The Guardr ll it's Good For the island an is ‘For it "Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” «l - . T .,- . ._,.._.. Three-year-old Rhonda Nicholson looks hard at her imgernails while Dad tries not to '-ok at damage caused By GERRY McNEll. QUEBEC tCP)-J1’-he Quebec cabinet — which has the final word -- is among the new ma- lor bodies in the province that has not yetistated its position on nationalization of private power companies. Resources Minister Rene Le- vesque. in charge of hydro re- sources. is reported impatient with any delay in carrying through nationalization. . Levesque. whose consis- tent theme for two years has been the necessity of state con- l‘ trol of electricity. has built up strong public support for his ents ’ argum . However. rigid opposition ap- parently has come from other government members. who feel the inv e ceded to na- tionalize would cramp Quebec's borrowing power and mean a thinner budget for other depart- ts men . LEADS OPPOSITION Meanwhile. Shawinigan Water and Power Company. the major company involved. has been ral- lying and distributing. its arguments against nationali- nation. Informed sources say an out campaign designed to bring about a government decision on the matter will begin when Mr. Levesque from vacation at I "Levesque of having this thing hangmoa a limb." says government toltakc a posi- fion. He's afraid the issue will. be confused by Shawinlgan." . In the Gaspe and Abitibi re- liona. where electricity is costly an services outm . munici- palities am even some Cham- bers’ of Commerce have urged nationalisation. Ajlnlons. nstionalist groups and . Kennedy's Attendance Is Sought For Opening 5 ronrnsno. Me. (AP)—-Sum- chairman of VOL. LXXV. NO. 176 Anthos-lad as 5 IS HE-R FIRST CRASH I when Rhonda. alone in car. re leascd handbrake and smashed I into photographer Ken 0rr's ‘ sports car in Vancouver. Orr promised Rhonda this pictor- ; ial wuvcnir of her first smash- ? ltP- (CF Photo) WCabinet Stand ls Awaited On Power Nationalization powerful bodies such as the icy on 274.000-member St. Jean Bap- tiste Society hsve come out pub- licly for state control. Shawinigan I The Union Nationals, opposlgy 17 Ilion‘s last word on the subject ‘electricity. published in June a .'was_ to as . Levesque last pamphlet outlining its April 25 when government pol- ?mcnts against state control. the subject would be made clear. Mr. Levesque re- plied "in due time." owns 0 DUTIES BEGIN AUG. 1 I United Fund Director Arrives In Province I Jack Ambler. recently appoin- ' I led executive - director of Prince Edward Island's United F u n d which was organized early in the year. has arrived in Char- lottetown from Moose Jaw with his wife and children to take up permanent residence. As full time director of th e United Fund of P.E.I.. Mr. Am- tbler ‘I begin his duties on ‘August 1. A permanent office is being set up in Charlottetown. from which the activities of the fund organization will be direc- lied by Mr. Ambler in co-opera- . tion with the board ‘of directors I d various committees repre-* Lsentative of the whole Island. ‘ A spokesman for the board of I directors said: “Mr. AmhlerI comes highly recommended. as I one admirably fitted by natur-I al gifts and practical training. I to give leadership to the prov- ince's first venture~tn a cooper- alive fund-raising effort". He was born and educated in England: He served withr th e RAF from 1941 to 1940 as a pil- JACK AMBLIR at with transport command in Europe and the Far East. Ho graduated from 32 SFTS Moose Jaw in 1943. He has been a mem- of Moose Jaw. RCAF Assoc- ia ion since 1951 and served as treasurer. dlr tor of the local Wing. provincial president and Imember of the nationalcouncll. Active in many phases of Air Cadet work he was promoted to commanding officer of No. Moose Jaw. RCAC Squadron in v 51 C 3 O 1961 WIDE EXPERIENCE - Mr. Ambler has had a wide experience in community and service fund raising work and tainly shall do so." he added. I was secretary of the former The bridge is scheduled to be ....‘.‘.’;‘,““...°‘:: m...‘;’..."‘..':,..‘.’:,"..““‘.:'..°"""""- CHARLo'1'rE'mw1v, CANADA. SATURDAY, JULY 23, 1962. Stolen Art Recovered In London LONDON iIteuters)—Scotland Yard s‘olved the biggest art theft in British history Friday recovering 35 stolen paint- ings worth $1,120,000. The undamaged paintings- mostly French moderns—-were found in s 8 am. raid on a house in the Plaistow district of East London. Scotland Yard detectives. ap- parently acting on lip. rested two men in pajamas and charged them with receiving the paintings. The tlfied as John David Terry, 30, a wholesaler. and William Bed- ford,-30, unemployed. The paintings. which included works by Picasso. Ren oir, Monet and Toulouse - Lautrec, ll‘- whr @unrolimr ~%°u W E A T H E R Mostly sunny, few clouds, slight chance of shower in afternoon; west winds. Low- high at Ch’town 53 and 70. 14 Pscifs C.F. Burke Presents Plane To Nat. Aviation Museum I Army Patrols Try I men were iden-I To Stop Fighting 4 3! ANDREW BOROWIEC Iunexplained circumstances dur-I ALGIERS (AP) —- Frenching the ; army P3“'°13 "appeared in the Paris government s on re es. of Algiers Friday as had announced that the French feverish agitation to prevent Army would intervene only to further bloodshed submerged protect endangered Frenchmen talk of civil war. and their property. on the sidelines since Algeria won independence July 3. the CALL FOR TEACE . French soldiers moved out afoot Facmn 5”“ °pl’°5°d lacm“ I were stolen July 11 from the 0'1-lana Gallery in London's fashionable Me yfa i r district by thieves who forced a rear door late at night after climb- ing over rooftops. ropcans by what Algiers police: headquarters called “uncon- = trolled Moslem elements" com- . pllcatcd the Algerian pict.urc..‘ Six Europeans disappeared in‘ I I I I I oroauer:ecnI . I nounccd June 24 to I . 5 with Mrs. Moose Jaw Community Chest for °' "3 Ffllmll 9- lIde(““ted Aug : ' I a, two years. He was appointed to '|‘m°1'“l 5'30‘ NW0” CW‘ manor 6;“ if h 1: the position of secretary manag- lznlitlh. N3» 3 I-uhec. Me-.I$d "I ° mi Kggmy ,3 (Continued on Page a col. 1) that the of the emonyl onslderlnz {airing off the Inlsht hslcbaagcd tocfearcilltsta coast a fglw gay: ' WHERE-TO-FIND-l‘l E‘ ‘l”“"'“ W P"“ld°“‘ If“ mm‘ hi; T‘ ewe". rack‘ Aanooaccmcats. notices . 1! I '.!“'“V- -I ,0, A ., anon. deaths. er-2.. .. a. is We WON" VQTY much mil‘ to Illlad ll‘ 0 c'...u-‘ed "H '2' '3 have President Kennedy sttt-.nd_ Pike. who served on the so “mm mmlm . u the dgduuu.'f Pllse lntd the‘Icu.i-ltles and Exchange Commls- r.mm"“hn" ' " H I ' ion in the Roosevelt adminis- ' “H van‘ mnNuWi:)d: :ration and was later a member w°m°'-'' "” """ " 7 Me. lflss.. whats hols Ittend- of the Atomic an ‘hf’ " ' hgaeouquecoqtbsi al lion. saldhe would conforwith Mm“... " .. Ac-d-wo.Hd-em °mml"°° '°°'"“°" "4 5°"" . . . . . .. is "If 03'3" ‘N ‘M9 W Edmlmd 5' M“'kl° mun‘ sommcrslds I to at we the president’: am we to we W! cm" int... c... s schsduy without sv- be done about having behind!‘ dates she's vs ssr- , . Reserves Grow, Dollar Holds Firm scribed as By ALAN DONNELLY I An indication of what has OTTAWA tCPl-—Finance UP.-T been happgniljg fin‘-_e [5 the. partment officials. from fi- drop of $?39.000.000 in govern-I MHCE Mlfllsl-9!‘ Fl! mln ll 011 ment cash during the two weeks? own. are breathing easier up to rust wednesday, I these days with Canada's for- (continued on page 3, cot 4) I c. F. BURKE BY FARMER TISSINGTON Capital Bureau of The Guardian OTTAWA — C. F. Burke, Man- aging director of Maritime Cenv tral Airway s, Charlottetown, has presented a Cirrus Moth plane to the National Aviation Museum in Ottawa. The plane. a fore-runner of the Tiger Moth. which was used extensively as a trainer early in World War 'l‘wo, was built Iby the De llavilland Company and was known as 60. zid who am I eign exchange reserves grow-; ing once again and the dollar holding firm on exchange mar- k. ets. Mr. Fleming broke his cus-I tomary silence on the subject‘ Friday. I "We’re well pleased with; the results that have been; achieved by the emergency] program." he said in a briefI comment. I The minister and the depart-; ment are keeping mum about‘ the exact state of the exchange WASHINGTON (AP)-—Presi-I dent Kennedy. nearing a finalg d " ' U.S. t tb reserves at this mint. utue ..°.°.§§‘.’.'.'..';'Li‘ié’.i".‘§. U.s. .';’i..n‘i.'3I 31°" um‘ " “‘°"”‘ 3fl-e‘'-~ '3 ament ‘delegate. Arthur —H.I ‘"5l°"“y l”'°3""" ‘"5 "5’ Dean. from Geneva Friday for‘ em ‘ hours with top advisers con-I h°‘“’y d”“" M the exchange cerned with disarmament mat-I fund‘ only m°““‘ ' °"d figure” I lers to assess how U.S. test had‘ ‘re made Wbnc’ and me. ']“!yIpolicy should be modified in 31 3l"‘““‘ °f the '°s°"V"‘s "5 9‘ ‘view of recent scientific find- pecled "’ I” a““°“"°°d at lhelings that underground nuclear ""1 °f “ext We°k' I blasts can be detected more eas-" HIT LOW POINT Iily than previously thought. it's known that the reserves; The group included Vice-Pre- increased by $53.000.000 fromIsident Johnson; State Secretary commercial transactions in the Rusk; Defence Secretary Mc-I. last week of June. after hitting Namara; the Atomic En-zrgyi the critically low point of Commission chairman. GlennI .ll00.00ll. Seaborg; the disarmament dlr-I 1 Education Conference I lem Has Ceased Activities . OTTAWA. iCP) —- The Cans-I Not much. Miss Robins indi-I, dian Conference on EducationIcated. As A nxatioiiial mstitutiltlil is no more. ‘it ha run ea ong into I After four years as an instl-I constitutional provincial juris- ’ tution of teachers and others diction in education. with per- who managed—lf nothing else— haps a tendency to stay out of to drum up‘ more public interest these fields. ln education. the conference has folded with the departure of its leadership trio. one of them. Carrie Robins.‘ former seventh - grade school-ii menu from Saskatoon, cleaned out the CCE office here Friday: and prepared to head to Metz, France, where she will help run schools for Canadian service- men's youngsters. Two others. Kurt Swinton of Toronto who is an executive of the Encyclopedia Britannica of Canada. Max swerdlow who directs educatir-. for the Canadian Labor Congress. also have bowed out. No one stepped up to replace them. This. plus financial trou- bles. led to the death of an or- ganization that had been set up on a continuing basis after a big Toronto conference in not and came tumbling down after the even bigger Montreal fol- low-up this spring. What did the CCE accom- lish? Miss Robins. 35 years a teacher. took a break from ‘its’ many intangibles.” one of them was what she do- '6 § bly the most social development ads In the last four ears. "Certainly there is A greater interest in education among the . ; general pu genuine Inter» " est. not run -. abs 9- Thsy're we're not do- Six happy 4-}! Club girls are shown here after they had been selected yesterday from the annual training session in education in ans . hut what did the actual con- ferences achieve in the line of curricula. leaching standards. liaaan‘ ~ * Final Decision |sNear On U.S. lest Ban iermls I Ol . I Russia. 3*},- and in halftracks that mounted °."!°“.5 ‘he '“g°"““ “Pd °°"' - w I , C , Continued kidnapping of E“ unity were loud in the land. Po-.' litical and trade organizations joined in the appeals. Mohammcd Ya . nounccd Monday he was quit- ting as information minister. presented an optimistic sum-‘ mary on flying to Paris on an undisclosed mission: 1 "Our people demand national. a unity as rapidly as possible. WcI are on the way to a settlementj O I of our problems. Discussions. if not negotia-I . tions. were under way here be— PQNDON 'R°‘{i"-'75‘ “ P“m° tween representatives of moder-.M"'“5l°" Ma°m_ln8I‘ 3PP°3l“-'_d ate Premier Ben Youssef Ben l°d_a¥ l0. he llghlllli ft" ‘"5 l(hcdda's provisional govern- l’°ht'c3l Ill‘ ment and the right-hand man The British leader's political of dissident Deputy Premier fortunes sank this week to the Ahmed Ben Bella. claimant to point where speculation began power in earnest over the possibility of his resignation. I-iis difficulties were con- sidered to have been only tem- ;porarily relieved by a vote of confidence Thursday from con- servative MPs in the House of ‘Commons. The vote was viewed as being far short. of an accurate reflec- tion of the temper of the rank- _and-file Conservative MPs to- ward their chief. For many Conservatives. the ole was merely a party ' actor. William C. Foster‘; and the chairman of the joint chiefs E‘ O of staff. Ly-man Lemmtzer. I . SAFEGUARDS NECESSARY ;move in the face of a challenge -may we“ reported In be In from the opposition Labor party gem-_.,3y agreement mat; and the up-and-coming Liberals. test ban treaty with the Soviet Union still must in- P[1'3A:I SJNKIOPULAE ,h (, n_ ciude scientifically valid safe-I e I." C Scenfis ~ 9 0 guards against cheating. s.erva Wes Iwerc t S lglwmg-"pal" 2. The new scientific data can ‘ “cm”; cootneiss d°B -£39m; lino’ allow a scaling down of previ-flew pans -" dc-fir am u ous U.S. terms for control posts’ Spemnomtlq lh-[cu 185' W g A and on-site inspections in the Memos ,m- tlsdp 3': -am soviet union. .proposa in ro uce in e some presidential advisersiliouse of ‘Commons Thursday were said ,0 have suggested for a National Incomes Com- that the United States could go} all the Way in abandoning its‘ earlier insistence on interna- tional manning of proposed con- or listening posts inside June's Deficit S jls $72 Million A federal IMPROVED EQUIPMENT These advisers suggested re- OTTAWA t(‘.PI liancr‘ on a strengthened s.vs- ‘budgetary deficit. of s72.7oo.ooot . ‘ll ‘lf-‘lemon Sl8ti0l1S "Ill-Efor June was reported Friday side Russia plus improved list-Inight by Finance Minister efllnl-I £188!‘ at Russian-mannedIFleming in a statement showing posts and on-the-spot inspec- Itax revenues had slipped and lions inside Russia of susplcl-Iexpenditures risen from year- ous events. ’ tea;-lier 1 _ The issue is important at the. The minister‘: regular 17-nation Geneva disarmamenttmonthly treasury report showed conference. The eight neutral a $22,000.000 surplus for the first countries there have proposed three months of the current fis- an anti-cheating system based cal year as the red ink in June on D0 blotted out much of a surplus nationally - manned control Sis. accumulated in April and May. \ a visit to the Royal Winter l-‘air. Left to right they are. Audrey Bolger. Hunter River; Joyce Lowt wall. Yvonne Gallant. Souris; Carol here for Garment Club girls. Their selection entitles them to a trip to National 4-H Club week in Toronto in November. and the experience will include lmission to oversee the govern-‘ In A I It I ...%M‘. ENT CLUB GIRLS EARN TORONTO TRIP Macmillan Fights ical Life ment's wage restraint policy iwhich has provoked the hos- W tility of the nation's unions. Most political observers dis- ‘missed his proposals as ill - [formed and feeble. Even nor- imally Conservative newspapers ffound it difficult to muster any _ enthusiasm. I Macmillan still was struggling Iwith a Conservative party up- Iheaval over his ruthless ”«shakeup of his administration 7 two weeks ago in which 16 min- I lsters were dropped. Island Man Thanked For 42-Yr.‘0Id Craft I The Moth will be restored and ' placed on display at the mus- I cum which is located in the mo- I dern Uplands Air Terminal buil- lding in the Capital. The plane Iwas designed by Geoffrey Dc IHaviliand and was first flown .in February 1925. It met a de- mand for a light plane that was ieconomical to operate. suitable 'for private owners and flying clubs. The first plane arrived in Canada in the summer of 1927 and was used by ‘he Onla_-lo =Provincial Air Service. Later. it ‘was adopted as an elementary training plane by the RCAF. The success of the Moth in Canada led to the establishment. of the Canadian subsidiary of the De Havilland Company. When a more powerful engine was installed and other modifi- Ications made. the Cirrus Moth became the Tiger Moth. the stan- dard RCAF trainer early in the ar. The aircraft being donated by Mr. Burke was purchased from the De l-laviliand Company in 1928 by International Airways of Canada. Later ' was acquired by Canadian Airways who sold it to the first of several private owners. Mr. Burke bought the plane in 1936. sold it in 1940 and ‘re-purchased it in 1942. It is powered by an 85 horse- power motor and has a too I speed of 95 miles an hour. Wing ICnntitnur_ad on Page ft Col. 7: I FOR CANADA, omens Farm Market Slice Is Sought BRUSSELS (Reutersl -- Brit- ain bargained hard Friday night for a guaranteed slice of the European market until 1970 for I the big farm exports of Canada. {New Zealand and Australia. The negotiations marked a .crucial stage of Britain’s bid 'for membership in the Common ‘Market comprised of France. ‘ West Germany. Italy. The Neth- terlands. Belgium and Luxem- ‘ bourg. As the talks wore into the night. an informed source said "the negotiations have never been tougher." "NOT VERY HELPFIII.’ A British official described as t“not very helpful" a Common By Britain fer 1970 but the question of the intervening years remained to he settled. Th high - level negotiations were being followed closely in Commonwealth capitals where apprchension \\-as running high Ilhat the Common Market na- ‘tions might resist any settle- ment. that would give Common- wealth farmers equivalent mar- kets to what they now enjoy in Britain under special Common- wealth preferences. This anxiety was emphasized earlier in the day by the resig- nation in Australia of Air Min- ister Bury over a. disagreement with Prime Minister Menzies on the likely effects on Australia ‘of Briitairvs entry into the Com- arkcL .Market pledge to follow a "rea- mm, M . sonable" price policy toward I the farm exports from the three 5 Commonwealth nations. 2 The negotiators r e a r h e d I agreement in principle Thurs- day on w to deal with the Commonwealth farm exports af- Dickicson. New Glasgow; El- : eanor ltvdc. Cornwall and Beth Matheson. Cornwall. (Story on page 0). an lifting Is Doubled MOSCOW tAPl——Twn Soviet literary figures expressed skep- ticism Friday toward a repo that the government plans to lift the ban on the late Boris Pasternak's novel Dr. Zhlvago. ' . ’ n reporters visit.» lng Stockholm told a press con- ,ferencc the controversial booll by the 1958 Nobel prize winner ‘would be taken off the blacklist ‘in the Soviet Union this year. But novelist Ilya Ehrenburg. who was a friend of Pasternak. ‘said he knew nothing about such a plan and added: "It sounds like some kind of fan- iasy." V, T. lmcyurzhcvsky. chief edi- ‘lor of the Moscow publishing house Soviet Writer. said a col- lection of Paste_rnak's verses is being prepared for publication but no one had proposed to him bringing out Dr. Zhlvagq in the Soviet Union. Free Press IBig Red Poper WINNIPEG (CF)-The Winni- peg Free Press Friday applied to Moscow's largest evening newspaper. Vechernaya Mos- kva. for advertising space re- Ifused Wednesday by Pravda. . R. S. Malone. Free Press pub- llisher. said his newspaper was lashing for advertising space in Iwhlc to answer a recent dis- armament speech mods by lPremier Khrushchev.