' If it's Good The Guardian is For it For the Island poi LXXVL N0. so i 9 who @ttmdttom WEA below and 20 above “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” THER Sunny with a few cloudy intervals; conn tlnulng cold; west wl nds 15. Low-high 5 “W ogumm .w W CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, THURSDAY, FEB., 28, 1963. “mam” SEVEN CENTS 20 PAGES BAPTIST MINISTER IS INDUCT ED induction services were held last night at First Baptist. Church. Charlottetown. for the new minister. Rev. Mal- ‘. Harlow. He succeeds Rci‘ w o for the past five months: Mr. Harlow to the congregation on Harlow will preach his first behalf of the board of deac- sermon in his new pastorate ISIS; All!"- fial'lfw- [and MR“- , r. ner .. ang ey. onc- S'mda" March 3‘ Shnw" ton. president of the Baptist left to right are Dr. Athol L. Fedmmon of Canada_ (see Roberts, who presented M r. story on page SJ -A Warning served as interim- minister ,,. Souris Fish wo New Steel Stern Ry RALPH CAMERON Guardian - Patriot Staff Writer Aimed at increasing Soilris fish production by at least ‘50 per cent a decision to acquire tun new 02-foot. steel stern trait-tors was reached yester- day at an all day meeting. 't has announced jointly last night by Fishermen's Loan Brard Chairman A. Walthcn Gautlct and Hon. Leo 'Rossiter. provincial minister of fisheries. The two trawlers agreed on are based on the 84 foot type in use in New Brunswick modlilf‘d to meet requests of lsland interests. l‘tctnlls regarding the Sil‘llf‘llnn of the trawlers will he announced later. While the tips recommended is based on C O “- that built by the B at h u 1‘ st terics and Usen Fisheries. Rep- quire Irawlers .resentatives of both were pre- Ient at the meeting yesterday as was Deputy Minister of Fisher- :ies E.M. Gorman. Months of investigation eries lo Ac ,Mai‘ine Industry —- a model of lwhlch was shown lecal authori- tics by a representative who at- tended the meeting and answer- d many questions—- it is known that at, least two other M ari- ltime shipbuilding yards are in- forested in the contract. JSKIPPERS SELECTED 1 Fisheries Minister R o s s iter land Mr. Gaudct also announced lthe new ships would be'assign— by lof fisheries preceded the decis- ion to obtain the ships in order ‘to assure the continuing pro- ‘cess of development of the is- } land industry. FEDERAL AID ted to two Soul‘is skippers who it was noted iwerc approved yesterday toinew stern trawlers wou cost .takc command. They a re 3 approximately $300,000 each the d>Capt. Bjornsson Jonas and :federal government pays half this amount. l ‘lers estimated to take lfour months, the ships are lCapt. Egbert Boerlein. ‘ Regulations of the Fisher- men's Loan Board require that the trawlcrs be assigned one to _ each of the main fishing c o m- l pccted to be in service later this panics in Souris. Eastern Fish- ’year to play a prominent part iin the. economy of the province. about ISLAND FERRY THIRD ON LIST Ship-Building Program Exceed CAPITAL BUREAU OF THE GUARDIAN OTTAWA w The. construction of the Wood Islands — Ca r thou terry for Northumberland Fer- rIPs Ltd. is a part of the federal Eei‘crnment's ship- building sub- sidy program. announced by Trailg’fiml‘t Minister Leon Balccr . l . Wednesday, the Canadian Maritime Commission released 9 list or 268 Canadian- built ‘h'hs which are included in the subsidy progra m. The Northumbcrland ferry is line or the four largest vessels Marco’rte Claims Frame ing Expectations value of the 268 ships being constructed is about $200 mil- lions and the federal subsidy will be in excess of $77 million. The transport minister said the program had exceeded ex- t pcctations. I “My forecast in June 1961 in- tdicaicd 35m millions in the next 510 years but the need by Can- ‘adians for ships at reasonable .cost has been much greater passenger ferry for Gulf Ports ‘than anticipated." said. ‘Slf‘amShIP CO-dmd- Md t "The figures in a general way, ‘ Ferguson In ustries . a - . . . . . . provide employment for be- .iéiigid'ieii’y”.dmg the MMhum tween 3.5.000 and 40.000 Canad- 1 Mr. Balccr said that total tans in one year." included in the list. l. a l' g e st federal subsidy is being paid .for a freighter to be. owned by tCanada Steamship Lines. This Esubsidy comes to 52.674000. Sec- ond is a passcnger- cargo ves- sel for Northland Shipping Com- pany. e Northumberland ferry ranks third with a subsidy of $1,097,000. followed by th e ionly other vessel with sub- ,sidy of over $1 million. an auto- d In ‘Santa Claus' Killings 3)" BERNARD DUFRESNE MONTREAL ‘(CPl--Georgel Marcotte testified to his own d y defence Wednesday that be we! not the Santa Claus figure involved in I bank robbery In which two policemen were killed last Dec. 14. He said that JranJ’aul Four- nel. who testified earlier he took part in the holdup with Marcotte and Jules Reeves, llime "tins to save himself and ill: brother Real Fournel. I By accusing me." Marcotte hFStlfled, "he is trying to save "it own skin. he is trying to iave hlsbrotlher. he is trying ” “3;? his stster-in-lau- and her on fhll and ourthly. he is to save his .tdressl Vested“ the capital in- J? 33-year-old man. who in h" 80! out of penitentiary" - [Nightly 0 after serving a term rmed robbery. testified for h i an. hour under question- ":“M has lawyer, Yves May- Can Prosecutor C l a u d o l r .Wagncr then began crass-exam- introduced in exhibit as the one ‘ination. lasting an hour. andlworn by one of three gunmen scheduled to be continued to-lin the holdup. l Constables Claude Marinenu land Denis Brabant were gunned . nwbile answering the . Marcotte earlier was named bank-s holdup alarm. Crown {by FOUFM’I- 40' she 58"” evidence is that Brabant—for ‘Claus bandit. and WM 0110‘“ his death Marcotte is on trial NAMED AS BANDIT in court by MrS- Vaquelmc'for capital murder—died of a Fournel as havin, . ' i "I . .308-callbre bullet wound in the ;have Just killed two police-1cm“. "in Fourncl h a s testified that Mrs. l-‘out‘ncl a ill-Warm” iMarcottc carried an FN-Bmwn- auburn-hatred Woman- is the ing nine which an expert Crown wife of Fournel‘s brother Real. ‘witness testified fires JOB-call- Marcotte said Mrs. Fournellbre bulletl. “was Jean-Paul Fournel's mlfi‘ The three defence witnesss tress. Three defence witnessctrwho testified about a relatlon- were called Wednesday to Elvevship between Fournel and i evidence which the defence is wife's brother we“, Rom d Euslng in an attempt In eSiflhIl-‘J‘ Simard 39. a brother-in-law of ‘an amorous relationship be-, Foul-net. Nin. vndlkjg, 35 ltwcen Fournel and his sister-in- .girl friend of Marcotte's and ‘law. lMabel Gallagher 32. a wait- h's testimony. Marcotte ‘ress. ' mi: heI had never been at the. Fournel has denied in: I Laurent branch disister-In-Iaw was his mistress land Mrs. Fournel has testified that the only thing t hem was their respective love for her children. l lsuburban St. the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce. had nevertused an iautomatic rifle. and knew oodl- Iing about a Santa Claus suit ithe Board and the department‘ that though the: With construction of the traw- ' ex- . to l Expanded By Nikita (API tKhrushchev warned Wednesday that if Cuba. Red China or any MOSCOW Pramler other Communls nation is a- .tackcd. "the Soviet Union will come to the assistance of its: friends and strike a devastating blow at the aggressors.“ ‘ Khrilshchev's speech to an} election rally In the Kremlin‘ came against a background of ‘ renewed Red Chinese attacks on his policy and a Peking demand for an apology for the Soviet attitude in their ideolog- ; ical dispute. ” Khrushchev d e fe n d e d hls ,peaccful coexistence policy. lwhich has been criticized by‘ Red China. as “the ble policy." He add _ “If. however. the imperialists' ‘violate the right of the peoplesI choose the socio-political‘ isystcm they want. if they try. ito impose their will on the: lpeoplcs. this will lead to a‘ ‘world thermonuclear war." EXPANDS WARNING The address echoed last Fri-y day‘s words of Defence Minister Malinovsky. who threatened the f United States with atomic war if Cuba should be attacked. But j Khrushchev e x p a n d e be warning to include the. other communist nations. specifically. *mentioning Red China. Northl ’Korea, North Viet Nam an East Germany. l Khrushchev did not speed. ‘ically mention Red Ohina's lat- fest blast in the quarrel a 7,000- l »word broadcast editorial of the. ‘official Peking People‘s Daily. .accusing the Kremlin of double- i ‘dcal-ing. His remarks. however. seemed directly connected with‘ .that argument. iPearson Speaks rIn Fredericton i FREDERICTON (CF! — Lib-l eral Leader Pearson said Wed-1 nrsday ."lg’lil that if given at majority in the. April 8 election .the Liberals will at once take isteps to bring the Atlantic provinces up to the employment and income level of the rest of Canada. “I have said there are soft solutions. and apply this to your problems here in the. Atlantic area." he told a nomi- nating convention for York-Sun- bury which filled the Lalo-seat tauditorium at the high school here. only sensi- ed: l He said a Liberal government will begin at once to attack the problem of unemployment in the Atlantic provinces which her “is far greater than most oh parts of Canada." lDiof To Begin iWostern Swing l - OTTAWA tCP) m Rome Min- ister Diofenbaker will whistle- stop by train through northern Ontario. Manitoba and Saskat- {chewan on y and Fri- day as he heads west to open this campaign for the April 8 election. . His twin dcutinatmns an II‘ritlce. Albert. Soak, for lib inominavtion meeting Saturday l night in his home constituency. ‘ainl Winnipeg next Monday d .ers from Fortune to Alberton. SDU Appoints New Registrar Rt. Rev. .l.A. Sullivan. rector we of St. Dunstan's University. yesterday announced the ap.'. ' pointment of Michael Hennes-“ BA. B.Ed, as university and director of public relations. He said Mr. Hennessey would begin his new duties July 2 when he would succeed Rev. Owen C. Sharkey as registrar it." and also become the univer-lf sity's first public relations di-1 6 rector. ~ . p.349“. .1 \ Hennessey Is a native of Mr. lCharlottetown and a graduate . Dunstan's from wh ch he k graduation he joined the Roy Canadian Navy and served for two years as staff officer of the university .naval training divis- up. w. ion at St. Francis Xavier Uni- . ’1' versity in Antigonish. from i1 at ' :. mm. ‘which he received the bachelor} MR, HENNESSEY of education in 1955. 0 at Clark School for the Deaf at ‘ent: in the field of athletics he Northampton, Mass. from rwill be well remembered partl- whlch he returned to Pnin school for the deaf for t h ree -ther study and varied expera ‘ . e is now employed by :ience will enable. him to bring to the Charlottetown School Board lhis new undertaking much that as guidance counsellor at Birch- .will prove to be of great value wood High School. .not only in his capacity as reg~ "Mr. Hennessey will re- istrar but also in his duties as turning to St. Dunstan's well- director of public relations." acquainted with almost every: At the present time Mr. Hon- aspect of ii n i v e rsity life," ‘nessey is engaged on a part - Msgr. Sullivan said. "As a stu- time basis as a sports columnist dent he achieved ‘an excellent for The Evening Patriot. He is academic standing: in his as- married to the former Aletha sociation with student publica-‘Doyle and has five children. Angus Breeders Back Marketing Yards Here By NEIL MATHESON Angus association president Farm and Provincial Editor ‘Leo P. Mclsaac who presided, P.E.I.’s Aberdeen Angusexplained that efforts are un- beef cattle breeders gave solid lderway now to promote the support here last night to the [livestock yards setup. and that Prince Edward Island Beeflthe proposal will finance itself Producers Association in its ef- ‘when it gets underway. But. i fort to establish livestock mar- the meantime. the association keting yards here. and endorsed lneeds funds on which to oper- Flans t anize a Maritime;ate. he explained. uturity sale. of breeding cattle here later this year. when they inn/[TED HERE . met in annual session in that Mr: Mas?“ “’M the meeting board mom of the RE}. de,iithat1nvttatlons have been partment of agriculture. The :lended I" the Angus- meeting was attended by hreed- =3"d_ Hereford breeders to hold tthelr national meetings in this . . . Voting $100 to the beef produc- 1222:“3‘ {diam “3".” a h ers assoeiation. the Angus men lwhether :he Wm“ a‘cie t‘ he were unanimous in stressing the lslaled y p" value of what the, association ls’ The'plam for tho :fglfiafiflegggo thehgfet' lMaritime futurity .sale of Angus Cheslev Hughe; Covehead m“jlrbrcedlng cattle will be discuss- Haber-t Mat-mews and Andrew ed when the Maritime directors Wells. Alberton are just a few 00:19“ w'th interested [5 land the breeders who voiced solidi feeders here during "‘9 F“ s u p p 0 H and suggested “we iStfikzgShow and Sale, March 28 an . should give them all the back-1 Island A n g u 5 men w a re ing our finances will allow." i (Continued on page 3. col. 4) proposed 3 volved in the building of the orl- I ther studies include a year 'tions he showed exceptional tal-. ce Ed- ‘cularly as an outstanding rugby-‘ ward Island as director of th e. :ist and hockey player. His fur-3 ex-‘ Shorthorn l CARS GO CHEAP AT MY. SALE NEW YORK (AP: - you needed a car and (I‘ldl’i have much money. Wednes- day was the day. Eighty-seven vehicles that police had found abandoned on the streets were sold at an auction for a total of $566. The classiest, a dump truck, went for 0 The cheapest. 'l t l A First lime SEAL COVE. NB. lCPl—Two American brothers saved fr a Wild sea by grit and a freak wave rested here Wednesday among people they call "the best in the world If t 'l. o 3 described. as an old heap brought $1. William 311d JoneS. adopted 'by residents of this community on grain Manan :lsland after a night of determi- gnation and heroism. are. ready ‘to go back to their Haycock Harbor. Me. home today. ‘ Monday on a routine trip to gather small _- shell fish on the shore. The ‘motor on their lS-foot boat failed and a gale came up, lBIuenose I Keel Laid ‘ LUNENBURG. N.S. (CPI Another Blue-nose began taking shape at the Smith and Rhu» land shipyards in this old Nova Grand Manan Channel. Scotia seafaring town Wednes— Exhaust“ fI‘Om bailian the)! [day‘ were close. to sharp rocks on 0“ hand 5m— thp keei laying .the island's shore when a wave were mam, of we principals in.‘plcked up their boat. carnied it over the rocks and set it ‘ginaq racmg I down in splinters on smoother These included designer W.J. rock at the base of a bald. [Roue of Dantmouth, NS, some 300%“ Ch“- inf the original builders nd; ended one Part of their team Angus waiters who s}(il,,"or(ieal—but another began. I. the original Bluenose in; Stunned and wet, their hands. ian undefeated series of races,”t and 19:85 .fmsmitten- they llagains“ New England mauengpisaw the In the darkness. ‘ as in the 19208 and early 19m;L Floyd. 36. was overcome with land and Son Limited. 8 Hal_ exhaustion. 'I was half out of ifax brewing firm. is financing my mmd‘ I do’” hm" What mnstmci-on of the 1 ‘ was going on some of the time. I have; thought you could feel a .” ECIII'OI' Denies CLIMBS CLIFF Leaving Floyd at the base of ’ . Arms Campalgn the cliff. the 42.year-old William started climbing to the crest ‘ ROSE’I‘OWN, Sask. tCP) —— 800 feet above . The man who led 28 Canadian "1 d°“'l.kn°“' hm” he . weekly newspaper mm on a been .visit to North America Air De-jthat tool: thim up." .fence Command headquarters all Amazed islanders say no one Spri gs. Colo did it." .mamdo Midlhas scaled the wall in living iWednesday there was no cam-imam .paig-ning age-m st the Cainadiianime government's nuclear ms w 5 ' ‘ alked for hou figfionbzr gig???“ C Roy Southern Head lighthouse 3 John Pinckney of Rosetownut 9 0t help‘ ith gales blowing in from sea Wiilliam made it rs where I . . A rescue party started back wgiwn‘ke‘gpapers Associagligifor the. cliff. Vernon Bagley of i am hwbusher of me w Seal Cove was lowered on ropes eekly . .Rosetown Eagle. was comment- m the base' |ing in an interview on a report i in the Washington Daily News. where he found l I INSIDE TODAY l i Announcements. notices . is Births. deaths . . . . . . .. a. til i Classified .. . . . . .. is. .19 Finance, markets . . . . . . .. in ed Comics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. ‘5 g Editorials . . . . . ~ e . . . . . . .. 6 ‘ City. Queens . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 5 PARIS iReutersl -— Th ej Kings County .. .. 4 . United States Wednesday called? Prince County . . 2 Lfor a multilateral NATO nucl-i Summertime . . - ~ - - . . - . .. 3 tear force and asked delegatesi x l‘t - . - - - - - - - I3- I‘ .to the ls-nation Atlantic coutniciI‘ Womens' .............. .. 7 to present their views on the mt way to establish such a CBC CREW DII'ES Four Bodi ms . mand structure and finance to .a later meeting. -.mo C night for what rs regarded an his keynote speech of the cam- l palgn. .1 Wedneslay. It was located on the. east side of a moor-back edge in the Porcilplne Hills, WRECKAGE 0F two-engine aircraft which ‘ four men to their deaths was found Livingston Merchant. Pnesi- Tdent Kennedy's special NATO ldefence envoy. presented tlie jeouncil with a general outline CALGARY (Cpl—The bodies of four men -—- the pilot and a three-member CBC television ‘of Washington's views on the matter, leaving more complex proble rmamen-t com- crew—were found in the wreck- age of it crashed aircraft. south- west of here Wednesday. t Missing since Monday were " pilot Bill Prentice. 27. of Cal- gary. and man Caton Len MacDonald 33 and Charles - Reigler 33 all on assignment from the CBC in Toronto. . x pine Hills. 18 miles Clarcsholm. dustry owned plane which vol- the down twin-engine Apache. clear while the other three were Mr. Kelly. HIT A TREE Mr. Kelly said he was llyin in R , He landed his. plane on a forest service road ‘ and he and two passengers scrambled down the steep slope at the crash s'te "The plane was all rolled up in a ball." he said. "I think the _ right wing hit a tree." It appeared the pilot of the. = Apocbe toicd to turn to avoid hitting bomething and in doing sogtdn right wing struck one of 10 miles west. of Cl: mini. M trees which stick up and some 60 miles mothwelt 30 tom feet in the area. he of Calgary. ‘ l. ' .5 open. carrying them 15 miles across1 and -1 o'Dr. Needlcr studied at the Unl- .‘ eific. international commissions study: ing George Kelly. pilot of an in- . unteered for the search. spotted . "wedged in like sardines." said. Brothers Saved From Sea By Gri’r And Freak Wave 300-Ft. Cliff Scaled In Memory {Floyd unconsolous. He picked .up the limp fisherman and was hauled halfway up cliff before he became exhausted. iSydncy Guptlll was lowered and he brought Floyd to the top men were taken hospital at North Head "They soon revived." said a hospital official. “They were ‘hungry and cold but their in- iJuries weren't as serious as we to William d e c l l n ed to talk about the experience. csting in the home of .Maurice Brown here cdnes- .day night. Floyd said “these' are the best people in the world. They are paying the hospital and bought us me new clothes. Come back? Sure, but ‘not the same. way." iDr. Needler Is Appointed Deputy Minister 1 OTTAWA tCI—‘t—Dr. A. W. E. iNeedler. 56. ednesday was .named deputy minister of the tfederal department of fisheries. succeeding George R. Clark. who .died earlier this month while at« .vtlending a fisheries meeting in l S O ___‘ o . n. One of the world's leading fishery scientists, Dr. . edler .has spent 35 years studying fishing resources of the Atlantic and Pacific and has been direc- tor of the department's biolo- gical station at Nanaimo. 3.0. since 1954. Last month he was named .ehairman of the fisheries re- lsaarch committee. of the UM. I Nations Food and Agriculture Organization. ‘ A native of Huntsville. Onl.. versity of Toronto and joined the Fisheries Researc ' t1926 to direct a study of the .Atlantic oyster. working from )the St. Andrews. N.B.. research istation. He became director of lthe station in . Between 1948 and 1950 he held in double. role. as director of the station and assistant deputy min- -Iister of the. department. Dr. Needler was moved to the research station .from St. Andrews and has been Irresponsible for the. development of studies on salmon. halibut. .and herring stocks in the Pa- He has worked on seven world fisheries problems. 9 is married and has 513 . children. es Found Of C r‘ The aircraft from which they. " ~ were photographing an elk herds » I '1‘ " sconce KELLY or c t. - gary was pilot of a search plane which spotted the crash- ed aircraft in Southern Alber in Wednesday. An air force spokesman said it appeared the Apache "flew right into the side of a hill." The elevation is 4.000 feet. The plane, owned by Tran‘ Aircraft IWesternl Limite . failed to rendezvous at Claret :holm Monday morning with a .second Trans Aircraft plane iwhich accompanied it on ’the tphoiography mission. l