Vr S if ii’; Good For the lsla The Guardian is For it ' \ * voL. Lxxv. NO. 209. i dis R:NiERSTON'iE LAID AT PRINCE smear scuooi Post Lt.-Col. L.T. Lowtba (right). presided. Remarks were made the city yesterday. in the mor- princ ipal of ' c Street by Col. Lowther. Dr. Lea and ning the cornerstone of St. 1929 to 1954 lind Mayor A. W. Gaudct. Keys to Jean elementary school was the at the new the school were presented to by LL 01- L00 F- Mafi- schoolmii. a cerexréioniymg got Pl'lnCl[:)8il.M1:Ilé5 BM 859; Donald, who was Principal of day 5m°°'n- -‘ 5'5 "'h°9°"‘- 3' - ' mm - school. which is the architect, Keith Piclo side. a member of the bulld- g“°°'“ 5q“‘;:l re Law from . C of the City ing committee. The ceremony I 9 new 5° 9 - School Board. Dr. R. G. Lea. was the second of its kind in l 1931 to 1958. T00 BUYERS TO BE AIRLIFTED By ALAN DONNELLY OTTAWA (CP) - The trade‘ department's biggest export push yet was unveiled Tuesday by Trade Minister Hoes —- a four - pronged operation that l will see more than 700 foreign buyers airlifted to the doorstep of Canadian manufacturers. Mr. Hoes called it “operation world markets" and informants put its total cost at more than $500,000 — an indication that despite its austerity program the governmen is ready to s nd money to help fatten the coun- iry's export earnings. Main feature will be a three- day national samples show in Toronto April 2-4 with more than 500 buyers from around the world flown in chartered planes to see and order the best Can- ada has to offer in consumer goods. During the previous week. more than 200 airlifted foreign tou ing the lilants of Canadian manufactur- ers of machinery and equip- ment. ANNOUNCED DETAILS Canadian companies announcing details of the national samples Show. and to nearly 500 machi- new and equipment manufac- |ll'el'S. The, other two parts of the liberation. under . for lilannins months. involved the trsdc¢e- T vartment’s ovussss salsa -'pro- Ouakgwa 55” Agassiz. 80 miles east of Van- remors Alarm tiered lran . and it may have hit villages to I the west." lnnnineot. A , the U.S. Armed Forces radio- iclhvlsion station suit thou motion force of some 120 trade ‘commissioners. They'll be flown to Ottawa for a week of discussions April 4-11 tions and special export prolr ems. Then the trade commissioners will hold open house for nearly three weeks for any Canadian businessman wanting to get into the export business or expand present overseas markets. This will be .the department's second national export promo CASTLEGAR. B.C. (GP)- With 20 miles of a 500-mile treek hi em. us of Freedom Doukhobors continued their march along a hilly. twisting highway in the sunny British C 01 u m bia Kootenays Tuesday. They vow they won't stop un- til they reach a federal prison for Freedomlte terrorists at couver. The estimated 900 marchers include about 100 school - age children, 75 infants, two ex- pectant mothers and at least 100 elderly persons. many of them in rm. Many are being trans- along the highway in wheelchairs and carts. . RCMP officers patrolled the on changing world trade condi- be l Trade Department Plans ' Bigsir-4-Pronged :- tion conference, and Mr. indicated he expects it wi do the scale of the first such conference, held here in Decem- w months after he moved into the trade minis- ter's job. _ ' 10-000 INTERVIEWS Hecs ll out- 9602 38 At that conference. 1,365 busi- nessmcn from 1.133 Canadian firms talked over export pros- pects with trade commissioners in some 10,000 separate inter- views. Freedomiles Move Slowly On 500-Mile Prolesl Trek half - mile - long procession to maintain order and keep the road clear while the Freedom- ites moved along the southern trans - provincial highway at about one mile an hour. Near Brilliant the Freedom- marchers stopped at the tomb of Peter (The Lordlyl l Verigin. former spiritual leader of the entire Doukhobor com- munity who was ed in a imyslterious blast aboard a train ll 12 orthodox Doukhobors stood guard and refused to permit the chanting. praying Freedomites to enter the fenced-in tomb area. ' RNEEL sin may The Freedomites knelt out- side the ground and prayed. Then they went on “their way. m ve as “been bombed nine times in recent s. '< O b -1 The prospect of legal action arose from two quarts d domites set out their rned - out shack town at a. ' General sked for a police on truancy and neglect of children among the marchers. The U.S. Embassy branded as “a wicket hoax" ls“ teltvhone call _ a man pm as s iiocxlcisl that led to a fag alarm in the early morning hours that more quakes were over sands Tamil‘, into Tehran in friglit._ icT«h‘}o'd':u:i'd:onndb’ Aw an a s (on S Hcmmled. do ‘ i azv . miles Flags onntbe fringe “of the nrlcken rssion. fled into 1110 Ilfsstl in their pyjamas. it was ' _t Tslu-an rumor nu is suing the U.S. “Arman liorcos station and At » cials would be V the Freedomilcs from setting in! a shock town near Mountain l"rccdomits‘s have been blaniodjor tsrrortsing til Nel- 924. However. a group of ' rs , ‘ ay, two days after; the Free- Germans Welcome 4 DeGaulle BONN (Reuters)—More than 300,000 West Germans in holl- day mood turned out Thursday for the arrival of President do Gaulle on a six-day visit aimed at cementing Franco - German accord. German officials said they were astonished at the size and warmth o c turn - out for the first official visit to Germanyof a French head-of-state. De Gaulle's visit also pro- duced unprecedented security precautions by police fearing another attempt on the French leader's life. Tuesday night in Bonn, de Gaulle and his wife attended a formal reception and dinner fol- lowed by a torcblight military display in the grounds of Bruehl Castle. De Gauile and Adenauer. the two statesmen who have brought about the revolution in Franco - German relations will start their political talks today and continue them Thursday on a ' steamer which will ;_ take the mto Dusseldorf and the industrial Ruhr Valley. The main subject of their talks will be the possibility of restarting negotiations for a Eu- ropean politic erlin will also be discussed. N liéovers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew" _'“:.“""“"" CHARLOT'l‘E'l'0WN, CANADA, WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 5, 1962. "$550" SEVEN cams WEATHER _Cl931‘lT1E duiu .g morning; ccol; ii winds. Low-high 48 and 65. BULLE At 2:35 reports from Sum- merside indicated there were two bodies, both males. in the car which plunged over the Marine Wharf shortly before midnight. It was believed they were members h Canadian Air Force -but their identity was not given. The vehicle had ust been removed from the water. SUMMERSIDE BUREAU OF THE GUARDIAN Early today naval divers were assisting police at Summersldc in efforts to recover a car which plunged off the Marine Wharf shortly before midnight. Reitorts from the scene said divers MacAlpine and Koable from HMCS La I-iulloisc report- ed they could see the body of a m- in the rear seat. They said the car had landed on its hood and that the windshield broken out. A truck driver hauling fer- freighter TIN No Decision Announced On MWF Plan HALIFAX (CP) — A request to finance the major portion of ii $1,000,000 Maritime Winter I-‘air budding in Amherst was considered Tuesday night by ‘lie three Maritime Provinces’ agri- e The request. in a letta sign- ed by Alex 'liliomson of Truro. secretary manager of the Mar!- time Winter Fair. aslocd the governments of Nova Scotia. New Brunswick and Prince Ed- ward Island to provide $700,000 to help finance construction of a building to replace one dea- iroyed by fire several years 0 Agriculture Ministers E. D Haliburton of Nova Scotia, Adr- ian Levesque of New Brunswick and Andrew M!acRae of Prince Edward Island attended e meeting. son area for years with bomb- ings. arson and other acts. Most of the more than 100 Freedom- ite men at Mountain Prison are serving terms up to 28 years for terrorism. The Marchers say they are tramping to Agassiz to be near tilizer from a moored at the wharf said he heard the squeal of tires and then saw Car Plunges ln’ro S'side Harbor was ' ions BIG CATCH LOOE. England (APi_ Eight-year-old Ian Hughes is four feet. two inches tall ——but he's a whale of a fish- erman. Fishing from the back of his father's boat Monday he felt his line go taut. As he struggled with the fish, his father looked on approvingly but offered no help. ver two hours little Ian worked the fish. When he got him to the boatside, the catch turned out to be a 91-pound shark. Ian weighs 74 pounds. the vehicle plunge over iihe west side of the wharf, near the end. It was reported there were , some 20 feet of waiser at the} spot at ebb tide. Divers said in | addition the car had settled into : some four or five feet of mud. ere was no immediate re-]‘ port on the identity of the man ’ in the vehicle, nor was it known whether he had been alone. Divers said the car was a 1954 S Chev and had P.E.I. license 4 number 39-356. ~ Divers shortly before 2 a.m. l were able to ligok a gable :10 the crari-3 from the scar stat-illll Chg [1995 Pat On Command was attempting to haul the veh- PASADENA. Calif. (AP)- icle from the water. A freighter is tied up on the west side of the wharf. nearer the town than the spot where the vehicle \ML‘llt over. On the cast The Mariner II spacecraft will side two naval ships and the old come within 9,000 miles of the planet Venus-1,000 miles closer than originally planned -— a scientist said Tuesday night. Jack James. Mariner project Scotia II are moored. The veh- manager for the U.S. space icle went down the west side of agency's jet propulsion labora- WASHINGTON (AP)——Presi- dent ,Kennedy told Cuba and 41113”! any part of e western hemis- phere. Kennedy said in a statement issued by the White House that there is as yet no evidence of a significant buildup of Cuban offensive capabilities through recent movement of military supplies to Cuba from the So- v m . “Were it to be otherwise," he said, .'_‘the gravest issues would _ ise. Kennedy declared: “It continues to be the policy of the United States that the Castro regime will no he al lowed to export its.aggressive purposes by force or the threat of force. It will be prevented by whatever means may be ne- cessary from taking action against any part of the western hemisphere." Kennedy continued: “The United States. in con- junction with other hemisphere countries, will make sure that while increased Communist armaments will be a heavy burden to the unhappy people of Cuba themselves, they will benothing more." TELLS OF BUILD P Kennedy said the United ta t e s possesses information with anti - aircraft defensive missiles, radar and other elec- their husbands, fathers and sons. wi-isrir.ro.siiio.nl Anasu ’ A o"IsIIIIIOOas . . . . . . ....-an-so.’-i tlstthennsouncsrwho made I Wouonhpaga ........,..4I nfltfllfillf '0 .. ,,_ tronic equipment. iDAlliY s commas AT cu: JFK Gives Cuba Pointed Warning; Russia Tuesday the U M t a (1 military technicians" now e I States will take “w h a to var in Cuba or on the w_ay—and that _ _ _-i'.l!¥ be.-sec . . . ._ ..so. reveal aggression by Cuba in suggests the objective of tram- S that Russiahas furnished Cuba 18 bo the wharf and than instead of tum-ing left at the end of the warehouse continued on to plunge into the harbor. tory, made the‘ prediction after precise calculation of the space- craft‘s trajectory following a critical manoeuvre 1.500,- 000 miles out in space. “Everything worked just as designed,” James told a press . conference. There had been fears earlier at the 447-pound space vehicle ght miss Venus by as much 233,000 miles instead of fly- ing by at a distance of 10,000 miles. [well The only pgevious Venus ‘rocket —— launched by the So- viet Union 1% years ago——came no closer than 62,000 miles. Its radios failed soon after launch- ing and no scientific informa- tion was gained. mes said Mariner II's high- powered radio a n t e n n a had ‘been successfully pointed at earth again after being swung out of its position at the base of the 12 - foot - long space ve- 1- hicl to permit firing of the tiny irocket that changed the craft's course. I "1. He said the United States also l gnsl knows that about 3.500 “Soviet ar the quantity of..Sov ing Cubans in use of the equip- m . Kennedy said the Cuban buildup must be, considered as part of a world-wide Commu- nist challenge and must be dealt with “as a part of that larger issue" as well as in the “special relationships" which characterize the inter-American l S)! - . llone Ranger ‘solar panels. ic BUFFALO (AP) Fran ifilllcfgjg fromd the sun ‘to powter Striker, originator of the fic-. e ra lo an o ier ins rumen s. tional western hero, The Lone lhad been Successfully trained Rage;-, was killed Tuesday in toward the sun once more after a two-car collision on route 16, the mid-course manoeuvre. about 12 miles southeast of On Dec. 14. scientists at‘ till: h , laboratory said, Mariner s on Two persons in the other car pass by Venus, electronically were reported in fair condition investigating the cloud- in hospital at nearby Lacka- shrouded planet's secrets. wanna. If all goes well. the 41 Npounds Striker. 58, created The Lone of instruments aboard ariner Ranger for a Buffalo radio sta- ll will try to determine how hot tion in 1932 and the same year it is on Venus, ow fast the he sold the show to a Detroit lpllanet hrotates 88;: tyre! liigutihacag sgagiom . 1 cnus as a m e. _ The Lone Ranger has been la radiation belt similar to the course of television series, . eart s _ oks, two motion picture‘. Answers to_ these questions serials, two full-length movics..could help’ scientists determine numerous comic books and l whether life could exist on newspaper strips. :VenuS- ll’ REALIGN SOLAR CELLS ,1 , Dairy Princesses from vices hn Bsboock. chief an-n. Carolina south. 3 cial dairy princesses conmeted fomnfflrovlnou wort honored ll o,flm -of Canad- ton. Ont: Hr. Babcock;nVei~ .¢ me cm]: for my ngfiong] u. "59 c““m' Tum" W‘ “"9"” '5“ ‘* 0°” ‘ u‘° ' M°"’°"b'°°k' tie which was won by Mrs. tion Friday when they won mores. From the left are Vina P.E.I.; Denies Aumullor. south jun» jflehfilln. lussax. N.l.. Bally Visw. Alta. Tho provln- - g r 1.. r . . . lSMAll ANGLER WASHINGTON lCPr -— The United States acknowledged Tuesday that an American U-2 {plane may have flown over So- viet territory last Thursday. The acknowledgement was made in a note dispatched to Moscow with President Ken- nedy’s approval ju a w hours after receipt of a bristl- ing Russian protest. e note said that “precau- tions intended to prevent such jincidents are under review.“ But state department officials ldeclined to describe the note as Ian apology. explanation of what happened. ; _The Soviets alleged that a ghigh-flying U-2 reconnaissance , plane flew over part of southern isakhalin. a Russian-held island just north of Japan, for nine minutes during the nig of recalled the famous May. 1960, flight by a U-2 pi- loted by Francis Gary Powers which went down deep inside Soviet territory. touching off an international incident. MAY BE UN ISSUE The note declared that the Soviet warnings of retalita measures against U-2 bases “re- main in rce." served the right to raise “this new gross violation" at the forthcoming United Nations General Assembly. The note demanded a “clear answer" question whether the alleged incursion “a revival of the old ' government, con d e m n e President Kennedy himself. or a provocative action of the belli- cosc U.S. quarters which would like to create a new interna- tional conflict like the conflict of 1960." The protest called on the U.S. government to "punish strictly the persons guilty of organizing this flight." It said Russia would “take measures it deems necessary to ensure the secur- ity of its frontier in case of new‘ violations. Washington in authorities ;launched after the protest was, received in mid-morning Tues-. He also said that the vehicle's da ' w By CARL HARTMAN BERLIN fAP)—The Russians submitted Tuesday to Western orders to reroute Soviet ar- mored cars into West Berlin. into the Berlin air corridors in a way that brought a Western protest. Amid tension over East-West traffic tory hit and apparently killed ately trying to disentangle him- "self from barbed wire atop the Berlin wall. Interest centred most of structions. issued last Sunday. These orders were to run the armored cars carrying Soviet relief guards to the Russian war memorial in the British sector by a shorter route than that through the U.S. C h c c k point ' two miles from the memorial. A long delay in the appear- ance of the Russian cars, which about 1 p.m., built up tension. Sandkruz Bridge in the British sector. little more than a mile ls Describe southern U.S. and chlal and public schools. reserved for white children. ew pickets ppaa as Catholic schools were in other communities inns and at Atlanta. integration of public They said it was an - It re- , ratic practice of the previous‘ d b said. lthat an investigation was. But they sent MiG jet fighters: problems, bullets from, Communist East German terri-, a middle-aged refugee desper-‘ ordinarily make the crossing‘ But the big six-wheclcrs, finally ; showed up in a rainstorm at; 8 111'. 10 PAGES U.S. Has Soothing Reply To Brislling Soviet Nole Fresh U-2 Incident Fans Russian ‘Anger | Then at 2:80 p.m., state de- ,parimcnt press officer Joseph lW. Reap issued this text of a ‘U.S. rcply which had been sent to the U.S. charge d‘affaires in ;Moscow. John M. Mcsweeney, :for delivery to the Soviet for- :eign minist : . “The charge contained in the ’Soviet note of Sept. 4 that a United States aircraft violated Sovre air space Aug. 30 and ovcrflcw Soviet territory and {territorial waters was investi- ggated immediately upon re- !ccipt of the Soviet no . | “Investigation revealed that :an unintentional violation may :in fact have taken place. “A patrol craft operated by l‘ the United States Air Force was .-in the northern Pacific area ,east of Sakhalin at about the ‘time specified in the Soviet note. “The pilot of the aircraft has reported that he was flying a directed course while outside 'Sovici; territorial limits but en- couni.ercd severe winds during this night-time flight and may therefore have unintentionally _overflown the southern tip of ‘Sakhalin. :POLICY UNALTERED , “My government has in- jstructed me to state that the « policy of the United States gov- jernment with refrence to over- ;flights over Soviet i-erritory has jin no way altered and remains ° as stated by the president on ‘Jan. 25. 1951. — “If the pilot of the aircraft ‘in question did in fact violate _ Soviet territory this act was en- itirely unintentional and due {solely to a navigational error .undcr extreme difficult flying I vonfiyiond. “Precautions intended to pre- rvent such incidents are under , = review." S t a t 9 department officials lgave a “no-commcni" answer (to a wide range of questions :about the incidcnl, including in- qulrics as to what mission the ‘plane was on. where it was based. whether it was on a reg- iular flight, the name of the pi- lot and how had the weather was. Russia ns Submit To West; New Incidents Reported from the memorial. it was just before 7 .m. The procedure was something lot’ a slap e East German Communist regime. which has decreed that Sandkrug crossing 1point should be used onl by Bcrliners—noi. foreigners. How- ever. this rule has been vio- ilaied by the Russians before. According he Western commandanis. the use of Check- point Cliarlic “could well have led to incidents which it in the mutual interest of the So- vials and ourselves to avoid.” The Russians earlier in the th -day hit the Western Allies and ‘their Berlin occupation in an- other and even more sensltlvi spot -— their unhindered access to Berlin by air. The United States. Britain and Franco protested in the Berlin Air Safety Centre against Soviet MiGs which accompanied three of their commercial air- iincrs in the air corridors bo- iwcen Berlin and West Ger- many. An allied spokesman said the plancs—0ne Pan-America. one British European Airways and one air force—were accompan- ied for shorf‘ distances in and near Berlin between 9:30 and 410:0?» a.m. by one or two MiGs. School integration d Quiet B THE ASSOCIATED PRESS;Flhritia, Tennessee and VE- As school bells rang over the ginia. Tuesday, Negro white children attended ;Baton Rouge, classes together in both paro-Zand Gadsden. Efforts to integrate schools at La.. Huntsville Aia.. and Al- bany. Ga.. failed. i For some of the Negro chll- 3 THREE STATES no“, OUT: dren. it was the first time they, Mm; had been in a school formerlyisough gamma ,-cumin me . southern states that have no II- The transition was quiet. Ar cially integrated public schools Roman: A u 3,, 1, Alabama. ssippi bot40Ne ‘. K » U.’ anal GIN hildrsa nt- Louis I 15 parochial schools In ' ' New Orleans. Of an schooig; school pupils in lflfl .O‘I&. was stepped up in Arkansas. ‘I about 9.0!!) are Nagrlais