.e- Mr. and Mrs. Chuen Kam To and their two daughters. refu- gees from Communist China. test the snow after their ar- rival in Edmonton. The Chuens are part of a group of 14 refugees coming to Can- ada under / federal immigra- ri\ Hifi‘E‘EE‘fiEEu ET SNOW tion program allowing the en- try of 100 Communist Chinese refugee families. Moderate Growth Expected By Pulp, Paper MONTREAL fCP'i " Another year of moderate growth for Canada's pulp and paper iudus-i try is expected in 1963. R. M Fowler. president of the Cana-' dian Pulp and Paper Assocla-i tion. says in a year-end review.i The outlook. Mr. Gowler com-‘ ments, naturally depends to at great extent on the generali level of business activity in North America, but he sees the" possibility of production; increases of about the same or-; der as in 962. i In 1962 production was at a‘ new high. with an increase of. about three per cent over 1961. reflecting increased shipments. both in Canada and to export markets. Gross value of producy tion exceeded 51.600.000.000 of! which more than $1,200,000.000 was exported. 5 Increase in over - all produc-j tion and industry operations est a whole continued to average! about 85 per cent of capacity.i Owing to the large exports.‘ the decline during 1962 in the. foreign exchange value of the Canadian dollar was of consid- erable significance to many pro-i ducers. Mr. Fowler says. andi helped to offset increased costs‘ Final newsprint figures are; expected to show that producsi tion 1 1962 was marginally lower than in 1961. However. to- tal shipments were slightly in several areas. i er Industry seas areas. principally America and the Far E In the United States. which South ast. »consumes nearly four-fifths of Canadian newsprint. consump- tion increased substantially in 1962 to a new igh. However. actual demand for Canadian newsprint increased to a much smaller extent, owing to a gen eral reduction in publishers' in ventories and to strikes at sev- eral newspapers supplied pri- marily by Canadian mills. Also. two new newsprint mills went into operation in the United States during the year. with some adverse effect on Cana- dian shipments. Annual rated capacity of Ca- nadian n e w s p r i n t mills in- creased by about 250.000 tons in 1961. and the average operating rate was 84.1 per cent compared with 87.1 in 1961. Capacity in 1963 will increase by a further 270.000 tons to bring the total to about 8.250.000 tons. ‘or the world as a whole. newsprint demand in 1963 in- creased by about 250.000 tons and capacity by 862.000 tons. As a result, total reserve capacity increased to 2.700. ons from 2.100.000 in 1961 and. Mr F0 comments. on diminution this figure appears likely in the near future. Preliminary figures indicate that total Canadian output of wood pulp in 1962 was three per w. in "”W'°""°“”"’”"‘iHundreds 0i Ex-Nazis Remain io Face irial COBLENZ. Germany iAPi— The court called a short recess —Iong enough for a cigarette. passed since these things hap- pencd." i {tried long ago? How did a man ’PREDIC'I'! DE GAULLI VIII! like Heuser become chief delec- tive? Why does it take years to prepare trials" A poll of several prosecutors. most of them teen-agch when the war ended. brought these t'icws' All war crimes trials in the early post - war period werei staged by the Allied tiers and no German officials had ac-" cess to the investigation. Often “Would you agree to close the investigations were done hap- . Twa witnesses had just testi- books if these men had slain hazardly. tied how prisoners of the Nazis your parents?‘ another visitor were burned alive. objected. t Now the courtroom was empty The Coblcnz hearing is one of ‘except for some of the guards hundreds of war crimes trials 1and some of the 12 former SS which have been. are being or ,men who didn't want a cigar- will be held in a country still ette. struggling to settle accounts In one corner of the court- with its Nazi past. room. defendant Arthur Wilke Twelve men sit in the Coblenz istood before a large green map dOck. Fou rte en more face .of western Russia. courts in Bonn. Fiensburg, “I to” you‘ those Russ-[ans Bamberg. When these trials are were just devilish." Wilke said. i Overt Others WI” {Ollow- Thou‘ tTwo young policemen listened sands already have been cm" i intently. victed. At least 700 war crimes wglke and 11 others were‘suspects still are to be tried. ‘chargcd with the war murder Trials may run In“) 1970- ;of 70.000 Jews. Russians. Gyp- INTEREST WANES , isies and mental patients. 1 This may be a reason why i PKOMPTS TALK J Outside in the corridor. elively discussion was going on.‘ 11 othem ! “Why don‘t the-V 010,50 the detective before his arrest in ,books now that Adolf Eichman‘1959 Iis dead?“ asked a young man.1 why weren‘t these people .“After all —- 20 years -———-«-—.—— m.» i VII'IIIIIIIIIIO NEWSDN ELEDTRID limited even in this town where have! ting made. available for nationl .emcrgencies. ; Individual hospital disaster ‘plans were established in more than 50 per cent of Canadian hospitals with the co-operation 1public interest in Germany is‘ a Georg Heuser. on trial here with; RECORDS MISSING ‘ When Germany became sov- erign again. it was organized on a strictly federal basis. making difficult any co-ordinated work. Most Nazi archives were in Washington. London or Moscow. SS officers. who concealed their Nazi past, could not be checked 0 5 “There was also a certain lack of enthusiasm in some parts of the legal machinery.” said prosecutor Dietrich Zeug of the central German war crimes ‘investigation board Ludwigsburg in 195 "I know of a case where a suspect was named as an ac-i complice in a written verdicti set up at ' 8 rose to bc a chief. FLOORING 8 PARIS tAP> — President do Gaulle may go to the United States next fall to talk to Pres- ident Kennedy. the newspaper Le Monde says. but nobody bothered to hunt him down "Sometimes it would have taken only a few telephone calla to get hold of a man." 'CO-OP INSUR Don’t Put It Off . . . 0 FIRE 0 AUTO 0 LIFE CO-OP Is Your Best Buy CHECK ON OUR CALL WILFRED DRISCOLL ANCE 163 Queen St. Dial 4-6035 WE LAY TILE and ALL FLOOR OOVERINOS i Concise answers to your questions about SPACE. For Prompt Flooring Service Dial 4-8703 Are satellites free of gravity?. . : Once a rocket is in space how ‘can it be steered? . . . How can in man get back from the moon 0 the Canadian Hospital Asso- ciation and provincial and mu- nicipal hospital authorities. higher. with increases in theI cent higher than in 1961 and, domestic market. the Unitedi for the first time. exceeded 12.- States and Britain more than§ 000,000 tons. more than double O WIRING *‘iO’rtawa Sources Back U.S. offsetting declines in some over-' the level at the end of the war. Mitzi]: Pilnlchzigfg oggrfégglfi"; O FIXTURES withoutthecompficamdhunch- I N I ‘fe-eding units. were set up. O APPLIANCES 11:8 Sggfgumfirzn ‘) e e across the oountr b emer- 1 ,. ‘ s u C a r gency welfare services 3land res- f . REPAIRS 99 Hillsboro St. Ch'town read the answers to these d Ide . welfare 1 . A" work Guaranteed 12 other major questions about; y DAVE McIN'l‘OSfl They also regard the French dependent n a t l on al nuclear scrwccs representatives were . Free Esflmafes! space- Get your copy ay- In ParaIytic PoIio Cases OTTAWA (CPi—A “remarks-I A 16-year fluoridation study‘ As part of the department‘s ie drop" in the number of by the dental health division at 1 fiiiicss program. 5500.000 Will be paralytic poliomyelitis cases to Brantford, Sarnia an Strat- made available to the provinces- 86 in 1962 from 185 in 1961 and ford showed that. among the for the development of commu— 909 in 1960 was reported here.younger age groups. mechani- nity fitness projects under in a year-end roundup by tliefcal adjustment of the fluoride agreements signed in 1962. . icontent of a community wa er B . OTTAWA (CP) —— There are strong segments of official opin- ‘ ion here which would like to ‘ lee Britain and France stripped l of all nuclear military power. '. The reason for this thinking. competent sources say. is the '-_ belief that all Western nuclear ‘_i apability and control should st exclusively with the United tates. established in Halifax. Quebec; Mirage bomber as already ob- Edmonton and Victoria solete for the same reason. COST HEAVY Some officials here doubt Brit- ain will actually go ahead with construction of nuclear sub- marines to carry the Polaris. The cost is about $160,000.000 each. The critical analysis here of e Kennedy-Macmillan agree- 3' ., In other words. as Prime Min- ister Diefenbaker and External Affairs Minister Green have said repeatedly. Canada is op- posed to the proliferation of nu- clear weapons under national control. Now this attitude has been carried farther. at least in some quarters. to a esire see Dial 4-8325 Electrical Contractors 161 Queen health department. I A H “u- g t said it appeared supply resulted in a Significant The repor . . that the original Salk vaccine TedUCtlon 1“ 100th decaY- FAMOUS FOR' BRANDED INSPECTED Ax- OWNER; ‘ have everything for KITCHENS, BATHROOMS. 1 MR. mm 0 1 ROYAL SECURITIES 4 1 t 1 1 1 b I i b . e , Sole U.S. nuclear capability ment appears aimed primarily Western nuclear capability and program had been greatly in- INCREASE STOCKPILES > . Cor oration Limited .. ‘ nd control would simplify dis- at the point that the agreement control restricted to a single strumental in reducing morbid- The emergency health serv- I S T E A K J Investlgem Securities RECREATION ROOMS. in fact. every room in your home. 1. ~ a mament negotiations and keeps alive the chances of in- country. the United States. ity to the 1962 level. ices increased its medical stock 3 0 ALE M SON Visrt our new modern showroom soon. force the European members 0 “To this was being added the pile inventory to $12,500,000 i: GOOD 0R1» Manager - '~ NATO to concentrate on provl-; . effect of ghehSttli‘SO feast-shagmg frortn 5815001100 diurintg 19:2.tThe 2A MONEY? 137 Gram)“ 5L ma] +8583 o a i n f ore conventional wea - I I d I- . k an in w ic e e era 0\'- ma eria. s are a s ra egic D l :0. o m p n s Emmem and Several 0‘ the i locations across Canada. is be- if . . . . . . ' . . . . I . I I IBIAIC'K't’ Charlottetown 1 Plywood Place ma! 4.6557 Some officials here interpret the defence agreement reached last week by President Kennedy and Prime Minister Macmillan! 'I at Nassau as the final push by: I ’ Ithe U.S. to get Britain into Eu- rop . TORONTO (CP) — The Cana- ian electrical industry. beset by a variety of difficulties in irecent years. looks for better itimcs in 1963. The US. by declining to pro-5 For the first time since 1957."i ceed. with the bomber - borneiSfl.VS the canadlan Elecmcal skybm missile which Britain Manufacturers Association. in a wanted. in effect ended the spe- yearjend 5t9t9menti "the Indus' ial Anglo-American defence ar-itry 15. “9‘1”th some Inf-‘35P“ angements which had existed!“ Pnce Stabimy ,‘Vm‘ Poss‘ble since the early days of the Sec-""0 crate Wm}? ‘flcreases In 0nd World War. Britain in iu-tsome Product “"95- ture would no preferrcd' Th9 Cf’mment ‘5 based Upon get. I . . treatment ahead of other NATO addsgl'vey and the assouauon ENDS ARRANGEMENTS For Better Times In I963 a Sabin oral vaccine program. Approximatety 4.000.000 Cana-: dians were immunized with the j tic mid-1962 report of the indus- oral vaccine, i try which revealed the first in-} The report also touched on crease in sales and factory ship- fluoridation. fitness and civil . ments in five years." efcnce planning. Industry opinion was divided| OD the'Value 01' emergency SUI“ i cal to manufacture in Canada Charges 0!! ImPOYtS- 1were already being produced. Forty per cent said the emer- This group and another 18 per gency levy would increase both cent said the surcharges .con- domestic manufacturing and do- tributed to predicted higher mestic content of electrical costs. since highly - speCialized An equal number said equipment impossible to manu- the tax made no difference _ facture for Canada‘s small mar. since electrical goods economi-iket must be imported. provinces were participating i countries. t 3 The U.S. did agree to supply‘ “Less than 10 per cent Britain with Polaris missiles. icompanies participating felt the but it made the same offer to 1 price structure might weaken in France and. by implication, toi1963. This. coupled with an es- other NATO countries. itimated four-to lS-per-cent in There are defence officialsicrease in sales and only ‘m here who say con-{erate‘ increases in industry vinced Britain and France are! costs. suggest a more reason- ' finished as nuclear powers. i able business climate." They say Britain's nuclear! Sixty per cent of participating Power as represented by RAF companies predicted a sales n- Bomber Command ls mlniscule crease while less than 10 per in proportion to that of the U.S.. cent forecast a drop. that in any event it is iFOLLOWS TRENDS and doubtful RAF bombers could! The forecast. the association over penetrate Soviet anti-air-icomments. “followed trends craft missile defences. inoted in the cautiously optimis- HOPE YOUR YEfiR IS BRIMMING WITH GBYETY! As I962 giveswayio 1963; we tako this opportmflytowifll you and yous everypoastblo happiness in the myoatom Goodspoeds of P.E.I. Your Chevrolet Dealer Charlottetown y Ste Livingston and MacArthur Nursing Home Sherwood Charlottetown NEXI AIIRACIION I Premier appearance of the I NwYoulMoyyouonioymy minute . . . and may w. my "thanks." 1.} W 3T1 THEATRE Charlottetown Masts-cot Queen St. l Moore 8: McLeod Ltd. TAN'I'ON TIRE -— CLARK TIRE & SUPPLY LTD. Kent st. comm i ll Dial 4-6541 ll St. Pete" Rd. 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