If It's Good For The lslancl The Guardian ls For It flllioc fittotridlimit “(.7overs Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” v‘ot. ix‘ x‘ vii. N0. 21 _j;.—w——f ltoslyii Keller. ll). of Mon- rm-ia. Liberia. snow queen of WFllf‘l‘l00 Lutheran Univ- Autbortud as sound Clue III! by he run om" Dflilrlnunt. omn. and lot pay-an LIBERIAN GIRL IS SNOW QUEEN ersll”-_y'is winter carnival at Waterloo. 0nt.. gets applause tfrom leftt Bria-n Baker. car- niial oliaiii-man; contestant _, mu“ _ u__ CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, SATURDAY, JANUARY 25, 1964 tHearings WEATHER Cloudirig over during afternoon: winds increasing to southeast 20. Low-high 20 and 33. Sunday: showers "°*,;;<;“ SEVEN CENTS Completed ‘ By STEWART MacLEOD ‘V '5 316th, and final submission a broad picture of the Canadian tax system by the Canadian lnx Foundation" The nonlpmm Vlsils by groups of nuclear spe-‘ofDfive:gl)ii/(l¢le1l)l/)ffl$i1alas dilegautlln lorganization was the first to ap- cialists and scientific informa- llast io days have visitviidoalilimiz ipea_r before the inquiry when tion swaps are provided underlfacilities at Chalk River, 0nt., lsittings began last April. leljms 0i an agreement signed e nuclear power station at No attempt was made in set Friday by Canada and Russia. tkolphton, 0nt,_ another one at out specific recommendations. .Th°_ agreement l°l' ¢0‘0Pel‘8-lK‘"°31'dl“9» Ont» _ _0ll8W8 in Friday's brief. Instead, ex- l‘°“ ."‘ the l’°3c°f“l_ "595 °l§a"d .M°M*'Sl" U““’9'5‘lY al plained Chairman A. D. Russell. iammlc energy “'35 “lined be’ '_Hamllt°"' the idea was to point to theltween .At9"“° Energy °f Call“ threads of continuity that have.""td"[ Llml“-‘Flt-t “Ed ltlllle 5°lVlel It nth hth 99d, I ~t_‘saecommiee or eutiiza~tw H -m mug e an 0 S1 ‘tion of atomic energy. Consid- I e OTTAWA (CP) -— Exchange- 72 =- ings. i . . i ' ‘l lso be given to- o - One of the foundations sug- Hat.‘-on w”- lgestions was that the commis-fmiihll-i an-‘Mable to each °theri n lsion, headed by Toronto char-jscle-n 1 lc Instruments and . . . ltered accountant Kenneth Car-‘equl.plnem' ' MONTBEAI‘ ‘LP’ *. p°l"’° it”, try to estabmh a {rame_: imttaiiy camper-anon Wm in..are holding Real LeClaii'e. 20. Pauline Thompson of Atwood. ‘Work of philosophy on which to ;°l"‘l° °’f°l“’“3e °i i“i°l'm3‘l°n °‘ N°"”" Dam“ d“. B°".C°“5e”- Om” and mmnel._up Judy base a tax system Um“ nowiof atomic power, research re.iQue.. as a material witness in Kaiinef-tiesser of North Bay lthere was no indication that ;a°l°r5- ".‘al°“al5 “sea ‘°l' lllell‘ l the 5133"“ 'l3“- 3 ‘ll R9“ G901“ (Cl, wlrephoio) taxes were based on R ph-l10So_ {construction nuclear and solid. ges Chouiiiard. \\'l2\'.\'IPEG iCPt—A head-on clash is shaping up between lt'hti0l authorities and the par- ents of 21 Roman Catholic cliil. drcn kept home from class since .‘\'ov. 12. The parents in neigliboring St. _l Vital withdrew their children — from Ste Emile parochial St'llfl0l to protest a public school bus transportation Letters from an attendance officer began arriving at the parents‘ homes Friday. threat- .\li's. Wil'liam Schick, the par- rnts' spokesman, said they plan to ignore the letters. Congo You Burning, C!’ from Reuters-AP Ll-IOPOLDVILLE. The (Iongn—— A weeping Roman Catholic nun. evacuated here from the terrorized Western Congo pi-ov- inc-c of Kw-ilu_ told Friday how three Belgian priests were liar-kcd to death by villagers with machctcs. The nun. who asked not to be attacked government posts. industrial sites and plan- tations. United Nations troops. the “We are quite prepared to go to jail." she said. "if this is the only way we can get freedom and justice." Mrs. Schick is s great-niece of Louis Riel. 19th - century champion of the rights of Mani- toba Metis—people of Indian and white blood. Six of her eight ichildi-cn are involved in the bus dispute. She said the parents under- stand that prosecution under the -Schools Attendance Act :resu'.t in either a small fine or fjail for up to 20 days. The act calls for a second ‘warning letter before prosecu- -tion can be launched. h Reported urdering wear in Stanleyville tduring the separatist regime of Gizengai." she sai . "They backed the priests to death with machetes. After the villagers left, we buried the priests." ‘(‘.0PTl-JR IN ACTION Meanwhile informed sources said a UN helicopter Friday ‘ e Americans in- ipitlie u . -cluding two children. stranded ' at a burned-out mission in Kan- dalc. about 95 miles southeast of Kikwait. The protestant mission was - operated by the Evangelical Congo Inla nd Mission. with licadquai-tors in Elkhart. Indi- -. ana. ' Seven of the Americans were identified as Rev. Harold Gra- ber, 40, his wife Gladys. 35 and their daughter. Jeanette. 7, of Pretty Prairie, Kansas; Rev.- phy of any kind. « .. . . an 6 Waste. and uses of ra--day by a provincial police The choice of rates for any-dioamve isotopes spokesman 3‘ Ha ‘en imp I . _ ' .' 0'. as . . ,given level of income appears . . ,, H _ h be d d t - th . Later_ said the statement byitant witness in the case. He ea d 0 n C S h a ‘pchstaallixiosteiéntiergledl (fill rellienu: l""‘°’"l° energy of Canada. other Was brought to Montreal Thurs- lconsiderations at the lower end, ‘a feeling for what is politically -saleable at the top end. and the‘ matters may be added by mu- day from the jail at Arthabaska ‘tual agreement. where he had been detained foi- President .1. L. Gray of not being able to pay a line 0 In Ma n itoba Sch ool Issue or a 0- ismoom curve between the two_-- signed for Canada. and the Rus.} baska. 80 miles northeast of l ‘sian representative was Dr. . Montreal. is where the inquest ;SUGGESTS MODERATION I. , Morohov. first deputy into the slaying will he held ‘owed a warning Monday byimfli: :0l;'£Ll"ljl;5l;)‘i1t\;t]tea5e?fsel::?:i ‘L3 glgzifnrriitaéie of the Soviet state Early hnext) week.‘ No specific - - - l ae as een se. Education M in is t e r George . Johnson to the heads of the six 3 more mweraie scale °l ‘axes- .families involved to return the ,ll';‘(’)‘t”';‘ll_g%‘l’1“ sIa)il§°°;°’ 3 'i):“‘(‘)fi_‘ll. .g§;1,-:33" t° 5°’-°°t *° W‘ W 3...... or at least ....£ .5’... lesdsi e a ff I ra n S I a n-|- ‘ _Up to that time provincial of-lg':_a‘l”all°"'h wt°“hl§l hale 1955 Emiala evidently expecting thels am on t e ec ncal fibre of 1' parents to give up the fight. had tall but ignored the truancy even Delivery of the letter: fol- fore the Legislative Buildings. i 5l"°° °°mmi55i0l‘ hearings There is some suggestion thebegall last spring. One of the , , lbattie of the bus is an “aimed most notable features has been: JACKSON. Miss. tAP)——Sur-tdetails of the arrangement and |skirm15h~.jn~ , urge, bemnd_me_ the widely different approach” -Igeons took the heart -‘from a‘circumstances leading up to the lscenes fight for pumc ‘rd unto taxfifon by economists, acgdead man, revived it and trans-‘transplant. I-‘separate 5choo]s_ ,countants and ]awyers_ The iplanted _it into the chest of a_N0 MORE TNFORMATION 3 M,-5_ Schick says. “Manitoba foundation Friday offered mlman dying of a heart failure‘ Following the hospital's brief ‘ Frlda announcement, a spokesman the_ only Canadian province W" Views On this- flll, Wlllcll separate tschoolst N'lh The report is scheduled to be ceive no governmen gran, no anded nto the overn nt .. . share of education taxes col- about the end of thisgyeargme hegt ll‘a:l|:Dlal1ti.)lf1 the wolf-ld. tclmircal experience is gained." ier-ted from on ra[epayef5_ . . .. _ ‘en e su stitute eart- e spokesman said this ‘ awe pay me ‘same taxes aslvklxvrs. efiag-tee3si'se(siaitc(l) it-1:idca0ym'l:i:l.failed and the patient died. lmeant the hospital would sa lower resldenls 9 “'93- lsion have been so diverse that The dimenswns of the onlylnolhmg more -[mm another “I feel we are entitled to the "whatever we recommend Wm -available donor heart at thellleart transplant is tried. same transportation and text. fl-ad support in mme “amen me of the patient's collapse’ At’ Chicago._ the American books Provided for public school _and it is aqua]; deqa, ma} P‘‘°V9d ‘-00 Small £0‘ ‘h91‘e‘l“lW'lMed'°al AS5°°'.a“°" Said this pupils even though we.” ready our recommendam-3:5 mum not moms of the consider-abiy iarger ‘was. as far as it knew. the first lto pay extra to have our chi'l- mm the wishes M an}. recipient." a kesman said. illeari transplant ever to work. tdren receive spiritual education ’ "This disparity must be mini-.5 The sP0li€‘sm8n at the medical - mized in future operations," gcentre here said the recipient For an hour, it worked——per- said: “No further information aps the first successful human .will be released unti‘. additional 7 .we want through attendance at p _ ‘it parochial srnooi.-- The spokesman added the sur- was rushed into the operating -BOOKJSSUE FIGHT geions were “gratified to con--.l'°°m ""1 sllolik dying 0i then‘- ; l ‘firm that procedures previouslyimlnai heart failure from chronic l Mrs. Schick tackled the text-I lC’:"ll'-"3;_ Llealhs - - - - -- -1~ 13 worked out in the experimental lh_eart disease Of years‘ dura- ibook issue in 1962_ when she had "95 '9 1“ ll laboratory a r e effective in] 0n-" ther children register at publicl °l_“lC§ man," The operation began shortly school, collect their books and.‘ l‘3ll|l0|‘|alS 4 Surgeons at the University of§b9in!'€ midnlfllll Tllnrsday night ‘bring them home. then registerl Sport . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 8 -Mississippi medical centre her-etand ended three hours later. ‘the next day at the parochial Finance. markets . . . . . . .. 7 performed the operation. early Friday morning, ischool. That case got to thet Kings. Queens, City . . . . .. 5 The hospital declined to dis- “l)Ul‘in-2 transfer and while Manitoba C ou rt of Appeal, ’ summersiae _ , , , , _ , . , _ .. 3 close the names of the surgeons, I-being sewed in place." the which ordered the books seized-. women’; _ . _ . . ‘ _ _ _ o _ _ ‘ _ __ 5 ‘the names and ages of the don- spokesman said, the donor heart chilled. I~-vr~,-u- iand returned. i The truant pupils have been riding to school free of charge ‘on a private bus rented by the ‘St. Vital school board. l A board statement published iiii the St. Vital Lance. a com-. lmunity weekly. said the bus‘ tcompany raised its rates last lfall and the board decided to impose a $6-a-month fee for leach parochial school student in tors and recipient, and withheld “was preserved with ...-» 5.2., sing it. Additional‘, the board said . .——-———i ..:.:::.-;:.".;:. .-:::.i 5 l‘lUCl8dlSWdDS Pldflfledlgllglldélilgli state physics. disposal of radio- LeClali‘(= was described l-‘ri-‘ -rude reporters on arrival NEW ORLEANS t'APi — . «- 3 .- its ‘Friday. a I d th h b ; l ; sen er you as come ac Hi It devfned the 135' day °_f pub‘ . he U.S. convinced of the ; C hearings l0 3 Presentation of . righteousness of his flag-rain ‘- it ing act—but troubled over .1 consequences in the Panama Canal "1 was right in raising the American flag." James Jenk- ins. 17. said Thursday after the Cristobal docked here. But if he had the choice of mission has revealed the au- thors of some Quebec school books were members of boards which approved them Bella: it“-as:in.§ ‘the! former and has also charged that ‘ a oa ig .c on senior added’ “rd have m mink ‘nearly three quarters of the about it if I knew four U.S. - citize us would have been ‘big 8 prom’ d_.. The commission said there i Jenkins. one of the student -had been 8 "5UTPI‘lslnB nllmbel‘ leaders in the Jan. 9 incident of conflicts of interest" between which led bloody rioting between US. soldiers and authors who wrote ‘school books panamaniansl is on his Way and at the same time were on to Cambridge‘ ' _ committees which approved the He will finish his education ibooks, there. staying with relatives. - V . . ~ He is returning to the U.S. The Zjlrpdge repom “NF.” \.olumal.“y_ he Say_ Maurice Bouchard. a Loi- enkins, who briefly fried to tversity of Montreal economics _ professor. was tabled in the confirmed that ‘he was the ‘Legislative Assembiy Friday by student who_ It‘:-.llS€(l the flag Cultural Affairs Minister Geor- E 5' il“l3alb06 H12 V . ges Lapalme. He made no com- - lt_ was.my flag.‘ he said. merit in the House but it is un- l tlld false lderstood the cabinet has not yet . studied the report and no im- mediate action is contemplated I The report, which also dealt with other sections of the prov- ing was coming sooner or r. “if the flag-raising hadn't happened. I th i n k there i would have b e e n trouble lsaid l anyway. . . . 1 Works, on the committees concerned ‘made a total of $1,416,565 in rroyalties. It made detailed suggestions the Income Tax Act. but he . t doubted if it would solve al’. the ‘'3’- - 9 But Man Dies After Hou r -- when the children paraded be ‘ ‘text books is delegated to the QUEBEC t0Pt—A royal com- . publishers ‘have been taking too. 12 i>A(;Tr‘§ llaiiillon Excessive Profits Notecl On Quebec School Books Authors On Boards Selections lic education council. the top education body in the province. and its sub-committees. The council will disappear when new education legislation takes effect. “VERY HIGH" PROFITS The royal commission report said that only 26.6 per cent of Quebec publishers are making a normal or below normal pro- ifit on school books. The rest were making high lhigh" profits. It said that if better purchas- ing practices had on us . Quebec taxpayers would have been saved an estimated $1,215.- 000 on school books each year between 1960 and 1963. me prominent figures in Quebec education circles were mentioned in the report as hav- l-ing been in a position of con- ict of interest between_their ‘work as authors and their po- sitions on approving bodies. It said Pierre Dagenais. dean lot the faculty of letters at the iUniversity of Montreal. made i$l99,781_ for . }ince's hook-publishing industry, lbooks In 1937 While he was on H v e geography the sub-committee of geography that 19 authors who were and msmry Gerard Fi‘.t.eau, technical ad- viser for the department of pub- lic instruction. was said to have 84,” 1 th 11! ‘on how to avoid such conflictlfiggerysl ‘0 for we gem“ of interests and cut costs ofirence. 3 former department 0,. i-F°l'°"- l3°°l‘s Wile" Qiiellec flefstficiai collected $199,239 in roy- its projected education minis-- books. J ean-Marie Lau- alties for 3 e v e n grammar books Other amounts involved in the catholic committee of the pub- ‘list ran from $2,000 up. well oxygenated blood pumped ‘"‘I.?.";Til"“fi.§""il’l’$‘e"‘i..i‘l'°'1i'.§¥ Former Lieutenant-Governor lsl fdrains the heart itself. .-:.-‘:.:’:"::.:i..°.;‘ :..:.-not Nova Scotia Dies Ar 77 lrillator to immediately re-esta-b-. llish a forceful. regular heart- 'beat. 4 ANTIGONISH, N.S. H 5-heart to a regular rhythm. _ _ The centre has been 3 pacemattributed to complications fol- lsetter in transplantation. _ _ in June_ 193,-3_ 5“,-geons at the , for an undisclosed illness. c e n t r e successfully accom- l .po,-ted hum-an rung transpiantaw 21st lieutenant-governor in 1952 jtion. The recipient died from ‘ ‘ind retired in 1953- ‘icausets other hart the rung, Son of Hon. Duncan Cameron twhich functioned perfectly. l A major obstacle to overcome ‘ ‘in any transplant is the human: ‘systems rejection of foreign‘ alld lawyer alld ernor of -mechanism. QSOME SPO'Kl:'SMiEN DISAPPOINTED ‘tween it and other indiistries." y BEN WARD Meagher also said that B '- OTTAWA tCP|—-A pledge to (cm--pi on. Alistair Fraser, a former. The electric defibrillator is an. lieutenant - E0VBl‘n0l‘ Oi NOVB‘ 3' ‘instrument used to pace thei Scotia, died in hospital here Fri-, . day at the age of 77. Death was lowing surgery earlier this week.- A native of New Glasgow, Mr.‘- lplished the wmqd-5 first re_lFraser became the province's ‘Fraser, also a lieutenant-gov-. Nova Scotia, be dis; tinguished himself as soldieri was a vice-; .m_-mgr placed inside the b0dy.‘pl‘eSldCnl of Canadian National. New drugs have been discov. Railways. A graduate of Dal- 0n e to combat the rejection-housie University law school In- l908, he was called to the bar: to be ai1nnIlnf'Pt"l later. Congolese national army and and Mr‘ -lam” B‘-'”5"l“" bml‘ lthe Public‘ Schools Act. prohibits Drivatc planes moved into the area to evacuate whites and try to control the situation. The nun said their mission spears and firearms. Only 11 cases of polio have been reported in the province since the Salk vaccine Pro Bram was initiated. . Hubert ltlacNelll. minister of health. noted as he described the H‘- lnarkable strides made by ROV- ernment in protecfiiic the health of children. While the five years since the program started wowed the excellent result above. the Pre- fllouc five years. 131 to 1955 lntiluslve. new 115 cases | and preschool child- Yen of the Inoculation clinics Hitch will be in sum. “in week. The Charlottetown lmllmn will not start until Feb. 17 an I ma dd»-ed due "Some wore the red helmets: that Gizenglst forces used tol Value Of Inoculation Stressed By Minister he Minster emphasized thlsi -42. and their son. Timothy. 7. of Archbo-ld. Ohio. and Selma Un- -ruh. 50. of Hillsboro. Kansas. The other two American mis- '-sionaries were not identifed. Radio reports said youth bands were "running wild and burning everything" at kan- ale. to unavailability of the new vaccine at the time originally planned. lVOAL VACCINE Every four years every s°l100l in the pi-oviince ls visited for the purpose of general unmuoiz- atlon and to that this year will the added the useol Savbm polio twccnne given orally. ft wfll only the given to rhosewhowehre Pg‘; viously inoculated wi if-la-lk vaccine The pleuiant tasting vsoc-inc. cherry flavored match its color. is given in small quantit- ies dropped I088‘ the bad on V, cent effective in Ktvlnli Pl'0l8C' .-except for public school pur-t iposes for which the parochial’ lstudents do not qualify. I Rather than pay the fee, the ‘parents kept their children iliome. Mrs. Schick says the par- ;ents cannot afford the charge. . ere quoted ii provincial education official as saying the govern- ment is considering making the truants wards of the courts to ensure schoot attendame. i Premier Duff Roblln brushed off the report as “nonsense" at ‘ weekly press conference Friday. but commented no fur- .l'. T’;-' 3' 5 ‘cm President fls Re-Elected re-elected yesterday as pres- dont of the Canadian Federa. tion of Agriculture at A meeting of the board of (Ir-action. Lionel Sorel. Montreal is the lot vice- president and Ed Ndlon, Ed- monton is the second vice presi- dent. Dir-ectiors named to In exocu. tive include C.E.s. Walls, Vic- toria. B.C.; N. Mclm. Cdauy; G. l-‘ranldi-u. Winnipeg: A.I.|(. Musgrave. lo: (Continued an we I. 001- ll Pre. J.M. Beriiey. Edmonton was’ for walking from HlI'1f(l'd for the in-tiemational Soowdvowai-a‘ M miles a day. took 19 days in its problems and "there can- Convemou being but! luot 1,. Snowshoe!’ Leo J. Mm-an of weekend. Moran. avo-~ag'nig fottbst:-in igive the Canadian fisherman help provided for the farmer was made Friday at the close of the first federal-provincial fish- eries conference. revised at it final closed-door lsession that ran an hour longer jthan expected. also set out a number of rincipies for a na- tional fisheries development pro- ‘gram but did not spell out any proposals in detail. l Although the 1.850-word state- Minister Robichaud at a press conference. reported "a spirit of enthusiasm and co-opera- tion." some provincial spokes- tmen said they did not think the ‘five-day conference made the 1progress they had expected. ‘ Premier Joey Smallwood of Newfoundland. however. termed the final policy statement a "marina charts for the fishing ilndustry“ and a historic mile- post in fisheries‘ progress. ‘ Conference sources said the lstatementis reference to putting fisheries on the same basis as Iagriculture was inserted at me strong insistence of Mr. Small- .wood. only premier to lead I ldelegation at the conference. ‘UNIQUE PROBIJ-‘MS Later. when provincial spokes- men were asked to make final comments with the press prer- cni. Brian Meagher. Nova Sco- tla's director of fisheries. said the fishing industry was unique l (W Wlrevhotol my exact parallel be- the same kind of government. ’ .they should have." Although it A conference report, hastily. lment. read by federal Fisheries. the conference had “perhaps al- lowed some to speak more than had got some problems “a little. ‘mixed up.‘ the Nova Scotia group was hopeful that sane and sensible solutions would emerge. Two western spokesmen said in separate interviews the con- ference should have laid dowr. ‘a firmer policy statement. Resources Stcrlittfl Lyon of Manitoba said it was obvious that some provinces did ‘not come to the conference pre- pared to talk on a policy level. Instead. much "administrative trivia" had been brought up. He said the week-long meet- ing came close to setting up a definite fisheries program pol- icy and "maybe we"'.l get it on the next go-round." Resources M i n i s t 9 r Eiliiig Kramer of Saskatchewan said some of the eastern provinces had resisted siiggcstions for a modern national marketing de- velopment. He indicated Quebec and Nova Scotia took that line "lf lll('l'(‘ had been as much unanimity among the eastern provinces as among the inland provinces there would have been much greater progress." he said. IIOPF. FOR ROAR!) Both Mr. Lyon and .\1r. Krat mer said they were hopeful that a federal-provinr-lal marketing board for freshwater fish will be organized as a result of the discussions. The conference report said an early meeting is manned with representatives of the three in l9l1 and made in King's Coun- sel in 1921. After practising law in East- ern and Western Canada he joined the army at the outbreak of the First World War. served overseas as captain. company commander and adjutant. lie won two promotions in the field and received the Military Cross at Vimy ' Survivors -include his wife, the former Jane Graeme Ross of Moose Jaw. Sask.. and three sons. Alistair. who is executive assistant to State Secretary J. W. Pickersgill. fan in Mont- real and Duncan in Brockville. l. l-‘iincral arraiigcmenls were i Policy Statement Called Magna Charta For Fishing Prairie provinces, Ontario and the federal government to study this marketing board plea. A l\'ev.‘foundland proposal for a salt cod marketing board is also to be discussed at a further meeting among Ottawa and At- lantic province delegates. _ Revenue Minister Eric Kier- ans of Quebec said in an inter- view his government. is willing to co-operate in a national pro- gram but insisted that some of the c o n to re n c e suggestions could not be accepted without closer study. He identified these as propo- sals regarding national market- ing boards. price controls and production controls, admitting there had hcen “complete and open conflict this morning" on the issues. Mr. Kicrans added that Que‘ bcr-‘s view was not in opposition to a national program. it would support any initiatives of tho federal government. However. Quebec preferred to continue its own fisheries pro- gram with additional federal fi- nancial aid rather than direct participation by the federal fish- eries department. l-‘ishcrics Minister Ernest Rl- . chard of New Brunswick said .. he hoped the suggestions made; . by the provinces would enable -_ the federal government t.o de- - ' volop a national program for the , ‘- fisheries. I’-liigenc (Gorman. tieputy fish-V erics minister in Prince Edward ‘Island. said he was pleasantly»; surprised at the progress mm by the conference. "I hardly expected as h be cause of the regional dlfforencu involved.