*7 V If it's Good For the Island The Guardian is For it o. with @nardtiottt WEATHER Clearing during morning. colder in after- noon; northwest, winds 23. High-low 30 and 28. Christmas Day; Sunny and cold. “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” Authorised In Second Ottawa. and fit payment of postage In nil is?" 'VOL. LXXV. N0. 301 r. Minn-w '3? -. -1 ‘. .-, s 1 . ONE WAY OF SAYING ’MERRY CHRISTMAS Many of the Christmas cards Sent out each year by The Guardian and The Evening Patroit go to distant parts of Canada. the U.S., and elsewhere abroad, so an effort is made to have them covey something of an ‘Island flavor’ along with a seasonal message. Above is an enlargement of the woodcut-style picture used this year. The information which accompanied it is reproduced at right. And The Guardian and The Evening Patriot now extend to all the same wish as appeared on the card: May the Season‘s Utmost Joys be Yours. Pope John Broadcasts Class Mail by the Post out" Department. . e . --.._~—.~ "was M“ ;:"E; t rake ‘ Christmas Peace Appeal VATICAN CITY (Reuters) ~— Iploration of the universe and to sage Saturday was carried over the Vatican radio. linked with Pope. John appealed Sunday forIdaring achievements of modern International collaboration inilechnology. radio networks of other coun space exploration and research.I "In doing this they will he tries. and over Italian televis- saying "brave and able men anworking effectively for hm; Ion. every race and nation" should brotherhood and peace w ic ‘ he used in such work are the object of the wishes and SAYS WORDS HELPED The 81-year-old pontiff voiced prayers of all at this holy time 0“ W’Wlfl Peace. the Pope ex- the appeal In the consistorial of Christmas." pressed hfsdoy that his “9931 hall of his official apartment , for “egouatmns “mead ."f “0' In replying m the traditional I RETURN GREETINGS ' lence Oct. 25—at the height of good wishes for Christmas andl h dean "f "‘9 d'l’loma‘” the Cum" "15's " appeared the New Year offered by theIm'ps' Ruin" 'mbassador "not mom” be" wasmd “1 diplomatic repre ves of Pam“ Prosper ‘ Ck' .c‘m' the BI" . . mm. 50 n to“, ‘ ed toIveyed the- diplomats‘ greetings, Pope John .said there were "1,. Holy Sea lsaying they had anxiously {01- Signs that his Word! had lowed his recent illness and now I "t'OUChG-d minds and hearts and “had the profound satiSfactionl are “Wing I" open "ll new of watching y 0 u ,- improve.I prospects of brotherly trust and my " ito hold out bright hopes of true John. ailing reccntly.I spoke in French for 10 minutcsI In a calm. firm voice. He told: the diplomats that the Roman! ' . I (Continued on Pa 9. 4 Col. ll (‘atholie church "applauded theI The POW has resumed mos“ g . . m ,of his engagements since hisl filowmgf matstew. ovu- e{illness and Satu rd ay night: - nrces o no ure. ‘broadcasl a strong appeal fn Thanks to men who 'fostcrcdjpcace and unity among Chris. IImushI-s of peace. he said. man-i tians in his fifth Christmas mes- kind could devote itself "in a noble rivalry" to the further ex-i e. The Pontiff's Christmas mes-. Czech Stowaway Held At Gander OTTAWA (CPI -A 13-year-old boy. who fled his native Com- munisl Czechoslovakian home~i land as a stowaway aboard a (‘uban airliner. is being held in custody by Canadian immigra- lion authorities at G a n d e r. \'fld.. officials said here Sun- day night. I The lad was identified as l\Ii- Ios Navratil and was reported to have boarded a Cubana Air- lines plane in Prague. He was discovered by the plane's crew at Shannon. Ire- land. after spending three days in the aircraft and was carried on to Gander. The plane landed . at the Newfoundland airport. at rcfuelling stop on its flight to? Havana. at 11 pm. NST Friday night. I The Cuban airline captain re-I Ported the boy as a stowaway to 3 Canadian immigration authorl-f ties and the lad was taken Intol custody. WANTED 'ro LEAVE I Asked by offlclnls why he had I stowed away. Mllos said he? wanted to leave the Communisti IOIInIry. If I 0 He said he had a great-uncle. who was a forest warden In the Ottawa area. Immigration officials have not have the same name. Meanwhile. the immigration department is looking after the boy pending an inquiry It is believed the first known instance of a person who has fled to Canada from a Commu- nist country ‘as a stowaway aboard an airliner. MAY STAY Under the normal procedure. the boy's case will be investi- gated by an immigration offi- cer who will make a decision. However. it has been Ca dian practice not to deport any- one against hls will to a country bind the Iron Curtain. If this procedure should apply I Milos. he would probably be granted a special permit to stay in Canada or given the status of a landed Immigrant. His age. no doubt. will be a major factor in determining his uture here. Show Change Prices are down 50 cents perIBOIduc. 40. and >100 pounds for Red and BIuchaBnon- 24. all members of the Ibrand steers this- week| and uplBrothers of Charity order at St. 50 cents for Brown or Sta nd-I :ards. according to information. received from J. Lincoln Dew- ar. secretary of the beef pro- ducers special committee nam-I ed to negotiate. a price formula] with Canada Packers on a trial' I asis I The company will be paying, $44.00 for Red brand steers on! .a rail grade. hot-dressed weightl ues Is ibasis. The price or ‘ been able to verify the existence. i54§-00 and for Browns $41-00 for }of the uncle. who is believed to ilhls week- ENike—Zeus IHits Target WASHINGTON tAPl-A Nike- 'Zeus anti-missile missile suc- icessfully Intercepted the first «intercontinental ballistic missile Itarget using decoys in a Pacific ftest Saturday. the us. Army 'nnnounced. ‘ wo Zeus missiles were fired lagainst the target and its de- pired coys. but one of the Zeus mis- siles developed trouble after launching and was destroyed. the announcement said. One of the questions raised by defence department experts about the army’s Nike-Zeus has been Its ability to "discrlmtm ate" beween th ue ICBM ltarget and decoys. Fatalities In N.S., N.B. Are Idled Blamed On Snow Storm - HALIFAX tCP) —- Harvey James Myers. 76. of nearby Jeddore Lake. was killed Satur- from Sussex. Her husband and baby. both certainly Inn-t. were taken to hospital at Sussex. Dr. Whiteside'e body was found Siliday in water near ledges in the Mace's Bay ma ‘ -:~. ‘\ __ .‘_ -v To ,‘- v‘e ' u ‘ . 1- 6.0.; r; CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY. DECEM'EER 24. 1962. Liberated Begin Arr muffin-E SEVEN CENTS 20 PAGES Cuban Captives iving In Miami Solon Low Dies I l I c I 5- ‘ ... I i .l I o i w L7. “ i 5 ~ ‘ ' ‘5 \ I .5 \- '.,.- . .. ' "‘ I... j i an. _ ‘ ‘ L‘s.- \ u.‘ :1- ‘. A LEGEND THAT GROWS Love. of the Sport of Kings. Island- style. Is part of the legendry of PEI. could serve as a trademark for the province that 'is widely - known as the ‘Kentucky of Canada’. It is a legend that not only lingers but lives and grows while providing lop attrac- tions to add to P.E.I.'s fame as ‘Canada's Holiday Iste'. Each year sees larger crowds sharing the excitement f some of Eastern C a n a d a's greatest harness racing spec. l tacle. _ Typical of these events. the I biggest feature of Charlotte- I town’s Old Home Week is The l Evening Patriot Gold Cup I and Saucer Race, surrounded I by a wealth of pageantry and preceded by a uge parade The picture symbolizing th living. growing Island legend is by William Taylor. chief photographer of The Guardian and The Evening Patriot. Of Heart Attack ' SHELBY. Monl. (CPL-Solon I E. Low, former national leader ‘ ” ’ W of the Social Credit party in Canada died here Saturday night. He was 62. Mr. Low. who was a member of the Alberta Cabinet was one of the first proponents of mone- tary reforms in the province. was here to pick up his son and take him back to the family home at Raymond. Alta.. for Christmas. It was reported Mr. Low suf- fered a heart attack. e was defeated in the gem eral election of 1958 and the next year went back to his former profession as a teacher at Raymond. He resigned from teaching in 1961 and since then was the family court judge for the Medicine Hat and Leth- bridge districts. Mr. w was a member of the Social Credit party in Al- berta since its sweep in the provincial election of 1935 and was national leader for 16 yea SOLON L0 W used in lieu of currency. This.’ he recalled later. seemed to beI that the ‘ WES concrete 15 vi e n c e :Ihenry of Social Credit I ruled. V down Wednesday. the court or- GAME or SKILL or In Drugs And Food not of chance, the California State Supreme Court has By WILLIAM L. RYAN lat DlI'II'IPl‘ Key Auditorium. the I MIAMI. Fla. <’APi-—Hundreds vast hall where they waited for of liberated captives from Cnm- their first sight of the arrivals. munist Cuba landed here Sun- One woman fainted from ex- ?day night in a pre - Christmas citcment. .ransom operation to airlife1.113‘ There were about 5.000 Cu- IBay of Pigs invasion survivorshans in the auditorium. await- to the United States. in: the moment they had longed i The first freedom-flight OCR for during the. last 20 months. tlanded with 107 former captivesloften Scarccly daring to hope. of Premier Castro‘s regime atiAbout 20.000 of the 1.50.000 Cu. I l l BRIDGIE R‘ULED I I e _ 1 SAN FRANCISCO (APl v I In a 5-Io~2 decision handed dered Mrs. Betty Allen. 58, freed from a charge of operat- ing games of chance as man- ager of a bridge club in West Hollywood. Calif. She on- tended bridge is a game of skill. not gambling. The majority opinion. writ- ten by Chief Justice. Phil S. ; (*ihson' noted that the", are EI- . . The second‘han exiles in Miami are close ,gnre than 500 hooks on bridge landed at nearby Homestead i relatives of the Bay of Pigs cur. and said: "The. existence of IA" FM“ Ba,“ 54 mIPUIGS Ia'il’ivnrs. such a large amount of liter. iter with 106 liberated men. T e Arrangements warp made '50 landings came after an agonI-ttransport all arrivals the 30 zigg nine-hour delay in the time-‘miles by bus to Miami from in ication that brid e is not ‘- a le. . _ IHomestead after their process- pr‘ldominamly a ggame of j A third Pan‘American Worldiing by health and immigration chance IAirways plane was close behind I officials. Because of the delay. cargo . , lwith 104 more men. i dust”? Mar'iha“ 17- M‘iu’mh I Hundreds more men waitcdfplanes which had carried ran- 931“ the character "I, the gal. San Antonio de Ins Banoslsom goods all day to Cuba were game and . “0' the Sk‘” "" imiliilai'y airport. 25 milessouth- ‘: pressed into service to bring out want_of skill of a playerfl!" Iwest of Havana. for their turns 1 prisoners. termmes Whether 3 Sam‘- 15 3 in the air shuttle. their libera- game of chance or a game of ‘mm achieved in exchange {on WORK ALL NIGHT skill. $53300!” war”, of {OM and‘ Officials of the 11.5. melgra- ldmgs' I ion service said the air shuttle I of prisoners would ontinuo GAVE CHEER. ature designed to increase the player's skill is a persuasive In the early 1930s. when de- pression gripped the Prairies.. Mr. Low was one of 18 teachers at a high school at Warner. Alta.. who found themselves working without salaries. Workable. Mr. Low was elected as mem- ber for Warner constituency in 1935 and two years later was .named provincial treasurer by 'Premier William Aberhart. one I5 Holidayers Die In River through the night until the job The end of a tense. anxiousgls finished. vigil in sight. ' usands of Cu-‘ The long delay In starting the ban exiles. many of them rela- prisoner airlift was caused. ap- tives of the liberated men. sent parently. by Cuban insistence a thunderouscheer as they The esperate town worked.of the. founders of the Social is Ioiit Va” pl_an whereby script was Credit party in the province. (‘HIBOUGAMAU Q (CP) .upon checking the cargo of the , . iie. , .up Iwatched the drama on televislon Five persons off on a holida . MAN RESCUE‘D Three Catholic Brothers Killed QUEBEC tCPi~—. Three Ro- man Catholic Brothers were killed Saturday in a two - c collision in Laurentides Park. 40 miles north of here. A fourth brother and two occupants of ithe second car were injured. I Provincial police blamed poor Idriving conditions for the acci- ‘dent. A thick snowfall reduced visibility and made.- traction un- ‘ certain. ille Millette. ll 'l Maurice Emmanuel Roger were Rev. 58. 9\ Rev. Ambroise de Chicoutimi. Que. Rev. Robert Desmarais. Ca- mille Harvey and Georgette Sa- vard of Montreal were injuredI They were brought to hospitalI here. .8. Ports .back of the building. City Firemen Battle lenement House Fire City firemen battled Saturday space heater set night to stop a raging fire in a l floor apartment. three-storey tenement at 135, Heavy, oily smoke hampered Hillsbmo Street. Fire officialsliiremen in their efforts to kill were atfirsf afraid that thelthis blaze. but firemen with building could not be saved and l masks-were finally able in on- were fearful for the safely Miter the fire area and quickly 21:: adjoining three-storey build- had the fire under control. ' . No estimates of damage were A" exploding space he a I" I available from either place. turned a small apartment 0 I . the third floor rcar into an in-1 Earl-V Sunday “WW” “1" ferno and when firemen arrived depar'mpm “'35 aga'" " a I Ind flames Were belching out the I "I": I" “"0” a Mr “"3 in Vic" j toria Park. fire to a third Y irip in Quebec's remote north-I land were drowned SaturdayI when their car missed a bridge| and broke. through the ice of al small river. I Mr. I ltf‘ontiniied on page 3. col. 2) They were identified as 1 and Mrs. Lloyd O'Connor andl Macmillan Defends is: amortisatrarsl:l Agreement Nassau mond Leclerc. 28. I Jolicoeur and Leclerc were| fellow-workers with O’Connor In] .the copper mines near Chapais.f LONDON (Rccte'rsl -- Pi'imeouarincs with Its own nuclear I23 miles west of Chibougamau:i‘dizyiséler hwgacmma" sunda-V ‘IP‘Iwar ead‘ ' . -l _ n 'th {I an e s agreement wi ‘ ‘ Iflgmfemu W ml" or o iPrcSIdent Kennedy giving up SHIRT “A? I‘ ’ Ithe Skybolt missile in favor of Asked about the gap until 1 _ Ithe Polaris as the. chief weapon 'Rritish submarines are Opera. I of Britain's Independent iiuilear tional with Polaris—estimated lRUSSIans an deterrent. as late as 1070 Macmillan Macmillan. however. told re- sai ~ chirge Spaceship l porters on his return here from his talks with Kennedy in The tlwi‘e Is a gap there Will he a gap. But if we do not have i BOMBAY- Ind‘a ‘API " The:Bahamas that. there will proh- ISoviet Union ls planning toI ably be a gap in Britain‘s nu- ;launc soon a manned space-jcioar deterrent power. lshlP weighins "several dozen But he added that. “if we do lions." Soviet Ambassador Ivan not have Polaris there will be a A. Bcnediktov announced here gap forever." Saturday. He gave no details. The two Western leaders Polaris there will be a gap for. ever." Macmillan said he had not least doubt in his mind about the Polaris dcal despite Saturday's sncces<ful Skybolt test after fivtI successive failures. One man was plucked from a third floor window by ladder.‘ ch, had been trapped in a thirdI floor front apartment by a wa ‘ of flame in the hall. He manag-l ed to close the door to the apartment and keep the fire‘ away until the rescue was car-‘ rie out. i The flames spread across the‘. full width of the third floor.3 broke throuin the roof and alcl‘ their way down into the second . . floor. Firemen to split 3-“ THE (’ANAMAN PRESS their forces to fight the. blaze at‘ Thousands of European holi- three points. iday travcllcrs were tied up in a 1N BLINDlNG SNOW vast railroad bottleneck Sunday Working at the height of a By Strike NEW YORK (APi U.S.1 longshoremen. rejecting a plea from President Kennedy. wentl on strike at Atlantic and GulfI Coast. waterfronts Sunday at the l moment a court injunction ex-.; 1 The labor dispute. ranging from Searsport. Me.. to rowns- ville. Tex.. had halted shipping for four days in October. until the federal government ob-, mens Association. said 81.000. dockworkers were leaving the' piers. Bradley sald. however. the u ion woul handle emer-‘ gency supplies. as well as mili- tary and dangerous cargoes. Pickets took stations at piers In New York. signalling the be-' ginning of a strike whlch Presi- dent Kennedy had said “would choke the economy 'and cut the nation's lifeline with the rest of the world." that. day night when," w” much 22 miles southwest of Saint They had been enroute to by a car while walking in a J h“; I” WI“- M' spen‘l WW "I"? I“ snowstorm Ilo'ng the highway bunting Saturday. snow and father. Alvm Hawkee Rook- ai sedan" “he. high wind swapt the ledges. Ville. near Sussex. The back used by hunters at low tide. seat of Morrow our was SAINT JOHN. N.B. (CI’l - Autborities sold mm was filled with . 0f titres weekend females in the apparem cause of death. Roads the prov- MW . two be- An sum or honest were Ince were treachqu after Iieved tho—d least indirectlyiconsldeml unnecessary. Saturday's Wall—ranging up P'" 3~ Dr. Whiteslde. of the mouth to a foot or more—and munch INSIDE TODAY leements. notices . 1k Annotl Births. deaths Chained Kings County . . . . . . . . . . .. City. Queens Prince County . . . . . . . . . . .. Summerslde T r I - A- N- cIal tmpttol staff at Lancutec. ous accidents occm‘red. many :hhlfdde. u. d Ker-abandon was born in mm. and jm‘ned cars slows-g off Kim high- " our Sal-t Jdm; Mrs. has“ ways. Walkmanhbue-b .‘he gum"! ‘m's‘m The Whittier girl suffered 0' rm. and I: “'5' MW “5 we“ ‘ fatal injuries when hit by a mm.l.dllm.hd'¥‘mhlim°d'truckdflvenmmm M . listen st Ramona. II in]. Cacti than at m. blinding snowstorm. the firemen . a“ “03W “"‘T‘Vsmrms “"“PI were able to bring the blame“rnss “‘9 mm'm‘m' under control and declared it The United States also reg out more than two and one Iialf1ceivcd some harSh lire-Chris'- Iiours after the first a l a r m mas Wcaihé‘l‘ as 3 Surge 0f AFC- came in. The fire was kcpl mit‘tic air brought snow sqitalls to of the first floor and the meat the Great Lakes and north At- markcl located there. Iantic areas Hard freezing was The firemen were packing IIDIHISO forecast in the south-cen- their equipment at the Hillsboro‘tral U.S.. but fog that tied up Street scene. about 10 o'clock I holiday travel on west coast air~ they were alerted by two w a yrports had largely dispersed radio of a fire at 38 Lin coln ‘ Sunday. Street where an exploding oil The bodies of a woman and By European Storms e prime minister described the Polaris agreement as a "good one" for both countries and said it preserved both the concepts or Independence and interdependence. He said Britain was getting a weapon “which should last. I would say. for a generation." velopment of the air-launched Sk_bolt. which Britain had planned as the backone for its nuclear homer force. In its place the United Slalcs‘ agreed to supply Britain with the sea-launched Polaris. which Britain will fit into its own sub- .Skybolt Launch Ihcr Iwn children were found in‘ Proves Success agreed in Nassau to give up de- ‘thcir snowbound car in Montana‘ iill the wake of a blizzard Fri-‘ .day. An elderly. Indian also was found dead of exposure. Several European countries tookascvere beating. . Ry HOWARD BENEDICT 'llie fIlSCllSSIOfl‘u But sources The Si. Gotthard Pass. link-; CAPE CANAVERAI. Fla. Ircpni‘tcd the shot was delayed int: Switzerland and Italy. WasitAPi—The controversial Sky- until the western leaders Im‘h'ed by 3“ aVfiIath“ fromibolt air-launched missile regis- parted “because of political ‘Fal‘ll' Saturday "minim "I‘m tcrcd its first success in six rcnmiis" one track was cleaer Sunday Icsls Saturday. but the White. nut “ohm limit-z. unrd came night. Authorities expcctcd the House and ppmagnn said mp {mm mm Boarh F13_ “1161:. Isecond line to he OPCHPd by '0- flight would not alter US. plans Kmnedy is mentioning that flay:- ' I o cancel the \vcapon- The Bahamas agreement ham“ Paulo“ “'"h ("Felt-l“ Acting Daft-‘an Sf‘f‘l'f‘lal‘y "gives the best possmle defence “'m‘hf‘l‘s filling “97"? Im‘ CIWISI',RoschI Gilpatric stroneg iiidi- (m- rim \\'(\5[ ,,nnt my}, I’m- the mas had to be diverted because rated in Washington “13' 53””. ms hm “w ms}. ‘nr hSaV-‘ISMWITIS ,‘l‘JLPAIJ‘E: ‘ days Ial'm'hing “‘35 'h“ 135‘ [Or White House Press Secretarv tamed a court order under 018' lSkybon'. The A” “I”? “ass?” Pierre Salinger said the Anglo- Taft-Hartley Labor Act for an! I I I l ."a‘ ""95"" “mm” “hm” American \‘assau Pact. an- 80-day "cooling off" perIOd. l " Imppd '" f'r“.m “so we nounrcrl lriday "played an Anthem Me‘- exph-ed at, n 0 e pi-ogmm was revived at a In. mmrmm m” m increasing 5 p.m. Sunday. CBDI. William m" “'9' unit)- in the West " V- Brat“? i PWSIdeM ofI . The successful test almost the International Longshore-I certainly will intensify the Sky- PFNTAGON ADAMANT “hora Gilpatrir drove another nail islin Skyholl's coffin later in the bolt Prime bcing assailed from all sides for do)" ulicn he said their would Britain Macmillan issue in Minislcr Noted In Wake 0i Nassau lalks clear force was noted by ab- servers here as an indication that the United States plan for Inesd‘y‘ Dec" 26' IThe Guardian will be Wed- ‘and now it is more or less cm I not come before. i . on a broader-based nuclear deter- ‘phasized to a degree which has the This emphasis last week. in 8. col. 6i his Nassau agreement “IIIIIIlf‘ no chance in the decision of . , . President ’ af't't‘l‘il IIII‘ Pentagon to halt the pro- NASSAU. The Bahamas (LP) rent may run Into difficulties In fact that the joint communique Us pnlaris Enhmmim. “mu,” Fm... Prime Minister Diefenbaker.lhi‘).l‘:_ATb0kf‘flunf‘ll»k ' :st‘t‘dlhy1 the Bl‘lltl‘slzi and (‘ana- in pm”. nf Skybom‘ Tho". “a: m. WNW,“ about . to en a'cr spoe o corre- ian ca ers Oml e any mcn- .. (.40.. an... 5'... .‘V. , says the new BrmSh'U’sj agree-'spondents as Prime Minister tion of the Macmillan-Kennedy rmfl‘m: din"? "II'I'a'f' "‘7' IIHIHEIFIII; mmllénggg on“. :1“ mam 0" "‘9 Pom“ mlss'k‘ I3 Macmillan left by air for I.on- Polaris agreement. which cu~ "‘Yl "a d P a. P w Inn": infant version of llic final prod— beneficlal for both countries but:don. winding up his meetings visagcd an eventual nuclcar ontnlh‘riSIIH; H... “0mm wrhum wars of d061,": hind other NATO mum with President Kennedy and the force for NATO. mime Wok”; ' ,Nm; “mm In. .N‘uirod to bers in any way. canadlan leadf‘r- On Britain’s consent to scrap “ ' ‘ Pf‘l'lr‘t'l n rcliiililr‘, operational . The prime minister told HI Macmillanfilad‘f "f‘ Sla'fml‘l" the Skyholt bomber-carrier mis- Af‘t‘l'RAf‘Y FANTASTII‘ Skylinli \\Illt’Il had been plannned lpress conference Saturday thPIOI‘P hoard!“ “'9 RAF C‘m‘N silc and accept the submarine- The sleek Skyhnlt “as to minor! the IIIf‘llmf‘ of the multilateral NATO nuclearilf‘l- launched Polaris. Dicfcnbakcr launched from a 13-32 sli‘alo- 1's 83‘,‘ and British Yuk-an force “has become a matter oIIMADE N" MENTI‘“ said the agrccmcnls were bilat-‘forircss bomber QII‘Caklll: moi-c homhci's Kennedy feels the Importance." but declined to‘ Observer“ “"‘r" "Turk h." “‘9 oral and "do not in any way than seven miles above the \\c;ipnii might become obsolete say whether Canada would sup-. bind other members of the Atlantic With aImOsI fantastic before it is completely devel- port such a force. The subject NATO group of nations." accuracy. the rocket drilled its dowry-and that the already- requlred Canadian governmentI No Paper Tomorrow The Canadian leader rcfiiscd nose cone to a target 830 miles perfected Polaris and Minute. consideration and decision. he . . 0 agree that the subjch of a down range. landing just nnc.mmi IIIISSIIf‘S will more than Isaid. I S'm‘“ t0m0rrow is Chnst' NATO nuclear force now was mile off the centre of the bulls talc Skyliolt‘s place. 5 His refusal to give public cn- 1I'll!!! Day. and a statutory more urgent. but he said: eye. The Air Force said "it was 'dorsement to a wider NATO nu- holiday, the next edition of “The problem has been there The Air Force originally the first time a ballistic missile scheduled the launching during ever was launched successfully Kennedy-Macmillan talks from an aircraft and flew its ' hopes a success , full mission range. under Iti m onlpower and guidance." ‘ would have some bearing