7s if t's Good For The Island The Guardian-Is For It. A small Vietnamese boy ts his fingers in his ears to the ecand of mortars & exploding near his home in LAB TESTS BEING MADE “CHILD'S PROTECTION FROM WAR NOISE rice paddy area near Que Son, ih support of Vietnamese 20 miles south of Da Nang. Rangers who were battered Little just looks and. lis- Oe ey re ae oe one tens. . Marines were in ar- AF Wireph%te) _ Montreal Asks For Ban On Plastic Drink Cubes \will order retail outlets to cease transportat An blficial of the Montreal selling them. 2 ygprey cn ie 9g 2 ama By THE CANADIAN PRESS health department called for a tory tests iow United States reports the Hong Kong- —_ —— contain contana: (0 moe of the water-filled ee balls or cubes designed to chill drinks. They can be frozen in @ refrigerator and dropped into | a drink. Meanwhile, -four Ontario cen- ~——#res—,- Toronto, London, Belle- ~— 3 ville and coolers sale TESTS DERED London's health officer, De. D. A. Hutchison said he has or- dered tests. If they show con- taminated Sudbury—reported the / water, he said, he | states are inves-|nate the cubes and not ‘even WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. Supreme Court refused {morning to review a voluntary recital of . nurusery- type prayers by public school | students. Parents of 21 New York City school children had asked the court to rule the simple non-de- and non-sectarian | tigating them and they have washing would clean their rough cities and states. Germ-laden coolers were dis- iciae ‘unrentined 50 bores” Oe eee tee ler tS ae Iheom traced to the cubes. 'sands have been sold rig U.S. by clubs and Sikes oe ‘ganizations to raise money. | ‘SAYS SOME LEAK W. B. Hope of the Arkansas health departmerit said the balis ‘—which some purchasers have = New Mars HOUSTON, Tex. jplastié dust cover left in a fuel line 4 blocked the laun¢ lessly Id have | the Gem |coceus, pseudornonas, escherici- | cia ‘coli and proteous, all of | jwhich can cause intestinal ail- | \ments. Dr. Lamquin said handling in satvonbiite Frank = Bank Loot Take In Raid On Tén WEEDON, Que. (CP)—Police closed if on a tent near here in a midnight raid Sunday and re- covered “the better part’ of: the $170,000 taken in a bank robbery Friday. Three were arrested. £3 Shots were fired in the p- site raid but no one 4 in- al unable | Polite said they to estimate ¢ xact amount of the loot red. Various | unofficial fports estimated it 09hto $100,000. ugnoney was stolen Friday od van Imperial Bank of Com- | branch at Asbestos, Que. y four or five men. Police said Monday the shots apparefitly were fired during the raid when one of: the thee men t to flee. The recov-/vault was not locked. boa they of caeais tet discomforts 14 days in space | jin the Gemini 7. ; | These disclosures came | day as Borman and Lovell | «|drove the Gemini 7 on toward | the morale - lifting news that | their rendezvous. with Gemini 6 probably would be made at last, on Wednesday. ered mon Ihestos, 5 20 miles west of here af about 85 miles east of | loot in the robbery was mated at between $130,000 and $150,000 Friday. Georges | Blanchette, the hank's manager (bit at. 6:02 p.m. EST. |aamended the estimate at $170,-| During Gemini 7's 137th orbit | '000 Monday. Some of the money was des- thirds mark itined for the payroll of Johns-|journey. It had logged more Manville Corp., an asbestos ‘than 3,800,000 miles at the time. imining company with a mining | office in the town. The payroll | \was a little more than $130,000. The men who robbed the bank | ‘made Blanchette and his staff lof 11 lie on the floor as they | i looted. the vault- | Before fleeing, the men put the staff into the vault, but =| Canadian AUCKLAND, N.Z. (CP-AP) Boy Left Behind |. Is Reunited With Parents | child to care for. her husband { |York borough of Queens. |the spacecraft crossed the two- | vin its marathon {John Craig, provincial patholo- |lottetown area. Billy Brown, three-year-old Ca- waiting-in-New- Zealand and no | nadian left behind in Honolulu money, Mrs. Brown was forced | by his anguished mother last to continue her journey here | month, has been reunited with his parents. Before the reunion Friday, | Mrs William Brown had last | seen Billy Nov. 18, the day he | was taken off the liner Can- | berra afd placed in Queens | Hospital, Honolulu, for treat- ment for suspected pneumonia. liously to find a job and a home. | \without Billy. The Browns are toseacity | ifrom Clinton, Ont.’ With her | |three children, Mrs. Brown left Vancouver early in October to | her husband, who had ‘come here some months prev- | As an airline hostess carried \Billy to his relieved and smiling With a nine - month - old |family here, he still clutched | ———jthe teddy bear which had never | Soeur throughout his hose/ Setafer 00 TR 3° deg ve | Billy’s father, a ‘British-born | seal > ONLY 10 upholsterer, said he knew Billy | ’ |was in good hands but he had | SHOPPING - me idea how he was progres. t DAYS TILL $3, Billys parents sid they, CHRIST Gescuin Aameeiene tonems ond many Dae athers who had. sub- 5 EA ceritved to a fund that paid ; % ee ne ee his The wives of the crews of gg oes see sa Gemini 6 and Gemini 7 space flights are™shown -on their way to # luncheon in Friends- 4 a == Spat principal Elihu Oshinsky or- ban on the |ehildren ontinues Prayer Ban i dered a alt ja. October. 1962, = kindergarten’ jand we’ thank Him for our food, |jamen!’’ Afternoon session ndergar- ka jten children, meanwhile, had been reciting: , United Nalions Monday the peo. ple of Kashmir must be a ta determine their own pol! future before there can be | Posies Pakisiant dispute. — Deen eee Counc ee ee es rae baianal which aoe as | ,- wants an block of Rhodesia “and, econo ing that, military action.” Prime Minister Wilson of Brit- ain is scheduled to ‘address the assembly Thursday. “? Gunshot Wound Is Death Cause - A coronec's jury decided Stic- iting William Andrews, 73, Free- town, met his death at his resi- |dence on Nov. 22, as the result of a shotgun wound in the right jside of his face. The coroner's inquest was s taken to As-|mew endurance records, and got |held last night at City Hall. Dr. ithew Vessey, Clarence Coady, coroner,. pre- The jury heard seven witness leon Robertson, es before:‘they deliberated for approximately one-half hour to cision. Witnesses included: Dr. Mar, Clarke, - Kensington; Dr. gist: Wyvell Reeves, Freetown; George Reeves, Freetown; Ly- GEMINI WIVES JOIN FOR LUNCHEON . are: Mrs. Walter M. Schirra, Mrs. James A. Lov- eli, Mrs. Thomas P. Stafford I |man Smith, Freetown; \Feederick L. Connolly, ROME. |Summerside; and Cpl. H. Victor Cameron, RCMP, Members of the cordner’s jury | were: Louis Henry Gaudet, Bel- vedere Ave; foreman; Roy Mat- 238 Grafton Street; Leurie Elmer Gormley, 69 Con- federation Street; Victor Harri- W@W Kérkwood iDrive West; Clarence Elliot ‘MacPhail, 19 Park View Drive, Gemini 7 entered its 138th or- |the jury room to afrive at a de- |Joseph Aneas MacKinnon, Mal. peque Road and Arthur Vernon ‘Garrett, 19 Pleasant St, All the jabove addresses are in the Char- | Dr. Marvin Clarke. testified (Continued on page. 3, cdl. 4) | and Mrs. Frank Borman. Two currently orbiting the earth in Gemini 7 and Mrs. Schirre Summerside. | io’ | the area DOCTOR, WIFE MISSING bad and was expécted’ to slow search efforts. A towering fi- gure in the medical profes- sion, Lovelace, 87, is one of three men who founded the. Lovelace Clinic in 1947 ~ after heading the surgical section at. Mayo Clini, Rochester, Minn.,. from 1041 to 1946. ‘(AP Wirephote) PARIS (CP) — External Af- fairs Minister Paul Martin says the Canadian government wel- comes the Nigerian proposal for a S. Commmpunientth prime min- isters’ conference on Rhodesia and hopes this ‘‘useful initia- tive’ will deter African mem- bers. from breaking diplomatic relations ‘with Britain. Martin, who held talks with don Friday, also told a press | conference Monday he knows of | mo request that the RCMP be Const, |used to patrol the. Kariba Dam lthat straddles the Rhodesian-' | Zaambian border. | At Teast: two British news- papers have suggested . Cana- jdian and Australian police lmight be asked to guard the |dam to prevent the disruption ‘of power t Zambia -and ~ pos- |sible destruction of the huge power project. After bs talks with ‘Wilson Friday, Martin told London re- porters Canada would be.ready to examine by the ane een which sets lg mortgage on the project, for |Canadian or other” international | observers at the Kariba but he | emphasized he could not say | and Mrs. Safford went disappointment of fail-. ure to launch Gemini 6 for the qcend tate yesterday. : (AP Wirephote) Paul Martin Hopeful = Of Averting ‘Bre what conclusions the Canadian. goverament would reach on, euch <a’ request. Monday he added as far as. he knows, the World Bank has | mot completed its report on the security of the Kariba and he, knows of no request for use of \the RCMP. ‘Holiday | Is Ending OTTAWA (CP)—Prime Min- ister Pearson ends his 10-day Caribbean holiday today and goes to Trinidad and Tobago for a three-day official visit before returning to Ottawa. Mr..and Mrs. Pearson go from at a dinner for Prime Minister Eric Williams and some mem- bers of his cabinet: The dinner | made |will be held at the home of the Canadian high commissioner. Eric Gilmour. . °* their small holiday island--to-|-,- By BEN WARD OTTAWA (CP)—The Brother- {hood of Railroad Trainmen (CLC) is scheduled to open con- tract negotiations with the CNR | Thursday in what will be the first posals made last week by the | Freedman inquiry into CNR crew run-throughs- WwW. P. Kelly, BRT eee dent, said in an interview Mon- day the brotherhood’s negotia- tors intend to make a bargain- ' ling issue of Mr. Justice Sam- uel Freedman’s recommenda- tion that the CNR negotiate with its unions on new working conditions brought about by | technological change. The - Freedman report said there is an injustice in present jJabor law, under which unions are helpless against such changes introduced while a col- jJective agreement is in force. | He recommended the law he anged and specificaly urged \the CNR to accept the new prin- | leiple voluntarily. Mr. Kelly said the BRT de- mands, served _on the major railways last month before the {Freedman report was made |public, include the. introduction ‘of a contract clause providing that ‘‘no material change in conditions of employment” will | be introduced without union- management negotiations. A similar item was eee im the demands made by the Freedman Report To Get First Test test-of revolutionary pro | lunion two years ago. FB wae |later set aside during bragain- ing which led to a five-per-cent | wage increase in a two-year |eontract. That contract expires | at the end of this month. ‘WONT BE SET ASIDE’ “This issue will definitely not be set aside this time,” Mr. Kelly said. “We will insist on | this protection for our 18,000 | members.” On wages, the union has asked for a 15-per-cent increase across the board for conductors and trainmen on freight and pas- jsenger service. It also seeks a lrevision on mileage rates se that’ the. payment for 100 miles | will! tal six hours of work- in- stead of eight. That means over- time would bee paid after six hours instead of eight. Last year, according to CNR figures, conductors received an average of $144 a week end trainmen $130- Im the case. of yard crews, the union seeks a flat %-cent houfly boost in the next twe years. By union figures, yard foremen , earn $2.66 an hour and yard pets $2.46. These categories equivalent to con- ductors and trainmen, respec- tively, on yard duty. ’ Mr. Kelly ‘said there is no question of, fa five - per - cent eettlement/on this round. Since the iast/ negotiations railway employeés had been left far he- hind by the large wage. in- WATERLOO, Ont. (OP)— How's this for a bridge | four | brid hull | at about one | on, creases awarded im other indus- tries. , ‘HAVE TO CATCH UP’ "SWe have to caich.‘up Gite jtimve,” he said. ‘‘It will. require is ae settlement by the rail- The BRT's eight-member ne- | gotiating team will meet CNR negotiators in Montreal .Thure- }day and Friday. Talks with the iCPR, where the demands are similar, are to take place early : din January. The BRT is the only railway eperating union whose contract expires this year. Those of the engineers and firemen fun um- til the end of 1966. ‘ However, 15 unions represent- jing almost 100,000 ee geen are alsn headed for railway bargaining table this month and next. They have | already - served their demands, involving re boosts ef up te {50 per cent, are cavaiting the initial Sita of the com- _|panies. In several cases, the non-ag- erating unions have asked for contract protection against the | imtroduction of new working |conditions without the right of | tlegotiation., They also are -ex- pected to hold out for accept- \ance of the Freedman principle- DUAL CULTURE FAITH EXPRESSED | Distinctive National Anthem | And Money, Urged By Jaycees | OTTAWA (CP)—A_ distinctive | national anthem and more dis- 'tinctive paper money are re- quested in a brief the 8,500- member Canada Junior Cham- ber‘ of Commerce is submitting today to the royal commission on bilingualism and bieultural- tsm. The brief says national iden- \tity often is artificial and more (Canadian symbols like the new flay are needed. ' "he jaycees, without referring directly to the Queen's photo- renee currency, suggest that of “prominent Cana- Aians of both cultures’’ be used in future, such as the Fathers of Confedetation and past prime | pinisters. WAVE FAITH IN FUTURE “We have great faith in a country based on a duality of ‘ language and culture.” | Other proposals in the jaycee brief: 1 Compulsory instruction in the second language, French or English, in all primary and secondary schools 2. Merit or financial i inceativés for bilingual teacher 3. A bilingual ieaerel district im Ottawa-Hull. 4 ae such subjects as history lterature m the Sal second language, perhaps us- | ing personnel from” the pro- posed company of Young Oe nadians. 5. Bilingual broadcasts and student and teacher exchange programs. A group of 18 university pro- fessors -from Kangston headed by Dr. John S. Ellis of the Royal Military College calls for an ex- tension of bilingualism to all provincial legislatures, courts and schools. SHOULD BE A RIGHT “We believe that every Cana- jdian child should have the right to be educated in the English | anguage or in the French lan- INSIDE TO TODAY Classified ......0+..- - 12, 13 | ere err re eer 12 = ' has probably done more than | anything else to cause French- Canadians to feel that ds not stand on an equal footing |with English Canadians through \out the country.”” The Canadian Welfare Coun- leil, representing 49 social agencies and associations. says ‘it is bilingual in its operations and that French-Canadian par-° | ticipation has increased in re- cent years. The Co-operative Union of Canada and Le Conseil Cana- idien de la -Co-operation, two autonomous bodies grouping | 1.600 co-ops, say i a joit brief | that their relations have never been more harmonious It was possible for, French ‘and English-speaking Canadians to work together im perfect 2. ‘cord as long as they had mutual respect for their cultural differ- ences. The Canadian Museums As- \eciation, professional bedy of ‘museum curators, calls for bigger federal grants to traia museum staffers and step up weeten of eT ee \ a She Bese =