10 The Guardian. Charlottetown. Wed. Oct. 31. 1962. .~,.,-. 5,...‘ ..; _ , . NAMED PRESIDENT OF NEW UNIVERSITY T ll.B. Symons. dean of De- \'tI.‘l3llll'f‘ House at the Univer- sity of Toronto. has been nam- Mystery Is Seen Deepening Over Khrushchev’s Letter I‘.-' I-IAROLD MORRISON \V.\SHIl\!GTON (CPI ~- What did the first Khrushchev letter - . « - for an undis- snv'.' And why does it remain :‘m‘fI€:,T(,lI' End {mam samhpd -(ism sun]. . a ,‘,.”.(..-_~ :e il e ouse. ‘ V . _ , _ The vny-<m‘.\' of that private 0" l‘I‘ida."- l\'l""'-‘l“"““" “'"-‘ ltllififilotfidglllvpléilllllillllfe l*3‘“"-‘ 39'“ I‘.V ill? 5‘“'l“l l““" I‘-"f30l‘lf‘f‘ Y0 hm‘? lnfllfialfld in the ll2‘Elnll.ln'i. mines at nearby Y7‘lPl‘ to President Kennedy last Fridzzy has deepened \\ it h |r,rlic.'-itions tl‘at it was a hurried and ccnci1ie.tor_v response to a ed pitsideri’. and vice-chancel- lr.r of the new rent Univer- sil_v at Peterborough. Ont. At l e t t e r s in three con.<eciil'i\'e dr.i..< that at first relieved. then Pllllilt P liirlusiries Ltd. Ll Iii; 1‘rl\'ate message that he was rm.-try to get his missiles out of (Tuba if the US would pledge not to invade the Communist- VTNoranda Mines ,SeIIs Acid Plant 33!, llcan S)lll(il']S is Canada‘: youngest l.Ini\‘ersity president. ((1? Wirephoto) 'i'0ll0'\§'l'O (CF) -- Nnranda Mines Ltd. announced Tuesday it has sold its Cutler, Ont., sul- ' ‘ lant to Canadian Ellini Lake. The company production has said uranium been curtailed .‘7il d:‘asticall_v that the plant is C()‘.lV(‘l‘ - based consulting engi- the Khulna Pulp and Paper Mill in East Pakistan. The tigers roaming the Bhai- rob River area forests. had The Sandwell men rose to the and the mortality rate promptly fell to one native a year. corded in the filing room at cmergcncy. assigning an expert: riflernzzn to each group of fallers i This tiger incident is duly re—- after starting hcre Jan. 1. 1949 d . 'l‘oda;.' the company is en- gaged in major pulp and paper mill or power plant design in Canada. the United States, Mex- lii addition its management specialists are operating pulp and rapcr mills in several coun- '.f‘.‘-. in .-o- Illt last year. the firm's foreign activities have brought‘4(l0. $21,000,000 in orders to Cana-{Through affiliated companies it .Marii of Japan. 1 tries. financed through facilities of Export Credits Finance Cor- ‘ poration of Ottawa. This week the first shipment ‘of $ll.000,00(| worth of Canadian pulp-and - paper-making ma- chinery for a Chilean mill was d d 33‘ ::v : cry is being supplied by John lnriglis Company of Tor- onto. which contracted to sup- Saiidwell did all the engineer'- rieei-iiig firm. with a unique In. with only crcy Ritchie lDicl(l ‘inf-' 0" the mi“ and Will mflnfllle furt. Zurich. Dusseldorf. Cnpcn-i cal problem when it began di- Szindwell nd a stenngrapher on 'l {M “V9 3’”‘r5 at R {F9 °‘ll1-men. Stockholm. Oslo. Parlfil recting logging operations for st'ff $1-00‘)-"W and Amsterdam. ‘ ()thcr big orders include R, $113,000,000 contract for a news- rint mill expansion in Pakis-I tan and $5l.flf-0.00(l for expansiofni a t ' '5 hm" klllint’. an average of 35 ico. Chile. Norway. Sweden. and modernization of a kr mm: mm“; that [hp firm sP°lI$OI'ed l-CdlG§ Alfllllflfy Of ‘TIC native loggers a year. causing Finland. The Netherlands. Italy. ’pir mill in Mexico. m.95n'i 9‘ inc hamp.c0un[rV periodic interruptions in prodiic- Pakistaii. India and Ceylon. HAS STAFF OF 400 recognition he feels -it deserves. . No‘ I Royal cal“ tron. WORK ABROAD few da_\':s ago a contract‘ 'ph,.,._-.-us an “pinion in B_(;._ he _. was signed with the Pakistan Power Authority to double the, cap a (' i t y of the Hyderabad‘ power station, a $5,500.000 job. Sandwcll today-has a staff of half o’ them engineers. {clan heavy equipment lndus-roan call on the services of an- "ligers‘ Posed Problem For Engineering Firm i€('0!lOl'l'llCS. mill operation. . 9 In M°“lTe3l- Th? m3"'-int! night a Santlwcll specialist‘. Montreal Laurieri who said Cn- tar r {Jobs Are ces ii serious crisis Wllll unsold CL-M planes on itg 11. rim and thermal electric power. j .1laIld5- forestry, structural and amage- ()'[‘TA\V[l. (Cp) ._ Defenc. Outside the Commons offi. mm" l"'°-I‘-*1“ cials said the government has vProrluction Minister 0’liurley Almost every hour of the day » mm luesday his department is i aiwadv assisted CL,“ plmm. l tion by financing five of the negotiating with Canadair Lim- ited. Montreal. to see what can 1. planes for more than $21.utlu.rinrl, iTwo of these have since been other 500. Its complex involves experts in research. marketin is flyinr to some remote pro- ject. Mi. Sandwell. who heads- the opcralioi he founded him- ~ "19 ‘l°"° “' keel’ We“ the Wm‘ VAf\’(.‘0U\’ER (CP)~Man-eat-;Sa:idwell's own building here. my all °‘1“,lP""9"t lm‘ ‘hi’ 521-‘ Self. ll‘-'s'VelS more than most of "pa"-"'5 I“'°d““fi°" line fl" "'9 mid to 3 yo b 1 . mg Ben tigers presemedithe “(We centre an 0pera_ 000,000 project near Nacimento hls man. This month he new to 3 CL-44 cargo plane. ’ ‘ .‘- ..i. uyer. tlus ie. Sandwell and Company, Van-;tion serving in countries)“ "I" 3'01"" R'V"1‘- ’l‘oroiito New York. Washing-* H9 “"35 FCPIYWE I" "'9 9°m'1d“3'°3 the 3°"9“‘m°m5 90111- mons to Lionel Chevrier (L-—-lmitment to some $13,000,000. HALI.OWE’EN DANCE AT THE CLOVER CLUB ton. Bermuda. London. Frank-; liut Paul E. Cooper. execu- tive vicc-prcsidcnt of the firm. who minds the shop while Mr. Sandwcll is away says he's a I C » it said. that consultants for major ad|an Leglo ' projects in most cases must be —- I b"°"“m i" "°"‘ ""“”°' , Special Prizes — Lunch Will Be Served World's largest oil tanker in. . 1952 is the 131,000 - ton Nissho, \ DMSS OPHOIIGI '.\F‘.Fn€ti.‘/ \\‘E1!‘nInE that only 3 ('un'i'olled island. On Saiul‘fl3Vv0D(‘l"llll‘-L’ at only 2% Per cent of r . , . ‘ . . . ‘ ' ‘ _ - ' ‘ _ _f’“ ‘leis. .'°"‘a'”°d h‘f°'“ ,”‘°- hf‘ -‘““df’"1." fl"maWlf‘d the Wllh‘ capacity and further curtail- "ha" ”.'“‘< “”"m °xl’l"'l“ ml" ‘l'’-"'‘'-'al "{ V/‘TO "U“lC3l‘ IIHSPS merit is exor-t-ted when the war in ’l‘urkc.v in exchanne. On Snn- Unit:-rl Kingdom uranium con- When and how the K(‘lln(‘dy ' \"£‘.l'l‘l,ll’lE was conveyed is veiled in rice!‘ riiplomaric. secrecy. But Hw \'Jashington Star siiggesls it 1311:’ sent to Khrirslicliev in the day hr reverted to his reported pcsition of Friday. The twisting and Soviet positions turning of siiggcsted to Ihe US. that a struggle was go- tracts are com Under an agreement with (‘a- uadian industries. .'\‘oranda will continiic to operate the produc-i inn uni‘. of the plant. The acid‘ ,rl‘,":n_‘ ","_“ l‘“"al"' '°“°" la“ mg or. in the Kremlin. Sovietwill be moved to the Canadian, liLl‘Ear-N -‘Witt lhal 1' ha‘ ‘I19 mp;-i-is here, after studying the lnrluistries acid plant at Copper. ":”‘la"y"' “h"'h "°'l‘ "l".“"l S-'t‘lll(".a,\‘ and Sunday Khriish- Cliff, . lxi'.ruslit'hev to get his missiles M1,... hm...‘ concluded ‘hm, .- . — -- -—- —--------—--i ol Cu a ’ “ ‘ ' in b U.S. diplomatic informants ackiio\vlea'P.e there was a great number of secret commiinic.a- Lioiis between Washington and Moscow durin): that critical M.ei<. They deny. however. that the Kennedy warning was con- veyed in a private . The siiggestion rather is that the tough Kennedy mood was conveyed by word of mouth by rliplr-matic representatives here and in Moscow. Whatever the method of con- veyance it apparently brought a on . Khrushchev it appears likely one reason why neither the Kremlin nor the White House will make tht first Khrushchev letter public is that it may con- tain clues to the preceding se- ._\_‘ cret Kennedy communications. . _ _ _ . , _ - . . __ . . .. ' . . HRST OF THREE ,.eSun._pm,n EaS._w(,_<. diS_ Paris ];ep1_ (lire glance at the lP‘flPSIllllg new beaul_\ of the 63 Llieviolel tells batteries. And there is a “new and broader engine choice. too, The Klll‘llSl‘I(‘ll€\'f respofnseh on armament. and other disciis- 224 Gr. (.90,-,_... gr, 4.5579 you it s a winner. The new Lhevrolet ollers you a big brindle of niclmlmg it new slantlartl Six. an improved standard V8 that thrives was the iist n free sioric, ' Frrrla ,____ : 24-hour response from‘ \\7L‘l‘.‘? iirittcr. by diametrically- opi;r-:erl factions, each with dis-. tinct rliaraeieristics and poli- '3 The view here is that the de- maiirl Saturday for elimination of Tirrkish bases was written by hard-line Stalinist types, while the Sunday agreement-to iiel-oiil was composed by soft- lir.c co-existence types. proba- bly the same group that pre- pared the secret Friday letter. While there is acknowledge- mcnr here that a great number of .-ecret Moscow-Washington exchanges took place, it is be- ing emphasired that Kennedy mriilc no concessions to Khrush- chev other than those publicly stated—the pledge not to invade Cuba: the eventual withdrawall of the naval blockade. and the Money on Anti-l<‘rccze. .2..;o PER GAL. Stewart Motors Save time to gel RfI\’I('P. Mr. your area 'l‘hiirsda._v. November Isl and will be able to answer such qiiestions as: . . . . . . 1. Why is It that I can bear but I understand? 2. Will a lieriring aid help my type of hear- ing loss? spacial N FOR THE HARD OF HEARING If you have a hearing; problem. now is the 3. If I am fitteti with ii. hearing aid. what follow-iip service can I expect. Ranisay will he in cannot EWS A General Motors Value C II EVRO LET. . . great new features, brilliant new ideas nimie_v-saving benefits like the new self-arljusling Safely-Master lwakcs, for lung lining life aml safe. sure, stops. Like the exleurIetl- CORVAIR . .. the sporty car with saving ways \ Chevy II Nov: 400 Convertible Gievrolet impala Sport Sedan -’ life cxliausl li_\'t-‘I("lIl. with lll‘H\’_V-Vflllge and aIumiIii'/.etl metal in ‘~ bring you longer life. better service. Like the new tliotle-reclifietl Delcolrnn generator that eliarges even at idling speeds. saves on on regular gas. plus five other V8’s ranging up to 423-hp. All this —- plus Chevrolet's famous ,lel-smooth ritlel Exciting? You bet! CI'I EIIY lI trim new beauty that stays young longer Sl1‘lal’lI_\’ styled, with a new husky look, Chevy II for '63 carries on the trend-setting traditions of its first amazing year. For '63. Chevy II offers even more comfort and convenience inside. without sacrificing any of its easy-handling nirrlblencss and handy size . . . plus a full range of full-size features, such as high. wide door openings - for easy entrances and exits. a big. spacious trunk (up to 25.5 cubic feet!), Mono- ' P Plate rear springs for a smooth. even ride. Biggest feature of all, of course. is Chevy ll‘s budget-sized economy . . . economy that merely starts with the low initial price. There's a whole load of ingenious new money-savers built into every Chevy ll to bring you value that lasts! For instance. a unique internal ventilation system that water-flushes and air dries rocker panels. hclps remove corrosive elements before they get a chance to start work . . . new easy-care maintenance features such as self- adjusting brakes, long-life aluminized exhaust system and increased lubrication intervals . . . the proven dependability and economy of Chevy ll’s Super-Thrift 4- and Hi-Thrift 6-cylinder engines. Get in on this new brand of excitement . . . see the new Chevy II for '63! (‘orvair‘s distinctive brand of driving fun and agile elegance takes on new excite- ment for I963! Graceful new styling. highlighted in gleaming metal trim. makes it cvcn more of an eye-catcher on the road . . . new rformancc and maintenance features make it more than ever a family-budget favorite. New self-adjusting brakes, cxtcnded-life exhaust system. and an improved front suspension add cxtravalue to cvcr_v Corvair model. make the going extra-easy for you! Proved and acclaimed, (‘orvaifs uniquércar-engine design and balanced weight distribution give superior road traction. stable. steady going on all kind of roads . . . with plenty of gasoline economy! And for those who like their sports—car excitement ore and powerful. thcreis the new Monza Spyder’. with I50-hp Turbocharged I45 engine and all the trim and trappings of a real sportstcrl For sheer fim and family enjoyment, there's nothing like the ‘(:3 Corvairl ‘Optional (:1 extra Nut. 4. What is the diff-erem-e between Binaural and Monaural Hearing? J. E. Ramsay Consultant FOR yous HEARING NEEDS AND rnonuzus. SEE um AT: Charlottetown Hotel — Phone 894-7371 Thursday. Nov. ‘ls? ‘I0 a.rn.—7 p.m. Wains Pliannacy—oppositc Post Office Sinnmcrslclc. Friday. Nov. 2nd Wliitewnll tires optional at extra cod Corvnlr Moon Club Coupe , '°-"«i»"-'??3-7«'-’¥7'+l- vi“-3"-33-331:“ ’53 UHEVRULET-atyaurdealerk one-stop shopping centre Saturday. Nov. 311! Phone ‘I00 I Puma-'8 P1“. Be sure to. see Bonanza on the CBC-TV network each Sunday. Check your local listing for channel and time. GOODSPEEDS (P. E. I.) LIMITED 0 Charlottetown 51-1 4-G571