« ‘tf it’s Good for the Island. _ The Guardian is For-it “Covers Prince Edword VOL. LEXV, NO. 2 : UNITED FUND IS. DECISION Prince Edward Island will -have a province-wide United Fund, was the final decision reached at the concluding or- / fanizational. meeting for ’Un- * fted Appeal held at City Hall Jast night. Prominent during ° the proceedings were Archi- bald Jackson, (left) executive | director of the Halifax—Dart-~ / mouth United Appeal, “and | Russell Seller, chairman ot the local organizational group. Mr. Jackson was present to answer questions concerning ~ the working of the organiza- tion. (See story on page 3.) PRIEST PRAISES SOLDIER . -# | such as group practice, co-op | , Survivor Of Massacre LEOPOLDVILLF. (Reulars)— The sole survivor of a New Year's “Day. massacre of 22 Roman €atholic missionaries said Thursday he was saved hy a quick-thinking Congolese sol- dier who hid him from berserk ' Congolese troops > Rev. Jwes. Darmont, a Bel- gian. described his escape after ‘being brought here from the Kongola mission in North Ka- tanga by a British United Na- tions officer. * Father Darmont’’ said that when it was his turn to be taken_out and shot, the Congo- fese soldier screamed: “You are going to the cellar.”’ claim- ing loudly that Darmont would point out Katanga troops. hiding there. ~ When .the priest protested there were no_ secessionist troops in the cellar, the soldier pushed him: into another recom » and. whispered: ° Ee “Be quiet, I want to sate . The soldiers later left ‘him -alone- because they thought he had a charmed life, the priest aw \ ‘jaccount in the organization Of |here despite the Brazil - Dew” and Like Th : WEATHER Cloudy with snowflurries: north winds 25 gusts to 35, shifting to southeast 20, Low-high 18 and 23. Okay To In Hou CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, FRIDAY, JANUARY 2 1962. CFA Gives see wor MOl® SEVEN CENTS Care Plan BANFF, Alta. (CP) — A na- tional compulsory medical care insurance program on a contri- | butory basis was approved im . principle today by the Canadian | Federation of Agriculture, . | | A policy statement, approved by the CFA annual bpm : i rom antie Cee Oe PUNTA DEL ESTE, Uruguay rovinces delegates, said: PeeThe CFA recommends that | (Reuters) — The United States the national office investigate bucked oe pepeunee Thursday this matter and make represen. 204 a “ n Lresntee- ‘tations to the royal commission | tion of rn can rood = on health:services on the basis bers blockade pro - Commun lof the following principles: |Cuba economically. : | State Secretary Rusk made | . “That long distances and SCat-\the demand at the. OAS foreign ‘tered ‘population be taken into inisters conference on Cuba led health services; |bloc’s opposition to any imme- “That. the federal government diate sanctions against Premier adopt as a policy implementa Castro's regime. tion of a national, compulsory The Brazil - led bloc, which medical” care “insurance pro maintains Cuba has forefeited gram to be carried out in co: jts OAS membership, has con- operation with the provinces; trolled_eight votes at the con- “That public’ medical insur ference: Any proposal - requires ance be implemented on a basis 14 votes to become obligatory that is. contributory to a reason. to all 21 countries linked to- > ‘able degree, rather than fully gether in the OAS for mutual | supported from general revenue defence and welfare. a | but that the basis of-contribue Cuban president Osvaldo Dor- | tions be such that no unreas ticos meantime prepared to take \onable burden is imposed op the floor for the first time. any family or persons. U.S. PLAN Rusk put forth this plan to CHOOSE DOCTOR | end the Cuban “tragedy” and That the principle of the manoeuvre -of “petty tyrant’ right of the patient to choose Castro® his own doctor be retained; 1. Exclude Cuba from the In- “That the terms and condi- ter : American Defence Board tions of such plans permit de velopment of co-operative, joint ° provision of medical services Retired Horseman e ° Dies In Saint John clinics and the like; “That the. commission recom- SAINT JOHN, N:B.. — (CP) mend ways of achieving co-or.. Alec Long, familiar trainer dinated planning of all services | and driver of race horses around and conditions related to healih; Maritime tracks for the last 45 “ -principle-be ac years. died hére Thursday at eratively owned and operated Tells How Life Spared told the Catholic press ageney DIA. The priest said the soldiers after their rampage were ash- amed and_filled with selfdis- | gust. , BEAT NUNS He said they beat some of the 35 nuns at the Holy Spirit mis- Hockey Meet Set For’U.S. OP from Reuters-AP | GENEVA — The world hockey | championships will take place | as planned in Colorado Springs, | Colé., the vice-president of the) South Katanga and when one of a all Politicians who international hockey federation the soldiers sew +his Ne ex- rarely have an opportunity to . \claimed: ‘‘Ah that’s too much. speak for themselves in parlia- said. Thursday. ; Federation. chief John, Ahearne of Britain refused to. comment on the visa holdup. threatening to bar the East Ger- 'troyed, siowebut when some of the troops attempted to rape one of the sisters all of the other sold- jers started th seream out against it. In other attempted — rapes | soldiers’ were held back from | the assaults by other soldiers. | Father Darmont said “he mis- sion was bombarded by mortar fire on Jan. 1 for one hour and the church, the priests’ quart- ers and parts of the school building were completely des- Although the’ nuns’ dormitory was hit ‘‘as if by a miracle no nuns were wounded,” he said. ’ The saldiers also murdered Dr. Pierre Honore Moreau, head of the Shinkolobwe hospital in doctor?” .The priest praised the hero- ism of, two Congolese - priests. | Should bewessentially provided | “cannot afford to finance such | tirely from general revente.” - acnioniianeteliahceletiontpeeataninidinicesiannnsan-cae'et House Speakers cepted, and means of implem- the age of 75. He retired from enting it recommended, that the | harness racing about six years provision of psychiatrie services | 28°- by means of public services ra: ~ than through private prac tive.” Lincoin, Dewar of Charlotte town, seeretary-manager of the Prince Edward Island Federa- tion of Agriculture,.said he fa- vored the CFA policy except that the medical carp plan should not be contributoty. “The Maritimes,” he said, ‘ FORT ST. JOHN, B.C (CP) a scheme on a contribuiory’ Red Adair nonchalantly put basis. It should be financed en then flew back* to his horpe state of Texas to take on an- other. “Ya hate to come: out for babies like this," said the 46- year - old Texan later. “It’s like eating between meals.” “But, it was mean and dirty and they needed me.” added the man. regarded as Plan Conference OTTAWA (CP) Seven ; : F Tt gather here this weekend to discuss common problems of ' parlia- mentary procedure: fire ‘fighter. - Adair donned an asbestos suit ‘Wednesday night and oi an oil well fire Thursday” including the general vicar, man team from competing. in championship but said the event Mer. Gerard Kabwe. who to- definitely will take plate .as| }manded to be beaten themsel- ren iar a Springs ves when the soldiers began ‘ashing the European mission- They are the presiding offic ers of the House of Commons gether with Abbe Gervai de-..and.the legislatures of Prince EdWard—Jsland, Nova . Scotia, New . Brunswick, Quebec, Oa tario, Manitoba and Alberta. walked through the flames of the burning Blueberry 29 at Mile 101. 0n,ti.e Alaska High- way, 50 miles north of e. With the help of others. he doused the flames with chem- - icals, then filled the well with - Transportation Report Gi N B VEN N.D. OTTAWA (GP) — This week's recommendations of the —-Mac- Pherson royal commission on transportation could be ‘‘a great blueprint of the future for the —Maritime provinces.” Thomas - .M. Bell -(PC—St. John-Albert) said Thursday tn t g 3 sec- was .excellent. New Brunswick MP es: _ euty welcomed two. propos- One suggested that freight subsidies on shipments from the Atlantic provinces to cen- Backing . | needed to prevent spring floods was. no longer being used. Mr. ‘Bell. said he optimistic than” I tween New Brunswick and Ita of related power possibilities were fa le. | then a full-scale fae ; be made. “If the power and industrial possibilities can be told, then 2} feel. we will get this canal.” EARLY PAYMENT nil | a + aries. Father Darmont also con- firmed that many Congolese cl- vilians were killed but could not give their number. ee , Parliamentary Association, over “ener will preside. They -will attend a two-day council meeting of the Canadian a spevat med to step the oll from flowing. JUST DUCK souP “It was ‘duck. soup com- which Commons Speaker Mich- Yanks Push Plan To Isolate Cuba and interrupt a “limited but significant flow of trade between ~ Cuba and the rest of the hemis- phere, especially in arms.” 2.. Recognize Cuba's commu- nist bloc alignment and declare its commitment ‘to extend com- munism in the hemisphere in- mmpatible with the inter-Amer- an defence system and a dan- ger to peace. : 3.- Exclude Cuba from partici- pating in the inter-American system orgafs, with the OAS courici] directed’ to implement the decision. “4. Mount a defence’ against Cuba's indirect aggression in the hemisphere. and ‘political | 1 7 ZL TORONTO ‘{CP) — Mrs. John Franz, the mother of nine children, has won. $1, 250 in the third Thomas Foster baby derby. , Five other mothers, each with eight children, will re- ceive $250 each. When former Toronto mayor Thomas Foster died in 1945, he left an estate of $1,168,559) which was to in- elude a series of four der- bies with legacies going to the mother having the most £hildren in a 10-year period. The fourth and final derby _ covers the period ending 1964. Only people living in the city of Toronto are eli- gible. 2 Lesage Queried | QUEBEC. (CP) Premier Lesage said- Thursday the only agreement he had with New- foundland Premier Smallwood over tim Labrador boundary dispute was that the affair must be settled as quickly as possible. He told the Legislative Assem- 4bly he had asked Mr. Smallwood for a copy of the throne speech read in St. John’s Wednesday which said the border issue had been settled. Mr. Lesage wat replying to questions from Opposition Lea- der Daniel Johnson who said pert Extinguishes BL; Oil Well Fire , pared to some of the fires I've fought,”’ said Adair. How much the Sun Oi! Com- pany of Calgary, which _ brought in the well recently, will pay him has not been an- nounced. But an official said the company had already Spent $100,000 before he ar- rived—-the fire broke out Fri- day—and any fee charged would_.be worth. jt.. Adair was brought here: from: Algeria. The events that led to the ingui _the fire: Adair and Sid White of Jas- per, Alta., fired a high-power rifle at the stem pipe of the well, attempting to knock off a small valve. They mana- ged to make a hole in the pipe, sending much of the ofl and flame belching in one di- rection. , Adair thén donned the as- bestos suit and walked into the inferno. “If Adair is sent to hell, he won't burn,’ said one awe- struck worker. _that the border must be settled On Border Issue ‘that fast Tuesday the premier had told the assembly the ques- tion is not urgent. It is a ‘‘vital question’’ said the gpposition leader. ‘‘I ,de- mand that the premier clear us up on this question.” “Tuesday the question <was not urgent,” replied Mr. Lesage. “T. admit that the question is different now. I was the first to be surprised to learn from the newspaper men thai the Newfoundland t hrone speech mentioned an agreement _be- tween Quebee and that prov- ince. . GIVES OUTLINE “This is what happened. Last December, during lunch with Mr. Smallwood in Quebec, I said there would be no sense in continuipg. the policy of the Union Nationale which consisted of leaving the question of the border of making sure Quebec and St. John’s did not take their responsibilities. of leaving a private company to fix the limits between the two proyinces. Because that is ex- actly what the Union Nationale did “It is the tron ore company which determines to which prov- ince it will pay royalties on the ore_it draws from the soil of brador. It’s a shame. It's a scandal to.let a company také the responsibilities belonging to governments. “The only agreement between myself and Mr. Smallwood was as. soon as possible.” Mr. Johnson asked if the ques- tion will be negotiated between the two governments or if the ter.” * 14 PAGES -abinet Unity Is Queried e War Of Nerves Minister Denies _CCF Charges OTTAWA (CP) Defence Minister Harkness was accused Thursday by Erhart Regier (CCF—Burnaby - Coquitlam) of going out of his way to ‘‘put the knife’’ into disarmament efforts of External Affairs Minister \Green. “Complete nonsense,’ Mr. Harkness replied. Mr. Regier drew other angry replies from ,.Mr. Harkness as he entered the Commons throne speech debate to attack the gov- ernment’s defence and foreign policies. , The British Colurmbia MP also stated flatly that there are nu- clear weapons on Canadian soil, and he refused to accept Mr. Harkness’ denial. There were other references to the question of cabinet unity as the debate continued through its fourth day of what one MP called an ‘electoral war of nerves." . Lionel Chevrier (‘L--Montreal Laurier) called the Progressive Conservative government ‘‘the most incompetent since Confederatign’’ and“ said it is impossible“t6 have confidence in a government whose cabinet ministers | ack confidence in each other. CLAIMS DESPERATION Justice Minister Fulton coun- tered that the government's rec- ord of accomplishment is a re- sult of teamwork—‘‘there is a team in the present cabinet. a team that werks well together, a team that {is proud to work under the present prime minis- He accused the Liberals of being carried away with their desperation. Mr. Regier, who was a par- liamentary observer at the last United Nations General Assem- X bly session, said he admires the “tremendous efforts’’ of Mr Green for good at the UN. But Canada's prestige there was rapidly and decidedly declin- ing.”’ ““Nonsense,"’ interjected Vet- erans Minister Churchill. Mr. Regier said it couldn't be atherwise when Prime Minister Diefenbaker refused to support Mr. Green's views and Mr. Harkness “goes out of his way to put the -knife’’ into the post. tion held by the external affairs minister He said Mr. Harkness had ap- pealed to Canadian servicemen “to support him in his battle inside the government.” ENTERS DENIAL Mr. Harkness said that state ment was without justification. Mr Regier said government policy on acquiring nuclear war- heads for Canadian weapons is to delay the announcement until after the election “We in Canada have nuclear weapons today. but the govern- ment doesn’t have the guts to tell the Canadian people." Mr. Harkness demanded, un- successfully, that Mr. Regier be forced to withdraw the state. ment since it Mad been ‘‘cate- gorically denied” hy himself and the prime minister Mr Regier retorted that he doesn't have to accept the min- ister’s statement “It’s even possible the minis- ter doesn't know." Mr. Regier said that if there weren't nuclear warheads if Canada for Bomarc missiles, the government would be proved to be completely irre- sponsible sinee {tt hadn't even placed -orders for conventional warheads for the missiles. National Power Grid — Seen Possible Vision OTTAWA -(CP) - Federa! plans for a national power grid s on * may be “another vision’ “Lio nél Chevrier ‘1. Montreal lau rier) said Thursday in the Commons He quoted H. Lee Briggs a member of the national encszy board anti former chief enginecr of the British Columbia power commission, as telling an eu gineering conference that no ad vantage is clearly established to warrant ‘building such a oa tional transmission system A major objection. Mr. Brizss Was quoted as saving. was tha! of interrupting power when the only economie wav to carty over 500 miles or more was dy direct current. Alternating cur rent is used in Canadian homes and indirstries Instead of a national grid. alt efforts should he directed te tapping remaining isolated sour- ces of power, Mr Briggs had said In reply to @ question Prime Minister Dicfenbaker reiterated Thursday that the provinces have been asked to attend a federal-provincial conference os the subject The throne speech at the opening of the parliamenw farv session announced that the letters had zane out ‘bec assembly: » decision will be left to the Que- "o" Non-Confidence Motion “Mr. Lesage replied the gov- pe ernment’s decision will be made By Liberals Is Defeated known “in due time.” ‘the moon. ~ OTTAWA (CP) A Liberal The vote foll&wed party lines, Moon Shot non-confidence motion charging With the small CCF-New Demo- t “failure to bring CTatic Party group supporting government the motion .made last Monday Cot Toda forward policies to deal with the iy Opposition Leader Pearson ~ y ireal probléms confronting. ‘his ge. proposed amendment to the 7 country” was defeated [44 10 42 address in repli to the speech CAPE CANAVERAL ‘AP) — jn the Commons Thursday night fram the throne With the weatherman’s blessing h vote om the reply ilself Te the United States prepared a WHERE-TO-FIND.-IT not exnected until next week, one-tw& space punch Thursday; The debate is scheduled to be To fling an ‘astronaut into orbit Announcements. notices I ispended today as the house around the earth Saturday. ano - Births, deaths, ete. = 3. if considers supplementary spend- fire a Ranger satellite today to Classified . 13 " n estimates of $82.290.000 for snoop at the moon. ° Finance; markets ; the current vear that ends But there were also ominors Comics, features Io Verch 31 ‘signs in the long-range weather eport oti i Included in the estimates are picture that could put off for : ar: : ees... 6... } $47,000,000 in acreaze vayments days the orbital flight of Marine Paitorials Fete eens 6 for western farmers, $40,000.00 Lt.-Col. -John Glenn if it shou'd Telde Oe eee reece 7 fr “winter works program miss its Saturday date Steer ce and $900.00 for a’ make-work | And the time is fast disap Kings Co... ee 5 scheme tn aid New foundlane | pearing for the Ranger satellite ny. Queens treeeeeee > _ fishing settlements where in 'ghot to be properly aimed for omens Nur rome ’ down due ta low catche . Kennedy Requests Broad Powers To Slash Tarifis WASHINGTON (AP) — Pres- 3. Provide federal subsidies compared with \mericans* instead of tariff relief for US $2 ident’ Kennedy asked congress, businesses and workers hurt by Concern individual com Thursday fof unprecedented imports. 7 m of new tariff-cutting powers which In the House of Representa home-district industries fore tives, which acts first on tariff shadowed opposition from he said are needed quickly to within both parties for Kennedy ~ . John McCormack deal with Europe's emerging eer sledged Demo- proposals to water down exist- economic gian', the Common citi jeadership support and ing safeguards Market. - Chairman Wilbur Mills (Dem. Kennedy told the legislators A major legislative battle 1s Ark.) of the tariff - handling the should act this year be | expected over Kennedy's plea, in a strongly worded special ways and means committee in- troduced the Kennedy legisla fore the tide of European union sweeps past the United States. - He said the choice lies be message, for five-year author- tion. ac ity to: But John H. Pent.(Dem. Pa \ ‘ween his proposed “wholly new instrument allowing a trade 1. Wipe out tariffs completely on many manufactured gdods 2. Slash all other duties up ito 50 ver cent. 4 voiced opposition to free —trad- ing with Europe where he said ‘workers earn: % cents an hour * partnership with the Common Market and a growing split with non-communit allies. °