If it's @oodFor the Island The Guardian is For it o fitttmrioiil VOL. LXXV. N0. 170 WEATHER Cleancloudingoverwithshowerser thunderstorins by afternoon. «Low-high 52 and 75. Sunday: cloudy. “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew" *'°°'l"‘ ';.,_'::‘,_.°':,,';";,_'.',,';',,.:',"'l_:-_l!'v--- CflARLO'l'TE'l'(iWN, CANADA. SATURDAY, JULY 21, 1962. nirimlou snvnn cums ,4 “afi- A ‘ Decision B 5 COURT CASES PLANNED “No my BOYS A CLAIM RECORD n n O u n C e S i cl;l‘i\li:! Charlottetown boys l w world record. t Major Decisions and forth 2,556 times yester- day. The r e c o r d claimed ‘ Thursday was 1,704 times, 5n.‘3.§.lé§.l1"oL3’§2;?§‘°..i§’.?.l'.é’.§ Zf.§“J.‘2‘.5s.2."if.f .f’..’t"‘.i'.‘.‘."t2‘ ?i.“o’}§‘2~; 23233.53! ‘§°"""g°" ‘" A" .. - . tflve major decisions Friday, in- l—with the power to require af- ' I a United Nations membe Cllldlllg one to prosecute four §filiation~—said CBC network pro- .unnamcd broadcasting stations ‘grams have little commercial The_ l°°al_"l3l‘k “'35 made should help pay for the organi- hy Jim Phillips and Angus ‘.zation's costly peace - ‘keeping ‘for allegt‘-‘fl BBG ljfigulation in- value to private stations. and tfractions of a serious nature." Jsuggesled the CBC build more Houston ill ~'l YMCA Camp loperations in The Congo and Middle East. l The h°3l'5l 3llll°l-lllced ‘-hese .of its own stations to carry its ‘ BBG at Holland Cove. They are “he” m°Ve57 ‘ national s e r v I c 9. Oil the Camp Staff. Official The decision at The Hague set C°lllil0l‘S W€l'e Alilill D0lll- the stage for a critical assem- l _l- ll. l3I‘0P0-508 l0 llll€I‘V8|'l€ ‘in ]would reserve radio frequencies . _ ‘ tile dispute over TV iootball for the c13c_ ver. Chairman of lhe YMCA bly debate here on whether to Camp Commlllee and Gary uphold the court’s opinion and .rights by forcing all stations on 4 both th ' ls lhorny 1 UNITED NATIONS (AP)- .The world court advised the General Assembly Friday that '1 In C.lldm0i‘€- revoke the voting power of any T h c governors , plrdged The tube has a regulation nation falling more than two ‘l 9 CBC and private CTV “ t' ‘ ‘d t‘ " f size one fr mi an electric !'e- h ' ' ' ~- A -i ‘ii 2' ’‘°“‘’°”‘5 ‘° °‘“"Y "'9 Grey Cllll wi.‘L'l'"li‘§§ ccaiiiiesti eiliemi‘pro:- frigeraioniouidoor temper- lliiirsdueimiiiir atiiigsgeethoeiierhiiioiii | ‘:"‘I’v§(‘3r°eao5:e‘r’°i’}"t:;"(‘;'}l3l3 dhtic ‘lems" connected with TV ii-- atiire at the time was in the and the regular budget. SUMMERSIDE GIRI. IS CHOSEN MISS P.E.l. C‘T., W...’ h f .cence application including 705- the cube lasted 25 mm- The vote on the advisory opin- agree °h °“’ ° those by the CBC. lites. ion was 9 to 5 —- with judges . hare advertising revenue the c d L. l l s , . S -- .::.:i’ :2: ..2:.°"..:..l;;“o;l. g;:,g,;v,«;,-;i -» him (right). of Ezmont Bay. 2. The hoard and the ‘publicly- sponsored by the Egmont Bay ‘owned CBC will seek an inter- from the Soviet Union. Poland. France, Argentina and Peru in ' opposition. The Soviet Union has served notice in advance ill ii Miss Beryl Maclnnfs. teen- Irei. Summer-side. became “Miss Prince Edward Island. 1962" last night as she was chosen by a panel of three Lobster Carnival. The 18- year- old "Queen" is the’ daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Mac- Innis of Sunimerslde and was sponsored by the Summerslde ‘Lions Club. She will be ci-o\vn- ‘ ed this afternoon at Civic Sta- dium by Miss “Prince Edward Island 1961." Miss Cheryl 02- on of Summerside. Named as her princesses were Miss Bet- ty Jean Callaghan -left). sponsored by the George R. Pearkes Branch of the Royal (Continued on page 4, col. 3) 4 leather From Montreal Elected ClF President 5 porting the decision were 0 < ... o . States. Mexico's judge was ab- se lit. The United States hailed the decision as one "of fundamental timportance to international law Miss Patricia Maybury. Mon- l ‘V , and to the present and future lcspacity of the United Nations to maintain peace." .v . 1“ dges from among 13 other youth club. (Fm. story see relation from the courts of s days. The BBG said it received ‘STEPS INT“ “A551-E ’F'ederation yesterday. She suc-l c M World Court ls Signal For UN Debate Peace-Keeping Cost Problem I UN officials and diplomats ‘generally predicted the assem- bly, to convene Sept. 18. would ‘endorse the opinion. Some also 3 predicted that the few countries now more than two years be- t hind would pay up soon so that . no .member would lose its vote. - That would mean a sin start toward pulling the United :Nations for good out of the fi- l nanclal hole it has got into be- ‘cause 57 of i 104 members have never paid anything for The Congo operation. and 2! [have never paid anything for lthe Middle East frontier work. 1 The assembly had asked ths l international court of justice to I say whether spending on the UN Iforce in The Congo and emer- lgency force between Israel and 1Egypt constituted expenses 1)! of the organization to be borne by heed the court’s opinion. Sup- all . members as apportioned by l the assembly. l The court ruled in effect that lsuch spending was included ‘ ong the expenses that all ~members should pay if billed by the assembly.‘ l The Soviet contention was l that only tihe Security Council- ‘where the big power veto pie- lvails—-is competent to take sea ltion invnlvinsl maintenance of ‘ world peace. 5 WASHINGTON (AP) —- Gen. 1 Lauris N o r s t a d is retiring from the United States Air Force and stepping out about Nov. 1 as U.S. commander-im chief in Europe and supreme commander of NATO rces. President Kennedy's accept- Mgss MAy3URy ance of the 55 - year - old stra- tegist's request to be relieved bernoon session. ;after six years as supreme 'l‘l1i€ meeting Cl0s€<'l lll l-‘he af- . commander in Europe was an- ternoon, and a board of direct- I nounced Friday by the White ors meeting last night complet- l House. ed the business for this unnuall No announcement was made period on Dec. 8. During. the brief encounter be- fore Mariner 1 passes on into orbit about the sun_. sensitive measuring devices in the space- craft are to pierce Venus‘ heavy veil of clouds in an effort to unravel secrets which have my- stifled scientists and astronom- banning broadcasts of "a parti- ,~ san political character” an elec- 8 ltion day and the two preceding ‘ e CB _ B lated a BBG interpretation that L h h I Y the ban included "news items . . . . . _ au C u e O Izgrii. hams“ polmcal char“ treal. was elected 1962-63 presi. V . ' 0 Zdent of the Canadian Teachers of ii N katchewan CCF party conven- lwet‘-ll the CBC and its lll'lV-’=llP John's, Nfld. ‘ tlon Friday endorsed the CCF‘ "' To The 41st annual meeting oil I government‘s stand on medical [ If t the CTF. which opened at Mont- ~ _ 3 gomery Hall July 17, came to I (AP) -— Project officials pro- doubt that plant and animal life ‘on Feb. 12, _1961. It passed lactivity marked efforts to break 5 l close nounced everything ready Fri- as earth people know it exists within 62.000 miles of the planet la deadlock between the govern- l Mrs. I. K. Castleton, Calgary. day for an attempt today to on Venus because of the oven- but produced no information be- ‘meat and doctors over the gov- was elected first vice president. on a 140 - day journey to the He said that if any life exists lbefora it got there. V ..csre insurance plan. on Wnd;-vice president and W. ’ planet Venus. there. it is -Mariner i , . ..-_-........-.— -mg ,.3¢.v;_—,-.;.-,,, re .....1e¢¢e.q.;~ , .. _ 9 — 2 lJa‘iii.en. New Vtfcst.ininster..B.C.. A powerful Atlas - Ageiia B I would detect, it. dwinys odd Premier wood,-ow Lloyd as Do. ‘third vice president. Venus will be $,000.0M miles litical leader and then urged . _ , in the We - dllwll <l8l‘lfll€5S to h A‘ '0“ d the Saskatchewan College of 3 Pefhh lhhhar-" lhhlh hhhealhdi . resentative on the start the 446-Pound lilylolld 03 planned intercept date it will be 0"’ Ir I e Physicians and Surgeons in l‘e- Fflday _‘°" U~S- "°°°3h‘h°h °' 1 board of directors for the com- In interplanetary voyage de- ss,ooo,ooo miles away. But Mar- l sume neg ions immediately ‘"5 l°Elm9- - ing year its riiaok Costello l lner I must travel a high-arcing mile. of Venus "01- . 3o.m[m.gg _ 1 The convention also pahsod ‘overthrow of President Manuel tare 1-[_ M_ palssom vlctor1a_ l3_ miles to reach its destination. A Kings Cfllmly youth. Mal‘. resolutions of the medical ca", 1"l'ad° w°dh55d3-‘>’- _G‘{h- El; C.. H. C. McCall. Stoney‘ Plain. There has been ISD€C1ll?1tl0lt| :colrtn gillisratl, (lfigrlgvtiééitollzllgl most v‘ard° Perez G°d°y Sald I“"’h- Alta.. Nick Toews. Steinback. i 1. "ll YESGTBY W . .. . .. um 3”" as" W‘ 3"" 3 their original fire in l'€Wl'lllllE_ the United States—onl collsid- vine, Q.,._.__ Miss L.,,,a1,.e Le.1 in the present favorable Deriotltl. §iniui'ti;a‘:pp‘:;::tlIye ffsimiolvs, _ Th R l d the ony 111011 0 ' Q “S “S ma e led in an automobile accident In E t . . Newcastle. N. B. . .Ald Bill Passed .e1'atl°h hhd l“ he rec ghihed-ii Blanc. Moncton. N.B.. and Rev. . The 56‘«Ve3"’°l‘_l luhta head A. F. Breiznan, St. John's. Nfld. l,5h°h_° 35 _lh“-‘ Uhltecl slates cu‘ Re-elected to the board were ioff its ilitary assistance pro- w_ A_ Hate‘ Reggn,-,,_ Rev_ ,)'.}1_ Th ‘i C lgham 1'‘ 3d°hh°h t“ 3 ‘-"“~"h°“' Conway, Ottawa. and Miss Flor- ree I1 OI’ gsion of millions of dollars in ‘ economic aid. P contestants at the summerside page 3.) seem“ °f the Br°ad°“tih5 Act complaints SASKATOON lCPl—-The Sas- 3- Slepping into a hassle be- eeds s_ G. Mccumy, or st_I CAPE CANAVERAL. F 1 n. l James said most scientists ‘previous Venus probe launching lea;-e as intense behind-the-scene late yesterday afternoon. Seeks U.S launch I Mariner I spacecraft like surface temperatures cause its radios gave out long ‘es-nment's compulsory medical‘ . George McIntosh. Halifax, see. i H rocket is scheduled ‘to blast off LIMA iAPl —— The chief of ‘p_1;_1_ REPRESENTATIVE from earth today and on the ‘ PE I. ' signed to take it w thin 10,000 lF°r Treatment with the government, Ill hi5 first llllefvlel” Slllce the other new b o a rd members route of more than 224.000000 _ _ situation which lost of ‘ 9 ‘l ‘h m l l m 9 h l 3 ‘mm ; Manitoba. J. E. Perry. Lennox- I 1”“ one spacecraft to Venus .IIalifax to be treated for brain The son of Mr. and Mrs. Mal- or for cell es. , colm Glllls. Baldwin‘: Road. he 'ence Wall. Halifax mee ting. Many visiting dele- immediately of a successor. The findings will be radioed ;By U.S. Senate began losing his sight yesterday‘ _ _ RESOLUTIONS -gates have already left the pro- Army Gen. Lyman L. Lemnit-‘ to earth. where scientists will} and was taken lo!‘ medical care. BRITTON. Mich. fAPi — A “We are seeking to preserve Resolutions p a ssed by the vlnce on their homeward mp. zen 52, chairman of the US,‘ meeting included one that the- Manitoba Teachers Federationl urge the CTF‘ to press the fed- eral goverrtment vigorously to ease tihe excessive strain on pro- vincial and municipal tax re- sources by providing financial Next year’s meeting will he held joint chiefs of staff, was nich- ln Vancouver. "rszsciii.-:3 EDUCATION Two points of viewon the pat- tern of teacher education were heard at a morning session. ‘The first was given by Rev. E J translate the signals into solid: wAsHrN(;ToN (AP) ._ The information about the mY5l€l‘l' ‘~ Senate. which last month voted on: planet. to bar almost all U.s. aid to Jack James. Mariner project Communist countries. passed manager for the Nations! Aero- Friday ii compromise $4.700,- nauttcs and Space Ar.'rnlI-:lstra- 000,000 foreign aid bill stripped tion’s jet propulsion laboratory, of the restrictive feature. ‘; it was then decided to send him: heavy wind whirled ll car democracy," Perez Godoy dc. 10 Hill“! l0!‘ lmmedlllle Neill‘; carrying five persons around. clared. meat. I‘ turned it upside down and i He charged that material aid smashed it into a tree Friday during the last regime did not -. 0 night, killing is 34-year-od‘ always reach its proper destin- Clry Resident Gets Contract well D. Taylor. 60. the presi- _ ‘ . dent's military adviser. mother. her son and a niece. ation but was sold by profiteers. N0,-5gad_ now back 3: his Britton police described it as' Earlier. the m ry cabinet “m “R ."“c"“ con” “shed The measure now goes to the :n lilsolatedatortnailo. It éiesgitéyetg. met‘ tot plan an countt:r‘;o‘ffleiissli;et I gdofigr aglggnentaw and.‘ Roche, registrar of St. Dun.~ .. eomueuue “am on the ham“ E0" 3° M Representative.’ chi liiendei (iloar th' south-I liga ns gclmgliriatili a alnst the N Va r i :11 s committee reports l St-‘his Uhlvehshy alhd thhihther ls K'“ed nu uwimnment of Venus’.-i when pun” “ “peeled next easiern villag: ldiiiilaetoraslhip - g lwere dealt with during the iif- l by J-A M'3°D°h3hl- ‘hast PT?‘ ' "ANE1. A MYSTERY week after some oratoricsl Dru» OTTAWA (special) __ A ' ' ' lsident or the Alberta Teachers W. PUbI'|ICO "Very um; 1. known about M“ ““"h“'°'°'h"""°“' otletown mall. Alexlusl 1“ mm’ 'AS5°°lllll°ll- . H ‘_ WEST PUISNICO. N.S.. tCPl the planet now. We don't know WcQuaid, has been a l Father Roche said 1ne — Alden DEntremonl. 4. was killed near his home here Fri- greatest’ weakness in the teach- ’ day night he was struck l ins. th stituo " , ‘ tr ct xii: of ltst siiiiospheri. iiiilliether Browne (P1051) Limited. his profession is the lack of clarity in it has a magnetic or I po- ' The contract. in the t the thought of teach- tentisl Van Allen-type radiation Plans of $2,323. is for aradhfi and ers." A diversified program of held here today. H but g u, teacher education gives the The boy's father. Ronal Disn- ST. JOHN'S. Nfld. (CP)—So- licitor-General W. J. Browne necessary emphasis to the aca-L tremont. was at sea fishing at " urem tr from‘ earth Me“ en (Continued on page 4. col. 3* ltime of accident. give us controversial tempera- when by ii truck. An inquest will be ‘ Chief Of NATO . !Plans To Re’rire gon Kennedy in Washington Mona l day and informed him of his de- ‘ sire to retire. the United States commitment {to the Alliance and of the ‘strength of the Alliance itself." At his headquarters in Paris. lNorstad told reporters he plans I to visit each of the NATO coun- tries before lic steps down. . W 'te ouse press secretary ‘Pierre Salinger indicated there might be in early announce- ment about it successor to Nor- stad. ttioned as a possibility, along. with retired army Gen. Max-I 4 Appointment Announced HYANNIS PORT. Mass. lAPl headquarters in Paris. called‘ ‘ .—Gen. Lyman L. Lcmnltzer he- ‘ comes the new US. commander in chief in Europe and Gen Maxwell D. Taylor will succeed him as chairman of the joint chiefs of staff. the White House announced Friday liig Lemnitzer's new appolntmen is expected to put hi ' lln . to succeed Gen. Lauris Norstad as supreme commander of North Atlantic Treaty Organiza- . tion forces. defence contracts for sio.ooo or more placed by Defence Con- struction during the latter half of June. Total value of the contracts is 986.710. ‘ : 2 l leaves for Ottawa this weekend where he is expected discuss his political future with Prime Minister Diefenbaker.’ to more than 600 degrees above near the surface." ‘ ’ Outbreak Of Hog Cholera Poses ‘Problem For Farms MONTREAL (CP) — Concill-L Court of British Columbia. said‘ atlon hearings into new con- it hopes to present its report to; tract demands by Canada‘: the federal labor minister be-l Conciliation Hearings End With Blunt Union Warning The unions promised in study any reasonable suggestion on the question that the board comes up with. Much of the hearing was taken up with ll statistical battle over how the wages of the non-opg -— workers not in- volved in the actual running of trains—compa:-c wil.h other Ca- nadian industries. The unions arr seeking parity with the durable goods stand- ard. an avcraric of wages paid in several -‘iasic (Tmadian lndus trics. The nor.-ops now earn an average of st M an hour. some 13 cents an hour below the latest standard. They say Lfl ' cents is needed to close the can land to maintain parity through ‘ the life of an r-xpor-led two-yrlal l contract. f The i'allwa_vs argued the non. ops should get no raise this con- tract bccausr tlioy x-~tually are esrning an -average of 16 cents ‘an hour more than workers in other industries whose jobs are most similar to those of the , non-ops. l The unions in return said the railways reached this figure by ‘ _ th ‘huh of 100.000 lion - operating railway lore Aug. 31. " ._ ‘v with no .. s 0 resulted in e fer employees ended Fr day with s 011"‘ sicniriiedri A d':tue:iliv:i iihiil.eii*:-iiiiflletg f':l'I2lel‘ll.llQl' thsii 1:0]! than 57.000 Ontario and utiliion lchaef bluntlywwignins l'lIi:dt m;firA‘::“eiPfi?';:E3Mof Sm In flshflnl Isninst time to to mini» it out ' Qll¢l*° 11°F’ 1' °°" “'° N‘ is “nor 6” won pus ltln srtlie iiestiim of ion secur- mmp pr ' an mi. N0 ‘ ON or “mam er‘ gwgtglmem duit arhliilink Hall veteran chief no-i ltyg came qmll as the thorniest host of hog cholera before it "'l‘l'leres no question that the compensli ll-fill“ le 80- gommr for he mmops ma problem Th‘ "aways bmefly ' an: fogthold in “nu” ofl‘kmVl 0' m°Di:.“i¥u§ hwgii '.:§.dm':..k§:.:t:“ go," ems1e.¢u‘i‘l; this to the conciliation ‘board 3 attacked. thecunlon proposal as on arms. Pol‘. II!!! ~ - - ,- ,' - _s _ so in. we can mo ~ we -meme dc»-ri-mu in mm =° will mi :‘.:;: :::.°.:::::t ..:“:..'°.t::. 2:11. i °,‘.:.°,..f.§"‘.‘....“.”.:"‘.'i‘.‘. ‘::::,.:°.:.:.m:. on 38 uric and Quebec veterinary director-general who Ottawa soinentfli. 1 . mm talks of “nous” "moms is the omy amwer to t-he Wm “mi h." he” had“! mm 1'“ coped with um“ ‘I Us’. The uric“ ugfld Hep“ men their employees i llem faced by long-time employ- nmugggyped . out i;:ch“' mot mic“-gilt Chou" outbreaks in :1‘rti!:I.'¥ ;Iet?l‘;ihledlItr::l)t?0:rlTf Summing up the unions‘ argu- ees who suddenly find their h‘-“'‘°d 1'' lh’ chmhhlhh '° Th‘ hm °"ld°m'° two ye." mhpeciedu " dih,T1"hb,i,i;e. faegiislncrease B112:-cflcnlliffbageititilillif-I gosilschetihigiziiaied by iechmiogi “mp nu miocflim flock we on cl" f eels tho‘. ity program Mr. Hall said thei ' EDI ll hishiy Null!‘ IMO U us‘ flue “ ed" in‘ F railways had reached ii wl hm‘ ‘ha ‘Vim’ “m ‘M mine‘ l nty "W ' me. “Mme no liomm mel.t’.- level of cynicism and lntransi- 1‘ d°"h" “'9” h‘"h‘“'"i ' I ma‘ worm"? en “y' . gence during the hearings ' - - Me ' up in mama“. firmer!‘ sum. The railways presented ‘their A“'"'“''"'""'‘’‘ "°“"’ ' '3 “flu” “ht 9"" be we‘! - . us‘ fume“ uh. nclihh-rah final arguments Thursdliv. m"h5' "nth" dc" ‘ 3' '3 some to help prevent spread 0 LONDON illeutersl - field wile“ llm lll lll°g°?“"°- . _ _ chamng that the ,5 CLC_am_ Classified .... .. 12. lfl i {B IIOIIII. Marshal Viscount M0l|ll!0m¢l’3' W911‘ W" ' why‘ 'i lhted “Mom that bargain rm, Finance. markets it TN current 0Illh|'¢lll ll” Ffklly WWW h°'Pl“l h°’° Th‘ Unwed stht” h” em’ ,,. E‘ me nmmps ‘had “med m build; Comics. features 11 has timed to no form in Esst- for A medical "overhaul." mated it costs them gosverage . my use for "1 “mean or any . women’: page 7 an osiss-in alsnurry A bulletin issued Friday night of more than! Moon. :25“; / MILITIA UNITS RETURN FROM CAMP other benefit. Kim 00- 4 wists-ufflclslsssyfbs farmer-— said: "Field Marshal Lord to live with on c era. in The mce.ma,n board W” M. city. Queens s I purl-unis shot is s Ilontreal Isontsolnery lit! 500' "°h"‘ '°° “M” “ii mum‘ "oval Militia units from this will" "l"°"' they Mk "mom N" ”'°Vo-it Corns rhcckinlz orders up after negotiations between‘ Elhhllllllf 5 ushers» -- fed had let!!! I.lIlI¢ll ‘I5 l‘ h‘ “d M 9. R” in. mi "1 iii“ that liice training for a week at vival training. some corps Left to right are L-Cpl. P It the railways ii a union; coll, v v ~ - - ~ 9- ’ bbi‘* “urn. ‘o H. W.‘ nun “ “rim. or W. mm or H Uog th Carri Debert N.s. returned training and practiced csrry- Doyle and Cpl. Vernon Rodd. lapsed last February. ‘ Sunmersldo 3 I iii Nil!!! VI! Illlnl MW M0IIllNIl¢1'¥- "- “h°°“°d ‘X1: .0“ w 2:3“ '31 : mm: yesterday. Wlih soldiers in: out their own sdmlnlstra- ‘ both of Charlottetown. P.E.l. chairman. Mr. .lust.ice. "5" ch" ’ fl ‘'°'l'‘' “" .h“""'“ °“"“‘n"‘ if, “"“‘"m""""" '°’ "" ''° '‘'°‘_''" hum silent on Atlantic Pro- lion. Here an members the lmooul Defence Photo) emu mini... .i is. - ' tflddling and dtddling with da- llstics. I ( is