If It's Good For the Island The Guardi \ ian Is For lt na rian “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” \CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1965. winds northerly Be -20 by evening t MORE SEVEN CENTS WEATHER ee wins erty aunty to 5, Se oe _ 12 PAGES , Only the chimney remains standing after an early morn- ing fire took five lives at Berkeley, Ont., Sunday. Dead are Mrs. Adam Bailey, 84, her son-in-law, John MacLaughleén, FIRE CLAIMS FIVE LIVES 6, her ee le tS eeee, Maver ~Mac- woke about 8 a.m. and found the house in flam- es. He leaped out a second- storey window and ran to a neighboring home for help. (CP Wirephote) John Raywood, % Raywood's two children, Kath- arine, 2, and Sharan Phillis, eight months. Mrs. John Mac- Laughlin, 62, Beverly Marc- Laughlin, 32, and Philip Walk- Conservatives Launch To Unseat Forestry Mi Maurice Sauve: They began |Thursday in Perce, on the top court action in a remote Quebec of the Gaspe Peninsula. fishing village to have his elec-; A hearing will be held later tion nullified. lin Quebec Superior Court at If the legal gambit succeeds, | Gaspe, when Mr. Sauve will the minister will find. himself have the opportunity to reply to without ‘a Commons seat and the Conservative allegations and forced to run again in a byelec- file“ a counter-petition if tion or-resign from. the cabinet. | chooses. . Hull lawyer Lionel Motigeot | Reached at his Montreal home disclosed Friday that a petition : ithe minister said he would study HULL. Que. (CR) — The Con- alledging irregularities on and servatives had a Christmas Eve \before election day’ in Mr. | surprise for Forestry Minister | Sauve’s riding was filed late | he ; A ft] {the lengthy petition, filed under ithe Controverted Elections Act. “I can't comment when I don’t know what it’s all about,” he told a reporter, WON BY 392 VOTES Mr’ Sauve, 42, was re-elec' AS RUNWAY NEW YORK (AP)—Because his passenger couldn't swim, a 19-year-old pilot landed his small plane on the George Washington Bridge instead of in the Hudson River Sunday Both men walked away with minor injuries. As the Aeronca monoplane landed in the centre of the huge bridge linking New York with New Jersey, its wing tip tea | cought on a truck's tarpaulin. Nov. 8 in Canada’s smallest pra ee ne ee ee constituency, Iles - de Madeleine, by a margin of 392, damaged but nothing else suf- fered. votes, down from his 1,485-vote edge in the 1963 election, The double-lane centre road- His Progressive Conservative | way of the bridge's upper nt, Dr. Mare Arsenault, eck was not open to traffic . Cape Wolfe Safe Reported Found The break is being: invéstigat- ALBERTON — A safe con-) the A taining some $2,000 in cash, and another $4,000 worth -of papers and other valuables stolen Thursday night from Costain’s | general store aft Cape Wolfe, | oes eee | NO SIGN OF BACKING DOWN 7 SERGE Ss Sas 129) RS Eres ee Sasa S Story Of Peace Feelers Will Be Told By Fanfani JAMES M. LONG Rome gro +. Italy's. fiery. fittie foteign ‘minister. Amintore The Fanfani, plans to tell his parliamentary eritics personally jand right over whether Fanfaal y ig nalenwed he will tefl his | affairs: commission . has been jas ‘called for Jan. 5..to hear. him. ‘tions ~ ‘commission will debate a einer ada crossfire of charges from left backing down A -tapitdees V, of the United Ne- :' ssembly wold has any intention of’ why he became middieman in jwas gullible. and whether he letities he is convinced he did | the peace feeler that aroused tkepticism in Washington and | fenials in Hanoi. An extraordinary session of the Chamber of Deputies foreign acted with the knowledge of the Italian paring i Nothing in the veteran politi- ie warrior’s nature or his ac- ‘tion since returning from his job oi La Pira of Florence. iright in passing along the pur- ported Hanoi overtures to U.S. : By THE CANADIAN PRESS The Christmas weekend death toll totalled at least 53 with one day remaining before the holi- _day_officially ends at midnight. Monday. A.Cross-Canada Survey by the Canadian Press until 10 p.m. EST Sunday lists 37 persons killed in traffic accidents, 14 in fires, one drowning and one _as- | staried at 6 p.m. : The Canadian fue Safety | Council predicted 60 would die | on highways during the weekend. Last year's road ~ etality toll was 57, SHARE LEAD Ontario, where five persons died in a house fire at Berkeley and eight others on the high- | Canada’s Death Toll 53 With One Day Remaining * CHANNEL STILL OPEN . Before coming home -he ‘con- \firted swith U.S. State Secretary )channel between Hanoi and |ways, shares the. highest provia- i's ggasi y A lag cial death rate with British Co- jlumbia. B.C. had 11 highway ‘deaths and two by fire. | _ In Quebec, 10 persons died in. \traffic mishaps and one man | was asphyxiated. and carries~~on crusades on world affairs. ound! Prince Ho Chi Minh of North Viet Nam i Newh and and Ed itold him personally in Novem- 'Heinrich-Heine Strasse crossing ber that he was willing to go point, a brutal killing. ‘amywhere and talk with any- |. U.S. officials said Schoeneber- phyxiation ‘since the holiday one drowning was recorded in |Oody about peace, and that with-| ger drove the car Friday ward Island were fatality free. Two persons died on the high- ways in New Brunswick and ldrawal of USS. iNova Scotia. In_ the western provinces two \persons , four in traffic and one ‘tions ~ fire in Saskatchewan an@| La Pira ‘was quoted as ques-°! hree by fire in Manitoba.” tioning whether the U.S. dis- | Three persons “also died by ‘closure of. the peace talks bid-! fire in the Yukon. had been adroit—it The survey does not include put’ Ho under hard pressure natural or indystrial. déaths, from® Peking. Stormy Weather Marks; Christmas Many Places | By THE CANADIAN PRESS / ‘There was a light: snowfall in Three of Canada's four po- | Montreal litical leaders were at home’ for | Christmas and, because of bad | weather across the country, | most Canadians followed ‘suit, | The only leader to escape the | from snow | Maritimes to | snow and drifting snow in On- | weather, and rain ranging in. the tario and intense cold in Wes- tern Canada and T. €. Douglas, | } leader of the New Democratic | Party who was in Jamaica. Prime Minister Pearson spent the day at 24 Sussex Drive in Ottawa. with their son, Geoffrey, and _nine | Christmas Day. with snow. Tem- grandchildren. Conservative Leader John Diefenbaker also spent the day | at his Ottawa residence. Robert | Thempson. leader of the Social | Credit party, was at home in | Red Deer. Alta. In the Maritimes and New- foundiand ‘it was generally | warm and wet Christmas Day. North New Brunswick and parts of Prince Edward Island (re ceived snow. DELAYS REPORTED Transportation officials ‘re | ~+|four were injured in a head-on and Mrs. | known’ suicides slayings. Christmas The day was cloudy. Churches reported large attendances Christmas Eve, Most persons in Quebec soem, ithe day at home. ‘Snow, which began falling Christmas Eve, covered Ontario | ' by Christmas Day. Driving was hazardous. One woman was morning. killed and lecollision near Ottawa was about It cold -in Manitoba peratures in Ws. Temperatures dropped to @ | below in Alberta and Saskatche- wan. Taxi companies were busy and towing _ services worked around tha clock: Stow fell.on most of British | Columbia. Temperatures were jmild. Highway conditions were hazardous as rain followed the snow and overnight tempera- tures. were low.’ Five members of one family were killed Christmas Day im a traffic accident near Haney in ‘the Fraser — * President Johnson through his lold friend, former mayor Gior- | | Dean Rusk and [Ptalian imform- ‘been ‘acts said afterward the Fanfani Germans escape to the channel was La Pira, who lives | in a Roman Catholic monastery (plot, said the dead man, Heinz | [BLAMES WESTERN AGENTS | ‘Schoeneberger forces from ‘tween concrete slabs built into South Viet Nam was not an-es- @ 2ig-zag course to slow cars |. died on highways in Al- _— pre-condition to negotia- {dows probably’ |- lof the wall. EAST GERMAN truck in Berlin Wall where stands as barrier at-Heinriche German guards shot and Heine Strasse crossing point ed a man early Sunday“ end near the ‘old town dump ‘at Summerside. The discov r was made by papers in the safe were said to. be intact. The | cash was missing. It was reported, but not con- | whi firmed, that children picked up are resulted in the Cape Wolfe being named the centen- pieces in the vicinity of the safe. |ward Island. | attorney here approximately $10 in 50-cent nial community of Prince Ee complained that some Liberal 3¢ the time, although six other supporters were guilty of irreg- | lanes were in use. ularities during the campaign | |The pilot, pared Ippolito and on election day. Bronx, polite he pe a losing power and al- Mr. ~— a ec oll we - set pe BEY sal pr ao ne ver. But he changed his mind when his passenger, Joseph Brennan, 3%, told him he couldn't swim. Magdalen Islands in the io Galt of \St. Lawrenee to investigate the aallegations at the request of Conservative Béodquarters in. Ottawa. Hostilities In Viet Nam Are Resumed After Lull BRIDGE USED | Truce Lasts Some 6 Hours From AP-Reuters SAIGON ‘(CP).— South Viet ‘Nam was wracked by war again Sunday after a brief Christmas truce the Western world had hoped would light the torch of peace. The -hour ceasefire by U.S. and South Vietnamese forces turned into a one-sided experi- | ment. The 12-hour truce offered | by the Viet“ Gang Ie lasted aout six hours. The US. state department Was reported to have ng ong | ithe military ‘command here to extend the ceasefire if it ap- peared to be providing the Com- ‘munists with an excuse to stop ‘shooting and start negotiating. | The Viet Cong seized the ini- jtiative, however. The U.S. high |¢ | command said the Viet Cong in- | jstigated a total of & incidents | ‘during the Communist and Am- | lerican ceasefire periods. Allied forces were back ‘in ac- | tion, but only in South vine] He collected several affidavits ‘and recommended legal action to have Mr. Sauve ‘anseated. |The petition was filed in Perce ‘by notary Jean Bourget, acting | for Dr. Arsenault. U.S. Roads Death Toll tsaid jin Ottawa Friday tifat a ec a similar action . likely will be IsR or ; : launched—early—next- month im!" cincAGO (AP)—The - three- heffard riding east of Montreal | where Liberal Louis Neveu | edged Conservative Paul Trep- | anier by 27 votes in a judicial recount. He_ said’ the final decision is up to Mr. Trepanier, who told reporters Tuesday he will de- day Christmas weekend edged to a close Sunday night. leaving arecord number highway travellers dead in the United | States. j | In Wall Crossing Try BERLIN (Reuters)—A West the car, staggered the short dis- German in an old car was killed ‘tance over the border line and | ge eda Shera eB lft ‘collapsed. He died in hospital. | | nday. Communist | report id three | \East Germany claimed he had can’ tae in a at trying to help two East jeg ‘in East Berlin. One man West. was carried off on a ‘stretcher The East German news ar- agency ADN, describing the es awe} a man and woman were ‘cape bid as a new provocative 1 , and another, \West German with him had | groups in West | lants termed the incident, at the The agency coased: Went | |German groups of using the! Christmas period to create ten- gai and unrest. Lon Maj.-Gen. John .F. Franklin, U.S. military gtr yy jin a statement sup st Psi gs ae te be oe and British colleagues: East. German guards blazed ‘“‘It is time that these sense- | away. with submachine guns |less killings cease. The fact that jand the car crashed gay and jammed into one side ing the solemn Christmas sea- ison makes the matter all the. Schoeneberger jumped out of ‘thore shocking.” through. this —is—the second — confirmed | the final wooden barrier at the shooting within a few days dur- | cide early in January whether |to proceed under, the Contro- iverted . Elections Act. After the allegations Mr. Sauve~ were. pecans apr minister ¢alled a. press confer- | iewcats ey = homeward > eer By—late—evening,_653-—-persons had been. killed in traffic acel- dents, surpassing the former eeria of --609 oi a three-day “the at continued acting wp Nam. The U.S. Air Force ag, Meany tein tye Ng oe of ae Relees.egapaet Te: Comores | ist North. As. a_result of Viet, Cong at- tacks during the truce at least 12 cans and up to | '50 South FVietnamese soldiers were killed. Many others were | | NO MENTION OF TRUCE Communist uper, Nahn Dan, said .the U.S.-is i“tirelessly prattling about un- | conditional discussions” for a settlement in Viet Nem. “They (the Americans) Put Hanoi’s official nemsne-| levents during the unoffictal- truce period: from the field dur ing the Viet Cong armistice and the early part of the American- Vietnamese ceasefire was slow. ers had little ewe ‘dence of infractions. | The state department ta |Washington apparently decided jthe atmosphere was right to éx- tend the truce and ge for a negotiated peace. | THINGS REPORTED QUIET The U.S. command in Saigon flashed to Washington word of the series of Viet Cong cease- fire infractions while their spokesmen were telling report- ers here that gp amg was —_. This took place all day bristmas. we 4 a.m. Sunday, the com ‘Continued on page 3 Col. 7) Volcano Stirring HILO, Hawaii (AP)—Hawan’s |Kilauea Volcano quieted down Sunday but gentle earthquakes |kept scientists from regarding the Christmas Eve eruption as rover. Seismographs on the tip” of ‘Kilauea crater recorded two of “reach the surface, but a few - sharper. jolts. were felt- in Hilo, \30 miles away. ge Quakes a minute were felt at the height of the eruption. oxo |" Ho. mabe -demege were ‘acting as if they ‘really wanted ported. ence Dec- 15 to deny. that he | wag personally guilty of any wrongdoing. He issued a 32-page statement replying point by, point to 23 al- |legations that had been reported | Twin Girls Separated in various newspapers. LOS ANGELES (AP) — Sia- | — mese, twin girls, tage Pes ol surgery six hours after ‘Former UC ‘Moderator Dies At.78 \life Sunday. A surgeon who divided their their intestines said th little better than the 50-50 ' I¢hance given them poser sk ‘| Sheila Norine and Lisa ADN Said the attempted ©* | TORONTO _(CP)—Very Rew. _Mantonya—were- » tre inl ne ecape—was—made—“‘under- the in- Wied aller te Waal Genial: tplanmed the estape for weeks. Isueoce of agent Alexander A. Scott, 78, a former. jstant care at Cedars of Lebanon La*Pira repeated that President | Western military command- Berlin.” moderator of the United Church | Hospital. lof Canada, died in hospital | Their mother, | turdey. A funeral service will (Mantonya, 20, | be held Tuesday. ‘“getting along very well’ at Dr. ° Scott, ‘ moderator from another hospital. A doctor said Mrs. |1952 to 1954, was appointed af- he tad told her the twins were |U.S.-Canadian border from -The (Project PPO! \‘attached in @ small area and. Rockies to New England where Were almost full as thé fesult of |ter 40 years in missionary. work. A native of Carleton Place, had to be separated.” /Ont:,. about 35 miles west of Ot- | The. father, Gerald Mantonya, tawa, Dr. Scott did post-gradu- |20, is a Hollywood film labora: ate w in Scot}and before lea- |tory technician. | ving for India in 1912. The infants, weighing: a. total Dr-. Scott leaves two daught- fof 12 pounds, -were-born by ers, Mrs. Lyle H. Wilson of Tor- (Caesarian sec tion: Saturday, onto and Mrs. David H Lewis of | Neither. breathed three. of Bierut, Lebanon, and a son Don- four. minutes. Ieee Cicadtuane thos, cimeg Win in order to bfand the namese people as belli- teose, “said an article signed by | [Pignter. Moscow charged that the US. Inad broken the Christmas céase ifire. U.S. military spokesmen ia) |Saigos, gave this picture of No populated areas were threatened. Aloi Crater; site of a three- jday eruption in December, 1962 4s off the chain of craters road, so ‘named because it weaves through Kilevea's many craters up to the 4,000-foot plateau built tr Be. Are Pes Arctic Weather common. bladder and “Theit| eir chances of survival now are a! Moves Into U.S. LEWISTOWN, ° ‘Mont. (AP)— 'Arctic cold invaded the United | |low in central Montana. | The cold was felt along the sub-zero temperatures were ex- pected to follow closely an un- usually mild and rainy Christ- mas. | The weather bureau. issued jcold - wave -warnings in the plains states ‘as far south as |\Nebraska, and posted cold wave predictions for Sunday night in ‘East he tried to ram a car through a the barrier. He’ stumbled across into West Bertin and when died ‘ald- of Dunnville, Ont. | Plane ars ‘Safely With . | Engine.Afire rep OAKLAND, Calif. (AP)—Holi- day passengers missed their \Christmas dinner aboard a To- |kyo-bound Japan Air Lines jet and escaped down an emer: gency chute without injury af- ‘ter the damaged plane limped ito a landing. | The plane’s: outer left engine ‘caught fire four minutes after ithe ,DC-8's takeoff from San \Francisco Saturday. There were 5 passengers and 10 crew “She went blooie.” said Flight Officer Harold L. Brown. the only American crew 7° ~ber. “There wasn't any warning.” Parts of the engine fell over suburban’ areas. \Capt. Tsuneo Kato landed the (plane at Oakland, across the jbay from San Francisco. . but the debris | jeaused no reported damage... parts of Minnesota and Iowa: | The Christmas-weekend storm which spread ice and snow from the desert southwest to the Ap- jpalachians lost its cold winds and gave the Atlantic only rain ‘before moving out. into the Ocean early Sunday. | But scattered snow or rain coullneld to the Pacific acct jwest, and there was a light Robin States on a broad front Sunday, | snowfall in the central plains wae reported dropping the mercury to 20 be- and some snow flurries in New | England: In Arizona, four Salt ‘River lakes above Phoenix snow melting, and. project offi- cials said melting snow the next few days could cause ‘them ‘te spill over. This would send water rash- ing down the normally dry Salt River bed between Granite Reef Dam. and Phoenix, and cut off all but one or two roads con- * north and south Phoe- ‘A storm last week pelted the state with record . a mts of rain and snow and caused wide- spread damage as the Gila River in eastern Arizona and the Rillito River in the Southern part of the state over-flowed their banks. necting nix. Pope s Disappointed — Over Truce VATICAN CITY 4AP'—Pope: Paul ,isreported. concerned- and disappointed overt the failure ec the Christmas truce in Viet Nam. bui determined to press ahead with his personal peace efforts. a “He has done everything he could. and he will continue to do everything possible to pro- mote peace in Viet Nam.” a pa- pal aide said Sunday night. It was believed a: the Vatican INSIDE TODAY | Classified .......... Sp, il cine ee po. Deates -....sccccsscvsees: 3 COMES .cccoccsevsesccess 9 Sport ..... veeeess tees 8 Women’s ....... eoevecees 6 , seme Swbsbvisset ose & ed Christmas tree is visible immerside ........ ibevere in background on East Ger- {| Kings, Queens, City ....5 man side. (AP Wirephoto by ” " ene, Mee ee cable from Berlin) - — that the Pope's appeal a. week ago brought about the ceasefire. Papal aides said more papal Failure white the Pope was saddenerc that ‘fighting had resume: ir Viet Nam, sources. said he has alsy been tremendously encour- aged that _his public appeal for « Christmas ceasefire »rought re- sults, even if treagre. The Pope also was disturbed by continued unresf in the Do- minican Repoblic. He sent a Christmas’ message there call- ing for ‘reciprocal confidence” and reconciliation among - the people .of the politically tense Caribbean nation. appeals on’ Viet Nam could be / At. his regular noon. blessing expected, along with a continu- ation of Vatican diplomatic ac- 'tivity at all levels. In a Christmas speech in War- isaw, Stefan Cardinal Wyszynski stated what has hecome clear here—that Pope Paul has made a truce in Viet Nam the main task of the) Roman *Catholic ‘church at this point in world af- of 15.000 persons in St. Peter's Square, Pope Paul called -or “peace, concord and serenity,” but did not mention Viet Nam or the ceasefire. “We pray for families and communities, and we pray te jthe Lord that He give peace. jconcord and serenity to al homes. We pray especially for mothers, and for every child.” ~ — —~