/ Ii it's Good For the Island The Guardian is For it / @lrr @nardlio “Covers Prince Edward IslandLiIze The Dew” VOL. LXXV. N0. 304 w w‘ on. .. Although it was two dayn after Christmas. the Christ- mas spirit still lingered in the hearts of the blind last night as they held their an- nual family Christmas party. Santa Claus was also on the scene and joined in the fes- Anthorizod an Ottawa. and for ANNUAL PARTY IS HELD FOR B tivities. field the Cana- dian National Institute for the Blind headquarters on Graf- ton Street. the members par- ticipated in the musical pro- gram. Among the entertainers were: standing. from left. Miss Thelma Teed. Miss Vio- PRICE CRITICISM HEARD Cornwall Man Is Elected To Head Beet Preducers I Daniel Gass. Cornwall. was elected president of Beef Pro- ducer's Association. at its an- nual meeting at Montgomery Hall last night. Elected as vice president was Lloyd Lockerby. Hamilton. while J. Lincoln Dewar. New Perth. was named secretary-treasurer. Directors named were: Queens County. Knud .Ioigenscn. 'Fred- ericton; Edwin MacRae. Highv Arctic Winds, Blizzards Take Toll Across Europe LONDON ICPi - Britain and most of Europe was caught in a mid-winter freeze Thursday night. Arctic winds. blizzards and numbing cold claimed a mounting toll of victims. The mum of deaths i" “‘Qiimporlam Eu” Pea“ "iv" Imost other European countries. 'iroutes were frozen and closed too. snow and ice rose to about Road. rail and air traffic was reduced to chaos and moved at a crawl. Near the British rail junction of Crewe. snow piled up over a pathetic debris of abandoned teddy bears and broken toys. Two express trains crashed in a blizzard there Wednesday night killing 13 persons and injuring 60 others. Four of the dead were children. Queen Elizabeth. in a men- Iage of sympathy. said she was zdeeply shocked" by the acci- ant. Only ski enthusiasts were happy about the cold snap. In Swiss resorts tons of thousands of winter sportsmen enjoyed near-perfect conditions on the slopes. Eight old people died of cold in normally sunny Portugal. Two died in Spain. TOWNS ISOLATED Hundreds of Italian mountain towns were cut by snow fall: and in the northern Alps the temperature plunged to 31 below zero. It was Italy's cold- est Christmas week of the cen- ry. Two Italian smugglers were. swept to their deaths by an avalanche and six other people died in the country of exposure. Skating on thin ice cost 13 lives in Holland over the Christ- when un r 5 took. to their skates despite radb warnings. - Ten 3 r person fronen to death in Switzerland this week. A farmer was killed by an avalanche and two boys drowned when the ice broke while they were skating. In France. 11 persons died Rom the cold and nine from Imam caused by faulty m h the last at um field and Leo P. Itlclsaac. Mcr- maid: Prince: Max Thompson. Victoria. and Herbert Matthews. Alhertnn: Kings: Jack MacKins. non. Brooklyn. Sterling Mac-f Swain. .Ir.. .Vioi'ell. and LeithE Townshencl. Rollo Bay. ‘ PRICES CRITICIZED The idea of dropping the for- lmula oriccs with Canada Pack- lers and setting up livestock 1marketing yard here was urged i bcond paymnt of pultnge la a smut. 0'“ "‘1’ by ‘h' P” “3° Dem‘memi CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, F RIDAY. DECEMBER 28. 1962. PCs Hold D WEA THER Light Show beginning at noon. clearing this evening; winds southwest shifting to north 20. Low-high, 3 below and 30. Wang?“ SEVEN CENTS Confederation Refit t MONCTON lSpeCiall Reqiusi a ft 6 r the winter sailing c Confederation should be com- . . quarters the. reduction in sail- pleted CIUtl'Illg the latter part of January. Eric P. Stephen- "The winter schcdule would son. Marltlmt‘ area manager have come into effect. whether for Canadian National Railways the Confederation remained in announced Thursday. service or not." Mr. Stephen- ‘The Connie sailed for Haii- Son 531‘ fax amd he? first "annular" R uiar service. capable of overhaul “- Heir Telly" [0 handling all traffic offering. is 59mm“ W1" Pl'fibably be Clmemcing maintained by other ships .3 IND lei Daley. Miss Bronwyn IMove Planned Mur ‘ O ray. and Miss Marlene Bow *l P r er. Seated at the piano is l n o f Strlke Miss Rozella Arsenault. The NEW YORK MP. W Labor welcome address was given by Mrs. John B. Morley. president of the Ladies Auxil- N . iwill enter the Longshoremcn's iary of the C IB. i strike that has crippled ship- ping along the US. Atlantic and Gulf coasts, l The labor department. au- lnouncing this in Washington :Thursday. said Wirtz told par- ties to Illt‘ dispute. "it is 1imperative to the iiaiional in- iterest that negotiations be re- isumcd." lSecreiary W. Willa r d Wirtz‘ .Khrushchev Blasts ‘Adenauer 0n Crisis to the end of the month," Mr. of [hp {loci at present. Stephenson said. .—~————— The bow of the ship is being altered during her stay in dry- .A-Power S'Ough dock in order to increase the‘ ' vessel's capacity to operatelFor Space USe no (1 er winter ice conditions.. which become seiere late in‘ the winter. WASHINGTON (API >7 The S. Air Force and the. Atomic cess during her first summer“ ooled their efforts to I. . ‘ CN's Northumberland'p p Odm'e lStrait ferry serv‘ ; The ship was a definite suc- ‘ Ebergy C o m m i s 5 i o n have a nuclear reactor to provide. ice. power for space missions. The She was primarily intended‘AEC announced Thursday that for speeding the, movement of.undcr agreement with the air passengers during: the. busy.force. it will have full respon- summer tourist season. She‘sibility for research and devcl-i did the job better than was ex- '. opment. on the power unit with ipected. ma ing crossings inithe air force charged with rc- 'record time. isponsibility for Integrating it The. ship departed for Halifax i into defcnce space systems. By JOHN MILLER lpolicy as directed toward \vai'. lJESSE JAMES’ ioor SOUGHT by Mr. Gass. who said livestock} yards elsewhere. such as Tor- onto and Montreal. would weir come such a movc. The Mari-j times. he said. is the only area. in Canada that is not organized: or marketing cattle. and the; marketing yards regard it as the spot big buyers use to break t c price structure. Yards could be cstabiishcd‘ here for an outlay of $40.00fl. 75i iConiinucd on page 3 col, ii i' A I. B U Q U I“. RQUE. NM. (Apt—7A Pueblo Indian ac.- cuscd of hiding gold bars al- legedly buried by the bandit Jesse James has been resie . Joc Suam. also knnwii as Kapccn and Lindy. is sup- pnscd to know the location of 145 gold bars now claimed by Jesse l.. James of Mani- tou. to o. ' The Colorado man filed suit to force Suazo to give up the gold whcih he said his grand- father left to him. In the suit. James said he and Suazo found the gold buried in the Santa ('lara reservation. He charged Suazo later but the gold and l’CIlISf‘fI to give it up until the "spirits" told S I. l British roads were littered ’to shipping. Scandinaiua was him ‘0 (‘0 with abandoned vehicles. frozen hard. After Suazo did not appcar Waist - high 5 n ow drifts? "There is no sign of a thaw In: in court in answer in the suit. ,blocked many roads and trains ithc next 24 hours." a Britis'ui and again to answer a court were delayed for hours by ‘frozen switches. l The Danube and many other l i I l l m SCOT Ex . bound from Glasgow to London. left. crashed In igovernmcnt weatherman said.l order telling him to turn the y“ln fact there may be worse to‘ told over to James. his arrest was oi‘dorcd a n d be was icome." p ‘ That was the forecast tor picked up Wednesday. I - . ‘ II scene of wreckage Eighteen persons Were reported dead holiday local train in icy weather near (Trewe. England Wednesday. causing this ) ar- ‘ MOSCOW (Reuters) - Pre- :‘ He charged that during the Cu- mier Nikita Khrushchev. speak- l ban crisis West Germany tried. .TI" States inmlllves- ing out strongly in the wake of l to drive the United | the Cuban crisis. recempliaisized I a corner. "with no way out but: lThursday his determination to i an armed clash." ireacb a West Berlin settlement.; The Khrushchev letter re He took his stand in a letter to i eated familiar Soviet proposals West German Chancellor Ken-Ion Berlin and declared that to rad Adenaucr which bitterly at- leave the present West. Berlin .tacked present. West .Germansituation unchanged would be ——————_‘*‘—i tantamount to "heading deliber- i ately toward grave international I complications." The letter. dated Dec. 24 and made public here Thursday. re.- ' Cuban crisis as :Supicion Marks Indian-Pakistan Opening Talks I ‘ I forts were needed to or e. v e. nt I RAWALPINDI tAPl » Indialwar. but charged that. "not a land P ak i s t a n opened talksl single call to settle the conflict lThursday on Kashmir in an at- ' . . . Bonn in lmosphere of suspicion but both those alarming days." ldclegations pledged to seek a Ipeaceful scttlemcnt of the 15- ! year dispute. ‘ India expressed surprise and I regret that Pakistan bad chosenl Eihc eve of the negotiations to Probe Is Made lannounce that it had rcacliedla I settlement with Peking on iisiover Property part of the. Kashmir border WIIII' MONTBEAL .CP, CnmmlmlSI China- . Emilc C a r d i n a I Leger Pakistani ministers called the hunched an investigafion mm lpact a triumph for peace, Gov-l {ernmcnt sources said it Sllouldiby Roman Catholic rpliginus or. ghave no adverse effect on the; ‘Kashmir talks with India. jmi. The cardinal made. this dis- }closure in an article published iThursday in the Mont re al ‘wcekly newspaper La Patric. The article was a reply to a llctter from reporter Pierre Le- :had been told by a Montreal lpricst that somc ordcr of nuns “are either going to change their ways at oncc or else they arc soon going to lose the. sym- Ipathy of everybody forcvcr." The reporter asked what the. cardinal would say if he met. , this priest in the street and per- sonally heard him express his concern over this question. AYS PROBES BEGUN i In his reply. the cardinal said religious orders have already lstartcd to re-cxamine their own 3 position. _ "A number of communitics .arc examining themselves seri- ously and positively on the ques- tion of their wealth. Personally. taken a series of consultations among persons from diffcrcnt. environments. to study all as- pects of the question. ' "They are all busy on II and will have to prepare a report for me." INSIDE TODAY Announcements. notices to Births. deaths . . . . .. . .I. In Classified In Comics . . . . . . . . .. 9 Rural churches . . . . . . . .. 4 Editorials .. . ‘t Finance. markets It Kings County 4 City. Queens . . . . . . . . . .. 5 Prince County . . . . . . . . .. , 2 V ' Summersidc . . . . . . . . .. a in the crash. with 60 injured. 5 _ r ' . _ I _ . H t H “P Wire’hm Woms' .. 1 by cable from London) fitting and drydockjng of My; schedules came into effect. Ar 'me. it was felt in some' ‘ l Cardinal Says i lken Chairlift for Set For Jan. Finish lings was due to her leaving. is sewn: ; VATICAN CITY tAPi—One the great archaeological mysteries—the origin of -.. :7 ’D obelisk Ill St. Peter's Square ~lias ben solved. l'Osserva- tore Romano reports, The Vatican newspaper says that archaeologists deciphered an ancient inscription at the base of the obelisk. dating it to the first century before Christ. The obelisk. standing in the heart of the square. long has been a m y st e ry. It was brought to Rome from Egypt by the Emperor Caligula. who ruled between 37 and 41 AD. Unlikexother obelisks car- ried to Romc. it lacked Egyp- tian Iiiernglypliics. Prof. Filippo Magi. in an ar- ticle in I'Osscrvatore. told why: It was built in Egypt for Roman Prefect. not for an Egyptian. The prefect. Caius Cornrlius Gallus. was born in 69 B.(‘. i and committed suicide in 26 l B.C. after the Roman senate ousted him and ordered him i exiled. He had become notor- ious for living a life of excess. l Mark Reunion Emotion, Joy MIAMI. Fla. tAPl—Nearly a 12 PAGES isputed Seats As Recounts Completed iOLD MYSTERY 1 MacRae And Mclean Are Declared Elected Two Progressive Conservative candidates in the Der pro- vincial election were declared elected yesterday as recounts were completed. Agriculture Minister Andrew MacRae was elected in Third Queens and John R. McLe a n. ‘speakcr in the last Legislature.‘ was elected in First Kings. Mr. MacRae had a majority of nine and Mr. McLean 22. In Third Queens. the recount, carried out in Queens County court house with Judge St. ‘Clair Trainer presiding, gave .Mr. MacRae 1.850 votes. com- pared to 1.841 for Liberal candi- date Cecil Miller. They were candidates for the A s s embly- man seat. Following recount. Mr. completion of the MacRae was de- .:clared elected by Queens Coun- ty Returning Officer Benjamin 3 Gallant. Declaration day figures show- ed Mr. MacRae to be ahead of Mr. Miller by 17 votes. Mr. MacRae received 1.849 votes, while Mr. Miller had 1.832. acRae gained one an8 in the recount. while Mr. Mil- ler gained nine. 'ihousand relatives of the freed I BIGGEST GAINS Bay of Pigs invasion prisoners arrived Thursday on an Ameri- olh candi- Biggest. gains for b ‘ the Cove- dates were made in for ruuuulloi‘ Ill 'l'liii'd Queens. EICCllOII le‘l‘b' tor the recount was CR. McQuairi. Charlotte- town. During the recount. .‘\li' Rae lost Mac— \(‘VCII votes but gained eight Lasscs by poll were: Win- sloc. one: Bracklcy Point Road. three; Little York A. one; Cor- ran Ban. one: Southport A. one. Gains by poll were Covehcad. four. Litllc York B. one: Mt. Stewart. onc; Pisqiurl. one. Mt. Herbert, one. Poll gains by I\Il'. M i I l c r were: Bracklcy Point R o a d. two: Covclicad. six: Little York B. two; Johnston's River. onc. His losses by iioll were: Tracarlie. one: Pisquid. one. IN FIRST KINGS In the First Kings recount. held in the court house at iContinued on page 3 col. .‘ii Manitoba ls Award Winner I WASHINGTON tAPi — Man.- ‘toba was named today as the [‘1962 winner of an aviard given :for the most effective industrial idevelopment program. The Society of Industrial Realtor... which makes the pro- .head poll. Here. Mr. MacRaeif€=5l0nal ll‘nnhy ward else can freighter from Cuba andigained four votes while Mr. MiL'ye-BI' said the Presentation Will were united with the former: captives in scenes of emotioni and joy. ‘ Chances were considered good i ler gained six. Largest. loss for Mr. MacRae was in the Brack- ley Point Road poll where. h e. i lost three votes. In no poll (1 i d l the Mr. Miller lose. more than one ithat another shipload of rela- 1 vote in the recount, i an example of what great ef-l i a . hasiirails up the side the question of property owned ' "3909” l since last May. I have undcr-l dives would be allowed to leave} ‘ uba. e ship. carrying 920 reia-S mostly women and chil-l dren. docked at Port Ever-. iglades near here at 9 a.m. Cas- ‘ 5 ‘ York. Charlottetown lawyer Al-. tro threw in their release as a "Christmas bonus" to the $53.5 .000 survivors of the invasion to: Gerald for r @- -Charlot.tetown . .lawyer Foster acted as counsellor Mr. MacRae during the count. Mr. MacRae's were Walter MacDonald. tewart. and Leith Brown. lison Gillis was iller‘s were provincial Liberal leader *be made .lan. 2o at the society’s laniiual meeting in New 01-] . {The society is an affiliate at National Association for .Real Estate. Boards. The states of New York. he!!- llucky and Florida were. given honorable mention by the ‘judges. North Carolina won the first Inward. given in 1960. and Maine ;was the winner last year. The judges said Manitoba has concentrated much of its indus- deal that brought. 1.113;counsellor. Mr. Miller‘s agents trial expansion effort on food processing industries servm . 8 Florida in an airlift that ended' A.W. Matheson and Eugene Cul-‘the needs of its basically agri- Christmas Eve. len. defeated Liberal candidate r cultural economy. 58 Young People Dangle VANCOUVER iCP- P‘ifty-. eight young persons returning from a dance dangled on a bra- abnut three1 hours. shouting to keep each' other awake in falling snow as‘ temperatures plun g ed below: freezing. . While rescuers trudged icy of Hollyburn ountain Wednesday night the swung their legs to keep warm in their seats. someg covered ground. ‘ Police and firemen and ncigli-‘ boring West Vancouver used; laddcrs and ropes to get the riders off the lift, One hundred and five others, istranded at the top of the lift.tower. lgcr of La Patric. who said lic‘on lhc popular resort mountain PULLS TOWER FROM were led down mountain trails. I-‘our youths. three of them juveniles. were arrested and later rcmandcd without plea on public nuisance charges. Fresh Gains For Economy Chairlift operator Mike Gazda told police he had seen some youths swinging chairs as they went around a pulley on the. turning mechanism at the bot- tom of the lift. Officers said the swaying mo- tion flipped the. chairlifi. cable; the. pulley. The saggingi from cable dragged a chair onto a tower crossbcam. felling the heavy steel structure. Most of the group had been attending a gathering at a lodge dam in [he Archdiocesp of Mannitimcs 200 feet above the snow-ion the mountain sponsored by, the Western Young .ludea group of the Zionist Organization of Canada. Ray Carlaw. on the lift said be empty chair hook on 22. a passenger saw the to thc BASE “As the cable kcpt travelling the chair pulled the tower off its The towcr toppled over on to the ground to the left of me if 85?. 3 Hours In Broken Lift 'it had gone sideuavt I would have. been pinned under it. Thrown L'il lent to the ground, Cai'iaw escaped wuh cuts and bruises. Andrea lime. l3. of Victoria and Wayne Shur, In. of Edmon- ton. were trapped in chairs hanging over ZOO-foot gully near the ion of the cliairlifi. Said Andrea: "People on the ground told us to keep talking or shouting to stay awake, so we yclled the whole time we were up there. Rescuers lonpcri a rope. ladder over the ciiairlift cablc at the Iiiin edge of the gully then inched the rope down to Andrea. She was told to tangle herself into the row ladder and was then lowered to the ground. The same procedure was used in rescue others. Police said it took until early Thursday to rcscun the chair‘ lift riders and 4‘2 hours to lead the other: down the mountain. Predicted For New Year OTTAWA WP! Trade Min- istcr llccs says that the Cana- l dian economy. after marking up its fourth-best year of the post- war pcriod. may face tougher slcdding in 1963. In a year-cud statcmcnt i=- sucd Thursday. lic forecasts ‘a significant increase" in domes- tic purcliacs in 196.1 to support t c cconomy at But It" lays III(‘I‘f‘ arc "signs of licsitancy in some of the ma- .jor industrial eConomies of the wor d." "Any slowing down in the out- side world would mcan that even Ercatcr efforts would bc rc- iquired if the upward momen- ,tum of the Canadian economy 'is to be maintained." Reviewing I962 developments. ‘Mr. Hecs says latest figures show an cight-pcr-cenf rise in .Gross National ‘of all good and services pro- :duced —- and a gain of seven l per cent in volume. of output Hts estimates compare with } Product—value k gains last year of 2.5 per cent in iross National Product and 1.8 per ccnt in volume of na- tional output. c says this year's ci-mith ratc “surpasses that rcalizcd 'n the frcc world at large. and within (‘anada's recent history has been cxcccdcd in only three of the last I? yrars.‘ "This expansion is all the more notablc in that it has been achieved in the face of increas- ingly compctitivc world condi- tions. which is in sharp contrast to the buoyant demand situation of earlier post-war years." His statement indicates that continued tough compctition for world markets can bc expcctcd in 1963, “Thcrc have been some ten- .‘dencics toward softening in in- lternational commodity mar. ets." .U.S. PRODUCTION LEVEL United States industrial pro- duction had been levelling off ‘since mid-summer. though busi- ncss «onlidence appeared to be strengthening now There was widespread cxpcctalion in west- (‘I'II Europr of a loss vigorous cconomic expansion next year. But Mr I'It‘fs says there are "important elements of strength ' the domestic market out. 55 Tllf‘ financial position of con- sumers was strong; inventory salcs ratios “err in a healthy ‘ and husinemen sccmcd in '0,“ planning for an- nlllt‘l' uniirl year A preliminary surici cl large (‘éinadian ("in panics siiggcstcd a rise of about five pcr cent in cxpcnditures on no“ business capital. "Thcsc considerations point to a significant increase In over- all dcmand in (‘anada in the coming year." the report says. SHOUT) MOVE AHEAD “If. in addition. Canadian pro- ducers take full advantage of the new opportunities available . to further strengthen their pont- -Continued on page 2 col. 2)