If it's Good For the Island VOL. who @mtrdiiot WEA Sunny. clouding over this eventua- THER .The Guardian 15 Fpr it cold; light Winds. Low-high, 3 anleer n ' ‘ Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” W o a la! 0 ‘ r Lsxv. No. 297 A“ “m 02...... .n mamm‘fft" 3&5“; 233: “mm”- CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 19, 1962. mugs“ SEVEN CENTS 18 pATEs‘ w— . a: was Fl ‘MMEBSIDE BUREAU . stories to come to light rrar happened yesterday in‘ iillllllilPrSldP. it was all about B u r n e tta Bridgcs, a pretty little girl. one of a family of 12 children, who travelled about 30 miles rom, her home in the Conway d is-l trict. arid day to earn enough money fol buy Christmas presents for the. iamdy. BU RNE’I‘TA PONDERS GIFTS Little Girl Sells Papers To Buy Gifts For Family With only time out biggest smile. you ever saw. and little presents for each of her 1little girl. maria-fl student-1M younger brothers and sisters. Arriving at the Guardian-Pa- triot office earlier yesterday morning. Burnetta announced her intentions for e a r n i n g with an armful of papers patrol- for her lof her family as she earned the OF THE GUARDIAN lsclf - earned dinner of frencblmoney, and with the stated ob- nni- or the nicest Christmasdrles and chocolate milk at aijective of taking home H1 ' g ‘local lunch counter. this little [money left over as a Christmas ' _gir ended up the day with the lgift to her mother. any The last previous time. this ,lnverness School. hadubeen seen lat the Summerside newspaper goffice. was on Nov. 9th wb en ishe came to Summerside to Tceiebrate her 13th birthday by sold newspapers allicmistmas shopping mnncy‘ and lselling papers so that she could pay for her own birthday dinner at a local restaurant. and had mm youngest member, or hm. ;led the cold windy streets. buy-$31.50 ten, 0V9,- ” rake hnme to log a new toy for each memberiher mother. ' volves 34,000,000 bu shels of competitors in the world wheat ton dN-iinpd Cuban Prisoner Release Lower Prices, Better Terms Mark China Wheat Sale OTTAWA t(‘.Pl»¢WiIh the help\ of lower prices and better credit iand: l" 3 terms. Canada has completed '"aha' credit terms recently by France the price cuts conceivably could lesser extent. Aus- ‘have been even greater. in view lot big world wheat supplies and its seventh in the. current series I REFUSES DETAILS Ifs‘fiff’fiilfipflleC222???” of‘wheat sales to Communist‘ However. he refused to dl- 41.700.000 bushels not yet taken China: ‘vulge details on the selling up by mainland China undcr Agriculture Minister Hamilton price, the wheat grades in- the long » term agreement. annnnunced ' the Commons ivolvcd or the interest being signed in the spring of 1961 and Tuesday that the latest contract lcharged. ('mlteming such infer-walling for (‘hina's purchase of under a Z'z-year agreement. in— .mation would benefit Canada'sllgfijm‘onn bushels, My, Hamil. to discuss pros- wheat worth about $65,000,000. ,markets. pects for an eighth contract un- Th(‘_P9kinfl EOVCanenI Will Elsewhere it was learned that 'der that general agreement, pay 2'7 For cent rash and thelsince A112. 1 ill? wheat board's In Statement in the Com. .‘balanfl‘ In One year. PIUS mter- ; pegged selling prices have been mons Tuesday. Mp Hamilton . . . idriftins downward. In the lastssatd the 34.000.000 bushels of On six preVlous sales totalling i 119,000,000 bushels of wheat the by terms were 25 per cent. down and the rest in nine months. At; the same time Canada had been j selling wheat. to Poland on the. basis of 10 per cent down and‘ the balance in three years. It ad been reported earlier: that negotiators for the Red Chi- nese state trading agency Were seeking better terms from the Canadian Wheat Board in view of the Canadian-Polish deals. Mr. Hamilton said Tuesday in an interview outside the Com- mons that. the extra three months for repayment. on the latest contract resulted from a general I o o s e n in g of wheat 2"2‘ l“ mu" Tents 8 bUSheli ‘will be shipped from west coast BCCOFdInE In tirade. .ports during the first half of One grain expert here said 1.1963. INTERIM SUPPLY DEBATED Defence Minister Harkness and "s e r a p b i c. platitudes" from ‘Prime Minister Diefenbaker. It was "amazing" that no member of government ‘stood up to defend the Colllm~ bia River Treaty. under attack during the current debate on an ‘interim supply motion. Continuing an attack launched Monday by Stanley Knowles “NDP—Winnipeg North Centre), Mr. Douglas said that whenever opposition members ask pert’ ‘nent questions they are told 1 subject could better be d cussed during consideration of department spending estimates. "There are no estimates." ASKS REASflN n the Columbia R d OTTAWA tCPi m The leader of The New Democratic Party :Tuesday flayed the government for “this shameful exhibition" of Parliament which. he said, denies MPs the right to debate ithe nation’s business.- » ' 1t is the privilege of mem- BUENOS AIRES 'APl—-Prls- .bcrs to question caliinet minis- oncrs rioted in this capital’s ’lers on policy matters. said T. Villa de Volo jail Tuesday, .C. Douglas. Yet they had been {killed a number of guards and Eunable to exercise this privi- held 20 others hostage for 10 liege in the current'session. hours. Tuesday night they sur ‘ 0n matters of defence, be 'rendered and the hostages Were ‘said, the House heard contra- .relcased unharmed. dictory statements from Exter- I Eight to 13 guards were re- ‘nal Affairs Minister Green and iportcd killed before Col. Miguel ""‘ ’ .P ,d" fA .l‘. .. ~ in:llvalnsllilpll(lt€::0811;551:1613: p21 ;Sydney MIII Gets ; iBuenos Aires lP-rison Riot ins Death To" ivcr rules- a ri 10:20 am. “the mutiny is mer. ' l . - ition. parliament ha ghl to About 400 of the jails 2.100 prls- .Lurge O‘I'CIel' jknow why i b e. gavernment. oners participated. scrapped the plan originally i aiva also annnollnced his res-‘ MONTREAL ICPi w Domin-fproposed by Gen. A, G. L. MC. lgnation after guards—angered lion Steel and Coal Corp. Ltd, gNaughlon, and why the govern- y the slayings of their fellow lbas announced it has received imam sighed the treaty with the guards - disobcyed his orders’ 8 000 order for steel lunged Starr-5 before the British an and sought vengeance on mu- Jrails from lndia. It will be fi- iCqumhia government. 1 By GEORGE ARFELD itiary Powers for Russian spy HAVANA t-APl M Negotiators fRudolph Abel. seeking to exchange food and lso arrivin with Donovan sion prisoners were reportedlVirginiafietancourl. officials of conferring Tuesday night with lthe Cuban Families Committee May Come By Christmas ' medicine for 1.113 Cuban inva-Iwcrc Alvaro Sanchez and Mrs“ tiny ringleaders. nanced by the federal govern~i He, was disturbed by defence composed of prisoners" rela-' men” EXP"rls Credits In-‘l'r'lQUestions. it was common tlves. ' I all“? for knowledge that pressure was Tlto Comp etes The order is for 170,000 tons Relatives in Cuba were [libi- 1 rails. Shipments from Sydney.t lant. They heard over United States and Cuban radio that an .American freighter was ready being exerted on NATO to adopt nuclear weapons. yet Parlia- tW0 weeks they have dePEdlwheal under the new contract‘ NDP Leader Blasts Curb Imposed On Questions - I New Satellite r A'd Sh‘ ‘ I O I IPS i POINT ARGUELLO. Calli. ;lAFI-—A United States satellitel designed to become a new guid-i ing star for ships and submar-i incs shot aloft Tuesday over the . Pacific missile ra A T4-foot-tall Air look it up. (‘I’ from AP-Rcutcrs NASSAU President Ken. nedy. here for talks with Prime ‘Minister Macmillan. has (ialicd Transit 3A. the 140- proved sending a top - level pound satellite was schediiled‘United States military mission as the. first of a network of four to The Congo. US. government which by the end of 1063 should sources disclosed Tuesday. The be able to give ocean vessels Congo is also an area of con- anywhere in the world a quick cam for Macmillan's British fix on their position in any kind govcrnmcnt. ‘of weather. Kennedy and Macmillan. who This is of vital importance to landed h"? in 75 ‘ (ICETCF DP- Polaris - type submarines that cembel' Weather. mt“ infill- have to know their position we. ,mally for nearly an hour Tucs- cisely before missiles can be ifiay in preparation for the open- launchcd. Current methods of ‘ln'l 0f talks lfldabi navifla'inn by "1,, mars rmmre The Us. informants said the (on... skips decision to send a mission to The Congo was made in Wash- ington Monday. amid increasing U.S. concern over some new bid by Russia to establish a power .position in the central African country. The informants did not exclude the possibility the 11.5. in an extreme crisis might con- sider putting some American forces in The Congo 1 The eight-man US. mission. led by LL-Gen. Louis W. Tru- man. will make an urgent sur- vey of the needs of United Na- ti s forces in The Congo and NATO b e c 0 min t! a nuclear men- iOI‘CP- Washington fears may in- llltimate hope of the. icreased conflicts over Congo world was a ban on nuclear‘unification. the sources said. testing and disarmament under in a co-ordinatcd move at UN international inspection. “it is headquarters in New York US. a 1mm. ham mad" and if NATO EAmbassador Adlai E. Slcvcnson becomes a nuclear power it willicnnVPde “19 US derisifln I" nge. Force Seoul .harden the situation "and make iUN SECFEIAI‘Y-General U Titani- h: 1 support. to porposals-for studies is- " any agreement much less likely . m succeeds. EVOKES SURPRISE The disclosure evoked siir-. SUPPORTS STUDY IDEA prise among UN delegates Mr. Douglas also added his there. After an hour-Inn: meeting lContinued on page 2, col. it between Stevenson and Thant. ability to deal with what‘ U.S. Mission To Congo Aimed To Block Reds Nassau Talks Begin As Move Is Approved lIll" l']\ :iliilmllirod that at 'l‘hani's I't‘rli,l(’>l the US. has agrccd in supply additional . equipmcnt to the UN Congo ‘ol'lr The amount and nature of the equipment rlcpcnds on tile. result of lI1f‘ silrvev lw the US. mis- FlOtl. which i: due in. New York today on route to Tile Congo. a li.\' spokesman said. Sources in Nassau «and the mission is lcx‘pr‘rlcrl to complete its survey hcforr- Ih.n year‘s cn . in a related development. US. State Undersecretary George McGhec flew to Brussels for l‘ongn talks uitlt Foreign Min- ister Paill-llcnri Spaak of Bel- gium, The Congo's former col- onial ruler in a Washington meeting last month. Kennedy and Spaak agreed on severe economic measures against The Congo's Katanga province un- less it ends its secession from thc central :overnment. Tun of Thant's chief Congo aides—Undersecretary Ralph J Bunche and Rnbert K A. Gard- iner, chief UN officer in The Congo-headed for consultations with 'f‘hanl. Kennedy and Macmillan are scheduled to discuss The Congo situation in detail today. SKYBOIJ‘ 0N AGENDA The other major topon on to- day's agenda is the U.S. inten- tion to scrap the Skyboll. the :air-to-ground missile on ‘cb Britain had pinned its nuclear deterrent plans in the. mid-19605. Other major topics up for ‘ review are the Soviet-Red Chi- ncse split and the Red Chinese- lnrlian border war. Both Kennncrly ant-l it‘ontiniicd on page Macmillan 2. col. 2l Committee To Study Problems 0i Producers For Food Plants t ‘ tables in t h i a province and compare such things as con- tracts and prices producers re By NEIL MATHESON Farm and Provincial Editor Farmer producers for food processing plants in this p1~o.,ceive in other provinces with vince last night agreed to have ‘ “'I‘a' “193' 3‘“ PM"- a five-man committee study Smith \laci’arlane. Harlin; (‘uhan Premier Castro. There: “as guarded optimism that the, . mcn might be released by .Dlsarmamenf team headed by James B. Don- 1 “rs. Berta Barreto. a nego-l “if” Canadian ('hl‘istmas. - member negotiating Ewan. of New York arrived ear-{ I ' ‘ . N in the day from Miami. I. nTTAwA . . lialor, told a reporter here that ? officials were ready to acknowl- ‘to deliver food and medicine in i *exchange for the captives. j Castro demanded 362.000.000 for their freedom and later agreed to food and medicine icompanying him as far as Kiev. , valued by Castro at $62,000,000. ; The two Communist chiefs. Steaming from Baltimore to who have seen one another al- Port Everglades, Fla. north of imost every day since Tito ar- l‘Miaml. was the freighter Af- irivcd last Dec. 4. left Moscow rican Pilot. Iaboard Tilo's special train. ‘home Tuesday night. with Soviet iPremlcr Khrushchev ac- lItt’ exchange for the prisoners ledge Tuesday that their hopesl Th“ 4354"” freighter. loaned captured in Apr". 195]_ Bay "f. . lhy the Farrell Lines to the ‘companylng his guest on his Pigs invasion of Cuba could“ a" early Fiay'wes' "nth." 'American Red Cross. which homeward journey was re- r"me about soon—"God will- ‘ Standing 0" d'sarmamenl "" .‘assumed sponsorship of th e lgardcd here as highly unusual“ inc“ ‘SPEC'IOH- much all” i“ “‘8 prisoner exchange. Is expected Iprobably intended as a special Later. callers at her room} \icre told that she and the other i three had been summoned by } Castro. the airport in Cuban security, Rat-rein maintains here. Donn-i \‘an. a lawyer. arranged the. {map of us. U-2 pilot Francis OTTAWA (CPL—Senator Ed- lar Fournier tPC—New Bruns- :‘Icki said Tuesday there are a. lot of things" that do not 'suit him in the. bin establishing he Atlantic Devlpment iiriiiird. But he urged fellow sen- ators to ‘glve it ‘a chance.“ what. he called an heady aftermath of the Cuban crisis. seem to have. been mis- placed. ln government circles. disap- the apparent failure of the agreement for on-site inspection to verify iSoviet missiles from Cuba. spend money in improving the economic position of the Marl- tlme provinces. JUST A PACIFIER l was “an instrument of premises to pacify a restless population," she said. The ill on: an example ~to show that “few politicians die because of ideals. but many .‘at the Florida port hursday. 1f the prisoners are released. lthey probably wil be flown in . lcharter planes to Miami. said Tile four were whisked from pointment was expressed overiCutltan‘hfamilies committee offi- icias ere. ‘t‘i‘vice cars to the home Mrs. iUnited States to get'Communist 5' The Red Cross was stockpil- [lng food and medicine gifts In the withdrawal ofjwarehouses at Opa-Locka Air Field in the Miami area. P.E.I. Woman Senator Hits At Atlantic Board ideals die because of politi- clans." Senator Fournier said that in a speech last week. Liberal Sen- ator Harold Connolly of Nova Scotia bad “insulted the people of the Maritimcs" by suggest- ing that the five-man board should 'not‘ include Maritimers. This suggestion that “we can- not run our own business" was Partial and all Haitians Should have faith to bill and in the Progress 2 Egan” I e the on e Russians Fire ‘ Nuclear Shots WASHINGTON tAPi -- The 11.3. Atomic Energy Commis- sion said the Soviet Union con- ducted two nuclear texts in the atmosphere Tuesday in the vi- cinity of Novaya umlya. lem‘ described as of intermediate yield, an the ve power was In the range between mm and 1,000.- U m of m. I financed false. "It is us. the Maritim- ers, who know what we n it is us who will have to eed INSIDE TODAY i Khrushchev‘s gesture in ac- Ibonor to a one-time Soviet-Bloc . renegade. lDory Is Found, i No Sign Of Men i STEPHENYILLE. Ntld. ((‘P1 1A 12-foot dory identified as the one used by two men from the Port on Port Peninsula area of the Newfoundland west coast when they were last seen Sat- urday has been found. but there was no sign of the men. Peter Hyncs. ill. of Port au_ Port and Emile .lesso of March Point left March Point in the boat to jig for codfisb , . .the shore. While they were out to strong offshore wind sprang up, and tliey were unable to row back to land. The boat was found 2'5 miles from March Point on the other side of St. George's Bay at St Theresa's. Floating upright just ,offshore when spotted by an lRCMP plane. it was empty. IS ‘ o a o . . . . lRUSSIan VISI'I‘ N.S., begin at the end of this merit has had no discussion. the production. marketing andlton: Reggie Lewis. st. Peters I lnonth. The NDP was opposed to processing of fruit and vege~lBay and Elmer Waugh, Wil— MOSCOW lAPl ~— President . ,, .Tito of Yugoslavia set out for 5“"): .mot Valley “ere n amed (George MacDonald. president or the PE]. Federation of Agriculture Who presided and the other two Will he named ullhin a few days, he explain- rd. The committee Will remmt back to a general meeting of producers as soon as possible. PROBLEMS LISTED ‘ A ' good public with Ilions between and Ipi‘odllcers. slow payment for ICl‘ODS supplécrl. problems of harvestin: peas in some cases land a problem of grading crops ‘Sllrpl't‘f‘l for processing. were some of the difficulties men- companies tioncd by various producers The meeting was gond natr ,. lured at all times and plant. [ lsnokc<men George Wright from ‘lhi Sherwood plant and Murray Macl'luen for the New Animal! plant aZl'ced the public rriatlons lcll much to sired. and said in some cases inexperience on both sides con. lrihiited to some of the dif-l fit‘llllir‘s which had boon dis-' cussed earlier. \larkctin: Director R e i d Sangslrr and a producer panel . it‘ontlnued on page 2. col 2' Parliament l . i iAt A Glance 5' . \( RV TIIF. (‘AVADIAN PRESS ‘” TI'ESUAY. DN‘. IR. I952 T Douglas. lcadei‘ of the \‘eu- Democrats. attacked the govcrumcnl for "this Filame- ful cxhibitlon of Parliament" “hich dcnicd essential de- hates Brilrc S Rccl‘ 'Ii-Peeli said \gi'll llitili'c .\I i n I s l e r Hamilton has not lived tip to Ill< plcrlzc to give eastern farmers a better deal. (icrnl'd Porron tSC— Rcauco- ul':cd higher famfly alloua rr~ to give a lift . Dull the plow.‘ Announcements, notices . im innmnllicru and children1g i He said his_own district of Births. deaths . . . . . . .. 3. - ln'timr for t‘liris'mas i Madawaskn is in worse eco- Classified . . . . . . . . .. It. 15 Swain" *7 'I E 3 1’ Ff‘l’rnifl' nomlc shape. than it was 30 Comics . . . . . . . .. 13 inc- \ru Bl'llll<“'lf‘h‘ rapped - “armo- Fazm {pechg‘l‘ubtiog rim-ice. markets I: « ' i “ I.lhcrai senators for their an cons me on 00 Editorials . . . . ; rriiicisms of the A t t a ntto . giganufi “gotthf‘eggg?§iy'rag g"!- Qggfiy » - - - - ' ' - - -‘ i’ Beard all. nee . '7 -‘ iv N'- in huge capital WOT" {Toxin lungs County .. .. 4 um. or my" sky-lights of entry. Demolition began \ton- office further east on Iibrarv is now located I11 the The t'ommons meets a’ i m'mnigmtgncsril‘g tnfem a. Snmmerside ...... a the charlofieuywn public lib. day to'make way for the Con- Queen square. Government or. old Queen Square school. Fri 2 on p m. to continue its de- w“ mead“ ' u do” by the _ - - - - - - - - '7 my and Harris memorial art federation Memorial Building. flees in ms hm]de a" cavation. for the mm“;a hair on an nit'rlm supply x “mm Provinces Economlc Women's . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. “new is being removed I , we,“ to he mm down is the l m ‘ Th building is scheduled to be..ln hill The Senate meets at 3 . cmc'u‘. 1' I , but with considerable diftl- Cabot building —-lthe old post "WW"! W Wane“- " in January ' 5”" t .1