II I‘ I‘ -~ If It's Good For The Island The Guardian is For It Wists finorntintt “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” ' lib L'.' Lxxvn. N0. 10 1 men com- at PANAMANIAN fort mourner on crutches Anthrbol up local Dooutnut. Ottawa. graveside Sunday during fun- eral services for 14 persons DEATH TOI.I. REACHES 24 Panamanian Guardsman Killed In New Sniping (1? from Reuters-AP . ‘iNAMA CITY — Tensions. .,ence and demonstrations I nued at both ends of the I lama Canal none Sunday de- spite a ieported agreement be- tween and Panamanian officials on the patrol of the tonal border. ' In Panama City. thousands of 'H"|Ul'nEl'S turned out for a mass funeral for 14 of their country- vricn killed during clashes with olice and U.S. troops along the i.-rder. ~‘.t Colon. on the Atlantic side -4 e canal. one Panamanian stional guardsman was killed as U.S. soldiers exchanged fire with Panamanian snipers. guardsmen were The new shooting brought to ‘4 the death toll in clashes that smoke out T h u r s d a y. Three were U.S. soldiers. Amid the unprecedented_out- pouring of grief and occasional violence. details were being over maintenance of DUh_li<‘- 0!‘- dor aiong the boundaries of Panama City and Colon with the zone. This would be a first step to- 6 Ivird resolving the crisis set by a flag-raising incident whose leonsequences included w id 9- are U . minds for scrapping the 61 -old Canal Zone Treaty. A FLAGS WILL FLY by Panama with the for the 3.000-man» off - States along with de-~ . In another gesture of concilia- ‘tion to the P-anamanians. the United States agreed to ensure the two coun- by side in the canal zone. The agreement came after a -further clash Saturday night between shouting Panamanians and US. soldiers with fixed bayonets. A tightening of security measures along the border was evident and it was reliably learned the U.S. garrison in the zone was being strengthened. A high U.S. official said l.%0 Power Project Announced :By Smaliwood . ST. JOHN'S, Nf-Id. (CP) — lPremier Sm-allwood announced Saturday that his government would proceed at once" with development of the £100.000.000 ‘Bay d'Espoir hydro electric project on Newfound- l Mr. Smaliwood said the_ con- tracts for the project. designed .to produce 350.000 horsepower. ;wou-id be let “in the near fu- iture." He said he expected the na- tional harbors board to estab- tlish a national harbor in New- lfoundland. Diet leadership Issue B9§es.P Iervative policy planners etched the broad outlines of My princi es at a twoday noting which ended here Sat- but reached no final issues IV. raemelnt on the key by g te party. orinnu said the closed 5% E£‘8;‘§_3;2 £- 7 9.!‘ save Association an- ID! IN "G committee usiitliuthe tiodcaltwith byline:-st fijfhoetll --Icouno by members of Q bhltot of tltesecommit til until u roblem For PCs At the conclusion of the meet- ing. Richard Thrasher, national ‘ . said he believes party headquarters will be able to send delegates s set of basic draft resolutions about 10 days or two weeks before e Feb. 3-5 convention. However. some key and controversial resolu- tions may not be drafted be- are the resolutions committee Committee . Cox of Halifax said it had not been intended that the commit- tee should complete its works In; was orm poration than prevailed some years ago when part policy was pounded out hastily on the of thecbnvention. “We had an excellent turnout won- the general meeting ns." Mr. cox said. Party president Egan cham- ber: of Montreal lot of op-can-tent in p I " was reached. Now. subcouuuttoo and Mr Ootx would killed during Thursday night's riot at the Canal Zone. (AP Wirephoto) marines were brought in Satur- sy and two‘ iiavai cruisers were standing by off the Atlan- tic coast. on the diplomatic front the five-man ' of ‘Organization of A m e ri'c a 1! States met for three hours Sun- day. E e OAS mission announced early Sunday that Panama and the personal representatives of President Johnson had agr on withdrawal of the US. armed forces along the streets on the boundary line in Colon and Panama and. replacement by the national guard. '1‘-h . . army put out statement saying that no with- drawal woufd take place until -‘peace is restored, and ere was no announcement. that an ‘ actual withdrawal had taken place. INSIDE TODAY Births. deaths . .. .112 Classified . . . . . . . . . . I2-I3 omlcs 11 Editorials . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 4 Sport 10 Kings. Queens. City . . . . .. 5 Summerside . . . . . . . . . . .. 3 Women's ................ .. 8 Castro Due CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, JANUARY, 13 Feed Aid Freeze Requested MONCTON (CP) —- The Mari- time Federation of Agriculture. WEA northeast winds 20. 22. , 1964 Governmen THER Cloudy with a few snowf'lui~i'ir:s; milder: Low-high zero and "°",,;;<;“ SEVEN cams at its two-day annual meeting that ended here Saturday. has‘ called for freezing of federall freight assistance policy pend-l ing establishment of an eastern feed agency. The agency would deal with the flow of western grain to mills and feeders in eastern Canada. Another resolution calls for removal of the four-per-cent fe- deral sales tax on building ma- terials used in farm construc- tion except farm dwellings. The resolutions will be pre sented to Eastern Agricul- ture Conference and the Cana- dian Federation of Agriculture at their annual meeting later this month in Charlottetown. Delegates discussed measures taken by farm woodlot owners in negotiating prices for pulp- wood New Brunswick representau tives explained the successful: operation last year of a pulp- wood marketing agency in the northern part of the province. Nova Scotia has been attempt- ing organize its pulpwood marketing during the last year. In Moscow MOSCOW (AP)—Cuban Pre- mier Fidel Castro will arrive here today (Monday) by plane. the Soviet Foreign Ministry an- nounced Sunday night. Battle lcel By STAN BOWLES Winds. ice and snow may have curtailed a number of other alctiivitiies in the port of Charlottetown‘ continues to boom along at. close to the same pace as it Late last night ‘f-wo ocean ing ships were pounding their way through the Northu;n- berland Strait ice headed for U1. her and the other large freighter, are expected to dock at the Railway wharf sometime At 8.30 last night local of- ficials of the Imperial Oil Com-t pany were in radio-teleiplione; contact with the skipper of the tanker Edward Siimard. Hc re- ported he was sou-theaist of Point Prim and almost at a standstill in the heavily rafted iice. riiangin ninywhe-re fir four ho six feet in depth. COULD SEE TUPPER The captain said he could see icebreaker COGS 'Ilupper com- ing up on his stern. He esti- mated that the government ship would join the tanker and take UP Position ahead at about 10 o'cloc- En route here from lmperoyal, It will be the second time within a year that Castro has Fsited the Soviet Union. He was 'here last April and May a surprise arrival ur- -mansk. At that time he got the brightest of red carpet treat- ment ‘ S The foreign ministry spokes- man said he did not know how long Castro will stay this time, or why he was coming. Riot Deaths ad Are Mou niing In Calcutta g CALCUTTA. India (AP) Rloting between feuding Hindus and Moslems boiled in and around Calcutta again Sunday. Arson and looting increased and police killed six rioters, raising to 66 the death toll in four days of disorders. By night- fail martial law was declared. The Indian army promptly began taking over the adminis- tration of five areas in the city, West Bengals chief minister. P. C. Sen. announced. He said six more areas would come un- der army rule as soon as troop reinforcements were flown in. Black smoke rolled out over on the east side of Halifax har- bor. he was forced to steer a arm. course around Cape Breton. due hours to the heavy winds and high sea which prevented passage ‘through the Gut of Canon. The tiantker first encountered the ice iii lsnules east of Cape Bear. P.E.I. about 40 miles east of Charlottetown. lie reported that it was not long after enterdn.-g the ice he be- ban to encount rarfted con- ditions. About 1.30 yesterday a-ftei- noon the ice nad cut his forward movement to about one mile an hour and it got less as da.~' wore on. Between 1:30 and 8:30 yesterday forward move- ment of the tanker was said to be less lilian seven miles. MISSED RENDEZVOUS Originally the captain of the tanker had expected to pick up the assistance of the ’l‘up|'.er during Sunday forenoon. How- ever tihe latter was unable to -catch up to the tanloer because at times she was almost brought to a stop by the heavy ice. The Tupper had left George- town. at the southeast end of Youths Killed In Accident -the city during the afternoon from a burning Moslem tire Ailing Prime Minister Pun- dit Jswahsrlal Nehru of India acknowledges greetings, of newsman on arrMnl‘it' New Delhi airport Sunday from Bhubnnuhwnr. India. He wls Iccomvlllfll II? III» . Alli HRU mucus factory. was durning open weather. i ay. the former shortly after. daylight and the latter severali hours later. V l the ‘streamed into Cairo Sunday for‘ n Strai itite Island. at about ltl.3f) Sun- aday morning. with the inten- ition of making a i'entie:vous but shipping 5 somewhere off Cape Bear. The ships failed to rendez- vous, and the captain of the taiiker decided against stopping to allow the Tupper to catch up ias he feared his ship miight lie- ('t"I'l'lf’. trapped. Being l‘B-'0Il!I')l‘C- crl for ice. he decided to con- ftiiiue what headway possible :\Vif.Ilnut the aid of the Tuppcr. l Late last night local con‘.- -pzmy officials said that if the i:ir:ker did not make her berill by shortly after daylight ii)- day. further cont:-ic-t would be made by radio-telephone sonic- time between 8 and 9 a.m. FERTILIZER SHIP The other ship in the strait ' which at last report last night, was st.-mevvhere off Cape Bear and moving along in the broken wake of the other mo ships was the MV Fosslicin. l'bt.ui.Id here from B-alitllmore, ‘Maryland with a cargo for : Island Fertilizer Corporatioii piant. David Scales of die fPl‘llIlZFl‘ company reported the ship is carrying some 3.000 ton-s super phosphates. She is expect- ed to dock late this forenooii at early aifvternoon. The tanker is expected to be iready iior her return to h er liome ' about 24 or 30 ‘ a-nnival here, while the fertilizer ship with tfavoralhle weather could be ready to sail in about five days. .. F‘. 0 5 Fr: 1 CP from Reuters-AP ZANZlBAR—A group of orebels took over control of this newly independent island off East Africa during the weekend and formed a new government the “Revolutionary Party." The proclamation of the Re- public of anzibar was an- nounced by Zanzibar radio. which said it would be headed by Sheikh Obeid Karume of the predominantly Negro Afro-Shin azi party. The radio suggested the new government's cabinet would be a coalition between the Afro- Shirazi party and the left-wing Umma party which was banned last week by the overthrown Arab-dominated government. The United States destroyer Manley was lying offshore aid- ing in the evacuation of Amer- ican families most of whom are employed U.S. satellite -tracing station on the island. Zanzibar radio itself is to be known in the future as "Voir-e I DIES IN Byron 1. (Boss) Johnson, former premier of British Co- lumbia whose government in- troduced one of the first hos- pital insurance plans in Can- ada. died Sunday in Victoria. He was 73. Mr. .lohnson head- ed a Coalition government of Liberals and Conservatives of the Revolutionary Govern- from 1947 to 1952. ment." it said. (C? WiI'I’-Pilot») (A broadcast monitored in Mombasa. Kenya. said all gov- ernment fo r ce s had surren- dered and had been replaced by the revolutionary army.) WOULD SURRENDER Ousted Premier Sheikh Mo- lhammed Shamte was reported have issued a statement aboard a British ship offshore saying he was prepared to sur- render provided he and mem- bers of the government and -their families were assured sale co . Bluenose Sails On Maiden Voyage LUNENBURG. N.S. (CPI The schooner Bluenose II slip- ped out of port Sunday under light sail to begin her maiden voyage. The replica of Nova Scotia’s mous racing and fishing sch- ooner sailed for Bermuda and the Panama Canal area where she is to undertake a number of The radio said K-arume was lAralos Meet {To Head Off ii I . srciel Job I ' CAIRO (AP) — Arab leaders a summit meeting on how to block Israel from starting its plan to divert the waters of the Jordan River for irrigation. The conference was called by President G-amal Abde’. Nasser last Dec. 23 for the outward pur- pose of formulating a Uni-ted Arab stand tow a rd Israel's threat to begin the Jordan River irrigation scheme, predicted to start next summer. The river divides Jewish ls- rael and Arab Jordan and the yirrigation scheme has become ‘symbol of enmity between is- rael and the Arabs since the 1948 war. At. one time or another, most. leading Arab fi g u r e s have threatened war if Israel goes ead, but now Nasser is say- SHUBENACADIE N-5 (CP’:ing. through his controlled press - Two youths were killed Sun-I day when the car in which they‘ were riding left the highway at- Milford Flats about five miles’ from here. Vernon Arthur Bentley. 20. of l Shudenacadie and Rudolph Vin- cent Martyn, 21. of Peterbor~l Ollsh. Ont-. died in the accidehtlservers say. that the conference after the vehicle owned and] driven by Bentley left the road and crashed in the ditch. ' ‘that war is almost impossible. ls ra el‘s membership in the United Nations has been recog- nized as a deterrent factor and the certain intervention of the United Sates is being spelled out to Arab readers. This means. competent ob- to be any kind of success must spread out to tackle the Arab quarrels among themselves. charter cruises. The $250,000 ship. sailing uii- ‘_f,,f,‘°‘-ld_g°',',t,',’fk ;h°A;‘d°.;'1' §°§;,';,b“a§ der the power of her diesel en- Babunits minister of ham, ab gines and her foresail and jib, fag,-5. also is to_take part in a soutii Babu‘ wh.-, was 1,, Dar Es 8635 m0VH’- l Salaam. Tanganyika. d u r I n 3 Aboard the Vessel W85 32-yea!‘ the revolt. said Sunday the ban- ‘ old Capt. Angus Walters. SItIp- mjng or his Umma party W3, De!‘ “I the Original BIuen0Se- the final injustice which Bluenose II left six hours ai- sparked the 1-evou_ her scheduled departure! U.S. sources described Babu Capt. Ellsworth Cosginslas pro-Communist and said his ofiiparty is Communist oriented. Babu said the revolt came as ter time. ordered the delay because poor weather conditions. { 14 PAGES I Overihrown In Independent Zanzibar 2 Ocean-Going Ships Revolutionary Party lakes Over Control o surprise to him. He said ho had forecast something like a revolt when the government re- fused in invite opposition lead- ‘ers for talks in a bid to solve . differences. ‘ Umma and the Afro-Shirazi ,parties had the support of 60 lper cent of the people, he added. It was not immediately clear whether the new government would keep Zanzibar in the Commonwealth. IN CONSULTATION In London, British Colonial Secretary Duncan Sandys said -his Eovernment was consulting with other Commonweaith coun- ;-tries in East Africa on the situ- ation. 3 Zanzibar's constitutional mon- iarch. Sultan Seyyid Jamshid 'BlI‘l Abdulla. a nd Premier {Sheikh Mohamed Shamti fled to ‘the British steamer Salama Sat- ‘urday night while police tried l to cope with the rebels who took ) :over two armories. almost alt lof the police stations and the airport. Early casiialty figures re- ported l h r e is dead and 24 wounded. including two women. ‘ reports said the Ameri- teans and Britons were not being ‘hot er by the rebels and -there ' . a possibility they {would not be evacuated. lmsronr or UNREST ‘ . Britain granted zibair in- |dependence Dec. 10. The island thas a long history of pmificsl ‘unrest arising from nacial ani- lmosity. Violence which area ‘following the elections of June. liosi. killed as lAn‘gIican Church .=Burns At Chofhom CHAT!-IAM. N.B. ICP) -—— Fire .Sunday destroyed St. Mary’: «Anglican Church here. ‘ The church. built more than 50 years 320. was a landmark near the centre of this eastern New Brunswick town. iU.S. REPORT MADE PUBLIC l Cigarette Health Hazard l WASHl!\'GTON (AP '——-Heavy ‘the cigarette smoking is the prin- smoke the more you risk early cipal cause of ca-ncer of the; ath llungs and the larynx and ‘ lhealth hazard so grave as to loan for remedial action.‘ a U.S. lscience panel has concluded. [ The nature of that action was inot spclied out in the report. imade public Saturday. How- ever, Surgeon-General Luther lT€l‘l‘_\' of the U.S. Public Health lservice said his agency will i-move promptly to recommend. ‘specific steps of the kind urged ‘ the science group. Mean- he told a press confer- iquested rn ommendations for laws or reg- ulations to offset. smoking haz- V-ards but it concluded: "Cigarette smoking is n heaith hazard of sufficient im- portance in the United States to warrant appropriate reme- dial action." .' time, This is the flat picture taken of Neh- ru slnce he was stricken Jan. 1 at the annual conference of his Congress Mn. Indira Gandhi. Party in Snub- sneshwu-. (AP Wlroplioto via cable from lHOUNDS ARE OUTFOXED BY ANTI-BLOOD GROUP * TORQUAY. England (Reut- ers) — Hounds of the South Devon Hunt were outfoxed Saturday by s new anti-blood sports group known as the Hunt Saboteurs. The h o_u n d s were side- tracked by lumps of fresh meat along the trail. led by a false scent Into a cul-de-sac. and bewildered by a series of false hunting horn calls. Some the 20 saboteur» who took part in the opera- tion said that hunt followers became so incensed they charged them on horseback. John Prestidge. 21-year-old chairman of the group. said: “There were scuffles all along the first the hunt route. I somehow got a punch in the mouth. and others got punches too." The hounds were led up the cul-de-sac by one saboteur who was sitting in a tree with a silk stocking impregnated with the scent of a fox. “ h hounds started coming up the tree. but were whipped off by the huntsmen." he said. Hunters also had their hands full trying to stop the bounds eating meat dumped along the hunt route. “I-‘ortunatcly the hounds managed to gobble up quite a bit before being winn- Prcslidge anri anotlier sabo- teur ii-ore chased and ar- rested by police after feeding the hounds meal. He said later: “We got a pretty rou'.'li handling by all and sundry. After the police caught us. a sergeant told us we would be charged with depositing litter‘ .. in the roadway. Another sabnteur. 18-year- old Graham Cummings. was armed with a hunting horn. He said: "For some time we had the unhappy hoiinris run- ning from one side of the field to the other answering first our hunting calls and then those of the huntsmen. '‘In the end some of thi- hunt followers got so angry they charged us on horseback and lashed out with whips." when the hunt ended. niori. ‘ than half the field had already quit. A spokesman for the hunt said: “We didn't make a kill, but nevertheless we have en- joyed ourselves." NOVDOIII .'eII('f*: I "l wotilri advise anyone to ldiscontiuue s m 0 k i n g ciga- iI‘0H°-<~" 4 By rm: ASSOCIATED PRESS l The ii)-man spei-ta’. advisory --D0 . somethmgnow gm-(.99 committee on smoking and health took I4 months to eval- uatc more than 8,000 studies of the effect of smoking on'healtli, it undertook no esh rc- iSl?aI‘('ll but decided available evidence shows that cigarette ,smoking far outweighs all other ‘icauses of lung cancer and can- ‘. ycer of the larnyx—in men and lpcrhaps in women. ‘N0 CLEAR INDICTMI-INT ; It had no such clear-cut in- fidiclment of cigarette smoking and the “more research-is- needed" camp were drawing battle lines in the United States today in the wake of Saturday's government r e p o rt calling ‘heavy cigarette s m 0 kin 2 a grave m e n a c e to life and 5’ '0 fl side will prcvailaand ‘how decisively — almost cer- tainly rlcpcnds on still - uncry- stalizccl public reaction In n blue-ribbon science panel's call for “appropriate remedial ac- ‘In the area of heart and b’.ood lion.‘ vessel disease or lesser ail- The ltl-man jury held I'l(‘a\'_v mcnls sometimes associated cigarette smoking is the prin- with smoking. cipa’. cause of lung cancer. It But, broadly. took found some association betuccn British Doctors Urge Cigarette Smoking Curb C!‘ from AP-Reuters ,cigareItc smoking was rolaforl l.().\'D0.\'~--The British YVlcdi- 10 8 hifihfl‘ $193”) W" '", 3 ;cal Association has warned numb“ 0 dwoasc mwgnrws __ g and was casually linked with ‘British cigarette smokers to hm, (.an(.(.,.. curb their smoking or face the A BMA spokesman said the fserious risks outlined in Satur- ‘U.S. report confirmed - "w' Iday‘s US report on smoking. very much more detail"-the ; The warning followed the re- findings of Britain's Royal Col :leasc in Washington of the find- lcge of Surgeons in March. 1962. tings of the special committeeon smoking. The 1962 report up by Dr. Luther L. Terry. said- U.S. surgeon-general. to investi- gate the health hazand caused ‘over many years is a cause. in ‘by smoking. .the ordinary sense. of tong T. committee found that lcancer. the panel 7-?- :r I-lalbitual cigarette smoking view that the more you- The special group was not re- 1' e specific rec- ‘ .. Called ‘Grave’ By Panel After releasing the report. Terry declared that there will ibe ithe c om m i t t on of scientists Esaid: y “In view of the continuing and ‘ymountinz evidence from many .sources. it is the judgment of line committee that cigarette 'Cont.iniiccl on page I3) Battle Lines Being Drown In Woke Of Smoking Report ‘smoking and heart amt blood .vessel diseases and many other ailments but did not claim any casual relationship. The report sparked imme- diate demands. inside and out- side Congress. for federal ac- tion fo alter U.S. smoking hab- its No one called for any general proliibifion against smoking but many anti-smoking spokesmen said the government. by ‘law or by f‘.\'(‘f'llll\'(‘ r-dict. should re- quire that cizarcttc packages carr_\- ii-arnings of health dan- £(‘l'$ and that arivertisiti: should be altered in the lg o the panel's report ST.-\TIO.\' BANS ADS \ ban on cigarette ad\~t~rtls- in: was annouliced by radio s t n l l o n l\WU\ at (‘on(ord. Calif. Saliirda}: in the first ‘such reaction to the report But the three major US. ra- in and television networks ~ CBS. .\'B( and -\BC—all an- noiinccd they would re-examine II‘If‘lI‘ advcrtisiiic standards as rotated to cigarettes. Bccaiisc the panel in its [4 months of work undertook no original research but only avg). uated some 8.000 earlier studies. pro-tobacco spokesmen insisted that nothing new was put forth and nothing finally proven So. they said. uch more research. by public and private agencies. is needed be- ]forc any drastic action can no ‘justified. J