‘ If it's Good For the Island The Guard ian is For it fibre @nardian “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” VOL. LXXV. N0. 264 Speakers at the 14th annual conference of the Atlantic Provinces Physical Education and Recreation Association at the Charlottetown YMCA got together before the opening Authorized as Second Cla- Ilall a, Pod 0t. tar/I. PHYSICAL EDUCATION CONFERENCE OPENS session yesterday. Left to right are Eric Ripping. who spoke on “space for the future." key- note speaker John Wilkic. Re.- gina. Sash. a n d John S. the and for payment at pout-go o Passmore. physical education professor at the Ontario Col- lege of Education. who will ad- dress tonight's banquet. (See page 3 for story.) 86 CANDIDATES NOMINATED Three Liberals Elected By Acclamation In Nfld. Minister .lohn 'l‘. (Theeseman. inlseats. Progressive Conserva- Hermitage. and Finance Minis-.tives nominated 35 and the ST. JOHN'S. NfIrI. 'CPI« Three Liberal candidates. two’ of them cabinet ministers. were elected by acclamation Friday; er E. S. Spencer in Fogo term in a Labrador South by- aa nominations closed for tbegclection last spring; retained Nov. 19 general election law‘s 593‘ unopposed- Newfoundland. 1 Premier Smallwood's Liberal i mael- ethefed' candidates for a I R" ' denied were FI-‘ihf’tl7lesllgll 42 of the legislature Queens, Pr tools For PC VictOry :APITAL BUREAU OF THE GUARDIAN OTTAWA -— Hopes for a Con-‘ servative victory in the Prince Edward Island provincial elect-- ion on December 10, were ex- pressed by Heath Macquarrie. MP for Queens. in a comment relayed from New York. Mr.) lllacquan'rie is with the (‘ana-i dian delegation at the United Nations. He said that commensurate] with the discharge of his duties g as Queens County M i would do everything possible to: assist his provincial colleagues. i "In my- opinion. my good.I friend Premier Shaw. and his associates. have given P.E.I. a: Eovernment and administration; of outstanding high quality": Mr. Macquarrrie stated. "it is; my opinion that the people of my province will re-elect the Show government. It has been of great assistance to us in the federal field to have a provin’. cial administration of such' competence and awareness of; Island needs as the presentl P.E.I. government." I Mr. Macquamie goes to the’ Island on the weekend and he hopes to hold thms with Premier- Sliaw before returning ’1: =- m Wider Ieacher Role . Urged By PWC Head SAINT JOHN. N.B. (CPt - Dr. Frank Ma’cKinnon of diar- lctbeoown‘. said Friday that quality of teadting is more im- ur taken from the bands of education demos and ed. in- j .,. ince MPs to Ottawa on Monday. Dr. 0. H Phillips. MP for Prince. said he was well satis- fied with the actions of the Conservative government of P.E.l. and particularly of the MLAs from Prince g “I am confident the. govern- ment will be returned in next month's election." Dr. Phil- lips commented. "i think move to eliminate the premium payment system for hospitaliza- tion is a very good step. I have never cared very much for the compulsory deduction of these premiums from cream cheques. fishermen’s unions. and in sim- ilar ways." Dr. Phillips said he knows of one case where a man had the premium deducted titres timcs. once from his wife’s wages as a school teacher. once from his wages as a carpenter and a (third time from his cream cheque. He said the system had been introduced by the previous Liberal government and it had pmven difficult and clumsy to administer. Dr. Phillips is travelling to the island this weekend and ex- pects to talk to Premier Shaw and other government figures before returning to Ottawa in mid-week. ‘ tain schools was associated directly with the type of teach- ing in certain classes. “We in curriculum committees must ask ourselves how best to teach what is on the curriculum." Dr. MacKlnmn is author of several works on education in- cluding his “The Pold of Education" published in [1960. He told the meeting here on departmen were “purer administrative and should not have control of the Principals and teachers were . New Democratic Party five. .Gerald Hill. elected to his first. I t One candidate entered under a labor label and the United Newfoundland P a r t y named one. Two independent! were. marinated bringingwthe total of c ted toss. Mr. Smallwood. 61. who des- pite 13 years as premier still lists his occupation as journal- ist. will run against 28-year-old E. Douglas Parsons. president of the. Young PC Assooiation in Newfoundland. ln Bonavista rth. James J. Greene, opposition leader and Conservative party leader. is entered in a straight two-way fight against James B. Higgins. now a Liberal. in St. John's East. Mr. Higgins was . SCOUTS GIVEN r "'3" mm“ CHARLOTTE'IUWN, CANADA. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 10. 1962. 'Former Premier, Senator Gets Hall Of Fame Honor Noggin SEVEN CEN'lS WEATHER Clear. clouding over in afternoon: light winds increasing to southeast 2.5. Low- mgh 35 and 50. Sunday; rain. 20 PANICS tManitoba‘ lIo Vote l0n Dec. 14 w I l I By STAN McCABE WINNIPEG (CPl —— Premier Duff Roblin called a surprise IManitoba general election Fri- :day for saying hisl Progressive Conservative gov-5 gram for which it had a man- ldate and wants voters“ approval for a new four-year program. . he move. climaxing a politi- "“|cally-dramatic week for Manl- ‘toba, caught all opposition par- ties by surprise. Their leaders admitted th'ey had been thinking in terms 0 a spring vote. It will he the fourth provin- . cial general election in Canada OTTAWA (CPI "" canad’a" within a month. Quebec will Boy Scouts and Scout leaders Note Nov. 14' Newfoundland were given the green light 'Nov. 19 and Prince Edward Is- Frlday to switch to long pants .1 land Dec. m from knee pants' in a depart' ‘ Mr. Roblin told a press con- ".re from " 54'year'°ld lradl' lference it was about 4V2 years non" lsince his government received Scout headquarters an- {its first mandate, nounced that each Scout troop .’ "Since that time we have there are 5.500--n0W will vote ldone our best to put into effect on the long-versus-shorr issue. {the program presented to our in addition. Rovers will be lpeople at that time. We. con- able to substitute red berets i (Continued on page 3. col. 3) for the standard scout hats. t"“"_““”"_"" "W"— The. moves are the first. in ‘ a drive to bring up to date k i P the Scout uniform and pro- gram to make them more at- 0 ’ ' tractive to atomic-age teen- agers. Scout membership has levelled off in recent. years at ‘I ’ S f 110.000 while Wolf Cub mcm- PI OT CI 6 bership has continued to t “W .. _ Los ANGELES iCPl An. SCDULQIl-Ifi 1353,5514 lh“-.iX-15 rocket research plane changes Will definitely help flipped over-mice Friday durl' recruiting. especially of adult ing an emergency landing but 19 5- e pilot came up smi‘ "A lot of people have told :... a ‘3‘ : U.S. space agency pilot "def th 1m . " ' ‘ l- “ Polrtrca ctron Par 'c'm‘e'" m“- ‘I won” be 313d '0 “PIP lMcKay was able to walk away. ‘ Th your movement. but I'll be -- 9 x45, one of three. was if 1'" wear H1059 Silo” badly damaged but is expected pants."‘ Public Relations to fly again. Commissioner Leonard .lohn- . t . . McKay. 39. was dropped from r son said mm 8 Chuck!“ a 13-52 over Mud Lake. New; Tank Battle a Conservative until be dis- agreed with the party's stand on federal grants to Newfoundy l land in 1959 and helped form The Ford Rotunda. one of the tions in the United States. ‘ cano Folday. The loss Was cs- to resemble a car gear. col- the United N e w f o u n d land Party. I I FOUR CONTEST SEAT Placentia East has four can- didates entered - a ' nl Conservative. New Democratic and independent. Three seats. St. Barbe South. St. John's Centre. and Bonavista South. each have three candidates. NDP leader Ed Finn. Jr.. in the 1959 provincial election lost Humber West to Labor Minister Charles Ballam by 1,325 votes. will try again. also against Mr. Ba . A. M. (Gus) Duffy. leader of the United Newfoundland Party. will try to hold St. John’s Centre. The UN? was reduced to_a one-man party € :- o earlier this year when two of its members joined the Liberals and a third went to the Con- servatives. E of candidates by acclamation is not new in New- foundland. In 1956 five seats. including Fogo and Labrador South. went by acclamation 1nd in 1959 one seat. Trinity South. was unconteste . In St. John’s East Externe. a new seat. William J. Browne will run against Liberal can- ate James Pagan. Mr. Browne. former solicitor gen- eral in the federal cabinet. d into the provincial elec- tion after a Newfoundland. Su- preme Court decision set aside a June 18 federal election in John's West in which he was defeated. a. u. n. 2’ Ford Rotunda; Lost In Fire DEARBORN. Mich (AP) —- 10 most-visited tourist attrac- burned like an erupting vol- tlmated at $15,000,000. In less than two hours the huge eight-sided building. built lapsed after the roof caught fire from a tarring operation. The building: originally de- t to teach in the schools and more participa to planting.“ signed for the.Chicago World‘s Fair of 1933 and later moved to Dear-born. was used as a dis- play arena for Ford motor productl l on what was to be. his seventhj research flight in the craft. His gine lit. but failed to develop Is Shaping CP from AP-Reuters He. skimmed in at 200 miles an hour for what observers said ing. But a nosewheel-tire blew. veloped Friday night for a“ The. supporting strut buckled. 'w‘” “0mm?” 333” The-V m armored battle. in the Ladakh The 5o.{om_ dart.shaped craft 01"“ Premler Shaw and Frank‘ Myers. Crapaud in First .. ' Highways Minister J. h {Stirlinued >on_£ag_e tidtfol. fl sector of the Himalayan front. .swerved and then rolled over ' Both Communist Chinese and Sideways lWICP- Coming I" “Stip . . on its back. Indians were reported movmg _ . up tanks to bolster forces mas-1 “Egg/3L aegmzigentgth‘eocnkozfi sing around the strategic Indian lgear collapsed and was airfield at Chushul. Ihanging upside down in his seat Informed sources said lndialstraps. unharmed. flew light tanks to its mountain " ' ‘ ' " airstrip 14,230 feet up in the: ' Himalayas to counter Commn- Iv°|can° sald nists tanks menacing the vital supply base. The area is bleak. brown andl .— O n. n --~ I '1 .— Military nbservers said it;volcano erupted Friday about looks like good tank country~§35 miles outside of Guatemala in contrast to the steep moun- ains and rocky valleys of most of the Lada‘kh area of Kashmir. :rng. llernment has completed the pro- » MacPhail, New Haven in sec 1 ,‘ ‘ ond: Agriculture Minister An-‘PM D'SCIalms drew MacRae and .l. Russeli - ' I Driscoll. Mt. Herbert in ihelRGSPOI‘ISlblIIl’Y lIn Eruption and Tomorrow citizens in all walks of life will join at either open air ceremonies or church services to pay homage to those _who gave their lives REMEMBRANCE DAY SERVIC in the two World Wars and ES TOMORROW b above one the RCAF's Arv craft passes low over the war Portraits 1 Unveiled Iomorrow TORONTO «CPI Portraits of 28 men who have. made sig- nificant contributions to Can- ada's agriculture W'lll be un- iveiled Sunday in the Canadian iAgriculiural Hall of Fame. S. McKee. secretary-treas- ‘urer' of the Canadian Agricul- .tural Hall of Fame Association. said the ceremony will be held ' ‘in the field crop area of the ‘ oyal Agricultural Winter Fair at 4:30 p.m. Nov. 11. The portraits will be. unveiled by Dr. H. H. Hannam. presi- dent of the Canadian Federa- tion of Agriculture. Many of the agriculturists to ‘be. honored by the association ‘lived in more than one Cana- dian province during their life- ttimes. and most had an effect too many provinces. 5 Among these wa the. late ‘ iJames G. Gardiner n former lfederal minister of Agriculture. er. Gardiner. who died last A *January. was premier of Sas- " 3 ;katchewan for two terms before . - the entered the federal Parlia- gment. While in Ottawa be was tresponsihle. for the Prairie tFarm Rehabilitation Act. and Iduring the Second World War ‘ rt :1 major role in supply- ing Canadian food products to Britain. memorial in Charlottetown. IBM“ "0"“ “"95"” ham 8 the appearance moor. provincial premiers mat m crew were .named to the hall of fame were 1-" salute to MW”) did mi ifJ. Walter Jones of Prince Eda {etum’ -ward Island. who died in 1954. _.a year after his appointment to the Senate; and Adelard God: bout of Quebec. who died 1956. As Quebec agriculture [minister be, instituted a huge A1. A rural electrification program. ‘Other new members from Que- . IbCC and the Maritimes are: a e S u By THE (TANADlAN vanss ; Robert a. Ness. Howick. Que. FRIDAY. Nov. 9. 1962 §I872-1960. who imported from I Political action was shapuigielected members only in the en up rapidly across the provincelfourth district last. time. St power. He. cut it. and glided last evening. fOIIOWinil Prem- downto an emergency landing q strip at Mud Lake. Nev. ton date announcement. er Shaw's December to elect-. In Queens County the Progres- hat all of them hilip Matheson and Lloyd third district and Provincialt Secretary J. David Stewart and! . Alban Farmer. Charlotte- town in the fifth. Wellington McNeil]. . Alexander ' City. Some inhabitants in the the people of the district want .‘ boost foothills were reported evacuat- him. Mr. ‘ b Elsewhere. little activity was; Explosions could be heard in night. reported. with only occasional lthis capital as huge columns of outbursts of shooting. r in The first annual donation of $7.000 toward rchaae of books to the new library of It. Dunstan'a Univmtty. was que made last evening. Here. the Rector. J.A. Sul- livan. left. accept! the che~ from Rev. Wendell Mac- .smoke rose from the volcano.ta major rcbur ,M t . DONATION GIVEN FOR SDU lIBRARY Qucens (‘ounty Liberals face V . 'Iding job as they V Commons that last spring th Intier. secretary-treasurer of St. Dunstan‘s Universrty Alumni Assocration. Allison Mayne. Emerald and; MacLeod. Bonshaw.: -‘ were nominated to representl den”? When i,he.First. Queens Liberals late uhhpmt ‘ ister . Macphersom {Eriday any government respon- Bcllevue. represented the PCs ’ Slhlhi-y in the statement to the GUATEMALA CITY (Apr—A in Fou-noh Queens in the 19591?“ (222?“ {US$128 Valera-i W3 ‘ 4 M f H election. Mr. McNeil] said last? 1"“ ‘ ‘r all“ 1 ‘ “C9 7‘8 95 G um. ‘35 nommac or is night he is available again "Hm- next yea”- pmbably win] b9; iHall of Fame awarded by tho ‘ ohci ’ Holstein-Friesian > “mm-son could notigovemment's dollar devalua-g OTTAWA (CP) — Members {OF his outstanding work in reached for comment lashilon- m, the lacted on quickly lbe has he icosualties and dollar devalua- . tion. 'crcase arose from dollar deval- nation. There was no further reply. probably would be increased by an average of 10 per cent. at~ tributing the steps partly to rising accidents and more ex- top plays of the 24th Canadianntlawa for her thirdprize play. placements of parts play-writing competition will be No Moon. Xn son due to dollar devaluation nndprescnted here Nov. 15-17 by The winner-r. will receive Prince County . . . . .. 1 Prime Minister Dietenbaker lscofiland 5m?“ “f the fine“ A-V‘ . ires ire catte eyer brought to said statements about Cuba manada' and hum up the im_ ‘ by a Conservative Dart-V exec' 1ports to one of the country’s top .d 1 . . Smith. Powml are the Sim“. utive have no bearing on gov- lherds. lie was a member of the .m hers. The convention willl emment pom-V- be held Thursday. November sive Conservatives won eight T 15 of the ten seats in 1959 and it] NEW DELHI__ Prospects de_ appeared like a normal land- is expected t Ipanel of judges of the agricul- NDP Leader T. C Douglas 1tural merit COn‘lpf‘llIIOI‘l spon- said the Board of Broadcast “wagggungrslwc depart- Governors lost public conft- l Herbert Dudlny Smith‘ Comp. 1t ordered the tion. Que. 1867-1943, president CBC m caniy CTV'S Gray ‘of the Canadian Hereford Asso- Cup telecast. ‘ciation for M years. .1. Benson tL——Kingstom Thomas John Pratt. l-lartlanri. ml corn-plained that mcome tax N.B.. 1393-1955. manager OI the concessions given the oil in- :New Brunswick Seed Growers‘ dustry will do nothing to dis- {Co-operative and director of the courage foreign ownership_ tCanadian Sccd Growers' Asm- ' Lewis (NDP_York iciation. He is credited with the South) unsuCccssfully sought :fflrmaiinn 0f the sccd growers' passage of a bill reducing the gcmoperalivc. ' federal voting age to 18 from ‘ . . . . I IHOLSTEIN N MINAT N OTTAWA (or!) — Prime Min-i 21- ' Th, 0 '0 Diefenbaker diisclairniedt e late Hon. Walt-er Jones. lwho was premier of the pro~ ince for It years and member 0 the, legislature for 18 before he was called to the Senate in May-arsMeet Association ‘of the cabinet met for an houribuild-inz r I] c. internationally and 40 minutes Friday with a- iamW-i Abt‘flwt‘" “ml at Em" PrneIwRichmond) noted m the group of Canadian mayms and bury. just across thc river from a lthe. mayors' spokesman said Charlottetown. ’l‘he herd was originated by afterwards be ex ects tw r . . p n 0 Mr. Jones during the first great . vfaSl “Lion against anyone Scek‘ the, "f their proposal“ to he War. 1914-18. It had an enviable r r ‘ g ting to increase pric ' [excuse of iWou'ld the government not in lthe case of the auto Insurance f increases show record over the years and was awarded both the Premier . . . Breeder‘s and Premier Exhibr‘ 1." meel‘m‘ the rap'dly‘mmm". tor‘s banners at the. Royal Wm: "‘3 3‘ “lb” m s “l SUhl'rh’m for Fair and the Canadian Na The municipal leaders asked lihe government for more help defibak" mum “‘"l ‘sprm‘l 5"“ ”°“'"‘"“'" "hsoles- tional Exhibition. Canada‘s «or ver been able to see cence, [Continue on Page fl (‘ol 2' Island Author Io Se Production At Ottawa OTTAWA tf‘Pt . The Ilrr‘ccflhc University Women": tillrh of the Ottawa Little Theatre. the workshop certificate awards group which sponsors the com- along with two others who tied etition. for fourth placeHCIarc Foley “— ‘P The three authors will he coupal of Ottawa with Press here for the productions. 'l‘licy Release and Theo M Dunn of ontrcal with Night .lar Maureen Orton of Hamilton. The awards Will he presented who will receive the Solange by the high commissroner for .Karsh award and $250 and the New Zealand. John Stanhope Birks Gold Medal for her first- lReid, prize play. 53X in History. The productions will hr adju- Adele Townshend of Sortris.jdicatcd by Dora Mayor Moore. PEI. winner of the Dorothydounder of Toronto‘s New Play .White award of $150 for her Society. who judged the scripts second-prize play. For the Love for the play-writing competi- of a Horse ‘on. The plays will be adjudi- Paddy Robertson of Chatham..caled individually with no com- *| Ont” who receives $100 from‘oetitinn or award-