United States land Britain. is to produce a l“fusion" reaction like that in l the hydrogen bomb. but keep it ' under control for power-produc- tion purposes. The taxi driver. Ovila Cantin. b April 13. . said d ar-l A l.) i f . By DAVE DAVIDSON HALIFAX tCP‘~The prem Jet‘s of the four Atlantic prov. ‘inces favor a meeting among representatives of the new fed- eral Liberal government and 1the. provinces to discuss prob- lems of mutual concern. Newly-elected Liberal Prem- ier Louis Robichau of iBrunswick says a "summit con- }ference." of the premiers will be ‘held "shortly." r, Robichaud said Prime Minister Pearson had tele- phoned. cmgratulating him on the results of Monday's provin- ‘cial election and at the same time said a meeting among the ‘provinces and the federal gov- lernmcnt would be held in the 1"near future." No date was set. ‘ Only Premier Walter Shaw of ‘Prince Edward Island was dub- ‘ious about the wisdom of an immediate meeting. He said Wednesday in Charlottetown he was in favor of Dominion-pro- vincial talks but didn't think it ‘was a good idea to have them thntic Area Ready For Ottawa Meeting too soon nftrr the April 8 federal election. “The new gowmment at 0*- tawa should first have the chance to get its feet on the ground and get its legislative program rolling. the Progres- sive Conservative premier said in an interview. w SMALLWOOD AGREEABLE Newfoundland Premier Jos- eph Smailwood. a Liberal. said in St. John's Wednesday he hadn't heard there. was to be. a Dominion provincial confer- ence but said he \rnuld attend such a meeting, leaving the date to Ottawa. "I would be. happy to attend any conference that Mr. Pear- son calls and happy to leave that date to him." Mr. Small wood said. Progressive C o n s e r valive Premier Robert Stanfield of Nova Scotia said he isn't ex- pccting talks right away but would attend if they were called. Princess Weds Scotsman In Old Painting Setting LONDON (CP) Princess Alexandra of Kent. 26oyear-Old ' cousin of the Queen. and Angus Ogilvy. blue-blooded Scntsman. were married Wednesday amid fanfares. anthems and rich medieval pageantry in West- minster Crowds cheered. bells pcaled. bagpipes skirled and Queen Elizabeth looked vaguely glum I the ceremony took place in gay. almost carefree mood that contrasted with the Gothic splendor of the ancient. abbey. Londoners turned in thou- sands to cheer the slim. green- eyed princess—Alex. as she is fondly known. Police reported 103 Casualties, most of them spectators who fainted in the. street. The princess. l2th in line to the British throne. and her 34-year-old husband left London Airport in the Queen's royal their honeymoon cottage of the Bal- moral royal estate in Scotland master painting come to life. white and blue-vested clerg and courticrs move against a background of cream and gold hangings. intricate gilded carvings. crimson velvet chairs. rich old carpets and tapestries. The abbey bolls pcaled out and the. organ thundered Bach's prelude and fugue in E flat as the. guests assembled. On one sidc were the bride's relatives. Queen Elizabeth and the British. Norwegian. Danish. Greek and Italian royal families —the women in shades of tur- quoise and yellow, the. men in black and grey formal morning Opposite were hridc- rooms family. Scottish lords and ladies led by his parents. the Earl and Countess of Airlic. Ogi vy. as second son of Lord is strictly speaking a oner. royal hridr‘ was fun minutes late for the abbey just five hour, an” me abbey cercmmn in accordance \"llh ceremo y tradition ,Her 'rrival outside was an— SEEN ON TV nounced by great fanfarcs of Kings. queens. princes and trumpets. and the abbey choir princesses were e softly sang the hymn Holy. 2.0m Kuesis who witnessed the Holy. Holy as she walked magnificent ceremony in the abbey. Millions more watched i t «nesday for for in the day at WWW on television or heard it broad- cast in 40 languages. The setting rumbled In aid slowly up the aisle—her great Ibridal veil a cascade of mag- nolia colored lace. falling mam. .tilla fashion from her head and ispreading lo a wide f tram on the crimson carpet behind. TAKE VOWS There was silence throughout the great church as the, couple took their vows in front of the Archbishop of Canterbury. Dr. Michael Ram- sey—a broad majestic figure in a cloth of gold cope. e was assnlt'; . the ically simple Church of Eng ceremony by half — a clcrgymen. including boy's dean, Dr. Eric \vcariu: a crimson cope made more than 300 years ago for the coronation of King Charles H. (‘liicf bridesmaid Princess Annc. 13-year-old daughter of the, Queen. followed the couple into the abbcy's ancient chapel of King Edward the (Zonfessor to Sign the register will]: the choir sang anthems The Queen wore an outfit of palcst green silk organza topped by a close-fitting hat of white lilies - of - the - valley. Princess Margaret sparkled in primrose embroidered silk and the Queen ha;- land Motbr.. in dove grey. .. i happily bencth a spray of osprey feathers. Princess Marina. mother d the bride. wore a striking ‘ itic- style dress in copper! be with a gleaming copper pictm six-foot lhaL