‘W E A T H E R Intermittent drizzle clearing by evening; easterly winds 25. gusts. to 35 Low--hit+h 43 and 50. Sunday: sunny but cool. ll . ' will ‘ll’ "'a"3 l Ih'oT(§uIfrd'lon‘is For if . ‘\ ‘g.’ ~ ‘ ~ - O c A ‘ '1’ll .hJ£ fiilllflfi JCIJICITUI .5 “Toners” Prince’ Edward Island Like The Dew” I °"',.';"_:,.:'.";',,.:’,,f‘."1:-_°-'-- CIIARLO'l'l‘E'I‘OWN, CANADA, ssruiuuv SEPT, 29, 1952. T Aulborludu. Sooolfl °"----W 18 PTEIE Basin Head Area Closed To Operation Of Trawlers "l§f“*""|':“M_ _ Move Is To Protect ‘WW0’ 5 '35'"9 I Inshore Operations A; Commons Meets OF THE GUARDIAN OTTAWA —— An area off Ba- 3' EN WARD [in "the proper conduct of the" OTTAWA tCP)-The playersgbusiness of this "house." were in their places. the cur-' tain went up and the familiar m"1Es 0!” QUESTION _ Commons stage was set Friday M“§'-“es late“ he “led Wt 3 "' . for the first, political skirmish llll°Stl°ll ‘mm James Byrne ‘L -. of the new Parliament. ':K‘;;tie"t3Y Il3(3~"’l_§)_ WI‘N}3_ _Ilt8d Although most of the ke 5 f'“' ° 35 “me “"5 91‘ ,' ‘characters took part in the 4:,i:Dietfenbaker dbgut l“se_i-iolus un-1 minute performance. the capac-U95 among 8 era CIVI serv- jty audience went away gen”, |ants" over a delayed salary in- ally disappointed. The l°1'935°- _ works everyone had waited forimllilfi BPYIIE? 13'!!! lt’aul Martial: _didn't go ott_ ssex as pu up a mi I ‘ qu£lSiteionocpceaI’s;:)odii ofwtafise gteh Sgt Speaker Lambert W35; .NV;?_S elletiged prgsident 0:’ 1962-1347, dated Septem- . . . ' ‘ = , loll? _alrv_ ounci a ;' er 27,1962. giiiment _whic1hh had] its ceremon- thgelée lilgfikegcczgggfifd “Ell llllltll its (‘ionvention in_Victoria. this i The area involved is about six afioptellnngl "I: 3y‘ t‘ questioners hack on the trazk W38 tNItr'Hlilltwitilihwi;1°ls7pre- I “"1 3 ha" "mes "‘1°"g"‘ 31°“ yt e tr'u es} e qugslonf pa- At no time did the ODDOSIIIOIII Isjinglled) fume Id rodhqts the Show and extends three; 5 3. me °r queues ° “" b h tk . t . I ‘ ' as serve. aS_a . "‘ lmiles out to sea. The western) gent nattotm tnt&§3t_ By pt-ac. tenltiiesf a e s tong exception; ector ofuthe fiouncil £01 eight ibmmdary is 0“ the east side Of; me, opposifign 5 attempt to o s irmness. . years. so. e as een a 5 Mcmnnon P . t (rm ‘ . . . . R 1- t- - - - _ -d t t h -_ v oln I e ar- longtitude 62 degrees. I17 min- gfil;iségfitgrlglflglgplgrolilhefraIggiffi the °l?ul‘: yl;z]déti“°lfrI;’;‘;calVlV3:thl:'(:l Egg ogrsiséeggl ;‘:]dil:fgcc;1nr_ lbour) and the eastern boundary, utes and 54 seconds west: thence in neednng the govgrnment new infomation. Among them: mmss_ The council is the na_ its marked by the church at;to the coast along a straight . Speaker Marcel Lambert- the Mr. Diefenbaker told oppoSi_ tional trade association of the .South Lake harbour.’ lllne drawn to that point from bilingual lawyer from Edvmom‘ mm leader Pearson that Can_ Canadian dairy industry_ re. ‘Mrs. Maedonald said Elia! theithe east side of Mcldinnon Point on west w-s gda gas c°""g! I ;:.':.:*;’°..;i..:‘..:: :::*..::.:':.‘:;i::.%;‘:‘°.‘:*::::i“i.’f;:i? Era; elem‘! 5"°‘”‘" T'‘"’-°‘°‘‘‘Y' “"3 "3" °w"°d~ S ‘"5 °‘ 37”‘ -in quantity such that draggerlbearing of 147 degrees true (172 served notice right at the start lsh registry which are carrying. I i I . . , . _ that he Intends to keep mem- 800dS from Russia to cuba_ I operators can not use their ot- ;l}1eegr§;::S:iie(gntt;‘t:c;).oitlli:2i:§eb§gii;g "°,Tu§§°“ SEVEN CENTS _l'.\.- . . operate \\'lIIlll'l one-half mix: of any other fishing enterprise or fixed fishing gear. As a result. the Prince Ed- ward Island fishery regulations are amended as follows: “No person shall use an otter trawl in fishing from a vessel in the area along the coast and on the waters thereof enclosed by A straight line drawn sea- ward from the shore at South Lake Harbour. Kings County, Prince Edward Island. on a bearing 147 degrees true (112 de- grecs magnetic) from the church at South Lake harbour to the ,point of intersection of latitude 46 degrees 22 minutes. 13 sec- onds north and longtitude 62 degrees, zcro minutes and 06 se- conds west; thence along a straight line to the point of in- tersection of altitude 46 degrees. 18 minutes. 40 seconds north and ibeen closed to the operation of lotter trawl fishing by all drag- I gern. V, Mrs. Margaret Macdonald. d ]Member of Parliament for iKings. announced the decision here Friday night on behalf of Fisheries Minister Hon. Angus i MacLean. ‘ Mrs. Macdonald said that scr- |ious consideration had been giv-‘ I JUNIOR nuns COMM|SSlONlERS'ENTEfRTiNlED “ George Douglas Valentine. Mr. Food is a native of Vic- toria. B. C.. Mr. Armour ,of Oakville, Ont., and Mr. Val- entine of Calgary, Alberta. Flood Toll May Be 800 BARCELONA. Spain ‘(AP)- .Leaders of the massive rescue is’ en to the problem before the de-; DAIRY HIEAD ICISIOII was taken. The closure- I M. Hartwick of Picton, lis outlined by order-in-council speaker was Hartwell Daley provincial reserach director. Above discussing the‘day’s ac- tivities are left to right: Rob- - ert Alfred Food; Davis S. Ar- mour; Mi'. Sangster; and eight junior trade commission- ers from Ottawa. who arrived in the province Thursday eve- ning. were the dinner guests of the Charlottetown Board of Trade last evening. Guest . Following a tour of I num- berof processing plants in the Summersldc area. and discus- sions nt the Charlottetown Ho-' tel presided over by market- ing director Reid Sangster. the Chinese AdmiIOpposiIion Inside And Outside Par’ry we of ' H - .' ll ‘ . _ . , . . "' thél On production it said that al-imdlcaled the death mu migh‘ presenting 90 per cent of al PE (Reutérs) The CM dgiry foods processed in Cari- nese ‘Communist party acknowl- 8 lter trawls without violating a 1 . d Frlda that “a certain The ‘ id , . _ _ _ ' .° ';..§§..i of tiilae" would elapse meetmgfondlrtigirdgge bite party though “the living conditions of texceed 809- _ - bers’ questions strictly within Justice MmIster_ Fleming ad- ,O'b|ecf Believed _mdm°n that mm“ mu mminmg_.. before the country could re- chairman Mao Tsetung_ had the people have ]mproved_ tho Latest figures said 473 bodies the rules. Vlsed Harold‘ Winch (NDP- w ther B "00" " sunie -its economic surge for- ward. ' ’ A communique published here following a three-day meeting of the party's central commit- lee admitted that "certain dif- ficulties" still faced the Ch nesc economy. but "‘ en- ttnly possible to overcome thelln" 1500- d uni Tie . wor ._comm que star V 4 Mon In and out of"tIie party to present Chinese ‘government policy. On foreign policy. it con- . d 4“modern revlsionism" as represented -by Yugoslavia - news agency as Huang Ke-chen nd T 'Cbeng — we decided on an "interchange of leading party and government officials," but gave no details. It announced that two mem- bers of the politburo secretar- iat—named by the New China an dis- missed. It gave no reasons. But there was a later com- .. M . rumou- fst ‘ Is,-"- "and “opportuniist re ideological notions" within t Chinese Communist party. The communique also said ‘flandlords; rich peasants and bourgeois rightists" had been Norlhelas-fer Slows Ships On Lake Ont. TORONTO (CP) — Northeast winds brought cold weather and heavy rain to southern On- tario Friday and delayed ship- ping on Lake Ontario. Toronto had a high tempera- ture of 47 degrees. making it the coldest Sept. 28 on record. The previous record was 51 de- . grees in 1912. e rain cut visibility on‘ Lake Ontario to almost and brought shipping in Tor- onto harbor to a halt. Harbormaster . J. Snel- grove said three ships waited out the storm in the harbor. Emile two stood by in Humber ay. “We haven't been out but it must be pretty bad frc‘i!ghters- won't‘fackle it," he at fl . Near Rochester N.Y.. a tug sprang a leak In the storm and was separated from a barge she was towing when the tow- lne parted. there if the Early Friday-.-might the -ves- sels were reported a t 30 miles apart off . Braddock‘: Pl‘l:lt. about 15 mlloh west Rochester. . The united states Coast Guard sold neither appeared in dancer 0.! sinking. Theere four men aboard the his two aboard the but-1 W919 and British lace Strike Oi Rai by noon ' LONDON (cm-_-ptruono Fri- .dahe ' Lu“? fidlntofaceuptbefact * 9 §* attempting to use China's cur- rent economic difficulties "take advantage of the situa- would 5‘ ti . The Chinese people goods we produce are still in- sufficient to meet the needs of the urban and rural people." had been recovered but addi- tional victims were being re-. ported found. I Speaker Lambert asked the MPs to make a careful study of the rule book and assist him . “continue to oppose subversion within our state or party." it A aid LAST YEAR OF PLAN This the last year of China's second five-year plan. which gave top priority to - the governor. focal point of Stage. Is Set For Arlresf O1'"*"Mississi,p Governor OXFORD. Miss. (AP)—While part of Mississippi's array of peace officers rc-grouped on the University of Mississippi cam- pus Fr’ any. a federal court ruled their leader, ‘Governor Ross Barnett, guilty of con- tempt. setting the stage for his arrest. The fifth U.S. Circuit Court of ppeals In New Orleans gave sistance to enrollment of Ole Miss of Negro James H. Mere- dith. until next Tuesday morn- ing to ‘purge himself of con- hcavy industrial developmei_1t.ttempt. - but the communique gave no in- ldication that a third five-year ‘servers’ impressions that Id for \several ‘OTTAWA (CP)—-British Coi- umbia‘-a appeal for dispersal of convicted Sons of ll‘:-eedom ter- rorists from their special prison in B.C. was rejected Friday by Justice Minister Flemlng._ _ If they were split up among of. the six maximum-security pen- ltentiaries across Canada. it could a "explosive trou- ble," Mr. Fleming said in the Commons. ‘ Prompted by a question from Harold Winch (ND? Van , . . to 3 .‘.( ‘ reorganization ‘proceeds. Whole comipunttiu pow dependent on the railways will be affected. 0 Cl.'N'I'RAL PLAN '-While ‘the loveriiménl red complratfvely generous computation for the redundant men. It appenrrtheI'e.is no cen- ‘ liveli- for the men who have de- thelr lives to the trains. is a *- """'.‘..F."“°"' . I .. .. lltduotrlll. Business and every- IUI of Britain. “ -commutsr that plan was discussed at the meet- ing. ‘ I It confirmed diplomatic ob- Iby the U.S. hinn ‘ ‘won years con-I 0 ;tinue to concentrate on agricul-.; yture. which was given “first im-lders would be carried out. Dispersal Of Freedomites Rejected By Federal Gov'i Continued resistance by Mis-I sissippi's defiant chief execu- tivc called for a $10,000-ii-day fine and his taking into custody attorney-general. Burke Marshall. assistant US. attorney-general for civil rights. assured the court its or- couver East). the minister read a prepared statement In which he sqid that jailed members -of the radical Doukhobor sect are "unlike ordinary prisoners." The 68 freedomitcs already in the specially - built Mountain Prison nea r Agassiz. B.C., “have already engaged in ac- tivities such as attempted ar- a conform with the routines" of he prison. r. Fleming's statement was in reply to the public criticism b Sept. Attorney-Gem feral Bonner of. the federal gov- ernment's policy of building in federal penitentiary at Agassi: solely for the Freedomites. Mr. Bonner said the concert- tratlon of Preedomite prisoners there had provided a "target" for. the present mass tre 1.300 Freedomltes from thcir homes in the Kootenays to wards Agassiz. The marchers have been stop for than a week at a goveyiment campsite dear Princeton. some .50 miles short of their goal. "3’ Asks O0-OPERATION Mr. Bonner said there should be co-operation between fed- son, refusal to,eat and refusal when X‘ 3: " Air Force Ass’n ' Barnett. who s ii u b b e d the court by failing to show up for ‘Friday's three - hour hearing, tmusi not only stop resisting but must maintain order on the Ole Miss campus. ORDERS OFFICERS BACK While the contempt hearing continued in New Orleans. Bar- nett ordered his volunteer con- tingent of local Mississippi peace officers back on campus. None would say why, but appar- ently the governor moved to guard against a surprise after- noon visit ‘by Meredith. Meredith came from Mem- phis, Tenn., to attend the New Orleans hearing. By late afternoon about 40 sheriffs. deputies and city po- liccmen had gathered in groups at alumni house. headquarters for Burnett's resistance to inte- gration of Ole Miss. oral and provincial policies In hdndllng the Freedomite prob- lem. _ Since the federal government a refused to disperse the jailed terrorists at Agassiz. he said. it must “accept its respon- slbility for conditions now caus- None wore helmets or carried riot sticks and the gates of Ithe campus 5 t i l I remained un- guarded. . None of the Mississippians on campus seemed tense. In Memphis. 110 engineers \ Vancouver East) that his d partment has no intention a scattering 68 imprisoned Sons of Freedom Doukhobors throughout the six maximum- security prisons across the country. Following the question period two new government back- benchers carried out_ the pre-I limmaries which sot‘-to motion the eight-day throne speech de-I bate which will be launched Monday. . ' Gordon Chaplin (PC—Watei'- loo South) moved the govern- ment address in reply to the speech from the throne. It was seconded by Clement Vincent (PC—-Nicolet-Yamaska ). f TRURO (CP) — RCMP said ’ Friday they believe a parachute- llike object spotted near Glen- jholme. 18 miles west of here, ;was a weather balloon. : They said it apparently did I not land, but dipped to the hori- lzon and kept going at a low ‘, altitu e rs. Hilton MacPhall. school bus driver. and a num- ber of children in her bus said the object was clearly visible peared to be a parachute but they were unable to say wheth- n or a cannister. from Fort-Campbell. Ky.. ar- rived at Millington naval air station. ready to help with ad- ministration and logistics the growing force of U.S. marshals. These are the first federal troops called out in the dispute. In Washington. Defence Sec- retary McNamara said “we're prepared to respond to what- ever emergencies- may de- velop." ISSUE W RNING I Meanwhie seven Mississisppi members of Congress warned the nearly unprecedented situa- tion could explode into a halo- caust in the U.S. south In Jackson, Miss.. a Mis- sissippi legislature in special session to reapportion quickly jerked the rug from under a proposed resolution that would have sought to sever Missis- sippi's relations with the union. The measure would have pe- the connection with Mississippi and the union if the eral gov- ernment didn't like _the- way the state operated. - . ing widespread public concern in British Columbia and else- Mr. Fleming said Friday that 68 freedomited now ‘are in fed- eral custody for acts of terror- ism and more than 100. others are awaiting trial. , The only. places where they might be moved were the six maximum - security penitenti- arles across Canada. But these were already seriously over- crowded with more than 4.000‘ prisoners, and space wouldn't" be available until 1964 when four new major penltentlarles would be completed. Urges ‘N-Arms HALIFAX‘ rCP)—The Royal Canadian Air Force Association Friday urged the government to strike will halt both the- trolm and wt-ten-to-i=mo.n Announcements. Iollcel 17 IOICIII. Kc. .. Flnnco Marketa 17 provide immediately Canada’: armed forces with nuclear war- heads for defensive weapons. Following its acceptance by 250 delegates at the associa- tion's annual meeting. a resolu- tion was lent to Prime Minis- ter Dlefenbaker. Discussion lasted for about 45 minutes behind closed doors. Afterwards in I pu session it was passed unanimously. The 1’ mo - member associa- tion of vet- A Japanese university stud- ent. I-‘umi Yoshlmura. on it two weeks visit to Prince Ed- ward Island on in scholarship award partly pald_by I new- -poper for which he will write tion is , erans of the RCA!‘ and Com- inonwenlui air forces. a I series of articles on return Winter Work Job Qkayed For Kinko-ra CAPITAL BUREAU OF THE GUARDIAN OTTAWA — The first winter works project to be approved for Prince Edward Island this season was announced here Fri- day by Dr. Orville Phillips. MP for Prince. Known as project No. 1. it is for the installation of a sani- tary sewer system in the village of Kinkora. ~ Total cost of the project is 20.000 and the federal govern- ment's share of the co . un- der the winter works program I ‘‘ there was no indication where itl K _ . - - zed in mid-September and were terminal bmldlnz. n ted. Transport department officials in Moncton said they ad no report of any aircraft in the area at that time.‘ (Sighting of an object in the :ky Friday morning was re- ported also from the Wood Is- glands. P.E.I. area. Details were ‘sketchy but it may have been the same object seen in Nova Scotiau er an object below it was a hu- , ma J If it was a weather balloon. Prince ilenders Are Opened ‘For Borden I CAPITAL BUREAU. . OF THE GUARDIAN , OTTAWA — Apparent low bid- improvemcnts to ferry terminal were announced ; here Friday by Dr. Orv" le Phil- ‘ lips, Member of Parliament for; Tenders on the contracts clos- li opened here only this week. N iewed by the treasurey board before any firm contracts are le One tender involves III! the. Borden harbou ibidder is Verria-ult Navigation lof Les Mechins. Quebec. , The other contract involves a [road widening project leading dredging I 1'. Lowest ‘ Ji=ire Hits Ship Al‘ N.Y. Berth I NEW YORK (AP)——An Ar- gentine cargo-passenger ship ‘ caught fire at its berth Friday night sending 15 passengers. at . least two of them children. hur- 3 rying to safety down gangways. to the ferry terminal. Apparent low bidder on this contract is Women's College Has New Building; TORONTO (CP)—-The Pres-L byterian College for Women has : a glittering new building of its own after making do with a series of converted homes in ) formula with the provinces. isl _ Two firemen were reported midtown Toronto for the last 55 titioned the U.S. Congress to cut $3 500 ' r of other winter A m works projects for the Island will be announced in the near future. .3. 5 JAPANESE STUDENT VISITS PROVINCE to Japan this fall, is been here being shown an issue of The Guardian by Mrs. Ken- neth MacLean, of Lot 16, at w he is residing- while on the Island. A chums- try student at the University of Kyoto. the visitor ll tourlnl }lIlJl.ll'eCI. One suffered a head I wound. Five alarms sent. fire-fighting pparatus racing to the scene 3/ I. lb nd and water. it Canada io learn more about this country. Arriving al.4311- couver about three months ago he toured western Canada and fhe Northwest Territories be- fore coming to Toronto and Montreal and llio Msritimu. l years. I The new Ewart College — training centre for women mis- sionaries and church workers in the Presbyterian Church In Canada — is to be opened for- mally Saturday in a special Projects Curran and Briggs of Summer- side with a bid of $65.-136.50. The two contracts are part of t0 “'9'” 35°“ 3-45 3-"L It 313‘ ders on two contacts involving a long range plan for the im- the Borden tprovemcnts to the Borden ter- take care of the ferry min tconfederation. Eventually it is Expected that the Borden ter- tmtnal will have a new sewer d water system and a new §?.€".§.‘i:".‘°’.i'.‘.".f...‘2f..°.’; :3 )YunI< Policy On V %Cuba Dangerous ls Poli-sh View UNITED NATIONS (AP) Polish Foreign Minister Raps- cki Friday accused the United States of following an ex- tremely dangerous policy to- ward Cuba. He also denounced the West. German government as “the most stubborn and ag- gressive cold war force In the West." Thc Commtinisi, d i p l om at made the charges in a policy spcech to the ]08-nation United Nations General Assembly. He declared the Cuban people have the same right to live un- dcr communism as the Ameri- can people do under capitalism. He said Communist states in Europe Iivc as neighbors with capitalist states and added: “We want to maintain such relations and develop them fur- or " lservice of dedication. “"9! “did ml?“ . I‘ "°i.ttl.‘°r ‘ Principal Margaret Wf‘bSI(‘I. "I'M °"”‘-‘: ‘Tr '5 3".“ W5‘ ‘°“ tchaflonetown _ raised high to threaten the bnited States If ;school teacher who became {head of the school five years Iago, believes the modern fac- ‘ilities will assist the church‘; lcampalgnlo provide better trained women for fulltimc work in foreign mission fields and in church educational pro- grams and welfare work in Canada. Bankruptcy or anyone else.‘ ' bittcrcsi words were di- rcclcd against West Germany and Chancellor Adenauer. He charged that Adcnauer. "skill- fully using the dreams of glory" chcrishcd by French President dc Caullc. was presenting his major NATO allics with a chal- lcngc for uthorily over all \Vc.sir~rn I-‘.ui‘opc. ls Facing - Unemployment Fund OTTAWA (CI’l—li. is virtually certain that the unemployment I ilnsurance fund will go broke ‘this winter unless the Eovern- .menl pours in heavy financial gait‘ to keep it solvent. e ad- ivisory committee on unemploy- 'ment insurance warned Friday. I The committee's annual re- port said it might take up to SIC-2.000.(l)0 to keep the fund, ali\e during the peak unem-E ployment period next winter. land spring. 5 It describes the steady drop the fund has taken in the last five years and then sums up the problem in this key paragraph. . "Lacking any clear indication that next winter ' see I in.-irked drop in unemployment lovely. and assuming the con- tinued operation the present unemployment insur- ancc scheme. the complete ex- haustior which seemed prob- ablc for 1961-62 now seems I ccrlainty for 1962-63." The report is signed by Rich- asd llumphrys and J. . Kroc- kcr. officials of the federal de- partment of insurance. It won tabled in the in whcn unemployment claims on low. then begin sinking rapidly with the onset of winter. At .Aug. 31 it was $39.833.IIll_. A .