I l If it's Good For the Island ' The Guardian is For it ,_——— VOL. LXXVI. NO. 98 The p r e s e n tattoo. of two bowling alleys by the. Canad» Ian Mental Health Association for use of the patients at Riv- erside Hospital. was in a d a last. night at the hospital. Ar- thur Peake. ccntrel. presi- EliminationStronglyUrged Of Que. Double Taxation By STEWART MacLEOD MONTREAL tCPl~Elimina- lion of Quebec's double taxation system and the return to the provinces of certain federal tax fields. was urged by the Mont- real Chamber of Commerce Thursday. “The job of collecting both federal and provincial ' taxes must place a heavy burden on the Quebec taxpayer." said chamber president H. M. Caron as he asked the royal commis- sion on taxation to look into "this very complex" question. There would have to he “give and take" by both governments as they worked out a method of dovetailing their tax systems together. One step might be for the province to stop collecting Its own income tax. with other concessions by the federal gov- dent of the P.E.I. branch of CMHA presented the alleys to Hon. Hubert MacNeill. tleft). minister of health who official- ly opened them. Frank Myers, MLA. is seen on right. The. al. am a later brief. civil law. TAXPAYER HURT have been civil overlooked. The Quebec tax. and in transactions tween husband and incredible situation ls most satisfactory.“ Commissioner Emile. ernmenl. said Mr. Caron. a chartered accountant. The brief presented by the residents in other provinces. BOWLING ALLEYS ' member chamber was could be made." mainly confined to general prin» Caron. v ciples. with details to follow in When the Canadian tax sys- tem is revised. said the brief. it should consider the Quebec penalized the operation of the law had been tax- payer. for instance. is penalized under the provisionsof the gift be- wife. This un- Beau- vais of Quebec City suggested that a new formula built around Quebec law could be unfair to I think some arrangementsi @1112 @tmrdio “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dow” leys were taken from the old oly Name Hall and re-as- sembled at, the hospital. The Kiwanis Club and the Knights of Columbus lent valuable as- sistance to the project. l said Mr chamber also recom-; mended that the federal govern-' ment leave the death dutiesl field because under the spirit ofl British North American ct. said Mr. Caron. this was a provincial right. The money collected from the tax. about $75,000,000 annually. was spent tering the act. Personal income tax should be changed so that the amount necessary for the subsistence of a taxpayer and his family be tax free. and anything above that figure be taxed on a graduated scale to a limit of 50 per cent. Commission chairman Ken- neth Carter said it would be difficult to establish a subsist~ ence level for all of Canada because it would “vary tremen- dously." ‘ Parliamentary Secretaries Are App By JAMES OTTAWA (CPI—Sixteen par-lmembers of Parliament whoyounger Liberal. llamentary secretaries to min-lbave demonstrated a flare for; They are isters in the new Liberal cab-lideas in Liberal party policyu that were chosen by Prime Min-' Istcr Pearson Thursday. fourth day of his "60 days of decision." ‘ Mr. Pearson selected two} MP5 to be his own assistants in l the House of Commons 3 did former Prime Minister iefen-l baker during his term of office. | (tile is John Davis. 46. enEs'ineer‘economist and Rhodes scholar representing the Van- couver riding of Coast-Capitano. and the other is oh government w h i p appointed Wednesday. Alexis Caron. “J P or Hull. Que. Most of the 814.W«o~yeu l the f secretaries are youthful. new Others were obviously rewarded or long service to the party (The 814.000 and Parliament. inclu $10,000 ties the regular MPs' salary.) LIMIT ALLOWED The 16 appointments fill the limit allowed by law. No secre- ta was appointed for the defence and defence production portfolios or for three depart- ments responsible for the basic M industries of fisheries. forestry and mines. For the key portfolios of tr dc. finance. justice and ex- ternal affairs. the. appointments Health‘iHazard label Wmdhr TORONTO (CPI—A lediln' “in: cancer expert said Thurs-i day cigarette packages should, labelleds "II 11”] hazard." ; on 0' cigarettes if the "fumes In . In its adv lets o. industry pest to d ".a . ; lng. particularly I He outlines his views in an in- I “Maw aim-m on C. by advertisers. The subtle sp- prosoh of identifying cigarettes with pleasure. comfort and ma 5. cut v uslly irresistible." lion-smoker. Dr. I also said doctors have a moral Que WWI swunment to put llm- obligation not to smoke where Columbia mm," m the an.” manufacture they willbe soon. Hessid if they other, are “om Newfound‘ud. wanted to endanger their own health that was their privilege. but he suggested. however. that y owed it to their patients and the general public to set a ointed ByPearson;f Iwent. to men typical of the; s Jean-Luc Pepin. 38. MP fort lDrummond-Artha-baska. a pro- I ffeSsor of political science and .‘student of philosophy and law. inamed parliamentary secretary 0‘ Trade M in isle r Mitchell arp. Edgar J. Benson. 38. King' lston. a chartered accountant 'and assistant professor of busi‘ ness administration at Queen’s University. parlitmentary sec- retary to Finance Minister Wal- lter Gor on 1 Donald S. Macdonald. 31. Tor- yonte ‘oscdale. lawyer and grad- luate of Harvard and Cambridge universities. parliamentary sec' retary to Justice Minister Lio' ,nel Chevrier. ISTEWART NAMED John B. Stewart. 39. Antigo- lnish-Guysborough. a consultant {on legal and political philosophy for the Rockefeller Foundation and a . a t -r. els Xavier University. tary secretary to External Af- ' lfairs Minister Paul Martin. Average age of the partis- imentary secretaries is 46.! years. and 10 are younger than this average. The average age of the 26 members of the cabl- net is 5!. t i Six of the secretaries not from Ontario and five from bee. Two represent British .Nova Scott. New Bruns- wick. The Prairie provinces-— .which elected only A - ‘ Ranked y The n he nid- 0‘ their ministers in the cabinet. 0th.! WI 0‘ with their ages and professions. in asses -— . v theotiliu' secretaries are: . political social leaders and colorful » rouotrr CAOUE'I'I‘E Dr. said cigars and Yvon Do 37. St. Jean-1b- pipc In less dangerous 3:22: 2.... -..:::.. a St. .. . because they .. Ibo was contain an alkali!» substance as the recent election to a large degree on adminis- W' CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, FRIDAY. APRIL 26, 1963. Packers, Beef Men Confer WEATHER Clear with a few cloudy intervals: little change in temperature; northwest winds 15. Low-high 26 and 42. mug“ SEVEN CENTS 12 PAGES Liberal Party Loses Seat As Tie Broken In Quebec The boand of directors of the: Prince Edward Island Beefl Producers Association met yes-‘ terday with W. F. McLean, president of Canada Packers Ltd. and other officials of ‘ com for a general d' - sion of Island beef prices. . McLean outlined the dif-I ferences between prices paid;1 for . . . . st Six 1 t at the prices! the Toronto of the figures for months showed th of live cattle on ’ ' g markets . logical relation to the prices:i paid for cattle in P.E.I. I “In order to recognize this logical relation it is necessary to take into account some fac- tors which affect cattle prices to a different extent at the dif- ferent markets." he said. COST FACTORS “The main factors arezn yield. which is the percentage that the weight of the beef car- cass bears to the Wight DI the Khrushchev. the stat: depart: ‘ ' ucl- ment amount of United States and British am‘l money 119“?in fm‘ such t—‘hi'mg's {bassadors may see ' ‘ . OW. etc.; the dif-;in an effort to revive the stalled crease in operating costs at‘Goneva test-ban talks. live I; e by PM values. that is the as hides f various nts; n the cost of freight required to the. am bassadors in Mos- shiip beef to various points in cow Wednesday. ' spurned a proposal to intens fy cattle land Speed up the nuclear test- bought in Toronto or Western ban negotiations. it since Canada are shipped long dis- tances to market and therefore II have little food in their stem the lime animal to arrive at the ‘5 same cost per pound for dressed beef. He pointed out that cattle which produce beef that grades standard (Brown) brand yield. approximately 21/2 per cent more i at Toronto than at Charlotte town and that this yield differ- ence represents a difference of about FREIGHT COSTS - _ cred_ {Kennedy and Prime Minister; Speaking- “ bypmduct Macmillan which was presented. 0 the Soviet leader by the two ‘ Harriman. seeking on president: ambassadors Wednesday. I its. be smd such industries as]t scalp l d hart ' i f ct .; 33...}? useengfiaw’f'afii’ea 10% Three Stabbed At Sarnio, Ont. mainly in Ontario and Quebec. This means that by products at Charlottetown are less valuable[ by the cost of the freight toi Ontario and Quebec. 0n slaughtering costs. Mr. l Mch told the group it is logical that the cost per animal tContinued on page 8 col. 6t INSIDE TODAY Sfiiifif‘cfii'i‘ill" .T‘T‘ilifi.‘ ll ; h , Sir Winston Returns Home Sston Churchill returned homel . iThursday from a two-week hot-l - ‘day on the French Riviera. l T seemed to be in good health and said that a stuin was the first passonger to leave ‘coat and gloves and dotted his: We a; grey homburg as he paused for‘. photographers Is Planned New Effort .On Test Ban l . :tllf‘. two env:.ys and mm, the yield of dressed beef threatened to withdraw his limy H is high, so that me packer can :itednffer to allow two or three-i pay higher prices per pound for 1°."‘S"e .of the report from sador Foy Kohler on the Krem- 1 Iin IKhrushchev took a hard line. he. did not finally slam the door on _;a test-ban pact lpe ’Thursday in a “mystery incid- lPopen, 35. with wounds in her‘ r lMacKinley. 52. with wounds in' men. LONDON tReutersl—Sir Win-i: i F be 88 - year - old statesmanl he aircraft at the airport here. l: . He was wearing a grey rain-IiEi ’ ‘ before descend. V mg the steps. WASHINGTON tAPl ite rebuff d Des- from Premier‘ indicated Thursday the l in. again t in a 90-minute session Khrushchev; 1 Betty Miller. 36-year- Santa Monica. Calif.. Khrushchev was reported to‘ ave talked in tough terms to1 Just before leaving Santa Monica Wednesday for San its. .;... .. isn‘t!» .A‘tif v . PACIFIC FLIGHT PLANNED Mrs. old flight instructor who will fly solo to Australia. sits at the ave controls of her Piper Apache Francisco. where she'll begin her 7.100-mi'le. trip. She'll fly via Hawaii. Canton Island and the Fiji Islands. revs-losing the route Miss Eanhart was flying ' ‘ 1937. when she lost her life in . tAP Wirephotot. l t l Defeated ‘ l I CAMPBELL'S BAY. ; .tCPl—Retuming officer .l. Den- zil Moodie changed the makeup of the. 26th Parliament Thurs- :day night. flipping a coin an! jt‘hen casting the iPaut Martineau. . Mr. Martineau's victory jPontiac - Temiscamingue con- :stituency reduced Liberal mcm- lbership in the Commons to 129 Progressive C o n servative :members to 95. There are. 24 Social Credit MP5 and 17 New Democrats. 1 Defeated Liberal Paul - O. lGoulet said he “very likely" lwill file a petition under the = lDominion ‘tions Act before the. Quebec [Superior Court to contest the 'election. “We have plenty to go on." - he said. "Some people voted ‘twice and some eligible voters were barred from voting." TIE RARE Mr. Moodie. a tractor here. said evident. about inspections inside Rus- ~ ia to enforce a test-ban treaty' Washington interpretatio U.S. Ambas- session was that while ason for a feeling here been foreclosid is at MOSCOW iKennedy's behalf Soviet support jof efforts to restore. peace in Laos. has expressed hope he ‘will find Premier Khrushchev agreeable. "i am always hopeful that. y with good will. we will reach SARNIA. Ont, «sons were (CPI — Thl‘f‘fi stabbed tent 'but. all were reported in sat- l’agreememi” the U-S~ Stale “n' lisfactory condition in hospital.‘dersecretary told reporters on S tabbed were MF5~ SWIM his arrival T h u r s d a y night ig‘ht shoulder; Mrs. Christina. on o . er cheek and New"... Pam...“ “The United States wishes to l‘ with wounds in his abdousupport the. stability of the neutral government. The United Both women live a, the samo‘states is careful to adhere to Classified . . . . . . . . . . .. 10.11 .address __ 420 Confederatimuhe 41962 Geneva) agreement. Comics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . {Street Th... Stabbing took placalboth in letter and in spirit." “mm” “gm” ---- '- " lon Milton Street and the women; A Second World War i’. s. Egahgll'fc ‘5 ‘ ' ‘ ’ (blood streaming from theiriambassador to Moscow. Harri- Kings County City. Queens . Summerside Prince County . . . . . . . . . . Spo . . . . . . . . . . . . . ....... i 4 Women‘s ‘bl 3W lhouses on the street. Mr. Popen jtalks with authorities of France [was found later on the lawn of‘and Britain about the. alleged [another home. campaign of ' ounds. into separatelman was fresh from emergency Police indicated that the slab Pathet Lao Guerrillas to expand ngs were part of a murder~ their holdings in Laos. whose Iii-nation 1 guaranteed by the tAP)-—-W. Averell aboard a Soviet airliner from‘ pro - Communist_ . Harriman Hopes l lobat serious negotiations havcl _ . l-not ' thsti~~ - ' "t mmmmamm to Reds Agreeable writin the ‘oint letter fromg' "M ' . . . n 8 J . . iCoiiiaiiugggmi'fi'leléefi.$1.23}?‘ EOIICIIOI‘ - general William Wednesday. only five votesi m . . . The Soviet Union and Britainjseparated Mr. Martineau and3‘hc “cello” Of Liberal Rwhm n~er. Goulet. Then it see-sawed Laotian confer-once last year. were co-chairmen of that co :ference. France and the. U. were influential participants ithe decisions that gave Southeast Asian kingdom a HOV“ Mr. ernment dividing authority‘Moodie flipped a coin when the. V“ among three factions—rightist. tie was declared—without indi-. . lemst_under a eating which candidate gm. Mr. Martineau 6.449; neutral and neutralist premier. Prince Sou-heads and which ttaiLs. . Moodie cast. his ballot for Mr. Martineau. his neighbor in this vanna Phouma. Truce Team Views Scene An international truce the ‘ lead Que. i» We; tie-breaking ‘ 1 :‘ballot at a judicial recount in‘ ifavor of former mines minister in3 i B Controverted Elec- ‘ lumber con- it became noon Thursday that he. might have to cast the Candidate May Ask Court Action a 2.... I I MR. MARTINEAU deciding ballot as required by was higher than it. should have ‘law in the case rarity in federal elections. Apr 1 ll. Mr. the Liberal candidate. minister when mines .‘Ivot-es were counted April 13. iBy :between the two men with Mr mrM‘artineau taki at one point. Martineau s a i d Then Mr Ottawa Valley community. Mr. a Lie. i! In election - night counting ‘ i Martineau had‘ been ahead of Mr. Goulet. but‘»“"Ia""f““-V look a {Iii-vote edge over the former ' ' service The recount got under'wa in, m. western Quebec town {astcan declare the seat vacant. pg 3 four~vote Mr. oodie has been return- Ptl. Under the Controverted Elec- tions Act. i be proved that more votes cast than the winning candidate's majority or plural- .\'- The results of the. recount. are final hilt. if irregularities sro iproved in the voting. the court: In the 1962 election. former successfully contested Cashln in St. John's West. The Newfoundland Supreme Court ruled that there had been irreg‘ ularities in the service vote and declared Mr. Cashin's election d. The final vote figures were: Mr. Gou- t 5.448: Yvan Bcaule. Social Credit. 3.339: Lorne Cather- wood. New Democratic Party. 35L The Conservative winner was mg Officer I." twn federal elec_ first elected to the Commons is tions__Apr“ 8 and June 18' 1962 I908 when be defeated former three Quebec provincial team elections. made an inspection trip to the ‘ Plain». des Jarres Thursday in FOURTH TIE an attempt to smooth the un- 3' easy Laotian situation—ruled by a shaky truce Since Sunday. it was the first of planned a“)? daily trips by officers and in- lndia ll was 3 terpreters from Canada. and Poland—the nations making ‘ I .. Control . p" ‘ up the international ‘ Commission charged with su- lsuicide attempt but did not ela-ineutrality and freedom werelpervising neutrality ' southeast Asian kingdom. was his first thought when he knew he. would have to break the tie—only the loui‘tli Confederation in 1867? was thinking of that. beer aim: to get." said Mr. IMoodie. "No, put, that down as Mr. Goulet said he felt the inumber of spoiled ballots—~421— ~— in t d' .' '1 r ‘ . Liberal M VIENTIANE' Laos meme”) ityamidn ce in a simia capac his 'Speaker of the :Jan. 18. 1962. P Hugh Proudfoot by 411 votes. He. retained the seat against. Mr. oulet in 1962 election.'winning by 132 votes. Mr. Martineau. a lawyer. was appointed minister of ‘mines and technical surveys in the former Conservative government Aug. 9. 1962. Previously he had been parliamentary secretary to for- mer prime minister Diefen- baker from Nov. it). 1959. until appointment as Deputy ommons on Three competitors In yes- terday's music festival are are; Elizabeth Taylor. prominent toe; Rosina Beck. e _ (Continual ollpogs 8 col. 5) not: here. From left to right and Shirley Graham. Chr- 1 t. t N JUNIOR ORGAN CLASS AT FESTIVAL ed to be completed today. (See ' lottetown. They were. contest- ants in the junim‘ organ solo class. Competition is schednh Wm:- M. ' fit story on page I.) LONDON (Reuters) - Soviet lPremier Khrushchev has told |Russian workers that at the age of 69 he could not be expected to hold his present position “for lall time." the Soviet news .agency Tass reported Thursday. Speaking to industry and con- ‘struction workers of the Rus- sian federation in the Kremlin .Wednesday. the Soviet lsaid the people must have lead ters and the "tried and tested lleader“ of the Soviet people is a ‘the Communist party's central ‘ committee K'hrushchev said: “i believe ' ttbat no one will suspect That in starting this. i have in mind ‘any special standing of my own do the party. i am already 69 “Everyone understands that cannot hold for all time the po- i sition which i now have in the ‘ party and the state. i 1 “Therefore. speaking of this. ‘I do not think of myself but of our Leninist party. the Soviet people and the great cause 0 communism." Before referring to his one Khrushchev said the 1962 meet ing of the party‘s executive Vi committee had recognized the party structure and a “more clear-cut and harmonious sys- item of guidance of industry and :construction from top to bottom its taking shape." I Khrushchev IlId the group. Irepresenting millions of Soviet workers: “The working class must have merited authorities. Headers. 'nis tried and tested and l have lhc right to say so.‘ i ' helmtol. lNikita Foresees 'End Of Career leader of the Soviet people Is our f‘ommumst party‘s Leninist central committee to which the most authoritative men and women in the party and coun- try'are elected." He said Russia now is so strong it no longer needs to fear threats from its enemies. Khrushchev said the present levcl of Russian economy is high. This was borne out by the fulfilment the seven-year plan for economic development. The solution of the econom task is the major problem to which partv and peoolc are directed and this is particularly true in the field of agricultura the Russian leader said. He said that last Soviet Union produced more meat and grain than ever be- fore and was far ahead of the United States in its rate of industrial growth. Dutch Princess 0 0 Visits Ottawa MONTREAL (CPi - Princess Beatrix of Holland arrived in Montreal by plane from York Thursday and left on I lZO—mile trip to OttsM by IIII‘ ousine. The princess' infer-ml thud- day visit to Ottawa. when I” lived during the last war. 5 part of a world-wide tour tild- rupted lost year by the of her grandmother. Quasi ' I‘r: V