J If _it's Good For the Island [The Guardian is For it v“‘oL." Lxxv" ""'. To. zoo‘ ' ' YOUNG LADY SHOWS PRIZE - WINNINO HEREFORD Miss Shirley Matheson. dau- ghter of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Matheson. Hunter River. leads her father's prize - winning Hereford bull at yesteiday"s Crapaud exhibition. The ‘an- imal was judged senior and grandchampion male at the show. DRIFTING ON INNER TUBE Bo.y&Saved ln Rollo Bay By('.7.3nstable,Young Man: I SOURIS BUREAU OF THE GUARDIAN A seven-year-old Rollo Bay boy was rescued yesterday at- ii.-rnoon by a Royal Canadian Mounted Police constable and a teenager. George Gallant was playing uitli an ' ated tru t e inner tube at Rollo Bay Beach when he drifted away from shore too far for ' nnn- swimmin . . other children were playing nearby also but no (I swim * IIIIE C0 . The mother called RCMP in Souris, several miles away. En route to the beach Constable. James M. Dunn plclned up"-, 7- _vear-od Ronald (Butch) Chev - in to assist him. when they readied the they could not see the boy but to be a mile or more off the beach. ' The two searched the shore Pencil Removed From Boy's Eye MONTREAL (CP) —- Success- lul removal of a pencil em- bedded near a boy's eyeball was described by a Moncton. N.B..- doctor Wednesday at the Inter- national Congress of Radiology. ‘Dr. Colin Ibbotson. a radiolo- gist at Moncton City Hospital. said the operation took place on 8 hp? admitted to hospital after fallingd in his school play- l‘0lI Th __ 9 boy. who was not iden- tified. had been playing a game of cops-and-robbers with other boys and they had been holding pencils near their eyes as 'guns" When the boy fell. the pencil, roughly two I n c h e s long, Dlunged beneath the skin sur- face he ween eye an nose. a_nd “went into orbit“ in the soft tissue around the eyeball. -rays up the pencil pointed along a path toward a iunus at the se of the skull "°|'m8| symptoms or signs trouble in the eye. Tl"-‘ Pencil was removed from the orbit along its track of en- l~|’y'and. said Dr. Ibbotson. the boys recovery "win complete and uneventful." Skysliield Will:\Ground Civilian Aircraft Sunday OTTAWA (CP) -- The mill- cnd found an old canoe, but no padd‘es. Using boa-rds as pad- dles, they made it_ to the lad who was blue from the cold. so cold that one leg had gone into the water and he could not raise it. He was hanging on maining heel. only by his hands and the re-[ v The constable and Oheveria wrapped their shirts around the boy to bring him ashore. He was" taken home apparently in good condition. : The child is the son. of Mr. and Mrs. Alban Gallant. Rollo B ay. ‘mic @111m5fiIiflil1 '“Cover's Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” CHARLO'l'l‘E'l'OWN, CANADA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 30, 1962. "2350" savnn cam-s WEATHER Cloudy with show- 20 with gusts to 35. Low-high 60 and 68. By KEITH KINCAID HALIFAX (CP) — The Cana- dian Bar Association was told Wednesday despite high hopes held for it by the federal gov- ernment the Canadian Bill of Rights generally has added lit- ~ tie to or altered already exist- ing I-IW Ghanaian Ministers Are Fired ACCRA (Reuters) -—— Foreign Minister Ako‘ A*djei and Infor- mation Minister Tawia Adama- fio Wednesday were fired from their posts and placed in deten- tion “in the interests of the se- curity of the state." Also ordered detained in the surprise move was H. H. Cofie- HAMILION (CP) — Police identify the almost headless corpse of a murderer from his teeth. Assistant Police Chief How- ard Moreau said the main line of investigation is that the man who shot down a constable in downtown Hamilton early Wed- nesday is the same man who fled from a burning house Tues- day. leaving his mother and. a neighbor dead with head in- a.s. C ries. . “We have no proof of this . . it's simply the logical line of investigation." he said. Police have confirmed that the physical characteristics of ad man resemble those of Griffett. Police have only the teeth to work on. The m n who s of Const. David Gregory. 34. in the stomach with a blast from ya 16-guage shot gun committed on 5" Q Q- G Wednesday night were trying 10 h ' l Identity Being Sought 0iHeadless-Murier~- suicide by blowing off most of is ca. officially a search has yet been call Griffett. 38. who fled the ‘ house Tuesday where his mothe Mrs. Mar Griffett, 59. and her neighbor. Milton Nelson, 56, died. Police say their deaths were the re- sult of severe skull damage Mother Gets House Offer DERBY. England (AP) - A Im r of six who offered her .month-old baby girl in exchange for a house m y a to keep her baby—-and get a home as well. Mrs. Jean Rook. 33, has re- ceived a number of offers of houses-—and only one for baby Jacqueline in exchange — since she made her offer Monday. Herbert Hoover ls Improving NEW YORK (AP) -- Former presldent Herbert Hoover showed continued improvement Wednesday during the normal period of crisis following his ' operation for removal of an in- testinal tumor. _ “We are pleased with his pro- gress." said a report from C Presbyterian Medical 0 I staying at a Derby welfare cen- who has tre'wlth her family since they were turned out of their munic- ipal apartment. said Wednes- d A ay. “It looks as though we shall get a home and that I shall keep my baby too. I am very happy about that." In Toronto. Mrs. Harry Crabbe, executive - secretary of President Nkrumah‘s r u l i n g Convention People's party. A h naian government an- fice did not enlarge on the rea- son for the detentions. which came four weeks after a bomb attempt on Nkrumah's life in northern Ghana. W The detentionb were regarded caused by a blunt instrument. Nkm by observers here as the first open sign of opposition to Nkrumali in his own party. The.official announcement did not name any successors to the dismissed ministers. 118 the NKRUMAH TAKES POST The preventive detention act gives the Ghana government the right to detain persons for five years without trial. In March ma announc the act would be reviewed to give the government authority to detain for longer periods. Monday. rumah relieved Adamafio of responsibility for establishment matters, which put him in - administrative charge of the civil service. and tool; over the post himself. Adamafio. a former journal- ist. has been- regarded in the West as one of the strong left- wing elements in the Nkrumah administration. A Adjei, 46. foreign minister since 1959. had been expected to accompany Nkrumah to the been Commonwealth prime ministers conference in London scheduled for next month and even to lead the delegation. in the absence of Nkrumah. Cofie - Crabbe. formerly dis- trict commissioner of Accra. was appointed executive - sec- retary of the ruling party’s n - tionai headquarters early last year. ‘ Pasma. 38, a childless house- wife. said Wednesday she would baby girl. my first two children and can't have any more. Centre. where the year-old former Republican president underwent the three - hour op-.: ieration Tuesday. Trans-Canada Air Lines will; ‘arr will li cancel r change scheduled de-, North Ame:-ll: °-.*°"""°r"'°s3l partureptlmes of 134 of its 1951 “W”! Sunday for air defence Sunday fl18l|l8- ' "°'°l'° 5"! ' - ‘ Norad said the date and limei 5" CM“!!! in Canada of the exercise—slmllar wart ""1 the here games were held in mo and‘ “'9 wine m.ouu day. includ- 19ol—were chosen as the best "" Mm or will available to disrupt the ‘wit {found between 8 ‘pm. and -civilian aviation. ‘ 4 All P-"L EU!‘ to N The Air Transport Association E Afr Com- ‘ i =:'“5 10 , to tum _ ‘Kw-an iiuaou on w'.|§g§.1'o.fiNn.|'l this woman in England will trade her baby for a house I'll go along with the deal." F . of Canada disagreed strongly and fired off a. protest to Trans- port Minlster Balcer. It said the Sunday before Labor Day is the second busiest day of the year for its member alrl es. The association asked that it be consulted in future on fun- ther Sky shield exercises. It had mly been called in ii! the RCAF and given the data- and time. Mr. Balcer has told tin: asso- ciation he is inclined to Ilrce with the need ‘for consultation beforehand has passed on this view to Defence Rarirness. The association said it recog- system that tin grounding ofmctvll aircraft Sunday will rte; I the public and the airlines. st yea:-c‘s Sky Shield mm held -ll civilian nights out of the air for 12 hours # : nouncement from Nkrumah’s of-» This opinion came from Rich- a . inni-peg. representing ti:-2_ Manitoba sub- section of the‘Association’s civil liberties section. The Manitoba group during the last year made a study of court rulings based on the hill since -it was p a s s e d by Parliament two 5 ago. Mr. Bowles said although it was too early to make specific recommendations on how‘ the can be improved. is evident. namely, people of Canada were prom- ised they didn’t get." "T ose principles which seemed to be espoused by the Canadian Bill of Rights were such that no House of Commons member wanted to be branded as being against the bill . . . There was a good deal of poli- tical sex appeal about the idea of guaranteeing human rights." paper to the civil liber- ties section at the association’: 44th annual meeting. Bowles reviewed cases related to particular sections. N0 DECISION YET section one. which says no person shall be deprived of cer- '< 30 D -1 Bill Of Rights Gets Criticism -lain fundamental rights "with- out due process of law.“ the pa- per concluded “there has been no decision where it has been effective either as a sword to enforce the rights of an indivi- dual or as a shield to give him protection." In what the profession con-1 siders one of the most sifnifi-‘ cant decisions on this uestion has priority over previous sta-2 tutes, Mr. Justice H. W. Davey! of the British Columbia Court‘ of Appeal rejected an appeal by . an Indian who was convicted of . possessing liquor off the reser-. vation. contrary in the Indian; > 2 e accused claimed he wasl denied equality before the law. but Mr Justice Davey ruled) that the Indian Act — a par-’ liamentary ena men ap- plied ahead of the bill. He; added that it remains to be! seen what effect the act has on 1 subordinate legislation such asl orders-in-council and others and-. bylaws of ministerial and ad-', ministrative bodies. n e port noted that decisions so far have supported the right of; found - ins in gambling a n (ii bawdy houses to be represented I Mr. by counsel while they are ques- v tioned. A section of the Crim-i inal Code has permitted found- ins to be examined under oath by judge without counsel 3 i being present. . and also on whether the hill 3 sitive side. the re- ‘- {HUG-E si-iovei ‘IS resren PARADISE. Ky. IAPI — A stripping shovel. 220 feet tall but operated as neatly as a sewing machine. uncovered its first seam of coal in the West Kentucky fields Wednes- day. The demonstration was ar- ranged by the manufacturer, Bucyrus - Erie, who did not give out the cost but said the shovel was more than two years in the making. It will be used by the Pea- . body Coal Company to help supply 65,000,000 tons of coal to the Tennessee Valley Au- tho‘rity steam plant being built near here. Transported from Milwau- kee on 250 railroad cars. the shovel was put together in a pit. then dug its way out. “We call it the world's largest self - propelled land machine," said G. Y. Ander- son, vice-president in charge of engineering for Bucyrus- rie. Some of its features: The scoop can be extended ‘ the length of an average city block. picking up 115 cubic yards of earth. Equipped with 50 motors. it uses enough electricity in one day to light a city of 12,000. A The lone operator, located in a cabin five storeys high, is carried to his perc elevator. His only controls are two hand and two fool levers. Anderson estimated the ma- chine's weight at 14.000.000 pounds, “or the equivalent of 4.500 automobiles." rs; nortlicast winds 18 PAGES Council Session Shelves Report Of Traffic Expert.- Marks Meeting In one of the most tiimultous, lsessions in years City Council} :yesterday in an emergencyi Imeeting almost literally threw; out the new traffic survey re-l port and the man who prepared it 1 Undertones of anger were ob- vious from the start of the ses- sion and they rapidly degenerat- ed into overtones of bitterness as charges of “inability to make a decision” and “bulldozing atti- were hurled across the chamber floor. La r the council by resolu- tion agreed to the resolution of the police committee that no ac- tion be taken until the complete report of the traffic situation is submitted to council. This has the effect of stopping any im- mediate steps in the direction 3Venu-s Missile §Put To Work . PASADENA. Calif. (APJ—Ra- dio commands ashed across 447,897 miles of space Wednes- day to put U.S. space Mariner II to work on four scientific projects as it sped toward V s. The 447 - pound instrument package was fired Monday from Cape Canaveral, Fla., on long. looping trajectory which, it is hoped, will take it within Classified Ads Valuable iln'FiridingBabies’ Homes BY MARION BRUCE Guardian-Patriot Staff Writer The Protestant Family Ser- vice Bureau is having unusual success"with a new metho has adopted for finding homes for babies in its care. The method: Classified ads. Bureau Executive Director Arthur G. Laws said yesterday the plan was tried here in The Guardian and The Evening Pa- riot as a result of its success in other centres. He says he believes placing the ad was “well worthwhile. It has been running at intervals for several weeks and the bur- eau has more than twice as many applications for adoptions than it can meet. 11 BABIES LEFT , A total of 25 parents have ap- plied to date as a result of the ad and the bureau has only I). babies to place. - “ he- people we are trying to r e a c h through this ad,” Mr. Laws said, "are the ones who have been thinking of adopting a child for years. but hesitate to take the final step of ‘consult- ing an agency. " He added that the agency re- ceived a number of_ unsuitable 7-: i replies from cranks and from couples with "weird motivations’ for desiring to adopt. He pointed out that parent’s motii ation is one of the m o st important criterion by which they are .:"reened. Other factors influencing ti.:- bureau's deci- sion include health and age of the parents. and it is the agen- cy’s policy to satisfy the demand of Island parents first. PROCESS EXPLAINED The entire process of adopting a child through the bureau. :1 (Continued on page 4 Col. 3) 10,000 miles of Venus in Decem- b . A signal transmitted from Johannesburg. South Afrlc a, Wednesday switched on instru- ments to perform these experl-. m l I 4 en s: 1. Measure changes in the in-f terplanetary magnetic field. i 2. Measure high-energy radi- stion in space 3. Measure density and distri- bution of cosmic 4. Measure intensity and vel- .ocity of low - energy protons from the sun. Scientists at the jet propul- sion laboratory here. where it was built, said that Mariner im- mediately responded to all four orders. It will take some time Several Suspects Held n N.B. Bank Robbery ST. ANDREWS. N.B. (CP) —; An RCMP spokesman here said Wednesday ‘night that have several suspects and are holding a car with Connecticut license plates in connection with the holdup earlier in the day t-he St. Andrews branch of the Bank of Nova Scotia. No a-nrests have been made. . Earlier Wednesday night RCMP Inspector H.E. Bloxham said from Fredericton that road blocks were being continued at! all entrances to this southern; New Brunswick resort town near 0 -v. ' . p°“°"’ ne United States border in of finding three men involved a in the robbery about noon Wed- sdziy. Inspector Bloxham said there has been no official estimate of the amount of money taken. However he said it was more than $7.000-an amount estimated by an unofficial source. men, one of them armed 'with a revolver, held ba-nik cus- tomers and employees at bay and took the money. A third man waited in a car outside the bank on the town square at the cor- ner of King and Water Streets. to evaluate the data it is send- ing. the scientists said. China, Hong Kongl ‘Frontier Sealed A HONG KONG (AP)—A bomb explosion in a baggage shed at a Communist Chinese customs station led to scaling off of the frontier between China and this] British Crown colony Wednes-; Y- i The blast was theseventh in] series opposite Hong Kong 3 and Portuguese Macao in recent =. weeks. e Ch nese havel blamed them on Nationalist Chl- '. nese agents.’ i W Sharp Debate of traffic control reform and giving the police committee m re time to consider all impli- cations of the report. COUNCIL ANNOYED Council members were plainly annoyed at what they consider- ed the traffic expert's attempt to smash all opposition to his plans and have his preliminary report accepted without change and implemented immediately. Laurie Mannell, the traffic au- thority called here from Oak- ville. Ont.. to assess the traffic situation in Charlottetown and file a report with his recommen- dations. was obviously upset be- cause ‘‘I came here to go to work and have had to sit around for 13 days waiting for you peo- ple to make up your minds." Later in the proceedings he‘ was jumped on by Mayor Gau- det who called his attention to the terms of reference of his employment. “You were to coma here to make a survey. We are, not going to be bulldozed into_ taking instant action." EMPLOYMENT TERMS He asked Coun. W. R. Mac- Neill. chairman of the police, committee. if the terms under. which Mr. Mannell was employ- ed included his remaining to im-_ plement his report. ’ “No, they did not." Mr. Mac- Neill stated. “We wanted a sun- ( Continued on page 2 Col 3) Woman Killed By Lightning ST. J01-lN’s. Nfld. (CP) —- A 45-year-old widow was killed and two people were injured by lightning Tuesday during a ma- jor electrical storm on the Bale erte Peninsula in northern Newfoundland. rs. Cecilia Matthews was electrocuted when htning struck an outside radio aerial at Brents Cove, about six miles east of Lascie and 22 miles west of Baie Verte. Her nine-year-old daughter Ste11a,one of 10 children, and a boarder. Michael Haas, were injured when lightning entered the room. The storm disrupted telephone communications, leaving the small community with only a telegraph line. RCMP official: at aie Verte could not be reached for information. n. Baie Verte resident said the storm was the worst in sev- eral years. sending b one: “ ‘g down” for nearly 10 minutes. followed by torrential rains. » It was not known if other damage was caused. There were no further reports of in- REDS MAKE PROPOSAL . voiucsxinair is INFLORAI. cuss .' , Mrs Donald Macheod. Vie- torla. is seen here with the _. - -.. , r_. ‘ti-‘uemuiusuuuuior .nuiiou.iru-iinimii. n Yorlr. in the flower ‘section of ‘Cl! Craoauil exhibition veeter- l in day. Mes. Mactisod was charge of floral exhibits. WASHINGTON mp )—Presi- , dent Kennedy said Wednesday!) the United States agrees with‘ the Soviet proposal for a Jan.‘ 1. 1963. deadline for a hall to nuclear testing. But he said the United States will not enter into , an agreement without provi- E sions to prevent cheating. Responding to the Soviet sug- 1 accord to end testing by next negotiations to reach a “work EARLY PAYMENT ASSISTS CARRIER Weekly collections by your Guardian carrier are ed to convenient service and to meet his school and vacation time schedule. He may begin collections on Thursday and nti uemtlin n in pay- ing him the first time he calls wil encourage him to prompt Elsrgollections before he can ‘racy the full profit of his is- New Year's Day. ‘I e n n e d y ha called for intensive and serious iprojiisions JFK Supports Plan lo End Bomb Tests able international agreement“ by that date. But the president stressed at his press conference that any new treaty must contain “rea- sonahle and adequate usur- ance“ to prevent a sneak viola- tion. He noted the Soviet Union year after secret preparations. ese enforcement that the Russians have been objecting to. JUSTICE BETIRES Kennedy opened the confer- fence with the announce [that Supreme Court Justice : Felix Frankfurter is retiring be- ‘cause of ill health and that iwill nominate Labor Secretaly Arthur Goldberg to the coat 1 vacancy. ‘ Frankfurter. 79. has been on ithe court since 1930. Goldbéfl Since both men are Jews, he complexion of religious tions among members of the high court will remain un- changed. - , Kennedy had high praise in both Frankfurter and Goldhfi. ‘but said the labor wouldbehardto He did not announce a succes- sor to Goldberg in its caflln. IOGXQ