'1 Q ~ .- ..._.—._ ll it’: Good For the lslancl fl he Guardian is For it 4 voL. Lxxv. NO. an , Rattlesnakes Hunt Is Ended TORONTO (CP)—Taxi-driver David Franks Thursday with- drew hls offer to pay $10 for every massasauga rattlesnake delivered dead or alive to his Toronto home. ~ His family breathed a collec- tive sigh of relief. Twenty dead snakes were delivered through the mall in the past week while r. Franks was on holiday in North Bay. on his return today he said he will not accept any more snakes but will pay for those already delivered. Brian Wonnacott. Charlotte- town (rightl. looks on happily as CNR Trainmen Joe O'Con- nor briefs four students on the Stratford Shakesperian Festi- Seaway Authorities lake Issue With Shipowner's Danger Charge By ROBERT RICE OTTAWA (CP) —— Is the St. ‘Lawrence Seaway fraught with dangers to ships? Who fitmrdaio srusm ENROUT ro STRATFORD val where’lhey are guests of the Canada Council. This pic- ture was taken at Toronto be- fore the students boarded the special train to Stratford. On- forward giving the skipper a clear view of an approachingl lock. Mr. Dalglelsh also suggested area or in the St. - “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew" CHARLO'I'l‘ETOWN, CANADA, FRIDAY, AUGUST 3, 1962. '21,,-;°u SEVEN cams WEAT HER Sunny and warm. Southwesrefiy winh 15 with lottetown 55 and 75. gusts to 25. Low-high at (max- Medical Care Acll I . REGINA (CP) The Sas- katchewan legislature Thursday “ gave second reading-—approval in prlnclple—to amendments to the Medical Care Insurance Act on a recorded vote of 52 to 0. The amendments, introduced shortly after the special session started, started receiving clause-by-clause study the house and the possibility arose that the session would last only one ay. The changes make it possible for doctors to practise outside the controversial act. There are 34 CCF members, 19 Liberals and one Independent st in the legislature. One Liberal was absent and there is one va- lario. Other students are Nan- caI':itb::1'Leadel. Ross Thatcher cy Vogan. Moncton; George‘ ; Lilly, St. John's and Irene Dl- * ncen. Halifax County. N.S. (CP PHOTO) of the original plan. a ‘ RESEIWATI S citizens of Saskatchewan. criticized the CCF government for its handling of the medical- care dispute but said his party: ffavors the amendments because j th would give Sas- katchewan a medical plan with universal coverage and would take some of the compulsion out ‘ MAIN l But be still had some reserv- ‘ atlons. "Is this the best kind of medical care plan for the " he asked. The amendments. besides al- seaway tends to be blamed for llnwinll d0Cl0I‘5 to Pfflclise Out- nccidents that actually happen_side the act. permit voluntary elsewhere in the Great Lakes ‘non - Lawrence plans to operate in association profit health insurance Revised l Surgeons which ended a three-. week boycott of the government 3 plan by doctors. i Mr. Thatcher said the con-, troversy caused wounds that{ will take a lot of healing and} the tragedy of the w h ol e, episode is that it need not have .3 happened. All people of Sas-l katchewnn favor medical insur- ance. The basic issue in this terrible dispute was a coercive‘ type of government plan versus a scheme acceptable to all." The government. the Liberal: leader said. abandoned demo-1 cratic methods “for the higl ick." ' SAYS MEETS NEEDS Premier Woodrow Lloyd said. the plan was shaped to meet} the essential needs of the peo-3 le ' “it will enable every family‘ and every individual to enjoy (Continued on Page 5 Col. 3) ' Test Ban By DOUG MARSHALL l Canadian Press Staff Writer I Recent scientific advances in atmosphere and outer space. lkel-S f0!‘ the agricultural EX- techni- These involve no major com;-o1';ports of Canada. Australia and underground detection THESE ANGLERS ARE DI.-FFE.R'ENT KINGSTON. Ont. (CP) ._ Two boys —- Walter Schinael and Stuart Vandermee—- won’t win any prizes for finesse. but what the heck, .they caught the fish. The were swimming near a powerhouse about three miles north of here when they spotted. a muskellunge lying in the weeds. '1 .- I «:7: G Walter threw a rock at it and it charged toward him. 1 Stuart hit it with another rock and Walter jumped on it. holding it against the bottom. Stuart scrambled ashore, found a piece of iron rod and jammed it through the gills of the musky. Together. they hauled it to the bank. Stuart and Walter had the fish measured and weighed- it went 51 inches and Z pounds—-and argued whether to have it mounted or cooked. The boys decided in favor of stuffing -— stuffing them- selves with" muskie. Accord Hopes Brighten 1 Some neutral nations urge an immediate ban on tests in the ‘ques have brighten-ad hopes for prublems, :8 nuclear test ban treaty. l 12 radii Definite Progress Made On Britain's Market Bid Assoc. Memberships For Commonwealth By ROBERT MAUTHNER BRUSSELS (Reuters)--Brio ain and the uropean Com mon Market chalked up a series of agreements Thursday night in their effort to work out by Saturday an outline of t e terms under which Britain can join the six-nation trade group. ‘ The agreements provided for associate mem rship for about 30 British colonies and depen- full mem r The negotiators also reached a w‘ e measure of agreement on the linking with ‘the Common Market of independent African ates of t Commonwealth. conference sources said. An point of agreement was on financial regulations of the ommon arkel agricul- . tural policy. The agreement left the status of some British dependencies to be discussed at later meetings. Included in this group are Malta. Hong Kong. the future Malaysian federation. Gibraltar and the British African protec- torates of Basutoland. Swazi- land and Bechuanaland. DISCUSS CANADA TODAY dencies with the Common Mar- 4 - ket if Britain itself becomes a be . which the talks deadlocked last urday. Neither Britain nor the "six" had anything new to say on U! H «-0- this problem when the negotia- tions were resumed Wednesday and e European ministers asked Britain to draw up a de- tailed document of British ob- jections to the market pro- posals. British experts worked until . . on the document and presented it to the Europeans when the talks got under way again hours or Sources said the document aimed at aking important changes in several of the Eu- ropean proposals, including the crucial issue of a price policy for farm products within the market. Differences among the mem- bers themselves have hampered the negotiations all along. par- ticularly on the farm products - M V! The French. with a huge farm-surplus problem at home. arebelieved reluctant 'to make concessions to the British that will allow Canadian. Australian and Newzealand farm exports to compete within the market if Britain joins. On the agenda for today is the vital question of alternate mar- lNew Zealand—the issues over Hostages Held By Pipevfitier ‘ A British shipowner thinks that British insurance under- River below Montreal. with the government plan. How-- - ._i K , , ' 5., ant gugayfiuiclalg page 13. writers have had. to pay large _ The p seawaym authority ,_also over. mem chi the gov-, mghfhemiyggi gggfifgulgj-:1 . I __ _ V I__ g _ ,1 _ _ PHOENIX‘ .A"?' ‘AP’ “' A.” 0Vle . .. ...~~...- . as .. W W-<W' ~ . M. .. l W dis-rmm~c°»~~-c- *1 B i ' :2::2.*::°y::' ::::.:::.::rr D _ Peter Dc .9 __ t. a e I .«-. ax_ v sin. . e-.. .n or.,.m9s’n prov cairn; ' — - ..4 -. I z . . ' Dalglggihsj pplng mm or Mr. Rankin said the Lower British freighter. Crystal Sap- 925,000 residents. °§u§':,’:l fifed *‘l°“‘e"°<1hb-V "f'§Dh°m’- “:3 ~ E 3.33311] llrwinnipeg re. St. Lawrence. the seaway itself phire that his ship was stopped The changes follow an agree- lmainmns “that new capabilities I “WY;-’." 9 3 ""0"" cenfly am the urge number .1 and the Great Lakes are all three times in locks because it ment signed last week between for detection and distinction W °“ ;:"“’t'°" ta“ 10¢“ in the geawgy ¢_-gain mm-1; lumped together as one msti:lr- was one-quarter_ot' an inch over the government and Saskatch- ~ deep subterranean instrument‘. °:h“eg°lir‘;“z‘::n’a‘mdu’;:im' . e ance area for ships. Hence the draught limit. ewnn College of Physicians and , makes inspection unnecessary loses Plea By TOM OCBILTREE LONDON (AP) -— Britain re- jected Dr. Robert Soblcn's plea for political asylum Thursday and ordered the Soviet spy packed off to the United States. The 61-year-old psychiatrist was told that he had lost in his race halfway around the world to escape I life sentence in a son as he waited in a in London's Brixton Home Secretary Henry Brooke told the House of Com- mons there was nothing to just- ify Soblen’s appeal for haven as a political refugee—since he had been convicted of espionage in the court of a democratic coun- t ry. “lie is not in danger of per- the passage “very dangerous." “An ‘accident ratio of less than three inland vessels. per 000 and 11 ocean vessels per 1.000 in 1961 would not bear out the existence of the dangerous conditions which Mr. Dalgleish suggests are present." Mr. Rankin said the accident ratio has dropped consistently since the seaway started oper- ations in 1959. lie said there is always a hazard in taking a ship into a restricted cha —particularly a concrete-bound scaway lock. SALTIES RIDE HIGH The hazard is greater for some salt-water ships because their flaring bows and high su- perstructure tend to catch the wind. particularly when sailing empty and riding high on the :4 secution in his own country for his political opinions or on ra- cial s." Brooke asserted. He said the British govern- ment was giving directions for yin! Soblen back to New York. where he Jumped 8100,1110 I CT 2: "did not spell out Just when Soblcn would be deported. H Soblen landed in England July 1 Just after slashing .his wrists and stomach I the Israeli El Al Airline plane fly- lns him so the United ‘states lafterd»-be had-been expelled by are . l water. 4 inland lake vessels. built es- lpecially tor the lake trade. are [low and sleek. with the bridge ACCRA. Ghana (AP)-—Police rounded up as persons Thurs- day in an apparent effort to determine whether the attempt Aim is To Prevent U.Kl.Raci coupon (Benton) —. Heine cited in lecrdary Hoary Brooks day promised thoroush study of proposals for legislative action tomprevent racist rallies in im- a . V But be emphasised that noth- ins must be done .to impair the rlsljllhof {no match. H e ipohto llouseof ComrndIi‘fl&,ln.ltlnlfor moretl;aa'&lloItwitbad¢le- Button of, , llldtli British 1 nillnunhtdn st Rallies M services Saturday. "The" evil we a thought was completely dis"- credltod. if not exorclaed. has raised its ugly head again." rabbi soil it his letter. Brooke said police would con- u- :- E WINNIPEG (CP)—The Freer calls on the Soviet p continue bargaining if he really wants world disarmament. But it cites the Soviet's. rec- ord of acts that impress us much more than the speeches lGl1ana Terrorists Hunt Is Spurred appear to be based on the hope ; that "lf the Western dike is l to assassinate President Kwame krumab was motivated by a political plot. The 52-year-old African leader escaped unharmed when a bomb exploded Wednesday night near his car in a village 500 miles north of Accra. The blast killed _ person eluding a schoolboy and two po- 56 in t In 3,000 persons marched through the streets in a protest demon- stration agnlnst the assassina- tion attempt. They carried plac- ards demandbis the "death pen- alty for the plotters." It was the first officially re- of Nkrumall. most political opposition since loading the rich gold coast col- ony to independence from Brit- ain in 187. K CI» -unto-noun ‘ ’ U“ uoooeoanon. . wr-in-‘ro-nan-n _ fiduroa Wanton’: page .... .\nnIIOIAOOOlI0o ' .¢.....w.-utooslooon -nououlva N ~onnIIDfIOI‘I.I ‘ r of intent" and declares new So- I vict proposals on West Berlin! ti open LETTER. FROM FREE mess broken there. it will soon col- Press. in an open letter to Ni- ilapse everywhere." kita Khrushchev T h u r s d ay, l mier to lllutchison. editor of the Victoria The letter is written by Bruce ‘K’ lsloldlo Continue Bargaining - If He Really Wants Disarmament .Times, one 0‘! the FP Publica- , ltrons group of newspapers to 1 you should fear the West's bases ‘which the Free Press also be- longs. It is in reply to a three- page advertisement inserted in the Free Press and two other Canadian newspapers July 18 by the Soviet embassy in Ottawa. containing ll text Khrushchev’s s p e e c h to t e I World Congress for G e n e r at | Disarmament and Peace Moscow in June. _ The Free Press first sought to publish a reply in the Com- munist party newspaper Pravda for the same price ($2,800) but was refused on grounds Pravda carries no advertising. The Moscow evening paper Vecher- ‘ naya Moskva also refused a re- quest for advertising s p a c e, stating it carries only advertise- ments eoncerning happenings in Moscow. -The Free Press reply occu- pies about five columns of the editorial page. Thelreverse side of the page carries a transla- tlonin Russian. . An accompanying note by publisher R. S. Malone says “It is possible that some of our readers. particularly those with origins in Russia or its satellite countries. may wish to mail this reply to friends behind the O u . _ Mr. Malone said a copy of the article is being mailed to Premier Khrushchev personally an it will be broadcast todlv to dis Liberty. a private or- ganization based In New York that beams broadcasts behind the Iron Curta . Mr. Butchison examines. some of the “formidable bill of par- ticular: against the West" pre- sented in the Khrushchev speec :_ . "As to Western armament. It is notiinl but I r to yours. late and reluctanhla you m“Aa to the Western bases. all of them were minted volun- tnrtly to the Won! by uni: Alva“! the consent of the nature poo- ptes. Your for-old! Wan also 95%- sentotthelocnlgpvernmelh nogtnouaovunuoowiwdl in: ,. l i i sect of the peoples was not l base ofl h r l powerless to resist and the con- asked . . . "Certainly we understand why for that is their entire purpose ——to make you realize the dan- ger of aggression. lf on moved that danger the West, would happily abandon these. ' .. 5’ SHVE ‘ CRUMP wms FIGHT "LIFE Paul Cnunp. above. won lb use when Governor use to Otto-Kofrner 3-nuns onnuuve domuaacodtbbounhb the next morning -and an a great deal of money.. log commission. 1 In any case. observers say. the Russians are unlikely to‘ concede even the bare mini-l mum of on-site verification un-' til they have made their nu-. clear deterrent less vulnerable. . It estimated it would take Russia three years to transfer} its nuclear weapons from ther present “soft' site s above ground to underground bays or: aboard submarines. E Because of new detection, techniques the Americans have 1, modified their verification de-, mands. President Kennedy of-; fered Wednesday to scale down 5 inspection requirements .if the} Russians would allow checks by E international scientific teams. ' NEUTRAL PRESSURE ; Meanwhile in Geneva there is l increasing pressure from the neutral countries for both nu-, clear sides to start serious dis- 3 cussions about control posts and 3 international m o n i t o r- 3 tmprlsonmen w goat“ for murder fromufieat: recommendation he never be united. I'll declahn came tn- By STEWART MacLEOD OTTAWA military tattoo ever staged by Canada’: regular forces is shap- ing up across the country in preparation for a huge. splash at the Seattle World's Fair next month. Nothing like it has ever been done before.__The two-hour tat- too will tell the story of Can- ada's history with 10 military pageants, 650 men, seven bands and the RCMP musical ride. In some cases. the performers won't meet each other u about a week before the six-day run begins Sept. 10—the begin- ning of Canada Week. But units across Canada have been work- ing out their parts of the show since July. "Each part will be handled to he in a completed package." Capt. Ian Fraser. of New Glas- 3 av- .- .- ly one and one-half days be- fore the Chicago man was to departure until have been executed. V (AP wt:-abate) Biggest Military (CP)—The biggest ‘ gow. N. ., the show‘: writer.‘ producer and dire c t o r said l Thursday. “Everything will} have been perfected before ".4 It's the first time regular‘ forces from across Canada have l joined together with official‘! blessing to form a tatoo. The, World’s Fair is picking up thei tab, estimated at more than. $30,000. To Powe ; By FINLAY CAMPBELL ‘ ALGIERS (Reuters) —— Al-l ‘geria's feuding nationalist lead-ime ers agreed Thursday to patch up their political differences and call a halt to the power struggle that has split the coun- try since ll won Independence a moot The settlement came at meeting in Algiers when dissi- dent Vice-Premier Ahmed Ben Bella's two bitterest foes agreed to recognize the seven-man po- litical bureau he named last month to run the country. As soon as the agreement was annorm . Ben Bella. whose troops already control three-quarters of Algeria. an- nounced he will leave his “exile capital" in Oran today and fly to Algiers. . However. under p re s it u re from the “r.eutral" troops con- trolling Algiers. he agreed to give up plans for a trlumphal entry into the city. WILL HOLD ELECTIONS Under the terms of the settle- ment the nationalist leaders agreed to hold country - wide L 3. Pearson’: Moth-er Is Dead OTTAWA (CP) — Mrs. Annie Pearson. aged mother of Llb-‘ eral opposition Lender Lester Pearson. died Thursday while; holidaying at Southamp-f ton. Ont., it was reported here. 1 Hrs. Pearson was believed to? be about 5. was to‘ Mr. Pearson, w have left this afternoon to pre- aide over an unofficial interna- tional conferenee on tensions in the western _ at Ba- hia in Brazil, has postponed his after the fun- eral. tentlflvely scheduled for ‘Innate Saturday gets to us." l g rs The W ing a hearing on the man's dis- abili claim. _ Lawyer Stephen Gorey pro- vided instructions from his hos- pital bed to pipefitter Charles E. Milligan, 50. of Tempe. Ariz. Gorey was reported to be in bers of al a 00 I. commission who had been hold- condition. Milligan vowed he wouldn't release his hostages from the hearing room at the state capi- tal annex until he completed statements supporting his claim and they had been re- co ded. Hall Is Expected r Ballle elections for a constituent assembly Aug. 27 and to submit composition of the seven- man political bureau to the ex- isting nationalist “parliament" a weelr later. The political bureau would apparently act as a sort of cab- inet to direct the affairs of the country. but there was no im- mediate indicalion of the role of Premier Ben Youssef Ben Khcdda. behind whom Ben Bella's opponents had united. Ben Khedd himself had al- ready agrced to the establish- ment of the political u and took no direct part in the settlement negotiations. army was not mentioned in the joint communique issued after the meeting. but It was understood its future had been discussed. Rocket Plane if Soars 28 Mi. LOS ANGELES (AP) . - Tell pilot Joseph A. Walker zoomed the X-15 an estimated 2|! mile! high Thursday_ testing a new way to curb the rocket plane’! tendency to yaw as it plunge! back from the edge of space. Yawlng. an uncontrolled swing of the nose to one side. can progress into a dangerous sldeslip unless corrected. After a recent night to a rec- ord belght of 60 miles. another pilot, air force Maj. Robert M. White. suggested further effort! to reduce yaw. In Thursday's flight Walker. who flies for the U.S. National space Agency. went aloft Edwards Air Force Base the tightest curbs yet ‘ mood scanty. lg into the electronic controls the sow: