If it's Good The Guardian is For it VOL. LXXV NO. 280 A two - day civil defence course on the protection of agriculture from nuclear war- fare ended last night at Birch Court. Representatives of farm organizations in the pro \rince heard addresses by RC. Parent. superintendent of the For the Island Experimental Farm: William Stearns. David Peacock. of the or of Agriculture; George Lewis; Brig. A. W. Ro- gers, EMO officer; Major 0. R. Simona. co-ordinator orci: vil defence and Dr. R. H. Henry. Moncton. district vet- shunni- loco-dela- Otawuandfuuymutotmlauu can FARMING DURINGIUCLEARIIWAR CONSIDERED i erinarian. A film was a l I 0 shown dealing with fallout and agriculture. Here four of th e course instructors check the agenda of the meeting. They are, left to right. Mr. Stearns. Mr. Lewis. Mr. Henry and Mr. Parent. P“ “a” m‘“ CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, THURSDAY. NOV. 29, 1962. ‘ on. @uordiom “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew’_’ WEATHER Mostly sunny. light and 50. winds. Low-high 25 mirage“ SEVEN CENTS . Nuclear Test Ban Outlook. IWin'ter Jobs I For S’side Announced I CAPITAL BUREAU I Snap Election Said Called To Beat Financial ‘Mess' (Editor's note This story was written for The Guardian by a Canadian Press staff writer. who is providing special coverago of the political scene here for the. Dec. 10 provincial election.) By DAL WARRINGTON Liberal Leader Alex Matheson accused Premier Walter Show Wednesday of calling a hasty“ election before the public finds out about Edward Island's treasury. “The finances of this provinc are in an unbelieveable mess." he said in an interview. "it’s fantastic." He said Mr. Shaw’s three ~ year - old Conservative government is spending mil- lions and planning to spend mil- lions more regardless of the prnvmce's ability to pay. The 59-year-old former pre- mier said the government will have to find $2,000,000 to cover the proposed abolition of hos- "the mess" in Prince pital insurance premiums. 000 for resources developments. 1.000.000 for a new frozen foods plant and $5,000,000 for a new provincial office building. “Where is the money coming from?" he asked The full story would not be known until fter public ac- accounts are presented to t Llodslhture. A Conservative gov- ernment; would never re- elected after that. REVIEWS RECORD Premier Shaw. meanwhile. in a radio speech to P.E.1. women. reviewed the accomplishments of his government since it suc- ceeded the Liberals in 1959. He said a system of 14 regional high schools opened during that period fulfils a need that h existed for 50 years. 2 pointed to new vocational schools completed or under con» struction and the job they could do in training skilled workers for new industries. He said the 5' O as assemlb Itinext step will he to build and! was also talking about $2.500.-iconsolidate a new system ofI ielementary schools through the provmce. Mr. Shaw repeated his recent forecast that the government will spend more than $2,500,000. next few years to develop th P.E.I. economy. His aim we ors. here at home. . -» The premier appealed to the woman othe province to take a more active part in politics. He noted that no woman has ever run for election to the Is- land legislature, although P.E.T. as a woman senator and a woman member of Parliament. He hoped sooon to see some women members in the all-seat ly. can ' dates were nominated for the forthcoming Dec. 10 election. House standing at dissolution was Conservatives 22, Liberals six, wit two former Liberal seats vacant. di- FOUIR MEN ARRESTED Narcotics, Bogus Bills Seized In Montreal Raid MONTREAL (CP) w RCMP announced Wednesday that nar- cotics with an estimated whole- sale value of $35,000 and an un- derworld value exceeding 81.- '. been seized along \Vlil1 counterfeit bilio totalling between $6,000 and . ‘ Four men have been arrested. three in con tion with the counterfeit money and another man later who 'was‘ charged with possession of unregistered firearms. PM Will Fly To Bahamas For Conference With Mac OTTAWA (CPI—Prime Mill- 3 a far-r in dis- cussion of World she‘ll: ll wu announced Wedne ny. Mr. Dlefonbaker will fly south to confer with Mr. Dd Immodiatoly after the British Mime ndniotor's conference with President Kennedy. Although it was in the Demons Wed In! Liberal party spokesman Paul Martin (L. «Emulsion am Mr. Di , also router Ilr. nutty. In- ormed sources Illd‘fhll Is not altrnpected: at this particular e. The lust after Mr. Icmillnn looted The seizures of the counter- felt money—in denominations of 0 and $20—and the discovery of a cache of drugs followed a series of raids carried out Wed- nesday. It was while a raid was in progress at a warehouse that the drugs were discovered. RAID HOMES. WAREHOUSES The raids were carried out at rooming houses. private homes. apartments and many were- M .— my sum on their talks Dec. 21. .The Macmillan 7 Kennedy mes s ire scheduled for Dec. 19 and so. INVITED T0 OTTAWA Mn? Dlefenblker first ~sug- that Mr. Macmillan houses in the Montreal metro- ea. politan a; on of the warehouses, while the search for ‘ ‘ “ bills was underway. the raiding quad found a trunk containing about 91 pounds of narcotics.— codein phosphate. , Th counterfeit squad promptly called the narcotics squad into the investigations. d there is every MR sai . reason to believe that the cache to provide more jobs for Island: '. especially young WoMi OF THE GUARDIANI OTTAWA —— Tw o more win-I ter works projects for PrinceI Edward island were. announcedI Wednesday by Dr. 0. H. Phil-I lips. MP for Prince. Project No. 20 involves the; installation of water and sewcrI ‘in Summerside. Total cost is: $7,500 and the federal share will I ibe $1,200. . Project No, 22, also in Sum-I Imerside. will be for the con-x struction of a septic cost of $3,000. The federal cost tank at a' 23 PAGES 4 Revived By Swedish Plan U.S., Russia Give Couple I Two persons. Mr. and Charles MacWilllams of Wood Islands. were taken to the Prince Edward Island Hospital as the result of being struck by an automobile early last even- in . Mrs. The. accident ocourred at about ‘ 7 p.m. a he intersection of Euston and Prince Streets, when the two people. both about 70 years of age, were crossing from north to south on Euston. The car which struck, them. a small English model. driven by Charles MacDonald. Mt. Ste- wart. was proceeding east on Euston. OTTAWA (CPI—New Demo- cratic Party Leader T. C. Douglas says the government should not “expect a medal for recognizing. at long last. that we ought to do something about planning our economy." Speaking prior to Commons‘ acceptance of a resolution to establish a national economic development board, h said Wednesday that the govern- ment’s apparent conversion to the planning idea was possibly some 0‘ it {Ederal funds» in the sharing arrangement will mean 1 “only the theft of a word and niured iln City Accident I At. the hospital they were, placed under the care of Dr. H. i P. Stewart. who at a late hOUI'I last night reported that Mrs. MacWilliams was suffering from numerous cuts. bruises and ab“ rasions. Further examination‘ will be carried out this morn-. ing to determine if any other tn-I juries are present. i Mr. MacWilllams was treated] for minor injuries to his rightl leg and was then released to: his home. The elderly coupch only recently took up temporary I winter residence on U p p e r ‘ Prince Street. I IDougIas Sees Board As ‘Iheit' 0i Idea The government's hill ihen‘: was given first reading. it pro-. vides for a board consisting of ‘ a chairman and a membership: of not less than 14 or more. an members to be ap- pointed by the cabinet. As outlined in the bill. the board’s function is: “To furnish to the minister of I finance all such advice and in-t formation as will best assist the 1 government of Canada in fur-l thering the attainment of a high.1 ' rate of eco—i nomic growth in Canada. thei n 3' GRAND BANK. Nfld. (CPI~--I Christmas is coming and the smuggling business with the French island of St. Pierre —— usually quieter through much oil the year—is looking up as New-F foundland's south coast lays inj its Yuletide liquor supply. ‘ It breaks out in full flow about .this time every year. but it has _its dangers, as two fishermen 'bringing home booze from St. Pierre found out Wednesdav ' The two. Gerald Hillier lromI nearby Lamaline and another unidentified L a m a l i n e man. were picked up by the RCMP as they made. the nine-mile run. back from St. Pierre in their :lla payment of $600 by Ottawa. inot the acceptance of an idea." Caught Ott Nfld.l I were convicted and fined $100,K each or two months in jail for smuggling. Their boat was con~I fiscated. I I BOAT GETS AWAY I ‘ But another boat eluded thel RCMP. According to one report. the two men in it dumped liquor overboard in shallow water and fled along the shore before the RCMP got to them. . Another method used to getl rid of the firewater is more in-I genious. at least as told by Burin Peninsula residents. The liquor is put into a bag filled with salt and cushioned with cork. then thrown overboard as I i the RCMP cutter approaches. liquor-laden dory early Tues- ay. The Mounties. who overhauled but in a few hours, when the ms for the NHPPRD. N-S- 1'85!” in 1948. the motorized dory in patrol boat Blue nine three-gallon tinsgof alcohol. four bottles of liquor and sev- The federal eral carton; of cigarettes. i in magistrate‘s court the two the RCMP salt dissolves. the cork floats. Heron. seized up the bag for easy reclama-i tion by the waiting fisherman. government pays fishermen a 50-per-cent rebate on salt. strengthening of Canada's inter- ; national financial and trade po-I lition. and the achievement of the highest-possible levels of ef: ficient production and employ- ment so as to ensure rismg,» standards of living in all areasl of Canada." 1 WOULD HAVE THREE JOBS In par icular the economiclenginc had been running at (Continued on Page 5 Col. 4) least 10 hours. _ “ ——"—"':"-—“‘—'—"‘_" Tliibault‘s companion l4.li7.a< Ibeth Moore. 21. o Hiudson.‘ searCh OHIMass., was taken to Pcterhoro M. . M Hospital where she was given FO' In good chance to recover. r Isan an 1 Police said one of the car‘s .s_ . a . ,.,.tailpipes had a large hole in it, INVERNESS‘ N (P permitting exhaust fumes to The main search for 27-year-oldI rueman Read. missing in woods I l ._. . I. . ( a" s is HONOREl A distinguished Canadian soldier, Major-General M.L. CD. OttaWa. tary career since 1958. has ac- cepted the honorary appoint- ment of colonel commandant of the Royal Canadian Army SerVicc Corps. He enlisted in the RCASC as a private in 1922. climaxlng his service as adjutant-general of the Can a ian Army. Major-General Brennan is director of the Community Planning Associa- tion of Canada with headquar- ters in Ottawa. Apple Picker, Companion Die In Car WILTON, \I.Y. mph—An ap- pic was found dead in a parked car Wednesday with a female com- panion- who had heen.-overcome by carbon monoxide fumes from a leaky exhaust pipe. police said George. F. State Thibault. 29, of North Range. .N.S.. died from the fumes some-I Itime during the night. The car's. leak into the car. picker from Nova Scotia, GENEVA I Reutcrs1 The United States and Russia Wed- ,nesday gave a cautious wel- ‘icome to a Swedish proposal to. ,halt all nuclear tests by Jan. . ‘l and immediately begin estab. yiishmenl of machinery to con- ‘trol the test ban. ' Dean. chief U.S. dis- Iarmament negotiator. promised ito study the proposal made by ~ neutral Sweden at the lT-nation Idisarmament conference. But he ‘d the suggestion sounded ,like an uncontrolled morator- 3ium on testing and the US. ‘could not agree to that in view ‘of "our most unfortunate expe- riences with them in the past." Cautious Welcome lution calling testing by an e also insisted that the West waive its demands for on-site inspection in controlling a test an. PROPOSES COMMISSION Swedish delegate Rolf Edberg for a halt to . 1. proposed an impartial interna» .tional scientific commission to .woi‘k on test-ban control ma- :chincry. Ihelpful for the panel of scien- ltists to have power to make lon-sitc ’ ‘,sidered this necessary to check [suspicious events whic He said it would be inspections if it con- h might.- be underground tests. Dean told the three-nation Russia broke an uncontrolled Jest-ban Schommittee of the moratorium by beginning testsICOfllerenP-e the WESt has 8030‘ ‘in 196]. Soviet d e l c g a t e Semyon Tsarapkin told reporters he considered Sweden‘s proposal H‘worth st u d y in 1:." But gcharged the West with ignoring . the recent United Nations reso- Parliament EAt A Glance WEDNESDAY. Nov. 28. 1962 Prime Minister Diefenbaker- said he has accepted an invi- tation to meet Prime Minister Macmiilan in the Bahamas Dec. Hazen Argue (L —»- Assini~ boinel' changed that Agricul- i ture Minister Hamilton has ordered Prairie farm assist- ‘ ance workers to work for the. I Tory party. , government bill setting l up the national economic de- ’ velopment council was given I first reading. I T. 0. Douglas. NDP leader. 3 said the government "should ‘ not expect a medal for recog- i nizing, at long last,“ the need for economic planning. The Senate approved 26 divorce bills, sending them to I join a backlog of more than ‘ I 300 awaiting approval in the ‘ Commons. THURSDAY. Nov. 29 The Commons meets at 2:30 p.m. EST to continue debate on the national eco- T in western Cape Breton since’ Nov. 20, was abandoned Wed-4 tsday. Navy personnel assisting vol- unteer searchers in the nearby Lake Ainslie area for several days returned to Halifax. An RCAF helicopter also returned to its Greenwood base and of-I ficials said it would not he in-, Holland for 30 years before she. Nothing is found in the dory. V01Ved in any further Search-I stepped down from the throne dent. 1 Read became separated fromi two companions while hunting-: in the thickly wooded Soutlii Lake Ainslie area. He was said night at her palace near Apel-l n. to have been lightly clad. Former Dutch ‘ IQueen Dies THE HAGUE ‘RCUieI‘SI Princess Wilhelmina. who ruled died during the night. it was announced Wednesday. She was 82. The former ouecii died quietly in her sleep just before mid- (Contlnued on Page 5 Col. 2) come to Ottawa after ‘the Ba- hamas meeting." They spoke by telephone about it Tuesday. . ednesday morning, Mr. Die- feabaker was given a message British High Commissioner Lord Amory from Mr. Macmil- lan. saying that a planned ‘ with President do ssus 52 scoorsas OTTAWA (cm-art- m; amnion! has sold In surplus ' goes the Chris the Bahamas Hr. the invitation of an lopportunity , to them with Mr. Kenned K It is unlikely there will be any «toiled new. Guile of France and the near- of tmns holing meeting with Mr. Kennedy wou make it impossible for him to come to Diefenbaker welcomed to hear Mr. Mocndl en's views Ibdt current world .problems fresh fro his discussion of y. the in the av con. . it also is unlikely any MM decisions will be made. ' may be dis- "I principle which will detailed agree- ...“mim't” it" “ bull t “r‘ u“ unmet time further h III con- “ed on world affairs who :I'lfiident magnum in w. ' I. It is expected that Mr. and Mrs: mm will “a. '9 0” Dan. at as m m on u..."- Upwards of 100 persons at- tended a cMmunity planning organizational meeting at the Charlottetown Hotel last night. Some 31 communities were re- COMMUNITY PLAN h presented. The guest speaker w a n Profe R. Graham Murray. vice - president of the Community Planning As- sociation of Canada. and dean MING DISCUSSED HERE of the faculty of law at Dal- houote University, Halifax. Ex- changing ideas with Prof. Mur- ray. (second from left) are. Mayor A. Waltben Gaudet. left. Charlottetown. Dr. George Dewar. O'Leary. representing the provincial government. n cy. Charlottetown. chairman of the steering com mittee. nomic development boar The Senate meets at 3 p.m. IFUND REACHIES I 81.2 PER CENT The United Fund Appeal ad- ded approximately 000 to hel to “the limits of human ingen-- iuity“ to reassure Russia that. ;on-site nuclear test_ inspection- .would not mean spying. He said Soviet charges that. inspection teams can] be esti ern espionage agents were‘ d u ' SO. I i f ipdtenfiy ridiculous as to ,unde stand ng." 1 British delegate Joseph God- ;bur emphasized the Western position in an exchange with ITsarapkin at the subcommittee .meeting. asking the Russian to 'accept "in principle" that the» }Soviet Union would invite in- 'spection "on each and every ;occasion that the scientists de‘ .clare on-site inspection to be. necessary." K Soviet delegate refused Th i‘to commit himself. IChina, India éQuarreI Moves To New Arena NEW DELHI tAPi-A Week 'after the Himalayan front fell silent in a cease-fire, India and Red China pressed their unde- ‘clar war Wednesday with diplomatic drives for the sup- port of non-aligned nations. Delegations and messages ‘dispatchcd from New Delhi and Peking vied for the backing of five countries invited Cey- ln 0 a conference— tentatively set for early Decem- ber—to seek a solution of the .~ d_ ‘India-China border conflict. The countries are the United Arab Republic, Ghana, Burma, 'lndonesia and Cambodia, all of ’whom at accepted lndia as a bellwether ‘of the non-aligned bloc. It was one time at least I announced here Burma Indonesia have. accepted the ilnvitations. Speculation of a possible Rus- gsian role ' ian ml- Inocuvring was amused by n fdisclosurc that the Soviet 'charge d'affaires met rim. Minister Nehru Tuesday even- ing. its total yesterday and now stands at $184,787. This amount is 81.2 per cent of its objective for Prince Edwa Island. Iravel Bureau Move ‘iReveaIed At Ottawa By ALAN DONNELL" inf payments problem just a OTTAWA (CPI—The govcrn- does commodity trade. ment's two big promotion ef- Northern Affairs Minister forts abroad—trade and tourism ‘Dinsdale said Wednesday the I —-are to be combined under the ,swilch of the 125-man travel trade department with the bureau had been suggested by transfer of the Canadian govern- the Glassco royal commission ment travel bureau from the on government operations dur- northern affairs department. ing its study of his department, Plans for the move, made public Wednesday. will put the WERE. OTHER FACTORS trade department's worldwide But It was learned that one of force. of trade offices behind the the. factors behind the decision effort to attract foreign travcl- ,‘WBS the travell bufreausi tplan . d th ir money to Can- 0 open a coupe 0 gm", 1e" an e flees in Europe. It was felt thug ads. I The. travel bureau. With a 8.326.000 spending budget year. has for years been adm' istered by the. northern affairs ‘earnings ~ and f WHERE-TO-FiND-IT department. lts transfer to the trade department underlines the iii“ New York. Chicago and Sm, fact that the country's mul‘ISIli‘rancisco and early last sum- ‘ spending by mer opened its first overseas of- Canadian tourists abroad—haven“ in London. on impact on Canada's balance cc,“ of its budget is spent for the job could be handled more tliisfcfficicntly by the trade depart- iu- ment‘s salcs force of trade corn- missioncrs there. The travel bureau has offices per ,. in the United States. The trade department has 65 trade commissioner office: spot in every area of tho a sub- I Finance. markets H kworld where Canada has T Announcements. notice! 25 istantial trade interest. Births. deaths . It. 25 For ye." Clam] tom-1's I must _ . - . - - ~~ - 2" ‘carnings have fallen short of Comics - . - ~ ~ - - - - ~ - - - w 2‘ what Canadian Weller: spend Emmi“ ‘ - - ' ~ ' ~ ‘ in other countries. mallet-l City. Queens -------- ‘ deficit which is added u- the Prince Count! u : ments deficit in such thing at I Summersidc .. C may, int.” ’.’ i Sport v- ‘7 ‘2 merits deficit in mhthinu a I women“ '- ' l“ 'foreign investment earnings ant ;__.___————-——‘ shipping meta. [ta ,