SALVAGE PLANS were in | with the Prime Minister of the the alr for the remaining por- | doomed federation, Sir Grant- oe bee Fit. _ Roy ae eae eee pecan ye tions of the West Indies Fed- | ley Adams (centre), and Dr. ° » Sache de chitenee ot Oop \achetaind ty tae 2 ee eration, left foundering by the | Arthur Lewis, principal of the | ae sanite de wwii —_ ; decision to withdraw by Jam- | University College of the West | zs " ermina ' e Tignish Air Cadet ames a | Seas Peiece. Stes Dean aica and Trinidad, when these | Indies (right), who is chief | mo ScRAAE tie codah cechemnzenn | ben, Mdwend Pico, deen Mem men met in Port of Spain Tri- | author of proposals for a new | sey, , ’ nidad, Britain's Secretary of | eight-unit “little federation”, T ° ne Sytney, US, wir gem Geheohaneos it aieamaaae ; State for the Colonies, Regin- | which are now under study. oO | cadet squadrons under the Sum- ing by “royal” command. : ald Maudling (left), is seen Trinidad Guardian picture) e iIsSCcusse ee unit left son Ladies Auxiliary of the ; merside plane.on Saturday. |Legion served refreshments. NEW NATIONS LOOM |. By NEIL A, MATHESON sible support. “He gave us two , oo - ee ‘ s ‘ | (Provineial and Farm Editor) | and one-half hours, and told us . 1 J eae: , ; (Continued from page 1) tory -which has lately made Selection of either Buctouche |he was available for consulta- ME \4 which cost upwards of $ mfl-| striking economic, social and | or Shediac as the New Bruns-|tion.at any time,” Mr. McCaull aze in eeTer Po MNS lion. educational progress, much of it | wick terminal for the proposed | reported. " e , : These. vessels, the Federal | through the exercise of recently | ferry link with West Point,| wr. Irving will *bufld a ramp _ MRS. JAMES Fennessey od to reign as Quean and King | teas”, an Acadian custom Maple and the Federal Palm, | acquired powers of internal self | P.E.1., is the problem that will to the dock if the terminal ‘is ° e. * and Elmer Gillis were select- | over the celebration of “Ga- | marked last week at Tignish, are already providing @ service | government. be discussed at a meeting in | built at Buctouche, where he has | Standing are Mrs. Roy Dow of exceptional value, operating | EFFECTIVE NATION Moncton today, Peter McCaull, | property and installations, but oug ign is WE ATHER | Prince Edward Island, east- cette, lady-in-waiting and Roy in inter-island trade. salts te tee It a to be pee ac- — = ew. ote ihe will still support the ferry. — HB. counties, lower St. Doucette, attendant. to the They were ditect quiring major attributes | tr, Me » presiden idea if a final decision suggests 0 ver ey: Overcast | ; ‘ federal Covernineny, which must | needed to function effectively | committee pushing the new ferry | Se tereninel should be at Point PP gear “ ag ny Blea muffled the sound of the alarm | TORONTO (CP) — Tempera- | with ‘during morning,’ — <r pow be dissolved. t govern |in full nationhood, albeit as a | service idea, could not suggest |du Chene, near Shediac. = ames at siren but Fire Chief Earl Mac- | tures: | changing in thé afternoon ee AR OT ment created a crown corpéra- | small nation. If nothing more, | which centre was likely to be| Mayor J. E. Landry is head- ing although a ai ee Donald and his firemen were on | Min. Max. | termittent rain, clearing in the tion which operates them, Just | it has an economy that can be | chosen, as he has not been able | ing the group from Shediac that | the Tignish fin ki a hand in record time. They | D&wson terveees 40-28 evening; milder; light winds in- TONIGHT what will happen to the corpora- | come viable, with caution, and | to talk details with either of | js seeking to have the terminal lass! ‘Se'*his potete cmmen’’at | fought the stubborn fire ie thy | Vameeer™ titeeees 3 «©6649 = creasing during morning to tion or the ships when the dis- | a sense of nationhood that can | them thus far. there. Pe ‘interior of the boxcar through | [2monton -........ 2 10 southeast 25 with gusts to 33 ON RADIO solution of federation becomes earey it far, if kept in perspec-| A previous meeting - planned i The CNR express diesel mov- | the roof hatches. [Regina ......++.++ - 3s ae courier er -——eomplete—seeins—to—be—beyond tive: =} INTEREST 1S HIGH ———_____ lat i a a» | Winnipeg... +. [HOrthwest 25, = - ; guessing at the moment. It is leas sure that the other |eral weeks ago, fell through| There is a great deal of it- ae a en a ow Be gai Toronto .....:..... 32 “36 | lottetown 5 and 28, Moncton 5 | THE HONOURABLE PLENTY OF PUZZLERS natiow proposed last month at | when the Shediac people were | terest in the proposition on the | ened by the Hames. and Sons who also owned the | Ottawa ........ voce 1D) MD [Ome Frotetionn 4 one M1 GEORGE NOWLAN There is similar puzzlement | Port of Spain, which would bind | held up by a snow storm. “But,” |New Brunswick side, Mr. Me-| ‘The fire is believed to have warehouse which had been | Montreal ...,...... 17 $7 | Seiat John 10 ond 86. ow “over what happens to the exist- | together the “little eight” unit | Mr. McCaul explained, “‘the | Caull said, and he and some | originated around a heater in | threatened. fete ss scsenens SB lsehe Gules? Gee oe 2 ing federal civil service — the | territories left over from the | Buctouche people came to Tor- | of bis colleagues have been | the “reefer” and was first not-| Firemen and other workers | Fredericton ....... 2 | Bay " Srovega erat oe University College of the West | original federation, possesses | mentine for the meeting; they |asked to appear on’ a Monetom | iced by the caretaker of the at the scene of the blaze were | Saint John ...,.... 8 MIG sal oun tae’ cee aes ere racer | Pace cera, love ce caren > trey [bare Met Mamta |S gan Pom Gentes | ered eee a nates [ace coring he aterm ’ , are, en to when y are in town for 5 a.m. rs. irvin Mac » PPO | FPAAN .... nw cesneee | » , half of eight other territories as | approach being, sittasdlien telephone trom Borden, So it te | meeting The _heavy frost_in the sir | prietors of Mac's Restaurant. | Charlottetown ..... ae Jevening. Southeast winds 25 with well — the West Indies Regi- | As a whole, the eight are enor- | apparent that they are interest-| The Moncton station has al- Pore ret eenteeee ; ment, created as the defence | mously dependent on grants |¢d in having the terminal in ready carried programs on the ‘ Yarmouth ........ ~ 7 3 ame . sertaveat” Le an foree of federation — the federal | from the United Kingdom. They |their centre. The delegation | ferry proposal, he added. SE ALIPAD eps aye wenszer Hust to 40, Low - high at Ed- meteorological and lightship ser- | are widely separated in the | was from the Buctouche board | - HALIFAX (CP)—The weather mundston zero and 23, C vices, ete., ete, Caribbean, which is an obstacle | of trade. | : 1 oS office says & disturbance cem- tellton § and 2 uron is fore- . i Bo yee oe as om. along | to a sense of unity. IRVING INTERESTED ‘7 ’ cast to move across the Mari- winds oF uta tecrtnse tea a ~~ ae a: odovere | INCREASING UNITY Mr. McCaull has talked to times today, and will be fol- ‘orning to south gales %5. shift Seiliation, help coplate: the Gie> | quater erat an vind. (oan, | Saat iain ae, ait Jet tee lowed by clearing weather late ine’ by Sovonica ro sctheen | appointment of British, Ameri- |'m population and in economic | of his Keen interest ond ail poe men, he one sted inal Seelone Overcast with a few snowflur- | | ’ pos- may, be expec ES MINISTER OF NATIONAL an, Canadian and other observ | weight, and, as a whole, have j most it will come as noe co ae ep maneing chang REVENUE = over the collapse of federa-| made nothing like the same|than she sells to Canadians. f § ve nee dh» 6 pov gaclt g mouth of Chemainus har- oe north, while mostly rain is = A . Sone gan, fo. apace : ~~ | @oeial, educational, political and | While Cuban imports provincial’ government ferry | bor. catedsfor the southern ;ram, 8 pvening ; . Still, at the present stage im | economic progress. ada have eeeeees eae | a | | Ethel Hunter got lost for eight ee es fog Lve could see gions. Snow'alls should be Saal celine a oe 630 the continuing postmortems over | But in their nationhood U.S. trade Cuba hours in a soupy, Gulf of Geor- | the dim outline of the beach . . . | as disturbance is mo : federation, no strong voice has | posal, as laid before Mr. Mand. fraction of ‘Cube's total ee | gia fog Saturday night but found |so the skipper backed up and/very quickly. ving milder. been raised from within this | ling, which calls for the creat- | 80 per cent of Cuban business— | she wasn’t alone. |then proceeded south to find the| Regional forecasts: High tide today at Charlotte- CFCY Radio group to insist that federation, | ion of a new “little federation’ | mainly in sugar—is with the ».| While the ferry with six pas- harbor entrance. He spotted a| Mainland Nova Scotia: Cloudy town at 11.29 a.m. and 11.03 in the shape it had taken, really | with its capital on Barbados, | Communist bloc, | sengers, two a ere inembete and marist booy aad saat toward = ae flurries caring p.m. At Rustico at 7.05 a.m. and had much chance of surviving, showed a larger sense wo cars a , Sat it out e. . But he found a » ¢ a '6.12 p.m. { or really deserved to survive. one and a greater siienaen Castro Shouts the middle of Stuart Channel be- | tug with a long log boom right |00m to intermittent rain, and |eighteen Gaon las "then 8 P.M. Naturally, about all these | to face economic realities than PARIS (Reuters)—Thousands | tween Chemainus and Thetis Is-| in front of the ferry.” _ Clearing in the everting; milder; | Charlottetown. Sun rises today things, my views amount to | ever in the past. Hi Defi of troops and 100 tanks and |land, an Indian fishermen| The skipper attempted to run | light winds increasing during| s¢ 7,05 am. and sets at 5.24 nothing more than impressions. | In truth, though, except for $ ance ‘armored cars were poised in a | Drought his boat alongside. | around the front of the tug. morning to south 25 with gusts | p.m. Tt was almost an accident that | the insistence of those who call HAVANA | watchful ring around Paris Sun- “I thought you were the ferry; ‘But by the time we'd gained to 35 and shifting in the evening ~ I was in Trinidad, as several |for a break away from colon- | tro om eee oe |day, alert to crush any trouble wharf, but you're just the | enough on the tow to get around Cio a : —_ at - of them came to a head, while ialism, there is a good chance at the Organization of io |on the eve of President Charles | ferry,” the fishermen told ferry | the tug we were back out in the | 204 40 Kentville te nt 28 en route to Tobago for a vacat- | they would be better off to say \een Stolen, WEEN wale te ox | de Gaulle’s speech to the nation. relief skipper C, W. Croft. middle of the channel.” Slane Sate oe ew fon, My news instincts caused | as they are, pending further de- | pel his Communist regime, and Perhaps because of the elab-| GR. Nixon, a passenger | That was when skipper Croft | 57 . . me to give a few days of at. | velopment, and until the oppor- |he said that U.S. imperialism | orate security precautions, the | ‘Tavelling with his wife and 1¢- | Geckded to ait 1 out tm the chee!” Cape Becton: Cloudy with in- tention to developments, but 1 | tunity arrives to join some dif- | “can never crush the Cuban | city was quiet and government year-old son, said the passen- nel. *e termittent rain beginning in the certainly didn’t become quali. | ferent form of new grouping, | revolution.” spokesmen said they don’t. ex- | S¢rs weren't worried. They sat | Early reports said the tug got | afternoon; milder; light winds fied to utter any large judg- | such as is almost certain to| Making his second so-called |pect any real trouble from the |! their cars and were “amazed tangled in the log boom. increasing during morning to~ ments. emerge as & proposal for the | declaration of Havana before a |0utlawed European extremist | Whe we heard in our car radios an fog began ag sn just | southeast. 15 and in the after- WRONG WAY ABOUT Eastern Caribbean before long. | roaring crowd of supporters, | Secret Army Organization. - | that @ search had been started. ore 1 a.m. As ferry PTO | noon to southwest 25 with gusts- . formed was. thatthe federation | ‘Right now they show little | States had suffered » major de- | total 28,000 men including Par- ecuenins ae boats, began it’ met two search boats. _|-33. 1 i ! - new collapsing never had any | willingness to wait, so there'll | feat at the Punta del Este for |isian police, were ready for in- |», which left Thetis Island R id I tor ‘ : oo cree be crea- | be no room for surprise if ~~ ministers conference, stant action against any under- ry p.m. but tailed ‘é — acar inven og appee - aon one ae op, iclans, | some variation of their “little e premier said Wash- | ground attempt to sabotage the 1. Chae ar and _ electronics both local and those | federation” plan wins. British | ington's -" of colonies | president's tlevised, brosdcast, ee ee oe ele Made Consultant |to the de‘ence research board of world powers with intereste _ | (18 of the 21 OAS nations) went | Special guards were placed | Channel” Oniinrin’ vn oone Chews me 10. { in the Caribbean; and that , it is @ good thing to keep | long with the successful U.S. |at sensitive communication | ()0¢ oe tev run | NEW YORK (CP)—Sir Rob-| | Now active in business, he - 0 Unar scarcely anything about ft arose |in mind that the business of |‘rive to order Cuba's ouster | points such as the Eiffel Tower, | aan, She | ert Watson - Watt, one of the| has also served as governing e - out of the feelings and the as | proposing federations in the | {rom inter-American agencies. ja key spot for radio and tele- inally got to Chemainus at 1:30 |inventors of radar, has been | director of Sir Robert Watson-. : pirations of the people. Caribbean has by no means : vision transmission, and nightly a.m. ‘ named a consultant to a Cen-| Watt and Partners Limited; And suspect that the creat: | come to an end, even though one} Nikifer Calls checks were made of thousands | ,.ujq, “TT” hat Fader but no |tre for the Study of eee Acelie. fee. of Mew |) 6: re fon of any healthy new nation | federation plan has foundered, of motorists and pedestrians for | Gives ACCOUNT Sea en ee ee eee | Early Spring Sailings from Montreal and Quebec must be accomplished other | and the ‘little federation” now ¢ ba Broth arms and explosives. ' Monday. Montreal and Toronto; and Pres- o way about: first through the | seeme to be the only one under upans ers Nixon gave this account of the| Born in Scotland, the scien-| ident of the New Continental | VERNA : | Comatderation. MOSCOW (AP) — Premier cautioned against ex- | tute: - ‘the radio board of the war cab- | Calgary , a ae poses of the people, and then | One good guess is that Trint- | xnrak M one Officials ex- : a ee APRH-13t HAVRE, SOUTHAMPTON through political organization, |dad soon will become (or will | Sue’ nc” 5 kent ® , message ee eee eee © 9 | Sy aeivan ot pat ee eee a ee Another impression is that | attempt to become) the pivot | tro’ ? e * - AY separate new nations now Polat of a Caribbean economic “he pe meee somes Sires, mesteseemas of 2 seenive i j38 Se eee Se half-mile- CARINTHIA™ APRIL 27 GREENOCK, LIVERPOOL agmen! community, could end | 7 federation, will come .closer-to | by producing a much aoe Saha ee oo the Ti : h Ma IVERNIA > may 4 Com, HAVRE, SOUTHAMPTON following this pattern, and ultim- | federation, but in an altogether | The ase can et So Se ARS seal comet | UGE ES n ce. pleeaaiiige every Friday ofl censen ately will prove stronger separ. | different form, than any so far |the message declared “a on broadcasting, i _ tee i ; ately than they could have be- | proposed. ing milteet Sgveneet of oR [Gen Cee ee Falls Into Pit "From Quebec the following day. Se SS ee he Seay oar id ely the Gos, pon case in set that decided con- 110% reduction applies on round trip bookings. APPEAL Cuban peo trol of radio came under fed- TIGNISH — Russell J. Perry arent set Telia, tok Be the UL Sape ong on |e Ne manager of Perry's Service | (Continued from page 1) | hirelings.” = In 1996 he became chief ex-/ Station here was injured Sat- y ; oan the export revolution among es ecutive assistant and secretary | urday evening when he fell into _ You step into spring the moment you Latin Americans. of the CBC board of governors, | the pit-at the service station. step oboard any of th gradi ae @ the Radio and in 1944 was appointed as-| Dr. W. Leon him at ice ae ee Pioneer sistant general manager, a post | his home for a leg tendon CUNARD liners. An alternate route a | fe Kennedy did not mention | Donald Manson | s,beiy init ts appointment as | and stock. Mr. Perry's assist. - el —ts that the move likely will ' genera] manager in 1951. ant, Leroy Arsenaiilt is also a to Europe is available aboard the reduce Cuba's ability to eam | Dies In Ottawa He retired in 1952, but com-/ patient im Prince County Hos- - ca with, which to finance : as con- | magnificent Queens, sailing regularly on ceaate snd OTTAWA (CP)—Donald Man- available for First Loans it from New York. S Scan (cal eaten otace | with Canada the Canadian radio industry, ® EE Eaves Cunord Pay-Loter Plan. ty | Sa . of @ NO CHARGE FOR PROPERTY msPECroe =| “Born i Wick, Scotland, Mr.]/ ‘The annual meeting of the East Prince Lib- | AS | Manson to Canada in 1907 g $20.00 fo work ‘atthe the Com. | eta! Association will be held at the Baptist Church PRINCE . CUNARD z ios. | pany in commer- | Hall, Summerside, on Wednesday, February 7th, a Wine | cial radio be] commencing at 8 p.m. | —— Jey, | served See fevers _ All polls to arrange for appointment of dele- | ment tor of fol-] gates and alternates. _ 312; Bor- | lowing the war he became chief \ farm Hunter | inspector. . later was Prominent Hunter River | oiied‘ausiatant’ controller ef it speakers will be in attendance. L. Mae | ali ie oad - Everyone welcome. : 7-2; valle laws an eoutat rd | , 9.90; | ing this. the NEIL R. MacLEOD, w Haves te eyes and ad- ae 4 t { 4 0d ISLAND NEWS PAGE Alberton and West Prince ae 2 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Mon., Feb. 5, 1962. Tignish Holds Gateau’, a —_ Px ged, the and “Queen Lauretta”, Elmer Acatiian tradition celebrat- at sapeatiy here on : | Gallant and Mrs. James Fennes- , Was held at the Legion **¥- bes Hall on Feb. 1. | Hector Buote, master of cere- | sion into the -hall chanting the | procession first in Frenci then Customary song and carrying a in English. Howard Foley, po- staff topped with a chanticler. | lice constable, presented “Old He was followed by Tignish Air | Black Joe’’ to His Majesty for Cadets preceding “King Elmer” | pardon, in accordance with the |custom, and the skit was much Cadet Officials “Ses a couple and their Flown To Sydne attendants performed a special | dance to the music of the orch- estra directed by Mrs. Kenneth Acadian Ceremony j Emile Gallant ied the proces- | monies, welcomed the royal | ©