If it's Good For the Island The Guardian is For it @hr @nardiam “Covers Prince Edward lslandLilze The Dew” VOL. Lxxvr. N0. 8 family. (6-year-old Kenneth Blacquiere. rescued by the carferry Abegweit from a . drifting ice floe in Northum- berland Strait early yesterday morning. is seen later With his father and mother. Mr. and Mrs. Albi-n Rlacquiere. and his youngest sister. five-year-old Donna Lee. at. their home at 441 North Market Street. in Summerside. The boy had been adrift from 8:30 Tuesday even- ing until 3:.'ll Wednesday morning. A companion. 14- 4.5.... BOY SAFE AFI'ER ORDEAl ON DRIFI'ING ICE Safely at home. with his year-old George Paynler of Sheen Street. Summerside. had been rescued shortly after Ice broke away from the shore at Summerside waterfront while the boys were smelt fishing. (See. story on page 3.) a, mflfggfif: "mm-h CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, THURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 1963. United Nat Tshombe's W E A T H E R Variable cloudiness, snowflurries em'ng; west winds 20 becoming southwest 15 in afternoon. Low-high 28 and 35. ber- mmggu SEVEN CENTS ions Call SIX YEARS IN- OFFICE LONDON (Reuters) old Macmillan ended his sixth four potential crises facing him. Crisis itself brought Macmil- lan to power Jan. 10. 1957. when he succeeded Sir Anthony Eden (now the Earl of Avon) who re- tired becausé of ill health after the Suez situation of the prev- ious autumn. Macmillan. now 69. survived the 1959 general election in such strength that his Conservative party returned to ower with Ceylon ’Saviour’ Planning Visit To Summerside HALIFAX it‘dPi—Air (fum- modore Leonar J. Birchall. "the saviour of Ceylon" arrived nion Funds Pay Private Nurse in Travel With SIU President By ROBERT RICE OTTAWA (CPI—Hal C. Banks admitted Wednesday that Sea- farers“ union funds paid the shot for a personal nurse to treat his back on out-of-town trips He 'also admitted that the nurse-identified as Miss Char- lebois~sbared a hotel suite with him on at least one occasion. but be denied any impropriety. “She is not an employee of the union." he said. “She is my my house- employee. She‘s keeper and my nurse." The issue was Charles Dubin. counsel for Mr. Justice T. G. Norris‘ marine non-union purposes. raised by federal inquiry. in questioning. the burly. 54.year-old union boss about the use of union funds for before the. commission to show that Mr. Banks and Miss Char- lebois travelled to and stayed at the Waldorf-As- toria together last March. Mr. Dubin saldr ’ “I’m not concerned with the question of the. morality of the situation but i put it to‘you that the room [or yourself and the union." It could have been." said Mr. Banks. after first denying that he had stayed at the hotel. TELLS 0F BACK INJURY "I had a very bad back in- jury and it Is a chronic situa- tion." he said. "She has trav- elled with me. The doctor has Miss Charlebois was charged to h w I Placing airline and hotel bills instructed me to take someone Th with me. 1 "If the doctor tells me to take ew York a nurse with me when I travel. I charge it to the union if I am taking that trip on the union usinqss. with him .. ‘2. or." he ad e . names of Mr. and Mrs. Banks. “There was'no Mrs. Banks registered in the hole." said (Continued on page 5. col. 4) JFK Reported Pleased With Congress Victory WASHINGTON (AP) The 88th United States Congress opened for business Wednesday and dealt sudden death to con- servative members' hope. recapturing control of the key House of Representatives rules commi cc. This victory for President Kennedy had been expected. but the size of his margin was a surprise. On the‘decisive vote ‘ the House. his supporters won 235 to 196. The vote kept the size of the rules committee a 15 mem- bers. If Kennedy's forces had failed. it would have reverted a O m to 12 members. leaving the com- new mittee in the grip of a coalition if conservative Republicans and major elements of Kennedy's legislative program. The committee. which con~ trols the flow of MI legisla- tion to the floor of the House. had been under the domination .of this coalition until two yea-rs ago. Then Kennedy forces. led by the late Speaker Sam Rey- burn. got a 217-to-212-vote vic- (ory that increased the size of the committee to 15 from 12 members. SMOOTHER SAILING? Wednesday. with the help of Georgia Democrats and some Republicans. Kennedy in- creased that five-vote margin to 39 votes—a boost that may buoy Southern Democrats opposed to‘ his hopes for smoother sailing through Congress IJII.IS year. Kennedy was described by White House press secretary Pierre Salinger as “most grati- fied" by the outcome. While the House opened its new session with a vital and decisive battle. the Senate con- tented itself with ceremony. Igoodwill and a postponement of (real business until after Ken- lnedy delivers his state-of-the- union address to Congress Mon- 'day. i Senators agreed they could put off until then their various proposals to curb filibustering and their probable filibusters against the proposals. DOUBLING OF VALUE SEEN Trade Minister PrOmises - TouriSt Harvest By 1967 - he' 10 JOIN AGENCIES The ha d Atta-ibutim part of last year's to devoluatzim of the (killer. Mr. flees ford- ' of 875.000.0(1) home i mane Canadian cast an incense expected SMOKING) 1m to MAMA”.- rm. h seasofllcewaswenedlastyuc hLondou. To date. the bureau's dfa’ta have been directed mainly ‘d attracting me tourists from the Un' States. It: first ovu- malice: said this year's pro gram win Include mom fa' tourist advertis'mg in Britain. It manger for Era-wean oper- ations and field offices for France and West Germany also will be. unprinted. Mr. flees said the m pun will crncnt ox- wi ".mnlltinthecuunflalyur. Plans for the current your 9. He said he has his secretary right now in a two- bedroom suite in an Ottawa ho- i‘But I'm not sleeping with d it Mr. Dubin said hotel bills paid by the STU for Mr. Banks dur- ing a 1960 trip to Miami Beach and Puerto Rico showed the rooms were registered in the here Wednesday to begin a three day (our of RCAF units In the Maritime provinces. Air Commodore Burchall. of operation since (960. earned the nickname by giving {'3 {3' p... ‘B - fleet approaching Ceylon 1942. Within minutes craft was spent‘three years as a prisoner ar. British Empire for while a P0 tour will Greenwood. NS. P.E.I. and Torbay. Nfld. advance warning of a Japanese: his air-l shot down and hei e incident earned him the ain's nuclear Distinguished Flying Cross and adequalfly safeguarded for the subsequently. the Order of the future. “Wage irnouarr; IN AFRICA --His stops on the Maritimel in cl u d e Halifax. Summerside. nearly double its parliamentary ‘ majority. But last year was. by general agreement. not the happiest of {his career as prime minister, :and the dawn of his seventh year in office was not com- pletely bright. r The first of his four crises is i the simmering unrest within his own party over Britain's future defence policy after the United l borne missile which Britain was (to buy for its heavy bombers to ensure “an independent Brit- 1ish deterrent" into the 19703. The American substitute offer in;' of the submarine-borne Polaris. incorporated into a joint. NATO deterrent in normal times, has a not satisfied right-wing elements Conservatives that. Brit-i the o independence Another crisis is potential con lthree of Britain's main depend Seal Hunting Regulations Unchanged ST. JOHN'S. NFLD. r CPI -~-~ There will be no change in reg- ulations governing seal hunting on the Canadian east coast: this spring. a federal fisheries de- partment spokesman said Wed- nesday. He said the season would stay the same as last year. opening March 5 In the Gulf of St. Law- rence and Marth 10 on the front. the ice floes along the eastern Labrador coast. Both seasons close May 5. The spokesman said the ques- tion of a shorter season a it other conservation measures were discussed at a meeting in Halifax last fall. but no action has been taken. Newfoundland is expected to have three ships at the northern front— the Bowring B rothcrs Limited vessel Algerine. (h e Kyle. owned by the Ea rl Freighting Company. and the Crosbie and Company Limited freighter Sir John Crosbte. lBlizzard Hits Aha. CALGARY ((‘Pt fashioned P r a I r | e howled down from the north Into southern Alberta early Wednesday. staggering the area with every weapon of winter. The first severe Weather of An Slates scrapped the Skybolt air-i isi (flict‘. in Central Africa where Crises Threatening Macmillan's Gov’ ' '13:"? "r. l iIMPROVES Plow; OTTAWA (CPI -- Malcolm S. Kuhring did more than ,ust grumble when a city plow piled his driveway with unwanted snow. He invented a new plow to eliminate the UNITED NATIONS (API The United Nations announced prfilemk h . H r f “1 Wednesday night instructions T- u ring. etc o e .H V iNational Research Council's paw been gl‘e" '" "‘9 UP ‘ engine laboratory here, got Off? In The Congo to restrain the idea outside his home one day when a plow clogged his driveway only five minutes after he had finished shovel» ing it clean. His answer to the problem is a hydraulic gate attached to the right side of the blade of a conventional plow. A model of the machine was given its test run in the NRC yards here Tuesday. It worked to perfection. leaving neat car-wide openings in the snow bank left in the plow‘s wake. ‘ The device was built In NRC's metal shops and could be produced for between $500 and $700. Mr. Kuhring said. "Although we don't usually do this sort of thing. we be- lieved it had such wide appli- Katanga proVince dent Moise Tshombe from ther irresponsible acts." by placing him under house arrest. The announcement was made ;by a spokesman for Secretary- General U Thant. It, said the only way Tshombe can prove his good faith is to permit peaceful entry of the fUN force into Kolwezi. _ He said that unless such proof ‘is given "there can be no more (question of contact with Mr. Tshombe on other matters." . he UN statement said that if Tshombe carries out a scorched earth policy in Kol- wezi “he alone will he held responsible for all the tragic .consequcnces of such acts of (criminal sabotage. e statement added that it Presi- “fur- ., , .r a» . ‘ l Cationfifimss canada Phat W9 is imperative Tshombe issue a M“. MACMILLAN me“ li- sat -, "clear and unequivocal renun- After further testing the de- wiafinn" of a” such threats and rilers about the future of the sign model will be offered to ;acmvities by him, Failing such nine-year-old Central African any interested manufacturer. In undertaking. mm statement 'said. "other measures will be Federation. I Last month. Britain agreed in (principle that Nyasaland should (be allowed to secede from the federation, and Northern Rhod esia was expected to demand which would mean the end of the Brit- the same privilege ~~ ish-built alliance hirdly. (for membership to perm Common Market unresolved. Finally. th. Macmillan‘s o v e r shadowing problem on the home . front. is_rising unemployment. - tion on how long he mean Britain's application r. e Euro- st ill is Macmillan has given no indica- s to ent territories -— Nyasaland and carry on as prime minister. Northern and Southern Rhod- esia—are locked in an intense that he might Step dOWn beforel struggle between colored politl- the next general election. which‘jscholarship here bv cal movements and white set- may come this autumn. ' So far there is no suggestionénearb o . icome a matter of urgent neces- rsity in order to prevent the . ldisasters threatened by his in- ;citement to destruction." lTo Receive ‘ :Tbird Award There was no indication Thant. paid any heed to Tshom- 1he's peace bid offered earlier. ‘MADE EFFORTS .‘ i. The. statement said Thant had r HALIFAX (CPl yn’made repeated efforts in the ‘F‘l‘anClS 0f the Lennox nd ilast fibree days through various rindian Reservation in Prince “Edward Island tonight will re- icelve her third consecutive In- .dian Affairs Branch scholarship. ltbis one valued at $1.000. These were listed as i Miss Francis. finishing four} 1. lyears as a nursing student at ihy Tshombe of his scorched Mount Saint Vincent Col~ fearth and sabotage policy: lege. will be presented with the. Mari! I sl a channels and by the good 16 PAGES 5 For House Arrest- :IRATE MOTORIST! Peaceful POIIC Is Demanded Y peated Intention to fight to the last man. 3 The taking of immediate tactical steps for implementing Thant's plan for reunification of The Congo: 4 Assurance of immediate recognition of the right of the UN force in The Congo to free- dom of movement through all Katanga. ‘CRIMINAI. ACT‘ The statement added that me citement hy Tshombe to de-' struction of economic installa‘ (ions in Katanga “is a criminal- act which cannot be accepted." In a reference to a Tshombe press conference in Elisabeth— ville Wednesday. the statement said his declarations apparently make it fruitless to pursue fur- ther efforts with him. Tshombe told the press con- ference. in his Elisabethviue palace to which he. returned * from Kolwezi Tuesday. that Ka- tangans have. placed demolition charges in every major indus- trial installation in Kolwezi. and would explode them if UN ‘forces try to advance on icentre. Mrs. Diefenbak‘or . Is In Hospital SASKATOON (CF) Prime Minister Diefenbaker has post— no ed a visit here this weekend because Mrs. Diefenbaker is un- dergoing a medical checkup in ]a Toronto hospital. 3 Harry Jones. the conservative of. member of Parliament for Sas- fices of various governments to katoon. said he received the in- obtain from Tshombe necessary ‘formation by phone from tho‘ assurances on four basic points. (prime minister. r. Dietenbaker was to have A categorical renirnciationmfficially launched Saskatoon'l low-rental housing project. No new date has been set for 2. Renunciation of his oft-re-ia visit here. . Edmund (Morris._ member of parliament EDMONTON (CPI Prime Minister Diefenbalcerr may call a federal election within three weeks. Walter Gordon. Liberal Member of Parliament for Tor- onto-Davenport. said Wednesday. Mr. Gordon said in an in - ,w that the prime minister will certainly call an election within twa months. e national chairman of the Liberal campaign committee i i OTTAWA lCPl .Leader Pearson called Wednes- rlday night for a new general election to bring stability and progress in Parliament. He said the minority Progres- . srve Conservative government avoids bringing basic issues be- fore Parliament because it. can't far have kept the government in office. 1 "And 80 national defence. Ft- inancc. taxation. the long -term economic plans that were prom- Liberal MP Predicts Early Federal Vote (said the prime minister Is on lshaky ground. l "He has yet to bring in the 1963 budget. The estimates have yet to be pass and he must introduce a heavy tariff bill. 'For all this he is depending on the support of Social Credit and the NDP." ‘ Mr. Gordon was here to ad- ldrcss the Canadian Club of Ed- monton. 1 Pearson Urges Election For Stability, Progress Liberallb'oadcast on the (:BC's TV sex lries The Nation's Business. 1 "Our experience since .1 u no this proved beyond question that ‘the present. government. in the present Panliament. where ‘cvcry party is in a minority. traitnot conduct the nation‘s I(business efficiently. constitution- u Ia‘ly. or with (the long term p r- nid. count on support. even from So- pnse that the national interest blizzard cial Credit MIPs whose votes so so desperately requires. ‘ “The only way out is to take 'the issues back to the people 1.for (be fresh decision of an elec- (ion. . . . "Only by ending the present the winter knocked out power. (sod. these and other major ls- ‘r'onfusion and uncertainty can streets. closed s n m c schools and made hundreds of cltiwns late for work. Four inches of snow. blown by winds which gusch tip to tilt miles an hour. was piled into “drifts three and four feet deep. A The. temperature here was 21 degrees at midnight Tuesday but it had dropped to 11 below at 8:1!) am. Wednesday and 16 below at noon. The forecast. low low. INSIDE TODAY Announcements. notices 15 Births. deaths . . . . . .. 1. is Classified . . . . . . . . . . .. It. 15 Comics . . . , . , . . . . . . . . .. I. Finance. markets . . . . . . .. t't Editorials . . . . . . . . . . . . . ., a City. Queens . . . . .. 5 Prince County .......... .. 2 Summers“. . . . . . . . . . . . .. a M . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 11 Mu‘ 8 for Wednesday night was 25 be—' struggle for political survival r goes on." . Mr. Pearson was in New York for a meeting of the executive of the conference on world ten- sions. His filmed message was rIn Santa By KEN SMITH ; MONTREAL (CPL—A heavily; armed sq u a d of policemen moved into a court house Wed- nesday and picked up two men in what officers said may he an important break in the in- vestigation of the "Santa Claus" * killing of two policemen during‘ a bank holdup Dec. 14. ‘ The men. arrested on coro- ner‘s warrants. were taken tm~ ‘mediately to provincial police rheadquaflen when Insp. Ger- ‘Two Picked U (stalled traffic in snow-Plullled sues are put aside, while the ‘we tackle the problems of Can-. ‘ada with the wise and gleadership that 'must give." A text of the remarks was Is- sucd to the press before deliv- p Holdup ard Houle described them as important witnesses." strong government He identified them as Victor. Levesque. 23. and Louis Mas- troluca. Mastroluca is a for- . PP eft the force about 10 years ago. losp. Houle also said police want to question a third man. identified as Jules Reeves. 29. now in hospital recovering from a stroke. He is partially paralyzed and is unable to (unbound on Page 5 0d. t) lfor Halifax. ' The presentation will be on behalf of Superintendent Gener- al of Indian Affairs. A.I-I. Bell. Mari yn. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John A. Francis. attended. public school on the reservation [ and graduated from (be Mis- couche Convent High School. N.B. Company By STAN BOWLES . I Guardian - Patriot Staff Writer iReveals New RCMP last night reported {Pajafo Deal that highways throughout the t HARTI AND N B (cm ‘ province were hazardous for lMcCain Produce Company Lim-' "“"?“,‘""" ""9 mainly ‘0 icy iited of nearby East FIorence-3mnd't'ms' aggravate“ 1“ wcsl' (ville has obtained their second E em Prince Cnunty by the fa”. 300nm,“ m supply New 13mm.1 amount of snow that fell (n that ;wick table potatoes to the ltal- ‘ 31‘“ durlnfl “‘9 d8)!- . In th at section of the prov- iian mar et M _ . The latest contract. annotrnc-llnCP- PTPCIPIIBIIM most M the ed Wednesday, involves a ship. . day was in the form of snow but ment of at least 200 carloaris. ‘from the Summerside district I Last year. substantial shi p. " to East Point the province re- lmenis to Italy were made by CGiVfld mostly rain- (the Carleton County farm a s‘ This fumed to snow light Snow leaves Highways Dangerous iKings by late afternoon or early ‘ evening. iNO SERIOUS ACCIDENTS . No serious traffic accidents Ewere reported. but there were ; several unofficial reports of vo- jhlcles sliding into the dltchel. 3 As far as could be learned, very few of these resulted in ‘ anything more. than minor dam- ‘age. and were not reported to 1 the police. Early in (be daylong dll- lance telephone circuits were out between Summerside and he western Prince communi- a b o u ti ties. including the Guardian - 'well 35 firms in Woodstock and; mid-afternoon throughout east Patriot (eletype circuit between Saint John. N.B.. under a feder- al export subsidy. Prince and the whole of Queens. .and the snow reached r i I Alberton across r and Summersr 2. (Continued on page ll. col. at Sunday Blue Laws Debate ’5 l ; By DAL WARRINGTON (silly law for this day and age." 1 HALIFAX (CF) orce-‘ Tuesday night Mr. Donahoe ‘ment of Sunday “blue laws"——‘issued a statement Indicating ior the lack of it~has stirred up'he was concerned more with :tbe liveliest controversy among Sunday operation of movie. lNova Scotians since in Halifax theatres. bowling alleys and clergyman launched a "clean-isporting events than with cer- .up" of newsstand publications ner groceries. ;Iast summer. ‘ “Ward A‘TIMES HAVE r'uAsGEn Attorney-General ‘ Donahoe started things with a‘ Th9 attorney - general ceded times have changed since ‘letter to city and town police chiefs Dec 19. He “de um,“ the act became law and his de‘ mums“, stops he 'aken in in_ partment would enforce it with sure enforcement of the Lord's. 'hi‘s" “fang” 1" mind- Day Act." a federal statute en- "9 "ml his I“-""““””"-‘ I" W" acted mm... than M" ,. (.mmryrlice resulted from "an increas- gm . ing number of complaints to my Policemen in Halifax andl‘lcpaflmem i“ “0”” "mm" other centres spent much of (her rPSPWI‘FK ""930" Vli‘lall‘ms-u munwing Sunday, warning 0",, He pointed out that the Lord's Pram” M f. M." , r E",er Day Act's original intent wa: to stores. newsstands and tobaccorflllfll’flM" “Wk?” I" "On-955°"- ,hops mm H k mm“ In I,“ l tial occupations in day of rest on such things as candy and cigar-i Sunday. With modern labor loz- cups on Sunday ~islaiion and (he fiveday week This action brought protestsllhis Prnif‘m‘m “'33 “"I 3‘ in" (from the merchants and some WINN- of those unable to buy their fa-L As a result of changed cir- vorite brand 0 smokes on theycumslances enforcement on the Sabbath. Some proprietors ig-i set had tended to become more nored the warning and kept onl lenient through the years. Few selling anyway. ioperators of small groceries Mayor John E. Lloyd of l-Iali- and canteens bad fax said the Lord's Day Act cuted. Automobiles and apart- should be amended or repealed. ment living made the convent- Manuel Zive. Halifax board of once of Sunday purchaser more (trade president, termed it "a essential. 3 “i (‘OH- H parks N.S. Controversy [ When he received reports .from police department any ac- ‘tion against violators would b. consistent with these circum- stances. Prosecution under the ‘act requires sanction of the. at- torney-general‘s department. However. Mr. Donahoe served ‘nntice that his department has . an eye on theatre. bowling alley ; d sports arena operators. Ofo ‘ficials. players and spectators at a Sunday hockey game In Glace Bay where an admission was paid were fined last month. Sunday games have continued with collection of a voluntary . contribution. iSHOW MOVIES ‘ Sunday movies Continue to b. Shown in Halifax theatres. usu- ally under sponsorship of sen- lce organizations. but newspaper advertisements for the films no longer contain reference to Sul- day. No action has . ken against coin laundries and other self-service establishments ope- Sundays. Letters in newspaper editor! include the views of those who question that. Sunday is the 8th- bath anyway. One writer I Christ up! "Which day did . . . you ask me. I think tin powers-that-be are trying to at. up a bornet's neat."