if it’s Good For the Island The Guardian is For it “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” Che Guardian VOL. LXXV. NO. 54 ash ‘Office Department, CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, MARCH 5, 1962. Nor MORE SEVEN CENTS SUMMERSIDE BUREAU | OF THE GUARDIAN | Tce conditions, described “usual for March”, pave ‘the progress of the MV between Cape lettin n yesterday and last night Hine Iootveshing cor. ferry. was | stuck in thick ice about one mile | outside the New Brunswick port for almost four hours before reaching its destination. | | On her last crossing, and only adian somone led by the the second: of the day, the “Ab-| Eastern Cai bie” left for the Cape at 3,40/ ton, N.S., are aaeaty assured Sunday, and did not arrive until | of a $30,000,000 order for rai it six | way cars from Argentina, it wi usually | learned here Sunday night = Trenton Plant Expects Big Railway Car Order OTTAWA (CP) — Three Can- | “We've been working on this for weeks," he said. The Argentine government was believed to have considered competing bids from the United States, Britain and Italy before approving the purchase from T.C. DOUGLAS, New Dem- | With Mr. Douglas, right, ts, | ecratic Party leader arrived | left to right, Alex Malice’ here last night and was met Parkdale, a member of the at the airport by Island re- | provincial executive, Wilfred Presentatives of the party, | Inman, Charlottetown lasts only-55 minutes.” ive cars and as many trucks were stranged on the Borden pier last night, as CNR officials reported that there would not be another crossing until the mor- ning. At Cape Tormentine the traf- |fic problem was reporied to be ja little more severe, however, every effort was being made to get most of the cars on the last | [pet which left there about 10.- { The return trip was made in considerably better time, how- il) ever the ship docking’ about m this morning. | Btiions were reported to have 4) eased considerably. Queen's Caniy candidate and | STRAIT JAMMED | | Thomas Dunphy, Peakes, Calm weather is blamed for Kings County candidate for the many delays, as Frida: the party and provincial or- | high winds jammed the strait ganizer, | with ice, which will not move jou until another strong vind rive On her first trip yesterday the Douglas Picks On June 11 2m swwere As Possible Election Date June 11 is my target date for club in Montgomery Hall here | the federal election”, said a tra- 30 minutes later, I talked to the vel-weary National leader of the | genial party spokesman while New Democratic party here at | he ate-in the Charlottetown “Ho- | 8 o'clock last night, as he grab- | tel dining room. hed the first bite of food he had! Rushing to keep scheduled had since breakfasting in Saint! speaking engagements is not J y Sy ing new for the former Saskat- To save time for T.C. (Tom- . and did not arrive back until over eight hours Ia- ter. Despite the severe batter- ing being experienced on every trip, no damage has been id tained in conditions which weeks, with a short break for the senesiod as being not as severe Christmas-New Year period. s last winter. ‘The party executive here h “the SS Prince Ed Bane ‘up eight speaking engage- | is on’standby duty at Borden: } ents for him, including one TV| On Saturday movements were | sabeare, in the approxima-| restricted to some extent, but | tely 40 hours he will be in the| (Continued on Page 5 Col. 4) province. my) Douglas, who was due to chewan premier, who has been SACKVILLE TOMORROW peak to the United Nations ‘travelling steadily now for 14|_ He leaves tomorrow afternoon for Saskville and a talk to a Canada Seen World Example: sm sist wi compise bang um, whieh w P Geeagek Matin tock rox In Refusing Nuclear Arms fluence and vote towards strengthening and reconstitut- ing the UN to become a world thority capable of maintain taining peace and enforcing the | rules of law, he said, The United | Nations probably offers man his only hope tn this age when war can destroy the race. “The best hope ‘rene world is to establish a world| rllament, a world police force, and a world cour ‘The speaker expressed the) opinion that Canada| cou! ercise a major role in mobi |itg the non-autlear nation bring’ pressi con the four nuclear powers to persiiade them to enter into a treaty for nuclear disarmamant. This | would take place under inter- national inspeetion. | matter of keeping the nu- | ‘Gontinued on 4 Col. 3) By refusing to accept nuclear} weapons on Canadian soil or to give nuclear weapons to Cana- dian forces, this country can set | the example to other non-nu- clear countries to keep the ‘“nu- clear club” from getting any T.C. Douglas, leader of w Democratic Party, said last night. Addressing the Prince of Wales College United Nations Club at Montgomery Hall on the to- anada's role in the Un- \ted Nations, Mr. Douglas as- serted that Canada has an ine 0 “bad record”, S| a foot in two. contin: ated as she is in North Amerien yet having ties in Eur- ope. MAJOR ROLE Canada’s major role should be the lending of her support, in- Senator Cairine Wilson | Dies Suddenly At Ottawa OTTAWA (CP) Cairine Wilson, rexpect- edly in hospital Saturday. ar was 77, Senator Wilson, who had been | in hospital three weeks, died from complications of hip fractures she suffered last spring. Funeral’ services will be held Tuesday at St. Andrew's Pres- byterian Church in Ottawa. Wife of a politician-business- | man and mother of eight chit | area, 3 Mie oe was 45 5 viet } the Feb ib, 1000 ty P Prime Minister | Mackenzie King. The appointment came after ae years of legal argument Wedding Is Hectic Event | Maria ‘Seicolone, there he goes to Montreal to ad- | dress a New Democratic con- vention “Tl be making my key-note speech for P.E.I. at Summer-| pREDERICTON (CP) — side Monday night, he said a8 | promier and Mrs. Louis J. he declined to discuss what be | Robichaud and their four child- has in mind for this province. | ren were forced to vacate their He told a Cape Breton audie- home Sunday night when fire (Continued on Page 5 Col. 2) | caused extensive damage residence on Brunswick Street othe Bremner and Mrs. Robi- watching television front by he ving ‘toon at the of the house when Boy Escapes In Fall Under Train Wheels ae (CP) — eee Peter Boudreau of nearby "e Mussolini's PREDAPPIO, Italy (AP) — Benito Mussolini's ete SS and actress Sophia youngest sister were married | Saturday—with the help of a doctor and pol As ‘saieas e invited and | | uninvited guests surged in ai around little St. Anthony's | Rockingham told RCMP Sunday Caurch, Romano Mussolini, 33, | he toppled off a snow covered | the groom, fainted. | bank, fell between the wheels | The arrival of his bride, |of a mot freight train and blonde, beautiful, 23-year - caused such a as the train mo ~d over him. tumult in the church that Bishop | A companion, Richard Me- Giuseppe Bonacini fled to the Cullough ran for help. When he seeristy be threatened to can- oa residents of area re- aE the ct pared. va italian photo- pone fought thelr way inside | was taken to hospital here for for vantage points. observation. Finally, police cleared a space RCMP said if the boy's ac- before the altar and Bishop count of the story was correct, Bonacini, ‘long a friend of the “it was a miracle.” Railway ores family, went on with a, died a knew nothing ceremony. ae the Ceremony, re Racketeer’s : Pals Shot BELLEVILLE, Tl, (AP)— | two ot rocketone Frank (Bus. ter) Wortmai thot to death In gangland syle | | Saturday night and their bodies were di a lonely try road less = han 0 miles from Wortman’ } Elmer oon Dowling. con- fice to be W killed Antonio Angelini, — cy teacher. The tae s Loren |, duce of fascism, was born 79 years ago and now buried. NB. Premier, Family: Forced To Flee Fire Canada. ‘The order will come as the three Canadian plants are run- ing well below production capa- city. The source said the order will be “a great thing” for East- rn Car, government source said only final cabinet approval is required to complete the deal, “and you could bet your bot- tom dollar on thi The order, by the state-owned Railway Enterprise, is for 2,850 cars. The bulk of them—2,000— would be built by Eastern Car, another 100 would come from the National Steel Car Com- pany in Hamilton, and 360 from | Marine Industries, jorel, Que. The Export Credit Insurance Corporation — the organization within the department of trade and commerce that extends credit on Se orders—has ap- proved the deal. Final cabinet approval pected within 10 days, source close to the government said “there isn't a chance” of it being rejected. The deal had Siteady. been approved fn. peia- ciple. 3 Children Die In Quebec Fire BOIS DES FILIONS, Que. (CP) — Three children died early Sunday in a fire that swept a wooden house near this community 20 miles north of fontreal. ex. | The victims were Denise Bu- and a 8, her sister Manon, 2, and Nicole Goyette, 1. Denis Du- beau, 90, father of two older girls, and another of his daughters, Nicole, 5, were se- vererely burned. | Education Group Given Welcome MONTREAL (CP) Que) Paul day-night he-disagrees with of welcome: to | those who believe French and to the Canadian Conferenc on English cultures in Canada will | Education, eventually blend into one, While reaffirming his govern- ment's insistence that pr eet in education must ere are people who think that sooner or later Can- ada will have to unity her cul- . melting together pinta beth (hai Prenes! aaa English cultures into a so-called Canadian culture. “I think these people are not | realistic and I, for one, believe | alarmed by the sound of break- that the deeds which’ are ing sla shortly ‘after 9:30 p.m. deeply rooted in our history and was virtually |in our mentalities are there to destrcoet. Prompt W ork by the | sta: Fredericton fire department This did not mean there | confined the flames to this room | should be no exchanges between | but adjoining rooms were dam- English - speaking and ee aged by intense heat and the speaking Canadians. entire ‘ullang ‘was atiocted by the contrary, it = rience ‘and Mrs. Robichaud first |COMPAFINg experiences are parallel but not rescued "the children, ranging that we are able to express our from one to 10 years old, who ae Mie iG, in upstairs bed- ‘ne nga F. Doherty said posed ‘to Sopecenily started | Pi" ideas with English Canade, It is, in fact, them but also insisting the fun- night damental problems of educa- of tion in French Canada be recog- ‘ nized.” is by which with greater ee Catate is not op- eeaiae a: toe playroom, a separate unit from the house heating plant. ‘The family spent the with friends No estimate damage was available, [eanaeeneeeranemeeeel TARTAN PLAN Gerin-Lajoie made the |may be available ard Island | bee's youth minister said Sun- statement in a prepared address however. ovincial | DU! ilding was fata problems more realistically and nd Councillors ISPARKS ROW GLASGOW (AP) — A pro}- ect to authorize a tartan for use of United States subma- riers based in Scottish wa- ters shook Scotland Sunday. Reaction ranged from amuse- ment to explosive indignation. American sailors manning a Polaris missile squadron based at Holy Loch want a tartan of their own design, and have taken steps to reg- ister it properly in the Ar- chives of Heraldry was immediate: “It is nonsense,” Thomas Innes of whose duty it is to tradition of tartans pure. ‘wi don't record tartans for sub- marines. T have never heard f ship's tartan in the whole zlorious history of Scotland am an officer of the Queen, not of the president of the United States of America It is entirely a matter for the American government if a section of their forces want a tartan. We would not recog: nize it.” Reaction said Sir Rescue Plans | Reported Lost In Windsor Fire WINDSOR, N.S. (CP). ords of five months planning for rescue work in a nuclear attack on Halifax were lost in Friday's a ae ee maroon ys the neon contained information on supplies to be used by militia | and civil defence units in re- entry operations in a devastated | area. Copies of some documents | elsewhere, ‘he atmaries.-housed the Jtal- ifax target area rescue plan- ning oe, headed by Lt.-Col. rnold. ‘The ‘The loss, is estl- including conten tampered with, he said: | ™aled at up to $150,000. Eastern Army Command sent team here to look for new headquarters, WEATHER Mostly cloudy with scattered snowflur ries; northeast winds 25 with gusts to 35. Low-high 28 and 40, 12 PAG! West Planning New Bid For Test Ban Agreement Control Proposals Likely To Be Eased foreshadowed the West's new proposals when he referred to “new modifications” in the test ban treaty “in the light of new experience. The president presumably was referring to new scientific ad- vances that have made it pos sible to detect secret nuclear tests, both in the atmosphere and underground, without as elaborate an_ ins system as had toed: peerionsty Cooma necessary In 1958, before these scientific advances were made, Western and Communist scientists at By JOHN EARLE LONDON (Reuters) ‘The West Sunday was reported plan- ning to drop its previous insis- tence on a big fool-proof inspec- tion system for a nuclear test ban agreement in a new bid to overcome Soviet objections. Usually reliable sources said a proposal for a looser control system was worked out in Wash- ington last week in Western con- sultations called to prepare for the 18-nation disarmament con- ference, opening in 10 days in Geneva. Geneva agreed on the principle The new inspection proposal of a world- network of some it sed 170 land-based and 10 ship-bi control stations to supervise a test ban. But last fall the Soviet Union went back on the agreement, then being laboriously drafted in Geneva, and produced a counter proposal for a test ban without any inspection. The Russians argued then, and have continued to do s0 since, that the control syst was designed by the west espionage network. The West on the other “hand, taking into consideration its new was one of several ideas re- lating to disarmament drawn up in working papers in Wash- ington by officials from the United States, Canada, Britain and Italy, the sources ‘sai France, the fifth Western par- ' ticipant at the forthcoming con- | ference, sent an observer. e new Western stand was a strong sense of urgency President Kennedy's an- | maaeeee two days ago that the U.S. .will resume nuclear tests in late April unless the Soviet Union agrees to “a fully aty. ce effective” test ban treat; detection techniques, has ine sisted that some form of inspec. FORESHADOWS MOVE tion still is necessary as @ nnedy in his announcement guarantee against cheat Canada’s Nuclear Views Are Reaffirmed By PM OTTAWA (CP).-Prime Minis- ter Diefenbaker has--reattirmed- Canada’s desire for an end to all forms of nuclear weapon testing, The prime minisier, comment- ing Saturday on the United States decision to resume at- mospheric tests next month, also repeated Canada's offer to per- mit the Russians to make dis- armament inspections of Can- ada’s northlandyin exchange for- similar inspection rights in the Soviet Union. “President Kennedy's ane nouncement in no way dimin- ishes the desire of the Canadian government to see an end to all forms of nuclear weapons test- ing.” Mr. Diefenbaker said in a statement SALARIES APPROVED Is Held ‘The approving of amendments | to 12 sections of the City of identical | Charlottetown Incorporation Act, including salaries for the Mayor ind a change the City’s election system; the signing of a wage agree- y form of exchange ment with Local 501 Charlotte. town Civie Employees Union; eager to pursue |@ discussion with representa- ives of the Charlottetown Play- ground Commission and the Passing of 11 resolutions were | among the items dealt with by COMMUNITY SERVICE RECOGNIZED ernthent and Civic Admints- his “‘volunteer service to com- unit Foley, left, chats with John work, especially in | tration. ‘Mr. Foley also pre T. Doyle at a testimonial din- | the field of welfare.” Upwards | sented & commemorative ner given in Mr. Doyle's hon- | 6°” 159. persons = 2 the honored guest. ot at The Charlottetown band Mr. Doyle is a resident of Hote! Saturday night. The re- | tendance including representa- jarlottetown. (See story on Sane wemghees ts beame @t | Grad of. Gn Beortnalel Gov- | pase 81 Action-Packed Meeting By City Council salary of $2,400, and the salary for each councillor to $800. The salaries would be in ade dition to allowance of $1,200 for the mayor's office expenses, and $400 for expenses of coun- cilors, At present, there are ne guaranteed salaries at all for the mayor and councillors. The mayor is allowed $1,400 for exe penses while the councillors ne- ceive $400, The only councillor opposing he salary hike was Elmer | MacRae, who agreed that the |councillors spent a lot of their time in regard t- City work but “there are a lot of other citi zens, who spend a lot of thete time and are doing a their work for nothing.” He ‘ald he thought the members should compromise. Allison Gillis said thet the salaries should be paid to councillors who a ciated with firms that are doing business _ the city. $20,000 RECEIVED members of the Charlottetown City Council Saturday morning in a three and one-half hour special meeting. All councillors were present with the exception of Edmund Arsenault and W. R. MacNeill. SALARIES APPROVED ‘The council ‘approved by 7-1 vole a decision to hike the mayor's stipend to a yearly Laos Feels [Money Pinch VIENTIANE, Laos (AP)—The government of Prince Boun Oum, feeling a pinch caused by lt trom tae wational Sask 10 treet monthly expenditures, in- formed sources said Sunda: The United States has with- held its $3,000,000 aid cheques for February as a means of Coua. ae Gormley point- Pressure on right-wingers to get eq out that one council has ‘on with talks to form a coalition received as much mment. (Continued on Page 7 Col. *”) RCMP Ask For Assistance In Hunting Dangerous Trio Baroy grenades OTTAWA (CP) The RCMP today asked Canadians to be on | the lookout for a heavily-armed | American trio being sought by | the US. Federal Bureau of In- machine oe Kk The woman, : sativa of Paoli, vestigation in connection with multiple bank robberies, in one of which a bank guard was slain arms from elbow to shoulder. They are identified as Bobby Wilcoxson of Duke, Okla, Randell Wilcoxson, 32, Albert works as a farm wneret, Frederick Nussbaum, and service ittendant an Jacqueline Rose, 18. on other similar je He is of medium build, hes dark brown hair, an artificial right eye and a burn sear on the left Nussbaum of Buffalo, N.Y. expert gun and locksmith the ability to pilot and aircraft, has a tattoo of a There is some suggestion that these individuals now may | be in Canada,” said an RCMP circular containing pictures and descriptions. The woman is re- ported to have with her a six- months-old They are’ rguened to be entwined around a dagger armed with a double-barrelled his upper left arm. He sawed-off 12-gauge shotgun, sub- , glasses. i