It It's Good For The island The Guardian is For It VOL. LXXVII. _No. 297 Authorised In sum Class We“. one". and fos- @111? finalisation “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” Mall by the Post Office puns-t of postage in out CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA THURSDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1964. WEATHER Clear, clouding over 1 . in evening; wester- y Winds 25 becoming light. Low-high. 10 and 25. Friday; snow and cold. “mtg” SEVEN ems l ARDA Rural Area Studies Show Extensive Poverty By ALEX MORIN i OTTAWA (CPi—A picture of farming for a living earn (less 2 per cent of the familiesiother jobs. Twenty-two per cent. or 395.410. of farm families are extensive poverty in rural Can-[than $2.500 a year. In this category. Ida emerges from the latest; 43 per cent of the rural {amt-g The number Of inw..,w.,me‘ studies made public by the Ag-ilies earning their living other.farm families by provinces and. ricultural Rehabilitation andithan by farming receive lessiih brackets. the percentage they Development Administration. lthan $3.000 a year. lrepresem among each may. The studies culminate three} 32 per cent of the wage eai'n- ince's total of {arm families; ye r of research by federa lers in rural areas who neithert officials during the pilot stagelwork nor live on farms earn (.eflflvfmgdif"? $3211“); of the federal-provincial cam-lless than $2.000. daffy”? {f ‘ gart. 513619] paign to combat low income in l ' . ' ‘ ova. ‘co la " ' areas away from cities andlHAVE N0 EDUCATION ‘(32)‘ New Brunswwk 3'008- (33‘; towns. 20 per cent of rural Canadizinsig‘“?bee 24327 ,‘29’i 0mm“ [7" The groundwork was laid at a of school age and over have at- 868 (16’: Man‘mba 10,190 ‘23): federal-provincial conference inttah‘ea “0 higher education than.sa5katc‘hewan 18.938021": Al- Montreal last week for the next grade {our primary 5°‘h°°1i"gt ‘berta 13‘103 ‘19.; Bmlsn (’omm' t . five-year assault on the prob- 64 per cent of the rural popu-‘bla 2'390 (15" t At A Glance Parliament ‘ l By THE CANADIAN PRESS ‘ WEDNESDAY. Dec. 1964 l The Commons continued de- i hate on the flag committee ‘ recommendation and a Con- servative amendment to it asking for a plebiscite. Louise-Joseph Pigeon tPCw 9 .loliette - l‘Assomption-Mont- . calmi said he is against a plebiscite. H W. Hcrridgc 'NDP— Kootenay West| said be per- sonally favors a plebiscite and the Red Ensign as the na- ‘ional flag. Deane Gundlock 'P(‘.—~Lcth- 'ii'idget complained about the flag debate washing out the . daily question period. 22 PAGES PC Front On Flag ISsue Broken By Second MP iwo Quebec lories Oppose Plebiscite OTTAWA '(‘PI A second Quebec Conservative has en- dorsed a Commons committee recommendation for a national flag with a single red maple leaf and opposed his party's de- ma for a national plebiScite. on the. issue. Louis-Joseph Pigeon (Joliette- l'Assomption-Montcalm) told the Commons Wednesday he would have preferred a green maple leaf to represent the Canadian sugar maple but hopes the pro- posed design is approved as soon as pnzsible. Gerard Girouard tP(.‘ __ ,a. Tuesday when another Conser- l vative strayed from the question iof the plebiscite. i The. Conservatives applauded I when Mr. Drouin said he had to igive rulings that had been * tContinued on page 5 Col. 2) Flag Debate At A Glance . By THE CANADIAN PRESS .I-‘lag debate. Wednesday. Dec. I2 lcm to which $175,000,000 is i‘ed- :lation of school age or nver‘SE'r UNDER $3.000 MiCha‘Tl Sta" 'pC '" ( .' ballet t k a similar stand Tues. . . «. , eral funds has been committed.,have not been educated past The. definition of low income lam“ sa'd unless ""9"?! '5 ay. no ihofiligehhilsil ihinuii’hme' Tm.” . Forestry Minister Sauvc. who1grade eight. tfm. the nnn.farm family in rural Email: awlilleggscfllm '3 t Mr. Pigeon spoke on the thirdl‘ Liberals; None ' ' Is In charge of the program. Arda's definition of a low-ln- areas was set at under $3.000 “ms; Canadafi‘ ‘ °“" day of ths rosumed “as delta”? Conservatives tS—two hours. POPE PAUL VI shakes hands wt. ndia's Prime Minister LII Bahadur Shastri as the pontiff arrived in Bom- bay Wednesday. Behind them are India's vice-president Za kir Hussain. left. and Cardin ill Gracias of Bombay. Man at right is not identified. (AP Wirephoto via cable from Bombay) Pope Paul VI ls Welcomed By Mighty Bombay Throng BOMBAY lAPt — A mightyl throng gave Pope Paul VI an awesome welcome to India Wed-t nesday. The crush of people. 1.000.000 or more. at times en- gulfed his car on the drive downtown from the airport. There was none of the hostil- ity police had feared. About 250“ members of fanatic Hindu or- ganizations had been jailed last weekend after,threatening dem- onstrations. The Pope. as one of his first acts in India. asked that they be freed. ‘ Airs. indii'a Gandhi. ministeri of‘information and daughter of] the late prime minister Jawa-' bsrlal Nehru. assured him: "They already have been re- leased." 9 {'Then tell them i am pre-t' pared to take them by the hand! and treat them with affection. and cordlality," the Pope res- ponded. JOURNEY OF PEACE Pope Paul told a restricted crowd of about 8.000 at the air- port he had come on "a journey of peace and love. of friendship and brotherliness." As far as the eyc could see. people jammed around the air- port—the lame. the poor. the outcasts. Police estimated at least 100.- 000 were at the airport and an- 0 er . 1.000.000 or more were along the route from airport to the city So vast were the crowds it took ltd hours for the Pope‘s limousine to go the 13 miles from "the airport to the oval in downtown Bombay. where he will attend the 13th Interna- tional Eucharistic Congress. This was the lure that led the Pope to undertake the longest mission in papal history. afllght of about 4.000 miles from Rome to this ancient city. The 67-year-old Roman Calls-1 olic pontiff looked about in won-t derment at the vast throngs fill-l ing balconies and standing atopi sign boards. walls and vehicles! . . . . . l to get a View. He smiled and tred brocade cape. spresmnfiomg}figures for rural areas of fewer waved almost continuously. oc-l icuionally shaking a dark hand Ismile on his f stretching out to greet him fromi the throngs. j The formal reception at the[ airport was as ceremonial as the pope‘s wel~ come was enormous and ex-l cited. I A roar of applause and cheers arose as the Air India 7-7 jet touched ground at 5:13 pm. He stepped from the plane, in white cassock. skull cap and a arm affectionately, see; " He placed his hands together. holding them beneath his chin momentarily in the Indian "na- splendid and lmaste" greetin g. and then. ‘raised his pressed hands up andi A mingled clamor of delight and applause came to response. Marcotte Death Ruling D OTTAWA tCPi—A decision on whether or not to interfere. with the scheduled Friday execution of convicted murdered Georges Marcotte has been postponed and will not be made until after a cabinet meeting this morning. Justice Minister Favreau an- nounced Wednesday night. The cabinetdecided earlier Wednesday it would not inter- fare with the hanging. but Mar- cotte's lawyer said he had placed new evidence before the Justice minister. Mr. Favreau said he would consider whether the evidence was sufficient to warrant airecommendation to the cabinet to alter its decision his executive assistant. Engines And Anchors Failed ".Ial. jail" the people shouted Is the Pope entered Bombay. "Hsil'. hail!" to Hold Freighter Oil Shore l SHERBROOKE. N.S. tCPi—iward. said. ship‘s. chm pater,” said he startedmoming into the engine-room. it end5to send a message to Hallfsx‘. I marine radio when a giant waveih“es under her Mlle“ '0 979’ i Capt. George Pateras. 20. told Wednesday how his varied career came to an on a reef at Barachois Head 13. tainous seas." The 2.828-ton Fury of Lib- erian registry. formerly the sda Steamship Company of f Tuesday in one of the worstt storms ever to hit Nova Scout! ship about were resting at s motel here.I Capt. Peteras. a Greek who; had taken command of the ship 19 days ago in Q City., was heading for Walton on the. west coast of Nova Scotia tot load barytes for New York. The storm with winds gusting' up to 90 miles an hour caught: them off the eastern shore of1 Nova Scotia. UNABLE TO KEEP COURSE He said the ship was unable. to keep her course because she‘ was empty and blowing about like a chip. "She. wo d not ethyl Montreal, ran upon the reef lumen Capt. elayed Gerry Oueliette. said the deci- sion wou announced at 12:30 pm. today after the 9:30 am. cabinet meeting. Earlier, the office of Solicitor- General Watson Macnaughton said in a statement there would be no interference in the sched- uled Friday morning hanging at Montreal's Bordeaux Jail. Marcotte is scheduled to be hanged early Friday morning in Montreal's Bordeaux Ja' The. former Monreal carpen- ter. found guilty of capital mur- der in the machine-gun slaying w 8 ‘says rural low income “or. as. 0 ' - - . lthe problem is commonly andtsaiii: gulls]: iiinaen :gh’mfiai’iiitali'on 1th: his.”- that a‘erage an- lhluntly called. rural Poverty ihigross annual sales of agricul-lnua amiy Income across the ' .- - ShOUld Cause con-:tural products under $2.500 and‘cmmh'y ‘5 ‘5'“9' or 685‘s” .cern not Just insome quarters.‘where the operator works no rural non-farm families. 43 per ‘hUt 30 8“ C3h3d13h5-" tmore than 25 days a year att (Continued on page 3 Col. 7t . journed until Dec. 14. THURSDAY. Dec. .1 The Commons meets at 2:30 tmenl '0 "5f" the report bad‘ Gundlock 40; Michael Starr pm. l . to continue the flag de- hate. The Senate stands ad- Although the root causes are.‘ iextremely complex. Mr. Sauve. .says Arda is ‘becoming more ;and more convinced education iis the most important single {factor among the cause of pov- the ne which may levcntually enable us to shatter thenvicious circle once and for l Two Ships Here Aground In Tuesday Night Storm l ; Touans nvrznv PROVINCE Arda research shows Iva patch- SUMMERSIDE BUREAU kas. was anchored of-f Sea Cow‘Belfast. grounded in Charlotte war of low income and near 01“ THE GUARDIAN Head light. approximately 0 town harbor during Tuesday that lOUChes miles east of here when it ap- pears her anchor chains lel go and she went aground approxh mately 300 fe et. from shore sometime during the night or 'early morning. The captain reported there was no damage to her hull as yet and that she. was in no im- mediate danger. TANKER AGROUND A second ship the oil tanker Two Fishermen Missing . Off Nova Scotia Coast every A 5.500-ton freighter which went aground while anchored in Northumberlatnd Strait battling a raging storm Tuesday night. continued to be buffeted by high winds and heavy seas last night Although winds weren't as high as .province. Here are some of the national1 than 1.000 residents: tQue. Byelectionsl“n d t m H” 30 i "8 0 (“V a eween SChedUIedJan.185and 40 miles per hour. l _. The Agios Nicolaos, whose QUEBEC tCPt * There .viii‘ -‘ A We campaigning this Cmmmastmaster is a Captain Alexandra- as a result. of provincial byelec- tions announced Wednesday to seats vacated by the de- partures of two Quebec cabinet earlier in the day they con- n. ~. minis ers Premier Jean Dosage. an- nounced byelections for . . l - day. Jan. 18 in the riding5 OH HALIFAX I.CP) — At least'neau and Terra Nova were. also st. Maurice and Terrebonné_ If“? vessels in distress. twolunsuccessful in a sea sear h. Nomination day is Jan. 4. At the same time. Mr. Lesage. said the new legislature session will start Thursday. Jan 21_ jnesday as high winds and moun-iin Min“ Bash, at the head of The byeiections are to chooselaim‘us 593‘ bUHeNed the coaStithe Bay of Fundv developed a successors to Hamey ;0f the Maritime provinces in the: _ ' - ‘ ‘ . ~ _ .' . _ 20degree list when her caigo member for St. Maurice Since .‘Wakf‘ 0‘ TUESdays ’3‘“ andIof lead concentrates shifted As- 1952. and Lionel Bei'trand.:5h0WSlm‘m- 'sislance was sought-The ("o‘ast “gigomber for Terrehonne Store New Brunswick. buried IlnderiGuard ship Walter E. Foster left fishermen missing. lit savedi I $55-$00}! S h _ Th t , K t I, w _ .vesse isa er c ulte. riding a “M he i my me ed lout. the sale off Cape Blomidon 1 - ‘iip in two feet of snow. strug-tqaiht ihhn Ng and a tug was Mr. Hamel resigned as attor-‘ ' ' r ‘ 7 ' ' " ney-general last month to be-lififihm get its figmays open'smndmg come 3 Superior Court justice! ' ‘ e sa'm 'lnh" “eat one 0' whne Mr. Bertrand. {ormeri F93 s New. for “‘9 5;“th olithe hardest llil. was still shovel- minister of tourism. fish and'the. InhSter “fishermen Phunlanlhhg late wednes‘la - game. was appointed to the lQu‘ma" a n d James Sm'lh“ Residents of Nova Scolia con- ‘astisearCh planes were unsuccess' ltinued to pump oiitflooded base- provincial upper hOUse f 1 ' lid h f h e k. : u m an a . ay searc or t imehts and clean up broken tree of constable Claude Marineau. will be the finst convicted mur- derer hanged in Canada since the preseht Liberal government took office in April. 1963. towards the land." he miles east of here smid "moun-mwem We, the shiva “we'rwent an explosion. lwork and carried away some'of l “the antennae and part of the din equipment. Novsport owned by Clarke Can-lmessage got out. rp- However the With coming rapidly Pateras dropped land both anchors and ordered fulltuwe did not know stream ahead. The force of the thurd us." he said All 18 menibers 0f the ere“itengine and the holding power‘. The long man-Red lo 98081” from lhc'of the anchors was not enough with the sighting of the Cana- noon Wednesday to keep her from driviniz toward dian Coast Guardvessel Narwhal when the seas subsided. Theylthe rock,_ ' The anchors dragged over the lNSIDE TODAY Births. deaths . . . . . . . .. 3-30 Classified . . . . . . 20-21 mics . . . . . . . . . . l9 ill Editorials . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 4 Summerslde . . . . . . . . . . .. 3 Prince (‘0. 2 Rural Churches . . . . . . . . .. 10' e The Liberals 8' Present hax'eim'IMl Inbsler boat' Jean am'lllimbs after the storm dumped 62 seats in the 954%, assethudy. drifting somewhere offimore than tw" inch“ of ram bly and the Union Nationale. with“ 5°"thW95tem fill 0i Novaihh mm. section; hidih‘. pmv. There is one Independent and’lSm'ia- The "a" ‘9“ 5"” 'S'linre rive coal mines and 5000 wo seats are vacant tlan‘l- N5" Mnndi‘y l” “‘l ‘nb‘ miners were left idle by wide- spread power failure in Cape Gatl- iBreton. ister traps. The destroyer ~escorts and the ship went upon .bottom 1 .3, \ . ‘a roe stern first. With water} . ‘was necessary to extinguish the1 NO ELECTRICITY . 3 With the steam gone theroi. was no electricity. Capt. Pat-l eras said he managed to get two tmessagcs out before the. cmer— lgency transmitter went dead. if somebody cold night ended d the arrival of the occan-. lgoing tug Valiant. 5 "'1‘ ere. was no way to save! lthe ship. i told everybody to. get out and we went over the. i side on ropes and ladders onto‘ the reef." ‘ The ship was high and dry. and the lit-man crew walked, ashore in comparative comfort; . v l The Fury. built in 1944 in; ttlamburg. Germany. was origi-; 'nally named the Wcserwehr.1 She later became the British‘ ship Empire Gsngwsy and then the Novaport. plying betwcer St. THE Lotto-TON Greek mo . light. some 10 miles east of "Inhn's' NM" cm" Rirooii' h A ' N‘ oi in s 'de The ship ground ‘ l nd Montreal iinti s 9 tors in gins to on iiimmersi . - lmmx a an off So. Cow Bond ed when an anchor costs in... sold to Greek interests. on course. kept it to los- West German ‘ night or early Wednesday when ed daybreak to attempt to dock at the railway wharf 0 dis- Icharge cargo. The tanker was no danger and was expected be refloated this morning. i in l to I A third ship for a time was' believed aground but later W3! Drouin objected from his seat at anchor awaiting, found to be improved weather conditions tShe was off Brae. in Egmont Bay on the west side of Prin ntv. Her was not known. Residents of the area said she was not flying distress signals. She was close inshore. Wed-neday morning but movedE tout to about two miles during the (lay. . Rumors of a ship aground be- t gan circulating early yesterday . morning but nocont’irmatiorr1 l tLapointet 1D ouin. who was presiding tem- , . porarily. call Mr. Pigeon to or-. amhors dragged as She Mal.“ ‘ der for talking about the thrce~ _ . ‘leaf flag. away from the point Minister Pearson's three in the. Commons. which is com- sidering a Conservative ameiid- to committee with a recom- mendation for a plebiscite. . ebate ran for 22 day: last summer. The present ses- sion—.longest in history—move through its 202ml day. The usually - humdrum de- bate produced one of its few humorous moments uring Mr Pig ' . as Vincent Drouin tL—Argenteuil ~ Deux- Montagnes) struggled with his conflicting duties of government member d acting Speaker. Gregoire d e m a n under debate. Mr. Drouin re fused and said should be allowed ductory remarkl. t l 28‘ l (Creditiste ~ ‘ the member 22 days. a few intro- Speeches in that debate: Total Mr. Caouett-e pointed out Mr. 155 minutest. Jack McIntosh 40: tLouis-Joseph Pigeon 23: Deane 38.- Robert Simpson 39; William H A. Thomas. continuing speech started Tuesday. five. ew Democrats t1—16 min- ‘ulest: H. W. Herridge 16. Creditisfes: None. Social Credit: None. Totals to date on current do hate: Speeches 24. Time: Three sitting days (11 hours. 25 min- utest‘ i Liberals: 3 (one hour. four E minute. 5). nservatives: ll teight hours. 47 minutes). Now 1) mocrats: (39 minutes) Creditistes: 2 t minutes) Social Credit: 1 (12 minutes). Previous debate. on Prims - leaf . flag resolution merits. occupied 174; Liberal 32; Conservative 117; NDP 10; Social Credit 8 Creditiste 7. Crash Possibilities Outlined lo Hearing MONTREAL (CPL-1W? pilot. 'were climbing when they actuv iml‘ld be "b'alne‘j lnr some firm ’ of an Air Canada jetliner that ally were not. i as contact could not be made byl {ship to shore radio clue to the vessel's antennas being knocked down by the high winds. Contact was finally made by wireless vis Grindstone in the .Magdalen Islands and the cap-i l tain confirmed that his ship was ‘ laground. All 18 crew members. t remained aboard. . ‘TO LOAD POTATOES . i The Agios Nicolaos. owned by 1 .a Greek shipping firm. was on 1 route here from England to pick. ‘up a cargo of potatoes. estimai led at between 100.000 and 120. i 000 bags. bound for Jacksonville ‘ Florida. The local shipping ii'rni invole cd is Thane Ellis Ltd. The ship's, iagent. Lorne Driscoll. said last} (Continued on page 3 Col. 3t .w broke during a fiercc storm Tuesday night. The 28 mem- bers of the crew remained {i carried 118 persons to . deaths a year ago may have mistakenly put the huge aircraft into a dive because his instru~ merits and physical sensations told him it was it 0 sin g up steeply, an RC. squadron leader testified Wednesday. Dr. A. C. Brian. 37. of To:- onto suggestcd this possibility at a formal hearing into the DC-8I" disaster Nov. 29. 1 Dr. Bryan. a specialist in ex- perimenial medicine. is head of .the RCAl-“s aviation physiology section and was chairman of the. “hidden factors group" that in- .vcsiigatcd the crash He said there have bcen at least two recent instances in the United States when pilots were . misled ino thinking their planes. I w - .. jchological disturbance or intox- -;.». c- _ . k; s aboard yesterday awaiting a tug which will attempt to re- flost the shin. "The. body cannot distinguish between acceleration due to gra- vity and so rimposed aircraft acceleration.” he said. "In such cases the pilot tends to reject his physical sensations and rely ‘on his flight instruments." I The instruments might be. elm- ! ilarly misleading in some cases. ihowever. HARD TO READ . Dr. Bryan said the attituds ‘ indicator. which measures pitch 'and roll, is hard to read accur- ater when vibrating during at! turbulence and "may . mis- leading in some situations." Dr. Bryan said examination of iragmented human remains iindicatcd there had been no jfire or disintegration in flight, .and medical records gave no reason to suspect illness. psy- icatinn on the part of the crew Qucstinned by Air Canada law- yer Alistair Peterson of Tor- onto. hc said he could not ex- clude the possibility of a small explosinn— "say in the order of a handgrenade"——in the cockpit or the possibility that a crew member had suffered some acute illness. It also was possible that softw- one had forced his way into the cockpit and shot the. pilot and . s researchenginccr employed by the National Research Council. was asked about the possibility of fire or explosion aboard the DC-RF‘ prior to the crash. He said tiici'c was "no evidence of but we cannot positively dis- count thc possibility." Both men testified as the in- quiry. under Mr. Justice George A (‘hallies of Superior Court. rcsumcd after a three~week re.- . cess. Peron Shipped Back To Spain RIO DF. JANEIRO tAPV- Brmiiian a ii i b o rities shipped former Argentine dictator Juan Peron back lo Spain Wednesday night on the same airliner that brought him here on tirated comeback attempt Latin America. He got no nearer to Argentina than the airport here. where ll. lfl spent the day under armed guard before winging back at .35 mm ’ i l l l