If it’s Good for the Island The Guardian is For it LIBERAL Prime | ter Pearson, blows out Minister Louis St. tome | = candies on a special cake with a le assist from the baked in honor of his 80th present ition leader Les- a Liberal party ban- Ottawa. (CP Wirepho- birthday. He was presented Memorial Building Project | Slated For Summer Start | Vanier to representatives of firms who submitted the win- ning designs in the architect- Construction of Confeder- ation memorial ing is ex- pected to begin in early sum- ings will be admirably suited for Charlottetown as you coulda’? put a great, monstrous structure OTTAWA (CP) — The Com- mons Thursday wished former Minister St. Laurent a happy 90th birthday. Prime Minister Diefenbaker . St. Laurent always rec+ ognized that there are two sides question and ‘that was of the parliamen- : al: of the government 's he offered the for- ral prime minister sin- ulations and ex- that he will have ”* birthdays. leader Pearson Mr, St. Laurent is . “the only. living prime minister in our country’’ and hastily - cor- rected this to ‘‘ex-prime minis- i AEE SgR, te ter.” He added that the Liberals hope to correct that “before long.” H. W. Herridge, deputy House |leader of the CCF-New Demo- cratic Party group, said it is good that from time to time the Commons can “‘sheathe the po- litical daggers” to recognize a contribution to Canada. Cuba Stand Brings Crisis In Argentina CANADA, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1962. Early Break puapayayihdnandiipainiemeseesssmee WEATHER Mainly sunny and extremely cold; winds. Low-high 15 As a result of his visit- to + Queens County Jail. yesterday | afternoon, .Attorney General | Melvin McQuaid said some improvements in Conditions at the jail will be carried out im and more extensive ' improvements will be made if funds, now in the estimates as the installing of proper lighting in each cell. Other improvements will come, he | said, when the budget for the | coming fiscal year is approved. Commenting on a resolution passed at the recent Older Boys’ Parliament, held in the Provin- cial Building, in which condit- fons at the jail were condemn- ed, Mr. aid said he feit the of members of the little more consideration to the framing of their report.” Mr, McQuaid said there 1s room for improvement at the jail and steps will be taken ‘o bring it about. the members of the partia- ment. I felt that an organ: zation of the stature of tie parliament should be free to visit the jail and I was dis- turbed -that they didn’t give a. Matheson Says Report On Causeway Not New the mainland but engineering and design studies still are not completed.” Mr. Matheson said “it’s same old song and dance. Prime Minister Diefenbaker said it when he was here. . . engineers told me in 1959 that “That's not news IT could have told you that two years ago,’ was provincial Opposition Leader Alex Matheson’s com- ment yesterday on a news re- port from Ottawa quoting Pub- lic Works Minister Walker as the DONALD BROKE FLEMING LINE PETER BOROUGH, Ont (CP)—Political solidarity ex- isted in the Fleming family until ‘‘wee'’ Donald—Canada’s present finance minister—was born. Up to then, the Flem ings were Liberals. This was divulged in Peter- borough Wednesday by David Fleming, an uncle of the min- ister The occasion for the flash- back on the family's political affiliations was David Flem- ing’s birthday—his 92nd. Mr. Fleming and the fi- nance minister's father,- Louis Fleming, were sons—two of a family of 12—of carpenter David Fleming or Harwood, about 10 miles south of here “Donald’s father was a staunch ‘'grit’ but his mother was a ‘Tory'"’, said David Fleming Thursday. ‘‘She re- mained a Tory ‘even though she married my brother.” David Fleming, also a Lib eral, has one surviving brother—Edwin, 89, a retired cabinetmaker living in Win- nipeg. Brother Louis, the fi- nance minister's father, was a schoolteacher in Galt, Ont ra | Is Predicted In Probe Of N.B. Murder ATTORNEY-GENERAL COMMENTS Early Improvements _ Are Promised For Jail below and zero. . 12 PAGES” Hiker Being Sought PETITCODIAC, N.B. ‘CP)— Clues in the death, of Nova Scotia laborer Arthur Casey ine dicate he was robbed, stabbed and abandoned in a ditch by a hitch-hiker RCMP said Thursday night they expected a break in the case within 48 hours, but de- clined to give amy details. A spokesman said the investiga- tion was “progressing very well.” The 23-year-old bachelor was alone in his car when he lef his home in the tiny fishing vil- laze of Port Felix, N.S, Sun day to drive to Saint Joha, N.B. where he had been work- ing as a laborer with a. con- struction company for a year. Casey's friendly nature may have been a factor in his death. A neighbor of the Casey fam- ily in Port Felix said Thursday Arthur had been warned by his family and friends not to pick mer, Dr. Frank MacKinnon, ural competition to find’ a in the heart of a city ‘of 20,000 | parliament who inspected the saying that ‘engineers are rea- w thle "° . - president of the Fathers of suitable structure to commem-| people and immediately ant) are cage a ae was ‘‘a bit exaggerated.’ sonably certain some type of ” Acting. 8 ee tevin uc. Gov't Queried | up hitchhikers. "But he would Confederation Memorial Fouu- orate the beginnings of Canada. to: the Provincial Building. eae rar ding eat Thanaday TW Members who made thé crossing can be constructed ‘0 Quaid, provincial treasurer . pick up anybody He = was dation, said yesterday. “The next step,” said Dr.|' “These buildings will be ot °° ‘ aon pat Thursday | inspection said it was “hardly link Prince Edward Island with while saying the report was en- On Wind Tunnel everybody's friend — the easy Dr. MacKinnon had just re- MacKinnon, “will be the draw-| the same stone as the Provin .2#ainst a demand from the fit for animals to live in.” couraging, had no official com- poe He was a little tee ; riendly, I guess armed forces that Argentina OTTAWA (CP) The govern turned from Ottawa where cao Tuesday night prizes were * gwarded by Governor General Mio-17 Pilot Ic Charced _ As Red Spy- ing up of blueprints and work- ing plans of the buildings by the | of Affleck, Desbarats, | after.” iy ‘her? nexr ween , Dr. MacKinnon said ~ that (AP) ! BARI. Italy (AP Formal Mhetreat tenlirt charges of political and military will be vr G . espionage were filed Thursday | jottetown next week to. confer against Lieut. Miluse Solakev of with Dr: MacKinnon and exam- the Bulgarian air force, who) ine im detail the site of the made two passes over a secret memorial building. NATO missile base in a cam-| Ea@larged photographs of the i 1 bef it; Winning model in the competi- era-equipped plane ore ‘tion were brought to Charlotte. erashed Jan. 20. | town by Dr. MacKinnon. “Wilb- An investigating judge in this! im a few days,’’ he said, “‘these eoutheastern Italian city issued Pictures, along with sketches an arrest warrant against the | Of the exterior and interior of @-year-old flyer, and two na- ‘e memorial building, will be Gad peice elfen val We) ee ee in the business section of Char- him in the infirmary of Bari’s jottetown. jail. “IT have also arranged for Solakov has been recovering ‘the winning models, and a num- | ber of other models submitted to be dis- * and ‘fractures . of ‘the Jeft arm” and. collarbone. “3 prize-winning models will be He had sought to give. the | tenes on eS aes — : _| I would ve impression that he was defect- | heew in Ge Gendederation ing with his Mig-17 jet. HiS Chamber of the Provincial government contended he Building. The tour. schedule, landed in Italy after becoming , has yet to be worked lost in bad weather on a train- out. : ‘ ‘ : ing. flight .over Bulgaria, more ar than 300 miles away. ADMIRABLY SUITED Under the section of Italian Commenting on the photos of architects of the winning firm ) Dima- kopoulos, Lebensfold and Sise cational and cultural of Montreal. Then tenders for | the Island. truction will be called. It | § expected that tenders will be come a let by early summer and work | of cial Building and in no way will they detract from that building. Their interior facili- ties will greaily add to the edu- - adians.” break relations with Cuba. The 53-year-old president was facing the toughest policy cri- ses of his crisis-ridden adminis- | :“When I paid a surprise visit | to the jail yesterday.” said Mr. McQuaid, “I found that con- ditions. were not as bad as re- ported to the boys’ parliament. life uf “The whole structure will be recognized memorial __ Significance“ and tration, now in its fourth year. The military call for sever- : jance of diplomatic ties with | | Premier * Fidel Castro's Com- | Iron Ore Mine I was somewhat disappointed m ‘Father Gives Evidence In: Baby Death Alberta Revenue By JACK PICKETTS ST. JOHN’S, Nfld. (CP)—The father of a seven - month - old ‘ee ae ito. Be Opened ‘quel to Argentina's soft stand i > Cuba at the inter - American , loreign ministers’ conference in Punta del Este, Uruguay. At Kirkland Lake Coupled with it was a demand . for firing of Foreign Minister TORONTO (CP) — A $30,000.- Miguel Angel Carcano and his | 90 iron ore development will | chief aides. | ‘ean stee! giants, Premier John |Robarts of Ontario announced | Thursday. : - | Jones and Laughlin Steel Cor- poration of Pittsburgh will be- detailed engineering and other preliminary work imme- | Orit., area by one of fhe Ameri From Oil Down EDMONTON (CP) — The Al- berta government reteived gin | be built in the Kirkland Lake, | baby who died here Jan. 9 after $110,932,000 in revenue from the. suffering what were first re- oil industry in 1961, the lowest | ported to be rat bites said total in three years. Thursday rats had not occurred Revenue from oil, has fallen diately, with first construction to’ start in May. The mine is expected to pro- to him until someone suggested it. re John O’Brien, -a 22-year-old construction. company worker who has been unemployed since - . Les ait Dn C 0 almost every year since 1957, | duce 1,000,000 gross tons of high- when the government received | quality iron ore pellets a year a record $134,359,861. when production begins in two Since 1947,-when the leduc oil years or more, the premier said. | | well ushered in this source of | An estimat men, drawn | | ment on the news story, saying he preferred to have Premier French Fear Pr . . | alter R. shaw. we in Oe | 5 | tawa, comment on matter. ‘Paris Riots | Mr. Walker, replying in the Commons Wednesday to Roy The McWilliam (L—Northumberland- Miramichi) who asked whether studies have demonstrated the | PARIS (Reuters) - | French government has ordered , Paris this weekend to fotestall, causeway to P.B.1.-in a writ: extremist riots in the fate of tén report said: . pr ee aes uy. “The engineers are reason- Thirty-two tanks will lead the SD/¥ certain at this stage ‘hal : is take Some type of crossing can | loa into Paris and take constructed. . However, studies itions in anticipation of . , President de Gaulle’s broadcast imto the designs for various types of crossings and into some to the nation Monday. ‘ The tanks will be supported of the engineering problems as- sociated with them, all of which by 70 “rapid intervention” ve- ' hicigs, including .light armored have a bearing on cost and fea- cars. sibility, are still not completed.” Snowdon Advised To Resian On Day He Started New Job LONDON (Reuters) The Earl of Snowdon was advised to retire Thursday—the first day it was an- versy as soon as noonced. Liberal party leader Jo Gri- mond suggested Thursday that tanks and armored cars_into _ssminity of < | provincial revenue, Alberta has | 0 thé ‘picked out” of several of hit ¢699.912.890 of the total. Rental’ a “piece iof flesh had- been gi)’ and gas. rights make up | son's toes. He had never noticed payments have brought in $294,- 'the marks before, he said. | payme and Sardis payments on He testified at-a magisterial oj) and gas production $280,- | inquiry that he did not know | 413 979. a who first. mentioned rat bites, The 1961 total was down $2,- | but .thought ‘the remark. Was | 590,000 from 1960 and $20,000,000 largest magnetit taconite oper-|Times, a job that started a | made after the arrival of a doc- | trom- ‘tor at his third-leor flat im an | — | older part of the city after the baby was found dead in its cot. He said he remembered the ' ‘ almost entirely. from the Kirk- ployed when ‘the: mine‘is ‘operat: ing to capacity. ° . | The mine is expected to pro-| duce at maximum capacity for | at least 30 years. : | It is described as one of the | ations in Canada. ° Prejudices In Education at his new job—by a political because of the press attacks on DDOR LA On would be justified.in making’ ‘‘a graceful withdrawal.” In an article in the weekly magazine Time and Tide, Gri- mond said the protests from the Sunday newspaper, The Obser- ver, and other papers ‘would be enough to justify’ the earl's j resignation. Whatever his future may be, Snowdon, who has not com- mented himself on the contro- versy, rolled up to the office Lord Snowdon ,— Society” pho- tographer Antony Armstrong- ones before his marriage to Princess Margaret—put in his first day at the office. as artis- tic adviser to The Sunday contro- storm of newspaper ment was asked Thursday why construction of a research wind tunnel at nearby Uplands Air- port vas continued after cancel- lation of the Arrow jet inter- ceptor program. Lionel Chevrier ‘L—Montreal Laurier) referred in the Com- mons to the report of Auditer- General Maxwell Henders swhich said the tumel wae re- garded as “an essential part of the air defence program. par- ticularly in the later develop- ment of the CF-105 (Arrow) aircraft and ancillary guided missiles . . .” . Henderson's report for the "1960-61 fiscal year ended last March 31, tabled Wednes- day in the Commons, said the original cost estimate of the tunnel was $3,750,000. The final cost was likely to reach $9,000.- 000. Completion had been sched- uled for the 1957-58 fiscal year but the project wasn't finished yet. Veterans Minister Churchill, who reports Yo Parliament for the National Research Council, referred to a March 2, 1960. Commons: reply on the same subject in which he had stated the tunnel would be used for aerodynamics. Mr. Chevrier said this reply conflicted with the statement of Mr. Henderson concerning use of the tunnel “in connection with the Arrow program Mr. Churchill said the Arrow was flying before the contracts for the wind tunnel were let. He added that the former Lib eral government had authorized the project in 1954 but it was 1957 before any* work on it Asking not to be uamed. the neighbor said Arthur scoffed at a warning by his girl friend Vivian Bond before he left. ‘‘He said something like ‘I wouldn't be worth robbing. I only have $70 and a few cheques.’ ”’ BLAME HITCHHIKER New Brunswick RCMP alse said it appeared.as (hough 8 . hitchhiker was responsible. His oody was found frozen Monday in a diteh along the Trans-Canada Highway about a mile west of this southeastern New Brunswick community. RCMP had trouble identifying him. Fingerprints im Ottawa provided the deciding informa- tion Wednesday He had been.stabbed several times. twiee in the hart, and a trail in the snow indicated his body was dragged. RCMP divisional headquarters in Fred- ericton said the weapon was believed to be a knife. A 10- mile search of ditches failed to produce the weapon An autopsy revealed that he ate hamburg and relish about two hours bedore he died. Police . hoped someone who had seen —a-testanrant—eottht—_say—__—_$_—— whether he ate ‘alone The neighbor said it looked as if the attacker took every- thing. including his ey, car and a supply of clea clothes gy Part of his clothes were torn off. Police figured the attack- er tried to disrobe him to pre- vent -identification and got scared off before completing the job. Cuts on his hands in- dicated he put up a fight and law on which the charges the model and architect's sket- “ctor asking how long the against Solakov were based," he ches of the building soon to be marks hed bees. ae che Suty's today in a chauffeur - driven Started. police were hoping the attacker is liable to a maximum penalty | : jlegs. He answered that he did limousine. carries. some tell tale bruises of 24 years imprisonment. ‘Ttaly - display. Dr. MacKinnon Mot | . Pim ° r ‘ eS : ; | or cuts has no death penalty for. any, S@id “I think Islanders will be O'Brien said he had seen the | a e re n ana a | SEES PUBLISHER Molotov Has ORKED HERE ‘ " : | 3 ~ : e * | day Times editor C. D. Hamil- H| ae . - |except for a diaper rash. The gy RUSSELL ELMAN employment.” he writes at the | jects, courses and schools. The ton to see Roy Thomson. (a- Heart Aillment 72°, 22%. ster and stocky rash was too sore to apply vint-' grrawa (CP) — Canadians | beginning of tle ®0-page booklet fact that parents continue to nadian publisher who owns the with datk complexion and dark ; ment and it was put on the ee aa ‘ enw straight hair He had worked diaper instead. he testified. must discard outdated snobbish | titled Education and Employ- want their children to stay in paper. Then he went to his own By JOHN MILLER th 2 Willsbe brid | Earlier in the inquiry - 4 prejudices towards school- ment. academic courses for as long as office on the editorial floor wosgcow (Reuters) Yva Min a Eisboro rie Re con. i death of Douny ten the ing and if the country | No one: suiggested that educa- possible reflects how wide- where he was expected to stUdY chesiay Molotov was reported struction company in Charlotte. ad y ; opened Tuesday jan aes catch up with the needs.of an | tion alone was a cure-all for épread is this prejudice.” the first issue of The Sunday thursday im hospital with a ?’" (or about a year before ; fied that there were skin Pa lexpanding economy, a promi-| unemployment, but without ade- “Choice of occupation,” he Times color supplement. an i0- heart ailment, ending weeks of 2...” Saint John last year. on the baby’s legs in Various 27 educationist said Thursday | quate training ‘the 100,000 teen- adds, “is too important to be novation in British newspapers. speculation over the where- He had previously worked with : : stages of healing. Saying the times warrant a) entering the labor force blurred by foolish and anti- The first issue is due this week- shouts of the disgraced oldtime | "® fisherman father, Daniel ; aes a |Arth P ;| burden the e om ee “Lord Snowdon has been Bolshevik. Fen ame brothers’ or eat 4) ; oe on 2. a or in fee eens Sere the paapertalt e om the ecOh- URGES BETTER COURSES learning his way around and ; af usually reliable source said sisters A reading of 12 below zero)that the mercury might reach he moved in about-a week be | =oUcation. called for a national |. : Calling for more and better getting to. know people” said )& l-year‘om sorrner. Soviet Step-brother Joséph Bellefon- ¥ de Radio Range | the 15-below zero mark forecast fore Christmas eat = + taking to r we Can- REVISE ATTITUDES vocational courses tied to the ‘a secretary Thursday night. foreign minister has been in the jaing a foreman on-the Saint of D ieene Airport at |{0r the day. that ‘there bad | 45’; manpower to its full po- . “is prescription gives priority needs of business and industry, “He put in a busy day.” lin hospital for the last 19 jonn project. spotted Arthur's 7° at Between “tential. oe NS a: jee revision of traditional, atti- yar, Pigott sees this as the way Newspapers which have at- ave. but his condition is “not oo, with an overtime parking 1 a.m.. this morning, indicating yesterday Boge ws the wens teas | tudes, ee a to uproot old-fashioned preju- tacked the appointment of ihe ous _ ticket on it in Saint John Wed- dropped mustering forees to,train tonal training : , yPes dices. Queen’s brother-in-law to ¢ nesday afternoon On calling po- year a young minds,” he said. “Here, ot jobs. ‘ “Either our thinking on vaca- job criticize it on two grounds— p li | lice he was told of the slaying. | Qugrée aasit. ‘our attitudes, practices and phi- | Outdated common prejudices tional education must be read- that it enlists a royal personal- | ar iament | ‘Casey resided in Charlotte. For Miss Ameri | The warmest losophy are lagging seriously.” foegpen the notion ue justed or we must be willing to ity in a newspaper ena | town for some time. He was em- “A large part of our Se ee eee, ee rely on immigration to war” and involves him in | ployed by Foundation Maritimes : <a) earn tion hitherto has been Frured another — “tate sintee- | Giles —_ and an ties, since the paper supports At A G ance Lid . on the new Hillsboro Bridge out of school unfitted for a tech- peti I nfl lg | ¢rafismen—or else to abandon the Conservative party project He left here prior to {ing of 4 oe noligical world.” : oes Ca- gil prospects of technical com. | Lord Snowdon receives some By THE CANADIAN PRESS completion of the project and ahem | os IREVITALIZE WORK neglected their best P- petence on the scale set in other Support from the Conservative THURSDAY, Feb. |. 1962 moved fo Saint John with the | ane “* _— ee oe cag Commtries today.” Daily Mail. Lo sect ‘Labor Minister Starr lashed company. engaged in the con- | P.m. ‘+ To beat the disease of unem.| Probably we have all been fp, proportion to population,- The paper said the criticism ack at opposition criticism struction! of a wharf there His | below mark. ; it was urgent » re. Suilty of an academic snobbery . @f Snowdon and Margaret over and said in- . Te eh Canada had only one-third as on unemployment brother is a foreman om. the | In the Summer side an obsolete work * . - Tegard “to vocational sub many professional people and the job and the £385,000 being dications are that ‘the out- same job in Saint John.) eee aes ween ot apes a cae I RE one-half as many skilled work- spent os orpals ate tee look for emplayment is good ——————— : = a work! WHERE. TO-FIND-IT «£13, 2% '¢. United States. Some Sensin alace. where this winter.” | dropped to _ + |ferce that makes a country eco- 7,000,000 adult Canadians had Will live rent-free was “unjust.” ‘The Commons “talked out” ° early morning in. eos "an clebieieit sad Almouncements, notices 1@ not completed secondary school, a, Redetting fo eee oa a CCF bill aimed at sneed- Mother Detained However. ; Births, deaths, _ \while an estimated 2,000,000 . week Queen ing up union-management col- ‘from tae one ‘oe canons aan Classified... 7 = » ‘could not read or write well ber husband Prince rua neve lective bargaining by elimin- In Double Death ranged ; Finance; markets . enough for practical use in 2 bought a racing yaw! to ating conciliation boards | ee _ ‘ her people to work.” “fa f oa porate ; place another yacht they loaned — Senator Olive L. Irvine PC ST. Paul L’Ermite, Que (CP) Eleanors and Comics, ag lie. \ coe with x . Pigott relates" education ; F , ae g The country's immediate vo- to the Royal aval College. the —Manitoba) said the Conser- -arole vre, 9, and her an ou ce pore Se ae Sea cae “""**"" 5 | cational education paper said: vative party has an “excel- sister Lorraine, 7, were found the + od of nine spe- Editorials seeeeces*S gg _| included additional “It Is inconsistent to suggest jeni record’ for keeping clec- ‘ead Thursday in a water. vir* Se a. for the ~ Prince bn nwevegeeeceveen : tion for ~ 15,000 in full- (that top much is being spent tion promises. filled bathtub im their home im reading at Canadien on Educa- attests +. <n+= :. 7 recruitment of 1,000 on“or by the royal family and FRIDAY, Feb. 2 this community 15 miles north another , tien in +8. it « eee eevee ‘ to 1.500 veestional coe is cheer Gis when they The Commons meets at i of Montreal dent of Gy enka: - $ teachers. Fiver secter | bt—be 2. continue debate on Provincial police said they that the . Tel eee ons Give £10,000 for a yac the 000 winter works have detained the girls’ mother, : ‘ ped % ; 1 I oe ete cause the critics are alse The Senate is , No other details were avail m . : schools and - | yachismem,” | adjourned to 8 p.m. Tuesday. able immediately. ; hae 3 ; . pad * ;