OUR TELEPHONES For hammer Want Ads Teln boce PA Man The telephone number to call for the Business or Editorial Dept is PA 6517 awash ms 98m YearNo 34 West Invites Reds To Meet On Disarming WASHINGTON AP The United States and Britain an amounced today agreement on Christmas Island in the mid Paciflc as site for United States nucleartest programs At the same time they called for an EastWest foreign minis ters meeting on disarmament The proposal for foreign ministers meeting was made by President Kennedy and Prime Minister Macmillan to Soviet Premier Khrushchev joint USEritisb statement said that foreign ministers of the three powers should meet in advance of the proposed is nalion disarmament conference opening at Geneva March 14 and should also be reallyto par ticipate personally in thc nego tiatious The aim of this foreign minis ters effort would be to generate supreme effort to bring the nuclear arms race under con trol the joint statement said On the military side the two Western governments declared that the existing state of nu clear development would justify the West in making such further series of nuclear test as may be necessary for purely military reasons An important factor in the present state of nuclear devel opment the statement said is the recent massive Soviet te The United States and United Kingdom govcmmcnls the statement then said have therefore decided that prepara tions should he made in various places and as part of these the Kingdom government are making available to the United States gnvomment the facilities at xChristmas Island The island which is huge atoll lies more than 1000 miles south of Hawaii in lonely section of the Paciï¬c US officials said the proposal to raise the disarmament meet ing at Geneva March 14 to the foreign ministers level was not barrier to going ahead with 05 nuclear weapons explosions in the atmospheric BABY MURDER TRIM Girl Could Break Easily Doctor SUDBURY CF psy chiatrist testified Wednesday Mrsr Roland Goulet on trial for capital murder in the shot gun death of her adopted child had an unsettled childhood and suffered from some neurotic traits He described her as some what confused but not men tally ill Dr Thomas Dixon of Sudbury told the Supreme Court of On tario jury or the personal his fory of the ztyesrold woman as he obtained it froman in terview with her at the Sud bury district jail Dec 19 Born in Montreal Mrs Gou iet had on unsettled family life as child Dr Dixon said Her mother died when she was three years old and her father remarried She suffered from neurotic traits as child and was con sidered timid and shy the psychiatrist reported She left school at the age of 13 After trying various jobs which she found too tiring Weather Orbit No Flies High CAPE CANAVERAL Fla APlTiros IV fourth in ser ies of high flying electronic Weathermen soared into orbit today to photograph the earths cloud cover The abspound cameracarry ing satellite rose in the nose of 90foot ThorDelta rocket which blasted off at 744 am EST All three stages of the booster fired on schedule and nearly two hours later the National Aeronautics and Space Adminis tration announced that the pack age was in orbit about 400 miles above the earth The rWallops sla Va tracking stationpicked up sig nals from Tires IV as it zipped overhead at the end of one orbit at 916 am EST Two TV cameras carried in the satellite were to begin trans mittiug pictures once orbit was achieved Amelia married Roland Goulct at the age of 16 Her husband was then 28 She told me that after they were married he started to beat her especially after drink ing Sometimes she would faint from the blows The doctor related the ac count of the shooting given to him by Mrs Goulet Shc indi cated the thought of the shot gun came into her mind as re stilt of remark made by her husband as be left for work Goulet rwasv speaking of woman who bud told Mrs Gou let her husband was going with girl while she was away He told the accused that if this woman came to his house again he would shoot her The baby come towards me Dr Dixon quoted Mrs Goulet as saying The gun went off and everything went black in her mind She remembers reloading the gun for herself When her mind came clear she decided to shoot herself she told the doctor She did so but receovered in hospital Dr Dixon said that although Mrs Goulet seemed somewhat gï¬nfused she was not mentally LAUGHS OFF MURDER TALK MOSCOW RéutersSoviel Premier Khrushchev during talks with Brazilian dipllr mat Wednesday laughed and joked about rumors of an at tempt on his life the diplomat said today Robert Assumpcua dc Araujo the Brazilian charge daifaires here said Khrush chev was in good health and high spirits when he met him at the resort town of Sochl on the Black Sea gt He said Khrushchev knew all about the rumors of an assas sination attempt and waved his hand in derision and laughed at them Khrushchev brought up the matter him self the Brazilian reported Khrushchev proudly showed his visitor hi twostorey dacha on the beach near Barrie Ontario Canada Thursday February 1962 119 Therm Esamimr LOCAL WEATHER Partly cloudy few snowflub ries 113w tonight 20 High to marrow l0 For complete summary turn to page two Not More Than par Copyt2 Page Quebec Seeks To Pay Missing Jane Found NASSAU Bahamas AP Actrcss Jayne Mansfield her husband and Florida friend were found on nearby Rose Is Innd today after search that began Wednesday when they failed to return from water skiiog trip Their 17foot open boat was found overturned near the island about sundown Search boats from Nassou scoured the area throughout the night and planes joined in at daybreak Atmidmomingtodaypa gtNa5lt sau Development Board airplane erolipoftbcislaod and noti fied aUnitcd States Coast Guard plunewhieh located the three The trioMiss Mansfield her husband movie Mickey and their friend hotel Eublicist Jack Drury of Fort audcrdale Fla were found on the beach They were picked up by fishing boat and returned to Nassau They skied goily off from Nassau about noon Wednesday the actress clad in scanty bathing suit Drury piloted the whltehulled boat with an out board motor Photographers in other boats followed for about mile shoot ing pictures of the bosomy ac tress and her husband former Mr Universe Thcfirst sign thatanythiog was wrong came when itliss Mansfield missed pm press conference in Nassau At 830 pm search was begun The report of the finding of the overturned boat with broken steering column touched off wider moraintense hunt All three were reported excel lent swimmers Rose Island is some six miles fromNassaur It is about nine miles long and halfmile wide and virtually uninhabited There are no communications The coast guard said they were sulfering slight exposure because they were dressed only in swimming suits Tempera tures during the night dropped to 64 degrees VOELKDIGEN Ger many AP The Saar Valley counte 270 dead and 83 se verely injured today in Ger rnanys second worst coal minlt ing disaster Upto 70 miners are believed still missing The bodies of minersburned gassed or crushed under tons of coal and rockwere being extricated by rescue teams morelhan hours after mas sive firédamp explosion in Luis enthal mine here Wednesday The death tau reached 270 when officials of the Saar state mining authority said Zitabodies had been brought to the surface and two men had died in hos pital The number still buried iuthe cavedin debris of the miuen fourth level 1300 feet under RELATIVES sin rumpus wait at the entrance of the spotted water skis near the east Electioneeri nmaway Vanguard and two trucks were heavily darn aged at Toronto international airport Mechanics were pre 25000n19eoao ALGERS Routers Police strengthened their patrols in this tense city today as 25000 students staged oneday strike in protest against the murder this week of three young Euro peans by Moslem gunmen The strike appeared complete with all high school and univer sity students joining in Two students were among the 10 persons12 Moslems and six Europeans slain in Algeria Wednesday in the continuing wave of violence between right GERMAN MINE oisnsrrn ground was uncertain One re port said that as many as 70 miners might still be under ground Another report said that the number could be less than 10 Rescue authoriues admitted theycould not tell for sure due to confusion in reporting of survivors In any case rescuers had all but given up hope that any more would be found alive The last man brought out alive was discovered Wednesday at mid day Since then rescue crews have found only bodies many cou torted in suffering from burns and asphyxiation During the night rescuers found one group of men lit tered like leaves in one gallt lery miner said Many miners died from shock waves which hurled them about and shattered their lungs Dr Carl Hugo spokesman for the Saarland Mining Authority said cant even guess at the number of missing Confusion as to the number still in the mine was attributed to the possrbilitythat somesur vivors might have fled in panic and be at home The Saar radio called on such men to report to the manage ment the stateowned Most of the 83 survivors in hospitals were listed in critical condition massive explosion bringing down tons of coal and rock thundered through the mine Wednesday The blast was fol lowed by fire Most of the miners whose bodies have been recovered died from carbon monoxide poisoning Hugo said Some died from burns and others fiomlhe shockwave which hurled them up to 120 feet and mashed their lungs FIND ONLY BODIES The last man brought out alive was rescued at pm vWedues day Siueo than rescue workers OOPS ll RU paring the big turboprop air liner for flight to Montreal and started its engines im aware that the brains were Students Strike Gunmen Drag Worker From wing European extremists and Moslem gunmen Workers on Algiers mornin newspapers also went on strike today to protest an expulsion order against Tony Arbona an Algiers sports writer and head of the Algiers television sports department Secret army gunmen today executed worker for the Algiers Water company He was dragged from the com panys bus by three masked men and taken away in car His body was found later rid dled by 20 rifle bullets had found only bodies and they held little hope that any of the menstill trapped undergron survived About 100 more of the mines work force were not accounted for It was not known whether they too were casualties or whether they had fled in panic from the disaster and were at home The Saar radio station at regular intervals called on all such men to report to tbeman agement of the state owned mine so that roll call could be taken Many of the rescuers were among the 200 miners who es caped when sheet of flame shot through the main shaft and set off blast that sent timbers flying and brought tunnel walls and ceilings crashing down 1800 feet below the surface It felt like being hit by unwnr LANE all The lCA plane plowed into the empty trucks in front of the main terminal Ilhe propeller sliced right through the truck roof r0nrv m1an Spaghetti Too nor TOO MUCH CHICAGO AP Quentin Lapash 39 complained to pn liceWednesday night that 40 spaghettieating cats kept by his wife Red Feather are making his life miserable like cats Lapasb factory worker told police men But Im tired of living with 40 of them Police took no immediate action 270 COunted Dead tearful silence as police and rescue cars passed Blankets hid the bodies being carried away on metal stretch ers to hall turned into morgue Saarbruecken radio station reported that faint tap signals had been heard by rescuers but authorities issued quick de nial so as not to raise false hopes gt Wives and mothers of missing miners hurried from hospital door to hospital door in ades perate effort to find their bus bands and sons inside doctors administered blood plasma brought by police cars and US army helicopters An investigation was started See MINE DISASTERPage giants fist said Georg Kneip 21 who was in gallery Nor Grey dirty clouds filled the part of the gallery 1was in could barely see my hands even if raised them to my face The lamps at the top at5 our helmets just did not get through this thick cloud Kneip said he managed to reach No gallery where the explosion occurred and found Ehdl The injured looked ter Almost all their cothes Were burned to ashes Some looked completely black Many cried in agony others rnoanedff N0 HOPE LEFT As dogtired US troops and German teams continued their rescue work in the mine an au thoritative source saidas many as 20 more bodies may be pulled out of the rubble cinls snidthiire Was absolut ngi hope of anyone being found Relatives and friends gath hlost fu naca redden skies The orowd the night Lights fromaA nealRy cred at the mine gate through ng Costs Revolutionary Plan Would lut llll Parties 0n QHEBEC CP Quebecs election campaign expenses will be severely restricted if legisla tion introduced Wednesday in the legislative assembly be comes law Campaign expenses would also be paid in part by the pro vmcial government something no other government in Canada does ZlBpnge bill containing the two revolutionary provisions and rewriting Quebecs Election Act was introduced in the assembly Wednesday member com mittee was immediately named to study it before it returns to the full House for approval Opposition Daniel Johnson said limiting the ex penses would put government and opposition parties on an equal footing He declined fur thcr comment The bill would also stiffen penalties for infractions and al Doctor Rescues Children HARROWSMITH Ont CF verouu doctor dashed into burning house Wednesday to rescue three small children and their mother Dr Bartley Campbell had been attending physician at the birth of two of the children Mrs Merlin Titley Dr Campbell was driving pregnant woman from Verona to Kingston when he saw smoke coming from the Titley home He ran in the back door and found Mrs Titley in hysterics He loaded twin girls nine months into wasbtub tucked Eric under his armand had the woman help him carry the children to safety The roof collapsed 10 minutes later Cause of the fire and amount of the damage were no tknown low names of Equal Footing recognized party candidates to be aecornlt panied by their party affiliation on the ballot Independents and candidates of non recognized parties would not be identified Party affiliations do not appear on ballots anywhere in Canada at the moment NEEDS 60 PER CENT Under the bill party would be recognized if it fielded can didates in 60 per cent of the provinces ridings and if it had party structure and leader The chief returning officer would decide which parties should be recognized Recognized parties would be limited to expenses totalling 75 cents for each voter The money which would come from the partys own funds would be spent on general provineewida publicity Mr Lesoge told reporters this would mean about $700000 for each recognized party in the next provincial election based on estimates that 2800000 voters will be eligible The next election is nominally due in 1964 Mr Lesage told reporters the cabinet spent long time work ing out the basis of recognition We decided on 60 per cent be cause we felt to he recognized party should have enough candidates to form governF ment Political observers said this could affect party such as the New Democratic Party which has nucleus but might not be able to put up candidates luso per cent of the ridings in this case the observers said NDP expenses and those of any other newly formed party would be confined to the expenses of individual candi dates The bill provides that individlt ual candidates whether inde pendent or members of reclt ognized party may spend up to accents per voteriu their rid ing on an election campaign If the candidate receives mini mum of 20 per cent of the yotcs cast he would be paid up to 15 cents per voter by the govern ment Child Dies lls School Bus Slams Into Back 0i Truck In Below CHAPAIS Que CP packed school bus slammed into the rear of trailer truck in Ellbelow zero Weather Wednes day leaving one child dead and at least eight other persons with serious injuries Provincial police and other sources in Chibuugamau min ing town 30 miles northeast of here where the accident oc curred estimated temperatures at 50 to 60 below and said icY vapor made road visibility zero The Chibougamau area is about 260 miles northvVest of Quebec City There were 42 children aboard the bus5 plus the driver and an adult hitchhiker when it plowed into the truck within Cbibnuga maus limits just moments from school and safety Raymond Savignac 10 was killed Claude Eoiviu 10 and Ms brother Serge were taken to hospital at Montreal with se vere head injuries Their sisterl Monique 11 was taken to hos pital with minor injuries John Papinovics 14 suffered broken jaw leg andhead in juries and Eric Taylor 16 broken leg Gbislaine Daoust was to be released from hospi tal today other children were treated on the scene by Cbihougamau doctors for broken noses bruises and cuts and other minor ries Most were the sons and daughters of miners in this rich copper area Bus driver Charles Desbiens 44 was in hospital in Roberval with fractured ribs Hitch hiker August Lavoie along with the children was brought to Opemiska Coper Mines hospital here He has broken pelvis shoulder hand and kidney contusion think theyll make it though saidDr Pat Fyfe in telephone interview