I II It's Good For The Island The Guardian Is For it s @1112 @tto1:odIimit “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” 0L. LXXVII. N0. 11 NEIL A, MATHESON. pro- vincial and farm editor of The Guardian and The Evening Patriot was made an honorary dairy farmer by the Dairy Farmers of Canada last night at ceremonies at the Char- Island Man Is Re-Elected Chairman OI Dairy‘Bureau By BERNIE RAINE .1. Lincoln Dewar of Char- lottetown and New Perth yes- terday \vas re-elected chairman of the board of the Canadian Dairy Foods Service Bureau at the first annual meeting held at the Charlottetown Hotel. R. Martin of Montreal was elected vice-chairman while F R. McCalla of Edmonton is se- cond vicc-chairman. Other members of the board are: Fournicr. Ont.: Brady. Weston, Ont.: J. War- burton, Poplar Point, Manitoba; god R. Marin. Sl. Hyacinthe. .Q. Dairy Foods Service Bureau is to advartize and promote tiie sale of dairy foods. The meeting yesterday approved an adver- tising budget of $548,500, which Includes funds for the home ser- vices and merchandizlng sec- tions of the bureau. TEST KITCHEN service section operates a test kitchen with three home economists under the charge of Marie Fraser. This service develops and tests many thousands of recipes fea- turing dairy foods and approxi- mately 500,000 recipe pamph- lets tested by this service are The purpose of the Canadian ’ Authorised as Dopartmut. Ottawa. loltetown Hotel. Mr. Matiheson was present ' a certifi- cate. showing that he was a dairy farmer and the con- ditions which he'was to ob- serve, by John K. Dickson. Ormstown. Que,, president of ..- A.- J. LINCOLN DEWAR distributed in C a n a d a each year. The merchandizing section provides point of sale promu- tions of various sorts, including displays for circulation to more than 4,000 stores across Canada The advertising budget pass- ed at yesterdays meeting in- cluded an allocation of $125,000 for a series of newspaper ad- uifu the Dairy Farmers of Canada. Sound Clua sun» he ran omen yoynutdputuohufi. CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, TUESDAY, JANUARY 14, 1964 Ship Div The Imperial Oil Co_ tanker J. Edward Simarrd. assisted by the CCGS Tupper, was making sl w progress towards Char- lottetown late last night. They were in I-[ilisboro Bay and in 24 hours had moved about 10 miles_ Early in the night they were an estimated six to seven miles from the dock. At midnight they were still not in sight from the Railway wharf. Meanwhile a fertilizer‘ ship en route to Charlottetown, the MV Fossheim, was divert to Georgetown. reach her new destination. David Scales of the Island Fertilizer Corp_. said last night a resident of White Sands told him the Fossheim had reached High Bank when the decision Steps Taken To Keep Peace Also presented with similar certific ates were J aimes Thompson, editor of the Marl» 5 time Farmer and Jack John- saon. in charge of the Marl- iime farm broadcast of the CBC I Funds for this large advertis» ing budget are raised entirely from the dairy producers across Canada. A large proportion of the 3.000 dairy farmers contri- bute. They give through a de- duction of one quarter of one percent of all cheques received purchasers make the deduc- tions on behalf of the Bureau. Prince Edward Island dairy farmers are the leaders in con- tributions with 100 percent col- ’ Next are Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta with and Saskatchewan, and Alberta and British Columbia. Each re- gion elects four members. ex- cept Ontarlo and Quebec, who elect six each. Three officers of the‘Dairy Farmers of Canada are ex-efficio members as well as the executive, which is made up of one member from eac Bureau region except Ontario D for milk or cream products. The ing \V Columbia Agreement Reached By ARCH MacKENZIE OTTAWA (CPI — Canadian% and United States negotiators have reached agreement on the huge Columbia River hydro and flood control pro_jcct, ' was announced Monday night. External Affairs Minister Martin. at the end of a meet- ‘h U.S. and B.C. repre- sentatives. said he hopes for a signing of the accord very shortly. indicated that ceremony could take place Jan. 22- date when Prime Minister Pear- son Is to visit President John- 3 no In Canal Zone PANAMA CITY tAP)—T-he United States and Panama took a first step toward patching up differences Monday by agreeing to creation of a joint authority rganization of to keep the ‘peace in the canal zone. Amid signs of decreasing ten- sion, Thomas C. Mann, per- sons‘. envoy of President John- paid a farewell call 0 nama Pre ident Robert Chiari before leaving for Wash- ington to report to Johnson. Mann expressed guarded opti- mism as he talked to reporters just before entering the presi- dential palace for his secon meeting with Chiari during his t y. ,u n (I e r the 0 ‘.American States -gm -5 ltsa Cabinet Shuffle ls Delayed Week OTTAWA (CP)—-The cabinet shuffle Prime Minister Pearson hoped to complete before leav- ing tonight for Paris has been postponed for a week. A spokesman Pear- erred NUT MORE THAN OIL DRILLING SAID POSSIBLE To Georgetown was taken about noon to divert her to Georgetown. She had re- traced her course only as far as White Sands about two miles, several hours later. The ship is carrying 3,000 tons super phosphate which will no-w be trucked to Charlottetown, Ice conditions at Georgetown’ were rerpcrted light and it was expected the Fossheim could reach dock there under her own ower. ‘ The Simard, with a cargo of 60,000 barrels of fuel oils, sailed from Halifax about 6 pm, Fri» day. She entered the iccfield. 15 miles east of Cape Bear near daybreak Sunday_ . Reports at Halifax yester- day indicated applications have been made for licences to drill for oil on the eastern end of Prince Edward island. At the same time it was reported the Nova Scotia government is taking “con- siderable interest in the rum- ors" because the boundaries of Northumberland S tr a i t have not yet been fI'xed and the oil exploration area may fall within Nova Scotia‘s territory. The area in question h as not yet been explored for oil by drilling. Surveys earlier had disclosed possible oil- bearing formations w h i c h form a plateau toward the eastern end of P.E.I. Murder Attempt, Robbery IIS Charge Facing Two Boys I MONTREAL (CPl—Twn boysy were charged with attempted‘ murder and robbery with vio-I The thieves stole her purse containing a week's wages. Miss St. Maurice is in hospi- WEATHER Heavy snowfail warning; snow ending by evening; northeast winds 30, gusts to 50. Low-high 5 and 20. SEVEN CENTS 12 PAETES Giant Storm Dumps Snow Florida To New England ‘ lravel ls Crippled, 26 Deaths Reported NEW YORK (APl—A travel- crippling. scliool-closing Storm, labelled a blizzard in some northern sections of the United States. dumped snow from Flor- ida in New England Monday. Another snowstorm hit the U.S. midwest a heavy blow and then moved eastward from the Mississippi River to join with the southern-spawned lwin into a gigantic storm system the weather bureau called the win- ter's worst. West of the Mississippi. skies generally were clear and tem- peratures cold. The mercury fell to 43 degrees below zero at Fra- r. Colo. I At least 26 deaths were at- Itributed to the weather. directly I r indirectly. including eight in ;‘New York City. Traffic acci- Idents accounted for most. with I ributed to overexertion or carbon monoxide poisoning. ‘THOUSANDS SNOWBOUND . The storm left thousands of ‘ ‘em’ M°"d"‘y l" °°“""°“°“ “"”‘- tal suffering from shock. broken. rura’. residents and travellers Ithe beating of a 19-year-old‘ waitress in a suburban St. ,Michei cafeteria last Saturday land were ordered to undergo a , mental examination. I I The boys. brothers aged WI ‘and 15, appeared before juve- nile court. judge John Long. The case was postponed until Jan. 27. I Det.-Capt. Fernand Dinelle oi the St. Michel police said the waitress. Lise St. Maurice, was Ifound lying naked and bleeding from the mouth, head and sev- eral cuts about the body. Police had to break through a padlocked door to get to the girl who could be heard. whim- pering inside after an anony mous telephone caller informed them someone could be found I injured in the cafeteria. The letters FLQ had been written on Miss St. Maurice's stomach with her own blood. Police said they were con- vinced Le Front de Liberation ‘Quebec0is. a terrorist outfit gwhich plagued the Montreal area with bombings over a 10- week period last spring, was not ‘ involved in the beating. 1 Police said they believed the girl surprised thieves breaking ribs and a fractured nose and ‘aw snowbound in Indiana ‘and llli-I finois. Some 500 motorists took 49 IN THIS PROVINCE 26,000WinlerHomes -Set lo Collect Bonus 0 WA (CPl—M0re than; said that of the first 26,678 2:; Canadians are cashing inl‘ ' I 26, the government's $500'bonus for rcfuae with the 1.200 residents of the central Illinois commu- ‘ of .‘\'e0:a. stranded by snow-clogged highways. Ten-foot drifts blocked traffic in the Kentland area of north- western Indiana. trapping about 2.000 travellers. A 75-car New York Central Railway freight train picked up many of them .and took them to Fowler, Ind.. Iwhere they could get passenger ‘trains. E *3.’ Flights virtually hailed at New York and Wasliington met- ropolitan airports. as well as many other fields in the east and midwest. The airliner bringing Italian President Antonio Segnl to the United States from Rome was diverted from Philadelphia to Montreal. Another transatlantic flight. from London to to . York. was directed to Detroit to land. Others were sent to Ber- |muda and Canada. “AUTOS BANNED Automobiles were banned lfrom the Pennsylvania Turn- pike unless they were equipped with snow tires or chains. .\'ew York City sent out I force of street - sanding and ‘snow removal crews numbering ;6,500 men and 1,500 pieces of ;equipment to work on major ,routes. . I Schools were dosed in many ;sections of the south, mldwest and northeast. Light snow faliing In De Pu- iniak in the Florida panhandle ‘was the first there in six years. The flurries extended to the IGulf Coast at Mobile, Ala. piications approved winter-built homes, thereby cre- tario. ating construction jobs for an-;‘ other 95,000 Canadians. The labor department Monday it has received about. 29,500 applications to date the ncwiy-introduced "incentive, figure is ex-L pected. to reach 30,000 before the- program expires March 31. Many applications are rejected. payment." The The 1,156, Alberta 3,627, British lwest Territories 31. Icovered will cost between $12, I000 and $18,000 and will be fl- dcpartment estimated. nanced by government that 95,000 construction workers About 7,000 dwellings. mostly loans , 8,902 came from Quebec and 8.189 from On- Breakdown for the other prov- Co-I lumbia 2,687, Yukon anr‘ North-, About two-thirds of the homes; MARITIMES ARE BRACED . N e w f o u n 180, saidi‘ Prince Edward Island 49, Nova ‘ Scotia 336, New Brunswick 233, for] Manitoba 1,288, Saskatchewan HALIFAX (cpl - Snow began falling in tihe southern Maritimes late Monday night and all three provinces were warned to prepare for severe storm today. ‘ The weather office here .-aid the storm. the same one I that smruck the eastern Un- lwo Nuclea Aboard Cra and Quebec, who have two members each. The Bureau is an autonomou.~I committee of the Dairy Farm- ers of Canada. vertisements across Canada. Officers of the Bureau 3 ol will (Continued on page c . 51 OTTAWA (CP) —- The RCAF wll’. be withdrawn from all combat roles, with the possible exception of anti - submarine pflflol work, within five years. llflhorities forecast Monday. They predicted that the serv- ice will become an aimost-ex- cluslvely transport force and that its combat roles in home .. on D , . 7 lens are already being made to, expand tatlon Tnnlms} 0nl.. headquarters for transport command. . lessening emphasis on Q! role of combat jet planes is causing consider-ablc ~ har- E’. at that the western sector of ’ STRESS PLACED ON TRANSPORT ‘ Early End Being Forecast For RCAF Combat Role The CF-104 station at Gros [feel the government shouldn't Tenquin. France, is expected to ‘attach extraneous or irrelevant be closed and the CI-‘-104s at Marvllle, France, converted to a photo-reconnaissance role. Associate Defence Minister Cardin announced Friday dis- bandment of two Voodoo squad- rons, ‘leaving three. Previously it was announced Mid-Canada Warning Line will be dismantled and that plans for installation of more radars to detect low - flying bombers have been The U.S. bomber and avsllalte intelli- gence reports indicate Russia isn't building any new types of lflsment in the RCAF because bombers It is in th process of introduc- ing Itl-Jet training. By the time this training program "‘ " ""' swing there may be few if any ucegt ttralners. Defence mqidtegrgeil has - n yer hnouncsd reyectton of CA!’ I C!‘ - 1011! Officials said it is obvious the Canadian government at least no longer considers orth American air defence a vital military role. ‘ DISCONTENT IN FORCES Meanwinle. there is discon- tent in the armed forces about some reasons the government is giving for defence reductions. urce the rrent econ- omy drlve in the defence depart- ment makes good sense but they scrapped. ,1) is junking the B-47 ‘ reasons to announcements con-I cernlng defence cuts. They cited ’ Ithese two examples from Fri- ,day's announcement of the dis- ‘bandment of two Voodoo squad- ,rons: e announcement planes from the disbanded squadrons at Ottawa and North ay. 0nt.. would be moved to .the squadrons at Chatham. N.B. and Bagotville, prove operational mmote econom . Informed sources said there will be economy. But the de- cision flew in the face of es- tablished NORAD policy of dis- persing Interceptors as much as ., in efficiency and said‘ CUMBERLAND, Md. A U.S. Strategic Air Command bomber carrying two nuclear weapons crashed in flames Monday on a snow-covered Ap- palachian mountainside. The commander of the five man crew bailed out. landed safely on a western Maryland farm, and said the other mem- bers of his crew had ‘left the‘ plane before him. Meanwhle, i.he West Virginia Civil Air Patrol said in Charles- ton it bad word that two crew bomber which crashed in west ern Maryland had been found. Arab Leaders Open Talks CAIRO (AP) -— Arab kings. presidents. sheiks and strong- men met at summit meeting unity and ‘quickly went into se- cret scssion to action against Israel. President Gamal Ahdot Nas- ' user of the United Arab Repub- lic addressed the opening ses- sion of 13 Ara rulers and their delegations. C"-‘rt-son-rl ents heard part ofit, then were ordered out of the meeting room. . ' (APl-— , the air force. ‘Husband Is Dead I PARIS (AP) Mme. Ngo Dinh Nhu said Monday she has asked the United Nations to investigate the November coup in South Viet ex- rVVeapons shed Plane Mai E_ H_ Chieves Said thel “I am not certain these two (report was picked up by the ‘ men are dead." she said, add- (c_A_p, radio network, but its ing that a widely circulated -;source was not immediately ; photograph of their bodies was ;e5Lab1ished not convincing. She said the . I He said the C.A.P. had word ‘bodies were not recognizable. first owner of a home must complete construction be-tween |Dec. 1 and March 31. The in- centive applies to single dwell- Iings, duplexes. triplexes and four-unit dwellings. Once the home is completed, I a government employee inspects pressed doubt that her husband it, the owner fills out an app1i~, applications. 900 were rejected and President Ngo Dinh Diem: cation for the bonus, and if all; because they did not meet con. [conditions are met, a cheque lfor $500 arrives in the mail. I HEAVY RESPONSE L The response has been heav- iiest by r in Quebec and On- ; tario. I A labor department statement 90 percent of the potential. son m Washington. son's office said the cabinet will , into the cafeteria after she was will be employed as a direct re- multiple units, will cost more, iled States Monuiacv. would The negotiators declined to imeet today. but changes in the left behind by two other em- sult of the program and that an-, than . and about 3,300; de1,,.e.r up to to jnghas at FIVE REGIONS . reveal any details until the ‘ministry will not now be made I ployees to close up at 2 am. other 115,000 workers in the homes will cost less than $12-‘ snow in some areas today BTrh°re_ at‘: f‘;'/F r‘i‘;l1‘°"S,I‘,’f lihe documents have been prepared Iuntil next Monday at the ear-3 Ibuilding materials industry will, 000. ‘I Heavy smwfan wanfing; eel; e3iu.ebece oratair;(r:ieMal:i%bl: for signature. l]IeSi.. on Mr. Pearson-5 return. J].-A Nhu Doubts, be affected indirectly. ; There were 2,433 duplexes, 134 “.9”. msueii fnr the three ' v v zlvllllco , To qualify for the bonus, the‘ triplexes. 539 four-unit dwell p['(yVin(_9§ severe drifting ings and 23,522 single houses, Iadding up to 31,096 housing‘ units. Of this group, 15,640 are lng built for sale, 10,011 are occupancy by the applicant and} 1,027 are being built for rent. In the original batch of 27,795} The leading edge of thc orm moved into southern . st If’oer'1 Nova Scotia at mid-evening southern tip of the province. The snow was causing trad- Iditions and 190 were cancelled! fie problems here u early Iby the applicants. V The number of applications is_ Iexpected to drop sharply this lmonth since the deadline for, Icomplelion is only 21/: months away. as midnight Monday. At midnight the I‘¢.dI0 range at Charlottetown repo winds here were northeast 15, Light show had just started that the two men were alive I ‘after ejecting from a B-52 jet 1- .-bomber and were taken to al . hospital. ‘, ‘ Maj. Thomas w. McCormick. ‘ ‘commander of the B-52 jet -,bomhcr. was xv member heard from after the ‘crash. V down on a farm near Grantsville. Md., about 24 Imiies west of here, a few miles ‘from the crash scene. I “I'm bruised bu not injured. that I know of," he told The Associated Press by tele- one. The 42-year-old plane com- By GEORGE CONDON Admission fees to Sunday (hockey games. the resignation ‘(of the city engineer and discus- Ision of gambling machines were .mander said he had walked for the main topics last niizht as nearly six hours through a snow ‘Charlottetown City Council met blanket two to three feet deep Tfor its regular monthly meeting. '-to reach the farm, two or three I The resignation o' Norman ‘miles from the crash scene. gstewart as city engineer was Th!‘ Plane “'85 described flslaccepted “with regret" last a Stralcflif‘ Ail‘ C0m"‘3“ ‘night after Mr. Stewart showed bfimbfl‘ “I'll “'0 ““a"“°d "“‘ his intention not to withdraw 0'39“ “"‘3I_’""5- H ‘his notice. He had been asked at ”M”_ I -the last meeting of Council tr. ‘reconsider his resignation and to give his decision at last night's meeting. Mr. Stewart showed his will- ingness. however. to rcma‘n in the position. within a reasonable ‘U D‘ IZanzibo“r~—#.M ISeoled Off possible to try to avoid their total destruction on the ground with two or three long - range missiles. The announcement also (said removal of the 10 voodoos from Ottawa would reduce the den- sity of air traffic at Uplands viousty that the electronic war- fare squadron at St. Hubert. ., will be moved to Uplands. It has 10 CF-100 lots. INSIDE TODAY Births. deaths . . . . .. 3. I1 asslfle . . . . . .. ll. 11 Comic! .. . .. .. Editorials 4 . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . 5 Kl!-gs. Queen. City .... .. merslde Women’: Finance. markets . . . . .. 12 ‘ DAR Es SALAAM. Tansan time, until the job was filled M It yika (APl—The African was decided that stops tlonalist regime of Zanzibar wonky be taken immediam-V. -n sealed off the island nation .d,,,.,.fi_,,,,z for the p,,5;,.;,,_.,, M°“‘I3Y “b 5"l’I’°"9"' °I ”‘9‘Counclilor E.M. Mac-Rae :.:~irl ousted -"3 ¥°"°"'m°"' "mac had been hoping that Mr. ' l’"""°d 3"" p“m“3 "9 ‘ "gm" Stewart would change his mlllfl. “:s"h"::r':g; afinmfg ‘Agile’ but now that the decision had streets of Zanzibar City. shoot- aggulgebzoafiigefinlfagllg log and looting. the U.S. began -S W" done by wt S'eV‘m_t removing 01 of the as AmerI- ~ ‘ ‘ ‘ cans on the island to the (LS. IUNDAY HOCKEY I navy destroyer Manley. :Debated As City ckey, Coun I I I I I I I I I NORMAN STEWART being scheduled In the new Char- Iottetown and Dbtrict Junior Hockey League, a major dis- cussion arose last night as to the possibility of any admission fees being charged. Both Coun- ;elllors A.L. Wright and MacRae Willi Sunday hockey gameslvolccd stmngexception to any (Continued on page I col. 3) ‘fin ! Slot Machines . I taken he could see nothing wrong I the city's youn-izcr people-—-and. to fall. Light snow was fail- ing at Moncton but had not _ve started in Summerside. There was snow and dniftlntl at Halifax. —:—j Abandoned Plant At Truro Burns ‘mono Ice) — Damage from ‘I M t a spectacular fire which des- admission fees. demanded or W-.,yed an abandoned milk plant tvoluniary contributions for the,y_e,—,. Monday night a ‘lame-1 itimc threatened adjacent hie):- Councillor w.n. Mac.\.'eill. we mill. may run as his as who explained the purpose ofI$100.000. firemen_sa , lohe new hockey league, saidl ’I'he blaze. WI1-ICII broke ‘out Ithere had been no mention of,-Ibout 6 p..m. Monday evening, ees in a letter which asked for K ‘9.‘9“"‘l ‘he Immerm d the Council's support of thesM"I‘ C°"}Pa‘}y pl‘.‘m,a SW93,‘ league. but if a collection was‘i° S‘3“f‘°‘d" L‘m"I"?d W.“ Isuorage and processing build- - - in . ‘with ‘L. " The Truro fire department. He said that the money would assisted by men and equjpmeng '” E“';"‘ "“." ,"."""-V ‘°;’." r“"_‘ from nearby Bible Hill. -p°5°"" ass” m refleamn 0‘ Ithc fire for almost two hour! and kept flames from leaping -;_. ,he could not see anvdiffereiicevtn surrounding buildings of mg ; between that and paying "green! textile complex after a small I fees" for a Sunday afternoon of: “N, in 9 Wm, pmcessh‘ 8° - Ibuilding had been extinguished. I Mr. MacNeill explained lhat,; Borden Company had ciogyj iin his opinion, going to a hoc-idmvn "per-ationg in use milk Iltey game on Sunday to be (‘II-imam in Novp|'nb(\r and 1 ho ltcrtained was no different. v‘romI building had been purchased by Igoing home and watching a foul ., sgan.n,~:¢-1'5 Limm-d Decem- bali game on television. I 1-,4-1-_ I Councillors Wright and Mac-; The structure, located at tho Iftae both said they had no ob» (-("nor nf ayvew and Logan Ijections to the games being play-‘ Streets was an "L-shaped” ‘ led on Sunday. but they did not: two-storey frame buldlng. A ‘feel that money should be in- service station attendant neu- Ivolved. by. said he hear a loud explos- lt was explained that the ion and the plant erupted QB mes. »