If it's Good For the Island The Guardian is For it who @umdliam “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” VOL. LXXVI. NO. 3 Authorized u 82 Ottawa. cond and in nutrient Class Hall by tho of push; fog; 23;;- Devmmm- CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, FRIDAY. JANUARY 4, 1963. WEATHER Cloudy with a few sunny periods; mild; light winds. Low-high 30 and 37. mange“ sEV’E‘N’CENTs 12 PAGE? CABINET MlElETING DAY Beginning Jan. 8 .thc Execu- ve Council will hold its re. gular Weekly meetings on Tuesdays at 9.30 a.m.. instead of Thursday afternoons as has been the custom for many years. Premier Walter R. Shaw said yesterday that Those day meetings will speed up business of government. “With Thursday meetings.“ he said. “it has usually been Monday before minutes-in-councll were transcribed and sent to the Lieutenant-Governor for signa- ture. By getting our business Blizzards And Gales In England Raise Ihreat 0t Milk Shortage" ' LONDON t(?P.l»-Fi‘csh bliz-lwhich began pounding Britain lords and galcs sweeping Brit-l nine days 880. and more deaths nin Thursday raised the threatlw"re feared‘ . . _ . Other searchers in Devon- of a nationwide milk shortage. Shire “.9”, iooking {or a 15. and hailed the airlift of fodder‘iycar-old girl feared lost. in the to starving snowbound cattle. isnow 3"" 193W“ “9" home With blocked roads cutting off‘ Ttlf‘SdBY- milk supplies. some. London. The storms already have dairies began rationing familiesli‘lalmed “19 “"95 0‘ thousands to a half-pint a head daily. of animals- An RAF helicopter craslicd iii. QUICK-“801ml! rain dISYUPlEd southwest England while drop/aim"? SChEdUIes- ping fodder to trapped rattled but one of the. five persons aboard was hurt. However. the raging snows and sleet forced airmen to abandon other rescue flights. Scorcs of southern Force men from Welford base pushed a food convoy to two villages in Berkshire. Helicop‘ ters were ready to drop food to another village whose 200 peo- ple had been isolated by 12-foot drifts since Saturday. Three trains ~—- I passenger CHANGED I l lin Watervale. N.S. the former IPresbyteriain minister held pas- At least 17 persons were un-ltorates afficially reported to have died Summemside. P. E. l. and 'l‘ruro om the effects of the. blizzards before. joining the college. Former S’side . O I I Minister Dies villages; were cut off. United States Air: 'I‘RURO lCPl —- Rev. Hugh ' - Icebreakers were busy on the. James Fraser. fonmer regist rar and professor of English at the Nova Sootia Agricultural College here. died Thursday in hospital at the age of 87. Born Inggiervillie. N.B.. FIVE PERSONS MISSING HST. JOHN'S. Nfld. (CPI-«Two orations to recover the cars. ‘Dragging started Wednesday. cars which plunged through that [on left when a bridge collapsed . Tuesday were located at the; bottom of Clode Sound at Porti pndford Thursday. but there, was no sign of five persons who ‘ are believed to have gone to‘i their deaths in the. cars. i ‘One of the vehicles. owned d believed driven by Robert ffington of Musgravetown. tins oulht to have been alone in e intecmodel sedan which “tuned into the water minutes otter heavy ice and high water carried away the bridge part of l causeway. Th r was also In- ubl divers from Gander. Nil .. but it was not. known whether it was "the second car was believed Coven by Berry Allan Skiffing- M- 30. of' Mussnvetown. Pas- : were Gordon Burden. his I? - year - old daughter . pod Mrs. Walter Gar- - 3.3. all of Port Blendford. fruitful-I were believed oldie from the Gender ‘, 1" Min and two civilian m not: port in although the search was ham- pered by strong currents. high water and drifting ice in the sound. an arm of Bonavista Bay. The two cars are believed to have driven into the water min- utes after 100 feet of the wooden bridge dropped into the sound and was whirled away. About 20 feet of water was under the Bridge. and currents estimated at 20 knots were swirling through the hole. Port Bland- fnrd is about 70 miles northwest of here. BRIDGE THREATENED Meanwhile. a bridge across the Gumbo River was still being threatened by high water and rafting toe. Although the bridge INSIDE " TODAY Announcements. mum . to Births. deaths . . . . . . .. I. ll Classified .... 10 mm. 0 -eoeeeooeeon. .I'I...Il‘ ..-...~ .- .- O‘DD KNOCKS SPARK FEARS EDMONTON (CPJ ~- Harry Sydora. 50. is beginning to have second thoughts about Friday. he and his family had retircd for the night in a basement bedroom when they heard knocking on the east wall of their house. Thinking it was a prowler. Mr. Sydora telephoned police but no source could be found for the noise. The. next. day Mr. Sydora took the wall apart but found nothing. Wednesday the family was again roused from sleep by more pounding. this time from the north wall. There, were three knocks. a pause then three more knocks. family moved upstairs called police. No source for the noise was discovered. The family de- cided to vacate the basement room for quarters on the main floor. “We're not going back down there until I find out exactly what it is." said Mr. Sydora. “It's a very strange and dis turbing situation." Tragedy Marks UN Advance LEOP-OLDVILLE [APL —'l‘hc important K a t an 1: a province mining centre of Jadotville fell to United Nations troops w' out a fight Thursday and Pres- ident Moise Tshombe was re- ported fleeing with his troops t0ward Kolwezi. But tragedy stalked the UN .forces. They evidently entered the city without orders to do so f h'gher echelons. a d an m a a. The and done on Tuesday mornings. this process will be. speeded up considerably." Here Pre- mier Shaw signs the oath of allegiance during ceremonies at -Govehnment House yester- day during which his new cab- inet was sworn in by Lieuten- ant-Governor F.W. Hyndman. :; =f - ficer deplored the incident. say- ing it should n e hap- ened. I M - ,. . N headquarters in New York said its communications rorn l n advance guard killed two Euro-l pean women. An Indian UN of-l Fishermen In Locating Fis New General Manager ere For Powgigo. The new general manager of Maritime Electric .Limited. Robert W. Sml rived in Charlottetown from Montreal yesterday afternoon. He succ s A ameron. who has been general manager of the. company for the past six years. For the past 15 years Mr. Smith has been senior supervis- ory engineer with Montreal En- ginccring Company Limited. A native of Moncton. NB. Mr. Smith is a graduate of Moncton High School. He re- ceived a degree in electrical en- gineering from the University of New Brunswick. worked five years with North Quebec Power Company and spent three years as a member of the Royal Can- adian Engineers. For three years he was assistant profes-l sor in the electrical department of. t)1(ie University of New Bruns- C . He expects to move his wife and four children to Charlotte- R.W. SMITH town from Montreal early ‘..i February when he will take on full-time duties as general man- agcr of Maritime Electric, Pilot ls Unscratched :Aiter Force GAGNON. Que. lCP)——A stu-i ldcnt pilot. “well fed and un-iRCAF search planes scratched" was flown to safety 4. Thursday after‘spending a night 1in the northern Quebec wilder- d landing 11:30 and two . spotted him within an hour after that. The plane that. finally picked him ilp was a single-engined am. Thursday ' . ncs . eaver from Sectcau Air Serv- igggucctgynif) oblige Idtzlwé‘l‘i Thelpilot. Robert Lacroix. 28. ice. Chibougamau. Que. ville march - n e v a 0 -. was pickeld up by a sléi-efquipped acroix. an electrician with . I . chscue pane in mi -a ernoo uebe C ' ‘ ' ‘ - train and two freights—werel K333115131" “Warmer” and:and brought to his home in gany ion Gaagdhed sgidmdé: octolir'1 abandoned in snow drifts near.Whlte mercenar’es Who haleagnnn. 375 miles northeast of I a Is Bath in West England. threatened to fight for Jadot-i The weather bureau said Lon- ville street by street and to. don has had at least 20 inches “film-V Vilall wining h9%uipmffilti of snow since the big freeze set . sever? 0"” 9 0"“ 9 ' i ' - in not 6 More mow s {KStCil‘J’N infantrymcn entoredlwgs "“uqagllzond. crrv UNDAMAGED ial"er"°°" M. "‘9 MUShalaSan Associated Press correspond-lRIver 40 “"1” southwe“ Of' ent ennis Neeld. who drovelGagn‘m‘. . into Jadotville ahead of a UN} 1‘3"le said. he was mak'mz column. reported the city ivaSia pleasure mg” I" the area undamaged and civilians said 1 when a storm caused heavy ice Quebec City. . plane. a single-engined Cessna 172 from the Lac Jean- forccast. . In Ireland. huge. drifts cut. off villages in the Wicklow Hills south of Dublin. Ballyknocken. with 100 population. has re- ceived no food. fuel or mail for. a landing. student pilot's licence a few months ago and has “about .‘5 or 60 hours" of flying time to his credit. He said his plane “didn't get. scratch" during the forced lDiefenbci 7 contributing articles and poems , week and doing her own house CRIME EXPERT ‘ lOSES OWN CAR‘ LONDON iAPI Shaw Taylor. television lecturer on crime prevention. Thurs- day rqaorted the theft of his car. Somebody removed the convertible from beside a OTTAWA ‘CP' Canada's parking metre on a snow— deep-sea fishermen will soon Ilq?g‘<14°nd°“ “Fifi”; H T have daily reports on sea con~ ,. very puzz in . ay- . . ‘ ,- hr said. .1 followed the ditions that “ill greatly help them locate schools of fish, the ‘Fisheries Research Board was told Thursday. The prediction was made in one of several reports to the board on technical advances hat. promise to eliminate much of the. luck in commercial fish- ing. The. boards three-day an- nual meeting concludes advice 1 am always giving on thc program about lock- ing car doors and so on." lPoIciris Decision i PARlS ‘Rf‘tllf‘l‘sl Prcsidcnt‘ iCliai'les dc Gaulle in a mcssagel .‘to Prcsidcnt Kennedy neitheri iaccepted nor rejected an Amer-. lican offer of Polaris submarine Satur- ay. The boards biological station in Nanaimo. B.C.. said it is tak- ing part in the development of an oceanographic information 'service that will become as im- portant to fishermen as the meteorological service. NATO nuclear deterrent. icial sources said Thursday. The new service has c0m_ Information Minister Alain .pleted its first year of opera. Peyrefitte told reporters after a ltion on the Pacific coast and is isteadily extending its scope. The 'service provides information on water temperatures. currents that are closely related to fish movemen s The Nanaimo station has de- ‘veloped a radiation thermo- .meter that takes readings of He rcasscrted France's inten-Twater Qurface temperature? tion to build up its own nuclear .“f’m hlgh'speed. a‘rcmfl' “"5 deterrent strike. force. iglves a mum “"der and {381" ‘ e o v e r a g 9 than temperature ‘readings by ships. 1 {cabinet meeting France feels no decision is needed at present on thc American offer. I But. . said. “there is no lqucstion of closing the door to. anything in view of the. impor. tance and complexity of these problems." ' The board was told that four new radiation thermometers are lbeing built for use on the At-i ‘ 'lantic and Pacific coasts. MontreaI i The St. Andrews, N.B.. std: tion reported that catches of swdrdfish. tuna "and" mackerel MONTREAL tCPl -« Poet. Dorothy Sproule. 95. died Wed~ nesday night in Montreal iapartment where she has lived 'for the last 35 years. i Most of her books of i'crso! were. published in the 1930's.i but she was a busy writer al-. most until the. end of her life”! 0 newspapers and magazines] in an interview Nov. 4 on her .95th birthday. Mrs. Sproule. said. she was still writing a poem a OTTAWA 7— Canadian fisher- men have grown to think of some. international fishing keeping. She said her chief “h grounds as their own. Fisheries .gret was that she had never ‘lcarned to ype Perhaps her best. known vol< the annual meeting of me my” tides and ‘ 'shi . A. sharks may increase consider-1 .‘ Minister J. Angus MacLean said ference to the need for here Thursday. He. was speak- taininiz and increasmg the num- ing at the opening in Ottawa of bar of Atlantic salmon. ‘ Promised Aid h Schools Prediction Is Made By Research Board ably a: a result of its experi- ments. MORE EFFECTIVE The cxpcrimcnts showed that longlino vesscls are much more effective in catching these spe- cics than boats using the. tra- ditional harpoon method. the re- port st'ated. Last September. the vessel Dorothea Rcevcs had taken 93 swordfish Wllh longlines off Syd- ney and eight with harpoons. In thc 1062 season. 32 east-coast vessels engaged in Ionglining for 1.500 fish worth more than 525% 000. The report said longlining could extend the fishing season by six to eight. weeks. Longline gear is effective at night. unlike harpoons. The longline experi- ments are continuing. The Vancouver station re- ported it has developed a pneu- matic method of unloading sal- mon that is much faster than the orthodox method. Air pres~ sure is used to force fish out. of special tanks and onto the cannery dock. The s almon packer "derek todd" has been equipped with four tanks with a total capacity of 129.000 pounds. and the pneu- matic device. In early trials. the ship was unloaded so fast that cannery handlers could not keep up. The board also was told that. its second fisheries research vessel. the G. B. Reed. will go 'into operation on the Pacific this month. starting with a an]- mon tagging cruise. The sister p T. Cameron. is based in Dartmouth. NS. Fisheries Minister Speaks As Board Opens Sessions CAPITAL BUREAU knowledge of the animals than ' OF THE GUARDIAN‘is intercstod to became more and more important as man con- :tiniicd to change. many aspects 'of his natural environment. Mr. Machan made special re- main- This is a fish that is of great. inter- five days. Lille. 1! major industrial cen- tre in northern France. was paralyzed. The public market was practically bare because farmers could not truck in their products. Heavy rain and snow fell in the northern Italian Alps. i lhe copper refinery of Union based mining company. had not been blown up. Mining installations at Jadot- ville turn out one-third of Ka- tanga‘s copper and two-thirds of its cobalt. UN headquarters also said there had been very little sab- otage in Jadotvillc. But Union Minierc officials in Brussels. reported that Tshom- be‘s blew up mining equipment. paralyzing its plants and knocking out the city's electric power. Rhine. the link between West Germany‘s industry and the great Dutch port at Rotterdam. Norway shivered in its third- coldest winter of the 20th cen- tury. Brussels. Belgium. had no buses moving and practically no cars because of ice on the Two Cars Are Located In NIId. CIode Sound Norstad Sees Canada Shirking Commitments I streets. Port Strike Continues NEW YORK iAf’tv-Scaports from Maine to Texas remained tied up for a 13th day Thursday by a strike of 60.000 union long- . 0 men. Renewed peace talks t to-form on his wings and wind-l Minicre. the giant Belgian-15m“ICI and made It ImPOSSIbIe fer Diefcnbakcr held . to see. “I had to open the cabin {window and stick my hand on ithe windshield to melt a hole ibig enough to see where I was landing." He. crossed over the junction of the Mushalagan and Seigne- lay River but decided not to land there because of surface water. Continuing his descent. he landed “two miles up the Mushalagan. close to shore. on solid ice.“ “I took enough food along for a week. so there was no worry at all there. I was well fed and unscratched." KEPT FIRE BURNING He also had an axe with him. he. said. and fire t about 4 a.m.. when he. crawled back into’ the plane and slept under a heavy fur coat for about five hours. A Quebecair flight from Bag- 1 he kep a burning through the night until - to brea the deadlock otvillc. Que. to agnon made i was still standing Thursday. It. was under eight. inches of water lCabi‘net Meeting OTTAWA i(‘PI~ Prime Minis- Iiis first meeti g of the new year with his cabinet colleagues—Thurs- day and briefed them on his pre-Christmas talks with Presi- dent Kennedy and Prime Minis- lter Macmillan. ' There were announce- ments beforc or after the two- hour cabinet scssion. called after Mr. Diefenbaker's return from a Bahamas vacation that folTowed his Dec. 2122 mcctings with the British and American leaders in Nassau. Later. Mr. Diefonbakor wont to Governmciit House to call on Governor — General Vanier. a visit the prime minister dos- g‘ibed as routine. lume of poetry is Bread an Roses. first published in 1937. WROTE NATURE VERSE Others. appearing earlier. in- .cluded Poems of Life; The Mys- tic Star: The Golden Goal and Earth and Stars. Nature. the. ‘fnlll‘ scasons. and holidays were ‘hcr principal themes. She was born Dorothy (Torri- gan in 1867. of a pioneer fam-. ily in castcrn Ontario's Dundasi County. Her father was a rural pestmaster. in 1894 she marricd Methodist‘l minister Frederic Sproule. who h served congregations in Mont-' real and eastern Ontario llntlIl his death in 1924. . She is survived by a son.l Frederick. a mining engineer. 1 erics Research Board of Canada est both as a commercial and a Th9 Queens' Mp mid that'sports species. Th9 Fisheries there' has been a steadily in_-Ministcr said thc numbers of creasing intensity of fishing by salmon have been declining since fleets primarily from Europe? the ‘Vhlte ")3" (“‘5‘ appeared and Asia. Some of the intcrna-M'Xn “‘9, “fitment “(I ht? 00“- tional fishing grounds. off Can-ISldflrs ‘t ""31 “‘3‘ "E ’m'ViVflI adian cast and west shores. ‘ Shm‘” b“ aSSI‘I‘Pd-» have. been fished for so long by — .- iNavy Planning Canadian fishermen that a belie had grown that the grounds be. . Jon. ExerCIse HALIFAX (CPi . longed exclusively to Canada. Mr. MacLean said. a The FISherles Min’Q‘" sa‘d . said Thursday its Atlantic coni- e was heartily in approval Of‘mand will hold an operations the fact that the meeting of the-exerciSp in the Bermuda are. board will study oceanographyIboginmng in late January. as well as the increasingly com-i Taking: part ' the exercise PIN Sl’bit‘t‘t 0‘ PXPeFimenlaI hifi- will bc 23 surface craft. and one logy. He said that more exact submarine. and closed to all traffic. The river 3 most years. although usually during thef spr g thaw. endangering the. narrow. wooden bridge spang ning it about two miles east. of the town of Gambo and about. 20 miles north of Port Bland- ford. They were the only two; breaks in the highwaywhichi OTTAWA ‘CP’ —‘ “mam spans the province. although ini. _ . several places was neariyl preme Allied Commamlc- in impassable because of mud .Europe. said Thursday Canada conditions brought on by a week i Will "01 be IiVInfi "it to its NATO of heavy rain and mild weather. lcommitments if it doesn‘t ac- The highway was open from ‘cept nuclear warheads. here to Port Blandford. where‘. He said at a press conference the break in the causeway has ,that Canada had made a com- all traffic stopped with no scc- imitmont to supply nuclear unitary route around. and from t capability for ’9: air division Gumbo to Port aux Basques on and arm bri ade in Europe the west coast. But the high- and that NATO is depending on wey's department said the road Canada to observe this com- a beating usually re- Imitment. served for the spring thaw. ~ He said Canada cannot meet How long the province will be. ithis commitment unless and un- divided isn't known yet. It willitll it signs a bilateral agree- depend on how long it takes tiheIment with the United States waters at Gumbo to receds and covering the supply of nuclear whether the birid ge comes warheads and the nuclear train- througb without serious dam-ling of the forces. age. i Even after a bilateral agree- It could take a month to re« ment is signed. he said. a. ‘< it would pair the do at Port Bland- win three to six months to ford. A m er gap in the train Canadian forces in the use causeway caused by ice. last :1 nuclear Wflpflm. spring took three mks to General Norstad aid at an- Lauris N o r s t a d. retired Su-i other point that in an emer- gency in Europe he would ex- ‘pect Canada to airlift reserve .brigadcs overseas. ‘ The press conference was held at Uplands Airport where the general was greeted by As- soeiate Defence Minister Se- vigny on his farewell visit to Canada. He later called on Gov- ernor-General Vnnler and then ileft for Wasmng . STICK TO ONE SUBJECT The subject of nuclear war- heads for RCAF CF-lM low- llevpl jet bombers and Canadian :Army Honest John artillery roc- .kets in Europe was pradicnlly the only one taken up at. the 50-minute press conference. The air division formed the iflrst of eight CF-lot squadron! iDec. 17. The division will have 200 planes. The army sent on Honest John battery to Europe in December. 1961. , Geo. Norstad repeatedly sug- l (Continued on page 3 col. 1) G N. LAURIS NORS'I'AD. left. retiring milita com- mander of the, North Atlantic Treaty Organization tNA’l‘Ol. t shakes hands with Gen. Ly- man L. Lemnitzer in cere- mony at NATO headquarters outside Paris. Gen. bemuitrer NATO assumed command of forces in Europe during cere- mony attended by diplomatic economic manhunt Ii body. I ‘1 MP W via radio in w ‘ ‘nnd military repruentntivel g f