< If It's Good F The Guardian Is For it I‘. or. The Island its @ molten “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” 7__§_______.......———:—j V0 WEATHER Cloudy with snowflurries; northwest winds 30. evening; colder; Low-high 25 and 30. clearing In x RECEIVES NOBEL PEACE PIZE Dr. Linus Pauling of Pasa- dena. Ca1il:‘., standing. right. 'i(‘('el\-V.‘S the 1962 Nobel Peace Prize for his campaign against r.uclea.r weapons and their testing from Gunnar Jerh-n, Early Answer Is Promised in Oslo. Norway. presented Tuesday. The peace prize award to Dr. Pauling carried . a cash award of $42,463. Other man in the picture is uniden- I lified musician. (AP wire I photo by cable from Oslo.) .3 chairman of the Nobel Foun- dation commiittec. The award in Dr. Pauling and the 1963 Nobel Peace prize, that want to the League of Red Cross Societies and the international lit-d Cross committee. were By Ottawa On ARDA Plans By FARMER TISSINGTDN Capital Bureau. The Guardian OTTAWA —— An answer on Prince Edward Island's agri- cultural rehabilitation and de- velopment projects will be forth- coming in the near future. Re- sources Minister Leo Rossiter said here Tuesday. Mr. Rossiter conferred here with AT David- son. director of ARDA for the federal government, and was assured that the outstanding P.E.I. projects will be disposed of at. the nert meeting of the ARDA board. Mr. Rossiter said that the is- land has about rojects for approval and that only about 10 of these have so far been ap- C '5 Pope Has Plan For Unify Plea VATICAN CITY (A-P)—At the_birthplace of Christ. Pope Paul VI plans to make a ma- jor appeal to all mankind for peace and unity. An informed Vatican source said Tuesday the head of the Roman Catho- lic church. visitin-g both Israel and Jordan on his Holy Land tour. will deliver a major speech in Bethlehem Jan. 6. The Vatican. meanwhile. re- mained silent on a proposal by Patriarch Athcnagoras, spirit- ual leader of church. for a Christian summit meeting in Jerusalem. The Pope dispatched an emiss 813’ t_<L:§.t_i93.as2ra.s with .<!¢talls_ 0" N.S. Boy Recovering Alter lmpri TRURO tCP)—'I‘wclvc-year- old Gary Wickens has lost his interest in freight trains. at least for the present. He lay in a hospital bed here Tuesday recovering from more than two days‘ imprisonment in a boxcar without food or- water. His doctor said he is weak from exposure. frostbite and hunger but otherwise all right. Coichester County hospital au- thorlties kept him in seclusion and allowed him no visitors. Gary said he climbed into an open boxcar’ the Dominion Atlantic Railway yards at his home town Ken lie. N.S.. tgought the police were after noon sums suur A few minutes later a brake- man cloned and fastened the car door without noticing the boy. Later in DAR freight train PTWIM the ear to Truro. 90 miles northeast. Monday Laurie Taylor, 1 ONE trackman. heard calls for I‘!!! while he was working in [lid Itltll fl‘! yg , "'1 heard. up! Let me out!‘ Tlrlor said. “I went over in that direction and found the ¢|Fl!!fi . tin be coming ff- tprnved. Most of the water re-l expected that applications for‘ sources projects have been giv-i subsidies on three 92-foot stern en the green light but in the ar-; trawlers to be built by Bathurst ea of rural redevelopment, the? for Gulf Garden Foods. will be 5 most important aspect of ARDA forwarded to the commission E to the Island, there has been a; next week. Mr. Rossiter said he ,- hold up. Mr. Rossiter said thatl‘ had also met with Solicitor Gen- : P.E.l. is anxious to get an ans-i eral J. Watson Mat-Naught for _ wer pro or con on the remaining a full discussion of the Bathurst ? projects so it will know where project to bring the Prince MP fstands and whether to procee lup to date. with further planning. l A discussion was also held Mr. Rossiter and Deputy Fish- With‘ the ixlaritihme Co.mmissi(ii‘n -cries Minister E.M. Gorman a.l- gzélighflegggrvlgel '“;;"\,‘,’:;‘;y ‘g‘,,;; i so met in Ottawa with Alex Wat- louemwn and St JDhn.h New ison chairman of the Canadian . ' ' ' y _ . . - - "foundland and between Char- Mul tcommlsflom “nth re. lottetown‘ and the North Shore gard to f ral shipbuilding sub- ‘ . i i Stanfield Worried By lrend SYDNEY (OP) —— —Premiet' Stanfield Tuesday called a spe- cial Cabinet meeting for-_ today in Halifax on the heels industry Minister Drury’s state- ment's preference for a he water plant at nearby Glace Bay may be changed. Mr. Stanfield, who eight days ago welcomed the announce- ment that Nova Scotia was to get the plant, said in an inter- view here he was "disturbed' by reports Mr. Drury's statement in House of Commons earlier Tuesday. Officials of Industrial Estate: Limited. which worked on the negotiations. co ul d not be reached for comment. IEL is 3 Nova Scotla Crown corporation Mr. Stanfield said the govern- ment would "sit tight" for the moment. an -5 He 5 id ‘'1 hope everything will settle into place as it was ;formerly," referring to last Iweek's announcement that the $30.000.000 plant would at Glace Bay. O'l‘TA~WA iCPi—A team of federal exvperts ' in Toronto 'checking a claimed technologi- cal breakthrough in heavy wa- ter manufacture that may be built ‘cause the government to recon- [ sider a plan that calls for a heavy water plant in Cape Breton. Industry Minister Drury said Tuesday that ‘ the British- American Oil Company has, in fact. found a new and cheaper way to produce the product for nuclear reactors. a plan an- nounced last week for a new Canadian firm with American parentage to build a plant in the laibor-surplus Glace Bay area may already be obsolete. He told reporters he has no information on where B - A might to manufacture heavy water if its process proves to be technically sound and economically more attrac- tive than the old process. The matter raised a new political issue in the House of Commons. of ment that the federal govern- l E l l l WASHINGTON IAPI De- fence Secretary McNamara or- dered the U.S. Air Force Tues- day to develop a manned mili- tary iaiboratory th at would start orbiting the earth in about four years. McNamara announced the project as he disclosed cancel- lation of another air force man- in-space project. the mann space glider called Dyna-Soar. The defence secretary called a surprise press conference to announce th military space approach. Astronaut P Says lMoi'Iier Believer l RANGOON. Burma (Reuters) Visiting Russian astronaut Val- ery Bykovsky told reporters Tuesday no Soviet cosmonaut believed in God and none of them had seen anything to . change their minds during their space flights. His companion. cosmonaut Andrian Nikoleyev. however. said religion was a personal affair and. although he did not believe in God. his old mother in Russia still did. I i CAPITAL BUREAU . He said the Manned Orbiting Laboratory program. coupled with other related research, will provide greater knowledge about man's capability for sus- tained life in space, at a saving of about $l00.000.000 McNamara stressed that the. ’ insurance ‘ new project is “an program" to prepare the U.S. to send manned space warships aloft if the need should arise. He emphasized. as he has be- fore. that the need for such a , military space mission is stil not clear. 2 The Manned Orbiting Labora- ‘tory will consist of a pressur- ized cylinder about the size of‘ la small house trailer. it will be =able to accommodate more than I one man. . McNamara said the intention is to attach the laboratory to a modified Gemini capsule and lift them into orbit. with a giant Titan ill rocket booster. McNamara said the first manned flight of the .VlOl. is ‘expected late in 1967 or early in 1908. to be preceded by a year with the first unmanned test flight of what will be known as the Gemini X capsule. tfrom Dec. 15 in May i it pro- Méiifiéd Orbiting lab 3 US. Defence Aim 5 I l i . i i , . RUBY S COUNSEL Melviiu Bel ii prominent (‘.ali-tor-niia trial lawyer. said Tuesday in Dallas that he had taken the post as Jack Ruby's ch-iet counsel in his trial for murder in the shooting death 3 of President Kennedy's accus- ' ed assassiim Lee Harvey Os- wald. Bell-i talked to Ruby for neorly two hours and said he imrnd him “a very sincere, but very troubled man". (A>P Wirephoto). and return. This will reduce y 05’ THE GUARDIAN M10598 l“ 0l?Fl‘alP flit?!‘ fi3.V5 the carlnad service from six to = OTTAWA - The Board of per week from Hazelbrook to three days 3 week lTransport Commissioners does ‘Murray Harbour and return. On the Souris and Elmira not intend to take hny further ,FAs carload freight is handled lsubdjvisions, it is proposed to l-action with regand to‘railway service to Kings County points sidies for Bathurst Marine. the He said that 8 close watch l’.b.°f the Orthodox . new Georgetown industry. It is 3125:0133: :fm‘1“'t‘§;‘t' an increase had been noted this past year. Chief reason for Mr. Rossi- ter's trip to Ottawa was to at- tend trade and industry meet- ings between the 10 provinces and the federal .<_1overnment. He said that Hon. C.M. Drury. min- ister of industry, had set forth the methods by which the new department will operate and how it will co-ordinate with the provinces. “We were assured that the government will consult the pro- vinces before making any ex- tension or changes to "s design- ated area legislation," Mr. Ros- siter said. "This was not done before the legislation was intro- duced and P.E.I. and the other provinces have been critical of the government's actions in this regard." ,the Holy Land trip. but a Vati-' can source said the emissary had no instructions to arrange cetinfl. LEAVING JAN. 4 ils of the Pope's tenta- tive schedule, from Vatican ‘sources. said he will leave iRomc at dawn Jan. 4 and re- turn at sunset Jan. 6. A meeting between the Pope and Athenagoras would bring together the spiritual leaders of l 7(l0.000.000 ' 50 - Christians 5. . 150.- 00.000 Roman Catholics. ;000.000 Orthodox. The Church of Greece met in l Tuesday and ignored‘ Athenagoras‘ summit meeting posal. Other Orthodox -churches also have been silent. ~ Athens SEEK INDUSTRIES The P.E.I. minister said it is the intention of the island gov- ernment to fight tooth and nail to obtain more secondary Indus. try which is the only way that the provincial economy can be sparked. sonmeni “I unlatchcd one of the dou doors and opened it and "I've ‘been in here since Satur-‘ day and I haven't eaten since Wednesday.“ He had been a‘ prisoner 52 hours. j There was no immediate ex-1. ‘boarding the car. His parents! are Mr. and Mrs. Chief John Brown he Kentville police said the boy was reported missing Saturday-i Gary‘s father declined to talkl with reporters about the case.‘. saying it had received too much ; the family." he said , Mr. W _ the Halifax International Air- port. Gary is one of several children. ITAKEN T0 HOSPITAL Taylor said he carried the boy ;across several tracks to Where his track gang was working. Three men put the boy _on I motor trolley and took him I0 the yard office. From there he was taken to hospital. "The youngster A p p e a r e d weak and pale." Taylm‘ ‘WI- He wore a oar coat. corduroy pants and rubbers. While I19 ‘was prisoner the ttcmperature here drolwed V’ the teenl. lckens is a fireman at‘ i l Charles; bnke Stewart Wickens of Kentvilie. i 8 of t publicity. "it's pretty rugged on. nest i Mr. Rossiter left Ottawa Tues. day afternoon for Mr--tr-e where he has a meeting to at- tend Wednesday before return- ing to the island on Thursday. Parliament his A Glande-‘_ the boy standing there. He said, - fly THE CANAMAN PRESS _ TUESDAY. Dec. 10. 1968 Industry Minister Drury said a company's claim of I «. cheaper process for making heavy water may revise the -pianation of wiry Gary had been; decision on a heavy water’ without food three days before; Plant» Opposition Leader Dieteti- r blocked introduction of bill setting out a plan for independent redistribution of Commons ‘ J. Perth) special pensions to the needy should have started Oct. 1. Dec. 1 as planned. tanley K n o w I e s (N-DP -Winnipeg N o r t h Central- agreed. and called for a‘ study of the entire federal welfare program. , ‘ opposition charges of patronage, a bill to switch auditors for R TCA was approved in princi- pie. Douglas Fisher tNDP — ‘ Port Arthur) congratulated , the government for in-ingjthe present auditor and in! (L- rapped by . .l. lemon The overnight ‘ 2:30 p.m. EST to debate privy council estimates. The Senatn meets It 3 p.m PM IS SILENT ON CABINET OTTAWA rcpt Prime Minister P e a r s o n declined Tuesday to say whether cab- inet changes are imminent. But he told the Commons with a broad smile: ‘ take an airplane and go to Quebec on the Christmas re- cess." Mr. Pearson was obviously referring to the Christmas holiday trip to Quebec City in 1961 by then prime minister Dieofenbaker to see Governor- General Vanier. At that time there were widespread ru- mors a cabinet shuffle which did not materialize. 0 ' ion Leader Diefen- baker asked whether Finance Minister Gordon “ls about to take a trip to the United Kingdom to take over another (Canada's high commis- sioner to the .K.. George Drevw. is retiring at the end of the year.) Mr. Pearson made no di- rect ‘reply. Dozens of people lined up at the plant in Hamilton, Ont.. Tuesday to fill out Job application forms. The VUNPLOAIYED sis unle suggesting that the service -bein offered is not adequate. ltold the Ottawa Bureau of The ‘Guardian that he has been in Ion bhese trains three days ; week now. this frequency. l On the Georgetown and Mon- -101"‘ Mu"3ll.V- MP 50" Kl“E3- tague subdivisions it is propos- Ia minimu ‘ed to operate a tri-weekly ser- lper Stewart isouris and return. : vice between Mount 0 -‘cancel trains M-233’and M-234 Will "03 (‘W59 lentirely and continue to operate ‘have ss complaints are received lany reduction in the present [grains M257 and lplace of the two canoe-lied trains it is rproposed to operate in of one extra train Oha/rlotietow-n to This will week. AIOUCI1 Wm‘ the Ward “V9? the land Geongetown via Montague ‘ provide a four-day a week set-l i reduction in the daily train ser- ivice to the area. He said he is jdisappointed in the board's res- ;-ponse and expects that a num- ’Iber of complaints will be re- ceitved which may force a re- consideration of the matter. Mr. Mullally said that Ship Grounded Eln St. Lawrence ; QUEBEC lCPx—-The coastal -freighter Ste. Adresse, her 12- l t l i 4 9 lman crew already rescued, hasl service in past winters to Souris ideveloped ,, 45,deg,-99 “st and 1 land Elmira had been trains a week and this was being reduced to four. On the Murray Harbor and Georgetown and Montague subdivisions. the service had been six trains a week but is being cut to three. SEES OBJECTIONS "We are not arguing about passenger service as we realize there ‘has not been sufficient straffic to warrant continuing lthis. B t we do want a daily 3 freight service and I don‘t think ‘the councils and chambers of ycommerce in the area will re- !gard the new schedule as ade- ‘quate," Mr. Mullally said. ' The CNR has advised that »_ . «W W‘ E linen: followed Mondays ur- nounvcement that all auda- baker automobile produotl will take place new 1110 K sruoamcsn JOBS jwhere she was deliberately igrounded 145 miles northeast of there. l The 729-ton vessel, carrying a cargo of beer and structural steel to Sept-lies. Que. ta grounded Monday after Capt. J. ‘Romain Bouchard noticed a .list. 3 High winds and wallowing lseas made rescue difficult. but iseven of the crew were taken lto Les Escoumins, about eight imiles west the grounded lshi on a pilot boat and the lother five, including Capt. Bou- chard. were en route here aboard ihc government vessel ‘C. D. Howe. « , .,xv.c-~o-- nw ‘ ‘tfinmls South Bend. ind. plant. ‘ will cease car productfum when current so-‘ncriulcs are com- pleted. (AP Wirevphotoi. “Inc fis being pounded by heavy seas ‘ i i vice in place of the presentl six days. 3 INTERESTED IN FREIGHT The railway told the board. that it is very interested in: freight traffic and that it wiiii run additional trains as re-l quired to handle the traffic! that may be offered. In addi-; tion. passenger service will be’ provided in the event of an . es on the island. submitted that the changes proposed by the an- ‘ adian National are commen- emergenci "it is “ 5 ‘suraie with the traffic offering; and certainly little. if any. pub- lic inconvenience will be occas- ioned to our patrons as a result ; of this reduction in train ser- vice." the CNR declared. , reoiv does not state what days i the trains will run or on what ; day the exhra train will be‘ operated on the Souris run.‘ This. he contends. will only lead ‘ to confusion and a possible drop- . ping off in the amount of freight traffic. ‘ 1-Three De As Gale Slams N.S. Coast H.-\I,.ll-‘AX l(‘.Pi——’I‘-hree per- ‘ sons are dead and one is miss- ing and presumed drowned fol- lowing a fierce wind and rain storm which hit Nova Scotia late Monday and early Tiles- day. However. there were no reports of severe property dam- age. A crew member on the ii,- 000-ion ore carrier Louise was killed and another injured when heavy seas broke over the bow of the vessel off Halifax Harbor early Tuesday during the tail end of the storm. Dead IS A. l. Paul, 40, of Cas- tries. St. Lucia island. British West indies. Woodrow Wilson, 22. of St. Ann‘s Bay. St. Ann. B.W.l.. was taken to hospital here with undetermined injur- low I The incident occurred as the ‘gypsum carrier was heading out of Halifax Harbor bound for ‘Baltimore with a cargo of gyp- isum taken on at the National Gypsum Company loading pier at adjacent Dartmouth. The heavy rain form with _winds up to 50 miles an hour ‘was lashing the area at the -time it started late Monday early afternoon and c n d e d Tuesday V dent change 3,000 troops in an area only 30 the - LA PAZ. Bolivia tAPi—-Presi- Victor Paz Estens-snro's government has warned Com- munist-led tin miners at Catavi -—-drawn up Monday night with a 48-hour deadline — was dis- closed Tuesday with the pas- sage of a 24-hour deadline set by the miners for the govern- ment to release two jailed Com- * V munist union leaders or “suf- fer the consequences." Th ernment has shown C 5 no intention of giving up these 1- LXXVL N°- 319 o."..'i.'3‘rl'.."5..;'.‘L.‘-'a..‘.'.°.‘i"‘...°"..'I .'5,‘3..'.’ a""..5Z'.'. °£."°.'.... C“ARL°T'1‘ET0WN- CANAD-L WEDNESDAY: DECTJ'IW3_E'li 11. 1963. "°*,;;‘;.“ SEVEN CENTS 13 PAGES‘, Free Hostages Or Starve, Bolivian Tin Miners Told Gov'i Masses Troops In Area four Americans held by the minors. DUTCH PROTEST T Netherlands embassy sent a message to Lechin de- ‘it will cut off their food sup- manding the release of a Dutch ine manager. The West German embassy legrapiied the mine headquar- ters at Catavi for information the health of a captive German technician. Indirect advices from Catavi said three of the hostages. un- identifle as to national- ity. were treated the mine hospital Monday for mild cases of nervous tension. In Washington. Bolivian am- bassador Enrique Sanchez do Lozada relayed to U.S. State men. They are Irineo Pimenlal Undersecretary George Ball the and Frederico Escobar, who regrets of Bolivia for the seiz- are a c c u sed of committing ure of the Americans. common crimes. instead the miles from Catavi. a mining La Paz. Whatever the significance.‘ one of three Canadian technl-, cians reported kidnapped by] the miners in the roundup of 21 ' hostages last Friday. was said: to be free. He is geologist. -James MoNamee, 30, of King- ‘No Board AciiorfP|anOr_iedl On Railway Cu’r To King A ston. Ont. RETURNING THURSDAY The Toronto headquarters of Prospection Limited which em-: ployed M.oNamee at a mining complex near La Paz. advis his parents in 'ingston it was, notified he arrived safely in La‘ Paz and will be returning to Canada Thursday for h‘ regu- lar Christmas leave. Details ;were lacking. ; The other two Canadian tech- inicians reported held captive been identified as Ray- mond Brousseau, 28, and rele Falardeaux. 34. both Kirkland Lake. Ont A fourth Canadian, Robert- Morrison. 37, of Toronto, ar-~ rived in La Paz Monday from the Catavi area. The British embassy here said Morrison‘ had been in another mine four miles from Catavi and had not been taken captive. U.S. ambassador Do u gla s Henderson telegraphed a n ‘ Lechin B oi l v i a's rebellious l h vice-president who heads Au- of te. -miners union. that Lechin will . held responsible for harm that might come to” D-ief Seeking l Defence Data ' OTTAWA (CF) — Opposition Leader Diefenbaker Tuesday‘ ‘asked the government to supply‘ the figures on the her of military and civilian personnel who will be let _ the defence department because of defence reductions. Defence Minister Hellyer said. in the Commons he didn't have. the information with him but} would supply it when he re-l T0 council ext any the turned from the NA meeting in Paris late w ad, One Captain A. Dawes. master of the Louise, said the two men had been in the foreca.-‘tic, sec- tion of the vessel. He said they had apparently seen the ap- proaching waves and started to run when the sea crashed down on the ship's forward section. Capt. Dawes ordered the ves- sel about and radioed here for an ambulance which was wait- ing at dockside when she ar- rived. it was not immediately known when she woulri leave. Meanwhile. near Lnckcport. on Nova Scotia's south shore. the wreckage of the lobster fishing boat lice .l was found and it is presumed the vessel's lone occupant. Richard Rurns G o u l d e n, 48, of lmckoport, drowned. There was no sign of the inh- ster fisherman near the wreck- age. The only piece of lifesav- iing equipment aboard-——a life ‘jacket—was found floating near the wreck. Mr. Gouidcn had left Locke- port early \lnnda_v morning and a search was started when he -failed to return at noon that lday. High winds and heavy iseas hampered the search. lMAN ('OI.I..\PSI-‘.9. DIES l Dllrinfl rush-hour traffic at Tuesday night Though four American engi- ‘government said law and order necrs were slain by miners in would suffer from such an cx- a similar crisis in 1949. do Lo- and quietly massed zada expressed belief after in with Bal will be that tiled l5-minute visit I the matter Se ?centre 155 miles southeast of peacefully. t is only a matter of time and patience," he said. Canadians Said Free LA PA7.. Bolivia tCP-APl—- The Associated Press reported that two Cana- dians previously reported held as hnstaiges Bolivian tin ' "apparently" are free 'but unable to. leave the mining ce re. Fears Mouniw For Safety Of Sinatra STATELINE, Calif. LAP’ -- Frank Sinatra. distraught and sleepless. was reported Tuesday willing to make any deal to will release of his 19-year-old son from kidnappers. A spokesman brought out the word while a two-day manhunt spread and fears mounted for the sa«feI._v of Frank Sinatra .lr., abducted in the Lake Tahoe snow countr . “Frank is willing to make any deal with no questions asked," said the spokesman. Jim Ma- hone_v. Sinatra's press agent. The FBI clamped silence on the huge search "until some- thina happens." INSIDE TODAY Announcements. notices . I5 Births. deaths . . . . .. I4 Classified .. .. . I4. 15 Finance. markets . . . . .. I2 (‘o ics . . . . . . . . . . 16 Editorials . . . . . . . . . . .. 4 Sport . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I2 Kings Queens. City 5 Prince County . . . . . . .. 3 Summerside . . . . . .. 1 Women‘: . . . . . . . , . . . . . . .. ‘I Missing the height of the storm. 2 man collapsed and died of natural causes shortly after he helped push a stalled car on the An- gus l. :\la(-donald Bridge over Halifax Harbor. Gerald S. liisnr-r. 65. of West- orn Shore. \'S., was it passen- ger in the car he helped push. The incident held up traffic on the bridge for nearly an hour. Another accident here during the storm claimed the life of an unidentified ‘.\’ewfoundland man who was struck by a car on A city street Monday nlzzht. The vehicle failed to stop . -not fishing boat was pulled off a reef in Halifax Har- bar after it four-hour battle with rising winds and tides Monday night. .\‘umerous attempts w e r 0 made to get a line aboard the vessel and during one of them. its owner Ed Dohcrty. fell over- ’ rd board. He was pulled a by his partner Cliff Hermes. Both are Halifax area resi- dents A line was finally put aboard by floating it out from shore on an empty gasoline drum. The grounding took place on Law- lor's island in the harbor. ‘\lumcrnu.< minor accidentfl more attributed to tho storm.