\ / I (. D ‘4 If it's Good For the lsland The Guardian IS For it who @mordism WEATHER Mostly clear. a few .cloudy periods this afternoon and evening; milder: Winds southwest 15. Low-high. 2 and 20. u 0 0 __‘____~ Covers Prince Edward Island Like 77w Dew” VOL' LXXVI' NO' 25 ‘““‘°"‘“‘ o:.'....‘,“::: ".9333." 0:33.15“; mg: Dev-mnem- CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 30. 1963 Nofigig'fifsnvaN CENTS 14 PAGES Sale Of Margarine Here Termed ‘Very Unlikely' After Request By Union 8y DON MacLEOD Guardian-Patriot Staff Writer Premier Walter R. Shaw said yesterday that it is "very Iikc’--" 'ltat tll" government will Implement. a request that the mmnfacture. and sale of mar- = :l l t permitted in the pro- vinv-c T nucst “as contained in a hv- presented to the cabinet yekf" “1y by the Prince Edward Islaiv'l hegislatlve Committee of lll" “itcrnational Railway Bro- tlie!“"iods. Each year the com- ' ‘ presents a brief to the government. entitled “Memoran- ci " " " LCnglF-Ill”|l." “With agriculture depending § E ‘highly OII dairy production in this proVince." the. premier said. "it is very unlikely that the re- quest concerning the . ' will receeivc favor- o .' D n margarine ible considerati n It was pointed out in the brief. submitted by J. C. Carroll. com- mittee chairman. that "it is pos- ‘afford to purchase butter I'illl“ that naiiy citizens cannot even at the present price. therefore. we do not consider that the sale of margarine would detri- mental to the dairy industry in this province." SUGGEST NEW FERRY It was suggested that the gov- ernment "look into the possibil- ity of having a new car ferry constructed containing rails to assist in the transportation of perishable t r a ffi c during the periods of the year when con- nections to and ham tl ain- land are most difficult and that this car ferry be similar in size and power to the MV Abegweit." This suggestion was based on the fact “that the committee re- alizes the proposed causeway could not possibly be to opera- tion during the next few years." Pointing out that the. basic in- dustry of the province is agric- ulture and its allied products. ‘which are generally in t h II I k. necessitating compact transportation of a "positive na- ture." the committee said “it is our considered opinion that the people of this province and the. government are the people to de-l -cide whether or not rails are. necessary on the p r o p o s e (if causeway . . . cssary even without mentioningl the. periods. spring and fall.'3 when heavy hauling is barredi from the highways." .1 HOUSING PROPOSAL Commending the. government on its efforts toward co-opera- live housing. the committee sug- gested that the government “in co-operation with federal authm- itics give consideration to broad- ening the scope. of the present National Housing Act so as to provide government - insured mortgages on existing homes that meet the standards requir-i I(‘ nl'iiucd oti page 4. col. 3!; GOV’T UPHELD 82-7l Social Credit MPs Aid Diet In Commons Vote OTTAWA tCPi——Social CreditltNDf‘ amendment vided board members consist of per- sons demic, training. MPs again come to the rescuei of the minority Progressive Conservative government Tues- day night and New Demo- cratic Party amendment. to the bill setting iip the national economic development board. was defeated 82 to 7t. i It was the first recorded vote ‘ couver-Burrard) :pose of the. amendment Timlskamingl. the: would have pro-i that at least half with professional. technical or aca' scientific. Tom Berger (NDP —- said \I‘an- the pur- If 5 fl- smce the House resumed busi-ianother to be introduced later ness .Ian. 21 after a month-longl recess. Social Credit. MPs sided iboard members with the government on several [public officials who (motions of non-confidence lastlout. all 7 The standing vote wail‘ party lines. with NB! Liberal was to ensure that ha] along‘tirne..lpnjdz_ mm-.flnd%_14%¢)§gnuations representingdnbnrh H ,.‘___._ h . 2 no u rm -- ~ members‘wh‘ v nutritional" and other ace-i LONDON (APt-The French members aligning woud not be lblackball of Britain's bid for a 3 to be. full-time could carry "genuine plannin ." The bill provides for a full- remunerated ei- ogainst Conservative and Social }cept for travel and living ox- Credit members. 1 Proposed by Arnold Petersi crises during meetings. Immigration minister Bell op-. Election { Rumors Flare In Britain LONDON AT‘l ment campaign to'clcar itsX iilation Tuesday Prime Minister Macmillan intends toterm f call a national election soon. Monday. the. government I“ . tiered cuts in the debating timelfm‘ced by lhf‘ OPPOSlllfln Pal‘"Pl‘all‘i€ A govern-[Macmillan is . ‘polls. .decks of legislation roused spec-‘MANDATE TO NEXT YEAR rushing to the The government's five-year of office expires in the all of 1964. rein- Labor speculation was thefeconomists and other special-v railways are. nee-i ' saying experts. the. amendment. the. place for posed that :ists was on the. board's perms-I ,ncnt staff. . He said the amendment ‘could place restrictions on the. thread representation desired ;for the board's membership. Earlier. an amendment pro- ;pose h unro tL—~. iHamilton East) was acceptedi ;by Finance Minister Nowlan. land carried unanimously. l Mr. Munro proposed that the lcabinet consult with large or- nomlc groups before appointing .the} board members. , ‘ Liberal and NDP spokesmen: expressed the hope that this; would result in representation: (H the board for such groups! as the Canadian Labor Con- gress and the Canadian Mami- facturers‘ Association. he. debate continued in‘ clause-by-clause study of that bill. ‘ rowan BROAD l ‘ Hazcn Argue (Ir-Assiniboialj allotted to two important do-lty's present leaderless state fol- national. t mestic measures—a bill ganizing London's municipal ad-; ministration and the Weights and Measures Bill. W immediately started buzzing around Commons lob- bies that Macmillan was getting ready for an election battle. reor-llowing the death of Hugh can. skell. There is widespread specula- ition that Macmillan may go to premiers , v . the polls before his opponents said Premier Stanfield of Nova Serval‘ve Parlys (‘hflmjt‘fi In the have time to make. a national. Scolia also is coming to Ottawa "9)“ (“W-“0n 0" Bl‘llams 28'"- figure out. of their next Icader.f Tuesday iThe new man probably will not b 7 The idea took hold in oppposl-Ebe elected until about Fe . a t tion Labor circles.l The contest for the party ilcadership also may reopen the Sources close to the govern- ment played down, the idea. split between Labor’s left wingl saying the cuts were a neces-iand its dominant. moderates. nary part of the parliamentary which Gaitskell‘s skill had; Program and no indication thatlhealed. t Cabinet Is Needled 0n Nuclear ‘Split’ I Mr. Pearson then asked Mr. Diefenbaker to confirm a June 12. 19th. prime ministerial state- ment. that the Voodoos would be armed with conventional weap- OT‘I‘AWA tCPi—The opposi- tion continued to needle the gov- ernment Tuesday over what it claluied is a cabinet split on nuclear arms policy. Liberal Lender Pearson hc- Ions. Son the exchange during the. Speaker Marcel Lambert C°mm°n3 quelllofl “"011 by “1' ‘ruled that questions could not 1 “ill! Prime Minister Dlefen‘ibe asked about a previous de- bate Ifisher to make a statement on‘ _ 8 "reported «Hemmer. wm‘t David Lewis tNDP York men“ mum" Hume’s' South) asked whether External '. Dlefenbaker said he had Affairs Minister Green agrees “mm to “a to What he had with the policy outlined by Mr. "id MOM.” "he" he 5““ 1“? Harkness. Mr. Green said this defence stnkmelll 0f ll“ Fn',wnn not a proper question. day new“ "“ interpretation Pau‘. Martin (L—Essex East) 1" ' 1'5' Demo' Isaid Mr. Harkness has contra- cratic P n r t y leader. asked | dicted the policy set out by Mr. whether ML mane” Mona” ; Diefenbakcr and that there is a Statement on nuclear ivoaoon<"'clenr division of opinion" accurately reflqu l""f“’""‘-"“ 'within the cabinet. 0 SUGGESTS RESIGNATION He asked whether Mr. Hark- ;ness would observe the "time lhonored" practice and resign. Mr. Lambert said the ques- tion involved matters of opinion. not of fact. The Prime minister said his (Mr. «baker-’5) statement "‘ I"l‘lfllly on defence st~nrts. Mr. Pearson asked Mr. tin-k. neu to confirm that part of his statement which hold Canada "8 accounting with the us. was assured. by Mr. Nowlan. Prime Minister Macmillan re.- ‘that the board had ‘powers'ceivcd the. news of France‘s broad enough if necessary tn‘VPlO of Britain's Common Main .tackle the rail abandonmentlket application stoically. But iquestion. this political leadership was im- Mr. Argue said the matterlmedlaft‘ly jeopardized. and de- tends to be seen as a whnliy'mands were expected to spread one. Actually It wast for withdrawal of the cxpcno Sivcly maintained 55.000-man ML anian referrpd tn British army on the Rhine Pr' Minister Diefenbaker's l STAKE“? CHANCES I pending meeting with westernl Macmillan ’hfid staked his D0" on the subject. or Wednesday next 1 donment. N HEES m,“ Mr. Douglas asked whether mind: ,0, ".2" fdfl?" Mr. Green will Issue a state: Interceptor ment clarifying Mr. Horknesn Dense smoke and mm. mt. ' statement which had been ln- from the Gout-p.11, nee. “'9 Sum .PLAIN tended to clarify the no building in downtown nto "o «In... aid his state- minister's. . , the height of on early-mg- "a" “'8 "plain nod clear and I Mr. Green laughed but did not null blue Tuesday. The build. . “my reply- l m m mm Contract | For Mom Awarded BRITAIN’S Edward Heath. left. talks With West German foreign Minister Gerhard Sch- roeder. right. ‘ conference . om in Brussels. Belgium. Tuesday after Britain lost bid for membership in the Euro- pean Common Market. Britain . chief negotiator the discussions. With them are Duncan Sandys, British secret- for common- and Christop- from. right. British minister of agini- cry {of state wealth relations. her Soames. second (AP Wirephnta via e from London) culture. Grave Concern Being EXDIESSEd ‘ Over ECM Rejection 0t Britain ipartnership role in continentallgency cabinet meeting in Europe brought grave concern .morning. I How‘evcrfi he maintained his usual a-plomb. After an emer- the. Macmillan went be- can. partnership to meet the‘ Communist menace. i "We have to pick up > ipieces and move on." a high in allied capitals Tuesday night 1fore. Parliament and refused to l US. official said. over Fears arose that President the unity of the west. lbe drawn into an open attackl de lGaulle‘s course might. sever the [on de Gaulle—despite the obvi- lous prodding of angered Labor western alliance politically and “party members. defensively. Repercussions mcdiately ton to. ommon capitals. Moscow were interested. edly pleased. spectators. He’litical life and possibly his Con- ing entry into . Market and having a voice in week to discuss railway aban-Mh.3 growing European pom-[ca union a; BUILDING D Measures ()rganiration branch. miscellaneous offices and bus- inesses and 90000 books of the Ontario goyemmcnt's exten- sion library services. Firemen foughttwonndnholflioimfn \\'f‘|’(‘ felt lm~; I in London. Washing-ideal with [his as we alwavs‘deyelopmcnts in Brussels and ‘ Market | and Peking and undoubt- tbe Common i 1 Philadelphia. ipcndent West European-Ameri- ESTROYED ! “I am encouraged to feel," Macmillan said, “that. we. shall ihave when we. have had diffi— lculties to face. We. shall face jthcm as a united country." ‘1 Deputy Foreign Secretary Ed- lward Heath. who led the. British negotiations at Brussels. said 'Iater that despite the outcome. “we shall not turn our backs on Europe or the countries of :the European community." lBHIW T0 DESIGN US. officials. who sought to the last to help Britain's cause. isaw the French action as a se- rious blow to the European tunity movement. was . seen as a blow for President .Kcnncdy's grand design. an- m .— .n O tnounced in his July 4 speech in for an E 9; a. 1 . . “:1- “I. ‘A a 5. _ “V w .5; “ i092} - t l 10-above-7ero weather to quell the outbreak. The building was formerly owned by the family of federal Trade Minister Hens. Delight at the turn of events i. was apparent In the Communist loamp. itself in disarray because lof the doc Moscow - Peking tideological rift. Dispatches to lMOSCOW news a crs reported other western capitals with ill- .concea ce. 3 P r a v d a dispatch ‘Washinglon said the US. helped 'design the Common Market as la wall against Communism. but ‘ that it had turned against Wash- gon. SHATTERS CONFIDENCE : In the Common Market itself, .the. five other members—West lGermany. Italy. Belgium. The; iNetherlands and Luxembourg-« lwerc. bound to accept France's ldeeision by the trade bloc's rule lof unanimity. But they felt no ‘obligation to like it. And moves were already under way to re- verse it. 'JEarly Meetings Min- Tucs- OTTAWA th‘l—Primo lister Diefcnbakcr called .day for an early ministerial lmectiiig of members of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade in the light or the breakdown in Brussels llf‘fltilia- fions for British entry to the European Common Market. He said also in a Common: statement that no limo must he Warm Air Flows From Arctic Area By THE CANADIAN PRESS ' ‘ southeast- and the to bring some relief overnight to resi- enf. of ntral Canada. plagued for almost three weeks with bitterly cold \I'f‘fflllt‘l' Weather offices from the Brit. Ish Columbia interior to north- western Ontario forccast warm- ing conditions for today. while coastal BC. Quebec and Maritimes expected only slight expected of the snowstorm struck Quebec Sunday came to light an hour: Inter when an unidentified man was found semi-conscious in ticket booth near Montreal's Molson Stadium. The man had been in the booth when knocked over trapping him if 1) inside. taken to hospital suffering frost- upoauro. l for Wirepliotol inn. and the I from' standing LPoir-l-ioment "At A Glance THE CANADIAN lESDAY. Jan. 29 Opposition MPs Prime Minister PRESS a3.“ ,. peppered Dietenbaker and Defence Minister Hark- l ncss about with more questions the government‘s nu~ clear policy. Mr. Dicfcnbakci‘ and Mr. Harkncss declined to confirm or deny contentions that. the cabinet is divided on the nu- clear warheads issue. Paul Martin if, v Esscxi invited Mr. Ilni'kncss to re- su:n over the “c car division opinion within the cab- ct." l Transport Minister Balcer said transfers of TC employ- ccs from Winnipeg to Mont- real have been suspended pending a rei'icw of the sitti- ation. Social Credit MPs backed the government. to dcl‘cat an NDP bid to amend a bill setting up the national eco- nomic development hoard. .lolin Munro tl.~—Hamillon Easti proposed the govern- ‘ ment consult labor and man- agement in selecting hoard ,mcmhcrs. His amendment was acceptc . WEDNESDAY. .lan till T Commons meets at. 2:30 pm. EST to study esti- matcs of the labor depart- ment. The Senate meets at 3 p.m *gUrged By Diet lost iii arranging for full and ' n informal discussmns members of the Commonwealth. T\1r. lliefenbaker‘s call for early meetings of the two groups was his only immediate proposal for action in the wake. of the collapse of the Brussels talks He noted that at the Com. monweallh p r i m c ministers' conference in London last Sep-i lcmbcr he had said that what- - the outcome of the British there should he a meeting1 free-world nations to Slflt‘l‘ ways of dealing tradc problems As a result. l’rcsideiti body had supported his 1 . .,,...“.. n. with Ken- SIIEECS- -~ . f m'i‘stci's representing (iAA'I‘ countries. ' that recent discus- sions ll'lH‘ indicated this meet- ing could not take place before early .\|1I'l “In ' of what has taken place at Brussels today. every thing should be done to speed «Continued on page 3. col. 3» INSlDE TODAY Announcements. notice: I! Births. deaths .1. .‘l Classified l2. ., I3 Finance. markets . 13 4 Comics Editorials ‘ Kings County 4 City. Queens 5 Prince (‘ounty .. 2 3 10 I Summerside . . . . . . . ... . ._ S . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Women? Pigott Co. Gets 5 $5 Mill Pigott Constnuetion Company Limited of Toronto and Mont- real has been awarded the con- tract to build the Fathers of Confederation Memorial Build- ing in Charlottetown. Amount of the contract $5,099,994. Announcement. of the award was made simultaneously yes- is its architects. Affleck_ Desbairaits. Dimalkotp- cuios. Lebensold and Sise. Foundation president. Frank MaeKinnon, who nounced the. awarding of the contract here on ' foundation‘s board of directors. said the winning firm has build :3 number of large buildings in Eastern Canada. including the .Queen Elizabeth Hotel in Mon- ti'eal. Dr. 9: 3 A CEREMONY SATURDAY Dr. MaeKiinnon said that: firm ipresident J.J. Pigott will abtend the sod turning ceremony Sat. urday on the site of the memor- ' I la . Premier Robert Stanfield of Nova Scotia in his capacity 0 .chai-rman of the 1563 Canadian :promiei‘s' conference. will turn betllalt of the. ion Job ill". sod. Addie-.3 for Lb: casinn is to be delivered by ’guebec Premier Jean Dosage. ’the chairman of the 1962 pm ‘miers' conference. 3 Other dignitaries to attend include Hon. Henry Irwin. act- ‘inig-premier of New Brunswick: Senator Paul H. Bcuffard. Que- b c City. vice-president of the foundation; Dimitri memorial Dimakopoulos. copra nting the architects; Dr. Eric Arth-un'. Toronto, foundation architectwr- al advisor; Hugh Cromliie. Mon- t:'eal_ genera manager of e foundation. ‘Machan. minister ,, Dr. MacKiinnon wilt preside at Saturday's ceremony. Sen-a- toi‘ Bouti‘ard will introduce Pl'lef’t‘ Lesage who will be thanked by Premier Walter R. Shaw. “The spade. used by re- mier Stanfield to turn the sod," said Dr. MacKinnon. "will be placed in the museum of the li’i'cmm'ial Building when It is ccmpleted' ‘ Dr. MacKinnon said that “tunning of the sod will be the gn—ahead for construction." Trouble With Memory v ROBERT RICE .lnternational Union of Canada. ‘pleaded forgetfulness more than 40 times Tuesday under Jerlcntless questioning before er. Justice T. G. Norris' one- iman investigation of Great lLakcs labor strife. “I can't remember." the 38- ,year-old unionist repeated over questions gabout the SlU's Internal opera- ~ions. Mr. Justice Norris scheduled an unprecedented night session of his inquiry so that commis- ‘sion counsel Marc Lalonde could complete his examination ‘of SIU vice-president Gilbert ,Gauthier. ‘ Mr. Lalondc. who has served a commission lawyer along with Charles Duhin of Toronto. twas to retire from the. appoint- ‘mcnt after the night session. He. ‘is taking up a previous commit- ment to represent the Federa- of Lawrence River Pilots before the Royal Com- mission on Pilotagc. BEAUI.NE SUCCEEDS Jean Pierre Beaulne. of fit- tawa Will succeed him. fl: 3 5 3 Mr. Lalonde Tuesday faced a witness whose mcm ry ent— of the key in . . issues under investigation. " e nc. mc. souvicns pas." the. witness replied continually. llis answers were. translated Into English by an interpreter. Mr. Lalonde asked the wu- ness about picketing. violenco and other incidents with which Mr. Gngnc had been linked in Plagues SIU Official R. OTTAWA tCP)-—Paul Gagne.; vice~president of the Seafarers': ' ;pt‘pvitiuv. lP’vlllllnf‘ly at the la- . To many of tho ques- . Mr. Gagne' answer was ‘that he couldn't remember. Finally. Mr. Justice Norris suggested the. witness was like the three monkeys~sceing no evil. hearing no evil and saying no evil. Once he adjourned the session so the witness could get a breather to freshen his memory. REPORTED 50 Mr. Laloride said Sill records show that Mr. Gagne reported one day 5ft seamen as 's cabs“ nd recommended them for the 99-year t‘liih——said to he a life sentence away from soafaring jobs under the STU. Test Ban Talks ‘Are Continued UNITED NATIONS fAPl The United States. the Soviet Union and Britain tailed again Tuesday to agree. on how to ban nuclear tests. But UN Secre- ary - General U 'l‘hant. sold chances for were. the best ever. A US. spokesman said the next meeting will be on Thurs- V. = agreement now a. 3! He cniild not say whether any pi‘ogrcss was made. But. another sources following the talks said the US. was sticking to its demand for eight to In on~site inspections yearly in the 0...... (wind, comnarod \\'Ifll the two or three offered by the Rus~ slant Poet Robert Frost Dies BOSTON ’AI‘I Rolierl P'rmiJ onetime mill uorkcr who won fol“ Pulitzci pri . hm poetry. died In hospital here Tuesday at the age of fill. Ilcath came l'v months aftci‘ an oper- ation for an internal disorder. followed by a heart attack and blood clot complications Tributes poured in to the man who first won acceptance for his poetry while living in ling- " . PrcSidcnt Kennedy called him "the great American poet our time." Mark Van I‘loron. poet. critic, English professor and longtime Frost friend. said " ‘rost cannot be replaced . . was a philosophical poet. which meant in his case that to a profound and delicate thcar: wns joined an intellect which never ceased to sf‘Bl't‘ll the ultimate meaning of a fatherlcss boy. Frost. worked in a ghee factory and a woolen mill. He studied at Dartmouth College and Har- vard University. but never fin- lashed "In Boston At Age Of 88 T’rnczf, a diligent defender n! private enterprise. “lslferl Mos ' last year and had a ton talk with Premier Khrushchev. Winning from thc premier s o m o u' h at qualified compli< ment, . A few day: before Frost's death. a group of Russian scholars i'tSlll‘l‘i him in his r‘om at Boston's Peter Bent Brigham llospitn‘. Sovtct poets and writ- org telegraphed from Moscow' Tuesday their sense of "heavy loSs suffered by world poetrv." and said “we came to love sincerely lllls great poet and cliarminr. roan " Amm'iranc iim‘r :lmi' to rep- ognizc Frost's genius. although they ‘olcr came to call him an uncroii‘ned poet laureate At the age of .19. he sold his farm and with the slender proceeds went to England, And It was there he found hll poetry received with an enthiio .siasm that astonished him. He was “C” on the road to success when bc returned to he United States at the age of If. Funeral clans wer- incur inloto. - ., 3