If It's Good For The lsland The Guardian is For it one @itilfl’J15tIifl1I WEATHER Cloudy, a few s h o w e r s in afternoon; southerly winds 25. Low-high 12 and 32. Sunday: cloudy, a little colder. “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” v'61T._Lxxv1I. 1'~'l'6. 3 Authorised on second class Department. Ottawa. and in payment Ilnll M the Post Office d postage h onl- CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, SATURDAY, JANUARY 4, 1964. m «o 10 pleas THAN Mayor Oharlotte Whit‘.ml. a tempestuous political‘ figure frequently accused of getting: in the soup. was literally ill it Friday. The fiery mayor is seen ladling French-Canadian -"--¢«.~ .. MAYOR WHITTOIN rlliillis-our pea soup at the formal open- ing of the Chateau Lauricr hotel's new cafeteria. “l.‘l\u- berge." Miss Whitton is shown with Chateau Lauricr chief de cuisine Angelo Casagrande. The bilingual coffee shop has the appearance of an early Quebec inn with stone walls and rough-hewn beams. a massive circular firenlace. soup cauldrons. and old well and waitresses with low-cut blouses. (CP Wirepbotoi , ICEBREAKERS GIVE ASSISTANCE Huge Oil Tanker ls Due In Charlottetown Today l By STAN BOWLES Officers of the CCGS Tup- per. government icebreaker, said last night that ice condit- ions in ' Noithumlberland Strait and I-Iillsboro Day are rapidly worsening. and are ex- pected to bring all shipping to a complete ndstill for the winter in a few days. should Bank Robbed At Dartmouth By lone Bandit DARTMOUTH. N.S. tCPl~—All armed bandit held up a down- town branch of the Royal Bank of Canada here Friday and es- caped by car. A bank official said $3.200 was taken. It was the third bank holdup in the Halifax area in the last sixi months. . Vernon Currie. assistant man» ager of the bank. said: “A man came in about 1:15 p.m.. went to one of the tellers. showed her a revolver. and asked her for the till.“ Teller Mrs. Barbara .iohnson. 20. told police the gunman was slender. about 35. and wore a grey tweed overcoat. About 25 persons were in the bank at the time. Many did not know of the holdup until it was all over. The bank is situated on Commercial street. Police set up checkpoints on all highway exits from the Hai- ifax-Dartmouth area. another severe cold sna-p blan- ket the gulf area. The Tupper arrived at her‘ berth at the Marine Wha‘rf.! Charlottetown. shortly after 8:30 last night. after a I2-licur_ trip from Georgetown. wherei Friday morning she escorted a pulp freighter througih the ice surruonding that east Kings port. The officers reported after the ship rounded Capel Bear it was fairly clear saillillg until reaching a point off Little Sands. From tllen on the Tup-l per was frequently called upon,‘ to buck fairly heavy ice. n m-any areas it was tounll, that considerable ice-rafting had i taken place. in most areas to; a depth of three or four feet. The worst ice conditions are apparently off Point Prim and an the Hillsboro Bay. in iillc‘ lat-ter rafting in some that l spots was greater than four feet. 'l‘l\NKER ENLARGED Despite the adverse ice re- ports. one of the largest oill tankers. the Irving Oil Com-, pany's “Irvingstream" is ex- pcctcd to tie up at the Railwa . Wharf here. sometime between: 8 and 9 a.m. t . “Irvingbrook“ l the new 24.000 ton banker. in a recent remodelling has been lengthened from 550 feet 670 feet. by the addition of a section amidsllips and another on the bow. Her cau'ry*in_: capacity has now been i l 3 increased by more; Professo In Murder Case MONTREAL (CF) — Profes- sor Roland Haumont was freed Friday after the court cieared Iii of one capital murder charge and the Crown withdrew era. The 42-year-old foreign lan- guages professor at Harpur Col- lege in Binghamton. N.Y., had faced three capital murder charges arising from the deaths of his wife and two daughters-« in an explosion last Oct. 20. Judge Claude Wagner liber- ated him of the charge of mur- dering his wife Sheila. 43. In a decision based on a study of evi- dence presented during a pre- liminary hearing of the charge. Judge Wagner ruled there was insufficient grounds to send Prof. Haumont to trial. He evidence presented by the Crown was "circumstan- tial and raised suspicions. but on not lead this court to the irresistible conclusion that the accused could be the author of the crime charged to him." , “After having considered the proof in its entirety the court. which was guided solely by the law. the proof and my con- science has not the slightest hes- itation in declaring that the evi- donco does not constitute mm. cioatproof to permit me to send ting accused to trki,ol." Du town prosecu r Jacques ~ use the announced the with- r Freed than two-million gallon tot ‘3.000,000. ; The I-rvingstrcam. left Syd- ll13'y. N.S.. where she had dis- charged nearly two million gai- lon to lighten the w. at about 1 p.m. Friday escorted by the icebrealleer CCGS John A. Mac- onal . The Macdonald. one of the largest of the coast guard ser- vice. will bring the Irving- stream. as far as the entrance ‘ of Hll'llSbO2I‘-0 Bay. ’ t-he larger ship being unable to enter Charlottetown harbor, the «Continued on page 3 col. 5i island Airman Gets AFC OTTAWA <CPJ—Flying Offi- icer Donald 1-‘. Parker, 24-year- old it a vi g a to r from Kelly‘s Cross, P.E.I., has been awarded the air force cross for “talking down" his seriously - ii‘. pilot l RCAF headquarters ‘Parker ‘ pletely unexpected situation and succ ' ' said though (he) knew that a land- ing attempt would be extremely hazardous." at Chatham, N.B.. was a flight April 10 when he noted that his pilot “was unable to perform even the simplest tasks without excessive pre-thought." The pilot, who was not identi- fied, is to take extensive medi- other cause was to bl Parker “talk e d mg in less than ideal weather‘ conditions. The pilot collapsed ficer shut off helped get the pilot out. His ci-— ‘ “Throughout a dangerous sit- uation . . . t e demonstrated exceptional courage, devotion to duty and loyalty to his pilot in hazarding his own life when he might have ejected from the aircraft. is cool and skilfui direc- ‘pilot’s severely limited ability. was instrumental in saving both their ' s and a valuable air- craft." F0 Parker is the son of Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Parker of North Wiitsllire P.E.l.. and joined the RCAF in 1958. l INSIDE TODAY . Announcements. notice it Births. deaths . . . . .. . .. 9 Classified . . . . . . 8. 9 Editorials 4 Finance. markets . . . . .. 9 Sport . , . . . . . . . . . 10 9 Prince County Kings. Queens. City . . . . .. 5 Summerside . Women's Public Servants Top_ Echelon Given Increase In Salaries By DON HANRIGHT OTTAWA tCP)——-The top ech- elon of federal public servants -deputy ministers, the chiefs of staff and the heads of the RCMP and various boards and agen- lcies—have been given saiary in- creases of up to $5,000 a year. But the biggest beneficiary of them all is J. Alphonse Ouimet. 5' 55-year-old president of the Ca- nadian Broadcasting Corpora- tion. who had his salary doub- led to $40,000 yearly. His salary had been frozen at $20,000 an- nually since 1954 The increases. which had trickled out of the prime minis- ter's office starting Thursday. were released in a batch late Friday. They were approved by the cabinet on Dec. 20—the day before Parliament was prora- . most cases are retroactive to last Dec. 1. RAISE FOR MCNAMARA included in Friday's list was Nel McNamara. chief com- missioner of the Canadian listed at 827.500 and while the ‘previous figure was not imme- diately available. sources said it meant a sizable increase. Also listed at $27,500 was D.F. Bowie. president and general manager of C a n a la n Over- seas Telecommunications Cor- -poration. One notch down at $27,000 a year are the three men re- garded as the most senior civil servants-—Deputy Finance Min- is r R. B. Bryce; R. Gordon Robertson. cabinet secretary; and Norman Robertson. under- secretary of state for external affairs. Grouped at $25,000 a year are the deputy ministers of agricul- ture. industry. justice. defence. works, trade. transport, labor. and revenue as well as the president of the National Re- search Council. Dr. B. G. Bal- lard. and the head of the Civil Service Commission. R. G. Mac- ‘ll. , A’.so listed at $25.000—a raise iof S4000 year—i.= Air Chief . a wheat board. His new salary is ‘ Marshal Frank R. Miller. chair- f man of the chiefs of staf. ,drawa’. of two charges arising NOMINATIONS close SOON from the deaths of Pro. .mont‘s daughters. Nicol , A cout s u . said the lcharges could be revived if new ! levidence comes _ light. He ‘said the law preventing the try-l ling of a person twice on thel 'sa e murder charge applied , only at the trial stage. if a man i was tried on a murder chargei land acquitted by a jury he could ; lnot be charged and tried again I lfor the same crime. _ _ j , Prof. Haumont put his head in ‘ ‘his hands and sobbecl whenl Judge Wagner read his five-l page written judgment. He sat in the wheel-chair he has used since the explosion in his West- end Montreal home. His Sou. Mare. 13. was aiso wounded in the blast. Prof. Haumont was released immediately after reading of the judgment without the nor- mal formality of first proceed- ing to jail where the liberation normally takes place. reporters he would feast the Haumoot would give no t Hau- .‘ l 9 R0‘ ' iland, l7, and Leslie Catherine, lCOULD BE REVIVED Prove To Be Woman? All four previous winners of the Islander of the Year award have en men. but this year the pos- sibility looms that the winner might well be a woman for the first time. Women as well as men are eligible for the award for according to the term of reference the panel of three judges will follow, senault, will join John the award will go to "that man or woman who during 1963 has used the best means available to serve a worthy Island purpose". Underlining the fact that women are eligible for the award has been the appointment of a woman to the board of judges for the first time this year. Provincial Red Cross Commissioner Ipbigenie Ar- S. Wright of Summerside and Melvin J. McQuaid in making the final selection. by Deadline for all letters iextended interview to reporters toiiowln his liberation. l t Readers can help influence the judges‘ choice sending letters of nomination outlining reasons why particular individuals should be considered. is noon of Wednesday. Jan. They should be sent to the Islander of the Year Editor. The Evening Patriot, Charlottetown. Queen's Visit To Province ls Possibility For This Year F0 Parker, with 416 squadron ‘I _i(3:30 a.m. A T iguards in renaissance uniforms. ‘designed by Michelangelo stood lready to salute the 66-year-old ipontiff on his departure. l cal tests to determine wh.-ither .‘R0m9'5 modemlsilc 8 l l‘ P 0 I‘ {- equipment malfunction or some lelghl Vallcall 5* 9 “ d 3 T m t? 5 tation reads‘ , ,tion. which made full use of the’. me a com? both savmg his ithe jet age today to send Pope _ pilot and their aircraft . . . Hui a.l ame. _ But the account says that F0 lime!‘ _ H the pilot -].Pope to the land where Christ through the approach and land- i1W9d lChristian history the Vatican or- oh the runway and the flying of. l-ganized for the Pope a farewell Pope Paul 0pensl‘.l’l'3';i".l’.l.'.‘.‘.. ’ Ottawa Considers I Issuing Invitation Pi I g a T I a ‘ MIDDLE MUSQUODOBOIT. By KEN KELLY -leaders to decide on financing N.S. lCPl—Two cows which’ pasture last October have fi- VATICAN CITY lAPl —- The - OTTAWA lCPl — The Cana- and plans for the 1967 world's nally come into the barn Farmer Hu gb Kaulback tried everything he knew to; get. the cows to come home. ' All -vvas in readiness hours in‘ advance of the 3.500-mile pil- grimage to the Holy Land and back. refused to leave their summer Vatican blends tradition with off on an unprecedented :H01y Land phgrimage_ 3 mhe_ pop‘, Paurs decision tn travel He even put tranquiiizing diangovernment is considering fair at Montreal. ‘Stone in Roman Catholic his_ was 3 giant Step forward rm. drugs in bay for the cows to _lnvltlng the’ Queen to be present He wasn't sure whether he - Roman ,_.at_h0h-cism. He Said 0"‘ but crows devoured and at ceremonies leading up to the would attend himself but Fi- scattered them. 00th anniversary of Canadian nance Minister Gordon would. They were finally caught in iConfederation. . r earson said Ottawa was rope snares and taken into the . Prime Minister Pearson said committed by the former Con- bam..thinne;— but warmer. at a press conference Friday servative government to a grant ‘that such an invitation is under of $20,000,000 to the world fair ‘consideration but he could say corporation and also to guaran- no more than that at the mo- teeing with Quebec corporation men. _ borrowings to finance the fair. i If the Queen did come to Can- He said Opposition Iaader iada. it woul be in connection Diefenbaker had neglected in ry. Takeoff time was 8:30 a.m.‘New Year's Day that be ex-’ pected his pilgrimage to have tremendous impact for years to‘ me. Here at the ‘Vatican. Swiss (1 0 lealiy. the Roman Catholic ruler looked at his journey as ‘more than just a first papal plane trip or a first papal pil- Controversy lgrimage to the Holy Land. He. , Develops Sixteen miles to the west. at ‘ ,announced it as part of his ef- . . . . , _ guarded a giant new let alr- .fort to further the cause o f‘“”‘ °°‘“°"’.“"1 °°"""”“‘°“‘:"‘°'.“‘°“ “"5 "”*“°" 0‘ guaran- Chartered to Carry the iclmstian unity and World peace‘ -next fall marking the round of teemg ,_.0,.pm.amm borrowings in conferences at Charlottetown 3 stating recently the federal com- and Quebec in 1364 which led mltment had been se[ at 320,. to the federal union of Canada. 000,000. |CPl _l Pearson's press confer-‘ The agreement. he empha. ience followed a cabinet meet- ‘sized. was entered mm b Mr, . I ito renew his church in the 20th J A I h h .century. l '1 01' i l5 MW 0 iiplel‘ in His trip dramatizes the new . I face the Roman Catholic church i SAINT JOHN‘ N3‘ mas been Seeking to present to Controversy over the proposed th . ‘ d M13‘ recalled centuries of tmdh _the world sin P J h tidal power development in Pas- ling at which other aspects of Di.ef_enbal'<er's Conservative ad. 9 engmeg an -on_ Xxm ordered cean ggeggiorfi: samaquoddy Bay. which lies be- 3 the centennial celebrations were mlms_tr_atlon Jan. 18. . . Standing out were the 19th mento"~an updating ~ by the ‘tween New nmswlc 3 "d Edlscusseli Omclals 0f the three 80Vl‘l'|l- :—Maine. continued Friday with al said arrangements are .ments involved woutd meet 3 lCanadian senator and publisher ; being made for a meeting along ‘next 'i‘uesda_v. This would be taking opposing views. zfederal. Quebec and Montreal followed by a meeting of poll- Liberal Senator A. Neil Me-l fical leaders at which he hoped Lean 0 New Brunswick said! the necessary decisions on fi- century uniforms of the Band of the Pahatlne Guard and ‘the More trips abroad. and blue. yellow and red - striped .mor n church policy. were garb with breastplates and hel- likely to follow this pilgrimage‘ mets of the Swiss guards. v Pope John's successor. ‘ ‘Vatican ecumenical council. l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l i the project “would be a com-. flancing and plans t id be ‘plete waste of public funds." In ‘ “Du , I la statement issue h ~ Senator Another centennial b -t Me-Lean said "only a handful of which came before cablhsei lfés fpet-ttllators. f>dI‘olr)neotefrts rand cap-j the proposal for federal parti- ‘. rac ors"wou nel rom e‘ WENA1-CHEE_ wash (Ap. cipation in a $6,000,000 or gproiecf. . _ i imagine stalking through the 57-00090" Performing arts cen- I Fredericton. p u hi I sher; woods‘ your rifle |.eady_ your .tre in the national capital. Michael Wardell of the Gleaner} eves ale" your ears twitch -UNDER DISC” commented on the senator's ‘ ' ‘ 55”“ inf! for the slightest Sound ~— Mr. Pearson said the matter and having a deer walk up {now is under discussion between and nuzzle your trouser leg? lthe National Capital Commis- That's what happened to ‘sion, the city of Ottawa and Robert Conner of Wenatchee ‘sponsors of the scheme. The and his sons. Boh. Jr., and .cost estimate was exclusive of hn. ‘the land. I s I I S statement. saying “the McLean brothers alone oppose the U.S.I Passamaqu dd project." Hei . . was referring to Senator Me-: !(\xRN0VEI\l’ _Khrushchev took the opportu- ‘Leah and his h,~othe,._ 13,5; . : — . ew ear .nlty to rev1ew.one by one all lA_ M_ A, McLea,,_ Liberai mem_: Peace Offensive W35 launched cases where disputed lel.'l‘ll0l'ylber of parliament for char.‘ by Premier Khrushchev Friday ‘is held by countries other than lhme - ~ -. w - ‘ . - _ I _ Wihll Ga fnote Pilbllslied Friday members of the Soviet bloc. He} The men oh.“ 3- 1a._.£_,ef ca mg olha gobal treaty re-omitted mentioning tenltorlesihemng fishing operahhh based nouncmg t_e use of force to set- heid_ by Communist nations. .Il'l~ fat Black-5 Harbor. hear the l U9 l9I‘I‘|_l<_>F13l disputes. .cIudlng the Soviet Union, which «mouth of the bay Mr. Pearson said preparations our --eyes.” said Conner. “We 38150 are being made for his all had guns but he was,” lvisits later this month to Paris an-aid, He walked up and i o confer with President de started n i b bljng at Boys vGaulle and to Washington a few “We could hardly believe. F o reign Office ;belonged to others before thel . ,» trousers!" days later for talks with Presi- spokesman said there appeared «second World War. 13 ‘$33: ';:.;{,l}, The men fed the deer some Td€‘."F Johnson External Affairs to be little new in Khrushchev's‘ 0 make certain he didn't in- lhghed in the New York Times; salt and candy. Then they lM""5‘9,r Mam" W01-lld accom- PFODOSBIS. but that they are tend to have the latter caseslwihich Mr wards]; maid con.‘ couldn't get rid of him. Ra- ll’a"Y him i0 Palis- being studied carefully. The reviewed. he said countries seek- gained ihhccun-,cie5_ He pm-’ ther than let him fall prey to H9 1‘°V935ed that 3 day 0|‘ 1W0 before President Johnson re- spokesman said the government fing changes were walking into , ted U9 .jec ._. congressional legis- is interested in discover-lwar hunters, the Conners decided ml ‘ 0 bring him home until the .tested the story in a letter ;the Times. mg ‘vllether the St°Vie.t leaderlls :4 Senator McLean. in his state-l hunting season closed. lgghig; filth llclngbelrhimports :9 Er°p°.5mg any .ex.ens‘°".°r .e 3' P am. said "some United States Getting the deer into their it I h ‘ ’ ' ° "50" ‘m l “ °ra“°" °f e.x1Sm‘g ‘.’bhga“°“S earson ans department of the inferior oifi- car was no pro lem. l efp “"9" . under the United Nations char. . ll" - . . . I thought this was the sort. ,clals want to use Quoddy to Just climbed in after . ten ‘Sunday Speech rbreak the New England private me." said Bob Jr. ‘Of matter °" W.h'°h I 5h” M In Paris. diplomatic circles. The deer is so friendly he l:'_glS'i1gents?.eEi‘l;r “1;'°°“-V l".d“"° ‘ . . earson sal . OTTAWA tCP>—Prime Minis- ter Pearson will discuss the lforeign capital and should not « lbe used as a tool to attack U.S. J l private capital." said the main part of the Soviet ro os ls lread' ‘ ' ‘ 3, 3.9 aUN achal.[2.l._ls mmamed prospects for 1964 in a 30-min- The, United states reacted ute radio and television net- coohy and Scephcahm “work appearance Sunday. his of- The state department flce said Friday night. (3 a I 1 ed I(vhru5hchev'5 package Ml‘. Pearson \vill deliver an proposal disappointing. The de. eight-minute statement and then partment promised c 3 re tut, be interviewed by Claude Ryan. l study, however, to determine 'an editorial writer with the 0 g . from 12-fool waves cut visibility-Lesage whether any constructive sleps ‘Montreal French - language: Friday in the search for ni e;F S k. can be devemped {mm the note -glfarles Lynch. Ottawa bureau E went down in the Pacific Thurs-l n w s p a p e r Le l)evolr. and . men whose military cargo plane to ease world tensions. ' The note, covering 21 pages_ lchief for Southam news serv-lday. out of gas. , V ‘ ‘ led to speculation among diplo- il'C€S- Fresh distress signals. pre-‘ QUEBEC ‘(/P‘ l ower companies. Canada needs‘ l poses a problem. ' How are the Conners going to slip away when they turn the friendly little fellow loose up in Fairview Canyon? The legislation would have re- guired a country-of-origin mark- ‘in on every piece of sawn lum- .ber imported into the U.S. and would have affected $325.000.000 worth of Canadian exports. Downed Aircbcitrl Still Not Found HONOLULU (AP |—Salt spray, Premierlcnme from French - Canadian iJean Lesage has received sug-‘ groups outside the province. mats as to just wnat Khru-..h-‘ The broadcast Wm he (harried l sumably from an area 750 miles _ chev sought to accom- jon the CBC radio network atiwest of Hawaii. renewed hopes 395“°"5 ‘hat _“9 E" 0" 3 “"°5_3'- l_‘7"9l‘_ Sim‘? hf’ befame Pl‘!- plish. international agreements .7230 pm. EST. and on the cac ‘, that some survivors of the C*'*"ad3 5°°“l"“F “W l" explain mi" '" 1950- Mr Lesaze ha.- ” , ditched C_1_-;_4 glnhemasier we,-cl Q_uebec.'s position in the current; accepted invitations to speak in ion a raft and using a hand-’ disc“-S510" .cranked radio transmitter. i3"d already exist in the United Na- . television network at 10 p.m. tions charter against use of ‘is being made available also to force to settle disputes. ‘private stations. over Confederation] many parts of the country and the province's fiscal de- abroad. His talks have gener- ly been devoted to Quebec‘; _. But at the moment the 51- problems. federal-provincial re- ‘year-old premier isn't giving lations and relations between " close attention to the sugges-‘French and English Canada. 'tions. a source disclosed Fri-‘ In so doing. he continued a day. it was unlikely he would‘ break with recent tradition. The make any such trip in the near late premier Maurice Duplessis future. ‘never accepted speaking en- The suggestions have come gagemenls outside Quebec and from several sources. none o his successor. Paul Sauve. died , ,them within the Liberal party.| before he was able to. Antonio 'the informant said. One came‘ Barrette broke with recent. prec- .. from an Ottawa friend of Mr.‘ odent when he spoke in Toronto ' Lesage. another from an llniden-.3 during his five-month tenure of tified American. Several had office in 1960. Goldwater Will Seek iRepublicanNomination " ,_ ‘ 2 . . WASHINGTON IA?) Tile » _ . [Republican presidential frce~for cause of the principles in which 2 all finally emerged in full-blown I believe. and because i am battle Friday as Senator Barry convinced that millions of Amer- Goldwater jumped into the fray icans share my beliefs in these ' and Governor Nelson Rocke- Principles." feller reopened to campaign in CHALLI-‘.N(‘.l-I T0 ill-IBATI-I , New Hampshire. Rockefeller welcomed (‘mirt- I Another on the list of Repub- water into the race with a trio- llican potentials. Henry Cabot gram and challenged him to de- Lodge. sent word from South bate the issues. Goldwater said Viet Nam that "frankly. I am he saw no reason for fellow Re- .not a candidate" for the Novem- publicans to hold such a de- lber presidential election. Never- bate. ltheless. a draft movement was As the i mands on Ottawa. "i have decided to do this he- .\ri7.onan announced .3" 3 ' ‘l au nch,ed by supporters in his plans. Rockefeller returned Lodge's home state. !Viassa- to his New Hampshire cam- SLALOM wmuea CONGRATULATED °h '" Kennedys assassini- 22. That state holds use-tts. xoldwater made the long-an- President ticipated announcement that he ltion Nov. Jean‘ Saubert. rlgh t. of Friday. With Miss Saubert Miaa Saubert. 21. is a memberlwna, gggk thg Republican p|'esi- ‘the first presidential primary III Lakeview. 0re.. is congratu- are Linda Me left. of of the U.S. Olympic ski team _denml nomination at . mgsgivg «the us, March 10 iatod by other competitors lf- Bishop. Calif. who too thlfil and a junior If Oregon State press conference at his hill.top The primaries are local party place. and Marielle Golschel University. of Franco who came in ace fer winning the first interns- home overlooking Phoenix. Ariz. votes to indicate candidate pre- tlonai Oberstaufen slalom recs ‘ l e ‘AP Wirepboto) the sold: for nice. - -_4__—j - ‘hf! vrs.\...a.a.~s<a~_:-3: