4 . r If it's Good F Vv4“ or Allie Island The Guardian is For if VOL. Lxxv. N0. zoo ‘ '\ . ‘. An ornery sheep can some- times mean a lot of trouble but they don't frighten five- year - old Michael Wood of Jnthorlsadaaloeoudclan Ottawa. SMAL so HA STBBORN sneer West Cape. To him its all in a day's work. Michael is seen in action yesterday at the Al- . berton exhibition herding a Ito @il1&£JfiIi§1l1 “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” if dlfllfli sutuinynsut can stubborn - type wool bearer back into its stall after judg- WW Geo'town . Resident Drowned CHARLUl'l‘E’l‘0WN, CANADA, FRIDAY, AUGUST 24, 1962. WEATHER Sunny and much \\'Hil';.: : ll'?l‘lf u"'"rl5 increasing in afternoon to so...u»..... 1-)- Low-high 45 and 73 " I4 PAtil‘..‘~ Traffic Report, Incinerator MONTAGUE BUREAU OF THE GUARDIAN . Sterling Yorston of George town, age 33. came to his death ; at Georgetown about 7 pm. last evening when the 1951 Plymouth tudor car he was driving plung-. of Wharf in Georgetown into .2 feet of water. The body was recovered about 7:3). Immediately following the mishap a large crowd gathered and members of the RCMP Montague Detachment directed rescue operations from the wharf and from a lobster boat. The car was hooked on the hack bumper by an anchor a tached to a steel cable which was in turn attached to two three-ton trucks. It was hauled about half way up the side of the wharf before it stuck with about half of the vehicle visible. Swimmers then dived into the water and found no one in the car. one door was partially '\ open. . operating from a fishing boat ' ber of men of the Montague~Detachment of RCMP began dragging with a line which had only one cod hook attached. He hooked the cloth- ing of the deceased almost at in; was completed. East Berlin Escapee Shot To Climax Developments’ BERLIN (AP)—East German guards with machine-guns shotynamed one of its generals to .the Soviet Union cannot ' at ytake over in East Berlin from foul‘-Dowel‘ rule of Berlin will- night the Soviet commandant. whose out their consent. a young railway pohceman lhc Berlin wall Thursday e as he fled to th West He managed to stagger 15 feet into Wednesday. Tl: olt)‘y‘i!ot‘i‘su_Soviet l isolated city no mug, inside the e res on curse toward dealing wlth'soviet -protests during the day East German regime. not against 3 Us Wm Berlin. then collapsed and N . The shooting. second at the wall lll six days. imaxed a day of multiple developments. . First the East German regime job was abolished by Moscow‘ {intent is to ;a c lthe ‘reco B e V . for l Andthn Unlhllrstatel. Britain wu ..\ West Firm In Declamtioii On Soviet Responsilail-ity WASHINGTON (AP) The Western Big Three rcfu sed Thursday to recognize .the So- viet move to replace its com- mandant in Berlin with an East German military chie In a joint declaration drafted h_.\-' ambassadorial representa- Ilvcs in Washington. the United States. Britain and France stated: 1. Russia is still fully respon- srhlo for its obligations in Ber- . The 600 - word declaration and France jointly declared that end The test of wills over this Iron Curtain brought vigorous . . tary escort ussians travelling to their memo sl in West Berlin. _ inst U.S. cars travelling flommunist - controlled terri- ry. o IDENTIFY VICTIM The new victim of the wall (Continued on page 2. col. 1) They t h r e atened retaliatig; f once. The body was taken to To ensure that blighted pots- toes do not reach markets out- side Prince Edward Island. the Executive Conmcil yestu-day approved a decision of the dc- partment of agriculture to pro- hibit the shipment of potatoes until seven days after they are harvested. Acting-premier Andrew Mac- Rae said that a seven-day hold- ing period after harvesting is long enough to show whether or not potatoes are affected by blight. Mr. Macfiae said the order applies only to potatoes slated 7-Day Holding Perio Ordered For Potatoes“ Vince a d the measure was taken to protect both growers and consumers. Recent information from the Dominion Experimental Farm in Charlottetown indicates that wet weather has created con- ditions for the development and spread of late blight and the number of infected fields is increasing. Experimental Farm personnel point out that the blight problem could become serious unless hot. dry weather slows its progress. I l l ! PROVIDENCE. R.I. (AP) for shipment outside the pro-l. lMA_R'|JUANA 4P|CKS SPOT —A single wild marijuana plant was found growing in '; downtown Providence Thur- ; sday. It had pushed its way ‘ through a crack in the side- , w 'ght beside the 1. health department office. Prayer Book Revision Gets Anglican Nocl By CARL MOLLINS KINGSTON (CPl —— The 21st general synod of the Anglican Church of Canada Thursday Princess Escapes As Car Ditched I the Queens Wharf and upon ar- rival of the coroner, Dr. G. S. . mnan it was removed to the Court House in Georgetown by Parker Hamilton, undertaker Murray ver. A coroner's jury was selected. They viewed the body. which was identified by J. W. Layers. The hearing then adjourned to the cal" of the coroner. The body was forwarded to Char- lottetown for an autopsy. > I-1 ROSECREA. Ireland (Reut- ers) — Princess Margaret nar- rowly escaped injury Thursday when the car in which she was riding had to swerve off the road to avoid a 20-ton truck. The incident occurred as the iven where hey spent the first part of their Previous to the accident M-r. Yorstcn pushed another car on Kent Street. then followed the car which was proceeding on its own power down Water Street then down the east side of the railway wharf. The oo- cupauts of the first car, Mil- red Glory and Freddie Myers. made the‘turn at the end of the potato shed. Howeverynbe Yo:-stop car. according to Fred Allen. who observed it from his canteen a considerable distance (Continued on page 3. col. 8) ysaid the only way fundamental (occupation responsibilities for Berlin can be ended is by a peace settlement with Germany as a w . "The Soviet assertions con- cerning the alleged sovereignty land independence of the 3called GDR' (German Demo- ycratic Republic) and the existence of the four - kommandatur is without foun- ons." $ '3: go -1? lm cstablished by Second World da War occupation agreements among the four occupying pow- firs. and its responsibilities cannot be abolished by the So- vlcl government without the consent of the three Western powers.’ 2. Thc four - power komman- rlalur for Berlin was estab- lished by four-power agreement and cannot lose its responsibil- 5 because of “he an nounced -abolition of the office of‘ the Soviet colnmandant.” ‘ '3. “The United States. the bolted Kingdom and France \\’lll continue to exercise their lull rights and discharge their full responsibilities in Berlin." The W Russia responsible for the con- Wluences of any attempt to ‘lamfllle Western rights. I .'_“Berlln remains a single <‘!t.V in the Western n estern powers will hold t What practical impact the So- viet move and the Western re- fusal to recognize it would have remained to be seen. The Russians withdrew from the joint kommandatur in 1948. mandant’s office there. Even without the four military chiefs administering jointly. the pres- ence of the Russian military representatives in the city has estern representatives an opportunity to deal with Russian representatives on the cue. U1 0 The Western powers have steadfastly refused to deal with he East German regime. which they do not recognize. _ However. the Russian mili- tary hcadquarters for all of cast Germany. is only a few miles outside Bcrlig. This and other l locations remain as possibili- ties for future Western con- HOLLYWOOD (AP) —- Cow- boy star Hoot Gibson. 70 who faced death with blazing six- guns in a generation of West- ern movies. died Thursday of cancer. He had made a fortune. and spent it. He had survived horse spills ‘and plane crashes with arrogance. enjoyed fame an suffered its loss. was marr four times and divorced thrice. His wife of the last 21 years. Dorothy Dunstan_ was at his side when he died at the Motion Picture Country House and hos- pitdl. a home and hospital for old actors and actresses. in Woodland Hills. He had been in hospital since Sunday. l-loot Gibson came to Holly- wood in l9l0.—when Hollywood was young. For 10 years he made a living as a stung man. hurling himself from gallop! horses for $2.50 to 85 a fall. en, in 1920. he became a leading man. With Tom Mix. E tacts with the Russians on Ber- in. Ken Maynard. Buck Jones, Rex Socred"Cl1iel Emb Over Caouette Statement 3! STEWART h!acLEOD Ojrrsws (CP> -... my on... fill?! professed admiration for e_ leadershl qualities of Mus- gtiwxlixnl and - flat has stung.so- embarrassment. but the leader dlncéuntl any - Winn: of a showdown I 5 fcputy. "'i‘dllfirCaoI1ette like?‘ to talk." . - “l°||llIIoI an Inter- "W Thursday. "and he'll nu: ituthcdrdpofa tButinblsbelrthelsnot raring to take our the leads;-. ‘MD of the pony” ‘ Ill‘e|d Inn mu '-' l I 6,’ I ednesdsy In Le W Maclean. In the m. tw Credit Leader Robert 5 sou-with -tory. the . "ls po- wns not supporting fascism or dictatorship." Mr. Thompson declined «to give any details of exchanges his deputy. S’ one llmd ments upset you," s ed. “Normally I don't let up!!! vs easily." he replied- d you find them embar- rassing?" ' “The publicity that bascomo over a topic that is not 'Mr. Caouette’: state- a reporter D I‘ arrassed pson within hours of prlblicatlon o Mr. Caouette’: statements. but their views were not re- vealed to reporhrs. -Mr. Caouette is president Cowboy Star Gibson Dies At Hollywood pson Ind ' ‘I -Rlvkrlltllls lltical h-roe: of billet‘: gc.fl —h has I "Mussolini Id Illld."-II dtlloflfltllamsnt mom was . me iiil'°iiéu'":'a'lmm“''“'r‘:‘n':ai;':.':iolmomuc 35 Nrlnthsuau-unions-o'uawen'laeoucn.wllsnr fi- 0f Funeraldservlces will be held a. g-ty in Qu u re Mon ay. n.°p'3.iuyc.1 ml. in u...l'°.....'v'. survmns. In addition to M- c._-_ wife. are Mrs. Lots Flanders. seveg-gl um” 31;.“ t|1¢_ gee. Gibson's daughter by a previ- tion there have a- 011' mllfllltt I 8 1'» MN- tions of a misunderstanding at -Tull! GIIIWIV. Ind I brothel. pf party's peak when in-. Gibson- Om - . .. ‘’' ...°‘°"“‘°.......:... wHess.ro.nu_o-n "°" “'5 nmee M n ' “""* """' - been ‘anon etc ""'a.u M, M“ ,:;°"‘,.f;;"l ’ 1: ‘V 7 Code PM u eons II. "Would in. caousul-hr um. We-c-5.:-n .. 0-: mm“ ‘gum flu |f ‘[3 .. ......u.-... age wig; ’ ug, (Its. been I within the next year!’ E-. ldlhlhh ...............: M VII ‘Us. ~ unooaousaosu "stslupmts lib-sthoss don’: Prise 00.. I l"'d..t.“’.;':‘t.'.".l.". F.‘.’“'‘'......' ‘T """...... hurt ourulvoo." Bell. Tim McCoy and William 8. Hart. Gibson was a top star on the Western ranges of the silent screen. Gibson was a hellraiscr. off- screen and on. He had learned to ride on his father’: ranch at ekamah, t Irish vacation. to Blrr Castle. One Killed, 3 lniured At Crossing A ‘ ‘C EDMONTON (CP)—0ne man died in a tangle of steel. three women were in hospital Thurs- day and 17 other injured per- sons were treated after a CNR diesel passenger coach slammed into a grav uck on the city's northeastern out- skirts Wednesday night. he truck driver. killed when his empty vehicle met the rail coach on a level crossing six miles northeast of here, was identified as Patrick McStrav- ich. a recent Immigrant from eland. In hospital were three Roman Catholic nuns, Sister Francoise Romaine, 69. Sister St. Zenon. 42, and Sister Colette. 44. all of Edmonton. They were among 10 nuns travelling to St. Paul. 100 miles northeast. The coach carried 44 passengers. The two-man crew were among the injured treated at hospital. '-1 r-I '1 home of Lord Snowdon's mother and stepfalher. the Earl and Countess of Rosse. Lord e Vescl. Snowdon's brother-in-law and their host at Abbeyleix. was at the wheel. Margaret was sitting in the front passenger seat and Snow- don was in . e back. The car was rounding a sharp curve when the big truck suddenly appeared from the other direction. Lord de Vesci swerved the car off the road. mounting a grass bank and fearing a three- yard - long furrow in the turf. No one was hurt. The princess. who has been reported by several British newspapers to be expecting her second baby. remained calm and nnruftled. ’ A security man following be- hind in another car said no one was at fault in the near acci- Ilent. Clue Fades For Child Neb.. where his boyhood prow- ess as an owl hunter earned him a lifelong nlclmame—Hoot. His real name was Edmund Richard Gibson. TOUGHEST OF TOUGH He hit Hollywood with a trav- elllng rodeo. arned he could get srmuch as $5 for spilling a horse. and sta . Even among the tough movie cow- pokes. some of whom were old enough to remember fighting Swedes Fire On Submarine ° STOCKHOLM ( Reuters )- Swedish destroyers fired depth charges at an unidentified sub- marine in Swedls waters in the Baltic Sea Thursday after it refused to obey orders to sur- face. In Search A l BEETON. Ont. (CP) .— Two‘ men held for questioning in the disappearance of 10 - year- T omasina Baker were released late Thursday and another clue turned into as po- lice and volunteers pressed the unt for the girl. v Police said the men were questioned extensively. then re- leased. Insp. James Harris of the provincial police had said ‘r both men live in this area. 30 miles northwest of Tor- E. :1. (D D '1 I- nto. He had described both men picked up for questioning placed a unanimous stamp of authority on a revised Book of lCommon Prayer for Canadian l Anglicans. I The assembly of more than clergy and laymen stood up after voting their approval and sang a hymn of praise to signal the completion in amity of a 19-year revising task marked at . times by controversy and dis- ‘sension . Authorization of the revised guide to worship—for official use from a date yet to be set by the prirnate—is considered by synod members to be a tri- umph unity over divisions once laozlled as high and low c urch. ' “The vote today not onl gives us a new prayer boo ." one dela-gate said after the (Continued on page 4. col. 7) Police Silent" Over Slaying OTTAWA (CPI —- Police im- lposed a veil of secrecy Thurs- lday on their investigation into the grisly saying of the 44-year- old wife of an Ottawa tailor. Provincial Police Inspector Don Nicol said it was not pos- sib to discuss any possible leads or suspects at this stage of the inquiry into the death of Mrs. Jr-an Bond. wuose nude and severely slashed body was found Wednesday morning in By STERLING KNEEBONE - Guardian-Patriot Staff Writer An overall traffic plan, which would implement six new one- way streets in the city. was presented to City Council ment- bers at a special meeting last night by L. S. Mannell, Oak- ville. 0nt.. traffic consultant with the Municipal Service Com- pany. as hired by the city to conduct a traffic survey. Giving the first of three re- ports. to be presented to the council. Mr. Manuel] said the one-way streets would “get traf- fic into and out of town as fast as possible and at the same time make it much easier for the worker to get to and from work without hitting the down- town area at all." Also given prominence of the meeting was a letter from l-Ion. J. David Stewart. provin- cial secretary, in which he in- formed the council that the government has refused its ap- plication to erect an incinerator on the former Farqwharson priv- perty in East Royalty. which thte tit)’ purchased for a dump e ‘it However. another site W81: suggested by the government for the dump providing the city meet with certain conditions. Othci matters dealt with at the two-hour meeting. held in and the minimum wage law. TRAFFIC PROBLEM Mannell said that basic- ally all streets in an area bounded by Euston. Pownal. Water and Weymouth streets, with th ception of Queen. Great George and Water Streets would be one way in or out of wn. Suggested as being made one- way streets were Euston. run- ning west, Richmond rimming east. Pownal running south, Prince running north. Hillsboro running south and Weymouth running north. Present one-way streets In that section include Fitzroy, ev- O the posh suburb of Rockclife Park Village. . Coroner Dr John A. Thomp-pl son described the slaying aal "the work of a sadist." ‘, Dean Rusk Plans ’ Ottawa Holiday 3 OTTAWA rcpx _ u.s. sec-‘ retary of State Dean Rusk will be in Ottawa today for “infor- mal" talks with Canada's Ex-_, ternl Affairs Minister Green. I A brief. unheralded announce-I ment said Thursday Mr. Rusk. will come here in the course ofl a "brief holiday" in this region. The announcement from the l “good suspects." although there external affair s department was no connection between the w o. Meanwhile, some 600 persons were still tr e m p i n g almost lsaid the two cabinet ministers will discuss “questions of mu- tual concern, particularly dis- armament and United Nations. shoulder - to - shoulder through problems." . No further details were given. l Indians. Gibson's fearlcssness was legendary. A director once asked him if he would make a particularly hazardous fall from a galloping horse for 35. Said Gibson. grin- ning: “Make it 810 and I'll let him kick me death." When the incredible riches of and I quart 31.25." His 314.500 I week. and remarried e marrid (his second wife was film star Sally Ellen). drove costly race’ c . had a stabl of fine mounts and four airplanes. salary then: in: but mumgagait . J. .'lsft. of Wolfvllle. N. 8.. training officer of HM Acadia. is reviewed by the commanding officer. Lt.- the rugged countryside. LOCAL orncsa TRANING Cdr. Roger Mann. right of Victoria. and his executive officer Lt.-Cdr. C. D. Gillls. of town and Halifax. Incalled at Point Edward Na- val Base. Sydney. N.s.. HMC8 : l Acadia is the training estab- lishment where some 2,000 Royal Canadian sea Cadets from Winnipeg eastwards go for their summer training. (National Defence Photo) Stones Fly ALGIERS (Reulersl — More‘ than 20,000 demonstrnto rs ‘ stoned the main administrative 1 building here Thursday night as rivalry between Algerian civil- inn and military leaders broke into the open. Police turned fire hoscs on« the crowd after it broke through the gates leading to the building and shouted at civilian leaders barricaded in side: “Enough talk—-we want action." Moslems su rged into the. streets in response to calls for a c rival rallies issued by the civil- ian politbureau and guerrilla army leaders who spearheaded the 7% -French rule which brought in- lldependenct-. July 3. WASHINGTON (API tration warned Thursday fled as such and which may be mistaken for other drugs. are still in some family medicine cabinets. The agency also disclosed that three cases of abnormali- ties have been reported in a- bies born to mothers who took thalidomide distributed in the U.S. for testing purposes. Pre- viously only one case. involving a baby born in Cincinnati. had become publicly known. The FDA warning was based on information obtained by its inspectors in their survey of doctors who received the soda- tive drug for clinical investiga- I on. FDA said that 410 out of 1.168 doctors interviewed by the la- spectors had at that time made no effort to make contact with patients to whom they had given the drug. City Hall were No-Man's Land H year battle against- tablets of lhalidomide. unidentl-. Occupy Council Meeting No Man's land Also Given Consideration running west, Kent. running cast. Sydney. running west. Dor- chestcr. running east and King. running vlcsl In the area between Fitzrnv and Sydney streets. referred to as the existing commercial area, there would be no left hand turns except off or on to one-way streets. At all busy unsignalized intersections. yield signs would be replaced with stop signs and the right of way would be given to the inbound or outbound traffic. At the corner of Queen and lGrafton streets there would be lno turns at all allowed due to yhcavy concentration of pedes- itrian movement. However. Mr. _ManneEl said. a left hand turn zwould have to be made from =Great George to Grafton Street las this is the through route of lthe Trans Canada Highway. CENIRE-BLOCK PARKING In regard to the city's park- ‘ing problem. Mr. Mannell said that the centre of each block could be used for parking. l“’I‘his vacant land could be in most cases reached through existing lanes or lots and with the exception of City Hall block there is not a, block that could {not be made to provide at least i car spaces of parking im- ymediatcly without removing ow ybuilding or buying one piece of and " l Noting there should be a ‘complete change in the parking ;meter setup. he said “As it now ;stands the parking meters are ;not doing the kind of a job that they were intended to do. The downtown area should have all lsureets metered. ‘ means labour 300 additional meters. iSevcr.:‘ types of meters and lcoin combinations should be yinstaaled. y “Now it is an absolute must lthat radical changes will have ‘to be made immediately. There is not time to have to argue youl. each change. street by jstreet, corner by corner. and I «Continued on page 5. col. 2) In Algiers As Rival Groups Clash The pnlilhurcau. established by Vice - Premier Ahmed Ben Bella with guerrilla backing ovcr opposition from provi- sional Premier Ben Youssef rBcn Khcdda. called for a big public meeting but the an- nouncement was censored by the army-controlled press and radio. Chiefs of the military com- mand which seized control of this capital last month while the politicians were feuding. issued all for a rival ra y. PROTEST UNEMPLOYMENT Many demonstrators heading for the politbureau rally said they wcrc protesting unemploy- ment - a complaint raised by the military leaders. lhalidomide Feared In Yanks’ Cabinets. The “Many of the 410 felt it was not necessary because of the time lapse. or they had no rec- ords to indicate w h i c h their palicnts had received the drug." the announcement said. DISTRIBUTED FOR TESTING "Inspectors were able to con- vincc many doctors of the need to make certain that patients did not have the drug in their possession." Thalidomide was ncvcr ap- proved for sale in the U.S. but was distributed to doctors for testing on patients. FDA said its survey showed that more than 2.500.000 tablets were distributed to 1.267 doc- tors. The assumption that many tablets remain In family medl lcine cabinets is based on the ‘fact they were generally given out by the doctors in envelopes [or other containers bearing di- yrections for use but no name. The distributed tablets were in in variety of mes and colors. .5‘. .. -..g_.. .