A If it’s Good .The Guardian is For it For the Island _ @itc (promotion high 15 and 28. “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” VOL. LXXVI. N0. 13 Authorized as Ottawa. Second Class Mail by the in cash and for payment of postage Post Office Department. CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 16. 1963 WEATHER Clear with a few cloudy periods: Little change in temperature; light winds. Low- sormmaE SEVEN éENTS is FATE}? MRS. ANDREW D. Mac- Lachlan. 66. h old I balhrob cord she says intruder attemp- ted to strangle her with in her Boston apartment Monday night. Her kicks and screams frightened the man away af- ter he had knotted the cord around her pet . (AP Wirephoioli , Boston Woman lives; As Strangler Attacks BOSTON (APIHA prominent Back Bay matron was nearly strangled Tuesday before she fought off the intruder with screams and kicks. Mrs. Andrew D. MacLachlan. president of the Massachusetts State Federation of Music Lov- ers. was attacked in the door- way of her first-floor Beacon Street apartment while her hus- band slept unaware. in a nearby bedroom T caped b e c o min g the ninth woman strangling victim in greater Boston in the last seven months. he 66-year-old woman es- don . Mrs. Macliachlau said drove the man off with a kick Iafter he had knotted'her bath- irobe cord around her neck. “I was fighting for my very existence," she said. “He. spun lme around so my back wasl lturncd so I brought my foot upl lbchind me and gave him hard kick." = "I . ‘vcry hard." . ‘Iie groancd like a pig. The intended victim is a! ‘British-horn graduate of l.on-. ‘5 Central School of Speech jand Drama and t e New Eng- :land Conservatory of Music. She is a former singer and ; music teacher. have kicked liiml she said “because Aussies Great Polar Feat MELBOURNE. A u s t r a Ila (AP) —— Four Australians. an American and a New Zealander have completed an 1.800-mlle trek that the head of Austra< lia's Antarctic program calls “one of the greatest polar feats In history." The six-man party returned to fr Australia‘s Wilkes Antarctic.a more difficult journey," new,“ “my base Tuesday after a 120-day round trip to the Soviet base at Vosto the New Zealander. Thomson. 35. Thomson said in a radio-tele- phone interview that the men encountered temperatures a: low as 83.2 below zero and al- titudes up to 12,000 feet above sea level. Robert Perform i Dr. Fred rick Jack, acting“ director of the Australian Ant~I arctic division. said e Ice ‘ was comparable to the. first. landi crossing of Antarctic by Siri‘ Vivian Fuchs' British party tn‘ 11957-58. ’ "But scientificallythe‘ .iWilkes-Vostokl trek ls more. ivaluable and undoubtedly was: i said. Imeasure the depth of the icel land took gravity readings evory‘ ifive miles to get a picture of ‘thc rock surface thousands of 'feet below. They also took con. stant magnetic readings and lkcpt a complete meteorological I record. site‘. i nate QUEBEC D'RO‘P'S 'PROVINCIAL’ MONTREAL (CPL A mcm- orandum to newspaper men Tuesday from the Office de la Langue F‘rancaise tr‘rench Language Bureau) of the cul- tural affairs department of Quebec asked their co-opcra- lion in eliminating the words "province' and “provincial” with Queb age. The memorandum on style. written in"Frcnch. said “tit: government Quebec has decided with reason to elimi- the expression “Prov- ince of Quebec" and, in a general way. the word "prov- ince" and its derivaiiVes. "it is therefore proper that French - ' ‘ help make prevalent the ex- pi'cssions “G o v e r nmcnt f Quebec" and “State of Que— ‘Also. they shall try to re- place the epithet “provincial” hy . . . "of Quebec." Lastly. they shall remember that the. presence of two nations in Canada prohibits the use of "national" to describe the activities and organizations of the central government. In this case. one must use fed- eral or Canadian." Seven Aboard Missing Plane HALIFAX tCPI A single- eugined Norseman aircraft with seven persons aboard is re- ported missing on a flight be- tween the two Ungav munitics of Payne Bay and Fort Cbimo. Earlier Tuesday it was re- ported om St. .Ioviet. Que. the pilot was aboard 0 aircraft. En route the men made sols: The plane, owned by Wheeler. k. The party was led by i mic soundings every 20 miles totAil-uncs of St. Jome was lastl seen Monday when it left Payne Bar for Fort (Iliima. A spokesman for REM" ters here. said Tuesday a Bea- ‘ver aircraft owned by Wheeler and an RCAF Dakota were searching for the missing plane. Liberals. Blasted By Diet As III Health Is Denied O TAWA (CPL-Prime Minis- gating that type of th‘filellsant‘ of Ontario. also announced t I~ lefenbaker. maintaining he. has never felt better. accused the Liberal party Tuesday of propagating 'perfidious comm— ent" regarding his health and standing with his cabinet col- leagues. He said that ever since 1956 a campaign has been conducted to undermine his position. The campaign is Identical to that conducted in 1882 against Sir John A. Macdonald, he claimed. He was commenting to report- ers as be entered a cabinet meeting on a story to Montreal Le Devoir that three ministers. delegated by their colleagues. had demanded his resignation for reasons of health. be Devoir said Mr. Dlefcn- baker was believed suffering from Parkinson's disease. 0 known as shaking parliyaia. "The pea and expectations of the Liberal party in propa- 'commcnt are their own an- lSWPi'. . . . t " never felt better and I} Ithink that is one reason they: iteel so badly." Icmss am JOHN A. He said the same sort of thingl had happened to Sir John A1 Macdonald and was reminded‘ that Sir John had said that “if‘ my health were influenced by the prayers of my opponents I would be awfully sick." E Veterans Minister Churchill.g who conferred with Mr. Dietcn-i ister Green in the prime minis- ter's office before the cabinet met. said the story is “the cul- campaign of villficatlon that hasi plétely untrue. Mr. Diefenbaker. bouncing the appointment of baker and External Affairs Min-i“ mination of the most insidious I occurred in Canada and is com‘ “9 Earl Rowe n lieutenant-gown the party. that while Mr. Green was acting prime minister last month the cabinet had appointed him (Mr. Dietcnbaker) president of the Privy Council. The post. normally the minister who presides cabinet sessions. has been cant since the resignation of former state secretary Noel Dorion following his defeat in the June iii federal election. Senator Allister Grosart. rc- liring national director of the Progressive Conservative party. said there were no resolutions condemning Mr. Dicfenbakcr‘s leadership among 219 motions sent to party headquarters for this week's annual party meet- it However. he told a press con- rence. there were it resolu- me, “Wilton: affirming confidence. in the prime minister as leader of \ I l , cc from current us- i Canadian Journalists i and Rescue headquaro held by Cut Seen In Bufler Suppon LONDON. Ont. tCPi The. support price of butter may drop from the present 64 cents a pound. Federal Agriculture Min- ister Hamilton indicated Tues- day. Mr. Hamilton said that "some reduction" in the present butter support price would not. only be reasonable but would be in the best interest of dairy farmers. e said a "closed door na- “serious dairy was addressing the Dairy Farmers of Canada. Even though there has been a 13.5 per cent increase in but- ti consumption. e. sai. nut.I butter production will still exceed annual consumption by at least 40.000.000. “In other words." said the minister. "we are still adding to our surplus" despite a 12-cent‘ consumer subsidy. The subsidy is reckoned to cost 542.000.000 a year based on a 350,000.000 pounds production al. II :1 a E The purpose of the subsidy. "startcd May 1. 1902. is to stim- lulate butter consumption. by .clipping prices 12 cents a pound {while continuing to give farm-. ters the same support-price re- turn of 64 cents a pound for top .grades. basis Toronto and Mont- Ircal. British Re-Action Is Sharp Following De Gaulle Blast Brazilian Plane Crash’ Has 13 Dead, Missing SAO PAULO. Brazil IAPI-r A crippled Brazilian airliner with 45 persons aboard crashed into a row of houses near Sao Paulo Tuesday and burst into flames. It was attempting an emer- gency landing in a steady rain. Of 40 passengers and five crew members aboard. nine were killed and their bodies re- covered. Four other persons on the plane were unaccounted for. Among the 32 known survi- vors was Liliana Berozczcy. 18. identified as a Canadian. Her hometown was not known im- mediatcly Firemen labored into the night in search of them and pos- sible victims among the resi- dents of .Iabaquara. a workers suburb of this southern Brazil industrial centre. The crash of the two-engine. propeller - driven airliner lev-‘ ellcd three \vorkers' homes and‘ sent residents fleeing into the .streets. They reported a thun< doring roar and crash. followed i by leaping flames. LONDON chnlei‘sI Brillin officiaidom 'I‘ucsday saw Presi- e Gaulle looming large" ever as the stumbling to Western political and military strategy in the wakc or his Paris press conference Mon- -dav. Residents and army medical men sped to the Scene. It was the fifth major Brazil- ian plane crash since Nov. 26. In the earlier crashes. 175 per- sons were i . The plane. a Convair operated by the domestic Brazilian air- line Cruzeiro do Sul. was near- ing the end of an economy flight from Rio de Janciro when it de- veloped engine trouble. airline The French leader rejected ‘the Anglo - American proposal for a multilateral NATO nuclcar lforce. and also turned a cold shoulder to Britain's American- backcd ' r membership in APPOINTED officials said. Appointment n{ w Ea r] the European Common Market. —_—‘ Rowe as lieutenant-governor BUI Britain was "Gt dett‘l'l‘fi‘d o . of Ontario was announced in from PWSSINS “5 Comm?" Mar- Thanng PIPES I Ottawa Tuesday by prime kct bid and drew constderable solace from affirmations of sup- ~31inisler Diefcnbaker. . II ' ‘ . i .. ~. port from France's Common P a ue Brlflsh I Rowe. SR. (.onsenative mem- U i . ‘ i 9 her of Parliament for Duffcr- Ma‘l‘f‘l palmrls "" r1WP“ (‘m' in-Simcoe. takes office March manl- H a I ~‘ BMHmm' The LONDON lReuterst ~ Brit'sh - V ‘ plumbers and firemen worktd .succceding J. Kempr Mme thlieilands and Luxembourg. I EAs Nikita Nods Approval do l By WILLIAM 1.. RYAN . i BERLIN (AP) M While Pre- mier Khrushchev listened. East. 1(icrrnany's Communist c..h ie V. =UIbrichtAssaiIs Red China wish "that this conflic Ireported progress in U..S'.-Sovietlspeaker. i will be ch .ended as soon as possible." I Khrushchev. who been iised the. delegates that Khru [twemunémninuie ovation oflchev wouldgjve istruck a new blow Tuesday at.rhythmlc clapping. occasionally jtails. Presumably he referred to 'Russian-Rcd Chinese amity andlnodded in agreement with the1 Khrushchev‘s I Solace Drawn ‘ From Support _|Oln the -;i\ - nation li'ommon Market. One senior HI'IIIFI’l diplomat said “we are negotiating with ‘the Six' and not JUFI with do Gaullc." Reaction was equally sharp to the French leader's rejection of the US. offer of Polaris nuclear missiles to France as part. of broad military strategy aimed at setting up the multilateral NATO nuclear deterrent, A British foreign office spokesman said Britain hoped France would “one day have second t h o u: It i s" about de Gaulle's decision on nuclear strategy, Most British and European newspapers ‘ saw Gaulle‘s Paris statement as a crippling blow to Britain's M-month-long overtime Tuesday to cope with Kay- I _ LAt‘KS UNDERSTANDING negotiations for Common ar- ooding as warmer weather ____W __ Officials in London said the km mt‘mbCl‘SIlID- .thawed millions of water pipes Gaulle's remarks at his press But their editorial comment, which had burst during the 20- conference showed "a complete came mainly before France's day freeze-up here. contrac’ '5 Let lack of understanding" for the (‘ommon Market partners re. Hopes nf a general ma“. WW.” I - ‘reasons that Britain wanted to .iected do Gaulle's stand, dashed by forecasts of heavy‘For ‘ ’ snow and frost in some areas , . , ,m ‘ F , P R ‘Tupsday mg” OIlAVlA tfl‘l A $1.41....mot rance s arl'ners a y contract has been awarded to] . . . Davie Shipbuilding Limited nit To G've Br'hsh Support ’ Lauzon. Que. construction ‘ "I d“ Iffiannl rpf"‘E‘;raI°d (33m? BRITSSEIS iReittersl - a In the Negotiations reaffirmed gm dlrpgzorv t < V h §“"France‘s Common Market parl~ that British membership in the l ""n a" “ 3 Fr” '5 “msmers Tuesday rallied behind Common Market was necessary Maclman announced I" ‘Britain in defiance of President. Gaulle's new hard line to- t ward British entry Into the six- 1963 or earl y 1964 M. ’ natioi European trade groups. an 95 on Berlin and F _ Arctica which has served the W. Germany. Italy. The g a '(‘r provmcc's fishermen for more Netherlands and Belgium made. man peace treaty. and prom- sh_ than 25 years. de“ 1' c new vessel will“ play a prominent part in the fisheries department's Newfoundland hait service program. It will be cap- clear in statements here that de Gaulle was speaking only for iF‘rance when he told reporters at a Paris press conference ‘Mcnday the economic systems more scheduled Wed- nesday address italks on the Berlin (‘rlSlS. It seemed likely that. KhrushJ The East German leader's ahl" 0’: {WHIan halt “51195; SIM-41“" Ema”? .an‘l Ih“ (inmm‘m i‘ East German Leader Waltcrichev will have more to say on .proposals for Berlin includcd ‘ 3-“ S‘illld- “9””an and caplln- m'MaFkM “NP mmmpalml" 3' ‘iUlbricht opened a conference oflthe subject of Red China lodayithe end of the occupation status ‘ "I" Flaws WhN they aI'P "1‘95"" _ iworld Communist. leaders with’in what is expected to be aland "removal of the NATO WWI" and “"II It? “50d I" Th? mill “Omniml MHI'I‘PI la blast at Communist China‘smajor Soviet policy speech.i base" from West Berlin. the» transfer frozen hail stocks from member. Luxembourg. made no ttack on India's HimalayaniKhrushchev also was expected‘substitution of the United Na-. arms "I surplus '0 “PM "I" defilflmllnn hUI \\'fis_k110\ljn In N frontier. He denounced the poll-ito deal at some length with the tions banner for “the NATO deficit SII‘OnIL'I)" Sympalhf‘tlt‘ with Ihf‘ cies espoused by the Red Chi-lBerlin crisis. the central issue flag." and arrangements msur- 'I‘IN‘ \‘t‘sst‘l will transport hail DY‘Q'Brill-‘ll DOSiIlnn 0‘ “1“ mn‘ Icommumsm. I The Chinese Reds have as- sailed Khrushcbcv's backdown bin Cuba. but Ulbricht insisted {that the Soviet leader's policy iin the crisis prevented nuclear; iwar and saved the Communist; regime of Cuba. Moreover. Ul-‘ briclu said. communism intends to extend its hold in the West- .ern Hemisphere. ‘ : Ulbricht spoke for 4‘4; hours: [before the luncheon break. He, .took the rostrum again in the} afternoon for about two more. hours of oratory ranging all the. way from the sins of devia- ,tionists to Ea st Germany‘s‘ _problems in pig production. l2,5oo HEAR SPEECH I About 2.500 delegates from 70“ :Communist parties around th-ei Iworld listened in the huge Wor- IUlbricht referred to the "re- grettable" Chinese'lnd‘la“ “0'” ant-Governor Paul Comtois. saidmerative to establish a dorm - m :flict. which be characterized as “highly superfluous." added that I i t i; l President matures news conference Tuesday Katanga Kolwezi. his emcogency cap. t ital when he annmnced he i was giving up his fith for ' recession "We are ready to be I proclaim. immediater Inese as the program for global ‘of the cold war for many years. ling Communist East. German to halt dermis and holding units ‘ Ulbrichf reported some pro-sovereignty over rights of ac- located in some 50 fishing Fei- ' ex- i cess by air. land and water. grcss in American-Soviet jority. The most emphatic pro-Bril- tlcments around the coast ish stand was taken by Belgian (‘immunists crs no more in electricity rat TSHOMBE GIVES UP Hon Quebec Power iakeover Calla—d Powerful Stimulus Io Economy QUEBEC (CPI-~The speech from the throne at the opening of the Quebec legislature Tues- day described the government‘s proposed expropriation of private power companies as "a powerful instrument" to stimu- Ilate the gmwm "I "‘9 Quebec The speech did not elaborate on a Bay com- ner Seelenbinder sports hall asleconomy. The. speech. read by Lieuten- expropriation will cost consu - es fore world that Kaunga's secession is coded. to allow United Nations free- dom of movement and to re- turn to Blisabettwitle to sup- ei-vise the of apply U 'l‘liant'o plan," Tshombo ammced. (AP WWO via cable from Ndoll) A ifrom the game and fisheries de-I Foreign Minister Paul - Henri .Spaak. a staunch supporter of iBriiish Common Market mem- ‘hersltip throughout the 14 gmonths of off-and-on negotia- tions between Britain and the six mcm ei cointiies, He said flatly the Belgian gov- ernment d l s a gr red with de Gaulle and added the problems into involved in British entry sthe (‘ommon Market were no greater then those raised by ‘and in some cases electricilylwill services concerned with France in 1056 when the six“ lbills will be lower. .ourism which now are under member countries were nego- the departments of game and tiating to set up the European fisheries and industry and com- ‘trade group. Spaak was speaking to report- ‘ The speech forecast legislation iwhereby the government would. “within the limits of its pow- mel‘h hr th ‘1 h ters." aid parents of children de- .. . . “‘5 9 ("'0 9 N’Sllmll "in F‘l‘t‘» lformed by the drug thalidomide. N07“ “0”” .M'“ or another session of member- ‘ 1h? FDN’Ch Sa‘d Ihf‘ Q"th ship negotiations between Brit- govcrnment is happy to he as- ain and the Common Market sociated with the federal govern- counlrlcs- [mum on page 3' col. 8) he West German delegation this proposal. The government said it is -. I tCon ment of tourism and forecast administrative changes in oihf‘r' government branches. One of [‘tihesc would be to transfer re-' ‘sponsibility of maritime fisher-y ties to the resources department im 1 ,, i partmcnt. ‘ 'swvs MANDATF. CLEAR ‘ The speech recalled that the Liberal government of Premier. issue expropriation and said it a ‘clear mandate to, carry it out. I Definitive offers of Hydro- Quebec to shareholders of pri- vate companies will be set down in detail in letters to be set! to them shortly. the government roprialion. the speech . "will contribute not only possible. but also to reducing it further. particularly in those regions which up to the present have been unable to take advan- tage of this factor. which Is es- sential to their development " In forecasting the establish- ‘ment of a new department of the Qu will come under its jurisdiction. So INSIDE TODAY l l I Announcements. notices to Births. deaths .. it. 17 Classified lit. 17 Finance. markets 17 Comics is Editorials . . . . .. 6 Cltv. Queens . . . . . . . . . .. 5 Kings Conntv . . . . . . . . . . .. 4 Sum erside . . . . . . . . . . .. 3 l Prince County . . . . . . . . . . .. 2 mmNANT r w t . . . . . . . . . . ,. I J — .0 .R- t _ II “Mme”. : "or Paul Comm“ “d M” the Quebec Legisla ure Tues ' 01th led the procession to day “h” M" "0mm" “ad both for economic and political I‘PFISODS. Their government In on , meanwhile. issued a statement appealing for unity among the v(‘.ommon Market states over the British application. Italian negotiators in Brussels said they will "pursue with firmness a constructive action" aimed at bringing about a successful outcome of membership negotiations. Dutch Foreign Minister Jo- seph Luns said in a television speech that do Caulle spoke only for l’rance and not for his Common Market partners Meanwhile. British Deputy orcign Minister Edward llcath said he was “determined to pl‘css on with tho llf‘EOI.lFiIinrt=" for British membership despite de Gaulle's position, RECEIVED I"ARI\II.\' IIealIi. Britain's chicf iiiai'ket negotiator. received a warm spouse who he resumed his presentation of the British case at Tuesday's session of e membership negotiations. lie outlined Britain's stand on transitional arrangea monts aimed at reconciling the market policies of Brilis do- mestic agriculture with common of the bloc. issue has main stumbling block in the no- gotiations A French gmcinmcnt spokes- man in Paris said de. Gautle's “declaration M o nd a y means that he thinks it Is no use going with the Brussels negotia- tions at present." the Throne Speech om 27th Quebec legislature. : (C? W imp—u