If it's Good For the Island The Guardian is For it «Wine @nmdin “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew " VOL. Lxxv. No. 300 MATCH‘EDM Mrs. Edythe Cookies mod- sis s ome of the dar mink iiirs sold for a record price 4-. iN-ker Authorised u BRING R at 3 Vancouver auction this week. Parisian fiirrier Max Reby paid $78 a skin for 37 Bacon Ottawa. and im- payment of postage Class III! by the to ECORD PRICE matching pelts. Previous high was $69 a pelt set in Montreal three years ago. LONDON (CPI — A mighty uproar rose in Britain today against the nuclear deal Prime Minister Macmillan made with President Kennedy at The Ba- hamas conference. A Labor party leader called it utter failure. the Liberal party chief said it exposed Brit- ain's nuclear deterrent as a myth. and newspaper head- lines screamed at Macmillan's acceptance of Kennedy’s plan. While Macmillan's cabinet— meeting here without him but with his guidance - approved the plan. it appeared that many of his fellow Conservative party members would dissent. “The sell-out." screams Lord Beaverbrook's Daily Express (circulation nearl 5.000.000) across eight front - page col- umns. “Macmillan's s u r r e n der "a per. The Daily Herald. in a front-page banner. "The political signals are set at danger." says The Daily Mirror—largest - selling British daily. LOST BATTLE r Minister Macmillan has lost the battle." says the Conservative Daily Sketch lead- ing off its front - page banner story. The Conservative Times says, however. that “some compla- cent assumptions about Anglo- American relations were due for a sharp jolt in any c se but what is left after the jolt as been made is not catastro- e... The Liberal Manchester Guardian says Macmiian may have saved himself with the Conservative party. but the Bv KEN KELer Robb-er Gives Upnaguietly. After Hostage Held Hours By MARVEN MOSS Friday night after holding anifirm was severely wounded in- elderly shoe company executivei ihostage for almost three hours. MONTREAL (CP) — A mang . ‘ armed with a sub-machinegun: dociler surrendered to policeiearlier and an employee of that in a wild holdup attempt Two others were capluredi I a frenzied gunfight between thel Pickersgill Opposes Gill Fishermen Plan OTTAWA (CPI—J. W. Pick- crsgili. the Liberal party's load- ing spokesman for the tlantic provinces. Friday night opposed a recommendation by the Gill committee that self-employed fishermen be removed from coverage under its proposed universal unemployment insur- ancc Ian Mr. Pickersgill. member of I the Commons for Bonavista- Twillingate and a former cabi- net minister. said in a state- moot: “i am shocked by the recom- mendation of the Gill report that self - employed fishermen should be excluded from the nrw unemployment insurance pan." The Gill report. prepared by n four-man committee under Toronto insurance executive Er- nest C. Gill. proposed that a separate plan be instituted for fishermen. providing an income supplement to those chronically under-employed. The report said this should be accompanied by relocation of! fishermen away from sub-mar-‘ ginal fishing areas to areasl where they could he expectedl to fish a long-enough season to; improve their economic posi-i tion. . opposes PLAN ‘ "I tend to oppose this recom- mendation with all the strength have." Mr. Pickersgill said. The proposal was not satisfae tory for two reasons: "Many fishermen want to work in the off-season and they feel they should have the same right as other workers to build up benefits for future periods of unemployment. “A separate plan of income support for fishermen would} destroy the existing incentive to accept work in the off-season whenever there Is work avail- able. While there is plenty of room for improvement in the present system. the fishermen must 0 cut off unemploy- ment insurance and l intend to bandits and police. Roger Poupart. about 40. the firm's external auditor. under- went emergency surgery Bcllchasse General Hospital for removal of a bullet that lodged near his heart. His condition after the opera- tion was described as critical. The hostage. Eugene Gibeau. 74. chairman of the board of Slater Shoe Company. Limited w s nharmed. “i was never afraid." he said afterward. Gibeau. a short. balding man with glasses. spoke. with the aid 9 of an electronic device. He un- Macmillan and an informal nedy. issued a reminder Friday thatwo n 1 y. through economic strength can the strength of Western beliefs be assured. The Canadian .prime minister. met at Windsor airport by the governor of The Bahamas. Sir Robert Stapledon. and Lady Stapledon. noted that a minis- terial conference soon will be held to prepare the groundwork t for an international trade con- ference that he had suggested in London at the Commonwealth prime ministers' conference last September He also emphasized that he will discuss with Macmillan Fri~ day and today Britain's bid- to enter the European Common Market and trade problems of interest to all the ommon- wealth arising from Britain‘s an DISCUSS cu A derwcnt a throat operation three years ago and lost his vocal cords. Hc idcntified his captor as Georges Bernier who worked for the firm seven years ago. “We talked about old times and he never even pointed the weapon at me. In fact be told me: 'Don‘t be afraid. I won't I hurt you'.' CAPTIVE IMPASSIVE The man's face was impassive as he was led down the stairs by police from Gibeau's office on the second floor of the com- pany's four-storey brick plant on Denormandvills Street in the north-east en . “We got him. five succinctly. The man. in his early 20s with wavy dark hair combed straight back. wore a grey-blue macki- naw jacket. Detectives said interrogation of the two men captured made it clear the gang was in no way involved in last week's holdup at a bank branch in suburban St. Laurent. when two constables u said a detec- fight any attempt to do that." Pilotage Commission Begins Here Feb. 11 OTTAWA tCPr — The royal commission on pilotage will he- fits its emu-Canada hearings in Charlottetown. P.E.1.. Feb. 1]. c it was announced FridHY- Subsequent sessions Will be field at Saint John. NB l4. Vancouver March 11. Prince Rupert. a.c.. March 18 and flew Westminster. ac. March on). Mr. Justice Yves Bernier. 40. Forth: n. ID fixed dates have been I“. eb. Great Lakes points. Ottawa and will be in "Newfoundland In April. and beginnning in May along the St. Lawrence River including Montreal and Quebec were killed. “Thi job was apparently planned in a tavern only a few hours before it came off." said one officer. The man who held Gibeaii captive was persuaded to give himself up by Constable Claude Fcriand. 29. "I told him the whole thing was futile." said Ferland. “The third time I reached out my hands for the sub-machinegun and released it without a wor ." “tic thought he knew me.‘ said Fer-land. “He didn't. But boy i lied through my teeth. I said anything." 9 ity. Hearings also are expected to be held in Nova Scotia. at possibly other places. it had been tentatively hoped to start. the inquiry early next month in Sydney. N.S.. but this was found inconvenient. commission is designed look into and report ll poets of pilot-ire in Canada. There are me pilots. whose duties are to guide ships in harbors and inland water- ways by visual navigation with to as- INSIDE TODAY Announcements. notices I! Births. deaths . . . . . . .. 3. 1 Classified Finance. markets ...... .. 14 .- ‘xv ‘wzw'tq, Kansas City Fat. whose id name tlc- known George 0. Jones. looks out from his cell at lklahoma State Pri McAlester. where he has been since 1934 use of landmarks. a . serving a life sentence for a meeting .with President Ken-s For Talks With Mac ' NASSAU (CPI—Prime Minis-ibakcr described as "that epic ter Diefenbaker. arriving here‘event" in which the for talks with Prime Ministerlthe United States brought new i the Cuban crisis. which Diefen- action of hope to mankind. Diefenbaker spoke briefly from a dais at the airport after inspecting..p,.\vhite ~ helmeted and white-jacketed guard of honor of The Bahamas police. .The warmth of his welcome. he said. was exceeded only _ the 70-plus-degree weather tha contrasted sharply with the 10-. below weather prevailing when he left Ottawa in an RCAF 5" < turbo-prop Yukon five hours earlier. The prime minister drove im- mediately to a luncheon‘ with Kennedy and Macmillan. who had just completed work on a communique on their series of talks this week. Kennedy left later in the day .lag M 0:;- M-mm: CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1962. l JFK-Mac Mighty Uproar Aroused } In Britain By Agreement 'continue at all with a British rrent. Criticizing Washington. thc Conservative Daily Telegraph says Polaris will be an inde‘ ipendent deterrent only in the jsense that Skybolt wa’s. i "For its supply we shall do- .pcnd exclusively on the United iStates." the newspaper says. “‘How hazardous such depends encc is. the fate of the Skybolt. ican‘celled suddenly without iwarning. has made only too .clear." , George Brown. Labor party defence spokesman. called ihc' . reement a “terrible indict- iment of the government's com- iplete and utter failure on de- ence.“ Liberal Leader Jo Griniond called it a “formula for British; :face-saving.” adding: tContinucd on page fl. t'oI 7i says the Labor party newsph-imain question is whether to w l ' orlci Court 1 1 i Dieienbaker Arrives l lGives Ruling ; THE HAGUE tReulorslvThe; World Court. ruled here Friday.; by a vote of 8 to 7. that it hasi WHERE SEVEN CENTS ake Action To Beef NATO Might WEATHER Sunny. becoming cloudy “1th snouflur- ries by eVening; light winds. Low-high zero and 18. Sunday: rain and milder. 20 PAGES CHRISTMAS MEANS HOME To many people Christmas mcans homecoming. From across the land Island nativ- es return to spend this spec- ial holiday season with their families. friends and loved ones: and Islanders by adop- tion lcave to join their families and friends in other parts of Canada." Today The. Guardian pres- scnts for its readers news about hundreds of who are going home for Christmas. Turn to page 7 for the first of hundreds of “Home for Christmas" per- sonals. They continue through pages 8. 9. 10. II and 12. Capt. Tom Bower Reaches W. Indies ST. JOHN'S. Nfld. 'CPl —- Forty-iour-ycar-oid Capt. T o m Bow-cm. who left here Nov. 11 The Grand Falls. Nfld.. bach- elor arrived Friday at Antigua. lie hopes to pick up the trade winds there and sail for West Africa. Dowicr is sailing a 33-foot home-made ketch. The New- foundlandcir. He had food and supplies for four months when he left. He sails by the stars. islanders i us by Liberia and Ethiopia alleg- ing South Africa has violated its mandate over South-West Af- rica. ‘ Legal observers said the seven dissenting opinions were. the highest number they could‘ remember in a World Court. judgment. 1 jurisdiction in a case bro ht. 1 (South African Foreign minis- ter Eric Louw hailed the ruling as a "moral victory" for South‘ Africa. (He told reporters: "The very; close margin is in fact a moral victory for South Africa which{. cannnot but favorably affect: South Africa's position at thef United Nations and in the ctr-i cumstanccs I am very pleasedi with the result.“) i A f r i c a administers South-West. Africa, a former German territory. under a man-i date from the defunct League of‘ Nations. I The case was initiated more: than two years ago by Ethioplaj for Florida and Dicfenbaker and Macmillan were to begin a round of talks expected to con-‘I cIude today. i Diefenbaker and his wife are: to spend Christmas in The Ba-: B Also. up for discussion will be hamas. 2er CHRISTMAS BEHIND BARS is-cent holdup. He will spend his 28th Christmas in the prison working as usual tend-‘ Ing to the wants of the con- demned men on Death Row. He has been recommended for parole. subiect to getting and Liberia which alleged South: Africa had not “promoted to that utmost the material and morall wellbeing and social progress' of the people of South-West Af- rica. - :i ii .vv. A... ssh. .,. i . an». n i the Prisoner Exchange To Begin WASHINGTON (VAleThe ex- change of the 1.113 Cuban pris- onsers taken in the Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba now is sched- filed to begin Sunday morning. Ccn. Lucius Clay. chairman of ban families advisory committee. and E. Roland Har- riman. chairman of the Ameri- can National Red Cross. nounced Friday night. Clay and Harriman. in a joint statement. said New York law- yer .lames Donovan. represent- signed an agreement late Fri- (lay. Under terms of the agrccment the freighter African Pilot. now loading supplies in Port ver- glades. Fla. will sail for Ha- vana today. “The prisoners will be flown to Miami in a four-plane Pan- American World Airways shut- tle. with the first. plane sched- uled to leave Miami for Ha- vana at 6 am. Sunday." Clay and I-iarriman said. an. . f France Gets Bid . To Partnership NASSAU tAPlr—Thc Kennedy Macmillan conference took the first steps Friday toward cre— jating within NATO a nuclear force to be built ultimately Iaround the powerful Polaris submarine missile. ,aris submarines assigned to President Kennedy and Primc NATO. in any case involving Minister Macmillan agreed to,"siipremc national interests." lset up a nuclear-armed NATOI The agreement represented a bomber force in the immediatellong step toward the solution of future. and then to get Unitedl'txvo problems which have Both the United States and Britain placed one condition on commitment of nuclear forces to NATO. The two countries re- scrvcd the right to employ in- dependently bombcrs and Po- ;Statcs Polaris submarines into plagued the two countries for action under the North Atlantic,many months: Treaty Organization by 1970. ‘ H . _ . _‘ Ken y immediately dis-.‘)FF.E.‘RS Hnl’snm' patched a letter to President do I"”"""'-‘“ 1‘0"“,9‘15' "'7‘9059‘1 Gaulle inviting France to makelihat bntli countries share the the precedent _ setting programlcosl of completing development a threeway partnership. He "Ll of Skybolt —— estimated at $100.- ifercd to provide Polaris missiles "00-000 Bad“ . 5 to France on the same condition Macm'ua" rc-"‘°"‘d “w _ plan. ‘which he and Macmillan had; ‘C‘m'mued 0“ Bag“ 3 COL ’ :to sail alone to West Africa. just worked out for a U.S.-Brit. __ has arrived in the West Indies. ish Polaris deal. 1 French See . A communique issued by the' .' . itwo leaders also said the presi~ Reledlon ident told Macmillan he has de- icided 'to cancel plans for pro- PAms [Rpuiergl ., source; duction ofthe Skybolt air _- to- close to the French government. .ground mlSSllP which Britain Friday night said they think It had wanted for its nuclear.un]ik9|y President :19 Gaul]. bomber force. iwill entertain President Kel- , . 'ncdy's offer of Polaris missiles FRANCEJNVITL’, ’. . on similar terms to those al- The United Statesoiill HSSIEn‘ready accepted bv Britain t" NATO one P013”? ‘. armedl President Kennedy made the “Uhmarme for 93?" “mm” u"'ll’nlaris offer to de Gaulle in a dam.“ "a" "lumped by theiletter from, Nassau where he The earliest date at which Brit-land B r ' t ' ff” SEE”: . . . i Macmillan am con” beg!" buymg Amerl‘ a reement under which Britain :11 .., Z: n can - made Polaris missiles v ' would be 1970. since no espe- WI“ get the Palaris‘ cially - equipped submarinesi LONDON (Reutersi a Mos- could he huiltbefore then. Brit-‘cow radio, commenting on the ain will pay for all missiles sup- talks between President Ken- plied but will not share U.S. de« I nedy and Prime Minister Mac- velopment costs of $2.m.mn,wmiilan in The Bahamas. said too. {Friday night the us. and Brit- Thc British will furnish their.ain are “again whipping up the own Polaris warheads. nuclear arms drive." Unattractive Overtones Are Feared By Canada 1 By JACK BEST E OTTAWA (CPI hamas accord between the U.S. .and Britain carries overtones Iwhich are far from pleasant. for 1the Canadian government. Some officials here saw theiflla" {ubit‘h Gen. tie. Gaulle has advo- Thp Baficated off and on since 1958 and .which Canada adamantly op- ; poses. OFFICIALS SEE DANGER . U der the French president's Britain. the U.S. and .‘ing the Cuban families commit- agreement under which Britain Fran"? “'Ollld form a director- ‘tcc. and premier Fidel Castro. is to get Polaris missiles as aiale I‘P-‘DONSlblP for Shaping ll" possible unk in a chain “(general strategy of the alliance. .events seemingly pointed in; Canada. along with most of .ward big-power directorship of theismallcr mcmhcrs of NATO. lure NATO alliance. .maintains that strategy should ’ The feeling was promplpd hy‘be hammered out through con— .reports from Nassau describmg‘sllllallnn among all members. ithe Macmillan-Kennedy agree- 12 and Small iment as a step toward bringing Officials Ilf‘i‘f‘ saw the danger lthe Western big three under althat after adopting a co - ordt- single nuclear deterrent Urn-inath nuclear strategy Britain. ‘brella. {the U.S. and France might pro- l The same reports suggested ceed on the. basis that Gen. do .that the agreement might be a.Gaullc‘s directorate proposal is lmcans of easing differences he-‘Opcraiive “‘hcther formally BC- “1N. a job. but has had no offers so far. The 58-year-old prison- er feels he "can be a a nod citizen. even with all these years behind me.“ 1 I Otter Trciwls “i [Banned In Boy OTTAWA icr) J Fisheries Minister Machan F‘ rid a y banned ottcr trawl fishing in Nova Scotia's Chcdabudcto Bay. Mr. Machan said there is solwhiie co-ordinating their strat-‘j istcr much congestion of inshore fish- ing gear in the area that "com-- pletc closure of fishing opera. ‘tions in vessels using dragging gear is warranted." By ROBERT RICE OTTAWA (CPI—More unemployment if employment it was estimated Friday That's» about 1.000.000 surance scheme. The blueprint for a universal plan was made public Thursday in'insurance plan. 'thc report of a four-man com~ ‘miticc undcr Toronto insurance cxccutivc Ernest (‘. Gill which studied the problem of support- for example. some of Canada's unemployment insurance ing jobless workers. Under the proposed plan. the would be required to contribute ' group would be required to l an estimated $1.05 a week to the. "9“ than 5.000.000 Workers would he in- ,sured against the hardships of the govern- iment extended its present no- insurance plan to almost all employees in Canada. more workers than are covcred under ’thc existing unemployment in- itween Britain and the U.S. on ccptcd or not. one hand and French President There is some fooling here Charles de Gaulle on the other. that the smaller NATO coun- l Geri. de Gaulle has been iii-.trics already are being left out isisting on an independent nu-‘jof important conferences affect- iclear deterrent for France.‘in2 the alliancc. ‘Novr. machinery is reported bc- The smallcr VATO countries ing sci in motion to permit both i have for the most hart found Britain and France to have a‘thcmsclvcs on the outside look< ‘form of independent dcterrcnt. in: in. To be sure. Prime Min- ‘ Dioicnbakcr was in the jBahamas today to confer with ‘ As seen by some Canadian of-IMr. Macmillanmhut that was lficials. such an arrangcmcnt bccause Mr. Macmillan report.- could carry the sccds of big-.cdly had turned down an inw- powcr direction of NATO affairs.tation to come in Ottawa. legy with that of the U.S. iGiII Jobless Insurance Proposal *Would Cover Additional Million they could i‘nllr‘I-t a maXimum weekly benefit of $36 or $48. de— pending on whether they have ‘dcpciidcnis. Thc committee sail f‘nnli‘lbllr tion i'alcs under the universal insurance plan could continue at the present level. It also said the government's contribuv tion to thr‘ proscnt fund should r—and would also be eligible for benefits. The 1.000.000 ncw workcrs who would come under a uni- vcrsal scheme of iincmploymcnt insurance Would be made up largely of s al a r i e d workers earning more than 53.460 a year. plus government w n r k e r s. teachers and employees in lins- pitals. orphanages. rest omcs he dropped-leaving employee! and other charitable institu- and employers to finance the lions. plan on an equal basis. These groups of employers Apparently the added revenue are excluded from the prcscnt from the extra 1.000. con- tributors would be oughly enough to offset the loss of the ciirrcnt contributions made by the govcrnmcnt, in i e room fiscal year. the federal govern- mcnt addcd $55,000,000 to the insiirancc kitty. The committee recommended INCLUDES EXECUTIVES A universal plan would cover. est - paid executives. They (VP Wirephotol contribute to the insurance plan .iund. if they ever lost their job. 'Conilfllit‘d on page 2. col. It