I w T (ll |i's~Good For The lsland The Guardian is For It one finardinn “Covers Prince ‘Edward Island Like The Dew” VOL. LXXVII. N0. 12 Cuban Prime Minister Fidel Castro is the center of all at- tention Tucisday in Tainitsky Garden. a winter playground in nthoriua no local! Department. Oltnvn. A «CASTRO HA5 Moscowllsiifiéioi-i RIDE the Kremlin. as he takes ride in a horse-drawn sleigh. Castro was guest of Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev at the park I for children. 'Ilhis picture is from the Soviet news agency Tass. (AP Wirepiioto via cable from Moscow) Dairy Marketing legislation Sparks Sharp Clash Oi Opinion A sharp clash of opinion oniaulhority that would give pro- the parent here yesterday at th need for certain national marketing legislation was ap- ducers a measure of regulation E CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 15, 1964 Legislature is Opened In Que c Quebec (CPi — Highlights of the throne speech read at the opening of the Quebec Legislature Tuesday by Lieu- tenant - Governor Paul Com- tois: Quebec government intends i to seek recognition of ‘ views at federal - provincial fiscal conference in Quebec City later this winter. .... 05- W Measure creating an educa- tion ministry will be pre- sented. Control of inspection of meats. milk and other foods will be entrusted to agricul- ture department. Bill prohibiting discrimina- tion in employment practices to be introduced. The government intends to lslation. Study of the draft labor code will be continued. Married w o m e it given “full legal capacity." Borrowers will be protected against “c e rt a i n abuses" legislation to be in- troduced as a result of a fav- orable supreme court deci- sion. Legislation to promote car- rying out of winter works due. There will be revisions to the Mining Act and measures designed to give Quebecers greater benefits from forest resources. Second Man i "legislation having do with the manufacturing. processing over the dairy industry. Nation-l and distribution of dairy food at President J.M. I-lartwick oli products. processed from milk. annual meeting of the Dairy the National Dairy Council, the-l the ownership of which has pau- Farmers of Canada. National dairy manufacturers. President John K. Dickson told sors and distributors. in an ap- the DFC that action has already parent reference to certain mar. been too long delayed on a mov create a national marketing. proces- l sed from farmers to processors, i represents an unprecedented in- "Action-Sieehfir imam Too Long 3”“ Delayed Need for action. already toofllomogenlled long delayed, to develop a na- tional milk marketing authority. was suggested by Mr. Dickson.‘ "We have nibbled around the edges of the concept of a na-; tlonal milk marketing author-5 ity. We have satisfied our ideal- ism by telling ourselves that at the right time we will take the‘ necessary steps. but for some there will never be a right time: there will always be some reason for which this should be postponed another year. anotb-3 er and another." the DFC pre-: sident chided. ~ One of the big problems of farm organizations has been‘ that generally they have had to key their attitudes to those of their most timid people —- con- sequently they have been behind [resent need. and have made a practice of locking stable doors‘. hind escaped horses." Mr.. Dickson criticized. "There are -those." he adden.. "who say ‘there will always be; a certain demand for milk and? I know that I can produce milk as economically as anyone else. I am in a good position to wea- ther any storm. I will land right side up.‘ But I am sure," Mr. Dickson observed. "that many of the people who are no longer in the dairy business said the’ some thing at one time." ' REGULATION ELSEWHERE There is no traditional dairy country in the world “that does not have ii larger measure rc~ gulation of the dairy industry (Continued on page 3. col. 2) l Man Crashes Aircralt " lnto School SHAWNEE. Okla. tAPl—Al former student radioed he tended to crash his plane into a school building Tuesday and five minutes later ived the craft into a classroo of Okla- homa Baptist University. The flyer. identified as Roi» ert Lawson. 42. was killed. one inside the building or on the campus was lniured. A class of about 40 students, 5.7 the situation." he said. , H The pilot‘: body still was in the wreckage. l Mrs. Addie B. Choate. who a...‘- , ,. .. . Milk Pr-ice MONTREAL tCPl — Most Montreal dairies plan to in- crease the retail quart price of and pasteurized milk one cent to 24 cents this week. Dairy spokesmen said it was the first increase since 1957. Since that time prices paid to producers had increased. along with a normal rise in production costs. One dairy spokesman said the Quebec Dairy Board set the re- tail price range to 23 to 27 cents of .Ian. 1. ‘An Elmhurst Dairy Ltd. spokesman said is company will not increase its ice. “We're taking another peek at Increase Prices MONTREAL tCPl — Three major sugar refineries — St. Lawrence. Canada and Domin- ion aiid Atlantic—Tucsday an- nounccd a 10-ccnl increase in the whole price of sugar to $17.10 a 100 pound bag. Monday the price was in ,}Iartwick said "few can deny Sugar Refineries ‘ vasion of rights that com- e keting regulations. — he did pletely unjustified and will not not name them —- said in part be tolerated." - ' -..‘- itiirfisinn Of Rights Charged that represents ented invasion of the rights" of dairy ma-mifa rers and processors is “com- pletely unjustiilfied and will" not be tolerated." J.M. Hart- wick said, The head of t.he dairy organ- ization which represents the manufacturers and processors was referring to "legislation ‘having no do with the manu- factuning. processing and dis- tribution of dairy products. processed from milk. the owner. ..A ._ Legislation 9- E: G I Is Re-scued° . I I ' In Two Miss’ g CUMBERLAND. Md. A helicopter crew rescued second survivor of a B-52 crasn from sub-zero cold Tuesday, but the body of a third crew member was found in wreckage and two others still were missing. ‘ They brought Peedinato os- pital here‘ where‘ he Joined (AP)- t-- :5‘ 0 yesterday dumpinig over eight propose portable pensions left ‘ Maj. Thomas W. McCormick, 42, who struggled to a farm- house Monday night. Both ap-' peared to be in fair or good condition. The U.S. Air Force Strategic Air Command did not identify immediately the crew mem r whose bod was found in the B- 2 at the foot of Big Savage mountain. 2,700 feet high in the Appalachian Range about 20 miles west of Cumberland. The eight-engine jet carried two unarmed nuclear weapons. Reporters w-ho visitcl the crash Tuesday said one was covered by a tarpaulin, the other by wreckage. The SAC emphasized there was no danger of an explosion or of radioactivity. Civil air patrol search and vein that the price differential to roolircieirs. between mill: at‘ equal quality for fluid consump- tion and for use in manufact- rescue team army and air force fliers marked off an area about three miles wide and 10 miles long into 28 grids and methodically searched for the men still missing. ‘seven _inches of drifting snow. Chang GoW NOT MORE PHAN HOUSE BURNS AccideniBlamedl On Snow Storm 'l‘he second major storm of the season within a month whip- ped into Prince Edward Island inches of snow in many areas and bringing most traffic to a standstill_ At least one person wars injured due to the storm. in Summerside, Barry Cham- pion, 17, siifered serious head injuries in: car-truck collis- -ion, but he was reported in sat- isfactory condition in Prince County Hospital. Storm con- ditions were blamed for this mishap. The Bedeque home of Mr. and Mrs, Harrison M‘-acil<‘arlaaie was destroyed by fire and the Kvinkora Fire Department was delayed almost a hour by par- tially-blocked roads while at- tempting to reach the blaze. Sn-o-wfall in the Euistieirn Prince County area was than in some sections with about four inches being recorded, PLOWS CALLED IN High Winds caused heavy drifting on all roads in i1i‘n_vi_n_ce and swirling snow kept visibil-ity to a minimum. Plows called in early in the day were held for emergency only but by late last night the storm had bf-‘§'}1n_l0 a-bate and plows were beg-in-ning the mammoth task of clearing di-' _, Plows in the city of Charlotte- ain clearing the streets , e at midnight last night after wait- ing several hours for the snow and drifting to cease. Northwest winds last nighet were blowing at a steady 30 miles per hour and gusting to 42. A forecast predicted that tcontinued on page 2. col. 1) No Damage, Fatalities Reported In Maritimes HALIFAX tCPi—The second major storm of the season vented its fury on the Mari- times Tuesday before moving off for an assault on Newfound- land which already is buried a under as much as 60 inches of SHOW. ‘U N -i . tween Although Ma,-mmer, had me.[ Northern New Brunswick virtu- ed for mo;-e_ the storm waslally escaped the storm and lit- cars became stranded in storm. The highest snowfall in the‘-E“3‘“°°"”‘5-' C°“P~‘“’l'°“ 1‘“‘“t' Maritimes Tuesday was re-. corded at Yarmouth, N.S.. were, 14 inches fell. However, tbe‘B' . _, , snowfall generally ranged be: The firm found the bridge‘ isi inches. mm seven and 10 satisfied with snarling highway‘ 119 01' "0 SMW W8-S "’p0I‘l°d Death Toll Reaches 127 From Snow Storm In U.S. traffic. There were no reports of serious damage and no fatal- ities were reported, in contrast with ‘ rm a‘ month ago that claimed more than 20 lives. New Brunswick escaped. the worst from the_ latest storm which clogged all highways Ill Prince d we rd Island with All highways leading out of Nova Scotia in the northwest- ern section were blocked for a time. but by late afternoon highway officials here said they were “passable if absolutely necessary." A Nova Scotia highways de- partment official said the high- ways leading into New Bruns- wick were drifting heavily and visibility was poor. The storm hit Newfoundland early Tuesday afternoon and by late in the day had nearly stalled traffic on the Avalon Peninsula. The Trans Canada Highway between St. John's and Salmonier Line was closed to traffic in an effort to avoid a recurrence of events last Fri- less . MINISTER Chev- i rier smiles as Prime Minister 3 JUSTICE Pearson announces his ap- commis- pointment as inner to Britain. rier will retain his cabinet post until the new position is 3 effective Feb. 1. (CP Wirephoto) Saint John Bridge Chev- ' WEATHER 'A few snowflurries and drifting snow; northwest winds 25, gusts to 40. Low- high 5 and 15. SEVEN CENTS 14 PAGES es In Organization i’rh Cabinet Shuffle ; ChevrierTo Get, l Post In London ; By JAMES NELSON OTTAWA CF) 5 n m 9 .changes in government organi- ization will accompany the fed- ieral cabinet shuffle to be an- inounced next Monday. Prime jMinister Pearson said Tuesday }shortly before leaving for a ,five-day state visit to France. , 1' He also announced Justicel lMinister Chevrier wiil becomel lcanadian high commissioner in‘ {London at the beginning of Fcb- i iruary. meantime. Mn] :Chevrier continues as justice. .minister and will be acting? ;prime minister while Mr. Pear- ,son is in France. 1 Mr. Pearson said he ha - made up his mind about details’ iof the cabinet shuffle some time. fago. But in addition to the per-l ‘ isonnel switches. there were tol ‘be some changes in government l organization. l This would mean a revision‘- in some departmental responsi- amcudments then would be submitted to the Commons ex- ternal affairs committee for approval before the treaty is ratified by Canada. ——Declincd comment on the current Panama crisis. saying he would neither agree nor dis- agree with Opposition Leader l)icfenbaker's call for an inter- national consortium to run the cane . —Announced Health Minister .liidy LaMarsh will represent the Canadian government at the Winter Olympic Games in Innsbruck, Austria, where. on Jan. 28. the International 0!- ympic Committee wilt consider Canada's bid to have the 1968 Winter Olympics at Banff, Alta. .—Commenting on a speech by Qu e bec Resources Minister Rene Levesque. said it is in- conceivable that any important constitutional amendment af- fbitities. Under the government f°_°ti“E Quebec W°“ld be ""159 Reorganization and Transfer of‘ ‘1c'I'u‘°‘l{’l Quebec: 3nPF:'i0V?l-M130‘ ‘ l v __ Duties Ac-f. branches or serv- ’- “T50” 90 H U 81‘ . SAINT JOHN‘ NB" ‘cpl Alices of a department can be‘ °"“'”“°"t 0" Ve5Q“9'| Toronto engineering firm an-. . . ‘ “Danced Tuesda might it hasrswitched to another department :'_°(l)3‘l’l"§9(‘1l aft‘-”"""(l“'“§lS‘€3il{utiil(1:l!:.’i , ._ without s cial le islatio . ‘ »:llnTirhld:teaa§l'bIss]agte.' “This hpa: takeng a gori‘d dealt change wmmul "°".'p1°l"’ and i 7 is economically feasible. iof time. and the announcement: absnlule semdelermlnahon by An outline of a , survey next Monday will combine both, Quebec‘ made by Foundation of Canada pers onnel and functional; ' changes in the departments.” °" Mr. Pearson tnfd a press C011‘: “IE 1'I'avl'b(f'farencE_ 1 BEFORE DEPARTURE ‘ ‘a requirement can be fled r. Pearson called the press_ in thmughway compiexv is econ. conference, at which Mr. Chev-- lomically attainable and shouldlflel‘ sat at the prime minister'sl be pursued . _ _-- ,rig hand, after a forenoon ‘cabinet meeting and before hisi is Ruled Feasible that by the th a decision e , was given at a press con-l ferencc called by ridge Authority. vi of a new $9,000,000 performing 3 arts centre in Ottawa. thul ‘ending a ocal controversy. The theatre and concert hail project is to mark the 1967 centenary. Pearson Leaves .._-.-.-.2 ..e-i..w.-..<...4.. . .. . departure for Paris Tuesday g . l l ht ' - - . _ 1 On Paris Trip Replying to reporters ques—I tions, Mr. Pearson also: 3 OTTAWA ‘CP’—Th9 RCA? ;'Yuk.on aircraft flying Prime ,— Reported amendments to the 3 Columbia River Developmentihgnfiler PeGr?°ndt° Piarls “wk . i A NEW YORK (APi——’l‘he U.S. relied snow or tried to free stuck Treaty have been approved iiy 3:04 ESl,l’.“,;‘u;dav'P°" "‘ vehicles or trudged through: Canada and British Columbia”: Accompanying .th.P. prim. winter‘s worst s n o w s t o r m -moved out to sea off New Eng- ldeep s n o w b a 11 k s. Wcather- 5 and wilt be signed by he and {and Tuesday leaving behind alcaused traffic accidents took 1.’ President Johnson in washing_ death toll of 127 and a large section of the U.S. digging out ‘d from a snowy paralysis. Billowing snowfall gave way to generatly clearing skies and bitterly cold temperatures. But the effects of the storm gripped an area from the mid- west to the Atantic and the‘ south to New England. Florida citrus growers pre- pared heaters for the low temperatures since the crop- killing freeze 13 months ago. Buses and trains ran hours behind scrhedule. Air travef, vir- tually halted along the eastern seaboard. s 1 o w l y resumed. Schools were ctosed ' sections and high job absentee- ism was report Scores died from over-exer- tion or exposure as they shov- 0 m .-u ; heavy toll. ay nigvht, marooned thousands of persons. including hundreds :of motorists snowbound in Indi- lane and Illinois. They began to -move again with easing condi- :tions. The storm dumped 13 inches ‘of snow on New York City in a I .31-hour fall, heaviest in three l years: 16 inches on Youngs-‘ ' ‘town, Ohio. heaviest in sixl I 15 inches on Albany.’- heaviest 24-hour fall for any January on record: nine iinches on Washington, D.C.. ‘heaviest in more than five *N.\’.: ,y ars. Twenty inches fell on Nan- tucket lsland, of-f Cape Cod. .. summer resort seldom hit by Iheavy snow. The storm. which began Sun-l ton next week. The treaty and minister for talks with Presi- dent de Gaiille was External iAffairs Minister Martin. I MIDDLE-BURY, Vt. (AIN- Leo Durocher, coach of Los An- jgees Dodgers basebail team, was named Tuesday in a $150.- 000 civil suit alleging he alie- h i a lawyer ‘ -‘mont housewife, sa' ured products. has been per- mitted to increase to this pain: where it is totally uneconomic and unfair. and ways and means of eliminating the injustice must I’ ound. "I am satisfied." the spokes- man for the processors and creased 55 cents to $17. _ g The we re three price manufacturers said. “that with the necessary common sense «Continued on page 3. col. 6| changes last wcek—a decreascl and two increases —— resulting: in a net increase of 25 cents.’ In 1963 the wholesale Price‘ was changed 97 times —— 72 In-; creases and 25 decreases. A spokesman for a retail food chain said Monday retail prices would be raised to BPPPOX1‘ mately $1 a five - pound bag and $2 for 10 pounds. l Building The plane crashed through the wall of Shawnee Hall. old est building on the campus. one that was the administration building when Lawson was student there. The plane hit the third floor of the building and burst into flames as it fell to the ground outside the building was instructing ii French class .be delayed for one ' go into effect as scheduted n was in session in the building- Fred Reese. manager at the municipal airport. said Lawson that the buildinfl should be evacuated because he Intended to crash into it and radioed take his own life. "1 tried to sun iiim." Reese Id. he use he was some 1! dt ctuh) in five mlnutes—ano- did-" u (to he in the building. said it sounded "like a terrific bomb explo- sion." she and the students im- mediately left the building. Authorities said L l W I 9 I‘ bu the building several times before he made the final ve. Lawson's son, Mike. attend! the university. Ontario Pensions Delayed One Year TORONTO tCP'—-On the eve legislature. announced Tuesday that the province‘: pension scheme is to year. The plan originally was to go into effect Jan. 1. I965. nir- ing all employers in the prov- 15 or more futltimc employee: to provide minimum pension requirements as set out by the plan. But Mr. Roberts said I statement the minimum provi- sions of the plan will be post- e until Jan. . , cause of a delay in learning fut! details of a federal plan that might conflict ' the Ontario scheme. er. the portability as- If E year from now. This means all existing private plans in Ontario will move with employees from job to ob. INSIDE TODAY Births. deaths . 2. 12 Clnulflel 12. 18 Co . . . . . . . . . . 11 Finance. inerltete 10 Editorials 4 sport ._ . . . . . . . . . I Kings. Queen. can I Suinnierelde 8 Women's . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. WEARING A substantial coat of ice accumulated on her trip to Charlottetown from linperoyal. on the out side of nettle: harbor. the Imperial Oil leased ker in a snow storm as she final- ly edfled into her berth at the 1 J day night when more than 100 Railway shortly after 3 p.m. y ay. The tanker the “J. Edouard Simerd." left Halifax at 6 p.m. last Friday wharf es rd began to. encounter heavy ice as she approached the North- umberlnnd Strait. and at the start headwsy.wse slowed to about one mile an hour. Monday even with the aid of the CCGS Tupper it was re- ported that the ships were only making a few yards on The complaint was brought by lRene Morin, s Swanton, Vt.. lstonemason, who charged that lDurocher stole the affections of his wife. Anna. _ Durocher denied the al‘.cga- tions in a statement he issued through his local lawyer. Ralph A. Foole of Middlebury. The Durocher statement said: "There is no truth in any sin- gle aliegation of the entire com- plaint. l have had the pivilcge of having plaintiffs daughter. Carolyn. as a friend for the past three years and through this friendship I have become close friends with many members of her immediate family. This in- c’.udes Carolyn's mother. Mrs. ‘Anna Morin, and this is the only basis on which I have known her." Miss Carolyn Morin was de- scribed as a striking beauty in her 205 who left the University nearly -10 years. first I of Vermont t.o pursue a career playcr. later as manager of - -. as a model and T\’ actress. H-i-ooklyn Dodgers and New Miss Morin and her thrcc sis- ters—Mrs. Jean Hadley. Mrs. lDurocher ls Charged :l’aula Sharkcy and Mrs. Elinor White —— issued this statement through Foote: “'I‘liere is no truth whatsoever .in the charges made by our fa- nated the affections of a Ver-‘th er. “Leo Durocher is a most hon- orable gentfeman. a friend, par- ticularly of Carolyn, but indeed ‘of all of us. and he has had no dealings with our mother. "His false charges against Mr. Durochcr constitute nothing more than another attempt to injure and hurt his wife and cliildrcn." ‘ Morin could not be reached ‘ for commcnt. A writ was served on Dura- cher curly Monday after he ad- dressed the Middlebury Ameri- can Lcrzion Post. He was brought before assist- ant Judge Lcon Busliey and or- dered to post hail of $30,000 or be jailed. Three unidentified lo- cal men immediately put up the bait. Durochcr. meanwhile, was In seclusion at the Middlebury inn. it could not be learned how loiil he would remain. Durocher has been connected with major league baseball for York Giants and, since 1961. as coach for Lns Anzelcs Dodgers. - Tanker Captain Tells Of GEORGE (‘ONDON After more than 48 hours of battling heavy raft ice in Hills- boro Bay and Charlottctoirii Harbor the 7.000 ion tanker J. I-Edouard Simard docked at Rail- way Wharf yesterday afternoon at 4.15. in Charlottetown said however. that Voyage bar, it was hard to imagine this lrclativcly small vessel perform- in: such feats especially in such .limilcd visibility as was caused ‘by yesterday's storm. The hoatswain Frcd .\ortlicolt all the ice had been knocked off near Cape ._ _.-._.....s... . . This reporter boarded the Si-, Breton. He then took a swing at mard ycsterday to have a talk‘ a nicdium-sized icc berg which , with her master. Capt. Michel] was once a ladder. One wonder- ’ Goulet of Snrel. Que, and fol ed what the ship had looked like find out just what kind of a trip‘ near (‘ape Breton. , she had. Capt. Goulet, a tall man with From the look of the hull and premature grey-flecked lint: ' ‘ superstructure buried under led the wen’ i“ his -"Pl¢l0|l8 ‘ - - rnches 0; in. and not 3 sign at lice. After turning down the II- lopen water anywhere in the har-l lcbntinued on 9880 3: 001- 89 hour. The final leg of the voy- age from the entrance of Hills horo Bay took more than 15 hours to complete. Unloading of her 60.000 barrel cargo got . underway soon after docking l and she is expected to sail this afternoon. V ‘- i