it it's Good For the Island ’ .T he Guard VOL. LXXVI. N0. 112 f ion is For it one @uordion “‘Cove'rs‘ Prince Edwer Island Like The Dew” ua-Knibyuierdomise (mines. MALLOCH TROPHY INSPECTION HELD ing to Sgt. extreme right. The inspection was the second of six across Canada. The first was at Lon- don. Ont. At present the Mal- loch trophy. won here for an inspection of 5 Signals Regi- ment in the Malloch Tro phy competition took 1 last. night at the Charlottetown Ar- mouries. Here inspecting offic- er Major D.A. Policy of army headquarters. Ottawa. is talk- Barry Stevenson. number of years. is hcld in Manitoba. Militia Signal units are eligible for the competi- tion. In this picture extreme left is Major W.L. MacKinnon and next in the background Lt. Col. cCarey. officer commanding s Signals. Riot Troops Held Ready; Birmingham RemainsCalm BIRMINGHAM. Ala. (AP)- Army oilicers and cderai offi- cials set up headquarters Mon- day in this violence-scarred in- dustrial city. About 3,000 federal trans were held ready at two nearby Alabama bases. President Kennedy wired Gov. George C. Wallace that the fed' eral efforts were aimed 'at help- ing local citizens “to achieve and maintain a peaceful. sonabie settlement. Kennedy said he trusted Wal- lace. who had challenged the dispatch of federal troops into. the state. would help maintain an atmosphere of law and order. He replied to a telegram from the governor who asked by what right troops were moved into Alabama. .Edwin Guthmaii. special as- sistant to U.S. Attorney-General Robert F. Kennedy arrived with six other justice department of- ficials and ranking military of- ficcrs as the Pentagon disclosed that 3.000 combat-ready army troops had moved into bases It Montgomery and Anniston. I Gutliman indicated that even if violence bursts out again. troops would not be used here unless local authorities were un- able to maintain control. CITY CALM The flurry of federal activity came as racial calm returned in this deep south industrial city after wild rioting by No- Ei‘oes Saturday night. The riots followed the bombing of a Negro minister‘s home and a motel used as headquarters by integra- ‘ in Washington, meanwhile. the'papermen today in Washington tpresident went ahead with plans |to vistt three North Alabam Valley Authority. Birmingham discuss " was and general. The latter despite the city's "extremely l“insensitive and tense" situation. he expects a biracial desegrega- tion agreement to stand. There ‘were these other developments: 1 . The president will meet lwith a group of Alabama news' yin the latest of a series of Iluncheons for editors and pub- cities Saturday for ceremonies llishers from various states. commemorating the. Tennessee iWANTS moors REMOVED Albert PI of nedy‘s motive "l sharply question the information upon which he acted." 8. Dr. Martin Luther King .ir.. leader of the Southern civil rights movement. went on a mission to Negroes with pleas u 101 TOMOR tion leaders. . . Near - normal business re-l sumcd in a lit-block area whichl was reopened f ter heavily armed peace officers had held ihehsectIOI under blockade for: ours ' i2 Britons, Banned By MOSCOW (APl-The soviet Union banned 10 U.S. and Brit- ish diplomatic officers a n d Wives of two of them trom‘Rus- Ila Monday in \the wake of ii I>i).v_(triai linking the envoys .wlth US. and British embassy lookesmen. while formally de- timing to accept the. Soviet ehPisces. could do Willing but comply. only British sccgnd secrets".v Gervcse Coweii and his wife "none the 12 accused were i1 2 m 0‘ . l let one oi the Americans. po- . v attache Hugh .“! 22$ m.l 13".“ still officially attached in his embassy but is on vaca-l u“ "l- . a. The rest from the foreign rain- "lly chm-sat that the in oni- °hls and two British wives "Km- iicee in the spythl Mimics of lritish man “mule «a Pen- w'lv. I sci-sane effi- fi-m "- wi- ‘ were incompatible. Charles William Judson will be celebrating his lOlst birth- day anniversary Wednesday. May 15 at the home of h i s granddaughter Mrs. Daniel Lamont at. Churchill.IP.E.I. Yanks «Soviets death and Wynne to eight years contincmeni .i a t u r d a 1.. Th names of the western officials came up in the hearings and the Soviet court suggested the government take action against th icons and British helped Wynne that E s diplomatic s t a tus. each diplomat was declared persona non grate. "We do not accept any alien-- ficers have ben 1: id. A iii-inn: diplomiit charged the f mini-try had vio- is fed nae nicdtts b! manure an": m”. U.S. official whose name 3y trig reamemwmle’lrmenkw: 'a current agricul- He was the w‘ C any circumstances. em. ~ The notes charged the Amer-. tor nonviolent conduct—and he collected pocket knives througn~ out the Negro communit 4. Warrants charging assault with intent to murder were is- sued for 53-year-old Carl ivory. a Negro. in the stabbings of Sgt. R. E. Lambert and Patroi~ man J. N. Spivey during the street fighting. As the federal troops ware held in critical readiness. 1,200 city. country and state officers remained under arms in the city. L IBLAME mar W- CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, 'TUESDAY, MAY 14. 1963. \Accoid Welcomed In U.S. WASHINGTON lcpi—Prime Minister P e a r s o n's meeting with President Kennedy at Hy- annis Port. Mass. and the de- cisions they reached have been welcomed warmly by U.S. newspapers. The Washington Star says in an editorial that looking at, the Cape Cod weekend meeting from any angle. the results are "encouragineg productive." "And why not? After all. our two countries a re identical twins. so to cally. politically. culturally. temperamentally and in terms .of the military imperatives that bind us together for better or worse. inevitably. "Certainly anything that would estrange or divide us would be a sort of sin against nature." Both The Star and the Balti- more Sun criticize former Prime Minister Dietenbaker for failing to accept nuclear war- heads for Canadian defence weapons. The Sun says Dicfenbaker's "hedging" on the defence issue and his hints of a Yankee plot cost him the prime minister's post. “That relations between the U.S. and Canada are once more operating smoothly. with allow- ance for friendly differences. is not a triumph for diplomacy. malcy that we all want and ex- ‘ he New York Herald Trib- .ime suggests the new spirit of iCanada-US accord is symbo- ilized by the joint acceptance of [the old Franklin D. Roosevelt ‘summer mansion on Campo- hello Island. N.B'.. as a place .for fostering better cross-border :relations j Differences remain. says The glierald Tribune. but these now ‘rcan be approached in a neigh- iborly spirit .in contrast to the en 3”th recent “narrow na'tionalismin The situation‘ 2- Mg" t to cd by the his brother. the attornev- .me *9" “m “‘90P.- said mag said e did not questiond Ken. de : fin». Canada and plain stupidity southf‘bf the border." It wel- comed the Hyannis Port pledge for more frequent Canada-US . consultations. ‘I may not be necessary to run a 'hot line' between the two capitals but it is certainly es- sential to avoid the appearance of a 'cold shoulder."' Nuclear Tests WASHINGTON (AP) — The United States called off a se- ries of three small detonations Monday scheduled for the Atomic Energy Commission's Nevada test site this month. The AEC announced cancella- tion of the tests without expla- na ion. ‘ Two of the. detonations were ' Legislation ls Drafted By Cabinet OTTAWA (CPi—The 'cablnet met for nearly five hours Mon- day to prepare legislation that will be placed before Parlia- ment soon after the form opening Thursday. rime Minister Pearson told reporters after the meeting that , another session will be held this jafternoon to complete the draft of the speech from the throne. The speech. an outline of the government's legislative pro- gram. will remain secret until it is read Thursday by Chief Justice Robert Taschereau. sub stituting for Governor-General Vanier. who is recovering from a mild heart attack. Asked whether the throne spech will be a long one. Mr. Pearson said with a smile. "i always like short "speeches. h He said the government wants to place a substantial legislative program before Parliament im- mediately the ope {“to ensure that there will be a isufficiency of legislation on the ‘or er .paps'r" no matter how lfast business was dealt with. hbinet session. re with President Kennedy at a two-hour mo seldom t to involve nuclear devices and the third was to employ chem- lived radioactive tracer. ‘Gienn Morgan. 5. was de- scribed as "tired but well" Mbwutouadnondayaf- speak—geographi- . It is merely a return to the nor- 1 Americans Delay} NOT MORE IRAN WEA THER Cloudy with intermittent rain in afteru noon; southwest winds 15 increasing to southeast 20; Low-high 33 and 52. SEVEN CENTS Minister Honor Fr By NEIL MATHESON Provincial Editor "1 value this honorary de- gree as one of the greatest hon- ors that have come to me . . . nothing touches a man more nearly than a tribute of this ‘kind from his own people. reverses the old adage and prov- es that sometimes a prophet is honored even in his own coun- try." Rev. .l. Sutherland Bon- ncll observed yesterday after- noon as he looked forward to receiving the honorary degree of MD. this afternoon at St. Dunstan's University, St. Dunstan's has always been warm and kind, observed the man who has never for- gotten his humble and some- what difficult beginning onthe road to international renown. nor the men who helped him over some of the most difficult r! E3 :1 .n Dr. Bonn'all quit West Kent .School in the 8th grade to go *to Falccnwood Hospital as an attendant nurse at 17 years. an. jexperience that. proved of in- .estimable value to him later. as he could draw upon case his- tories of men he had known as mental patients here during his one of them 'Iarly brilliant man." 'Prince of Wales Values om SDU iciiwer and deeper study of psy- chiatry many years later. He was attracted to the study of mental disorders first when he spent weekends at Falcon- wood—it‘s Riverside nmv—witih his father, Abraham Bonnell. who “as supervisor of the in- stitution and spent y e a r 3 there in all. He accompanied his parent. on rounds of the wards and often stopped to talk with patients in those early years. WORKED AND STUDIED The then Sutherland Bonnell completed the studies leading to Prince of Wales College while employed at Faiconwood and was aided in his efforts by men- tal patients who tutored him. “was a particu- he recall- "0 3. Dr. Boniiell also recalled yes- .terday that he had received a great deal of help from Pro- fessor J. H. Blanchard who gave him special tutoring at College and "showed me no end of kin iiess." The. study of psychiatry has [Continued on page 3 col, 2i Funeral Home. Issue Undecided By STAN BOWLES Guardian - Patriot Staff Writer Despite considerable wrangl- ing. which at times wwil-ijotyf u ar the city council at its re meeting last night failed to bring. r Hennessey Funeral Home to the Aitken property on Longworth. Avenue to a definite conclusion. As matters stand now William gBrown. the proprietor. has had ‘ the rental of his present site ex- tended for six month from‘ June l. i man of the town planning com- 3 mittee. told the meeting that his l committee had held four scs-i sions during the past few wecks.i the last yesterday afternoon. COMMITTEE DECISION i i , felt that if the funeral home. was? ; allowed to move into the Long- lworth area. there IS the possib- Councillor Walter Cox. chair-iof lprises. The committee‘s vote o lwas 6-4 against. the proposal. » He also stated that the com- mittee had also discussed the? possibility of making a notice that dis- the subject of the moving of the] trict as a commercial area. But. this idea was dropped as it. was of motion to open up decided that no action of such a nature should be taken until the been received from Walter de- and Silva. provincial town planner. in reply to a question. Mr. Cox against the funeral home going there. but they are more or less afraid of the implications it may cause " NOTES CRITICISM said “I don't. think any membery 1 the committee is actuallyrnpenc‘l 3‘ - Pm DR. BONNELI. Trade Ministers Meet In London 16 PAGES Clouds May Force Delay In Cooper's Space Flight 1 Preparations Go On For Launching Today C A P E CANAVERAL. Fla. (APi—Predicted heavy clouds in the launch area pose a threat to astronaut Gordon Cooper's space flight. But Project. Mer- cury officials said preparations were continuing for a launching 3this morning. A weather summary released1 nautics and Space Administra-i the sky. with some periods dur- ing the morning hours having‘ nearly overcast conditions." If conditions are favorable. an - Atlas rocket is scheduled to blast off between 10 a.m. and 12:3 p.m. ADT to start Cooper LONDON (prnfrrade Minis_ on a 22-orbit flight lasting more {ms from 20 British Commom ‘than 34 hours——iongest manned wealth countries met here Mon- day as a prelude to International trade negotiations opening in Geneva Thursday when mem- bers of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade me i ‘space flight attempted by .United States. I Irvitai camera coverage of the f. the heav cloud cover over Cape Canaveral would prohibit‘ iv .-minute Atlas boost phase of Officials who attend'ed' thetfiight. The photographic record secret meeting said ters. including Canada's Mitchell ..barp. didn’t attempt to align their policies towards President ‘Kennedy's plan for freer and easier world trade. | A welter of conflicting aims land interests which emerged in preparatory talks among offi. the minis. is needed in case somethingqfa; goes wrong. Trackers would like wide_ visi- bility in case trouble forces the Astronaut to abort the mission am shortly after liftoff. PREDICT IMPROVEMENT The weather forecast said :conditions would improve later PBleif.‘ area southeast of Mid way——where Cooper would land at. the end of 22 orbits—was for moderate. seas and winds Mercury officials said they would w a l c the weather closely. "As of this time prepar‘ ations for the attempted launch of Gordon Cooper‘s Faith 7 are rMonday by the National Aero~jcontiniiing." they said Monday. As the scheduled liftoff time ition said that "morning cloud- neared. Cooper ran through a ~iness over Cape Canaveral to- brief simulated countdown and lmorrow Will c0ver at least half launching iii a trainer at Mer- cury control centre. .. viewed the flight. plan and star charts and was having a final F ..9_ mission rcview with all key officials late in the day. Space Flight At A Glance CA P F. CANAVERAL. Fla. (API—I-Iere is a rundown on the. basic facts of the forthcom- ing 22-orbit space flight: stronaut — Gordon Cooper. air force. major. married. aughters. Launch time ~— Scheduled for today between 9 a.m. and 11:30 EDT. Weather outlook —- Period of fine Florida weather coming to an end: some cloudiness today may pose difficulties. Flight plan—22 orbits cover- "lals led the mlnlSleFS l0 fliVe and probably would be better by ‘ing 600,000 miles and more than up the bid pelts Financing ‘ Talks Today UNITED NATIONS (CP) — The United Nations General As- i l complete report or the pmposed .sembly goes into special session ‘ town planning for the city had‘mday "1 593W“ 0‘ Stop-8.313 Way! of financing UN peace-keeping operations. The session. expected to last. thrce weeks or more. will be . . y Zafrulla lKhan of Pakistan, president of ithe regular 17th Assembly ses- sion that ended in December. s task will be to decide on a formula to pay for the UN 1 Congo force. and the N Emer- At this 90”“ Mayor walthm“gency Force for the last six to heavy criticism and ridicule by the citizens. unless the coun-ithis {an cil does come up with a The subject. of Mr. Brown's; Gaudet stated he, felt that. if the months or this year. Lnngep lappncation had been gone into: council continues to handle theuerm solutions to the UN.S com | fully. he said. but the committeei question In the way thcy havctinuinfl financial plight are ex- done so far. they Will he held up ‘pected to h 2 taken up at the 18th General Assembly session The financial difficulties have yility that council Would event-idecision on the whim-i very been mounting because of mg i tions from other business enter-i ternoon. 24 hours after be dis- leelnd from his family dur- ing a fishing tr. won of Cal- ical high explosives with a short! “ally be swamped with appliCa-I soon. tContiniicd on Page 3 Col. 6) [051' ram HOURS gory. The RCMP officer rar- rying the boy out of the bush is not identified. ‘C!" W i re- photoi refusal of Soviet bloc nations 1 and some other members to pay . their assessed share of the costs of the two forces. Arrears now ‘total some $100.000.000. While the speciai session was ‘called chiefly to deal with fl- rianccs. 21 countries have pro- posed that it should also act on the Security Council's unani- mous recommendation earlier ‘this month to admit Kuwait. There is also a possibility that the Southern Rhodesian question will be added to the agenda. .Ihope that a northeast wind blowing into the area would ishift sufficiently to carry the clouds away aunch time. Elsewhere around the world. the weather remained favorable. .Sorne stormy conditions were Pu forecast for the main Atlantic Ocean landing area east of gBermuda at the .planned launch :‘time. with improving conditions "later in the da y. The prediction for the primary l‘ Cnmmfmweallh tWednesday morning. There was 34 hours. unity as hopeless. a source said. Liming I Near Midway 15’ ,land in the Pacific if flight lasts ‘22 orbits; elaborate worldwide network sct up to recover cap« sule elsewhere in case trouble forces it down before then. nose—To move the‘fitinar Handing program along by ob- ltaining medical data on the ef- lt‘ects of weightlessness. radia: ‘tion and limited mavemeni. Fin i countdown -- Starts 12 :hours before launch. Cooper Appears Untroubled By Flight Delay Prospect f' A P F‘. CANAVERAL. Fla. (APi — A forecast, of cloudy weather — after eight days 0" perfection—threatens to delay Go ooper's biir for or- bits around the eart . All day Monday the sentiment was the. same: Clouds might make the flight impossible but plans were still going ahead for Cooper to take off somewhere between 9 and 11:30 a.m. da. . At 6.1.) .m. it press confer- ence report. said confidently: “Everything is in readiness for the planneed launch time. of .00 a.m. uesday." Not until the last. sentenCe of the five - paragraph announce- ment did it touch on what was on everyone’s mind. “Cloudiness at Cape Canav- eral." it said. "continues to be a major concern." Walter C. Williams. director of operations. said the first half of the two-day countdown was completed Monday morning. :0 The second half of this countv *dnwn was to begin at 2 am Along about. this time another size-up would he made of what tricks a coastal wind mlEht be up to. COOPER CALM If all this bothered Cooper. no one mentione 't For him it was dinner and early to bed. Around 3 a.m. he is to be routed out for final preparations for this prolonged flight Faith '7. in which he will ride for 34 hours at 17.500 miles ‘hour, was rea y. All around the world 153.000 men were stationed. anxiously waiting to fish Cooper from the water should he land in their area. tbcrcby ending what would by the mast. lengthy space fight ever tried by an American. Cooper's flight. supposedly the last of this Mercury series. .is primarily designed to pick up tadditional medical data. essen- tial if man is to get to the moon. SC, NDP, lory Alliance Plan Denied By By KEN KELLY OTTAWA 4CD) Robert Thompson. Social Credit leader. Isaid Monday it was "ii fabrica- 'tion of somebody's imagination" to allege—~as Deputy Real Caouette did last wcckcnd «that Social Credit members tried to negotiate a deal to keep 'the Diefenbaker government in office after the April it general election. At the same time. Mr. Thomp- son said in an interview that six Social Credit MP5 who gave. and later repudiated. a promise of support for a Liberal govern- ment hr' ii an acrccmont not to participate in any deals as a result of the indecisiVe out- come of the election. Mr. Caouette has snid the six acted to forestall a keep-Diefen- baker-in-power move in which he implicated Dr. Guy Marcoiix. the party's parliamentary whip. ‘Dr. Marcoux resigned his Que- hcc party membership Saturday and announced he will sit as an Independent-Social Credit mem. her in the parliamentary session .which opens Thursday Mr Thompson eeid‘Dr. Mar-1m foundation in fact." saldiably the truth. , l Leader . lhompson, lf‘OliX will be invited to altcnd ‘the caucus of Social Credit MP3 Wednesday. adding that he hopes it will be possible to bring the Qucbcc-Mmtm" '. ency back into these strategy sessions on a regular basis after- wards. Meanwhile. T. ( Douglas. New Democratic leader. said Mr. (Taouctte "is Sniffing "" ‘ hallucinations" in saying New Democrats had considered an alliance with Social Credit to keep the Conservatives in power. In the election. thc Liberals won l29 seats. the Conscrvativcs 95. Social (‘redit 24 and New Democrats 17 in the ass-sen House, Mr. Diclcnhakc' "i had governed with a minority sinCe the June l8 election of I962. resigned and Liberal Lender Pearson took office. also with a minority. "Mr. Caouette's statement that l or anyone on my behalf ‘had any discussions with the .Social Credit party or any other political party either before tduring or after the election is ‘completely untrue and without Douglas Mr Douglas statement. Mr. f‘aouttc said that in re- turn for this support. two or three Socrcds would be named iii a prepared in the cabinet and VDI‘ .‘lP Stanley Knnnlcs \\'n|llfl be named Speaker of the Com monk SAID PLAN I'I‘SEi‘l' ‘,\ir f‘aoiiette :airl the :yx 3n. rial Credit VP: who issued a public sl‘temen' ‘ "r the rte". tion pledging. sunpor to the Liberal: had "or “r‘ pl"is just 20 Minutes before Mr. P. '[gl'ic was to confirm the alliance Said Mr Douglas "it Is apparent that Mr itanu cttc finds l‘ilme‘ll in some dif- ficulty over the haywire negotle shops that were conducted by some of the Social Credit mem- bers with respect to supporting a Liberal government. Conso- quenily. he now is seeking to find a scapegoat. “I can only conclude that W. Canuette is suffering from Illi- iucinations and i s ggest M come up w some men plausible coplanation -— prefer. :3‘ (I