If it’s Good for the Island The Guardian is for it “House Te To Open Feb. 22, Premier ShawAnnounces. By DON MACLEOD ; usual amount | of legislation” is Guardian-Patriot Staff Writer expected 10 be considered at the The regular session of the | forthcoming session. Last year a | oe oe opens on February 22. It-is known that work is being The date was announced by | carried out on revisions to the Premier Walter R. Shaw follow-| Trade Union Act and the Civil ing yesterday's meeting of’ the|Servant# Act. Labor Minister government's Executive Coun- Henry Wedge, in a ei. | broadcast last year, promised Premier Shaw and other gov- | | that the province would have a} ernment officials have said ‘re-| revised Trade oe Act. Mem." eently that\“not more than the | bers of the PEI Public .Ser- HugeBuildingProgram = comes Pririce Edward | Island Like The Dew” - WEATHER . Cloudy, occasional light snow in after. noon; west winds 15, Low-high 10 and , CANADA, FRIDAY, JANUARY 12, ee, nat ‘Association have passed| a resolution to the government | asking that consideration oe given to setting up a civil ser- vice commission in the pre wi yea Fi r Sy ‘INDUSTRIAL Industry and N | ces Minister predicteé tha Me im ages machinery for’ =| development will -be + ror "Mr. Rossiter made mis | | Srodiction following the special | Ji ) —s frye Legislature. see , en last December 7 ice oe “Tolasios ‘enabling the| ; province to collect. income and’) re oe tax. withlareer a MiB thik Senedd have given the P.E.I. Industrial Cor. (Continued on page 2 Col. 2) Announced For City | Noting that pans ace weil ad- | Malpeaoe Road Side walks vanced, Hon. David Stewart, | would be put. in on one side: “al ateahite Lak mae | Following the laying of sewer . of the 5th District of | pipes from Belevedere Corner mms Progressive Conserva-| to MacKay'’s Corner, that Association lastnight that-|-ton-of the the construction of the Fathers | @ Confederation Building would | get underway this coming The meeting "was presided | the absence of Calvin Wood, (Continued on Page 5 Col.. 3) over ‘by Arthur Macinnis | fe. : ae rs | F 3 thtag \. OTTAWA, (CP). — Trembling | | with Tage. Mayor Charlotte | | Whitton stormed out of a. closéd | Board of Control meeting Thurs- | day and met -reporters’ ques- tions” with : “Don’t, ask me, I'm ho eanie the mayor." Asked if Whe. had iectened: | | thé controversial woman mayor | snapped: “When I have a state- | ment to make, I'll make a@ statement.” ;’ Controllers said Mayor Whit- ton had ‘exploded over a board decision to reappoint - Narcisse Lacourciere to the Ottawa Transportation. Commission She dating batt woud cot PREMIER MAKES) Sida ties damek ten | he ONGUE bs propet png. new SLIP OF T 3 =e plot ia Caagtonte- | Premier -Walter R. Shaw. . made a brief slip of the ton- MANY GOOD THINGS .. | gue last night.in speaking to Mr. Stewart emphasized that, the members of the 5th the economy of fhe province Queens Progressive Coner- | has been. advanced to no end vatives. : during the last few years by Speaking on the road pro- the “good things that came to! gram in the province, the the Island” as the result of the Premier said “We will have Diefenbaker Government and | the best road policy im Can-.| the Shaw administration. _- ada by the time we go out of | He stated that more hard sur- | Power.” “a face pavement was laid last Realizing what he -had.said,. year than in-many years and} Premier Shaw added ‘'l mean) Outlined part of the progranrfor by the next . By the this year. d time we're out*of power I'll ing of St/ : at eee bless- railroad tracks t6 Belevedere’ '&- Fer corner, to compare with the | | Montague High lo Get 10-Classroom Addition The Montague Regional | High | onomics and thrée commercial. School Board has decided te | ctss rooms. j According. to specifications, | build -an additional 10-class-| | the: dew wing will coatein 10 room wing on the present school | classrooms, a secretary's “of- with construction to begin as | fice, health ‘facilities and a early in the spring as weather | teachers’ room. allows. Charlottetown architect Keith Board Chariman Paul 1. | Pickard has been ~ commis- | Kingsbury, Dundas, said sent | sioned to.draw up ‘plans for the | terday afternoon that the addi- | addition. Mr. Pickard said yes- tlonal, facilities are proposed to | terday that the plans- should be handle. a rapidly increasing en-|Teady in about a th’s time..| rolment of students. | 'The addition will: be.of the same | At present,-508 students at-| type of construction as’ the ‘rest | tend the school and, according of he school, the architect said. | to Mr. Kingsbury, enrolment is addition will mean an | expected to double “within the |imcrease in vocational training mext three or four years.” facilities as well as academic | “The sthool now has 19 class- | facilities. § - rooms, library, two classrooms» It is hoped that the new, wing that could be used for home ec-| will be completed by late 1962. ! | Bagnall and Mrs. Helen Dun |had wanted Dr. Pierre Gen- | dron, dean of applied science at the, Yniversity of Ottewa, to! fill the position. +» ~° : They said the mayor charged , | that the move was a “double: | - DR. BAGNALL ‘eross.” =~ . The vote to reappoint wl cominissioner passed 2 to 1 with | ‘Lone of the four controllers ab- \ : staining. A year-ago Mayor Whitton . threatened ‘to resign over a street. reconstruction issue. She | didn’t carry out the threat. lel ana tins a aeotperys et lien Mlegal Entry | Dalhousie, died at his home in > | -He joined the teaching staff tatirant operator James Seto, )at Dalhousie in. 1921, and d€ | was committed to trial Thurs- came dean of dentistry in 1947 | day in the Nova Scotia Supreme | F retired from active —. in | | Court . on three charges of con- arid in 1955 was” , | spiracy to obtain illegal. entry be emeritus of the dental tac |to Canada “for four Chinese. y. | Provinciak Magistrate John F. Dr. Bagnall was the first MacDonald Canadian to be’ made a fellow | sole a. Nee as is the dental section of the Wor- | month: following an iavestiga- Id College of Surgeons in Eng-| 5.) ey RCMP to part of a 90 land. was horiored | at the 3960 | tion-wide inquiry inte an. al- He cofivocation of the university | leged. Chinese immigration rae: | with the. honorary degree of |.***- doctor of laws for “‘distinguish- ed service to his profession, his Sai Pera (AP) —A 12-yard-) community, and -to the ‘univer. e Rock: deep’ ‘ie a of mud, rock aid sity. - melting ice, sluiced. down a e was a veteran of the First | orld War, “going cnikeope Yugoslavia with the first. contingent. The late Dr. Bagnatt -is ot "SPLIT, Yugoslavia’ (Reuters) vived by a son, also: a dentist, | The second violent earthquake PIC | Col. Geoff Bagnall, Cana- | .f y, kl in five @ays rocked Yugosla Ont., and a daughter, Mrs. R.J. Barcham, | Pi , Eng., whose husband and unloosed mountain’ slides ‘is Lieutenant-Commander in huge boulders onto villages. the British Navy. ‘ | At least two persons were A brother and two sisters’ Te | yivied and a va side on the Island: E. Manning |g seme. | | bar, Charlottetown, ‘and Mrs.| homes werg demolished | Sheldon Matheson of Tea Hill. | and rail tratfie blocked aiid tele- oaty it Funeral arrangements have) not yet been completed. LONDON (CP) — Toppling mes ROYAL FAIR TROPHY PRESENTED — a ctiaiale Ane ” Mac- “(right) ia Dingwell gratulating ve pees, Seeman Oihet. memorial won by sholwing the champion- Flock ‘Association held VILLAGE WIPED OUT ” Wis civls Feared Dead ship box of capons,at the Roy- al Winter Fair, Toronts,. ast . November, The ctip was pre sented yesterday at the an- trophy which he ~nuat iieeting of the “Approved — af 5 Kensington. Mr. MacLeod has won the trophy several times. and he had the p over all types of poultry at the Royat—on—at-least one—oc. easion. (See story on Page 3.) In Peruvian Avalanche |dreds more via’s Dalmatian coast ‘Thursday | have died ie a a of | disasters of its: cn Their fears” | were based on fragmentary re- towering mountainside enormous avalanche, entombed the Andean yillage. of Ranra- hirca and most of Thursday. Perusian officials feared hun- area may of the worst , however In the first shoek of. the disas- reported 20 persons ter which struck night, some_officials. speculated that ar final toll might be 3,000. But would be some time be- oot on fore they could determine ‘the ‘Winds Fell Trees, : Kill: Six Britons | said it Fordfield capsized in the Eng- lish Channel but her nine-man |the. Huascaran crew. was or out of cer : ‘later by its: 300 peo- Wednesday ‘they | Bearby full extent of the disaster be- the nearby communities were: | settling down peacefully Wed- cause of broken communica- tions. “In eight minutes Raprahirca was wiped off the map,’’ said Mayor Alfons Caballero in one of the few reports from the area. Hé said nearly 500 residents survived in Ranrahirca, a village .200 miles northwest of Lima and 30 miles of Huaraz. 7,000 LIVE THERE. More than 7,000 persons lived in -surrounding ranching . and nearby district of Yananiac. Another survivor, Dr. Leoncio | 4 who barely— escaped {from a nearby “settlement, , ex- | oeeand the opinion the death l would reach 3,000. “It looked as though everyone | , ~ — had been buried ~ he ice, rocks and mud,” he, paid, . Because of the depth of the ‘debris only two bodies had been recovered. Ranrahirca, a 9,000-foot-high village surrounded by the 15,- 000-foot snéw-topped peaks of | Mountains, and | ("Rain lashed in on the crest Off houses, smashed down (of the gale from the southwest BS co eee FOF N F and set rivers lapping danger- _s highways. . ew erry Senet under oe of > ag ie a. a2: 8 mated confederation aa ae = Seria ag oes rete wae ae a. apokesman fer |» Seed throagh houses ot‘ sev? breakfast just a few minutes be- paises Shipyards said. Thurs |- | oak Saas oo Np ase fore, jay: - ton British yessel¢j rr. [ae ae, ee eT ‘is hen jcoeen gyal Lables, ing _ sed electrical wiring. stl MERE-TO-FINDAIT [Bese ct.4,town Wt root_unt De plied, ey WHERE-TO-FIND-IT ic nn io vear-cd | inis can. begin. Ate ‘Announcements, notices ‘11 im tree. Three other persons | ter that the vessel—will pe furn- , 4 died when. trees fell on their,|-ed over to the transport depart- Churches: Sa i oe automobiles. and~s farmworker ment and then to the Canadien Bitths, deaths, Bae ee in a field. National Railways. | Classified ....;....... a Eassiah ‘Chemmst shipping’ was | The Confederation is, destined oe oseaes=e, 8 ‘wained to beware of the drift-| for service on the Necimamoe wins Seen sete wee 2,662-ton ship Breit- Sirait between Cape Tor- Finance, Markets ...... . a ae rae’ seperted an|Mentine, N.B.. and Borden, Finance, Markets mare : i breakdown. A wig was P.E.1., where it will join the Prince County sse8eweee ; [sie wt trawler | ferry Abegweit.in winter ser- _— oe a v3 5 after she ‘gn engine’ vice. eis rf ; eeeeenereetene : breakdown in the Channel. | Jott Demeo, CNR - Atlantic ? Seas around Britain were so) regional general manager. said eee. &, (ee Oe ee ee ¢ Oe wet & Bene Ree Oe > sree? eee wbeees was blown over the soon as the vessel is reatty it . cliffs. will be put directiy te work. 50 of the| north of the hot-springs_ resort } nesday night. Then, at dusk, down the slope. ' Aid Is Offered, By Red Cross Toronto (CP) — The Canadian Red Cross has cabled its Peru- mining communities and in the vian counterpart offering emer- | | gency aid in dealing with the | enormous chunks of ice from a glacier, | loosened by Peru’s summer sun, crashed down and started a gi- gantic flood of water and snow "come Tax Tariff Slash Contemplated WASHINGTON (CP) — Presi- dent Kennedy asked Congress in a State of the Union mes- | sage Thursday for unparallelled | power to. slash taxes and tar- iffs. ~ Standing in the rostrum of the House chamber, Kennedy out- * |linedgplans for a strong a growing economy, a_ healthy, prosperous, well-educated ~peo- ple, military might, and an end | to what he called a global civil war that ‘‘has divided and tor- mented mankind.” : The greatest burst of ‘applause from the Senate and House members and the jammed 4al- nedy said the situation in Ber- lin still is threatening and un- predictable then added: ‘‘We are prepared to talk, when ap- | propriate, and to‘ fight, if nec- essary.’ On civil rights, Kennedy nad pledged legislative action when . he campaigned for the White @House but resorted only to ex- ecutive action once he got there There were signs he planned to continue relying on executive powers in this area. But Turs- day he called for legislation to outlaw literacy tests and poll taxes as voting requirements. leries above came when Ken- | ; ment tax credit as He said this is just one example of what he wants MEASURE SIDETRACKED On aid to education, the prest- dent had urged a bill that would provide federal assistance for school construction and teacher salary increases ~ but not for private or parochial schools. This measure was sidetracked in a scrap over the religious i®- sue and the widespread expecta- tion was that Kennedy would veer away from it this time Instead, he didn't retreat inch on the broader bill nudged Congress to shove through at this session Kennedy asked Congress to give him standby authority to lower personal income taxes and to speed ug federal publie works spending as insurance against future recessions. de proposed, too, a pér manent strengthening of the system. for payments to people out of jobs, Kennedy also recommended training men put out of work by aa and it machines, assisting 1,000,100 jobless young people .to find work, and providing industry with an eight per cent invests an incentive for expansion Some Senate and House mem (Continued on Page 5 Col. 1) He Won't Get Tariff Bill | Is Republican Prediction WASHINGTON (CP) — Pres- ident Kennedy served notice on a Conservative-toned Congress - Thursday that he will demand | authority to eliminate tariffs al- together on some goods and re- duce tariffs by as mich as 30 per cent on others in a five- year plan to crack Common Market tariff walls and expand world trade “He won't get it,’’ said Rep- resentative Noah Mason, top Republican on the House ways and meas committee, which will have life-and-death power lever. the revolutionary tariff bill Kennedy will present to Congress shortly. But the president's ‘enthusi- astic following of Liberal- minded Democrats, led by Con- |gressman Hale Hoggs of Loui- |giana, predicted victory before {the -second session of the 87th Congress folds for November | elections. Kennedy, sensing the legisla- |tors’ cautious attitude, offered {a concession for protectionists, saying escape - clause mechan- isms, under which the United States can withdraw or modify tariff deals when domestic in- | dustry is hard-pressed by im- | ports, will be. safeguarded. | South American country’s ava- WIDE IN SCOPE lanche disaster. * His proposed five-year trade ho was élected by /a vole 14 to to 10. Mr. Allen, a Tor- ento lawyer, was an alderman from 1950 to 1955 and a con- troller from 1956 on. He be- len, of 1 expansion plan will be . ‘fate ‘reaching in_seepe but. designed with great_care to make certain, its benefits far outweigh any risks,’’ Kennedy said “The bill: will:permit gradual elimination of tariffs here in the United States and in the Com- mon Market on thase items im which we together supply 80 per cent of the world’s trade— mostly items in whieh-ouf abil- ity to compete is demonstrated by the fact that we sell abroad substantially more than we im- port . On other goods, the hill will permit a gradifal reduction - of duties up to 50 per. cent— permit bargaining by major categories—-and provide for ap . propriate and tested forms of assistance to firms and em- ployees adjusting to import competition.-’ ¢ The traditional practice of extending the results of bilateral tariff bargaining to all members of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade will be con- tinued, Kennedy indicated means Canadian exporters would benefit from lower U.S. and European rates. But Ken- _Medy’s aides. expect these nom including ° European countries Canada, to adopt more liberal tariff policies of their own. CHAIN OF OFFICE IS TRANSFERRED comes the secoud “thairmas Toronto and its 12 neighbors have had in the last nine years. (CP Wirephot®) 7 rhs, +