v v If it's Good For the Island The Guardian is For it who @nmnlian “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” . Vo'L. LXXVI. N0. 5 Nine 4 - I! Club members were chosen Saturday for two- week inter - provincial visits next summer. Each of the winners will visit one Canad- ian province. and travelling expenses are to be assumed by clubs in each province and by the Royal Bank of Can- ada. a member of the Canad— ian Council on 4-H Clu Three of the top competitors Second Cla- Mail by the Put. Oflloe Department. wmandhpaymntdpoa‘ue incest: 4-H ciua MEMES CHOSEN FOR Visns MacPhail. Meadowhank. first: Mr. MacKay. and Norma Ho- are shnwn'above with the manager of the Charlotte- town branch. Royal Bank of Canada. L.D. MacKay. Left to right are: Jeanie MacMil- lan. Cornwall. second; Jean Sausages Made From Fis Reported By Research Bd. OTTAWA lCP I—Sausagcs made out of fish but with the texture of pork have been developed by scientists of the Fisheries Re- search Board of Canada. on the sausage. made out of Whitefish and de- veloped at London. 0nt.. was given Saturday at the board's annual meeting here. It said the formula for the fish sausage resembled that of the pork product. Fish fillets are minced to a pulp in grinder and are blended with precise amounts of fat. spices and water. Another development. which may one day have an impact on the. household menu. was re- ported by the board's Vancou- ver technological station. which has prepared baked halibut to Itaste and smell like bake spring salmon. The experiment was carried out by scientists seeking to understand the phe- nomena of fish flavor. RECORD SCALLOPS CATCH The meeting was told that 1962 was another record year for landings of scallops. Land- 000.000 pounds of shucked meats with a value of about 54.000.000. The board said it expected the offshore scallops fleet will prob- ably increase in 1963 to about Dock Strike Talks Resume NEW YORK (AP) »— Negotia- tors for longshocremnnadsphi tors for longshoremen and ship owners met Sunday in the first face-to-face session since Dec. 18. five days before dockwork- ers went on strike at ports from Maine to Texas. James Reynolds. the assistant secretary of labor who brought the sides together, said: “The conduct of the meeting was a credit to both sides and re- flected a clear effort. to clarify opinions." 50 boats. However. the catch per boat may decrease. with earnings about the same as in 1962. The board attached special importance to an experiment undertaken by the St. John‘s biological station. in which 2.500.000 pink salmon eggs were transplanted in Newfoundland from British Columbia. REPLENISH RUNS If the experiment is success- ful it might mean the eventual establishment of a pink salmon fishery on the Atlantic coast. shifting pressure off the Atlan- tic salmon and helping replen- ish Atlantic salmon runs. British Storm losses Range to $60 Million N iReutersl m Brit- Ish businessmen today glumly began letting up the cost of Britain‘s "12 cold days of Christmas." Estimates of the total IOSses to industries. farmers and trans- portation services ranged up to £1).000.000 ($60,000,000). The English version of a com- paratively mild Canadian winter began the day after Christmas and started to let up Saturday. as war temperatures brought thawing. flooding on f . ush and snow made driving still hazardous on many streets ' London and back roads and up and down the country. . I The Automobile AssoCiation said. however. there had been _____________.____..___.-—— Wooten Meyer Urges Meeting M0 CTON —. lCPt — Mayor N She and Rideout of Moncton om dell Sunday for a meeting of Wed Atlantic Development rd. . The Mouton mayor. who is also a Liberal member at par- liment for New Brunswick's m County. said in a radio address he felt the grass Noted eeommic Motion and mm .-. . . in the Atlantic ’. , its target: at a “general overnight improve- .ment" in driving conditions. Despite the thaw it looked as if the country's troubles were far from over. An anxious watch was being kept in several areas of south- ern and central England on rivers threatening to flood as heavy snows melted. RESCUE LIVESTOCK In Dartmoor. the bleak pla- teau in southwestern England, which was one of the hardest-hit areas. rescue operations con- tinued today to help livestock caught in last week's blizzards. A spokesman for the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals said more than 1.500 cattle. sheep and po- nies so far had been rescued or fed. Some of the animals were dug out alive from solid ice. he said. Britain's auto industry — the hardest hit by the bitter weather ——put losses at close to £1.- 'm' . . Road. rail and airline com- pany losses probably will ap- proach £6,000.000. experts said preach £6,000,000. experts said. British European Airways alone estimated lost 1350.000 3 - INSIDE TODAY "'“""°°".““.“:.'.".’f'.‘?‘.'.. i" ings totalled approximately 14,- I 9'. 9’ it one Dec. as in cancellationst ginning through Jan. 14. istove~ptpe hat. An lrel's contributions a The boards meeting also noted a further tapering off in the haddock fishery on the New- foundland Grand Banks as stocks have become depleted. The species also was in short supply in the St. Pierre Bank. Another report showed that American plaice grow faster on the southern half of the New- foundland Grand Bank than on the northern section. For the first time sincc. 1054- 5.3, cod-tagging was carried out bank areas. WEATHER ‘ Cloudy with snowflurries or showers; mild. winds light, increasing to southerly 15. Low-high. 28 and 35. CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, JANUARY 7, 1963. NOT MORE SEVEN CENTS 12 PAGES ' I‘HAN ' t pleaded guilty Saturday to assaulting? Michael Kaspar- and later in a bus with their fists and high-heeled shoes. Friday after Kasparian was found not guilty of stealing ast year with 19.000 cod tagged in Newfoundland inshore and By C. N. GRIFFIS LIMA (Reutersi—Up to 800 people were reported under ar- lrest Sunday as the Peruvian military junta continued its swift roundup of alleged Com- lmunlsts said to have been plan- ning a takeover of the country later this month. A meeting ‘of all non-Commu- ;nisi political party leaders was lto be held in the government palace Prisoners were being brought ito Lima by plane and bus as tarrests continued throughout the country. Government to r c e s lacted Saturday morning with ‘the mass arrest of 300 persons in Lima Constitutional g u a r a n tees .were suspended Saturday and WOOONSOCKET, Rt tAPJ Sunday the military took over Two women were fined $25 ‘ each for inflicting their own punishment on a man cleared in court of stealing the false teeth of one of civil administration. in announcing the suspension, the government junta said ‘ would not abandon its "first obligation to hold the fairest possible elections July 9" and .to hand over power to those elected. ARREST UNION REDS Among those arrested were ‘Luis Alvadarado. head of the Bank Employees Union. and Guillermo Sheen. head of the .Commercial Employees Union, both Communist-dominated. An unconfirmed report here said tGenaro Checa. a veteran Com- _ ‘munist party organizer. had tescaped the police net. government communique New Strangulations Plague Boston Police BOSTON (AP) — Two more slayings plagued greater Boston police Sunday—Nos. 9 and 10 in the string of unsolved strangle slayings since last June Victims of the latest. strang- lings were: l Donna Ella Saunders. 16. whose body was found Saturday .night in an alley only 40 feet from her home in Boston's Rox- bury district. Harold L. Carlman Sr.. 69, strangled Saturday night in his in the small apartment above ’his variety store in Sa- lem. a ot 1 miles north of B ston. Police said they are working on the theory the latest strang- lings are unrelated to the first eight. all women who might ' assailant. The body of the Saunders girl was found as her mother town shoppping trip. NOT ABUSED . 9. Medical examiner Richard Both villages arc near this Ford said the girl was not sex- community 300 miles northeast ually abused. "In my opinion she was muRKEd." said DY- Film. "The pm. EST. Details were not im- injury on her neck is deep: it mediater known. 'i‘hc car was is consistent with a forearm dragged severa squeezing the throat. There is along the track no evidence of robbery. Her handbag was intact." SPRING STYLE PREVIEW IN NEW YORK Medical e x a m i n e r Robert Shaughnessey called Carlman's I 1 charged the Communists planned 0 seize power between Jan. 15 and Jan. 20 with mass assassin- ations of government. business and religious leaders and at- tack»: on defence establish- merits. Large quantities of arms. am- munition. propaganda material confidential documents have been seized. The junta said the plot was crushed a few days before Red agents were scheduled to touch off an uprising with hit and run raids across this Pacific coas nation of 10,000,000 which has een considered a key country 95 5 a. GASCONS QUEST. Que. (CP Eight persons were killed Sat urday night in a collision be- tween their car and a Canadian 1 National Railways train at ‘Gaspe peninsula community. have fallen victim of the same; The Victims were all in their. i205. Four were members of one ’ family—Andrea. Marie - Claire.l Mean-Marie and Lucien Roy ofI _ . . searched the neighborhood for 1For! Dahlel~ Que- The Otherstpilc“ '5 “Olgd for ""5 weEk her after she failed to return ‘were Gilles Roussi and Hubertinll1 542"” b01118 OlfGI‘Ed Der 100 home on schedule from a‘down- Langlois of Port Daniel and . . Jean-Claude Soucy and Gerard t8 hOl dressed WEIEM baSIS be- ?Normandeau of Petit - Pahos. ‘ing down $1.75 from last week. I The $41.00 offered for Blue ‘in President Kennedy's Alliance for Progress program. Red arsenals were said to in. elude rifles. bombs. pistols and sub-machine-guns smuggled in from abroad. A clandestine radio station was reported set up near th .structn'ons from abroad. Beef Cattle {Pricelist Shows Map l A sharp drop in beef cattle lpounds for Red brand steers on brand steers is down $2.00 per hundredwclght from last week. 40.75 for Standard The accident occurred at 11.302brand is down 25 cents. i The prices were received tfrom J. Lincoln Dewar. secre- hundred feet ltary ot‘ the beef producers spec- t ada Packers. iannouncing the Lima arrests ishombe i w. Re-actlon iAwaited i ELISABETHVILLE. The .Congn tAPt — Dr. Ralph J. iBunche flew to Elisabethville ySunday with the announced aim lof completing United Nations arrangements for Kaianga with llocal military and civilian lea- |ders. He said he had no plans to meet President Moise “Where is he?" the. UN un- dersecretary for political affairs asked in response to an inquiry as to whether he would seek a imeeting with the secessionist leader. At last report: 'l‘:~.iiombe was in Kolwezi. a mining town 150 miles northwest of this Kat tangan capital occupied by the U. He has established emer- ’gency headquarters and rallied :some of his battered arme iforces there. i Bunche said the time for ‘negotiation is over. Of possible intentions of the UN Congo com- mand to press on toward Kol- wezi from its newly won base lat .ladotville. he said: "We have stated that we expect complete freedom or! " ' l “o ,. i * g - . movement. «through the. elimin- ation of all armed resistance‘. That, is a principle. and it sticks. , ‘ ' I. , l Diplomatic and UN sources A‘ ' I to. . ' said Saturday the UN was not: " ' ' making any direct. approaches t to stomhe. but contacts were being maintained through con- , sular channels and the Union l-K’Okmfl 3” yéat‘s younger. thI-lldHY., using sword her Johnstone. retired university Miniere mining company. Mrs. Jane .Iohnstone of Hali- grandfather carried at Battle professor. gives a hand. iCP . . . fax cuts cake on her 105th of Waterloo. Son Dr. J. H. L. Wirephotol. WW,“ (“AME . I Diplomats expi'rssed belief Jar Bolivian border to receive in-. .ial committee named to negoti-, ‘ I I ‘ d 'h . h . A coroner's inquest was to beam: a price formula with Can- iMoloney of the U.S. National ‘Slly 1“ swede" have found Six days 0" an lCC “GP in thelamun 6” 0m? at ng § l3unche. the Nobel peace T.l ‘ Us ‘ ' STEP MADE IN LONG SEARCH .tf.‘.?£;°et.“i.n:§‘"ft.Ema? Nations into Kolwezi. in which . O Q ~ Cancer-Causmg Virus prize winner of 1950, was ac- e o cnmpanied on his LOGO-mile L flight from Leopoldville by ocated By SCientlsts x. A. of Gh case hr: could keep his position as provincial prcsident under the Leopoldviile central govern- ana. over-all head of the UN Congo operations. and Lt: By ALTON BLAKESLEE ‘of Dr. Francoise Haguenau of could mean that viruses somc— ’ Gcn. chbede Guehrc of Ethio- NEW YORK tAPi—Scientisisjthe College of France in Paris. times bring changes that later pia. chief of the 18.000-man UN 7have discovered a. cancer-caus- ‘This virus has a six-sided head [give rise to wild or cancerous Congo command. .ing Virus shaped like a tadpole. and a tail and seems to be a growth. D r. Albert L e‘ may use its long tail likeimaiure form of this leukemia van of the Lund Institute of REPAIR BREAKDOWN a hypodermic needle. ‘sting-lvjriis. Genetics told the medical news- Bunche's announcement as- ing" healthy cells to turn them' In shape it resembles a virus lpaper, Medical Tribune. 'Siflnmenl lnClUdPS “Pair of a into cancer. known as phage which attacks! One long-held theory is that:1 breakdown in The Congo mm- And Swedish researchers havetand kills bacterial cells in a'seemingly innocent viruses. ly-. mand's execution of order! found clues how ordinary vi-fhighly remarkable fashion. Theling latent in cells of the body. - from UN headquarters ln NEW ruses might sabotage healthy‘phage attaches itself to the liv-lare stirred into action later in ‘ank. That presumably was a lcells. setting the stage for lateriing cell tail-end first. then in-ilife. taking control of cells to topic of talks he had With ' ' Leo cancerous change. 'Jecfs its genetic material. car-imake them cancerous. And Gardiner and Guerbre in These two reports add a bit :ried in the head or nucleus ofitherc is some Evident".- Iliat thelpoldviiie Saturday. more evidence to increasinglthe Virus. itincidence of leukemia has in. Whatever tlien'esults. the UN suspicion that viruses causelREPRODUCE RAPIDLY {creased after epidemics of force that seized Jadotville . ‘ .. .’ ‘ . measles. Thursday a ared ' t' t - We]; l'fffgl‘uslitlrlngunmcéhl1 vcvaaxycserdf. .The fegwc Klatenalffmm. lhe'. The Swedish team is extend- ward an :fintualpodri‘illneg 3n checking into the suspicion. tieegagtear‘lfgle cg" figg‘c‘éggtwg .li‘ts tMarkl t? hother viruses. lléol'wczi in the campaign to end - . » i '01 l. s reliefs??? Illumiieaii‘ digit?" to produce 100 or more. news... Pcaicé. i..°§..ni.‘." ii:.i2..2£?."‘§§‘£. s on. 4. be found to produce vaccines or ‘c‘lml’le‘e tadpme'snaped “Fuses . . .\\'llhln 20 minutes or so. Then. set up other pmtemon agamst the cell bursts. spewing out the. VIRUS LONG SUSPECT I I c "eel-3' ‘ncw viruses which go seeking new victims. . Viruses have long been known The institute researchers now t 0 cause some cancers in an}. are trying to learn. whether the. mals. including leukemia. And new'lound lt’Ukem'a VITUS b e. tiny objects which might hp vi. haves in similar fashion. Under-t ' fuses have been spotted. under standing how this virus works in ‘ the microscope. in some human alllmals COUld help l" learnlnfit - cancer tissues. whether viruses cause human= ' blood cancer. The tadpole - shaped virus lGUl‘em'a- 0" causing leukemia in mice and M98 les l5 8 common Virus . , . . “its was turned up by Dr. At. which attacks human blood cells; NOML' “as” (Ap""rh“‘" Th” “3” “"09 hlmllni lest but ,1, Dalton and Dr_ John 3_ land scientists at Lund Univer- jEskimo seal hunters drifted for i Mfm‘lay lm‘ Seal 0" “19 DaCk ICC - .‘t '. , ' breaks or changes in the chrom- . . _ Island. 80 miles northwest of Canter lnsti life. With the aid nsomes 0' blood cans from chm lBertn sea in the 'almost ton- hem The... had n" boa, and “me dren with measles Chroma. glam , “’m'“ darknf‘55- ll‘f‘l’ scar because it was to be lsomes are the carriers of the. “£133,” {00" and " “3" h"' Slmr' trip ' ’h ite i ' ' . , ‘ lgggggcgtgggcgvgg £19.33”: The on... m... of the instructions to a living cell, and “905”? l" 'h“ 5‘”?er ICE BROKE OFF Then a big piece of ice broke weather Saturday. loft and they were stranded. The In the afternoon. during thc‘floe hcgan drifting and by the O ' telling it what to do. a n u e n a S n s MEASLES CHANGE CELLS brief hours of daylight. a plane time of their rescue had shifted The By JEAN SPBAIN WILSIN NEW and gaudy checkered pl YORK (APi—Thc in- lJackets. m fluence of such males as Abra- ham Lincoln. Lawrence of Ara-i Stan L a u r at. Marloni Brando and Eisenhower 1 was so coveted h in feminine fashions next spring 1th," versions of i will be evident to the more then 200 That comfortable V-cui cardi- lWOl‘“ “P '0 .lll‘lr gan that Rex Harrison wore as dOW" ‘0 the" we . Henry Higgins in My Fair Lady. 1 This spring ladies will be just middy blouses. peacoats and . . y the fair sex ,as slinky from head to foot in . cape. Prize-fighters arr- contrib- thighlighi the leather or leather-like materi-luting their turtle-neck sweat-’ g e als. Sometimes in pastel hues. em. “'3th Wm!" he" for'tcuses it grows to such great but mainly in black. the femi- -semi-annual style previews lie-ileum s tod as and lawn: f comes a shifty little dress. scorv smuno T-SHIRT mum” Eve“ "mush Marlo“ Brand“ .waist-hugging band will have a h“ been “"3"” “cam” for ‘half-dozen feminine interpreta- sorne tilne, American coutuners mans in ,vewtmu from bur 1 "9 pregrvm“ l‘Sh'rl“. “9 "ml" loads as s dinner-gown topper to famous in Streetcar Named Dc- :lowly denim as . mm“: “ck”. isire for fashion posterity as 1 The programs have.been ac~ ranged by the New York Cou~ tore Group. a “member organ- ization of design houses, and the recentlycrented Fashion Circle of Couturiere headed by’ Eleanor Lambert. ‘water and on the ski slopes. Eisenhower's field jacket with front and ' reporters will {more of the knit rage. Less ‘TURBANS, SCARVES IN The fashion learn that thus far Honest Abe's style influence is limited to hi it Stan Lau~t retoo-smgll Then there's that sleek. sup- Istolen that veil the face. along the Lawrence of Arabia knit shirts are for all occasions, ‘theme. fashion has arranged to slacks and hostess pants in fa-l Followang retirement. mm from the beach to the ballroom. have turbans. scarfed hats and kat: of ladylike ankle - length >Wateimen and his wife will .vanuk. 55. died a short time be I we cuffed and buttoned like hub-.to a meeting of the House oflthem in another hour. ‘ th Province chromosomal change in- lpassed overhead. The t\\'n stir-.100 miles to within 40 miles of 9 leather [hm Marion and mewm‘ draped. shoeblik§ gowns duced by the measles viruslvivors furiously waved a.St. Lawrcncc Island. southwest otorcycle — riding imitators ‘as a part of the American des- — sideburns and ert scene for spring. 8' h 5' Sailors are donating their sweater and a hag—the nnly.of Nome. «dark items they had. Thcir Thursday thc hunters shot a iparkas were white so the seals scat. it was their only food. .wouldn't see them. That same day they spotted l ! The plane flew on. then cir- plane sent by the air force to icled and spotted the men. ook for them. But it was too ;‘ ey cried. When an Eskimo high and too far away in see HALIFAX ‘Ol’l — Rl- Rt"- Ecries his world is coming to an three small figures in white And husbands. as usual. are. Robert Handd Waterman. Ang-tend‘ 0r just beginning When Kayvanuk died, An. that the sweater be' “me leather 100k M” be under 1M" the Shir“ 0" me“ had“ ‘llffl'n b35410!) 0‘ NOV 8 Scull. They didn‘t. know it. but the gum and Annnaoyc decided to Thus. this spring women will smce 1950. announced Sundayiumted States air force had ’ head toward Northeast Cape on r woollen suits With indicts hc Will submit his ms'lflnaflml planned to call off the hunt for l St. Lawrence Island. hoping to ‘ find other stepping-stone floes y shirt. Hea- beltless dresses {Bishops of e on the way. (or shiftst Will be like his nllhlECanede in Montreal J81! 3- tan Ignatius Annayoc. 42. who They had gone nearly -three shirt. And her formal gown willl'l'he resignation wul he effect-tweaks little English, told ohmiieg when ihp (.54 [many be that "me Pedestrian shirt. ? ive .lune so. :their ordeal today from hospital spotted them. dropped survival 0‘. Haltingly. John Angusac. 38. tcovered with jewelled opulence He will he succeeded by Rt. beds here. Attendants say they gear and summoned two belt- and stretched to the floor. Jim W. W. Davis. hafnp' co- are in remarkably good condi~ copiers from Nome to make the But the trend is away fromladiutor. tion rescu The survivors were flown to the air force station at North- east Cape and then hen. i it Their companion. Frank Kay- live at Smith's Cove. N5. lion rescue came. .VJ ' Mung-.4... .