ll} *1 I x - Hiller's Grand Slam Enables Giants To Even Series ll it's Good For the Island Ihe Guardian Is For It u'Irn.n rnnnows LIKE rms sun AMONG ‘moss: Nnnpnvo HELP Island Wide Fund Drivel Will Be Launched Today Months of planning and organ- izing come to a head a a Prhlca Edward Island embarks on its first campaign of the new ‘ §ruinn‘ce Edward Island United Since the deeialon to Imd-an s taloa the Island-wide venture was meetinli have gone down in history including one which set ‘its; all-over objective at $127,- Breaking the total objective down. Prince County's objective has been set at $24,000; Queens County. $26,000; Kings County. 8ummereide’s ob ’ Cold And Heavy Rains Keep CanadiansHome W s in the low nos in magi parts of the country and storms with ‘heavy rains in both eastern and western coasts Canadians spent the Thanksgiv- in: holiday in a relatively quiet manner year. mfifiide - "from special - cllulgtll 0-aosaduc. ‘ ted by many e- nominations ., a scattering °3 Sports , sum pr nces "P011 little ' Ictivity to mark the 84th co tive annu Ry ‘rm: cltiulnlan PRESS ith immature‘ 3 , acm- tram-. Hnht.-V ln~Ga|lIli_ ‘E a wagaengratitlz 1”‘? iii 0|‘. e as vs to the . ' ~ -mu... ""“"“""’ °‘” "muses min home to “M or the World Ihriei television and "Mills ' ' In use fgmily and friends. -en ""°" l °'f I .. "id be2sd"_xtII'l.':»lap.ll)egsr‘:r.l:le.‘ b” ‘ l 9‘ reported quite heavy. Many stores were open for business and no special celebrations tools are Most parts of Ontario en- joyed mild or sun and warm weather conditions and p:e:in- ‘E. flainpolloe no “flu )3! re r on m r L aye. o major tle-um nucx mason OWN! The duck hnslng season opened in Mgifoba Friday. brliifillll many In tr to the auras s firms and beer ill: 2|; o‘ut'letsD:’ere“.‘oloeed for s was , _ n in llninnlpeg enjoyed I sunny I 13 Q‘ =< slfllavllvlestber was the '°°..*...'.f°:::""..‘“ ‘°"' '".‘.:.:: o .. peratures ‘in and skies main y sunny. f It ht clouds. V :dv°alltsg'e of.the tbs:-in holi- day for huatlnl‘ UPI and esters Yootlll 0011'- WHO‘! ut- IVI has been at sas.ooo while Charlottetown-has a goal of $118,’ 467 to re ch a . Geting underway today will be the advance gifts. local busi- ness. professional collect one. The rural general canvass will get underway Get. with the resldentialsclanvaps 0 tom: tamer- side beginning Oct. 29 and con- tinuing until the end of the campaign G Out. 81. Organisations taking part in- clude: Canadian Natignal In- stit the Ilind: anadian fut Poliomyeiitis are ::E§ ration -2habliltation—P.E.I. Chap-' Canadian Association; _Cerebral_ Palsy Cen- Cross--P.E.I. Socisl Wel- otte ‘ ire; Cans chapter Catholic '. ‘gm. Welfare “Covers Prince A _ MacDonald Mental Health 3 was asaaeia 7'0 Ovds-seas Man it! and ltethymnis lns‘tIh'KIltlIflDdls h M asuulsu : pg I . ............ ‘HUG.’ ososu-.g....I...-‘: from the as the s ‘ministration said. ‘ Mrs. Roosevelt is Recovering NEW YORK (AP) — Mrs. to Columbia Presbyterian Med- ical Centre for an infectious lung condition, was reported to- day to be "up and around and progressing satisfactorily." A sli ht ver which recurred last weal: has disappeared. a hospital spokesman said. The widow of the late U.S. president. will be 78 Thursday. I! HAROLD MORRISON own shcompsny w h.’ ciates. constituted the impo :- ll. of com. . II I . . were eight csnedien the British flag and ip Management Company uoteers Limited. London. The in time administration est said Counties ship Management tedwltll hi Limited, Landon. foremost handlers of cargoes for Cuba in the free world during the first eight months of the year. " is ‘ more or! Jhipstbetmedas talofns trtpe.orIIio!'ethsn crescent byfree of World. ships to Chiba ' :3; ad- tankers in the Cuban trade. is were associated with this dflrvias WILL CLOSE PORTS Prellden Kennedy has urged terestricttheue Franklin D. Roosevelt. confined t s .\\‘ u.s. sure‘ osrr. « _ \. Canadla ;\ Owned B ht hnndlio ll destin 5 g3 with the ,8. its fiumcrlio I The Dew” Edward Island Like , OCTOBER 9, 1962. FOR STORY SEE PAGE 9 ‘ WEATHER Cloudy and a little cooler; north gusting to 30. Low-high 45 and 5 winds 20 5. "°{.'“'§°“ SEVEN CENTS ' 16 PAGES Riots Flare Ali UN Gates One Killed, One In Two Traffic Ac Christine. a schoolteac Wood Islands. - The funeral was held 'R.C. MacPhee. NVDP On ~ ls..Re:.el. ronorrro , er 13‘; stir und- ff-cred Mari- / ' end of y noon ected by leadership Democrat 'MI‘. M year as its pred ere . an hour U d Yar- 9 o s smashed Ind V and three KA land Cape fishing craft, 35 et in ED ! t deck of a govern- . at Sandy Point. near; was washed awa ‘ -foot building was lost. signs, telephone lines. a ‘ d a ballpark fore the wind in - armouth. Communications in Au Shelburne and Yarmouth V‘ / r f-/ To Cuba . " riiish Firm I as subsidiaries of Counties Ship Management. Names of the Canadian ships: l Beech Hill. Cedar Hill. Fir Hill. * Maiden Hill. Mulberry Hill. . Streatham Hill. Sudhury Hill . and Sycamore Hill. C TRIPS , k w \\_\ \\ \ I \ ‘r' ' ll « ercial shipping in ommunist cargoes « Cuba in two weeks U.S. _- closed to shi s snsport Commun st - Cuba on the same (In I. * on of their 0 ll Hill. Sudhury. ll ham Hill made» direct trips rom Russia tol C b \report} rgoes I fro t East . European ports. ‘ firm 1. filo p i trade with Cuba prcciable extent. I The traditional European maritime nations are providing bulk of the free world ship- pigg for trade with Cuba. to any ap- 9 QB ev- owned by cadis Overse Puightere Limited. Halifax. and one owned by Vancouver 0rl- . Free world ships greatly ex- Llmited. Vancou- ceed number Soviet bloc were described ships trading with Cuba. Jap Shipping Firm Plans To Drop Service To Cuba TOKYO t-AP) -— A J hfaru. new on the Golf-Carib mm. Inpgllwadrop heanl‘oute.teunieadUtmsof nave bw hbel. enema. foreign carrying Mitsni took xhe action for fear goods to from anchoring of a possible outburst of Amer- et ports. ioen‘ nation Aspokesmenfortbelfltsnles boycotting .1 steamship Company Ltd. said ments':y American longs the has ‘:0: labor assists. the consent ordered 11.0w-tee freisiltc ledsks 4 l at New Harbor. , Strike Dallas ‘ d ' “ml p-. ¢ f gjuflulla ioiiae lIIdfll;for!lIValIltIeaCris- ct‘ termed de- —vice is the equivalent of be- lniured Cl nl’S. FAMILY FLEES AS BULL AR-R;lVES ST. JOHN'S. Nfld. ‘CPl—- Peirick Walsh. his wife and 13 children didn‘l. waste any time leaving their home by any exit available when a bull crashed through their front door onday. The b w h i c h had broken loose from its moor- in,'7.s. looked over the house for a few minutes. then con- tinued its dash down Black- hc-ad Hill on the southern outskirts of the city. The Walsh family, uninjured, re- claimed their ouse. The hull was finally cor- ncred by some men an went back to tethered life. Following Cuban Speech Castro Backers Attacked NEW YORK (AP) .» Anti Castro Cuban demonstrators at- tacked Castro supporters with rocks and fists at the United Nations gates Monday. resumed ti--~ fight in Hammarskjold Plaza and then mounted a barrage of rotten eggs. Police, who had watched the As the result of two widely The pallbearers were: J.W. ._-' // ii at about. separated highway accidents, Bell; Jack Giliis; Allan Nichol- ~ ... Bren-‘ both involving trucks, one man son; J. Stewart Ross. ML ' Bristol. is dead and another is a patient James Benton; and Louis R n ribs and in the Prince Edward island Flower bearers were: Neil ' , a minor 1 Hospital. hart MacNeil; t he wasl The dead man is Robert 8in- , comrmt. ciair Nichol . 26 of Belle - River. He was killed when a - ported to tru he was driving left the Ross. Murdock i when Mr highway at about 4 o'clock Sst- Nicholson; Les ~ ' truck Casi. urday afternoon. on ewart; - ad mt Cong The accident is to Interment w e‘ ruck is‘ of Belfast Church. The vehicle In th ma breaking- went off the highway. struck a ‘- ‘ culvert and nosed over. ’ When found Mr. Nicholson was - found to have beenllthrown part ’ ' _ pinned . " . . ””Damy cut off for most of Sunday‘. disrupted telephone lines. e restored late in the day.‘. -Minor telephone disruptions? hcurred around Halifax andl .:- ee without phones Monday. At Peggy's Cove, 15 miles ‘west of here, a father and son ’ drowned when they were we off rocks by a giant wave. Their l bodies were not recovered. Four other surf watchers were res- w er They were among the: hundreds of people who went to? the picturesque fishing village: to watch the waves vent their.’ furv on the rocks. l DRIVEN AGROUND The winds tore a 269-ion seal-j -ing vessel adrift from her pier-J lsidc moorings Sunday afternoon! miles west‘ of Halifax a n d drove herl aground. A smaller vessel alsol was driven ashore in the same place There were no injuries. Cloudbursts DALLAS (AP) -— Cloudburst- type rains struck Dallas before dawn Monday creating floods that drove residents from their homes, washed cars off streets and paralyzed traffic in the north portion of the city. Residents called it the worst flooding they ever had wit- nessed here. No one was drowned. Two persons died in the rain area outside Dallas in traffic accidents blamed on slick highways. The rain fell at a rate of an inch an hour for four hours be- fore slacking off. Dallas rainfall 2 total was 4.92 inches by late‘ afternoon « , Heaviest reported rain was at-I slightly week. it has been announced by 9 J. L' Lipan south of Fort Wm-th—5.49‘ inches. ‘- Algeria Becomes . 'lO9i'h UN Member; at‘ D basis. are: 7. Rod. durum 50 cents; M1 for Blue. down 25 cents; 75 for Stan- Slams Top Blow Ar. Australian couple and a Scottish seaman heading for Halifax in a 36-foot converted fishing vessel escaped with a wetting early Monday when the Harbor. 70 miles north- storm grounded their boat on ‘east of here. Some small south a beach at Seaforth, about 20 . shore communities were stilllmiles east. of here. The vessel, rwhich the trio had sailed from lscotland and the Azores. was Iseverely damaged. Seventy - five nor»-{tent of Nova Scotia's:+:l,700.000 -2 bushel apple crop was still on An- napolis Valley trees when Daisy cued after being swept into the l struck. N0 CROP DAMAGE J. R. Wright... director of the agriculture d e p a r tment's re- search station at Kentville said crop. Mr Wright said about five per cent of the applies in the sta-. in form were knocked wn.' bv the wind. He said a damage I survey would be carried out to-E in southern New Brunswick damage appeared confined to lost fishing weirs. The tropical storm, before moving into the Maritimes. was blamed for at least 24 deaths in New England. In Boston Monday the public health commissioner advised house-holders to use a disinfect- ant when cleaning flooded cel- lars. There were widespread re- ports of contamination as a re- sult of sewage backing up when sewer traps were opened to drrin cellars. The winds died out in the Ngw England area Monday, but showers continued. Steer Prices Ease Slightly Anticipated prices for the week of Oct. it for the two top grades of beef steers are down the previous mcoln Dewar. secretary demonstrations all day in fear of trouble occasioned by the ad- dress of Cuban President Os- valdo Dorticos to the United Na- ’ . General Assembly re- peatedly moved in to quickly break up the conflict. Alto et er, 33 persons were taken into custody. The clash occurred when the anti-Castro Cubans spotted the Castro supporters passing out propaganda material a c r o s II First Ave. from them. Seven pickets who had been march- int‘ behind police barricades broke ranks and charged across the avenue As policemen broke up the clash, a ozen patrolmen formed a human wall to block a second charge of anti-Castro ‘ckets. One of the pro - Castro dem- onstrators was hit on the head with a rock and others were pummeled with fists before po- lice could halt the melee. Earlier, officers had picked up :2 man who ran up to Dorti- cos.‘ limousine and tried to re- lease pigeons as. he said. "a "symbol of peace." Pro-Castro demonstrators had started to stack their placards against a tree when the rotten- ‘E l ,as far as was known there was egg barrage began. Many of the i no serious damage to the apple eggs had been injected with a red dye and small containers of red paint or dye also splattered on the street. Dorticos ls Bitter In Speech UNITED NATIONS (AP)-—ln an uproarious meeting of the General Assembly Monday. Cuba called on the United Na- tions to brand as an act of ag- gression any naval blockade of Cuba by the United States. Outside the meeting. Chief 1).!- delegste Adlai Stevenson de- clared that the Fidei Castro re- gime by importing Soviet weap- ons and personnel had turned Cuba into a springboard for eg- gression to overthrow the Amer- ican system. The Cuban posltiesrwas pre- sented by President Osvaldo Dorticos Torrado in a speech interrupted repeatedly by snti-Castro hecklers. He chal- lenged Stevenson to stand up and give guarantees that there would be no U.8. attack on his ou ry. Stevenson, deferring to UN tradition, refused to answer the chief of state directly in the as- sembly. He told a hurriedly called p res s conference the United States would never com- (Continued on Page 5 Col. 4) «hard, unchanged. . UNITED NATIONS tCP)—The UN admitted Algeria as its 109th mom-bar Monday. The election was by scclama- tion of the General Assembly without a vote. Algerian Premier Ahmed Ben he rd a long series of statements by assembly mem- bers congratulating the new na- lion. Ben Belle will address the assembly today. Russian s Fire 'I8th Bomb Test WASHINGTON (AP) — The soviet Union has exploded an- other lntermediata'- range nu- clear device in the atmosphere over its Arctic testing site. the .S A nergy_ Commis- iate - range tween mm is 1,000,000 tons of 1. Kensington Man Killed Hunting SUMMER-SIDE BUREAU OF‘ THE GUARDIAN A young Kensingion man. Paul Gregg Bernard. 21. died almost instantly Saturday when a" double-barnelled shot- lain accidentally discharged while he was a passenger in a fishing boat returning frun hunting trip. The charge struck him in the shoulder. The accident occurred around 4.1!) Saturday afternoon. Mien the victim was sitting in the bow end of the boat whfle Wil- lard Colcs. New London, owner of the boat. Ottdlllflfl to I theta relesed by tin tine VII Information Police hidieated that at of the afternoon ,5 C iii of Coroner. Dr. Ll. Prowse was called to the scene and announced that no inquest will be held. ed by s parents. Mr and M Aulson Bernard a brother. ’!:ed. iovyed at F