It it's Good-For the Island The Guardian is For it “themed an VOL. LXXVI. NO. 66 —.—-———— ANNE 0' L. 15. of Bal— Peter’s Basilica in Vatican timore. M s the ring of City Sunday. Anne's recovery llancis C Spellman of from leukemia has been at- New York end of boa- tributed to the miraculous at D of Mother Seton. (AP W photo via radio from Rome f Eliza- in St. tification cor ny 0 both Ann Baylcy Seton Many Pilgrims Attend Beatification Event . VATICAN CITY lRelltei‘s)~-..SISters of Charity of St. Joseph Pope .I o h n XXIII described ‘ “were m attendance' Mother Elizabeth Ann Seton The ceremony WW9“ ".19 . . acceptance by the Holy See in Puma-V. as “1" “m "mc'allrFebruary of the validity of two "3“"?“‘"“ MW." °l Sammy cures necessary for beatifica-. “mh the UM“ Slates tion. One was the recovery of ;. VT: 0 yo. Second Ottawa. and tar lumen who (Smoothies ' “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” Claaa Hall by the Put Ollie. t d poa'au In udl Mm" CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, Truth Squad Disbanding Announced } OTTAWA ( CF) —- Liberal party headquarters announced Sunday that it has decided to disband the “truth squad“ that’ was formed last week to attend ‘ meetings held by Prime Minis- ter Diefenbaker. MARCH 13.7%. W E A T H E R Occasional rain changing to snowflurries: clearing by evening; colder. North winds 25. gusts to 45. High-low 34 and 28. Wings“ SEVEN CENTS he squad. consisting of Judy . La Marsh. MP for Niagara; Falls in the last Parliament,‘ any carafremh NUC Masked By free-lance journalist, has been ' 5 held by Prime Minister Diefenbaker to point out to the press “any inaccuracies" he might make In his political campaign. Here is the text of the quarters' press statement: . Last week the national cam-i ‘ head- PARIS (Reuters) - An offi- .paign committee of the Liberal‘cial blackout Sunday masked party began to correct. in a reports France was conducting systematic way. mis-statements ‘an underground atomic bomb of fact being made by the prime test in the S a h a r a Desertl minister in his e l e c t i o n ‘ against Algeria's wishes. speeches. i Algeria h a s retested Io HARASS LA MARSH France that a test explosion on Because this procedure has Algerian territory would lead to been misunderstood and mistn- a “grave situation." ' terpreted and because of the. Defence ministry officials regrettable harassment of Miss there said they could give no in- udy La Marsh. candidate for formation on the subject . Parliament in Niagara Falls. it In Algiers, reporters trying to ,ls being discontinued. find out whether there had been Ba n-The-Bomb 1 Group Pushed ' QUEBEC (CP) —— f b Ban - the- picketers including girls bom were attacked physically Sull- jday outside a party rally or jLiberal Leader Pearson. I While police watched. the group of about 35 young pick- with anti-nuclear signs eters and jostled and pushed sharply. . Most of the signs were torn up and trampled. Most pickc ers did not attempt defend themselves. The people who did Iihe push- ing and shoving left the meeting and later returned to it. One of the ring-leaders identified him- self as rmand Anoreau of Levis. Asked by reporters twice the : to ‘ America offers to the world." 5 pokc at a service vener- nting the. 19th-century New York nun following her beatificatinn. Pope John was greeted with the late sister Gertrude Kert~ zcndorfcr from cancer of the pancreas in New Orleans in 1935. The other was that Theresa O‘Neill. applause by a congregation ofE .whether he was a Liberal he ‘retorled “I am a nationalist. 1 {can tell you one thing we don't 0 twant any Communists in Que ‘bec." some 6,000 when he entered St. Peter's Basilica accompanied; bv 15 cardinals and many bis-1 hops. He knelt before a portrait of Mother Seton. first U.S.-horn} person to be heatified. and: prayed privately for 15 min-‘ 5. Present at the morning cere- mony in St. Peter's basilica here were senior Roman Catho- lic clerics from the United. States. including Francis Cardl-‘ rial Spcllman of New York. . MONTREAL I'CP) —-- Mal-cell Also attendin was 15-year- . i . . . . ~ "M Theresa ogNem of Bum. differences that. have developed pieSldentlal post a nd‘ three . Vmetdh ""Iggha'rd‘m‘l“ “ntl-V mt’e train for Timmms. when he is mm. cured of leukemia u Within the ranks of Quebecsother high-ranking positions pol" 9 i a “ 3 “’3” “d own address another meeting to. war; an" an”. pm'yers to separatists when he was elected llure leaders of the two other lsmy- night Saturday as president of the! lRepublican Party of Quebec,1 INVOKES BLESSING the political n r g a n ism be} How than 3.000 United States‘founded to break away from Pllgi'aims attended the care-Confederation. "my and later Joined a crowd‘ “I would like to make an n 99‘5"“5 3“ Sl- Peter's 'lappeal for unity. a union for the Smini-e to hear Pope John lnymmmon good the cause,"‘ Mother Seton. 0 who the blessing on the nun‘he told 300 “Gimmes from who died in 1821. lliindl‘cds of members of the order she founded in 1309-the 5'“ .‘ *- 13' ': Wily» it"gr'k of. vention here. . i ': U.S. : tracked the intruders by radar Chaput Makes Appeal For Separatist Unity As part of the peace offering. .Chaput made a bid to mend the i the party left vacant the vice- ‘V0lcan" menace 0 V 9 ‘3 main separatists groups — le Rassemblement pour l’lndepen-; Canada Lacks Leadership : SC Party Leader Declares, dence Nationale and l‘Alliance Laurentienne. The R.I.N. lauching itself as a political party here earlier this month under lawyer Pouliot of Quebec City. rejected a resolution calling for a com- tist groups." Mr. Chaput. a onetime chem- which came out of the 19th cen- lshowing the ist who resigned from the i Miss La Marsh will be asked ‘an explosion were told tele- lto resume her regular schedule ‘phone calls‘to France's Sahara; lof speaking engagements. test. site at In‘Ekker were not‘ i Liberal campaign headquar-lpossible. Eters will receive reports in Callers to nearby Hassi Mes- jthe normal way from an Ob- saoud. where an observatory ;server who will attend Mr. could have detected an explo- lDiefenbaker's meetings. Fac< lsion. were told by the operator: jtual statements correcting inac- “HaSsi Messoud does not an-. » ritory of lear lest i Blackou ' swer. We have cancelled your call." The Algerian government rte- cided Saturday to call its am- bassador in Paris home for s. and warned France it‘ "could not accept that the ter-‘ independent Algeria‘ should serve as a field for tests of nuclear devices.’ ' France retained the right to use her test sites in the Sahara Hits In U.S. In Heavy Rain By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Heavy rains in a water‘logged section of the southern Appala- ‘chian mountains brought new flooding Sunday in parts of Kentucky. West Virginia and :Virginia and forced 2.500 to ‘3.000 persons to flee their homes. One death was reported In West. Virginia. At Centreville. Alabama a tornado injured three persons and caused widespread dam- age. Desert for five years under last year's Evian peace agreement with Algeria. : A communique issued after aj cabinet meeting In Algiers said the government had “reliable information" that France in- tended to test an A-bomb. France's test. program is part of President de Gaulle's plans for a national nuclear strike force. It was the third straight week that tornadoes struck in Alabama. .. The floods piled new misery :on an area staggered last week”); Intprnafiona] by some of the worst flooding in memory. Rains up to three ‘inches bit late Saturday night‘mood and early Sunday while recov- ery and rehabilitation work was in progress. gcuracles M e i s i: ll 9. d as lwarranted. SI Returning i ‘To Lonely Isle i l TILBURY. England iAPt—Al lwhite liner pulled out of the lThames River Sunday night I and 51 men. women and chil-- By ALAN DONNELLY l idren turned their backs on the ST. JOHN'S. Nfld. jsimple life of the farms and Progressive Conservatives have. 20th century to return to thc‘mounted a major effort to 1. fishing boats of Tristan da ICunha. 40 square miles of . . Ivolcanic rock far out in the: Bad weather lSoutb Atlantic i The islanders speak the Eng-1 Delays Douglas lish of the early 19th century {used on by the three British ,TO RQNTO- (Cl? " Bad soldiers who settled the island “93m” “' Nor“m* a,an iwith Polynesian women in 1816. {mead 0- Douglasi new i Shipwrecks added Dutch. Ital- Democrat” Party leader' ‘3 inn and American blood to the can“! 3.5peeCh “bedded “1' community. Blit it still had only Raw-“85mg sunday mghl' 70 families sharing 10 family. lead" had been names, ischeduled to fly in Kapuskas- The Tristanpse camp tn Ens“ mg. in Cochrane riding about 65 land in the fall of .1961 after o‘mll‘?‘ “"“hw‘isi "' T‘mmmu long _ dormant volcano flared during the afternoon. but the. ,into action and made the island r‘igmar Trans'canada A" I‘m“ .dangerous. Last year. with the fight was Cancelled' . 1 they Douglas and his party: .lohn Dlefenbaker -~- in an election speeth dominant political Liberal premier. I “I want Newfoundland not to ‘allow itself to be controlled by any one person." said. i The Conservative leader also Tset out to demolish the idea. Istill held by some Newfound- :landers, that the provincial Liberal government is to thanked for federal government benefits such as family allow- ;anccs and age pensions. .Referring to pensions. he. said: ‘I know some people say: Isn‘t Mr. Smallwood kind. Well. we pay for it. . . . Don‘t anyone tell you that voting for us will mean loss of that pen- 'By BRUCE LEVETT l PENTICTON. ac. (CP) — throughout the province attend' lmittee "to come to an under-inch”: Thompson Social Credit ing the party's inaugural con- lstanding with all other separa- Header said Saturday night Can- ‘ada is operating on policies ‘ tury and is i i Defence R c s e a r c h Board. 3 came out of the First World ‘ founded the R.I.N. as a political education movement and then left it last December after a squabble undisclosed in natureiMr. Thompson blamed lack OflCaouette. Quebec's deputy na-itic provinces, leadership for much of Cana-ltional officially. L‘Alliance Lalirentienne gave indications meanwhile earlier this year that it was not in accord with the R.l.N. transfor- mation to a political party. Its President Raymond Bar- beau said the move was a gesture of despair by an organ- ization that could not retain its members. Soviet Planes Over Alaska " Draw Formal U.S. Protest? By JOHN M. HIGRTOWER WASHINGTON (AP) -— Two Soviet reconnaissance planes flew over the southwestern cor-. in background of a worsening itrend nor of Alaska last Thursday night, penetrating air ‘ space about 30 miles. the gov- ernment announced Saturday. fighters scrambled and A i: but did not fire. . tasr VOYAGE In Moscow U.S. Ambassador ltalks. and the more angry tone- oy . r made a formal protest to the Soviet foreign of- fice. The U.S. note demanded that Russia "take all necessary lWar. l Speaking to 320 persons in a Who-seat high-school auditorium. lda's problems. i "Leadership is the issue." in the federal election campaign. he said. “We n' want one- ‘man leadership. We don't want ianything to do with dictator- lship whether benevolent or oth- ‘erwise." ENDS The B.C. TOUR speech wound up three N The inciden occurred against in U.S.-Soviet relations. Signs of the trend are disap- pointment of U.S. officials with the slow pace of Soviet troop withdrawals from wn of nuclear test-ban in Soviet propaganda against the United States. particularly in Latin America. Officials said. nevertheless, I lany place with the Pentagon."‘ ngan said in Juneau. ‘ ERELATIONS WORSE measures to prevent any repeti~ i that they would‘not initially at-’ tions" of violations of U.S. ter— ritory. This is the first “clearly er tabllshed incident of a Soviet overnight or the United States." i a state department spokesman Iai . Alaska's Governor William "tach great seriousness ‘to the precedent - breaking Soviet re connalssance flights over lAlaska. linformation - gathering péanes o’clock Thursday night. Alaskan 1 i loccurred between 9 an o i The flights of the two Soviet dent or the U.S. protest. andi i i of interception. Mr. 18” Twom'o sunday evening by l sion. because we increased it to $65}. A less-hhan-capacity crowd of 7510 turned out despite a blizzard .and near-.zcro temperatures. | {KEPT COMMITMENTS Returning to the weapons issue. he asserted that 3the government has “kept ev- y commitment we ever days of campaigning through made" and accused Liberal the Okanagan Valley in the Lead?!“ Pear-50" 0‘ flfequent heart of Social Credit British‘ChantleS in Liberal policy on Columbia. acquiring nuclear weapons—— "nine different viewpoints." “Confederation need not be He reiterated his accusation horrible cracks i by men wholphat she is at the present time. ‘ot Liberal party obstruction in“ “Social Credit Is the answer the last, Parliament. separatism" The Conservative leader then Touching on reports of dis-‘wound up his four-day cam- cord between himself and Real,paign swing through the Atlan.. ‘ taking off for leader, Mr. Thompsonottawa by chartered aircraft said: "Anytime Real Caouetleidespite a strong cross-wind that has ever been asked publicly. almost kept. his plane grounded. Dl'lValPly or any other “’3! Earlier at a coffee-and-dough-t iNeonundIanders Told 'Diet Is ‘Best Friend' Pear- here which he said recommended "a $12.50 weekly for a simple life of the farms and convince Newfoundlanders that Saturday night, took aim on the one-way ticket for you" ' ' power held 1 central Canada for those unable ‘ printers' wages averaged about in this province by the peppery to get jobs in the Atlantic provinces. 3 Bomb Arg l ‘ QUEBEC (CPI —v- Youthful ‘ban-t'he-bomb pickets. including ‘girls. were jostled and pushed sharply Sunday and their signs torn from their hands by about a dozen men outside a big elec- tion campaign rally for Liberal .Leader Lester Pearson. N no actual blows were struck in the .melee that flared from heated i arguments. Inside. the meeting of more than two hours was just. begin-i n . There were about 14 area nuclear candidates. plus former primei i . imini'ster Louis St. Laurent. still ‘hale at 81. and his wif P. , The long series of speakers ln- ’ lcluded Paul Martin, Liberal lparty front-benclicr. and Lionel lChevrier. ‘b 'e the Police estimated after noon crowd at about 2.500. most of it standing. The crowd dled steadily as Mr. Pe was the last speaker. It was snowing hard outside dwin- arson and Mr. Pearson finished with less than 1.000 in attendance. SPEAKS IN FRENCH Mr. Pearson spoke mostly in French on themes developed Mr. Pearson's Que-j nt. . i l l l NEW YORK (Apt-«Striking printers Sunday rejected a con- ‘tract proposal that could have helped end a 100-day shutdown ‘of New York newspapers. 1 Negotiators for the union had irecommended acceptance of the contract terms. which had been proposed by Mayor Robert Wagner. The vote to reject was ‘to 1,557. A s ant 64 votes created the :massive stumbling block to a ‘quick settlement of the dispute. I It a stormy members Typographical jllnion Local 6 loudly expressed ithe split in their ranks. T to reject was much in .evidence as the printers cheered speakers who said the proposed contract terms were inadequate. Elmer Brown. l'I‘ll interna- znational president. strongly fa- vored accepting the proposal. ram Powers. dynamic. leader of the New York ITU local who had agreed to the proposed terms with reluctance. .had urged the group to accept. ll-le admitted he was not satis- ‘ d with the contract. 1.621 .mecting at which the e _ not .loeyleconomic prospects headed by The proposals turned down by (CP|--~ ‘Smallwood—is their best friend. Walter Gordon—now Mr. Prime Minister Diefenbaker. son's chief economic adviser— a the printers' vote called for package worth an extra two-year to contract. Before the strike $145 a week. . The strike Dec. 8 blacked out ument Flares Outside Pearson Meeting be" m ARCH MacKENZIF. {oral government would be a Qnational study on biculturallsm land more senior posts French-speaking Canadians in the civil service. at Social ('redil. 75 'cf He hit hard which won 26 of Quebec's seats last June. as h threat to the Liberals. March 4. Island Press. 14 NEE—sf Newspaper Strike In NY. Prolonged B I New Flooding Union Split Close Vote Rejects ? Contract Proposal all New York's nine major dailies. The printers called the strike at four newspapers but the ‘others closed under a pub- lishers‘ agreement to consider a strike against against all. The New York Post broke ranks and resumed publication Printers had not walked out there. Still closed are the New York Times. Daily News. World Tele< gram and The Sun and The Journal-American—the four pas pens whole printers walked out —-Herald Tribune, Mirror. Long Island. .‘Zlar-Journal and Long one a strike 4 Dietenbaker Relaxes At Ottawa OTTAWA «CPI—Prime Minis fer Dlefenbaker. returning from Newfoundland early Sunday. rea taxed from election campaign« lng Sunday and called a cabinet meeting for today to be at4 tended by three new ministers. Mr, Diefenbaker. who spoke in St. John's Saturday night. arrived at 1 a.m. by chartered TCA Vanguard and was met by a small group of party workers and supporters. j INSIDE TODAY l i the cl. ‘ Announcements. notices . 13 Births. deaths . . . . ., 3. 13 Classified . . . . . . . . . . .. 12. 13 ,omics .. . . . , . . . . . . .. I Editorials 4 Kings. Queens. City . . . . .. 3 Prince County. 2 Slimmerstde . . . . . . . . . . .. .1 Sport . . . . . . . . . . 10 Womcns' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 7 TOURIST DIRECTORS MEEET .‘ By RALPH CAMERON Guardian-Patriot Staff Writer .departmcnt bringingzlctter asking the government to Another convention approximately 600 people here in 1964 was announced at the monthly meeting of the direc- ‘When the general and“ began itors of the P.E.l. Tourist. Asso- ciation held at The Charlottetown Saturday. ‘ The gathering here in Cm- llcnnial Ycar will he that of the National Air Force Association. 'Wh“ l5 "‘9- loade" 0‘ the 5mm nuts reception at Sydney. hegearlier in the April it election scheduled to spend three days in Credit party" What does 9 made a brief speech aimed at; 53y? the three Cape Breton Island‘ “He says ‘Bob Thompson.‘ InlconstituenCies. ‘ mu. d i v e r s i t i e 5 men, is He referred to the 1957 report i i. of the royal commission onl strength. Island. The other on more. northwesterly bearing flew over Nelson Island. U.S. fighters which sped aloft from an Alaskan base were un- able to intercept the planes vis-‘ ually but did spot and follow them by radar. N0 HOSTILE INTENT The U.S. fighters did not fire. 1 officials said. because the in» truders displayed no hostile in-l tent and because they werei clearly on a course leadingL away from Alaska by the time Defence officials said they‘ were not in range of the Nike anti-aircraft missile sites. Soviet officials made no im-‘ ‘ mediate comment on the incl-L there was no mention of it in‘i the Moscow press or radio. t . « campaign. "I know that French-Cana- dians do not occupy their right~ ful place in this country." said. One step by a new Lib- l“_' 3?. ‘1‘“ this city in the third week of iSptember. it was announced by 'Harvey Campbell. President Charles Linkletter had secretary A. W. Gaudet Another Convention Added To 1964 list road a rcply from the provincial of highways in a build a new bridge at Ross Cor- ncr to replace the one washed out, The department stated plans for the new bridge had al- ready been drawn. It is expect- work on it will begin as soon as conditions warrant. DISCUSS BRIEF Prior to the directors" meet ing members of the committee named to prepare the annual brief for presentation to the gov crnmcnt at this session of tho iContinllrd on Page 2 Co]. 2) The note which Ambassador The 90 ~ yaar o old auxiliary l’miuantlna Bear left munth. NS. snow at the and “I n towllna. bound for Phila‘ flelphla. The “Moot Ship that ed r e m n a n t s the ‘3'le expedition in 1 and took United States admiral 111- l chard Byrd to the Antarctic in 1933. has been partly restored. She is destined to become a combination floating museum and restaurant after lying neglected in Dartmoith since 1962 (CP Wirephoto) Egan and Senator E. L. Bart- lett. both Democrats. said the incident. points up what they termed a need for better air de- fences in their state. “We have been screaming for protection along the northwest coast. but w don‘t seem to get e. 'Kohler delivered to Soviet Dep- The aircraft flew across theiuty Foreign Minister Vasily Bering Sea from the southwest .Kuznetsov was devoid of name entering Alaskan territory overicalling or charges of hostile in-i Kusko in Bay and departing I tention. It left the door open for in the vicinity of Hooper Bay. Russia to acknowledge the inci- one of the planes on a weat- dent and apologize if it wished erly course flew over Nunibak to do so. ‘i \ l Dressed in full members , , a... guy-i. ‘ I ST. PATRICK S rcgalia. of the Benevolent Irish Society yesterday morn- ing turned out to stage one of the biggest. St. Patrick‘s Day DAY parades in years. Here Grafton Street. w h e r e a wreath - laying ceremony took t the long parade ls seen as it ap- p r o a c h c s the cenotaph on PARADE BIGGEST IN YEARS pan. and Irish music was pro- place prior to atltending High Mass at st. Dunstan's Basilica at 11 o'clock. The parade. was marshallcd by Everett B. Bea- vidcd by the band of the P111. (Sea story on paga Regiment. 5.‘ . | i