If it's’ Good For the Island The Guardian is For it VOL. Lxxv. N0. 214 I Alllllnrlfi ll loeouduel ouawmaeolu @ c one-moo ‘“Covers' Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” Ilallw Hand paymeatelpootaglu WEATHER Overcast with widely separated showers; chance of thunderstorms: winds increas- ing to southerly 15. Low-high 57 and 77. “':_°“""“"" CHARLOTTE’l'0WN, CANADA, TUESDAY, SEPT. 11, 1962. ~05“-5°“ SEVEN cams 14 PAGES PLEBISCITEIIO as HELD No Man's Land Problem Moves Nearer Solution Provision of’ water service within five years and immedi- ate -arovision school accom- modation. street maintenance and fire and l>01l¢€,Pl’0¢€¢fl0!1 were among the provisions of ,. by-law given first and second ____________..___._._.__ Missing U.S. Jet Tanker is located SPOKANE. Wash. (AP')—Two e gounty sh£riff‘s office late Mon- day and said they had located the wreckage of a U.S. Air Force jet tanker with 44 per- sons believed aboard. The sheriff's office said it re- reived a report that the wreck of the KC-135 of the Strategic 11 SP0- kane. about 20 miles northeast here. The report said bodies were at the scene. It was not immedi- ately known how many or if there were any survivors. The plane was reported miss- ‘ n route from Ellsworth Air Force Base, S. D child Air Force Base just west of here early Monday afternoon. Fairchild officials have not yet confirmed that the plane has been found. ‘ in a NATO anti - submarine and readings at Charlottetown City ll meeting last night dc- to' ate No Man's the city of (Inflat- own. Wuhin 40 to 45 days the re- sidents of that area will be asked to indicate in a plebiscite whether they ever ' ' ‘° within the corporate limits of the city. A 60 per cent majority of eligiole voters is required. The matter will then come up or the Municipal Extensions ct governing such amalgamation»: under provincial law. TRAFFIC PROBLEM The traffic problem again shared the limelight as Coun- cillor w.R. MacNeill. speak- ing for the police committee and supported by the council spoke against reconnnenduiz the adoption of the traffic ex- pert‘: report when that plete report was not yet avail- able. Only part of the plan has ‘been presented and the coun- siun clllor stated he was particularly Interested in the location of the 800 available parking sites as well as the meters which would operate on a different time basis. It was emphasized by council that they had asked only for L the report rather than for the implementation of such. How- ever, the impression was not to be taken that Mr. Mane'l's suggestions have been discarded or “put in the wastebasket." as 6 Canadian S-hips Set For Exercise OTTAWA (CPl — Six Cana- dian navy ships will participate fleet exercise in the western sea approches to Britain n ext month, the navy said Monday. They are the aircraft carrier Bonaventure and destroyer es- corts Nootka. Micmac. Cayuga, Crescent and Athabaskan. Also taking. part in the exer- cise, named Sharp Squall Six. will be ships from Britain, Den- mark. Norway and The Nether- lands. Mayor A. Walthen Gaudet ex- pressed it. lso in connection with. the traffic situation, the pr-ass came under fire when coucillor John Nicholson ri a recent (Continued on‘ Page 5 Col. 3) l Nova Scotians‘ Voting Today In 2 Ridings Outbreak ' ease Anthrax Reported ECM Sq ‘OTTAWA (CP)—An outbreak of the virulent bacteria disease anthrax among western buffalo could threaten cattle herds. fed- eral scientists said Monday. mouth disease. which broke out in Saskatchewan in the early 1950s and brought an immedi- ate campaign of slaughter to wipe it out. ‘ The anthrax outbreak has been located near Wood Buffalo National Park. world's largest game preserve. on the Alberta- Northwest Territories boundary. Burning and other remedial actions have been started. Birds such as ravens and crows can carry the spores for 100 miles at a flight. Predators like foxes and wolves also can spread it although none of these carriers is affected by the dis- But, unlike hoof and mouth disease or hog cholera. one sick animal can't pass the disease on to another directly. It takes five to eight days for animals to sicken and they are dead within 48 hours. Vaccina- tlons can be conducted for cat- tle erds. HALIFAX (CP) — Provincial byelectlons will be held today in Iiants East and Inverness to As Freé GRAND FORKS, B.C. (CP)—— RCMP were out in strength and ready for anything Monday while a chilling rain kept sons of freedom doukhobors huddled ifriteldt on. a farmer’: An officer said seven squad cars and 15 room rs of th RCMP Doukhobor squad are keeping a round-the-clock watch on the refugee-like band of 600 Freedomites. “The situation is no clearer than it was when they got here five days ago," he said. “They could decide to stay here for a week or a month. Or they could decide to move Two moves Monday by lead- ers of the Freedomite caval- cade added to the uncertainty. Two carloads of freedomitel headed for Agassiz in the Fra- wlthln and dynaml Rain Falls omites Wait ser Valley, apparently to range for accommodation for -the main body near a Freedo- mite prison there. DUE BACK WEDNESDAY “'0 lrloo-milew est- ‘! ward trek from the British Col- umbia I(ootenays._ Police found no evidence of arson in the ruins of a wooden highway bridge which was burned 13 miles east of here. Highways department. officials posted guards on all river cross- ings in the area. With a long history of terror- ism. Freedomites have burned _ ted bridges, homes. railway tracks and power poles in the Kootenays. Sixty - seven sons of Freedom are serving terms up 0 years at the Agassiz Mountain fill vacancies created earlier this year by deaths. , It will be a fight between the Progressive Conservatives and Liberals alone in both ridings. Inverness had been Liberal. Hants East Conservative. Moist. warm weather was forecast for the voting which will provide the first test of public support for Premier Rob- ert L. Stanfield's progressive conservative government since the 1960 provincial election. In Hants East. 43-year-old undertaker J. Albert Ebtinger of Shuhenacadie, N.S.. is trying ‘ ' ‘ can “hold by his Conservative--fafhca, ‘Ernest - M. Ettinger, who died last spring. The Liberal candidate is law- yer Gerald A. Regan, 34. of Maid Is Sought In Child's Death MONTREAL (CPI Five- year-old Linda Martin was KEITH HOLYOAKE. left. Robert Menzies, center. and John Diefenbaker, prime min-.:.ters of New Zealand, Au- found strangled to death Mon- day at her Napierville home. 25 miles south of Montreal. and provincial police sought a 22- year-old maid for questioning. Police said the maid had been for about six weeks. The child's parents a re Mr. and Mrs. Georges Martin. The child's body was found at noon when the mother returned from a school wherc,,a e teaches. The Martin's two-yea_r- c‘i son was unharmed. The father was working at his nearby garage at the time. working for the Martin familyl J 1 stralia and Canada respective- ly. are shown in a London hotel. They are in London for this week's Commonwealth Prime Ministers Conference. Trio conferred to coordinate positions on conference issues where their interest coincide. (AP Wirephoto from London) 7 I l t .14 Of Family In Hospital As Fire Sweeps Dwelling EDMUNDSTON. N.B. (CP) -- most of Monday morning in thcgonly member of the family to Fire early Monday sent rs of‘ one family to 14 operating room. lfns- Dr Loyola LeBl-aznc said the 1:1 . pital and destroyed their .two- children suffered second ‘a nd’ storey frame home at Green third degree burns. varying In ‘-VESCKPC severe injury and suffer- cd _ol1‘.y ‘a burned -hand Jni foot. he said. Cause of the fire was not River parish, about 2) miles extent of body surface. fromllmown immediately. soueliwest of here. Wmdso . ., who made - successful bid fo Halifax seat in the June 18 f eral election. In the two-member Inverness riding, William N. MacLean, 54, is running for Liberals against Inverness hotel proprietor Al- lan Davis. 43. Mr. acLean. a rvice station 0 rotor, is a brother of the late Roderick MacLean whose death in Jan- uary left the vacancy. The other Inverness seat held by J. S 28 Clyde Nunn, a Liberal. Prison for bombings and arson. 7pm Cuban Situation Causing Mounting Ottawa Anxiety I By JACK BEST OTTAWA (CP) — Officials here are watching the Cuban situation with mounting anx- Iety. Though Canada putlilécly has remained silent on recent Communist arms buildup in the Caribbean is 1 I n d. diplomatic sources privately admit to ‘"2 deeply concerned _RePorts reaching the Cana- dian government have latest big flow of Soviet weep- Meanwhile, diplomatic on to Cuba has been essen- sources re ay a feeling of “filly defensive, ' relief-in view of the heightened They Ibo g the belief 11.8.-Cuban tensions-that Cona- that soviet personnel diaircxports to Cuba have can- In Cuba are technicians. not tinned to 30 III‘. it has not causodany visible , r ecu... dlan - ‘ relaflons. Canada is one of the few in to 0 against Cub the western hcmhpbcro which liberal MP stem lifl I RONTO (CP) - Steven Otto. Y IF . 1 " henna?‘ last_Lbo:::dmeoi=: still have diplomatic ties with the Fidel Castro revolution gov- ernment. U.8. scion FEARED Part of the anxiety felt here results from the pressure which developments Cuba Trade experts-believe the bid in Cuban purchases from Canada is due - to a chroni shortage of dollars Cuba has ex- perienc sin ' s s leaf tobacco were shut out of the American market early this year. » 0 Polls are open from 9 a.m. to 1 . ADT. , E" of her parents for an abortion‘./The N.Y. Doctor Is Arrested In Death Probe NEW YORK (AP) ~—The FBI nine months to 16 years. In homital were Mr. and Mrs. Adestc Deschenes and their 12 and are under sedation. Some from his home about at children ranging in age from will go to surgery for clean up" mile from the Desohenes home. Dr. Guy Savoie. at the hospit- will be skin grafts. . 31 here, said Mr. Deschenes 39. they will all survive. barring l family coming out in various and Mrs. Desahenes, 38, suffe!'- complications." (‘cl severe burns to about 30 per said cent of their bodies. ’Ilhey spent The baby, Marcella. was 20 to 50 per cent. are all in severe pain of thr. wounds and later on there . We feel Dr. LeBlanc the It was discovered about 6:15 am. ADT by Gilbert Lizotte Lizotte rushed to the flaming lDescheces house and met gstagcs of dress. He used the .Desc.hcues car to drive ltamily to hospital here. announced Monday the capture in Europe of a New ‘York Phy- sician sought since the abortion death last June of a teen-aged Dr. Harvey Lothringer. 41. ’was seized in the tiny sovereign state of Andorra that lies on the border between France am. The physician vanished a few days before the dismembered remains of 19-year-old Barbara mento were found in the sewer of Lothr_lngcr's combined home and office in the borough of Queens. U! ‘U 93 B Q- '5' ‘school girl had been delivered into Dr. Lothringei-‘s hands by physiclhn was described as a Authorities said the convent 1‘ ST. JOHN'S. Nfld. (CP) - levision _ Nobody knows ‘what th wood. who simply requeste member of a city-wide abortion ring. V Newfoundland's Premier Small- _ . ‘wood has the province stirred Suggestions are a dime a dozen up again, this time over what but most often mentioned IS the 8 speegbjs about. and Mr.‘Small- d generated in _Weshington for bold action by the United states to topple the Castro e. Canada continues to have ser- ious doubts about the wisdom f any kind of military action For thenflrst six months of 1962 e ‘ totalled $4.49'7.000' —little' more than e-third of last year’: 515.400.0110 for this though it forbid arm: and strategic materials. ‘ lo Probe Of Fines flood a holiday’: pay 2:: lm- preaentlng the D. 1-‘. Mac- Netll trophy to manager and playing coach of the Flyers, let. 1-hsold Monteomcry. hotel (I Smallwood lalk Move‘ Has Nlld. Stirred Up saying. ‘ _ Speculation is running not e’s going to say Wednesday 1n date for a provincial election. Rah‘:-ad and te speech even though he doesnt have to i will blanket the province. hold one until the summer of However. usually informed sources think Mr. Smallwood probably is saving the election time-on all radio stations. isn't to_ toss it into the political circle Wl th the next federal election. Others say he’s simply going to announce that the House will assemble this fall. At proroga- tion last spring esday. Sept. 12. was suggested for the opening of the next session. It's more important than simple announcement that the House will convene. say other lPe¢|-|I3t01‘S- In H10 P351 h€'S lust 1 States ambassador to Canada. 3 try, sources here said Monday issued a statement to the press to make the announcement. RCMP were investigating. The Deschenes children are: Roger, 16, Lorraine, 15. Yvog, I ‘,Noel'v.a, 8, Dora, 7, ,'Fernand. 5. Marcel, 3. Fern- and, 2 and Marcella, nine months. ma‘ ueeze On Canada Seen PM's Speech Theme No New Facts Given in Macmillan Plea ALAN DONNELLY Relations secretary S u n c an LONDON (CP)—Prime Minis-; Sandys. were also present. .' The conference held in Marl- for Commonwealth undcrstand- borough House is being "outed as ter Macmillan, bidding Monday ing if not support. put the case one of the most momentous in for British entry to the Euro-the history of the multt-nation pean Common Market. His speech. on the opening day of a momentous Common-, wealth prime ministers‘ confer- ence, contained no new facts or , association. =BOUND T0 AFFECT British entry to the Conmion M a r k e l. which Macmillan trade assurances I C d -I seems‘ determined to bring and some other megfber aéiéiunafl . :;bout if at all possible. is bound 0 tries which have been close to‘ Britain’s Common Market ne- gotiations at Brussel A conference said Macmillan ml the case fort joining the European Economic: S. Community's six - nation trade;imo the group-"Subject to satisfactoryldom. safeguards for ‘other Common- wealth countries." communiquc I affect Commonwealth ties in - SOITIE measure. An impact of trade ties is in- evitable since the Common Market countries have made clear they do not want the whole Commonwealth coming trade bloc by the side But the commonwealth's un- (written constitutional ties also Fmm the Canadian govern-vare involved—to a degree that others made in the past which ment’s viewpoint. this appears, will depend on how far Euro- “? be 8 less Precise pledge than ; pean political unity progresses. Among other Commonwealth promised protection to “cssen- icadcrs scheduled to speak to- t1al"‘ or “vital" trade intercsfsiday are Prime Ministers Men- of Commonwealth members In‘zies of Australia. Holyoake of the British market. New Zealand and Nehru of In- For the next two days the dia. whose countries all face ing with Canada's Prime Min- ! Commonwealth leaders. start-‘ trade problem as great as Can- da‘s or even greater should a ister Diefenbaker. will tell Brit- 31‘ ‘Iain 10111 EUI'0l3€- am ‘just how satisfactory they consider the safeguards worked out so far at Brussels. REVISE SPEECH l Canadian officials were busy: Their concern. like Canada's.- not only is with export sales but with the possible strains as the many other ties of Common- wealth. Macmillan put the main em- Monday night revising the lextlphasis of his speech on this of D1efenbaker’s speech today: "political" aspect of the case. ,—now in its eighth draft—in the . rejecting the view that Britain 1 Macmillan. 5 we expected Diefenbakcr will base his argument on light of the case presented byjls choosing between the Com- monwealth and Diefenbaker's Europe. speech today _ lhe‘will deal with this vital aspect .squeeze facing Canada's $900,-.fon. His Progressive Conserva- ‘000_,0Q0-a-year export market in: five government has described Britain from the trade terms as I the Commonwealth relationship they shape up so far in Brit-‘and the strengthening of it as ain’s uphill negotiations the six EEC members at Brus- els. . It seems likely he will alsoargumcnt. Monday was express the hope that the terms can be improved when to the with! one of its basic policies. _.MORE VALUE AS MEMBER A main theme of Macmillan’: that these Britain would be more valuable Commonwealth inside . Britain’s chief Common Market-‘ Europe than outside looking in. ‘ negotiator, Lord Privy Seal Ed-. for both to the. reasons. ward Heath. returns Brussels conference table in at ‘ month. political and economic He said Britain’s main value l to Commonwealth members lies '. Heath. who reviewed the statelin its market for their goods lof the Brussels ‘slengthy conference following Macmillan‘:-z talks l statement . provide in a 3' and the capital resources it can for their expansion. speech.;Britain's value as both I mar- Au RCMP spokesman said pm-was with Diefenbaker Mondaygkct and as an investor would lice were unable to get a coher- statcment of what happened. It was believed Mr. Deschcnes and his eldest son had expectexl :to leave their home Monday imor..in;: for Saint John. N.B. where they are employed at n m . l The family lost everything in the f ' JFK Names lAmI3assador To Canada I S l WASHINGTON (CPI —» Pres- iident Kennedy has decided to (D H r« 3 I appoint W. Walton Butterworth. ta career diplomat. as United lit was learned Monday night. A native of New Orleans and night at Canadian High George Drew. Two other top British cabinet ministers. Home Secretary R. Commissioner l BY KEN KELLY OTTAWA (CPl ment sources herc regard Presi- dent Kennedy's trade pl‘0f,ll'«'lm and Canada’s drive for exports as the only real answer to Brit- lsh entry into the European Common Mar . Although Prime Ministcr Dict- enbaker. on arrival in London for the Commonwealth primr- minisiers' conference. talked of ,an "aliernativc“ to British en- Ythe government's hopes are lpinned on Canada's own efforts Some 5“gg"‘5t It I5 F“ °°!"‘~'-‘C’ l a onetime Rhodes scholar. the . 10 expand I101’ ”a‘_I€ 3"“ III“ ‘—‘F' tion with a third paper mill-—a ! 59_year_o1d Butte;-worth now is . feet of the American program I°“8“me 5ma1IW°°d dream " "F l U.S. ambassador to the Euro- ‘ if it P-38505 C0"f11'(‘55- has to do with co - operation on hydro elcctnic development WIIII Quebec in Labrador. Floating Hotel To Be Scrapped SEATTLE (APi—The former British ocean liner Dominion Monarch. serving as a floating uri_ng the world's fair. the on y. Seattle back- on of the venture turned the vessel over to the Mitsui Com- pany Limited to be scrapped. A spohesman for Mitsui said re we III hotel WHERE-TO-FIND-II ship again. Announcements. notices I2 Births. deaths. etc. 3. L3 ed . . . . . . . . .. 12. 13 Comic features . . . . . . . . .. II no . . . . . . . . . . .. (3 Finance Markets . . . . .. 4 City. . . . . . . . . .. 7 Prince County . . . . . . . . . . .. 2 flu‘! . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 9. l4 fimmersldc .. . . . . . .. J I once’: peg; 37.3. ,. . . __ , re no plans to use it- jpcan Common Market at Brus- : scls. l A close friend of State Sec- lrctary Rusk. Butterworth holds j the rank of career diplomat. an ‘honor bestowed on only a few officers in the U.S. diplomatic vice. _ An informant said Kennedy IS likely to make a statement on his appointment sometime to- V W O "1 The president has for months been considering the question of finding a replacement Ot- tawa for Livingston Merchant. who recently left his ambassa- dorial post there to retire from .the diplomatic service. ' Butterworth. married and the father of two children. has seen ‘diplomatic service in mainland China. Spain, Sweden and Brit- ain. Hc serv in the U.S. Em- bassy at Ottawa from 1932-34- at a time when the Common- wealth was developing and ex- panding its preferential tariff 3 Veteran of 33 years in the US. foreign service. Butter- Aworth also served as an assis- tant statc secretary for Far Eastern affairs in 1949-3 cru- cial peri when Chiang Kai- ,shek's forces fell at the hands lot Mao Tsc-Tung. ,1 N Canadian program in- ‘ eludes the dispatch of trade mis- ‘sions abroad at the ratc of one every two weeks and conferences suc s last week's industrial expansion m c c t i n g here to jawaken Canadian businessmen forcefully to the need to com- ypctc in the world market on lhc basis of design. quality and price. Tradc Minislcr Hccs rcgard.= this program as vital not only if Britain docs enter the Euro- pean Common Market but even if she decides not to do so. (Tom- pctition for markets in cillicr case is going to bc incrcaslnflly severc. OFFICIALS OPTIMISTIC Trade department officials are optimistic that President Kon- ‘ncdy's program will be accept- ‘able to Congress in large part. Under th e president's pro- gram. the United States would ‘negotiate with Common Market countries gradual elimination of United States and Common Mar- ket tariffs over a wide variety of goods which are mainly pro- duced in these areas. This program would also per- a dinner given by be greater as a member of the common market. Macmillan also held out the prospect of improved chances for workd marketing agree- A. Butler and Commonwcaltltl (Continued on Page 2 Col. 3) Export Drive, JFK Plan Seen Best Answer To ECM by the US. and Common Mar- G(W(‘l‘l!- kcl tzountries would be extended to Lanadian goods under terms of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade. The fact that the Kennedy ad- ministration is pressing hard for this program tends re- licvc some of the Canadian worry about the serious effects on this country's trade of Brit- ish cntry into M But the U.S. program is con- . sidcrcd to be no more than one ray of hope and the government plans to direct Canadian busi- ness thinking as forcefully as possible int.o lines of locating new markets and expanding ex- isting ones. Dr. Soblen Confinues Unconscious LONDON tReutersl —— Fugi- uvo spy Dr. Robert Soblen was ' ' a coma Monday night as doctors labored to save ’ from the overdose of barbitur- ates he took four days ago. A bulletin issued from Killing- dnn Hospital. where the 62-year- old N:-xv York psychiatrist has lain unconscious for more than 100 hours. said there was ‘no significant change" in SobIen‘I ‘ condition. Medical efforts were being di- rcctccl at treating brain damage which resulted after the barbit- urates interrupted the supply of -oxygen to Soblen‘s brain. He is ibcing shaken by frequent em- vulsions. '1'. Soblen swallowed the drugs ll London lmit the gradual reduction of ‘ he was being taken to l U.S. duties _ up to 50 per cent on ' other s airport for deportation back to the United States to serve I life atever reductions are made . sentence as a Russian spy. .3 .-‘~ 1-‘ .--. . . A.w%Y1r:1 .- . . .